This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
12657 | Are we to place here, as Crowe and Cavalcaselle do, the_ Venus and Cupid_ of the Tribuna and the_ Venus with the Organ Player_ of the Prado? |
12657 | Is it not to insult one of the greatest masters of all time thus to assume that he would have designed what we now see? |
12657 | Is this the canvas now in the Wallace Collection, but not as yet publicly exhibited there? |
12657 | Margarita_ means one and the same canvas--_The Figure of St. Margaret in a Landscape_? |
12657 | Or is it perhaps that the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have spoilt us in this respect? |
12657 | PEN DRAWING BY TITIAN(?) |
15364 | ''I do n''t know; is n''t it Emm[=a]us?'' |
15364 | Deb[)o]rah? |
15364 | He looked for comment and hoped for praise, but the Provost''s only remark was,''Why do you say Emm[=a]us?'' |
15364 | Is it useful? |
15364 | Then he went on''Deb[)o]rah? |
15364 | Why can we not so use it now? |
15364 | Why do we not speak of''The Royal College of Leeches''? |
15364 | _ meterly fausse_(? |
15364 | fy!--a Greek tragedy and protagonists?). |
15364 | or is it merely a pretentious blundering substitute for words that are useful? |
1682 | And ought not the country which the Gods praise to be praised by all mankind? |
1682 | And whom did they choose? |
1682 | And why should I say more? |
1682 | Are you from the Agora? |
1682 | For who always does justice to himself, or who writes with equal care at all times? |
1682 | For you know that there is to be a public funeral? |
1682 | MENEXENUS: And can you remember what Aspasia said? |
1682 | MENEXENUS: And what would you be able to say if you had to speak? |
1682 | MENEXENUS: And who is she? |
1682 | MENEXENUS: Do you think not, Socrates? |
1682 | MENEXENUS: Do you think that you could speak yourself if there should be a necessity, and if the Council were to choose you? |
1682 | MENEXENUS: Then why will you not rehearse what she said? |
1682 | SOCRATES: And what might you be doing at the Council? |
1682 | SOCRATES: But why, my friend, should he not have plenty to say? |
1682 | SOCRATES: Well, and do you not admire her, and are you not grateful for her speech? |
1682 | SOCRATES: Whence come you, Menexenus? |
1682 | What sort of a word will this be, and how shall we rightly begin the praises of these brave men? |
16801 | O_h, what can match the green recess_, W_hose honey not to Hybla yields_, W_hose olives vie with those that bless_ V_enafrum''s fields_? 16801 And now, what is it that Horace sees as he sits in philosophic detachment on the serene heights of contemplation; and what are his reflections? 16801 But how insure this peace of mind? 16801 F_or whom that innocent- seeming knot_ I_n which your golden strands you dress_ W_ith all the art of artlessness?_ D_eluded lad! 16801 For whom bind''st thou_ I_n wreaths thy golden hair_, P_lain in thy neatness? 16801 Is not_ O_ne Hebrus here,--from Aldershot?_ A_ha, you colour!_ B_e wise. 16801 Of what avail to fly to lands warmed by other suns? 16801 There was Quintilius, whose death was bewailed by many good men;--when would incorruptible Faith and Truth find his equal? 16801 W_hat''s here? 16801 What difference does it make to him who lives within the limits of nature whether he plow a hundred acres or a thousand? 16801 What exile ever escaped himself? 16801 What is the secret? 16801 What need to be unhappy in the midst of such a world? 16801 What of the man who is not rich? 16801 Where else may be seen so many vivid incidental pictures of men at their daily occupations of work or play? 16801 Who knows whether the gods above will add a tomorrow to the to- day? 16996 How can that be?" |
16996 | Was it cold water,they asked,"that was brought unto thee?" |
16996 | [ 79][ Sidenote: Is Islam suitable for any nation?] 16996 An error in the pronunciation of the mystic text might bring destruction on the worshiper; what could he do but lean upon the priest? 16996 Could conceptions of divinity so incongruous co- exist? 16996 Disliked and denied they may be; but forgotten? 16996 How could these be the thoughts, or those the expressions, of the imperfectly civilized shepherds of the Panjab? 16996 How far, in fact, did there exist inducements or hinderances to its adoption inherent in the religion itself? 16996 How is the marvel to be explained? 16996 How is this great falling- off to be explained? 16996 However desirable freedom might be, slavery was not inconsistent with the Christian profession:Art thou called being a servant? |
16996 | It is a solemn question, Had he said it when his career was ended? |
16996 | Need we say how gloriously rich the Gospel is in having in the character of Christ the realized ideal of every possible excellence? |
16996 | Now what is Christianity? |
16996 | Say, now, which are the more worthy to be called martyrs, these, or thy fellows that fall fighting for the world and the power thereof? |
16996 | What could explain it? |
16996 | Where then is our merit? |
16996 | Wherefore wast not thou slain before him? |
16996 | Which bears the impress of man''s hand, and which that of Him who"is wonderful in counsel, and excellent in working?" |
16996 | and which the artificial imitation? |
11630 | ''Aw- aw, Donoghue''says I,''is it worth while backing you for a cool thou for the Balaam?'' 11630 ''Docker,''he hisses,''do you remember driving''er one day down the Menin Road when Fritz started shelling?'' |
11630 | ''What odds for Red Liz in the five- thirty?'' 11630 HOW MUCH WOULD IT BE IF THE FEATHER WERE REMOVED?" |
11630 | Like to pick your fancy for the Derby, Docker? |
11630 | WOULD YOU MIND DOING THAT BIT AGAIN? 11630 Well, that was good enough, was n''t it?" |
11630 | ( A voice,"With rigging?") |
11630 | *****[ Illustration:_ Small Brother( to rejected lover)._"BUT JOHN, DIDN''T YOU TELL HER YOU''D PLAYED FOR ESSEX?"] |
11630 | By the way, whilst we are on the subject, who is this MILLS? |
11630 | Can no enterprising picture- paper supply the want? |
11630 | Did Victorian Flossie Or Gladys, when glossy Of nose, to such methods incline? |
11630 | Do n''t you think they would do to begin on? |
11630 | HOW CAN I PLAY FROM THAT LIE WITH A WOODEN CLUB?" |
11630 | If tall hats, he said, went out of fashion, what would become of conjurers? |
11630 | P.S.--Couldn''t you touch up the Bishop on the subject of the Convent tube? |
11630 | Returning home what can he hope to be? |
11630 | STEALING A WATCH, EH?" |
11630 | Who ever heard of a happy poet? |
11630 | _ All_ the rest? |
11256 | Dicat films Albini: si de quincunce remota est uncia, quid superat? 11256 What is more strictly protected,"he says,"by all religious feeling, than the house of each individual citizen? |
11256 | ( 2) how was it supplied with food and clothing? |
11256 | 5:"vos convivia lauta sumptuose De die facitis?"] |
11256 | : would you stay there among those harlots, prostitutes of bakers, leavings of the breadmakers, smeared with rank cosmetics, nasty devotees of slaves? |
11256 | ; breeding of slaves; prices of slaves; possible number in Cicero''s day; economic aspect of slavery: did it interfere with free labour? |
11256 | But did Varro also conceive of this Jupiter as a deity"making for righteousness,"or acting as a sanction for morality? |
11256 | Can we doubt that he was himself a shareholder? |
11256 | Let young Albinus say:"If you take one away from five pence, what results?" |
11256 | The three questions to which I wish to make some answer in this chapter are:( 1) how was this population housed? |
11256 | Was it really popular at Rome? |
11256 | What are we to say of the Jupiter of the_ Aeneid_? |
11256 | What is the moral standard that will become clear to him, the sanction of right living that will grip his conscience? |
11256 | What was it that so greatly amused and pleased them? |
11256 | What was the need of children compared with my loyalty to you: why should I exchange certain happiness for an uncertain future? |
11256 | What were the moral effects of the system( 1) on the slaves themselves;( 2) on the freemen who owned them? |
11256 | What will he see? |
11256 | Which way am I to turn? |
11256 | and( 3) how was it employed? |
13049 | Who ax you fer ter come en strike up a''quaintance wid dish yer Tar- Baby? 13049 Whose child?" |
13049 | After quite a silence he asked again:"What was there before the world was born?" |
13049 | But can I cause my boys and girls to think they can? |
13049 | Can it be that their teachers failed to invest these places with human interest, that they were but words in a book and not real to them at all? |
13049 | En who stuck you up dar whar you is? |
13049 | I have a right to use my knife at table instead of a fork, and who is to gainsay my using my fingers? |
13049 | I recall that one of my aunts came in one day and, seeing me out in the yard most ingloriously tousled, asked my good mother:"Is that your child?" |
13049 | I wonder if reclining on the grass under a maple- tree is not a part of the pursuit of happiness that is specifically set out in the Constitution? |
13049 | If I believe that a grasshopper is a quadruped, what satisfaction could I possibly take in discovering that he has six legs? |
13049 | If it is n''t, it is hardly worth a first reading, I do n''t get tired of my friend Brown, so why should I put Dickens off with a mere society call? |
13049 | If that is true, why do n''t they wait till matters scientific are settled, and then write their books? |
13049 | It might not help him much for me to ask him:"Do n''t you wish you could?" |
13049 | Let''s see, was n''t it Theseus whose eternal punishment in Hades was just to sit there forever? |
13049 | Meekly he asked:"Why are they tolling the bell?" |
13049 | Must I travel all the way to Yellowstone Park to know a geyser? |
13049 | Now, just what are the native interests of a colt? |
13049 | So I suppose these critics will look at me, with something akin to pity in the look, and say:"Do n''t you wish you could?" |
13049 | So why not be philosophical and read the book? |
13049 | So, what additions can possibly be needed? |
13049 | The artist looked at him steadily for a moment, and then replied:"Do n''t you wish you could?" |
13049 | Then, what? |
13049 | When his laughter had spent itself somewhat, I asked meekly:"What are you laughing at?" |
13049 | Who knows? |
13049 | Why all the bother and trouble about a little thing like that? |
13049 | Why ca n''t folks let a fellow alone, anyhow? |
13049 | Why write a book at all when you know that day after tomorrow some one will come along and refute all the theories and mangle the facts? |
13049 | Why, pray, should he wash his feet when he knows full well that tomorrow night will find them in the same condition? |
15729 | Epidemics, I suppose? 15729 Whom do you carry and to what place?" |
15729 | And who were the judges? |
15729 | But have the Jews actually gained by the change from the illegal persecutions[ in the form of pogroms] to the legal persecutions of the third of May? |
15729 | Greig put the whole issue in a nut- shell:"Are the Jews to be suffered in the country, or not?" |
15729 | I suppose they are meant for the fleet, but how should I know? |
15729 | In his reply Lilienthal advanced an impressive array of arguments: What will you gain by your resistance to the new measures? |
15729 | Is there indeed no means to put a stop to this crying scandal? |
15729 | Of what avail can ministerial circulars be when the highest administrators on the spot paralyze their actions in public by the living word? |
15729 | Struggling against adversities which no other people have encountered, do they not yet survive-- the wine from the crushed grape? |
15729 | The birthright of this race is thus despoiled; and, Sir, have we no word of protest? |
15729 | The martyred nation stood at the threshold of the new reign with a silent question on its lip:"What next?" |
15729 | The question"For whom do I labor?" |
15729 | What will Europe say when she learns that in fighting for our liberty we have not been able to get along without Jewish help?" |
15729 | Will the light of day break at last? |
15729 | Will this go on for a long time? |
15729 | You are a stranger; do you know what you are undertaking? |
12261 | ''What for?'' |
12261 | An old woman tended her; and when the girl was grown to maidenhood she asked the old woman,"Where do you go so often?" |
12261 | And she said to him,"What will you give me if I shew you how you may destroy the walls of this city and slay my father?" |
12261 | And why, before doing so, had he to pluck the Golden Bough? |
12261 | But how, we must still ask, can burning an animal alive break the spell that has been cast upon its fellows by a witch or a warlock? |
12261 | But it did him little good; for one ox said to another ox,"What shall we do to- morrow?" |
12261 | But we have still to ask, What was the Golden Bough? |
12261 | But we naturally ask, How did it come about that benefits so great and manifold were supposed to be attained by means so simple? |
12261 | But why, we may ask, should the burning alive of a calf or a sheep be supposed to save the rest of the herd or the flock from the murrain? |
12261 | Can this use of a wheel as a talisman against witchcraft be derived from the practice of rolling fiery wheels down hill for a similar purpose? |
12261 | For not being herself fertilized by a spirit, how can she fertilize the garden? |
12261 | For who could ripen the fruit so well as the sun- god? |
12261 | In short, what theory underlay and prompted the practice of these customs? |
12261 | In what way did people imagine that they could procure so many goods or avoid so many ills by the application of fire and smoke, of embers and ashes? |
12261 | Loki asked him,"Why do you not shoot at Balder?" |
12261 | Then Loki asked,"Have all things sworn to spare Balder?" |
12261 | Then she would rewind the thread and ask,"Who holds my clue?" |
12261 | Then you call out,"Who holds?" |
12261 | They said,''What is the matter?'' |
12261 | They say to one another:''Who was it who saw Sirius?'' |
12261 | Thus equipped they repaired to a spot outside of the village, and there the old dame with the kettle asked the old dame with the lock,"Whither away?" |
12261 | We have seen that at Spachendorf, in Austrian Silesia, on the morning of Rupert''s Day( Shrove Tuesday? |
12261 | What if we were to drive over and join the rest at the tournament?" |
12261 | [ 789] Can any reasonable man doubt that the witch herself was boiled alive in the person of the toads? |
12261 | [ What was the Golden Bough?] |
12261 | and could the good- man and the good- wife deny to the spirits of their dead the welcome which they gave to the cows? |
12261 | and why had each candidate for the Arician priesthood to pluck it before he could slay the priest? |
16768 | Are you not aware, replied the Malay, that it is written in a Book? 16768 But who winds it up?" |
16768 | How do you secure a prisoner( a man was asked) without employing a chain or our stocks? |
16768 | It may be true,answered the other,"but what foundation have you for expecting assistance from Allah and Mahomet?" |
16768 | You pay a veneration to the tombs of your ancestors: what foundation have you for supposing that your dead ancestors can lend you assistance? |
16768 | An example of the former species is as follows: Apa guna passang palita, Kallo tidah dangan sumbu''nia? |
16768 | Apa guna bermine matta, Kalla tidah dangan sunggu''nia? |
16768 | But are these the real circumstances of polygamy? |
16768 | Have you not heard of the Koran?" |
16768 | How is the matter to be decided? |
16768 | To what is this disproportion owing? |
16768 | What signifies attempting to light a lamp, If the wick be wanting? |
16768 | What signifies playing with the eyes, If nothing in earnest be intended? |
16768 | When Christ saw the cross he trembled and shaked; and they said unto him hast thou an ague? |
16768 | or must custom be allowed to supersede all other influence, both moral and physical? |
16768 | or to the earth''s losing by degrees her fecundity from an excessive cultivation? |
16768 | to the difference of grain, as rice may be in its nature extremely prolific? |
16768 | to the more genial influence of a warmer climate? |
10703 | -coecus-,-fullones-,-Hortensius-,-Quintus-,-varus-), and nine after female(-Gemina-,-iurisperita-,-prilia-? |
10703 | -privigna-,-psaltria- or-Ferentinatis-,-Setina-,-tibicina-,-Veliterna-,-Ulubrana? |
10703 | 192), have been expected to incur censure? |
10703 | As the lore of entrails and of lightning was cultivated among the Etruscans, so the liberal art of observing birds and conjuring serpent? |
10703 | But how stood the case with agriculture itself? |
10703 | But in truth, where was their security that these at least would continue in their hands? |
10703 | But what else would this mean, than to demolish the rampart protecting Hellenic culture from the Thracians and Celts? |
10703 | Had he not reason to revile the Greeks, with whom he had become acquainted in Rome and Athens, as an incorrigibly wretched pack? |
10703 | Is there any wonder that the reins of government in such an exigency slipped from the hands of a deliberative assembly and of commanding burgomasters? |
10703 | Method of Attack But how could Italy be attacked? |
10703 | Of the fifteen comedies of Titinius, with which we are acquainted, six are named after male characters(-baratus-? |
10703 | The army was expected to save the state; but what sort of army? |
10703 | Towards the close of this period( 574?) |
10703 | We have already spoken of the metrical chronicles of Naevius( written about 550?) |
10703 | What other result was to be expected? |
10703 | What were they to do? |
10703 | Who can doubt that these dramas gave a practical impulse to corruption? |
10703 | With what colour could it be expected that Rome would now deliver her keys to the victor, or even accept an equitable peace? |
12342 | );"Hamlet,"1602,"Measure for Measure,"1603;"Troilus and Cressida,"1603- 1607(? |
12342 | );"Richard II.,"1594;"King John,"1595;"Merchant of Venice,"1596; 1 and 2"Henry IV.,"1597- 1598;"Henry V.,"1599;"Taming of the Shrew,"1597(? |
12342 | ; is the hero of the Cornish ballad,"And shall Trelawney die?" |
12342 | Black?" |
12342 | CLIFFORD, JOHN, D.D., Baptist minister in London, author of"Is Life Worth Living?" |
12342 | COLLINS, MORTIMER, a versatile genius, born at Plymouth; wrote poems, novels, and essays; was the author of"Who was the Heir?" |
12342 | EST- IL- POSSIBLE? |
12342 | How? |
12342 | In such a case the challenge of Goethe is_ apropos_,"What have I to do with names when it is a work of the spirit I am considering?" |
12342 | Johnnie Cowp, are ye wauken yet?" |
12342 | MANNA, the food with which the Israelites were miraculously fed in the wilderness, a term which means"What is this?" |
12342 | Saved or Lost? |
12342 | Sure enough, I am; and lately was not; but Whence? |
12342 | Whereto?" |
12342 | got for answer the counter- challenge"Who made you king?" |
17244 | Qu''est que ça me fait si elle suait sous les bras, ou au milieu du dos? |
17244 | Are we never to have your skill, your observation, your amassing of"documents"turned to any account? |
17244 | But,_ Can_ they be successful if the accepted masterpieces of modern sculpture are not to be set down as insipid? |
17244 | Can anyone doubt it who sees an exhibition of their works? |
17244 | Does nature look like this? |
17244 | How many foreigners know that he painted what are called architectural subjects delightfully, and even_ genre_ with zest? |
17244 | III What do we mean by style? |
17244 | In the event of such an irruption, would there be any torsos left from which future Poussins could learn all they should know of the human form? |
17244 | Indeed one is tempted often to inquire of the latter, Why so much interest in what apparently seems to you of so little import? |
17244 | Is it caution or perversity? |
17244 | Is not sympathy with what is modern, instant, actual, and apposite a fair parallel of patriotism? |
17244 | Is the absolute value of the parts in shadow lowered or raised? |
17244 | Is there more individuality in a thirteenth- century grotesque than in the"Faun"of the Capitol? |
17244 | It was felicitously of him, rather than of Dupré or Corot, that the naif peasant inquired,"Why do you paint the tree; the tree is there, is it not?" |
17244 | The first thought is not, Are the"Saint Jean"and the"Bourgeois de Calais"successful works of art? |
17244 | What does a canvas of Claude Monet show in this respect? |
17244 | What has been gained? |
17244 | What is the effect where considerable portions of the scene are suddenly thrown into marked shadow, as well as others illuminated with intense light? |
17244 | What was he thinking of? |
17244 | Where is the realistic tragedy, comedy, epic, composition of any sort? |
17244 | Wherein does the charm consist? |
17244 | Who knows? |
17244 | Why is he so obviously great as well as so obviously extraordinary? |
17244 | Why should not one feel the same quick interest, the same instinctive pride in his time as in his country? |
17244 | Why? |
17244 | Will it? |
17244 | Would there be any_ disjecta membra_ from which skilled anatomists could reconstruct the lost_ ensemble_, or at any rate make a shrewd guess at it? |
10001 | ''I do n''t know,''did you say? |
10001 | A Stoic, then? |
10001 | After all this torture can not he have a rest? |
10001 | As they passed downwards along the Sacred Way, Mercury asked what was that great concourse of men? |
10001 | Ask if you like how I know it? |
10001 | But why should I speak of all those men, and such men? |
10001 | For this have I calmed intestine wars? |
10001 | How came we here? |
10001 | How came you all here?" |
10001 | How can he be globular, as Varro says, without a head or any other projection? |
10001 | Is it for this I have made peace by land and sea? |
10001 | Is this creature to mend our crooked ways? |
10001 | Is this he you want now to make a god? |
10001 | Out he comes to meet him, smooth and shining( he had just left the bath), and says he:"What make the gods among mortals?" |
10001 | Say, is this land the nurse that bred thy soul?" |
10001 | To this Pedo Pompeius answered,"What, cruel man? |
10001 | Up he goes, then, and says what your Greek finds readiest to his tongue:"Who art thou, and what thy people? |
10001 | What grudge is this you bear against him and the whole empire? |
10001 | What land, what tribe produced that shaking head? |
10001 | What will this person think of us, whoever he is?" |
10001 | Where do we find that custom? |
10001 | Who but you sent us, you, the murderer of all the friends that ever you had? |
10001 | Who has ever made the historian produce witness to swear for him? |
10001 | Who thy parents, where thy home?" |
10001 | Who will compel me? |
10001 | Who''ll now sit in judgment the whole year round? |
10001 | Why mumble unintelligible things? |
10001 | Why, says he, I want to know why, his own sister? |
10001 | Will you thus neglect so good an hour?" |
10001 | [ Footnote: By the Cloaca?] |
10001 | could it be Claudius''funeral? |
10001 | to have mercy upon them?" |
10001 | who will worship this god, who will believe in him? |
10960 | ''Tis hot,she sang,"and dusty; nay, travelers, whither bound? |
10960 | Are not the phrases,_ imperium Oceano_ and_ spoliis Orientis onustum_ a direct reference to this triumph which, of course, Vergil saw? |
10960 | Can we assume an Epicurean creed with better success? |
10960 | Could one find a more fitting place than Venus''s shrine at Sorrento for the invocation of the_ Aeneid_? |
10960 | Could she have been the lady he married upon his return from Athens? |
10960 | Crump,_ The Growth of the Aeneid_] Was not this the act that prompted the happy idea of writing the epic of Aeneas? |
10960 | Does this provide a key with which to unlock the hidden intentions of our strange treasure- trove of miscellaneous allusions? |
10960 | Has not Vergil himself referred to the_ Aetna_ in the preface of his_ Ciris_, where he thanks the Muses for their aid in an abstruse poem( l. 93)? |
10960 | He had been writing verses; who would not? |
10960 | He is powerless to grant Cybele''s prayer that the ships may escape decay: Cui tanta deo permissa potestas? |
10960 | How could he but fail? |
10960 | If nature was to be trusted, why not man''s nature? |
10960 | Is Vergil''s scenery then nothing but literary reminiscence? |
10960 | Is not this a reference to the_ Aetna_?] |
10960 | Might not the scientific view prove that the passions so far from being diseases, conditioned the very life and survival of the race? |
10960 | Or would you rather keep them to lay upon your grave? |
10960 | Sed iam jnihi nuntius iste Quid prodest? |
10960 | Sweet garlands for cold ashes why should you care to save? |
10960 | Was not Antiochus Epiphanes himself a"god,"while as a member of the sect he belittled divinity? |
10960 | Were not the instincts a part of man? |
10960 | What can this mean but a graceful reminder to Messalla that it was he who had inspired the new effort? |
10960 | What else could such a wreckage of enthusiasm and ambitions produce? |
10960 | What other poem could he have had in mind? |
10960 | What then are we to say of the Stoic coloring of the sixth book? |
10960 | Why curse the body, any man''s body, as the root- ground of sin? |
10960 | Why should the slopes of Lactarius be less musical than those of Aetna? |
10960 | [ Footnote 1: Dequa saepe tibi, venit? |
10960 | ilia autem"quid me"inquit,"nutricula, torques? |
10960 | quid tantum properas nostros novisse furores? |
18781 | And who have hard hearts and obdurate minds, But vicious, harebrained, and illiterate hinds? |
18781 | Men foolishly do call it virtuous; What virtue is it that is born with us? |
18781 | O, what god would not therewith be appeased? |
18781 | Seek you for chastity, immortal fame, And know that some have wronged Diana''s name? |
18781 | So having paused a while at last she said,"Who taught thee rhetoric to deceive a maid? |
18781 | Tell me, to whom mad''st thou that heedless oath?" |
18781 | What difference betwixt the richest mine And basest mould, but use? |
18781 | What is it now, but mad Leander dares? |
18781 | Where both deliberate, the love is slight: Who ever loved, that loved not at first sight? |
18781 | Which being known( as what is hid from Jove?) |
18781 | Whose name is it, if she be false or not So she be fair, but some vile tongues will blot? |
18781 | Why art thou not in love, and loved of all? |
18781 | Why should you worship her? |
18781 | Why vowest thou then to live in Sestos here Who on Love''s seas more glorious wouldst appear? |
18781 | Wilt thou live single still? |
13885 | AT THE BALL GAME What gods or heroes, whose brave deeds none can dispute, Will you record, O Clio, on the harp and flute? |
13885 | But_ we_,--how do we train_ our_ youth? |
13885 | Do you bemoan Your side was stripped of oarage in the blast? |
13885 | For who doth croak Of being broke, Or who of warfare, after drinking? |
13885 | For whom amid the roses, many- hued, Do you bind back your tresses''yellow wave? |
13885 | For whom do you bind up your tresses, As spun- gold yellow,-- Meshes that go with your caresses, To snare a fellow? |
13885 | HE What if_ ma belle_ from favor fell, And I made up my mind to shake her; Would Lydia then come back again, And to her quondam love betake her? |
13885 | III A PARAPHRASE How happens it, my cruel miss, You''re always giving me the mitten? |
13885 | Long time ago( As well you know) I started in upon that carmen; My work was vain,-- But why complain? |
13885 | No longer you may hear them cry,"Why art thou, Lydia, lying In heavy sleep till morn is nigh, While I, your love, am dying?" |
13885 | Or why to men can not return The smooth cheeks of the boy?" |
13885 | Perchance you fear to do what may Bring evil to your race? |
13885 | SHE Before_ she_ came, that rival flame( Had ever mater saucier filia? |
13885 | Should a patron require you to paint a marine, Would you work in some trees with their barks on? |
13885 | TO MISTRESS PYRRHA I What perfumed, posie- dizened sirrah, With smiles for diet, Clasps you, O fair but faithless Pyrrha, On the quiet? |
13885 | TO MISTRESS PYRRHA II What dainty boy with sweet perfumes bedewed Has lavished kisses, Pyrrha, in the cave? |
13885 | TO POMPEIUS VARUS Pompey, what fortune gives you back To the friends and the gods who love you? |
13885 | TO THE SHIP OF STATE O ship of state Shall new winds bear you back upon the sea? |
13885 | Tell him that I am short and fat, Quick in my temper, soon appeased, With locks of gray,--but what of that? |
13885 | The chip is on my shoulder-- see? |
13885 | Was not the wine delicious cool Whose sweetness Pyrrha''s smile enhanced? |
13885 | What are you doing? |
13885 | What if the charming Chloe of the golden locks be shaken And slighted Lydia again glide through the open door? |
13885 | What lofty names shall sportive Echo grant a place On Pindus''crown or Helicon''s cool, shadowy space? |
13885 | When his strict orders are for a Japanese jar, Would you give him a pitcher like Clarkson? |
13885 | Where is your charm, and where your bloom and gait so firm and sensible, That drew my love from Cinara,--a lapse most indefensible? |
13885 | While the wine gets cool in yonder pool, Let''s spruce up nice and tidy; Who knows, old boy, But we may decoy The fair but furtive Lyde? |
13885 | Whilst thus the years of youth go by, Shall Colin languish, Strephon die? |
13885 | Why do I chase from place to place In weather wet and shiny? |
13885 | Why do I falter in my speech, O cruel Ligurine? |
13885 | Why down my nose forever flows The tear that''s cold and briny? |
13885 | Why indolently shock you us? |
13885 | Why with Lethean cups fall into desuetude innocuous?" |
13885 | Why, Mistress Chloe, do you bother With prattlings and with vain ado Your worthy and industrious mother, Eschewing them that come to woo? |
13885 | Why, even flow''rs change with the hours, And the moon has divers phases; And shall the mind Be racked to find A clew to Fortune''s mazes? |
13885 | You ask what means this grand display, This festive throng and goodly diet? |
13885 | You know the fate that overtook him? |
13885 | You see, your grief will cry:"Why in my youth could I not learn The wisdom men enjoy? |
13885 | and is it truth You love that fickle lady? |
13885 | nevermore? |
13885 | though favors I bestow Can not be called extensive, Who better than my friend should know That they''re at least expensive? |
12090 | Why, sir, said I, I hope you do n''t imagine I will go into a bad course of life? |
12090 | --Try what repentance can, what can it not? |
12090 | As I gained reputation in the forementioned character, is there any crime in acknowledging my obligation to Mr. Thomson? |
12090 | But then is the English a translation of the Latin? |
12090 | By this time the reader may be ready to cry out,''to what purpose is all this?'' |
12090 | Can a man who thinks so, justify a change, even if he thought both equally good? |
12090 | Come Rosalind, O come, for without thee What pleasure can the country have for me? |
12090 | If a divine should begin his sermon with a solemn prayer to Bacchus or Apollo, to Mars or Venus, what would the people think of their preacher? |
12090 | In this case, who would not spurn such mean Beings? |
12090 | Is chance a guilt, that my disast''rous heart, For mischief never meant, must ever smart? |
12090 | Is there a treachery like this in baseness, Recorded any where? |
12090 | Shall I tell you a secret? |
12090 | To whom it may reasonable be asked, has Virgil been most obliged? |
12090 | What frenzy in my bosom rag''d, And by what cure to be asswag''d? |
12090 | What gentle youth I would allure, Whom in my artful toils secure? |
12090 | Whether the Spleen is necessary or useful to the animal possessed of it? |
12090 | Yet what can it, when one_ can not repent._ Who does not see at once, the heaviest foot that ever trod can not wear out the everlasting flint? |
12090 | and was it his fault that Mr. Addison( for the first book of Homer was undoubtedly his) could not translate to please the public? |
12090 | could he be blamed for exerting all his abilities in so arduous a province? |
12090 | how ill I bore thy pleasing pain? |
12090 | may not gratitude, as well as vanity, be concerned in this relation? |
12090 | or rather does not think it sounds far better without it? |
12090 | or that he who does not think has no thoughts in him? |
12090 | or that repentance can avail nothing when a man has not repentance? |
12090 | or, am I unpardonable, though I should pride myself on his good opinion and friendship? |
12090 | what can it be? |
1974 | ''Did he go?'' |
1974 | Again, does the error touch the essentials of the poetic art, or some accident of it? |
1974 | For what were the business of a speaker, if the Thought were revealed quite apart from what he says? |
1974 | What, for example, would be the effect of the Oedipus of Sophocles, if it were cast into a form as long as the Iliad? |
1974 | Yet what difference is there between introducing such choral interludes, and transferring a speech, or even a whole act, from one play to another? |
15121 | All got towns? |
15121 | And what about it if it is? |
15121 | And you, Sir? |
15121 | Are you going to_ London_? |
15121 | Are you thinking of getting married yourself? |
15121 | But what town do you choose for Post? |
15121 | By the way, shall I see you at the orderly- room tomorrow before you go? 15121 Duty?" |
15121 | ER-- IS THERE ANYTHING YOU''D LIKE ME TO GET ON TO, SIR? |
15121 | Funerals are a fairly sound stunt, are n''t they? |
15121 | HI, MISSIE, WHAT BE YE DOIN''WI TRACE- HORSE BEHIND, AND A LOAD LIKE THAT? |
15121 | HOW MUCH IS IT TO THE MARBLE ARCH? |
15121 | Have you? |
15121 | How about funerals? |
15121 | I knew Macclesfield would be caught-- he''s so stately, is n''t he? 15121 I used to think him so haughty; now--""Albemarle Road-- don''t you want Albemarle Road?" |
15121 | Of course it takes forty- eight hours to buy a vacuum- cleaner, does n''t it? |
15121 | That''s all very nice,said the Stunt Pilot,"but the question at present before the meeting is how are we poor beggars to get any leave?" |
15121 | The 9.5? |
15121 | To- morrow? |
15121 | Town? 15121 What about a breach of promise case? |
15121 | What d''you mean by leave? 15121 What''s your town?" |
15121 | Why to- morrow particularly? |
15121 | Why? |
15121 | You, Sir? 15121 _ What_ duty?" |
15121 | *****[ Illustration:"THE BLOKE WOT PAINTED THAT KNEW''OW TO DO A BIT O''FOOD''OARDING, DIDN''T''E?"] |
15121 | *****[ Illustration:"WHAT MAKES YOUR HUSBAND SO CROSS THESE TIMES?" |
15121 | *****[ Illustration:_ Skinner._"WHAT ARE YOU DOING ABOUT THE RATIONING?" |
15121 | Are you all ready?" |
15121 | CAN I BE ANY USE?"] |
15121 | I do think this Society for the Abolition of Boredom in Public Conveyances is an excellent thing, do n''t you?" |
15121 | Mr. KING drawled out,"As_ The Times_ has stated that this gentleman was so appointed will its foreign circulation be stopped?" |
15121 | Now that we have towns for names, it will be far more friendly, wo n''t it? |
15121 | Oh, is n''t it fun? |
15121 | Pernambuco? |
15121 | SUDDENLY A CHEERY YOUNG VOICE SMOTE UPON HIS EAR:"WHAT''S UP, OLD CHAP? |
15121 | Suppose I manage to get mixed up in a breach of promise case, would n''t that do?" |
15121 | WOULD YOU LIKE A TRUE ONE NOW?" |
15121 | We had been such good friends all the evening-- how could I ever forget it? |
15121 | We never_ can_ be serious with each other after this, can we?" |
15121 | What train are you catching?" |
15121 | Where was the sense in it, where the justice, and when the deuce were they, any of them, going to get a chance at the bath- room? |
15121 | You wo n''t be away longer than forty- eight hours, I suppose?" |
15121 | _ Skinner._"FROM THE OUTSIDE OR THE INSIDE?"] |
19443 | 149 Who Shall Judge? |
19443 | And what is my reward for all This watchful care and earnest toil To train the youthful mind? |
19443 | Earthly scenes are worth preserving, Bitter though they sometimes be; Who would wish to sink in Lethe All the fruits of Memory? |
19443 | Have the people lost their honesty, Has the Nation sunk so low, That partisan strife can blind our eyes Till we know not friend from foe? |
19443 | Is there some stain whereby you are duly Debarred from the pleasures that should be your own? |
19443 | O who has not felt his gay heart beat with gladness, As forth he has wandered some morning in May? |
19443 | Tell me, yes, tell me, and tell me most truly, Is there just cause why your flight is alone? |
19443 | WHO KNOWS? |
19443 | WHO SHALL JUDGE? |
19443 | What scientist can ever tell The mainspring of all action, If all his reasons fail so prove Molecular attraction? |
19443 | [ Transcriber''s Note: The following errors in the original have been corrected in this version: WHO KNOWS? |
10681 | ; what''s new? |
10681 | ; what''s the latest poop?. |
10681 | ; what''s the latest? |
10681 | Heaven knows; who can tell? |
10681 | No kidding? |
10681 | OK, all right, might as well, why not? |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ G.], what''s in the wind?, what on earth?, when?, who?. |
10681 | [ Macbeth]; who can cloy the hungry edge of appetite? |
10681 | ], how now!, where am I? |
10681 | ], thinkest thou existence doth depend on time? |
10681 | ], who will watch the watchers? |
10681 | ]; What, drunk with choler? |
10681 | ]; and what not? |
10681 | ]; chi tace accousente[ It]; the public mind is the creation of the Master- Writers[ Disraeli]; you bet your sweet ass it is; what are we waiting for? |
10681 | ]; glory be to, honor be to? |
10681 | ]; qui vive? |
10681 | ]; what stronger breastplate than a heart untainted? |
10681 | airy tongues that syllable men''s names[ Milton]; what''s up? |
10681 | am I not a man and a brother? |
10681 | cui bono? |
10681 | how comes it, how is it, how happens it? |
10681 | how does it happen? |
10681 | little did one think, little did one expect; nobody would ever suppose, nobody would ever think, nobody would ever expect; who would have thought? |
10681 | never mind; Who cares? |
10681 | one''s bark being worse than his bite; beggars mounted run their horse to death[ Henry VI]; quid times? |
10681 | quaere? |
10681 | quis custodiet istos custodes? |
10681 | what art thou, thou idol ceremony? |
10681 | what next? |
10681 | what on earth!, what in the world!, What the devil!, Holy cow!, Can you top that? |
10681 | what''s the matter? |
10681 | whence? |
10681 | wherefore? |
10681 | who cares?, what difference does it make? |
10681 | who cares?, what difference does it make? |
10681 | who shall decide when doctors disagree? |
10681 | why? |
10681 | with friends like that, who needs enemies? |
11562 | 5 in a class of 27 children; what is his centesimal graduation? |
11562 | Are we to understand that it is the duty of man to be credulous in accepting whatever the priest in whose neighbourhood he happens to reside may say? |
11562 | As to the creatures called burkish, utrati( dromedaries? |
11562 | Can you at will cause your mental image of any or most of them to sit, stand, or turn slowly round? |
11562 | Can you easily form mental pictures from the descriptions of scenery that are so frequently met with in novels and books of travel? |
11562 | Can you mentally see more than three faces of a die, or more than one hemisphere of a globe at the same instant of time? |
11562 | Can you project an image upon a piece of paper? |
11562 | Have they varied much within your recollection? |
11562 | Have you ever mistaken a mental image for a reality when in health and wide awake? |
11562 | If so, explain fully, and say if you can account for the association? |
11562 | In which of these conflicting doctrines are we to place our faith if we are not to hear all sides, and to rely upon our own judgment in the end? |
11562 | Is it to believe whatever his parents may have lovingly taught him? |
11562 | Is its brightness comparable to that of the actual scene? |
11562 | Is its brightness comparable to that of the actual scene? |
11562 | Lastly, we are told to have faith in our conscience? |
11562 | One morning A rushed in saying,''Oh, mother, how are you?'' |
11562 | Or is it to have faith in what the wisest men of all ages have found peace in believing? |
11562 | Or_ is_ it B? |
11562 | She said,''When did you do this portrait of A? |
11562 | Since then the conditions of their lives have changed; what change of Nurture has produced the most variation? |
11562 | Subsequently during the night they(? |
11562 | The question remains, why do the lines of the Forms run in such strange and peculiar ways? |
11562 | Thus the interrogation"what?" |
11562 | What is the idea that the word"boat"would be likely to call up? |
11562 | What is the process by which they are established? |
11562 | When the act of retaining it becomes wearisome, in what part of the head or eye- ball is the fatigue felt? |
11562 | When you do so, does it grow brighter or dimmer? |
11562 | Where did the seal come from, and whither did it go? |
11562 | Who, for instance, ever succeeded in frowning away a mosquito, or in pacifying an angry wasp by a smile? |
11562 | Why is it not one in five or one in five hundred? |
11562 | _ At different ages_.--Do you recollect what your powers of visualising, etc., were in childhood? |
11562 | _ Command over images_.--Can you retain a mental picture steadily before the eyes? |
11562 | _ Comparison with reality_.--What difference do you perceive between a very vivid mental picture called up in the dark, and a real scene? |
11562 | _ Distance of images_.--Where do mental images appear to be situated? |
11562 | _ Illumination_.--Is the image dim or fairly clear? |
11562 | _ Illumination_.--Is the image dim or fairly clear? |
11562 | _ Music_.--Have you any aptitude for mentally recalling music, or for imagining it? |
11562 | _ Persons_.--Can you recall with distinctness the features of all near relations and many other persons? |
11562 | _ Scenery_.--Do you preserve the recollection of scenery with much precision of detail, and do you find pleasure in dwelling on it? |
11562 | replied the Emperor,''you do not see it? |
11562 | within the head, within the eye- ball, just in front of the eyes, or at a distance corresponding to reality? |
14856 | But what about the D.C.M.? |
14856 | Did it though? 14856 Did you hear that?" |
14856 | Do n''t you love him when he stands with his hands in his pockets? |
14856 | Harrison,I said anxiously after a determined struggle,"were you standing on the duckboards?" |
14856 | How many times have you seen this new piece? |
14856 | I SUPPOSE OLD HINDENBURG KNOWS WHAT HE''S ABOUT? |
14856 | Not quite bust up, is it? |
14856 | Poultry? |
14856 | Rrrrrobert,I said,"what like is the VON HINDENBURG line?" |
14856 | What did you like him best of all in? |
14856 | What was your business? |
14856 | What? |
14856 | Why should n''t he? |
14856 | ''_''Ave a banana?_''I yells, and out come ten of''em, cryin''for mercy. |
14856 | ( with bitter scorn of non- essentials)._"GOT YER WRIST- WATCH ALL RIGHT, I S''POSE?"] |
14856 | *****[ Illustration:_ Apollo._"I NEVER SAID NOTHING TO''ER-- DID I?" |
14856 | *****[ Illustration:_ Fond Teuton Parent( to super- tar home on leave)._"AND YOU LIKE YOUR SHIP, FRITZ?" |
14856 | *****[ Illustration:_ Landlord._"WHATEVER DID YOU LET THE FIRE OUT FOR? |
14856 | *****[ Illustration:_ Officer( to applicant for War- work)._"WHAT''S YOUR NAME?" |
14856 | And the people over the way?" |
14856 | And who was the subject of these eulogies? |
14856 | BEEN OUT IN THE LIFEBOAT OFTEN, MISS?"] |
14856 | But do I suppose that HINDENBURG ever wanted to fight, ever meant or ever means to do it? |
14856 | C. F. S.*****[ Illustration:"THINK WE''LL''AVE ANOTHER CUT AT THE''UNS BEFORE THE WAR ENDS, JACK?" |
14856 | CAN YOU TELL ME WHY I''VE HAD TO PAY A PENNY MORE FOR SCALLOPS TO- DAY?"] |
14856 | Call this cold? |
14856 | DID YOU SAY EIGHTEEN HOURS, OR WAS IT NINETEEN?"] |
14856 | Do n''t you remember him as the Prince at the LORD MAYOR''S Ball?" |
14856 | Edinburgh? |
14856 | How was that?" |
14856 | How would it be if you was to lay the fire over- night and scrub over the floor? |
14856 | I took a map with me and, calling his attention to the general position, asked him what about it? |
14856 | IT MAKES SOME OF US OLDER ONES FEEL A BIT MUFTI, DON''T IT?"] |
14856 | Inhale the Wisconsin aroma Or think as the Humanist thinks? |
14856 | It was such a very unusual greeting from this source that I said anxiously,"Not the leg gone wrong?" |
14856 | New? |
14856 | OFF TO ADMIRALTY, I SUPPOSE?" |
14856 | Or, if Eton by then is suppressed, Be sent to grow apples or wheat on A ranche in the ultimate West? |
14856 | Quite so, I agreed; but then what about the line? |
14856 | Same with''''Ave a banana?'' |
14856 | To Lunnon? |
14856 | WHAT I SHOULD LIKE TO KNOW IS, WHERE ARE THEY TO COME FROM?" |
14856 | WHY DIDN''T YOU PUT SOME COALS ON?" |
14856 | Was it really chicken- pox?" |
14856 | Was n''t that rotten luck?" |
14856 | Wha''s chief? |
14856 | What d''ye see? |
14856 | Whaur did our good EX- PREMIER go Whene''er he wished to swank? |
14856 | When I calls''''Oo sez a blood orange?'' |
14856 | Will you aim at a modern diploma In civics or commerce or stinks? |
14856 | Will you learn Esperanto at Eton? |
14856 | Will you learn to play tennis from COVEY Or model your stroke on JAY GOULD? |
14856 | Will you play the piano like TOVEY Or by gramophone records be schooled? |
14856 | _ First Wretched Islander to Second Wretched Islander._"DOES THIS VISIT INTRIGUE YOU?"] |
14856 | _ Second Flapper._"AND WHAT DID YOU DO?" |
14856 | _ Wine Steward( acting as one of Ammunition Supply Party)._"WILL YOU TAKE LYDDITE OR SHRAPNEL, SIR?"] |
16424 | _ Ought_ not the Christ to have suffered these things? |
16424 | And may they not be correct? |
16424 | Are our lives merely fertilizer for generations yet unborn? |
16424 | Are we all self- deceived? |
16424 | But can we be content with no personal share in it? |
16424 | But in such a sentence what possible meaning can be put into the expression"His beloved"? |
16424 | But is this emparadised life to be some day thrown aside? |
16424 | Can a mere imagination compass such results? |
16424 | Can life''s highest values be so dealt with? |
16424 | Do we know God in the Son? |
16424 | Do we know God in the Spirit? |
16424 | Do we know Him as our Father? |
16424 | Have we entered into the fulness of their fellowship with God? |
16424 | His keenness of conscience and His acute sympathy brought to His lips the final cry,"My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" |
16424 | How could He, if He be the living God? |
16424 | How far may we trust our experience as validating the inferences we draw from it? |
16424 | How shall we account for His singular personality? |
16424 | How shall we conceive the union in Him of the Divine and the human, which we have discovered? |
16424 | How shall we test the validity of the inference we draw from our experience? |
16424 | If a man loves God with his all, how can there be any remainder of love to devote to someone else? |
16424 | If they are simply ours, who knows what will come of them? |
16424 | In all our advances in religious knowledge are we not liable to undergo Fallings from us, vanishings, Blank misgivings of the creature? |
16424 | Is it likely that, were God a mere fancy, a fancy which we should promptly discard if we knew it as such, our experience could be what it is? |
16424 | Is not every new unveiling of God accompanied by unsettlements and seeming darkenings of the soul, temporary obscurations of the Divine Face? |
16424 | Is there not something analogous to this in the sphere of the spirit? |
16424 | It must never ask itself,"Will the community support me?" |
16424 | Look at the generations of old, and see: Who did ever put his trust in the Lord, and was ashamed? |
16424 | May not our experiences be accounted for in some other way? |
16424 | May we not be in a subjective prison from whose walls words and prayers rebound without outer effect? |
16424 | More than this who cares to know? |
16424 | More than this, for what can Christians wish? |
16424 | Of a book? |
16424 | Or who did abide in His fear, and was forsaken? |
16424 | Or who did call upon Him, and He despised him? |
16424 | Shall we question the correctness of Jesus''personal experience, and call Him mistaken? |
16424 | The second question was asked even during Jesus''lifetime--"Whence hath this Man these things?" |
16424 | The third question, How are we to conceive of the union of Deity and humanity in Him? |
16424 | Three chief questions suggest themselves to us: How shall we picture Jesus''present life? |
16424 | To every thoughtful person the question is forced home,"If a man die, shall he live again?" |
16424 | Was the faith which produced them, the faith which inspired Him, an hallucination? |
16424 | What did Jesus Christ contribute towards answering our question? |
16424 | What should be read? |
16424 | What takes Jesus Christ to that tragic death? |
16424 | Who decides me there? |
16424 | Why did He give up the opportunities of a life that was so incalculably serviceable, and apparently court death? |
16424 | Why, they ask, should we care what took place in Palestine centuries ago? |
16424 | all power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth, go ye therefore and make disciples of all nations"? |
16424 | but"Can I inspire the community?" |
10214 | -----------------"Further still, it may be said, where will be the venerableness of your boasted science about divine natures? |
10214 | ------------------- In what manner then, says Syrianus, do ideas subsist according to the contemplative lovers of truth? |
10214 | And can he know this without knowing as much of those natures as it is possible for him to know? |
10214 | And can this be effected without knowing what are the natures which he surpasses, and what those are by which he is surpassed? |
10214 | And especially what indigence will there be of that which is subordinate? |
10214 | And if it be replied, Because it is a triangle; we may again inquire, But why because a triangle? |
10214 | And is not the pure the cause of the commingled? |
10214 | And what will be the generation of second from first natures? |
10214 | And what wonder is there, says Syrianus, if we should separate things which are so much distant from each other? |
10214 | And will the objector be hardy enough to say that every man is equal to this arduous task? |
10214 | And, if this be the case, what will that be which leads them to union with each other? |
10214 | But as these divine causes act for their own sake, and on account of their own goodness, do they not exhibit the final cause? |
10214 | But can any thing either belong to, or be affirmed of that, which is not? |
10214 | But how is this possible? |
10214 | But where will be the coordination of intellectuals to intelligibles? |
10214 | But who are the men by whom these latter interpreters of Plato are reviled? |
10214 | Can this be accomplished by every man? |
10214 | Do you not perceive what a length of sea separates you from the royal coast? |
10214 | Does it therefore move itself from one impulse to another? |
10214 | For how is it possible, it should not be indigent also so far as it is the one? |
10214 | For what will there be which does not participate of being? |
10214 | For whence can good be imparted, to all things, but from divinity? |
10214 | How can it? |
10214 | Is it not, however, here necessary to attend to the conception of Plato, that the united is not the one itself, but that which is passive[2] to it? |
10214 | Is then that which accedes the principle? |
10214 | Is therefore that which is properly self- moved the principle, and is it indigent of no form more excellent than itself? |
10214 | Is this then the principle of things? |
10214 | Let us consider then if the immovable is the most proper principle? |
10214 | May we not say, that this, if it is the united, will be secondary to the one, and that by participating of the one it becomes the united? |
10214 | Or can any one properly know himself without knowing the rank he holds in the scale of being? |
10214 | Or is it in a certain respect these, and in a certain respect not? |
10214 | Or is not this also, one and many, whole and parts, containing in itself, things first, middle, and last? |
10214 | Or may we not say that all things subsist in the one according to the one? |
10214 | Or was it because some heavy German critic, who knew nothing beyond a verb in mi, presumed to grunt at these venerable heroes? |
10214 | Shall we say then that body itself is the principle of the first essence? |
10214 | Shall we then say that it is the most perfect principle? |
10214 | Shall we, therefore, in the next place, direct our attention to the most simple of beings, which Plato calls the one being,[ Greek: en on]? |
10214 | Was it when the fierce champions for the trinity fled from Galilee to the groves of Academus, and invoked, but in vain, the assistance of Philosophy? |
10214 | When and whence did this defamation originate? |
10214 | Whence is it then that the dianoetic power concludes thus confidently that the Proposition is true of all triangles? |
10214 | Whence then does it derive the power of abiding? |
10214 | Whence then does it simply obtain the power of abiding? |
10214 | Whence therefore does the world derive its being? |
10214 | Whether however is it known and effable, or unknown and ineffable? |
10214 | Which of these therefore is by nature prior? |
10214 | or it is moved by something else, as, for instance, by the whole rational soul in the universe? |
12641 | But all this glory and activity of our age; what are they owing to, but to freedom of thought? |
12641 | And you think that is no affair of yours? |
12641 | Are these not enough? |
12641 | But what directs its vascular threads? |
12641 | But what does the sunrise itself signify to us? |
12641 | Could Bill Sykes have done it? |
12641 | Do you think a vicious person eats less than an honest one? |
12641 | Do you think an old Roman would have liked such a piece of filigree work? |
12641 | Does your ordinary English householder know that every costly dinner he gives has destroyed forever as much money as it is worth? |
12641 | Have I not, even as it is, learned much by many of my errors?" |
12641 | Have we, indeed, desired the Desire of all nations? |
12641 | How far, then, have we got in our list of the merits of Greek art now? |
12641 | How many of them have taught it? |
12641 | How of the earth itself? |
12641 | If it be, do the public know it? |
12641 | If you take the wrong cup or the wrong berry, you will die before the day is over, but you will have acquired the dignity of a Free child?" |
12641 | Is there, indeed, no tongue, except the mute forked flash from its lips, in that running brook of horror on the ground? |
12641 | Jupiter pities him and says to her,"''Daughter mine, are you forsaking your own soldier, and do n''t you care for Achilles any more? |
12641 | Or, of modern handicraftsmen, do you think a burglar, or a brute, or a pickpocket could have carved it? |
12641 | Seek for it, in five fibres or in three? |
12641 | Seek for it, in serration, or in sweeping curves? |
12641 | Seek for it, in servile tendrils, or impetuous spray? |
12641 | Seek for it, in woolen wrinkles rough with stings, or in glossy surfaces, green with pure strength, and winterless delight? |
12641 | Shall I not know the world best by trying the wrong of it, and repenting? |
12641 | So we come back to the question,--if the face is to be like a man''s face, why is not the lion''s mane to be like a lion''s mane? |
12641 | That rivulet of smooth silver, how does it flow, think you? |
12641 | Then what are the merits of this Greek art, which make it so exemplary for you? |
12641 | What do we mean by talking of the faults of a picture, or the merits of a piece of stone? |
12641 | What do you think this helmet of lion''s hide is always given to Hercules for? |
12641 | What does all that mean? |
12641 | What does it matter how it is conveyed? |
12641 | What is this"primo mobile,"this transitional power, in which all things live, and move, and have their being? |
12641 | What made him take pleasure in the low color that is only like the brown of a dead leaf? |
12641 | What made them seek for it thus? |
12641 | What made them want that? |
12641 | What was this Nemean Lion, whose spoils were evermore to cover Hercules from the cold? |
12641 | Where do they get it from? |
12641 | Who has paid for their dinner and their pot? |
12641 | Whose cash is it then they are spending? |
12641 | Why do you suppose Milton calls him"sage"? |
12641 | Why that horror? |
12641 | Why, what is"employment"but the putting out of vital force instead of mechanical force? |
12641 | Will you not interfere with it now, when the infection that they venomous idol spreads is not merely death, but sin? |
12641 | Yet of the two, would we rather be watch- dog or fly? |
12641 | You think that puts the case too sharply? |
12641 | You would interfere with the idolatry then, straightway? |
12641 | a wayward youth might perhaps answer, incredulously,"no one ever gets wiser by doing wrong? |
12641 | and that every family ought to watch over and subdue its own living plague? |
12641 | and what real belief the Greek had in these creations of his own spirit, practical and helpful to him in the sorrow of earth? |
12641 | in the cold gray of dawn-- in the one white flower among the rocks-- in these-- and no more than these? |
12641 | or that Michael Angelo would have spent his time in twisting these stems of roses in and out? |
12641 | or that it is cheaper to keep a bad man drunk, than a good man sober? |
12641 | or the Dodger, dexterous with finger and tool? |
12641 | or what is motion? |
18125 | Are n''t these people wonderful? 18125 Are we downhearted?" |
18125 | Did you ever see anything like it? |
18125 | Do you think a poor, bankrupt, starving, ragged neighbor as desirable as a healthy, solvent, fat, well- clothed one? |
18125 | For what avail the plow or sail, Or land or life, if freedom fail? |
18125 | Have you a bed here? |
18125 | What is good? 18125 What is happiness? |
18125 | Where is----? |
18125 | Who dies if England lives? |
18125 | And how has it all come about? |
18125 | And what does America know about these movements on the European chessboard, and upon what basis should she aspire to be arbiter or peace adviser? |
18125 | But what do we think when we find that Germany has for years run a boycott against every American enterprise? |
18125 | CHAPTER XIV IS IT THE PEOPLE''S WAR? |
18125 | Did you ever see such resolution, such steady work, such sacrifices, such unity of empire?" |
18125 | Do you wish to tempt us?" |
18125 | For justice, freedom, right, what wrought? |
18125 | Had he a right individually to shoot a German invader? |
18125 | Had not all the poets given Him the German countenance and complexion, even light hair and blue eyes? |
18125 | Have we not seen that the British Empire has still some interest in the Panama canal? |
18125 | He responded promptly,"Certainly I am, but would not the boys on the floor of the Exchange be astonished to see me in this uniform?" |
18125 | I said,"Are you still an American citizen?" |
18125 | I said,"Were there not men enough here to do this work?" |
18125 | IS IT THE PEOPLE''S WAR? |
18125 | If the Germans were free to map England, why should they not be free to map all its resources, individually as well as collectively? |
18125 | Is it not just as neutral to purchase German bonds from the Germans as to purchase ships or our own railroad shares from Germany? |
18125 | Is it to be assumed that with the new development for Africa and Asia, Europe is going to abandon her interest on the continents of America? |
18125 | It is worth a winter trip across the Atlantic to stand with a London audience and hear it respond to the call,"Are we downhearted?" |
18125 | Now who in Washington knows anything about Mesopotamia or the Bagdad railroad? |
18125 | Should a citizen without uniform take up arms against the invaders? |
18125 | The American lady quickly asked,"Has the Kaiser been assassinated?" |
18125 | They say,"Are not the German people great thinkers; do they not know that the power of government is from the governed?" |
18125 | Were they not at war, and if Germany were able, should she not possess them? |
18125 | What might be the position of Germany if the American protective tariff system were expanded over the earth? |
18125 | Why should fifty or a hundred million in gold be sent across the ocean in the spring, to be returned in the fall? |
18125 | Will not the very force of these developments make a foundation for European developments in North and South America? |
13074 | And that ere arf- crown? |
13074 | But why has n''t a brick any fluidity? |
13074 | His conversation-- sparkling but ever spiritual-- renders our modest meals veritable feasts of fancy and flows of soul..._ Well_, GALAHAD? 13074 My lad,"he said, with a certain calm dignity,"will you be so good as to black both my legs for me-- at once?" |
13074 | The horther? 13074 Well-- er--_why_ has n''t it?" |
13074 | What are you waiting there for? |
13074 | What is it? |
13074 | What''s the use,they ask,"of winning Hartlepool out of doors, if things are so managed that we are made ridiculous within?" |
13074 | Who''s for SHORE? |
13074 | Why do n''t you come in and hear SWINBURNE make one or two speeches on Tithes Bill? |
13074 | Why has n''t a brick any fluidity? |
13074 | Yes, quite so, and-- er-- er-- has a brick fluidity? |
13074 | ''s shoulders are convulsed._) What the dooce are you giggling at_ now_? |
13074 | ( How often have I told you that I will_ not_ have the handle of that paper- knife sucked? |
13074 | ( Why the devil do n''t you learn to write decently, eh?) |
13074 | ***** WHAT DO_ YOU_ THINK? |
13074 | *****[ Illustration:"RETIRE!--WHAT DO_ YOU_ THINK?"] |
13074 | --(_Two_ f''s in difficulties, you little fool-- can''t you even_ spell_?) |
13074 | Although I think that must be why My brain has ever since been teeming; But tell me( if you can) am I At present mad, or_ was_ I dreaming? |
13074 | And where are you?" |
13074 | And why do you think I put in the water first and the whiskey afterwards?" |
13074 | Are they? |
13074 | Are you ready? |
13074 | Been to the Guelph Exhibition? |
13074 | But I''m like that"Awful Dad,"Though this makes my rivals mad, Do n''t true Gladdyites feel glad? |
13074 | But the Bishop-- what of him? |
13074 | But they wanted them for the one at the Tower, do n''t you know, and as for the Koh- i- Noor, was_ that_ invented in his time? |
13074 | But, MONARCH, dear, would that be quite_ fair_? |
13074 | But, possibly, my wish to have these legs of mine disguised by your pigments, strikes you as bizarre, if not positively eccentric? |
13074 | By the way, do you take much interest in the subjects we have been discussing? |
13074 | Can it possibly have been written by that amiable and instructive authoress whose stories for children have recently been reprinted? |
13074 | Can you tell me what I mean?" |
13074 | Can you tell me why that is so? |
13074 | Could it be? |
13074 | DEAR MR. PUNCH,--Why should ARISTOTLE be the only author whose works get discovered? |
13074 | Did his ears deceive him, or was this the end of the famous BRADLAUGH incidents? |
13074 | Do you happen to have such a thing as change for a five- pound note about you?" |
13074 | Do you think it''s all right?" |
13074 | Eh? |
13074 | Have you anything to say to_ that_, GALAHAD? |
13074 | How will he manage it? |
13074 | I do n''t know the place-- isn''t it somewhere in America? |
13074 | I see there''s been a row in Chili-- what do you think about it? |
13074 | I suppose they will be useful for change? |
13074 | If I can not expect to win the prize without descending to floweriness, whose fault is_ that_, I should like to know? |
13074 | Is it a voice Calling-- again-- again, Or a fragrance to make my heart rejoice From the sunlit land of Spain? |
13074 | Is my pose not marked by ease? |
13074 | M.-J._ Only_ what_? |
13074 | My love? |
13074 | Now what would happen if I drank this curious mixture?" |
13074 | Now, CHARLIE, when you eat or drink anything, where does it go?" |
13074 | Oh, then it''s a mistake their quarrelling, as I suppose it will be hard upon the poor, especially during the winter? |
13074 | Or, quitting both ships, will they land on common ground? |
13074 | Retire,--and leave things thus? |
13074 | Should he pass over this last indignity? |
13074 | Stay, was n''t it discovered by Captain COOK, or DRAKE, or somebody? |
13074 | The close and daily scrutiny of many years has discovered"--(What are you shaking like_ that_ for?) |
13074 | They imagine"Mr. Fox"Has delivered such hard knocks That_ impasse_ my pathway blocks!-- What do_ you_ think? |
13074 | What do you think of him?" |
13074 | What do you think? |
13074 | What do_ you_ think? |
13074 | What do_ you_ think? |
13074 | Why make a fuss? |
13074 | Why omit the"Mr."? |
13074 | Will it be long, then-- long? |
13074 | Will those in the York ship join the Canterbury, or_ vice versâ_? |
13074 | With such a Consort, am I not doubly crowned?''" |
19164 | You can not travel in Greece? |
19164 | _ Must it be then only with our poets that we insist they shall either create for us the image of a noble morality, or among us create none? 19164 And if Miranda is immoral to Caliban, is that Miranda''s fault? 19164 Could it not be sung at all, or only sung ludicrously? 19164 Do you think the+ mênis Achilêos+ came of a hard heart in Achilles, or thePallas te hoc vulnere, Pallas,"of a hard heart in Anchises''son? |
19164 | First: What ground have we for thinking that art has ever been inspired as a message or revelation? |
19164 | If, in such times, fair pictures have been misused, how much more fair realities? |
19164 | Is there to be no king in it, think you, and every man to do that which is right in his own eyes? |
19164 | Next, what does that Greek opposition of black and white mean? |
19164 | Now, is not this a work which we may set about here in Oxford, with good hope and much pleasure? |
19164 | One kingdom;--but who is to be its king? |
19164 | Or only kings of terror, and the obscene empires of Mammon and Belial? |
19164 | These figures, he says,"Raphael drew and sent to Albert Dürer in Nürnberg, to show him"--What? |
19164 | This is grievous, you think, and hopeless? |
19164 | What internal evidence is there in the work of great artists of their having been under the authoritative guidance of supernatural powers? |
19164 | What is the purpose of your decoration? |
19164 | Which of us knows what the valley of Sparta is like, or the great mountain vase of Arcadia? |
19164 | Whom will_ you_ be governing by your thoughts, two thousand years hence? |
19164 | Would it not be well to know this? |
19164 | Yes, but of which king? |
19164 | which of us, except in mere airy syllabling of names, knows aught of"sandy Ladon''s lilied banks, or old Lycæus, or Cyllene hoar"? |
12286 | And what if I were to give you a fine tie- wig to wear on May- day? |
12286 | Did you ever see a fairy''s funeral, Madam? |
12286 | Do you hear him? |
12286 | Do you know the proper name of this flower? |
12286 | Pray, what is it you mean by the contrasts? |
12286 | Pray,said some one to Pope,"what is this_ Asphodel_ of Homer?" |
12286 | ''My dear Charlotte, where did you get?'' |
12286 | ''Twas but a moment-- o''er the rose A veil of moss the Angel throws, And robed in Nature''s simple weed, Could there a flower that rose exceed? |
12286 | --"''Tis the colouring then?" |
12286 | --"Should not variety be one of the rules?" |
12286 | And what more noble than the vernal furze With golden caskets hung? |
12286 | And who is there here that does not sometimes recal some of those feelings which were his solace perhaps thirty years ago? |
12286 | Are we to seek for happiness in ignorance? |
12286 | Bid the tree Unfix his earth- bound root? |
12286 | But is it not also the child of Nature?--of Nature and Art together? |
12286 | But might we not with equal justice say that every thing excellent and beautiful and precious has named itself_ a flower_? |
12286 | But who would not loathe or laugh at such manifest affectation or such thoroughly bad taste? |
12286 | Familiar as it must be to all lovers of poetry, who will object to read it again and again? |
12286 | For this lily Where can it hang but it Cyane''s breast? |
12286 | For valour is not love a Hercules, Still climbing trees in the Hesperides? |
12286 | If these names are unpronounceable even by Europeans, what would the poor Hindu malee make of them? |
12286 | Is intellect or reason then so fatal, though sublime a gift that we can not possess it without the poisonous alloy of care? |
12286 | Its price?'' |
12286 | Must grief and ingratitude inevitably find entrance into the heart, in proportion to the loftiness and number of our mental endowments? |
12286 | Of this hedge, he was particularly proud, and he exultantly asks,"Is there under heaven a more glorious and refreshing object of the kind?" |
12286 | Or court the forest- glades? |
12286 | Say, shall we wind Along the streams? |
12286 | See on that floweret''s velvet breast, How close the busy vagrant lies? |
12286 | Shakespeare could not have anticipated this triumph of art when he made Macbeth ask Who can impress the forest? |
12286 | THE SUN- FLOWER Who can unpitying see the flowery race Shed by the morn then newflushed bloom resign, Before the parching beam? |
12286 | Than when we with attention look Upon the third day''s volume of the book? |
12286 | The spirit paused in silent thought What grace was there the flower had not? |
12286 | There is a blessing on the spot The poor man decks-- the sun delighteth To smile upon each homely plot, And why? |
12286 | What a melancholy privilege, and yet is there one amongst us who would lose it? |
12286 | What can''st thou boast Of things long since, or any thing ensuing? |
12286 | What charms has the village now for the gentleman just arrived from India? |
12286 | What climate is without its peculiar evils? |
12286 | What face remains alive that''s worth the viewing? |
12286 | What is the cottage of his birth to him? |
12286 | What more would the dedicator have wished Thomson to say? |
12286 | What shall I say of Cincinnatus, Cato, Tully, and many such? |
12286 | Where does the wisdom and the power divine In a more bright and sweet reflection shine? |
12286 | Where hath her smile So stirred man''s inmost nature? |
12286 | Where''s the spot She loveth more than thy small isle, Queen of the sea? |
12286 | Who that has once read, can ever forget his harmonious and pathetic address to a mountain daisy on turning it up with the plough? |
12286 | Whose tongue is music now? |
12286 | Why should not an opulent Rajah or Nawaub send for a cargo of beautiful red gravel from the gravel pits at Kensington? |
12286 | Why should we, in the compass of a pale, Keep law, and form, and due proportion, Showing, as in a model, our firm estate? |
12286 | Why then should he revisit his native place? |
12286 | Yet why deplore This change of doom? |
12286 | [ 002] What a quick succession of lovely landscapes greeted the eye on either side? |
12286 | [ 049] What is the reason that an easterly wind is every where unwholesome and disagreeable? |
12286 | _ Could I touch A Rose with my white hand, but it became Redder at once?_ Another poet. |
12286 | _ Em._--That was a fair boy certain, but a fool To love himself, were there not maids, Or are they all hard hearted? |
12286 | _ Emilia_--This garden hath a world of pleasure in it, What flower is this? |
12286 | and pray what was this phoenix like?'' |
12286 | bless your honor, my master wo nt let me go out on May- day,""Why not?" |
12286 | how many hearts By lust of gold to thy dim temples brought In happier hours have scorned the prize they sought? |
12286 | or ascend, While radiant Summer opens all its pride, Thy hill, delightful Shene[026]? |
12286 | or walk the smiling mead? |
12286 | or wander wild Among the waving harvests? |
12286 | was he a better painter of nature than Shakespeare? |
12286 | where shall poverty reside, To scape the pressure of contiguous pride? |
12286 | who could gaze on thee Untouched by tender thoughts, and glimmering dreams Of long- departed years? |
12286 | writes Jeremy Bentham to a lady- friend,"and the signification of its name? |
20356 | And who, like earth, would spend that dower of heaven, With rank desire to joy it all at first? |
20356 | At last he came: O, who can tell the greeting These greedy lovers had at their first meeting? |
20356 | Men foolishly do call it virtuous: What virtue is it, that is born with us? |
20356 | Perhaps thy sacred priesthood makes thee loath: Tell me, to whom mad''st thou that heedless oath?" |
20356 | Seek you, for chastity, immortal fame, And know that some have wrong''d Diana''s name? |
20356 | So having paus''d a while, at last she said,"Who taught thee rhetoric to deceive a maid? |
20356 | Then said her Cupid- prompted spirit:"Shall I Sing moans to such delightsome harmony? |
20356 | Thou long time his love did know; Why shouldst thou not use him best? |
20356 | Vessels of brass, oft handed, brightly shine: What difference betwixt the richest mine And basest mould, but use? |
20356 | What man does good, but he consumes thereby? |
20356 | What shall I do? |
20356 | Where both deliberate, the love is slight: Who ever lov''d, that lov''d not at first sight? |
20356 | Whose name is it, if she be false or not, So she be fair, but some vile tongues will blot? |
20356 | Why in your priest, then, call you that offence, That shines in you, and is your influence?" |
20356 | Why should you worship her? |
20356 | Wilt thou live single still? |
20356 | _ Dick._ Fie, Nan, why use thy old lover so, For any other new- come guest? |
20356 | _ Dick._ Fie, lusty younker, what do you here, Not dancing on the green to- day? |
20356 | _ Fool._ And saw you not[ my] Nan to- day, My mother''s maid have you not seen? |
20356 | _ Gentleman._ How say you, sweet, will you dance with me? |
20356 | hath heaven''s strait fingers no more graces For such as Hero than for homeliest faces? |
13325 | Then again how are they disabled by the wasp, and yet not injured so as to cause their immediate death? 13325 & V._? Priacanthus Blochii,_ Bleek_. 13325 & V._? ramak,_ Forsk._ opercularis,_ C. 13325 (? Blævis,_ iGray_, in Index Testaceologicus.) 13325 (?) 13325 ), the kangewena, or unicorn fish(_ Balistes?_), and a number of others, are more or less in bad repute from the same imputation.] 13325 *? relictus,_ Wlk_. 13325 ----? 13325 9-maculata,_ Fabr_.? 13325 ? Thynnus affinis,_ Ca nt._ Cybium Commersonii,_ Lacép._ guttatum,_ Schn._ Naucrates ductor,_ L._ Elacate nigra,_ Bl._? n. 13325 ? Thynnus affinis,_ Ca nt._ Cybium Commersonii,_ Lacép._ guttatum,_ Schn._ Naucrates ductor,_ L._ Elacate nigra,_ Bl._? n. 13325 ? Uranoscopus guttatus,_ C. 13325 ? hebes,_ Wlk_. 13325 ? panops,_ Wlk_. 13325 Amsacta? 13325 Camptorhinus,_ Schön_.? 13325 Can it be that the latter avoid the path, on discovering this evidence of the proximity of recent passengers?] 13325 Can it be that they thus assemble in groups in the hills for the sake of accumulated warmth at the cool altitude of 4000 feet? 13325 Can this have reference to the peculiarity of the stomach for retaining a supply of water? 13325 Cimex,_ Linn._ lectularius,_ Linn._? 13325 Crysophrys hasta,_ Bl._? Pimelepterus Ternatensis,_ Bleek_. 13325 Cucujus? 13325 Debaani?,_ Jek_. 13325 Do they, too, take asummer sleep,"like the reptiles, molluscs, and tank fishes? |
13325 | Dussumieri_? |
13325 | Forficula,_ Linn._------? |
13325 | Gymnoplistia? |
13325 | Hemiteles?,_ Grav_. |
13325 | How then does the enclosed fly always select the right end, and with what secretion is it supplied to decompose this mortar?"] |
13325 | Ichthyology of Ceylon, little known Fish for table, seir fish Sardines, poisonous? |
13325 | Is it a fact that, in America, pigs extirpate the rattlesnakes with impunity?] |
13325 | Is the sense of smell sufficient to account for this display of instinct in them? |
13325 | Ixodes...? |
13325 | Lumbricus...? |
13325 | Nephila...? |
13325 | Oribata...? |
13325 | Osorius? |
13325 | P-- n. s.][ Footnote 2:_ Gelasimus tetragonon_? |
13325 | Peneus...? |
13325 | Steaopus...? |
13325 | TENEBRIONIDÆ,_ Leach._ Zophobas,_ Dej._ errans? |
13325 | Tachina? |
13325 | Thalamlta...? |
13325 | There are many other species of the Coccus tribe in Ceylon, some( Pseudococcus?) |
13325 | Whence do they re- appear? |
13325 | [ 1][ Footnote 1: Rhinolophus affinis? |
13325 | [ 2][ Footnote 1:_ Culex laniger?_ Wied. |
13325 | [ Footnote 1: A Singhalese variety of the_ Rana cutipora?_ and the Malabar bull- frog,_ Hylarana Malabarica_. |
13325 | [ Footnote 2:_ Pentaceros?_]_ Sea Slugs_.--There are a few species of_ Holothuria_, of which the trepang is the best known example. |
13325 | _ Alpheus_...? |
13325 | _ Cardisoma_...? |
13325 | _ Dromia_...? |
13325 | _ Grayii_? |
13325 | _ Porcellana_...? |
13325 | _ Squilla_...? |
13325 | affinis,_ N.S.__ Crangon_...? |
13325 | ambiguus,_ Sch_.? |
13325 | annulipes_? |
13325 | compressum? |
13325 | cucullata? |
13325 | extensicollis,? |
13325 | goudotti?_ Bennett.] |
13325 | histrio,_ Fabr_., var.? |
13325 | lateralis,_ Fabr_.? |
13325 | longicollis? |
13325 | molossus? |
13325 | or is it aided by special organs in the case of the others? |
13325 | punctiger? |
13325 | semipunctatus,_ Fabr._ Platysoma,_ Leach._ atratum? |
13325 | transmarinus,_ Herbst_.? |
12852 | And who is it now? |
12852 | How did this all first come to be you? 12852 Who is that?" |
12852 | 8? |
12852 | But how did he get that intelligence? |
12852 | But how much worse is it when we consider-- what criterion does mankind possess for disinterring and distinguishing the elements of truth? |
12852 | But looking at the Genesis narrative, who could suppose it to be a parable? |
12852 | But need it always be so made? |
12852 | But what possible reason have they for this conclusion? |
12852 | But why should there be a second narrative at all? |
12852 | Can all these things happen_ without_ such aid? |
12852 | Can it be believed, then, that protoplasm, as the origin of life, is self- caused, and self- developed? |
12852 | Can it be that the professor has for the moment overlooked one very simple fact? |
12852 | First of all, how did any_ substance_, however vapoury and tenuous, come to exist, when previously there was nothing? |
12852 | Here we must stop to ask how this protoplasm, or simplest form of organic life, came to exist? |
12852 | Here, then, he could distinguish and perhaps name the species; but what more was to be done? |
12852 | How are we to understand what was meant by the Tree of Life or the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, or by the Serpent speaking and beguiling Eve? |
12852 | How did he come to place_ birds_ along with fish and water monsters, and not separately?] |
12852 | How did he get to formulate the idea of a_ God_ when he had simplified his group of many spirits into one? |
12852 | How did it get its_ life_--its property of taking nourishment, of growing and of giving birth to other creatures like itself? |
12852 | How did man get the idea of a personal spirit or double-- no such thing,_ ex hypothesi_ existing? |
12852 | How does such a delicate ornament answer the demands of mere conspicuousness? |
12852 | How is it, then, that this is not the case? |
12852 | How so? |
12852 | How then can it exist in animals? |
12852 | How, for instance, are we told of the temptation and fall of man? |
12852 | If the_ days_ of Genesis mean indefinite periods of aeonian duration, how is the seventh_ day_ of rest to be understood? |
12852 | If this bee became extinct, the plant would die out; how can such a development be advantageous to it? |
12852 | Is it, for instance, the experience of the mass of men, as men, that the"fleshly mind is death, but the spiritual mind is life and peace"? |
12852 | Is not such a production and such a design the true essence of Creation? |
12852 | Is the account in the Book of Genesis true? |
12852 | Lastly, how are we to account for the beauty of autumnal tints in woods, or coloured_ leaves_ in plants such as the_ Caladium_? |
12852 | May I make one remark on this interesting science tournament? |
12852 | Now, in any case, the writer could have had no knowledge of any kind_ of his own_ on the subject: how did he hit on this particular arrangement? |
12852 | Was"bdellium"( as probably being a fragrant gum) one of these offerings? |
12852 | What is the cause, what is the purpose, what is the plan in the scheme of nature, of these structures? |
12852 | Why are they fanatics, Sisyphus- labourers, and what not? |
12852 | Why is Professor Huxley so angry or so contemptuous with people who value the Bible, whole and as it stands, and want to see its accuracy vindicated? |
12852 | Why is that? |
12852 | Why is the dental formula of the_ viverrinae_ different? |
12852 | Why not any other animal, or a nondescript-- a form which no zoologist could place, recognize, or classify? |
12852 | Why should stags shed their horns also, leaving them defenceless for a time? |
12852 | Why should the Jews have received that truth through the medium of a story of which the whole framework was false, and nothing but the moral true? |
12852 | Why should variation take certain directions? |
12852 | Why should_ development_ have gone in different directions_ towards the same object_? |
12852 | Why, again, are savages prone to imagine natural phenomena to be caused or actuated by"spirits"? |
12852 | [ 1] In what possible way would this beauty serve for any purely_ useful_ purpose? |
12852 | [ 1]"Have we not here an exhibition which can not be accounted for on any principle of natural utility? |
12852 | an elephant? |
12852 | and who has changed the inconvenient, the painful, into the_ wrong_? |
12852 | how comes it that natural forces and conditions of life so occur and co- operate as to produce the variety of changes needed? |
13068 | Can an army tailor make a Commander- in- Chief? |
13068 | Do you know, dear Vanity, that it is not impossible that King Asoka( of the Edict Pillars), the''Constantine of Buddhism,''was an Eurasian? 13068 Hulloa, Colonel, how are you? |
13068 | Well, you''re looking very blooming; what the devil is the matter with you? 13068 ( Who would n''t be her Pygmalion?) 13068 A cocked hat, a tailcoat with gold buttons and a rapier:--See''st thou not the air of the court in these enfoldings? |
13068 | Armies? |
13068 | As I say to him,--what should I do with it? |
13068 | But how could they change the old Colonel? |
13068 | But what has all this talk of country matters to do with little Mrs. Lollipop? |
13068 | But who could play with it? |
13068 | Child of night''s sweet bird, what dost thou now?" |
13068 | Do you observe the fine frenzy that kindles behind his spectacles as he leans back and tries to eject a root? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh? |
13068 | Eh?" |
13068 | Hath not his gait in it the measure of the court? |
13068 | Have you ever watched her at a big dance? |
13068 | Have you seen Smith''s new filly? |
13068 | He could not have grown cold too? |
13068 | He is rich:--What is that to me? |
13068 | Her bosom''s lord sits lightly on his throne? |
13068 | How is he to pass effectively into the golden silences? |
13068 | How is he to relapse into the still- world of observation? |
13068 | How is the bay pony? |
13068 | How shall I lay this spectre of my own identity? |
13068 | I always replied with the counter question,"What is the use of India?" |
13068 | I really wish to be polite to H.E., but how can I say that I think he was justified in finessing his deficit and playing surpluses? |
13068 | Is Ali Baba to cease upon the midnight without pain? |
13068 | Is a pump an analyst and a coroner? |
13068 | Is he not one of the four satellites of that Jupiter who swims in the highest azure fields of the highest heavens? |
13068 | Is it, then, worth while to pass through this fire to the possible Moloch who sits beyond? |
13068 | MY DEAR MRS. Lollipop, dic, per omnes Te deos oro, Robinson cur properes amando Perdere? |
13068 | On his return-- when he ought to be bathing-- he will probably write his article for the_ Twentieth Century_, entitled"Is India Worth Keeping?" |
13068 | Or is it to be the mandragora of pension, that he may sleep out the great gap of_ ennui_ between this life and something better? |
13068 | Reader, you anticipate me? |
13068 | Receives not thy nose court- odour from him? |
13068 | Reflects he not on thy baseness court- contempt?" |
13068 | Shall I leave it to melt away gracefully in the light of setting suns? |
13068 | So the Collector died, the merry Collector; and"where shall we bury the merry Collector?" |
13068 | The people whisper as he passes,"There goes Ali Baba"; and echo answers"Who is Ali Baba?" |
13068 | Ulu ka bacha, tu kya karta hai?" |
13068 | Voices would ask:-- Do ye sit there still in slumber In gigantic Alpine rows? |
13068 | Want a trip to the hills? |
13068 | Was it not the Bishop of Bombay who said that man was an automaton plus the mirror of consciousness? |
13068 | What authority has a pump? |
13068 | What claim has the Bishop on my improving conversation? |
13068 | What does the Commander- in- Chief command? |
13068 | What is it that these travelling people put on paper? |
13068 | What was a seat at the Sadr Board[BB] to him, a seat among the solemn mummies of the service? |
13068 | What will the Service say? |
13068 | What would the Apollo Bundar say? |
13068 | What would the Bengali Baboo say? |
13068 | What would the sea- aye- ees say? |
13068 | Where is he going? |
13068 | While the eagle of Thought rides the tempest in scorn, Who cares if the lightning is burning the corn? |
13068 | Who could linger over it tenderly with a candle, or a lump of mutton fat, when cold had laid its cruel hand upon it? |
13068 | Who could tweak it passionately, as a prelude to kissing? |
13068 | Why keep her charms concealed from mortal eye, like roses that in deserts bloom and die? |
13068 | Why should I spend a day with the Bishop? |
13068 | Why? |
13068 | Will it appear? |
13068 | Will the Commander- in- Chief be offended? |
13068 | Will the Government of India be angry? |
13068 | Will this process of parting with coin-- this Valley of the Shadow of Death-- lead them to any palpable advantage? |
13068 | Will time, think you, never impair her infernal memory? |
13068 | You suppose I refer to one of Mr. Gladstone''s new Ministers, or to one of Lord Beaconsfield''s new Baronets? |
13068 | You will ask,"What has all this talk of food and famine to do with the villager?" |
13068 | [ Is this nothing? |
13068 | how''s exchange?" |
13068 | or is he to lie down like a tired child and weep out the spark? |
13068 | or should he just flit to Elysium? |
13068 | treasures up and the Anglo- Indian hastens to throw away? |
13068 | what''s the news? |
13068 | who bewailest The frailty of all things here, Why choose you the frailest For your cradle, your home, and your bier? |
15448 | How falls it out so strangely? |
15448 | Ah cruel fates, why do you then besot Poor Corin''s soul with love, when love is fled? |
15448 | And sith no other sun, why should I fear? |
15448 | Are women woe to men, traps for their falls? |
15448 | Be husbands fearful of the chastest wives? |
15448 | Besides, since from one root we both did spring, Why should not I thy fame and beauty sing? |
15448 | But what hear I? |
15448 | But what of pity do I speak to thee, Whose breast is proof against complaint or prayer? |
15448 | But what of this? |
15448 | But what, is mine so great? |
15448 | But why, O why, do I so far digress? |
15448 | But, for the other greedily doth eye it, I pray you tell me, what do I get by it? |
15448 | Can beauty both at once give life and kill? |
15448 | Did nature frame thy beauty so unkind? |
15448 | Differ their words, their deeds, their looks, their lives? |
15448 | Doth fancy purchase praise, and virtue shame? |
15448 | Doth kindness grow unkind? |
15448 | Hath she nor ears to hear nor eyes to see? |
15448 | Hath truth unto herself procurèd blame? |
15448 | Have lovers ever been their tennis balls? |
15448 | How can I hide that is already known? |
15448 | How then? |
15448 | I that thus take or they that thus refuse, Whether are these deceivèd then, or I? |
15448 | II My heart was slain, and none but you and I; Who should I think the murder should commit? |
15448 | IV Did you sometimes three German brethren see, Rancour''twixt two of them so raging rife, That th''one could stick the other with his knife? |
15448 | If that the sentence so unhappy be, Then what am I that gave the same to me? |
15448 | Is it to have the weeds of sorrow grow So long and thick, that they will ne''er be spent? |
15448 | Is nature grown less powerful in their heirs, Or in our fathers did she more transgress? |
15448 | Is she a stock, a block, a stone, a flint? |
15448 | Is there none to aid me? |
15448 | LII What dost thou mean to cheat me of my heart, To take all mine and give me none again? |
15448 | LVI Is trust betrayed? |
15448 | May show of goodness lurk in treachery? |
15448 | Must sacred muses suffer misery? |
15448 | Or dost thou scorn to pity my despair? |
15448 | Or doth my Chloris stand in doubt that I With syren songs do seek her to beguile? |
15448 | Or from what planet had I derivation That thus my life in seas of woe is crossed? |
15448 | Or hath it lost the virtue with the times, Or in this island alt''reth with the fashions? |
15448 | Or have our passions lesser power than theirs, Who had less art them lively to express? |
15448 | Or have thine eyes such magic or that art That what they get they ever do retain? |
15448 | Or will you love me, and yet hate me too? |
15448 | Pity or let him die that daily dieth; Dieth he not oft who often sings this ditty? |
15448 | Shall Phoebus hinder little stars to shine, Or lofty cedar mushrooms leave to grow? |
15448 | Shall fortune alter the most constant mind? |
15448 | She was an heiress, he a penniless poet, and what was to be done? |
15448 | TO HUMOUR XIX You can not love, my pretty heart, and why? |
15448 | TO THE CRITICS XXXI Methinks I see some crooked mimic jeer, And tax my Muse with this fantastic grace; Turning my papers asks,"What have we here?" |
15448 | Then as in time they come, so must they go; Death common is to beggars and to kings For whither do I run beside my text? |
15448 | Think''st thou, my wit shall keep the packhorse way, That every dudgeon low invention goes? |
15448 | This new- coined love, love doth reprove? |
15448 | VII What need I mourn, seeing Pan our sacred king Was of that nymph fair Syrinx coy disdained? |
15448 | What next, what other shift? |
15448 | What should I say? |
15448 | What talk I of a heart when thou hast none? |
15448 | What will you do? |
15448 | What, will you hate? |
15448 | What, will you keep a mean then betwixt either? |
15448 | Whose fortune then was it to win all three? |
15448 | Will reason yield unto rebelling will? |
15448 | X Am I a Gorgon that she doth me fly, Or was I hatchèd in the river Nile? |
15448 | XI Tell me, my dear, what moves thy ruthless mind To be so cruel, seeing thou art so fair? |
15448 | XI Winged with sad woes, why doth fair zephyr blow Upon my face, the map of discontent? |
15448 | XLIII Tell me of love, sweet Love, who is thy sire, Or if thou mortal or immortal be? |
15448 | XXV O, why should nature niggardly restrain That foreign nations relish not our tongue? |
15448 | XXV Who doth not know that love is triumphant, Sitting upon the throne of majesty? |
15448 | XXVII Is not love here as''tis in other climes, And differeth it as do the several nations? |
15448 | XXVIII What cruel star or fate had domination When I was born, that thus my love is crossed? |
15448 | XXXVII Dear, why should you command me to my rest, When now the night doth summon all to sleep? |
15448 | Yet my confused affects no speech affords, For why? |
15448 | and"I!"? |
15448 | can he love? |
15448 | what yet remains to do? |
22381 | Pirithöus, holding out his hand in token of peace, exclaimed,"What satisfaction shall I render thee, oh Theseus? |
1395 | Ah, my Lucy, dare I hope for the affection of the best of men? |
1395 | If you take from Virgil his diction and metre, what do you leave him? |
1395 | The Rape of the Lockis very witty, but through it all do n''t you mark the sneer of the contemptuous, unmanly little wit, the crooked dandy? |
1395 | Was ever woman in this manner wooed? |
1395 | Was there ever such a man, my Harriet, so good, so just, so noble in his sentiments? |
1395 | A Amsterdam, chez Jean Boekholt Libraire pres de la Bourse, 1685"? |
1395 | A curious touch, is it not, of pity for the people? |
1395 | Ah, madam, how shall I answer you? |
1395 | And the Great Spirit said:''Pe- shau- ba, do you love the woman?'' |
1395 | And the others? |
1395 | And what subjects shall they be? |
1395 | And who is there to succeed the two who are gone, or who shall be our poet, if the Master be silent? |
1395 | Are they never aweary? |
1395 | But can you call_ this_ true:"There is nobody but is ashamed of having loved when once he loves no longer"? |
1395 | But does not the notion of living on frozen pomatum rather take the gilt off the delight of being an Indian? |
1395 | But how did a religiously minded man regard the gods? |
1395 | Ca n''t you see her stealing with those"feet of ivory,"like Bombyca''s, down the dark side of the silent moonlit streets of Beaucaire? |
1395 | Can anything speak more clearly of the decadence of the art than the birth of so many poetical"societies"? |
1395 | Can you fancy Fielding composing such a scene, Fielding whom Richardson scouts as a profligate? |
1395 | Can you find among our genteel writers of this age, a figure more beautiful, tender, devoted, and in all good ways womanly than Sophia Western''s? |
1395 | Could anything be more delightful? |
1395 | Could so worthy a man have been so absorbed by an unworthy book? |
1395 | Dear Lady Violet,--Who can admire too much your undefeated resolution to admire only the right things? |
1395 | Do husbands and wives often bore each other for the same reason? |
1395 | Do n''t you think, dear Hopkins, that this allusion to_ bas- bleus_, if not indelicate, is a little rococo, and out of date? |
1395 | Do n''t you wish you had lived in Kentucky in Colonel Boone''s time? |
1395 | Do you know an older? |
1395 | Do you know what it is to walk alone all day on the Border, and what good company to you the burn is that runs beside the highway? |
1395 | Do you know whom he reminds me of? |
1395 | Do you remember the lines on the ring which he gave his lady? |
1395 | Do you remember the pretty paraphrase of it in"Love in Idleness"? |
1395 | Does it touch thee at all, oh gentle spirit and serene, that we, who never knew thee, love thee yet, and revere thee as a saint of heathendom? |
1395 | Does one not feel it, the cool of that old summer night, the sweet smell of broken boughs and trodden grass and deep dew, and the shining of the star? |
1395 | E. P. Roe is your favourite novelist there; a thousand of his books are sold for every two copies of the works of Henry Fielding? |
1395 | Even then should a gentleman take advantage of a poor bookseller''s ignorance? |
1395 | Have the dead any delight in the religion they inspire? |
1395 | His only motive would be an aversion to disobliging a_ confrere_, and why should I put him in such an unpleasant position? |
1395 | How comes it that in the fierce fighting days the soldiers were so tuneful, and such scholars? |
1395 | If I lend you it, will you be kind enough to illustrate it on separate sheets of paper, and not make drawings on the pages of the book? |
1395 | If he does not like them, why should he like them because they are forwarded by_ me_? |
1395 | Is it not lucky for swains like you that the soldiers have quite forsworn sonneting? |
1395 | It is a mammoth posing as a kitten, though whatever he says or does, his audience throw up their hands and eyes and ask:"Was there ever such a man?" |
1395 | May a maiden read the book that the young lady studied over Charles Lamb''s shoulder? |
1395 | One can not translate things like this:"_ Ou sont nos amoureuses_? |
1395 | Say, am I Love or Phoebus? |
1395 | Shall we find old age easier if ever we come to its threshold? |
1395 | There he sang of Nicolette,"Was it not the other day That a pilgrim came this way? |
1395 | What apology of Lauzun''s, or Bussy Rabutin''s for faithlessness could equal this?--"Why dost thou say I am forsworn, Since thine I vowed to be? |
1395 | What are human motives, according to Rochefoucauld? |
1395 | What guardsman now writes like Lovelace, and how many of his friends could applaud him in Greek? |
1395 | What has become of it, the lusty old militant world? |
1395 | What he meant by his belief that four times he had,"whether in the body or out of the body,"been united with the Spirit of the world, who knows? |
1395 | What hope or what fears did he entertain with regard to the future life? |
1395 | What is all this but the changeful mood of grief? |
1395 | What knew Samuel of Eustathius? |
1395 | What novelist was ever so rich in both? |
1395 | What of"Pamela"and"Clarissa"? |
1395 | What says his reformed rake, Mr. Wilson, in"Joseph Andrews"? |
1395 | What will become of us, and why do we prefer to Fielding-- a number of meritorious moderns? |
1395 | What, then, is lacking to make Mr. Swinburne a poet of a rank even higher than that which he occupies? |
1395 | When Tanner was grown up, he came back to that neighbourhood, and the first thing he asked was,"Where is Manito- o- geezhik?" |
1395 | When a man was a rake, a poet, a warrior, all in one, what chance had a peaceful minor poet like you or me, Gifted, against his charms? |
1395 | Who can equal that song,"Once you come to Forty Year,"or the lines on the Venice Love- lamp, or the"Cane- bottomed Chair"? |
1395 | Who can tell? |
1395 | Who does not wish he knew as little of Burn''s as of Shakespeare''s? |
1395 | Who ever laughed at mankind with so much affection for mankind in his heart? |
1395 | Who is the author? |
1395 | Who knows? |
1395 | Who said:"To know all is to forgive all"? |
1395 | Why are they not reprinted, as Mr. Arber has reprinted"Captain John Smith''s Voyages, and Reports on Virginia"? |
1395 | Why such a man as Plotinus, with such ideas, remained a pagan, while Christianity offered him a sympathetic refuge, who can tell? |
1395 | Will it bore you, my dear Dick, if I tell you of an old Indian''s death? |
1395 | Will the crown reward you, say, When the fairy gold is fled? |
1395 | Will you be the heroine? |
1395 | _ I d cinerem aut Manes credis curare sepultos_? |
1395 | have I been Or Lusignan or Biron? |
11623 | But, prithee, why so severe always on the priesthood, Mr. Bayes? 11623 Lycoris, doubtless, was a jilting baggage, but why should Mr. D. belie her? |
11623 | Who''s there? |
11623 | ''Twere well, if I could like a spirit live; But, do not angels food to mortals give? |
11623 | And after that trust my imperfect sense, Which calls in question his omnipotence?" |
11623 | And at what time was he so? |
11623 | And ca n''t the proud perverse Arachne''s fate Deter the[21a] mongrels e''er it prove too late? |
11623 | And dare The[21a] puny brats of Momus threaten war? |
11623 | And he concludes, boldly enough:"Shall I speak plain, and, in a nation free, Assume an honest layman''s liberty? |
11623 | And yet the queen of beauty blest his bed--"Here Mr. D. comes with his ugly patch upon a beautiful face: what had the queen of beauty to do here? |
11623 | Ay, but, Mr. Bayes, how could you contrive the belly- ache? |
11623 | Beaumont and Fletcher uncorrect, and full Of lewd lines, as he calls them? |
11623 | But does not Dryden find even Jonson dull? |
11623 | But how did he steal? |
11623 | Can I believe Eternal God could lie Disguised in mortal mould, and infancy? |
11623 | Can they compare, vile varlet, once hold true, Of the loyal lord, and this disloyal Jew? |
11623 | Did not Demas leave Paul? |
11623 | Does not quotation sound as well as I[20a]? |
11623 | For what a[ Transcriber''s note:"Bessus?" |
11623 | Forbear, foul ravisher, this rude address; Canst thou at once both injure and caress? |
11623 | Hath he laid lurking in his country- house To plot rebellions, as one factious? |
11623 | How can he show his manhood, if you bind him To box, like boys, with one hand tied behind him? |
11623 | How could my guiltless eyes your heart invade, Had it not first been by your own betrayed? |
11623 | How is it possible to forgive Baxter, for the affectation with which he records the enormities of his childhood? |
11623 | How will he shrink, when all his lewd allay, And wicked mixture, shall be purged away? |
11623 | If a little glittering in discourse has passed them on us for witty men, where was the necessity of undeceiving the world? |
11623 | If there be such a church, says Dryden, why does it not point out the corruption of the canon, and restore it where lost? |
11623 | If your design holds, of fixing Dryden''s name only below, and his busto above, may not lines like these be graved just under the name? |
11623 | It does portend--_ Muly._ What? |
11623 | My light will sure discover those who talk.-- Who dares to interrupt my private walk? |
11623 | Now, where are the successors to my name? |
11623 | One jewel set off with so many a foil? |
11623 | Or if his lumpish fancy does refuse Spirit and grace, to his loose slattern muse? |
11623 | Or were these gems sent to adorn his skin, The cabinet of a richer soul within? |
11623 | Or who indeed would be a laureate, That must or fall or turn with every change of state? |
11623 | Pray, how was that, sir? |
11623 | Prithee tell me true, was not this huff- cap once the Indian Emperor, and, at another time, did not he call himself Maximme? |
11623 | Shakespeare''s style Stiff and affected? |
11623 | So many spots, like naeves, our Venus soil? |
11623 | That the great Maker of the world could die? |
11623 | That, you will say, is not easily to be done; but what can not Milbourne bring about? |
11623 | Thou art my blood, where Jonson has no part: What share have we in nature or in art? |
11623 | To damn, at once, the poet and his play: But why was your rage just at that time shown, When what the author writ was all his own? |
11623 | To his own the while Allowing all the justice that his pride So arrogantly had to these denied? |
11623 | Was e''er our English earl under disgrace, And, unconscionable; put out of place? |
11623 | Was not Lyndaraxa once called Almeria, I mean under Montezuma the Indian Emperor? |
11623 | What bring they to fill out a poet''s fame? |
11623 | What gain you by not suffering him to tease ye? |
11623 | What have they merited to pull down your indignation? |
11623 | What if some dull lines in cold order creep, And with his theme the poet seems to sleep? |
11623 | What recompence attends me, if I stay? |
11623 | Where did his wit on learning fix a brand, And rail at arts he did not understand? |
11623 | Where made he love in Prince Nicander''s vein, Or swept the dust in Psyche''s humble strain?" |
11623 | Who, after this, can ever say of the''Rehearsal''author, that his picture of our poet was overcharged, or the national humour wrong described?" |
11623 | Would a man who has an ill title to an estate, but yet is in possession of it; would he bring it of his own accord to be tried at Westminster? |
11623 | Would you repent? |
11623 | Yes, I have bound myself; but will you take The forfeit of that bond, which force did make? |
11623 | [ 22][ Is it possible that in this famous passage"Veer"is a clerical error or a misprint for"Ware"? |
11623 | _ Lucif._ A golden palace let be raised on high; To imitate? |
11623 | _ Muly- H._ Though showers of hail Morocco never see, Dull priest, what does all this portend to me? |
11623 | did not Onesimus run from his master Philemon? |
11623 | tell me who''s the God, Who peace, so lost to us, on you bestow''d?" |
14194 | ''And what did you do?'' 14194 ''Did you approve that order?''" |
14194 | ''Yes; why not? 14194 And what will the end be?" |
14194 | And why not, Louis? 14194 Are not we magnificent in our own house, Monsieur?" |
14194 | Are we going to be shot? |
14194 | Are you proud of your resistance? 14194 Are you so sure of that?" |
14194 | But my wounded? |
14194 | But what must I do,asked the duchess,"without friends, without relations, without counsel?" |
14194 | But, M. le Comte, are you not afraid of reducing us to despair, of exasperating our resistance? |
14194 | Could you not offer me two hours? |
14194 | Does Madame desire so much to pass in? |
14194 | If the present Government of France is overthrown,they said,"and an appeal made to the people, who will fill the interregnum? |
14194 | Now, shall I fire, or shall I reward you? |
14194 | Then what can be done for them? |
14194 | What have you ever done for me that you have any claim on me? |
14194 | What would you have? |
14194 | Where are you going to take me? |
14194 | Where is it held? |
14194 | Where''s Le Sage? |
14194 | Why am I a Boulangist? |
14194 | _ Ah, mon Dieu!_she cried once, when pleading for the pardon of a workman,"how could he be guilty? |
14194 | _ Tiens, Général!_he cried,"is that you? |
14194 | ''And your passport, Citizen?'' |
14194 | ''How can a French Assembly be expected to deliberate when covered by your guns? |
14194 | ''How is it, then, that you were arrested? |
14194 | ''Then all is over?'' |
14194 | ''Then no one,''I said, pointing to these blossoms,''need be afraid in Paris?'' |
14194 | ''What is that?'' |
14194 | ''When?'' |
14194 | ''Where are they wounded?'' |
14194 | ''Where did you get it?'' |
14194 | ''Why not? |
14194 | ''Your name?'' |
14194 | ; and he added:"After all, why should I treat with you? |
14194 | And when an officer in attendance called out to the crowd not to hurt the king, he was answered:"Do you take us for assassins? |
14194 | And with all the machinery of government in his hands, is it certain that a_ plébiscite_ would be the free vote of the people?" |
14194 | And would he understand what to do? |
14194 | At this another voice called out:"_ Tiens!_ is that you, Lamoricière? |
14194 | But how to feed the multitude? |
14194 | But the government of France was the government of one man; and if anything happened to that one man, where would be the government? |
14194 | Could I ask one of the soldiers to convey a message for me? |
14194 | Could a child and a woman govern as he had done by a despotic will? |
14194 | Could n''t one be allowed to re- light one''s cigar?" |
14194 | De Nigra gave him a kick, and asked him how he dared to cry:"Vive l''Empereur?" |
14194 | Do you wish me to try it?" |
14194 | Gambetta was known to be for_ No Surrender!_ Which should prevail? |
14194 | His reply to such applications always was:"If he is not a Christian, what does he want with a cross?" |
14194 | I gave him my hand, and said:''You will come and see us tomorrow before going away?'' |
14194 | If France were a republic, who should be her president? |
14194 | If his project for self- government in France must prove a failure, when he was dead, what then? |
14194 | May I here be permitted to relate a little story connected with this day''s events? |
14194 | On hearing their story, he turned round, and said, in excellent English,"What are you doing here, an Englishman and in plain clothes?" |
14194 | She was the queen''s niece, and if captured what could be done with her? |
14194 | Should the president be elected by the Chamber, or by a vote of the people? |
14194 | Should there be a vice- president? |
14194 | Should there be one Chamber, or two? |
14194 | The difficulty was what royalty? |
14194 | The general called to one of them by name:''Have you got the road from here to Metting?'' |
14194 | The king had got his own again,--why should not they get back theirs? |
14194 | The major went up to him, and looking at the eagle, said in French,''Is it for sale?'' |
14194 | The marshal went himself at last, and the king, after listening to his representation of the state of Paris, said calmly:"Then it is really a revolt?" |
14194 | The people never saw a horseman without shrieking to him,''How is all going on at present?'' |
14194 | The question this time was: Shall the prince president become emperor? |
14194 | The young woman smiled at me, as much as to say:''Is he not a fine fellow?'' |
14194 | There were several points of primary importance to be settled at once; first: should France be a monarchy, or a republic? |
14194 | Was it on a barricade?'' |
14194 | What are you but rebels? |
14194 | What could have occurred? |
14194 | What have I not suffered?" |
14194 | What might not be happening to them? |
14194 | What more can we say? |
14194 | What was now to be done? |
14194 | What would become of those under your care if the friends of the Commune were set over them?" |
14194 | When it had reached the Germans, one of its occupants put out his head and asked, in German, for Count von Bismarck? |
14194 | When the resignation of M. Grévy had been accepted, came the question, Who should succeed him? |
14194 | When the_ maire_ presented himself at their summons, they demanded on what terms Versailles would surrender? |
14194 | Where had the empress- regent fled? |
14194 | Why did I not take your advice? |
14194 | Why should I give your irregular Republic an appearance of legality by signing an armistice with its representative? |
14194 | Will General Boulanger, if all power is intrusted to him, consent to give it up, if the nation votes for monarchy? |
14194 | Would the dictator lay aside his power without a struggle? |
14194 | [ 1]"Why are my friends Boulangists? |
14194 | she said,"are you the Commissioner of Police come to arrest me for my outrageous letter to the queen? |
14194 | was the blood of priests to be spared, and that of patriots imperilled at a post of danger?" |
14194 | what have you done to your eyes?" |
11448 | But why talk of Gavius? 11448 What has a Jew to do with_ pork_?" |
11448 | What makes an action right or wrong? 11448 What reason is there", he asks,"why, when I have bought, built, repaired, and laid out much money, another shall come and enjoy the fruits of it?" |
11448 | What should induce the Deity to perform the functions of an Aedile, to light up and decorate the world? 11448 What will history say of me six hundred years hence?" |
11448 | Who does not know what my return home was like? 11448 Wouldest thou propitiate the gods? |
11448 | Yea, was his reply;"but where are those commemorated who were drowned?" |
11448 | After all, what is our eyesight worth? |
11448 | And I should like to ask them how they hid themselves, and where? |
11448 | And did you even think that I was unwilling to see you? |
11448 | And lastly( a point of casuistry which must sometimes perplex the strictest conscience), of two''things honest'',[2] which is most so?" |
11448 | And what is this courage? |
11448 | And what is this pleasure which he makes of such high account? |
11448 | But we do not understand even our own bodies; how, then, can we have an eyesight so piercing as to penetrate the mysteries of heaven and earth?" |
11448 | But what consolation can we bring to ease the pain of the Epicurean? |
11448 | But what says Milo? |
11448 | But who is to fix the limit to such vague concessions? |
11448 | But why, continues Cicero, why add to the miseries of life by brooding over death? |
11448 | Can anything console the sufferer? |
11448 | Could I possibly be angry with you?... |
11448 | Did we not say that Cicero was modern, not ancient? |
11448 | Did you really fear that I was angry, because I sent off the slaves without any letter to you? |
11448 | Do you remember that before you put on the robe of manhood, you were a bankrupt? |
11448 | Few modern brothers, probably, would write to each other in such terms as these:"Afraid lest your letters bother me? |
11448 | For if formerly, when you had good examples to imitate, you were still not much of a proficient in that way, how can I suppose you will get on now? |
11448 | He here resolves the question, If honour and interest seem to clash, which is to give way? |
11448 | How can I describe those days, when all kept holiday, as though it were some high festival of the immortal gods, in joy for my safe return? |
11448 | How could a man best bear pain and the other miseries of life? |
11448 | How shall I learn to choose between my principles and my interests? |
11448 | How the people of Brundusium held out to me, as I might say, the right hand of welcome on behalf of all my native land? |
11448 | I angry with you? |
11448 | I very nearly collapsed, gentlemen, when a man asked me what day I had left Rome, and whether there was any news stirring? |
11448 | I wish you would bother me, and re- bother me, and talk to me and at me; for what can give me more pleasure? |
11448 | If such improvements gave him pleasure, why should he have chosen to be without them so long?" |
11448 | Is idleness the divinest life? |
11448 | Is it an unmixed evil? |
11448 | Is life to any of us such unmixed pleasure even while it lasts? |
11448 | It is an important question, how, and when, and to whom, we should give? |
11448 | It professed to answer, so far as it might be answered Pilate''s question,"What is truth?" |
11448 | May we not argue still more strongly in the case of the gods? |
11448 | The fifth and last book discusses the great question, Is virtue of itself sufficient to make life happy? |
11448 | The very first words I said to him were,''How did you get on with our friend Paetus?'' |
11448 | Then comes the question, What_ is_ this nature that is so precious to each of us? |
11448 | Then he proceeds:"Would you like us, then, to examine into your course of life from boyhood? |
11448 | Then, rising to enthusiasm, the philosopher concludes:"Who can not but admire the incredible beauty of such a system of morality? |
11448 | Was death an evil? |
11448 | Was the soul immortal? |
11448 | Was virtue any guarantee for happiness? |
11448 | What character in history or in fiction can be grander or more consistent than the''wise man''of the Stoics? |
11448 | What else can be this power which enables us to recollect the past, to foresee the future, to understand the present? |
11448 | What is a duty? |
11448 | What is expediency? |
11448 | What need to dwell upon the charm of the green fields, the well- ordered plantations, the beauty of the vineyards and olive- groves? |
11448 | What pleasure ever had I without you, or you without me?" |
11448 | What reverence, what love, or what fear can men have of beings who neither wish them, nor can work them, good or ill? |
11448 | What shall I say of the fact that fire, and red- hot plates, and other tortures were applied? |
11448 | What, after all, are a man''s real interests? |
11448 | When the man asked--''Whether anybody wanted to know anything?'' |
11448 | Which of us can tell whether he be taken away from good or from evil? |
11448 | Who at one time was a greater favourite with our most illustrious men? |
11448 | Who could be more greedy of money than he was? |
11448 | Who could lavish it more profusely? |
11448 | Who was a closer intimate with our very basest? |
11448 | Who would have asked your help, we should answer, if these difficulties had not arisen? |
11448 | Why feed your misfortune by dwelling on it? |
11448 | Why grieve at all? |
11448 | Why need I speak of my arrival at each place? |
11448 | Why then call it wretched, even if we die before our natural time? |
11448 | Why uphold a theory so dangerous in practice? |
11448 | Why, exclaims the Stoic, introduce Pleasure to the councils of Virtue? |
11448 | Why, then, did the Deity, when he made everything for the sake of man, make such a variety( for instance) of venomous reptiles? |
11448 | With what powers of voice, with what force of language, with what sufficient indignation of soul, can I tell the tale? |
11448 | do n''t you know that he was Quaestor at_ Syracuse_?'' |
11448 | how the people crowded the streets in the towns; how they flocked in from the country-- fathers of families with wives and children? |
11448 | what line of conduct will best advance the main end of his life? |
11448 | whose are? |
11448 | yes, to be sure'', said he;''Africa, I believe?'' |
13552 | Besides the other Ambo- trees, and the trees that are not Ambo, is there any other? 13552 Besides this Ambo, and those other Ambo- trees, are there any other trees on the earth? |
13552 | Besides this one, is there any other Ambo- tree? 13552 Besides thy relations, and those who are not thy relations, is there, or is there not, any other human being in existence? |
13552 | Hast thou any relations, oh, king? 13552 King, are there any persons not thy relations? |
13552 | Then again how are they disabled by the wasp, and yet not injured so as to cause their immediate death? 13552 _ King._ Have you seen any of the royal tanks at Oung- ben- le'', which have recently been constructed? |
13552 | ''Prince,''she replied,''from attendants what pleasure canst thou derive? |
13552 | (? |
13552 | (?) |
13552 | ? |
13552 | ? solidus,_ Wlk_. |
13552 | ?_ Sitophilus,_ Schön._ oryzæ,_ Linn._ disciferus,_ Wlk._ Mecinus,_ Germ._*? |
13552 | ?_ Sitophilus,_ Schön._ oryzæ,_ Linn._ disciferus,_ Wlk._ Mecinus,_ Germ._*? |
13552 | ?_ ebeninus,_ Wlk._* immunis,_ Wlk._ Cleonus,_ Schön._ inducens,_ Wlk._ Myllocerus,_ Schön._ transmarinus,_ Herbst_.? |
13552 | ?_ ebeninus,_ Wlk._* immunis,_ Wlk._ Cleonus,_ Schön._ inducens,_ Wlk._ Myllocerus,_ Schön._ transmarinus,_ Herbst_.? |
13552 | And he describes at Angola an insect( A. goudotti? |
13552 | Are the seeds of this plant narcotic like some of the_ Solanaceaæ_? |
13552 | But in the case of Ceylon? |
13552 | CUCUJIDÆ,_ Steph._ Loemophloeus,_ Dej._ ferrugineus,_ Wlk._ Cucujus? |
13552 | Cardisoma...?_ Ocypoda ceratophthalmus,_ Pall_. |
13552 | Discourses are delivered upon the principles of vacancy( nirwana?) |
13552 | Does not this drawing of a species of Chironectes, captured near Colombo, justify his description? |
13552 | Dussumieri_? |
13552 | For the purpose of ascertaining the capacity of the gifted monarch, Mahindo thus interrogated him:--"O king; what is this tree called? |
13552 | Gymnoplistia? |
13552 | He described it as being divided by a river( the Mahawelli- ganga?) |
13552 | His father seeing him lying on his bed, with his hands and feet gathered up, inquired,"My boy, why not stretch thyself at length on thy bed?" |
13552 | How then does the enclosed fly always select the right end, and with what secretion is it supplied to decompose this mortar?"] |
13552 | ICHNEUMONIDÆ,_ Leach._ Cryptus,_ Fabr._* onustus,_ Wlk._ Hemiteles? |
13552 | Ichthyology of Ceylon, little known Fish for table, seir fish Sardines, poisonous? |
13552 | In Ceylon he was struck by the number of serpents, and the multitude of wild animals, lions( leopards? |
13552 | Is it a fact that in America, pigs extirpate the rattlesnakes with impunity?] |
13552 | It occurred to him his retinue must surely have been seized by her, and he exclaimed,''Pray, why dost not thou produce my attendants?'' |
13552 | Ixodes...? |
13552 | Lumbricus...? |
13552 | MUSCIDÆ,_ Latr._ Tachina? |
13552 | NYCTERIBIDÆ,_ Leach._ Nycteribia,_ Latr._----? |
13552 | Nephila...? |
13552 | Oribata...? |
13552 | Oxytelus,_ Grav._ rudis,_ Wlk._ productus,_ Wlk._* bicolor,_ Wlk._ Trogophloeus? |
13552 | Peneus...? |
13552 | Porcellana...?_ Decapoda Macrura. |
13552 | Stenopus...? |
13552 | Thalamita...? |
13552 | The first day he crossed a river,( the estuary of Calpentyn?) |
13552 | Whence do they re- appear? |
13552 | [ 4][ Footnote 1: Rhinolophus affinis? |
13552 | [ Footnote 19:? |
13552 | [ Footnote 1: Galle?] |
13552 | [ Footnote 1:_ Culex laniger_? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2: The fable of the"spicy breezes"said to blow from Arabia and India, is as old as Ctesias; and is eagerly repeated by Pliny? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2:_ Gelasimus tatragonon_? |
13552 | [ Footnote 2:_ Pentaceros?_]_ Sea Slugs._--There are a few species of_ Holothuriæ_, of which the trepang is the best known example. |
13552 | [ Footnote 3: May it not have an Egyptian origin"Siela- Keh,"the_ land_ of_ Siela_?] |
13552 | _ Crangon...?__ Alpheus...?_ Pontonia inflata,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Crangon...?__ Alpheus...?_ Pontonia inflata,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Dromia...?_ Hippa Asiatica,_ Edw_. |
13552 | _ Grayii? |
13552 | _ Jek._ cribricollis,_ Wlk._? |
13552 | _ Oliv._ Sphænophorus,_ Schön._ glabridiscus,_ Wlk._ exquisitus,_ Wlk._ Dehaani? |
13552 | _ Squilla...?_ Gonodactylus chiragra,_ Fabr_. |
13552 | alternans,_ Wlk._ Stenus,_ Latr._* barbatus,_ Niet._* lacertoides,_ Niet._ Osorius? |
13552 | and whether the Devil should be drawn with horns and a tail? |
13552 | annulipes_? |
13552 | aridifolia,_ Stoll_ extensicollis? |
13552 | atratum? |
13552 | cygneus,_ Fabr_.? |
13552 | errans? |
13552 | ferrugineus,_ Fabr._ introducens,_ Wlk._ Protocerus,_ Schön._ molossus? |
13552 | lectularius,_ Linn._? |
13552 | longicollis? |
13552 | or do they cause dilatation of the pupil, like those of the_ Atropa Belladonna_?] |
13552 | panops,_ Wlk._ Cossonus,_ Clairv._* quadrimacula,_ Wlk._? |
13552 | perplexa,_ Wlk_.?] |
13552 | punctiger? |
13552 | s. Vert, cucullata? |
16352 | After the death of King Wan,said he,"was not the cause of truth lodged in me? |
16352 | And how, Lord, do they treat the remains of a king of kings? |
16352 | And what kind of man is he? |
16352 | But of what kind of spirits is the Lord, the venerable Anuruddha, thinking? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the higher penalty? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | But what, Lord, is the purpose of the spirits? |
16352 | For whom have you come? |
16352 | Has the superior man,said Tsze- loo,"indeed, to endure in this way?" |
16352 | Has your majesty,said this officer,"any servant who could discharge the duties of ambassador like Tsze- kung? |
16352 | Have you heard any lessons from your father different from what we have all heard? |
16352 | How do you mean that you are unknown? |
16352 | If the great mountain crumble,said he,"to what shall I look up? |
16352 | Kung Kew,replied the disciple,"Kung Kew, of Loo?" |
16352 | No,replied Le,"he was standing alone once when I was passing through the court below with hasty steps, and said to me,''Have you read the Odes?'' |
16352 | Sir,replied Confucius,"in carrying on your government why should you employ capital punishment at all? |
16352 | What do you say,asked the chief of the Ke clan on one occasion,"to killing the unprincipled for the good of the principled?" |
16352 | What is this world? |
16352 | What makes you so late? |
16352 | Who are you, sir? |
16352 | Who is that holding the reins in the carriage yonder? |
16352 | Why, then, do you not remove from the place? |
16352 | Again he inquired of him, saying:"Canst thou act as my guide?" |
16352 | Am I a bitter gourd? |
16352 | Am I to be hung up out of the way of being eaten?" |
16352 | And even if some gain should accrue to the people, in what way would this interfere with the sage''s action? |
16352 | And if they existed, do the order and relation agree with actual truth? |
16352 | And until we know, is it not a waste of time to pore over the lesser happenings between? |
16352 | Another day, in the same place and the same way, he said to me,''Have you read the rules of Propriety?'' |
16352 | Arbaces communicated his ideas and projects to the prince then intrusted with the government of Babylon, the Chaldæan Phul( Palia? |
16352 | But did all those who preceded him, and those who followed him, exist as he did? |
16352 | But my principles make no progress, and I, how shall I be viewed in future ages?" |
16352 | But the real formula is,_ post trigesimum diem_, and we may ask, Why did Livy or the annalist whom he followed make this alteration? |
16352 | But what was the practical result? |
16352 | Can the vanishing pictures of the past be made as simply obvious as mathematics, as fascinating as a breezy novel of adventure? |
16352 | Can this be accomplished? |
16352 | Did not kings Wan and Woo, from their small states of Fung and Kaou, rise to the sovereignty of the empire? |
16352 | Did the Ptolemies admit the claims which the local priests attempted to deduce from this romantic tale? |
16352 | Heaven will not let the cause of truth perish, and what therefore can the people of Kwang do to me?" |
16352 | How is it possible that they should not be dissolved?" |
16352 | How is it possible that[ they should not be dissolved]?" |
16352 | How many of us do really know about them? |
16352 | How then is it possible[ that such a being should not be dissolved]?''" |
16352 | If I associate not with people, with mankind, with whom shall I associate? |
16352 | If the strong beam break, and the wise man wither away, on whom shall I lean? |
16352 | If while an ox is passing on the street[ market?] |
16352 | If you accept the invitation of this Pih Hih, who is in open rebellion against his chief, what will people say?" |
16352 | Is not he who neglects to teach his son his duties, equally guilty with the son who fails in them? |
16352 | Is there any who will assist me?" |
16352 | Miki In no no Mikoto, also indignant at this, said:"My mother and my aunt are both sea- goddesses; why do they raise great billows to overwhelm us?" |
16352 | No sooner had the envoys put the question to the Delphian priestess, on the day named,"What is Croesus now doing?" |
16352 | One time he said to his friend just named,"Do you think we are governing the people well?" |
16352 | That this poetry is very ancient can not be doubted; but did the legend at all times describe Romulus as the son of Rea Silvia or Ilia? |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor inquired of him, saying:"What man art thou?" |
16352 | The emperor summoned him and then inquired of him, saying:"Who art thou?" |
16352 | The first problem to be confronted was, What were the Great Events that should be told? |
16352 | The question now is, What were these two towns of Roma and Remuria? |
16352 | Then the Mallas of Kusinara said to the venerable Ananda:"What should be done, Lord, with the remains of the Tathagata?" |
16352 | We are told that he reckoned a sheep and a medimnus( of wheat or barley?) |
16352 | What is his likeness?" |
16352 | What is to be done?" |
16352 | Where is the place in which the Nile is born? |
16352 | Which was the greater, the external magnificence, or the moral sublimity of this scene? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
16352 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice?" |
16352 | Who is the god or goddess concealed there? |
16352 | Who would suspect any uncertainty here if it were not for this passage of Dionysius? |
16352 | Why do they harass me by land, and why, moreover, do they harass me by sea?" |
16352 | Why need there be such rectification?" |
16352 | Why should we not proceed thither, and make it the capital?" |
16352 | Why should we remain for a long time in one place? |
16352 | Why? |
16352 | Will this not be well? |
16352 | _ But will God in very deed dwell with men on the earth? |
16352 | and did the god regain possession of the domains and dues which they declared had been his right? |
16352 | he cried,"for whom have you come?" |
16352 | or any one to compare as a general with Tsze- loo? |
16352 | or any so well qualified for a premier as Yen Hwuy? |
16352 | or even know what they are? |
16352 | or one- twentieth part of them? |
16352 | surely thou knowest our Master?" |
17306 | And the condition of the working- class during this period? 17306 And the working- class? |
17306 | And why,said another,"do n''t they send the parsons as drones every day in Salisbury Cathedral, for nobody but the bare stones? |
17306 | But what is to be the consequence? 17306 But, good friends,"I asked,"you surely do not always come out of the church with such bitter feelings towards the preacher? |
17306 | How long since she was confined? |
17306 | No,said Joe;"but when thou had n''t no work, how hast thou not shifted?" |
17306 | What for do we go? |
17306 | ; but where are they now? |
17306 | And have they not, in the end, to seek happiness in the same way, by the same means? |
17306 | And how could the people be clean with no proper opportunity for satisfying the most natural and ordinary wants? |
17306 | And if they knew, how could they obtain a more suitable regimen so long as they can not adopt a different way of living and are not better educated? |
17306 | And those who can not pay for such a refuge? |
17306 | And what power does the cottage system give the employer over his operatives in disagreements between master and men? |
17306 | And what wages do they get? |
17306 | And who else is there to bear the hardship? |
17306 | And, first of all, what belief have they themselves formed about the justice of it? |
17306 | Are they wrong? |
17306 | But Joe, that is my friend''s name, had seen it, and said:"Jack, what the devil art thou doing? |
17306 | But assuming that England retained the monopoly of manufactures, that its factories perpetually multiply, what must be the result? |
17306 | But if the"Ladies"are such as this, what must the"Gentlemen"be? |
17306 | But is that to be wondered at? |
17306 | But what difference does the ill- treatment of eighty thousand proletarians make in a country in which there are two and a half millions of them? |
17306 | But what does that come to? |
17306 | But what follows therefrom? |
17306 | But what is that in a city in which, according to Gaskell''s calculation,{ 104} three- fourths of the population need medical aid every year? |
17306 | But what of that? |
17306 | But, what says the_ Free Trade Mercury_, the_ Leeds Mercury_? |
17306 | Can any one imagine a more insane state of things than that described in this letter? |
17306 | Can any one wonder that the poor decline to accept public relief under these conditions? |
17306 | Does the English bourgeoisie reflect upon this contingency? |
17306 | For love of work? |
17306 | From a natural impulse? |
17306 | How can he be expected to resist the temptation? |
17306 | How can people wash when they have only the dirty Irk water at hand, while pumps and water pipes can be found in decent parts of the city alone? |
17306 | How is it possible, under such conditions, for the lower class to be healthy and long lived? |
17306 | How is this? |
17306 | How should they know what is to blame for it? |
17306 | I once heard a manufacturer ask an overlooker:"Is so and so not back yet?" |
17306 | In consequence of this increased demand wages would actually rise somewhat, and the unemployed workers be re- employed; but for how long? |
17306 | Is it a natural state of things which can last? |
17306 | Is it to be wondered at, that in such localities all considerations of health, morals, and even the most ordinary decency are utterly neglected? |
17306 | Is this a state of things which can last? |
17306 | Is this social war, or is it not? |
17306 | It will be asked,"Why, then, do the workers strike in such cases, when the uselessness of such measures is so evident?" |
17306 | Make the small tenant a landowner himself and what follows? |
17306 | Moreover, why should he need much room? |
17306 | Such is the moderate price at which the landed aristocracy purchases the noble sport of shooting; but what does it matter to the lords of the soil? |
17306 | That they starve rather than enter these bastilles? |
17306 | The wealthy English fail to remember the poor? |
17306 | This may be so, but what sort of a social order is it which can not be maintained without such shameful tyranny? |
17306 | True, it is only individuals who starve, but what security has the working- man that it may not be his turn to- morrow? |
17306 | True, the temperance societies have done much, but what are a few thousand teetotallers among the millions of workers? |
17306 | Well, are we to put by the rotten goods? |
17306 | What better thing can he do, then, when he gets high wages, than live well upon them? |
17306 | What do my readers think of such a state of things in the quiet, idyllic country districts of England? |
17306 | What do our good Germans say to this story? |
17306 | What does such a race want with high wages? |
17306 | What else should he do? |
17306 | What must it be through a hot summer night, with fifty- six occupants? |
17306 | What will it be when the increase of yearly production is brought to a complete stop? |
17306 | What? |
17306 | When people are placed under conditions which appeal to the brute only, what remains to them but to rebel or to succumb to utter brutality? |
17306 | When these people find no work and will not rebel against society, what remains for them but to beg? |
17306 | Whence comes this incongruity? |
17306 | Where is the missus? |
17306 | Which is it to be? |
17306 | Why do n''t_ they_ go among the heathen?" |
17306 | Why do you go at all?" |
17306 | Why does he work? |
17306 | Why does she not ask permission to go home? |
17306 | Why, is that thy work?" |
17306 | Why? |
17306 | { 119} Shall I call bourgeois witnesses to bear testimony from me here, too? |
22765 | Your name, the name they cherish? 22765 ''Fie, a devil,''quoth the King,''who say so vile deed? 22765 And were they sacrificed to him, as a dark hero or demi- god of the past, to propitiate him against plague or conquest? 22765 And what is the magical significance of the limpet- shells, which cover them and him alike? 22765 And, if it were, what causes led to its deforestation? 22765 Are they of two different dates? 22765 Charles''s relationship with the lady of his choice may be gauged by the following:How is Adelaide?" |
22765 | Did the Englishmen of the nineteenth century really talk like that about their dearest and most intimate affairs? |
22765 | Did"forest"mean also moorland, wild and unarable land? |
22765 | Is there any land, east or west, that can give us what this dear old England does-- settled order, in which each man knows his place and his duties? |
22765 | Oh, my lady, how shall I ever brook your weeping face? |
22765 | Why, then, was it called a"forest"in Saxon times? |
22765 | Your hands are on your breast now, But is your heart so still? |
19308 | ''A witness of what?'' 19308 And who is JESUS?" |
19308 | Are there any in Rangoon? |
19308 | Are they foreigners? |
19308 | Are you willing to part with me? 19308 Art Thou not from everlasting, O Lord my God, mine Holy One? |
19308 | But how,he asked,"came the wish for this knowledge?" |
19308 | Can a mother forget? |
19308 | Has God commanded kings and indunas to learn His word? |
19308 | He is neither born nor begets,cried the Moollahs; and one said,"What will you say when your tongue is burnt out for blasphemy?" |
19308 | How do you hope to obtain forgiveness? |
19308 | How is your heart to be changed? |
19308 | How many were present? |
19308 | O vagabond,cried one man,"why didst thou not come to my house? |
19308 | Said I,writes Mr. Judson,"knowing his deistical weakness, do you believe all that is contained in the book of St. Matthew which I gave you? |
19308 | What was that sacrifice? |
19308 | What? 19308 What?" |
19308 | Who is GOD? |
19308 | Why do things go so well with them and so hardly with me? |
19308 | Will this be better than what I have found? |
19308 | Will you forgive injuries? |
19308 | Will you renounce all idolatry, feasts, poojahs, and caste? |
19308 | Will you renounce the world, the flesh, and the devil? |
19308 | Will you suffer for Christ''s sake? |
19308 | And where shall we ever expect but from that country the true Comforter to come to the nations of the East?" |
19308 | And who can paint our mutual joy When, all our wanderings o''er, We both shall clasp our infants three At home on Burmah''s shore? |
19308 | Are you like the Portuguese priests? |
19308 | Are you married?" |
19308 | Are you sure there is such a thing in existence, or are you merely subject to a delusion of the senses?" |
19308 | But as you burn with the intenseness and rapid blaze of phosphorus, why should we not make the most of you? |
19308 | But even if only one is gained, is not that an exceeding gain? |
19308 | But what was the word I spoke last? |
19308 | He writes:"What should a young minister do? |
19308 | How do you suppose we can waste any more time in praying for you?" |
19308 | If a British cruiser descended on a slave- ship, and released her freight, should he not also deliver the captive wherever he met him? |
19308 | If any of them did wrong, the alternative was--"Will you go to the Rajah''s court, or be punished by me?" |
19308 | If she answered,"It is matter,"he would reply,"And what is matter? |
19308 | In particular, do you believe that the Son of God died on a cross?" |
19308 | In the sun the bright waves glisten; Rising slow with solemn swell, Hark, hark, what sound unwonted? |
19308 | Is it an idea or a nonentity?" |
19308 | Is it matter or spirit? |
19308 | Is there no magic in the touch Of fingers thou dost love so much? |
19308 | Mr. Brown, on hearing of his plan, consented in these remarkable terms:"Can I then bring myself to cut the string and let you go? |
19308 | Presently he inquired,"How long a time will it take me to learn the religion of JESUS?" |
19308 | She wept much, and the Bishop said,"Bring them both to me; who knows whether they may live to wish for it again?" |
19308 | Such bitter disappointments occur in missionary life; and how should we wonder, since the like befel even St. Paul and St. John? |
19308 | The examination was thus, the Bishop standing in the midst:--"Are you sinners?" |
19308 | They demanded of him:"In the Gospel of Christ, is anything said of our Prophet?" |
19308 | Was Corpus very much changed, when, only eleven years after, John Keble entered it at the same age? |
19308 | Was it his fault, or was it any shortcoming in the teaching that was laid before him, and was that human honour a want of faith? |
19308 | What fruit has his mission zeal left? |
19308 | What words can befit this piteous history better than"This is the patience of the saints"? |
19308 | When did you arrive? |
19308 | When shall appear that new heaven and earth wherein dwelleth righteousness? |
19308 | Where should the phoenix build her odoriferous nest but in the land prophetically called the''blessed''? |
19308 | Why should we"faint, and say''tis vain,"after one hundred in India? |
19308 | Will he ever come again? |
19308 | Will he ever come again?" |
19308 | You speak Burmese-- the priests that I heard of last night? |
19308 | and be guilty of a breach of faith?" |
19308 | this little girl not converted yet? |
19308 | what can it avail?" |
19308 | what is rice? |
19308 | when shall time give place to eternity? |
19308 | when to meet again? |
20300 | Is it so, sweetheart? |
20300 | Is that all? |
20300 | Is there none other remedy,repeated Henry,"but that I must needs, against my will, put my neck in the yoke? |
20300 | Who wrote this letter? |
20300 | A child of nine would reign, but who should rule? |
20300 | Alas, how can any such study, or give any godly counsel for the( p. 257) commonwealth? |
20300 | Are these signs of fraternal love amongst you? |
20300 | Be these tokens of Charity amongst you? |
20300 | But was there no third candidate? |
20300 | But what claim had he? |
20300 | But what good could the treaty do Henry or Francis? |
20300 | But who were the Tudors? |
20300 | But why is"the King''s pleasure"placed opposite only three vacancies, if the whole twenty- eight were to be filled on his nomination? |
20300 | Did a monarch wish for peace? |
20300 | Did he desire war? |
20300 | For whom do they choose but such as be rich or bear some office in the country, many times such as be boasters and braggers? |
20300 | Had he died when Wolsey fell, what would have been his place in history? |
20300 | Had they not permanently or temporarily deprived of power nearly half their kings who had reigned since William the Conqueror? |
20300 | He continued,''Is he as stout?'' |
20300 | He had enjoyed an unequalled opportunity of effecting these reforms, but what were the results of his administration? |
20300 | Henry''s sister Margaret, and both the husbands of his other sister, Mary, had procured divorces from Popes, and why not Henry himself? |
20300 | Heresy in itself was abominable, but if heretics would maintain the royal against the papal supremacy, might not their sins be forgiven? |
20300 | Hertford or Norfolk? |
20300 | I said he was not; and he then inquired,''What sort of legs has he?'' |
20300 | If Ferdinand was"Catholic,"and Louis"Most Christian,"might not some title be found for a genuine friend? |
20300 | Is conscience a luxury which only a king may enjoy in peace? |
20300 | Is recourse necessary to a theory of supernatural agency, or is there another and adequate solution? |
20300 | It was all very well to dispense with canons and divine laws, but to annul papal dispensations-- was that not to cheapen his own wares? |
20300 | Should they cleave to the old, or should they embrace the new? |
20300 | The King of France, is he as tall as I am?'' |
20300 | The party of reform or that of reaction? |
20300 | The rest were lawyers and priests.... How came you to think that there were more noble men in our Privy Council then than now?" |
20300 | Was Henry''s individual will of such miraculous force that he could ride roughshod in insolent pride over public opinion at home and abroad? |
20300 | Was Mary''s legitimacy beyond question? |
20300 | Was her succession to the English throne, a prospect Henry dangled before the Frenchman''s eyes, so secure? |
20300 | Was the dispensation for Henry''s own marriage beyond cavil? |
20300 | What manner of man was this, and wherein lay the secret of his( p. 004) strength? |
20300 | What then was the meaning and use of acts of attainder? |
20300 | What was the poor Duke to do, between his promise to Henry and the pleading of Mary? |
20300 | What would be the effect of this terrific anathema? |
20300 | Where shall we place the limits of conscience, and where those of the national will? |
20300 | Who, he asked, should be Protector, in case the King died, but his father? |
20300 | Why should he not come forward himself? |
20300 | Why should he wish to see Henry in Guienne? |
20300 | Why, wrote Henry to Clement, could he not dispense with human laws, if he was able to dispense with divine at pleasure? |
20300 | Yet if these were not Wolsey''s aims, what were his motives? |
20300 | [ 1035] If the canonised bones of martyrs could be treated thus, who would, for the future, pay respect to the Church or tribute at its shrines? |
20300 | [ 1126] Had not James V., moreover, refused to meet him at York to discuss the questions at issue between them? |
20300 | [ 279] But did not his services merit some more signal mark of favour? |
20300 | [ 335] Could the most constitutional monarch have been more dutiful? |
20300 | [ 516] If the Princess Mary succeeded, was she to marry? |
20300 | [ 670] But what was it? |
20300 | [ 824] But would the Pope be so accommodating as to expedite the bulls, suspecting, as he must have done, the object for which they were wanted? |
20300 | [ 830] Was he not, moreover, withholding his assent from the Act of Annates, which would deprive the Pope of large revenues? |
20300 | [ 834] In the face of such evidence, what motive was there for prelates and others to reject the demands which Henry was pressing upon them? |
20300 | [ Footnote 1026: Is this another trace of"Byzantinism"? |
20300 | [ Footnote 255:_ Cf._ W. Boehm,_ Hat Kaiser Maximilian I. i m Jahre 1511 Papst werden wollen?_ 1873.] |
10328 | ''Tis so--''tis so-- I knew that I should pluck The cowl from your delusion-- Is''t not so? |
10328 | Am I not as the clay within thy hand, Taking the shape and image of thy thought? |
10328 | And I perchance no more to gaze on thee, Snared by some fatal falsehood from thy side? |
10328 | And hath he master''d aught his sorrow now, Or still rides passion curbless through his soul? |
10328 | Blood? |
10328 | Brighter for her, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | Can the heart reach it before it die? |
10328 | Comes there not streaming into my dreaming, At morning''s beaming, rays more divine, Rays from her soul divine, rays giving strength to mine? |
10328 | Dead? |
10328 | False? |
10328 | Flashing white pinions''gainst the golden sun, That fain would nest thee on his ardent breast? |
10328 | Hear''st thou my weary cries, Eurydice? |
10328 | How canst thou wrong me with the thought? |
10328 | How could I leave thee thus, Eurydice? |
10328 | How great will be the wonder and the hate, Waking to see the glorious truth too late Will_ he_, too, see his error, and be sad? |
10328 | Hurrying swiftly, with weeping eyes, And hectic cheeks, and smother''d sighs, Whither away-- whither away? |
10328 | I trust in thee, my love, with perfect faith-- Am I not as the floating gossamer, Steering through ether on thy guiding breath? |
10328 | If the place should e''er decay, And the tower be crumbled down, And the arches overthrown, Would the dove then fly away? |
10328 | Is the spider''s pretty net, Hung across the arches there, But a frail and foolish snare For the little stone bird set? |
10328 | Is the wind their guide through the trackless sky? |
10328 | Is there not Phoebus in the golden East, Pouring forth floods of brilliancy divine, That fire the spirit more than Jove''s own wine? |
10328 | MABEL HEBE SPRING THE BITTERN GONE BEATRICE DI TENDA SERENADE THE EAGLE WHITHER? |
10328 | My Mabel, hast thou faith and trust in me? |
10328 | No certain visions of the hidden things Thou seest in that far mystic spirit- land? |
10328 | Or roams with thee a spirit band, Blending sad voices with thine own,-- Voices that once with cheerful tone Made music round the sleeping land? |
10328 | Quicker and quicker drew I in my breath,"If there be land beyond, receive me now; I''ll trust in thee-- but, Spirit, who art thou?" |
10328 | Ruffling thy breast across what honey breeze? |
10328 | Shall I proceed, or break this magic wand, Wherewith they deem that I am dower''d withal? |
10328 | Shall I spill rashly forth this wine of joy, Because for me within the crystal cup Some dregs may haply rest when she has drunk? |
10328 | Shall I thus cage my bird from liberty, And let it beat its life out on the bars, Lest some dear bliss detain it in the heavens? |
10328 | Shall space have any power o''er god- like souls? |
10328 | Shall thus for ever end The glory and the greatness whither all hopes tend, And as the Past comes booming shall the Present wend? |
10328 | Shines she not radiantly over the skies, Over the morning skies, ere the Earth- vapours rise,''Twixt me and Paradise, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | Shines the place brighter, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | So that, seeking it around, All some golden summer day,''Mid the ruins as they lay, It should never more be found? |
10328 | So the father turn''d him to his son and cried,"Are not these bold subjects worth a monarch''s pride? |
10328 | Ta''en her so soon, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | Ta''en her so soon, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | The dog alone? |
10328 | Think you that words can smooth my rugged track? |
10328 | This Duty, known and done, which all men praise, Is it a thing for heroes utterly? |
10328 | Thy soft blue eyes are suffused with love, And thy smile is as bright as the sunshine above,-- Whither away, whither away? |
10328 | WHITHER? |
10328 | What Heaven is there but that which Love creates? |
10328 | What act? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What art thou-- friend or foe? |
10328 | What certain aim Have all these strokes you level at my ways? |
10328 | What did your lord? |
10328 | What dost thou when the thunder is unloosed? |
10328 | What far orb Echo the fierceness of thy battle- cry? |
10328 | What hand will raise the chalice to my lips? |
10328 | What have I to do with Time? |
10328 | What hidden virtue hath Death reft from thee-- What unseen essence melted into space? |
10328 | What if God saw her hovering aloft, And smiled her in amongst his cherubim? |
10328 | What if the draught of bliss should, Lethe- like, Blot me for ever from her memory, So that she sought me never, never more? |
10328 | What know you, Father, of an infant''s sleep? |
10328 | What real need Hath spirit of these sensuous avenues, Through which the soul looks feebly on the world? |
10328 | What songs of Bliss, save those by Love intoned? |
10328 | What star Shall raise its mountains for thee? |
10328 | Whence is thy power to smite the silent heart, Till as of old the unseal''d waters run? |
10328 | Where is there in story any fame above That King''s whose deeds are written in his people''s love?" |
10328 | Where''s my child, That you maltreat, most rash and guilty man? |
10328 | Which way, then, tend your fears? |
10328 | Whither away, girl, whither away? |
10328 | Whither away, old man, whither away, With locks of white, and form bent low, And trembling hands, and steps so slow? |
10328 | Whither away, poor one, whither away? |
10328 | Whither away, youth, whither away, With lightsome step, and with joyous heart, And eyes that Hope''s gay glances dart? |
10328 | Whither away,--whither away? |
10328 | Whither away-- whither away? |
10328 | Why hast thou ta''en her, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | Why hast thou ta''en her, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | Will the babe know me-- ope its sweet blue eyes-- And stretch its little arms to clasp me round? |
10328 | Wilt thou wing homeward ere the eventide, On shining pinions to thine own soft nest? |
10328 | Without one look, one glance, Eurydice? |
10328 | Words heal the stab your soft white hands have made, Or stir the burthen on my bosom laid? |
10328 | _ Her_ blessed Paradise, Angel of Heaven? |
10328 | about the sky? |
10328 | and on the mighty storm He rides triumphant, spurning the dim Earth-- Whither, O whither goest thou? |
10328 | art thou alone, Thus breathing round the sleeping land? |
10328 | but see you not the blood That hotly streaks your sleeping lily there? |
10328 | false to him? |
10328 | from thee and me, Amid the sweat and grime of working days? |
10328 | holy man, now tell me, for God''s grace, Where in the Land the Golden Water flows?" |
10328 | is this death, or sleep? |
10328 | know you not, Sir, that the child is dead? |
10328 | my Beautiful? |
10328 | or do I dream, Or see I now the motion of a breath, Ruffling the pouting lips that stand ajar? |
10328 | sad chime, I will not weep-- What is there within thy tone, That should wring my heart alone, Rive it with this endless moan? |
10328 | shall thine ocean undiscernèd roll, Night on mine eyes, and darkness on my soul, Groping for knowledge blindly evermore? |
10328 | the robe''s white now... will''t long be so?... |
10328 | thou unseen one, To make still sorrows from their slumbers start, And play again, unsought, their bitter part? |
10328 | what is this? |
10328 | where art thou, hid in light That haunts me, yet still wraps thee from my sight? |
12001 | Clouds obscure-- But for which obscuration all were bright? 12001 Have you any offer of a paper or papers from my friend John Austin? |
12001 | I grant,said Lessing,"that there is also a beauty in drapery, but can it be compared with that of the human form? |
12001 | What is a classic? |
12001 | What is celebrity? 12001 What want we? |
12001 | And how could he deceive himself into thinking that he could retire to write a history? |
12001 | And shall he who can attain to the greater, rest content with the less? |
12001 | And what has oratory to do with it? |
12001 | And why is it worth your while, at least to dip in a serious spirit into its pages? |
12001 | And why? |
12001 | Apart from the curious compulsion of the reasoning, what is the actual state of the case? |
12001 | Are Englishmen becoming less like Romans, and more like disputatious Greeks? |
12001 | Are not most of us just as blind to the thousand lights and shades in the men and women around us? |
12001 | Burke said,"What is the education of the generality of the world? |
12001 | But is it credible that poets can permanently live by systems? |
12001 | But is it true that First Chambers assume an air of divinity? |
12001 | But this shape is not beautiful, and the end of art is beauty? |
12001 | But what share had legislative innovation in producing these great changes? |
12001 | But what sort of science? |
12001 | But where will Europe''s latter hour Again find Wordsworth''s healing power? |
12001 | But will wise guidance be endured? |
12001 | Did Gambetta consider First Chambers divine? |
12001 | Do you continue in the old belief? |
12001 | Even in his own field of the simple and the pastoral has he touched so sweet and spontaneous a note as Burns''s_ Daisy_, or the_ Mouse_? |
12001 | He may be wrong, but where is the acquiescence, whether sombre or serene? |
12001 | How choose? |
12001 | How could a society whose spiritual life had been nourished in the solemn mysticism of the Middle Ages suddenly turn to embrace a gaudy paganism? |
12001 | How have I described Rousseau''s_ Social Contract_? |
12001 | How long will it last? |
12001 | If so, what becomes of the moral? |
12001 | Is anything gained by pressing us further than that? |
12001 | Is it likely, asks the critic, that Duke Silva would have done this, that Fedalma would have done that? |
12001 | Is it so certain, not another cell O''the myriad that make up the catacomb, Contains some saint a second flash would show? |
12001 | Is it the English or Scottish Crowd that is charged with a wanton desire to recast the Union? |
12001 | Is not that enough? |
12001 | Is that the gay lively labour in which some people would have you believe? |
12001 | Is the best literature produced by the writer who does nothing else but write, or by the man who tempers literature by affairs? |
12001 | Is there a fluidity of character in modern democratic societies which contrasts not altogether favourably with the strong solid types of old? |
12001 | May we browse at large in a library, as Johnson said, or is it forbidden to open a book without a definite aim and fixed expectations? |
12001 | Nunquamne reponam, Vexatus toties rauci Theseide Codri? |
12001 | Of the minor vexations who can tell? |
12001 | Of what avail is intimidation? |
12001 | Or is not system, whether ethical, theological, or philosophical, the heavy lead of poetry? |
12001 | Or is such an expression a"burlesque of the real argument?" |
12001 | Reading a parcel of books? |
12001 | Since when has the disorder been the fault of the physician? |
12001 | Speaking now of the particular kind of knowledge of which I am going to say a few words-- how does literature fare in these important operations? |
12001 | Then are not propositions about democracy being against science very idle and a little untrue? |
12001 | Then is it the Irish Crowd? |
12001 | Then why inspire fright? |
12001 | Then, does the excitement of democracy weaken the stability of national temperament? |
12001 | These have we, and a thousand nooks of earth Have also these, but nowhere else is found, Nowhere( or is it fancy?) |
12001 | They recall the French wit to whom a friend showed a distich:"Excellent,"he said;"but is n''t it rather spun out?" |
12001 | Was that the thing to be done? |
12001 | Was there ever in the world such prodigious nonsense? |
12001 | What French sources, what French models? |
12001 | What are the different recommendations of the rival systems of anonymity and signature? |
12001 | What are the qualities of a good contributor? |
12001 | What but the weakness in a faith supplies The incentive to humanity, no strength Absolute, irresistible, comports? |
12001 | What do the promoters aim at? |
12001 | What do we seek? |
12001 | What does the body that lives through helpfulness To women for Christ''s sake? |
12001 | What is it that makes Plutarch''s Lives"the pasture of great souls,"as they were called by one who was herself a great soul? |
12001 | What is literature? |
12001 | What is the object of the movement? |
12001 | What is to become of us, thus placed between the devil of mob ignorance and corruption, and the deep sea of genteel listlessness and superficiality? |
12001 | What is wisdom? |
12001 | What kind of change, if any, has passed over periodical literature since those two great periodicals, the_ Edinburgh_ and the_ Quarterly_, held sway? |
12001 | What makes a good Review? |
12001 | What tumour that has to be cut out does not involve loss of blood?... |
12001 | What? |
12001 | What? |
12001 | Where blackness bides unbroke, must devils be? |
12001 | Where is the effrontery, the search for methods in the Reign of Terror, the applause for revolutionary models? |
12001 | Which of these two gulfs was duty?" |
12001 | Who has ever advanced such a doctrine? |
12001 | Who shall suppose it possible that Caponsacchi acted thus, that Count Guido was possessed by devils so? |
12001 | Who was it dared lay hand upon the ark His betters saw fall nor put finger forth?''" |
12001 | Who would deny that in Great Britain they are closely connected with the greater or less prosperity of our commerce and manufactures? |
12001 | Why conclude that this style constitutes the one access to the same impression? |
12001 | Why give them an aspect of alarm? |
12001 | Why is this? |
12001 | Why not? |
12001 | Why was it worth while for Mr. Jowett, the other day, to give us a new translation of Thucydides''history of the Peloponnesian War? |
12001 | Why, then, was I bound to take a false view because Lord Holland''s family have inherited his hatred of a great rival?" |
12001 | Why? |
12001 | Would any mercy have been shown to Canning''s character and memory by any of the Whig party, either in society or in Reviews? |
12001 | Would the line have been drawn of only attacking Canning''s executors, who published the papers, and leaving Canning himself untouched? |
12001 | You suffer? |
12001 | [ 1] Then where is the literary Jacobin? |
22125 | (?) |
22125 | (?) |
22125 | (?) |
22125 | (?) |
22125 | 1522(?)--1582. |
22125 | = Cracow.= PRINCE CZARTORYSKI, Portrait of(?) |
22125 | = Hampton Court.= Madonna and Saints(?). |
22125 | = Monopoli.= DUOMO, St. Jerome and Donor(?). |
22125 | Annunciation(?). |
22125 | Christ Blessing(?). |
22125 | Crucifixion(?). |
22125 | DONNA LAURA MINGHETTI, Judgment of Paris(?). |
22125 | Dead Christ(?). |
22125 | Death of Peter Martyr(?). |
22125 | Deposition(?). |
22125 | E. Bust of Man in white cap and coat(?). |
22125 | Finding of Moses(?). |
22125 | Head of Young Woman(?). |
22125 | L. MR. R. BENSON, Madonna in Profile(?). |
22125 | LORD ASHBURNHAM, Small Landscape(?). |
22125 | MR. J. P. CARRINGTON, Bust of Man(?). |
22125 | MR. W. B. BEAUMONT: Catena(?). |
22125 | Madonna and Saints(?). |
22125 | Madonna and four Saints(?). |
22125 | Portrait of Man with Staff(?). |
22125 | Portrait of Man(?). |
22125 | Portrait of(?) |
22125 | St. Sebastian being Bound(?). |
22125 | Stoning of Stephen(?) |
22125 | The Saviour(?). |
22125 | This brought an entirely new answer to the question,"Why should I do this or that?" |
22125 | Why should they always have to go to the Doge''s Palace or to some School to enjoy this pleasure? |
14634 | ''And has he got a vote?'' |
14634 | ''Does his coat Fit?'' |
14634 | ''What are you called?'' |
14634 | ''What''s his race?'' |
14634 | ''Who''s his father?'' |
14634 | A bloodhound; do you brave, do you stand me? |
14634 | A bravo is asked: Dost thou imagine thou canst slide on blood, And not be tainted with a shameful fall? |
14634 | A girl speaks thus within sight of the grave( p. 808):-- Yes, I shall die: what wilt thou gain? |
14634 | Ah, when will dawn that blissful day When I shall softly mount your stair, Your brothers meet me on the way, And one by one I greet them there? |
14634 | Ah, when will dawn that day of bliss When we before the priest say Yes? |
14634 | Am I your dog? |
14634 | And what can be more piteous than this prayer? |
14634 | And whence flows this pride? |
14634 | But how should the unfortunate Francesco be entrapped? |
14634 | Charles Lamb was certainly in error? |
14634 | Couldst thou not speak some seasonable word, Tell him what shame this idle love hath wrought? |
14634 | Do the noblemen of Rome Erect it for their wives, that I am sent To lodge there? |
14634 | Do you know me? |
14634 | Fair one, haste our king to greet: Who will fling him blossoms sweet Soonest on this first of May? |
14634 | For what past sorrow is he weary of his life? |
14634 | From those who feel the fire I feel, what use Is there in asking pardon? |
14634 | He looks sturdy, and may live to be of any age-- doomed always, is that possible, to beg? |
14634 | He who steals another''s heart, Let him give his own heart too: Who''s the robber? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How can I sing light- souled and fancy- free, When my loved lord no longer smiles on me? |
14634 | How have I made, dear Lord, dame Fortune wroth? |
14634 | How indeed could he make this city in a moment free, after sixty years of slow and systematic corruption? |
14634 | How shall I bear a pang so passing sore? |
14634 | How shall I make the fount of tears abound, To weep apace with grief''s unmeasured flow? |
14634 | How shall we reconstruct the long- past life which filled its rooms with sound, the splendour of its pageants, the thrill of tragedies enacted here? |
14634 | I have often asked myself, Who, then, was this nun? |
14634 | In his rage he cries: What fury raised_ thee_ up? |
14634 | In other words, what is the characteristic which, proceeding from the personality of the artist, is impressed on all his work? |
14634 | In the following picture of the house of Venus, who shall say how much of Ariosto''s Alcina and Tasso''s Armida is contained? |
14634 | Is a girl about to win A brave husband in her lover?-- Straight you set to talk him over:''Is he wealthy?'' |
14634 | Is all art excellent in itself and good in its effect that is beautiful and earnest? |
14634 | Is he out in it, and where? |
14634 | Love, what hast thou to command? |
14634 | Mark ye how sunk in woe The poor wretch forth doth pass, And may not answer, for his grief, one word? |
14634 | Methinks I am dropping in swoon or slumber: Am I drunken or sober, yes or no? |
14634 | Midas treads a wearier measure: All he touches turns to gold: If there be no taste of pleasure, What''s the use of wealth untold? |
14634 | No, you pander? |
14634 | Now, prithee, let me hear what made you stay So long upon the upland lawns away? |
14634 | O traitor hill, what shall it be? |
14634 | O traitor hill, what will you do? |
14634 | Or is it my brain that reels away? |
14634 | Or with thy beauty choose To make him blest who loves thee best of all? |
14634 | Or, like the black and melancholic yew- tree, Dost think to root thyself in dead men''s graves, And yet to prosper? |
14634 | Oredimus? |
14634 | Say, hast thou seen a calf of mine, all white Save for a spot of black upon her front, Two feet, one flank, and one knee ruddy- bright? |
14634 | Say, hast thou seen her now? |
14634 | See''st thou that all his senses are distraught? |
14634 | See, I have emptied my horn already: Stretch hither your beaker to me, I pray: Are the hills and the lawns where we roam unsteady? |
14634 | Shall we these years that are so fair let fly? |
14634 | Should he bring manuscripts or marbles, precious vases or inscriptions in half- legible Greek character? |
14634 | Since you beg with such a grace, How can I refuse a song, Wholesome, honest, void of wrong, On the follies of the place? |
14634 | Since you beg with such a grace, How can I refuse a song, Wholesome, honest, void of wrong, On the follies of the place? |
14634 | Tell me, dear love, which are the most, Your light steps or the sighs they cost? |
14634 | Tell me, dear love, which more abound, My sighs or your steps on the ground? |
14634 | The scholar''s scepticism, which lies at the root of his perversity, finds utterance in this meditation upon death: Whither shall I go now? |
14634 | Then answers Love: Hast thou no memory How I to lovers this great guerdon give, Free from all human bondage to endure? |
14634 | Thyrsis, what thinkest thou of thy loved lord? |
14634 | What anguish of remorse has driven him to such a solitude? |
14634 | What are these weights my feet encumber? |
14634 | What beauty manifest? |
14634 | What calm is in the kiss of noon? |
14634 | What found you by the way to do? |
14634 | What grace of heaven, what lucky star benign Yields me the sight of beauty so divine?'' |
14634 | What grace, what love, what fate surpassing fear Shall give me wings like dove''s wings soft as snow, That I may rest and raise me from the clay? |
14634 | What have I done, dear Lord, the world to cross? |
14634 | What have I done, dear Lord, to fret the folk? |
14634 | What history had she? |
14634 | What is''t distracts you? |
14634 | What joy hast thou to keep a captive hung? |
14634 | What joy hath rapt me from my own control? |
14634 | What light is this? |
14634 | What man is he who with his golden lyre Hath moved the gates that never move, While the dead folk repeat his dirge of love? |
14634 | What mattered it that the theme was slight? |
14634 | What melody? |
14634 | What of the calf? |
14634 | What place would there be for a Correggio or a Raphael in such a world as Webster''s? |
14634 | What sorrow- laden song shall e''er be found To match the burden of my matchless woe? |
14634 | What sweet makes me swoon? |
14634 | What terrible crime had consigned him to this living tomb? |
14634 | What was the cause of his death? |
14634 | What''s this flesh? |
14634 | What, me, my lord? |
14634 | What, then, is the Correggiosity of Correggio? |
14634 | When comes the day, my staff, my strength, To call your mother mine at length? |
14634 | When will the Italians learn to use these men as Fabius or as Cæsar, not as the Vitelli and the Trinci used them? |
14634 | When will the day come, love of mine, I shall be yours and you be mine? |
14634 | Whence came pure peace into my soul? |
14634 | Where am I? |
14634 | Where is the sun which shone so fair? |
14634 | Who brought me here? |
14634 | Who can rebuke me then if I am kind So far as honesty comports and Love? |
14634 | Who e''er will sing so sweetly, now she''s gone? |
14634 | Who hath laid laws on Love? |
14634 | Who knows, for instance, the veritable author of many of those mighty German chorals which sprang into being at the period of the Reformation? |
14634 | Who speaks? |
14634 | Who was the first to give it shape and form? |
14634 | Why did the Greeks consecrate these myrtle- rods to Death as well as Love? |
14634 | Why do we here desire the flower of some emergent feeling to grow from the air, or from the soil, or from humanity to greet us? |
14634 | Will pity not be given For one short look so full thereof? |
14634 | Wilt thou not put thy flower of youth to use? |
14634 | Would you be kicked? |
14634 | Would you have your neck broke? |
14634 | Yet both perhaps have scarcely interpreted their own spirit; for is not the true source of tears deeper and more secret? |
14634 | an lateri juncta puella meo?_ EURYDICE. |
14634 | through what long years Will she withhold her face from me, Which stills the stormy skies howe''er they rave? |
14634 | what is''t? |
14634 | what''s that? |
14634 | what''s that? |
14634 | wherefore did she cease and loose my hand? |
1673 | And that person is he who is good at calculation-- the arithmetician? |
1673 | But is it better to do wrong intentionally or unintentionally? |
1673 | But to return: what say you of Odysseus and Achilles? |
1673 | EUDICUS: Why are you silent, Socrates, after the magnificent display which Hippias has been making? |
1673 | For example, had a man better have a rudder with which he will steer ill, voluntarily or involuntarily? |
1673 | For who always does justice to himself, or who writes with equal care at all times? |
1673 | HIPPIAS: Certainly not, Socrates; what makes you say so? |
1673 | HIPPIAS: Certainly; how can I have any other? |
1673 | HIPPIAS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
1673 | HIPPIAS: Where is that? |
1673 | He who runs slowly voluntarily, or he who runs slowly involuntarily? |
1673 | I will therefore remind you of what you were saying: were you not saying that Achilles was a true man, and Odysseus false and wily? |
1673 | Is he not the good man? |
1673 | Is not he who is better made able to assume evil and disgraceful figures and postures voluntarily, as he who is worse made assumes them involuntarily? |
1673 | Is not the same person best able to speak falsely or to speak truly about diagrams; and he is-- the geometrician? |
1673 | Must it not be so? |
1673 | Must not justice, at all events, be one of these? |
1673 | Please to answer once more: Is not justice a power, or knowledge, or both? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And Homer must be presumed to have meant that the true man is not the same as the false? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And are you not likewise said to speak truly about calculation? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And being as you are the wisest and ablest of men in these matters of calculation, are you not also the best? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And could you speak falsehoods about them equally well? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And does not the same hold of astronomy? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And does not the same hold of the bow and the lyre, the flute and all other things? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And having this knowledge, are they ignorant, or are they wise? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And he who runs slowly runs badly? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And he who runs slowly runs ill, and he who runs quickly runs well? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And he who runs well is a good runner, and he who runs ill is a bad runner? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And if a species of doing, a species of action? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And if justice is knowledge, then the wiser will be the juster soul, and the more ignorant the more unjust? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And if some one were to ask you what is the sum of 3 multiplied by 700, you would tell him the true answer in a moment, if you pleased? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And if they are prudent, do they know or do they not know what they do? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And is it better to possess the mind of an archer who voluntarily or involuntarily misses the mark? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And is it worse or more dishonourable at a wrestling match, to fall, or to throw another? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And is not blinking a defect in the eyes? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And is not running a species of doing? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And is not the soul which has the greater power and wisdom also better, and better able to do both good and evil in every action? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And is that your own opinion, Hippias? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And now do you perceive that the same person has turned out to be false as well as true? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And should we not desire to have our own minds in the best state possible? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And tell me, Hippias, are you not a skilful calculator and arithmetician? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And that would be true of a dog, or of any other animal? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And the good man is he who has the good soul, and the bad man is he who has the bad? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And the true differ from the false-- the true and the false are the very opposite of each other? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And there are bad runners? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And therefore you would be the most able to tell the truth about these matters, would you not? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And to do injustice is to do ill, and not to do injustice is to do well? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And were you not yourself just now shown to be best able to speak falsely about calculation? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And what do you say about grace, Hippias? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of an unmusical voice; would you prefer the voice which is voluntarily or involuntarily out of tune? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of the art of medicine;--has not the mind which voluntarily works harm to the body, more of the healing art? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of the characters of slaves? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And will not the better and abler soul when it does wrong, do wrong voluntarily, and the bad soul involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And will our minds be better if they do wrong and make mistakes voluntarily or involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And would you choose to possess goods or evils? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And would you rather always have eyes with which you might voluntarily blink and not see, or with which you might involuntarily blink? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And would you rather have a horse of such a temper that you may ride him ill voluntarily or involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: And would you rather have feet which are voluntarily or involuntarily lame? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Are you not also skilled in geometry? |
1673 | SOCRATES: But is not lameness a defect or deformity? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Do you not see, then, that the same man is false and also true about the same matters? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Do you say that the false, like the sick, have no power to do things, or that they have the power to do things? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Does the false man tell lies about other things, but not about number, or when he is making a calculation? |
1673 | SOCRATES: He and no one else is good at it? |
1673 | SOCRATES: I am very desirous, Hippias, of examining this question, as to which are the better-- those who err voluntarily or involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: In a word, then, the false are they who are wise and have the power to speak falsely? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Is not that because you are the wisest and ablest of men in these matters? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Now, Hippias, I think that I understand your meaning; when you say that Odysseus is wily, you clearly mean that he is false? |
1673 | SOCRATES: O rare Hippias, will you be so good as not to laugh, if I find a difficulty in following you, and repeat my questions several times over? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Shall we examine other instances? |
1673 | SOCRATES: That would be the better horse? |
1673 | SOCRATES: The involuntary is the worse of the two? |
1673 | SOCRATES: The soul, then, which acts ill, acts voluntarily by power and art-- and these either one or both of them are elements of justice? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then Odysseus would appear after all to be better than Achilles? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then a man who has not the power of speaking falsely and is ignorant can not be false? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then he who involuntarily does evil actions, is worse in a race than he who does them voluntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then he who runs badly does a bad and dishonourable action in a race? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then in a race, and in running, swiftness is a good, and slowness is an evil quality? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then in astronomy also, the same man will be true and false? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then in the art of medicine the voluntary is better than the involuntary? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then in your own case you deem that which voluntarily acts ill, better than that which involuntarily acts ill? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then may we further assume, Hippias, that there are men who are false about calculation and number? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then the good man will voluntarily do wrong, and the bad man involuntarily, if the good man is he who has the good soul? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then the good runner does this bad and disgraceful action voluntarily, and the bad involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then the mind which involuntarily errs is worse than the mind which errs voluntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then the same person is able to speak both falsely and truly about calculation? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then they are prudent, I suppose? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then voluntary ungracefulness comes from excellence of the bodily frame, and involuntary from the defect of the bodily frame? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then with a horse of better temper, vicious actions would be produced voluntarily; and with a horse of bad temper involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then, Hippias, he who voluntarily does wrong and disgraceful things, if there be such a man, will be the good man? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then, according to you, they are both powerful and wily, are they not? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then, according to your view, it would seem that the false are to be ranked in the class of the powerful and wise? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Then, at a wrestling match, he who voluntarily does base and dishonourable actions is a better wrestler than he who does them involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: This would be the better mind for the purposes of archery? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Well, and does not the same hold in that science also? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Well, but at a wrestling match-- which is the better wrestler, he who falls voluntarily or involuntarily? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Which of the two then is a better runner? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Who can they be? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Who, then, Hippias, is discovered to be false at calculation? |
1673 | SOCRATES: Why, were not the voluntary liars only just now shown to be better than the involuntary? |
1673 | Which is the better of the two? |
1673 | Why do you not either refute his words, if he seems to you to have been wrong in any point, or join with us in commending him? |
1673 | Will you tell me, and then I shall perhaps understand you better; has not Homer made Achilles wily? |
1673 | Would the ignorant man be better able to tell a falsehood in matters of calculation than you would be, if you chose? |
1673 | Would you not call a man able who could do that? |
1673 | and in what particular does either surpass the other? |
10096 | ''Fore God, the wisdoms and the greatnesses Of seeming, are they hollow all, as things Of naught? |
10096 | ''Tis bitter that mine eye Should see it.... O ye Argives, was your spear Keen, and your hearts so low and cold, to fear This babe? |
10096 | ''Tis we, thy children; shall no man aid us? |
10096 | ( How? |
10096 | A deadly wrong they did me, yea within Mine holy place: thou knowest? |
10096 | Ah, husband still, how shall thy hand be bent To slay me? |
10096 | Ah, is it thou? |
10096 | Ah, what bringeth he Of news or judgment? |
10096 | Ah, woe is me; hath Ajax come again? |
10096 | Am I still alone? |
10096 | And Hector''s woe, What is it? |
10096 | And I, whose slave am I, The shaken head, the arm that creepeth by, Staff- crutchèd, like to fall? |
10096 | And comest thou now Forth, and hast decked thy bosom and thy brow, And breathest with thy lord the same blue air, Thou evil heart? |
10096 | And hast thou turned from the Altar of frankincense, And given to the Greek thy temple of Ilion? |
10096 | And her own Prize that God promised Out of the golden clouds, her virgin crown?... |
10096 | And is it granted that I speak, or no, In answer to them ere I die, to show I die most wronged and innocent? |
10096 | And is this not woe?) |
10096 | And my sons? |
10096 | And this their King so wise[22], who ruleth all, What wrought he? |
10096 | And this unhappy one-- would any eyes Gaze now on Hecuba? |
10096 | And thou, Polyxena, Where art thou? |
10096 | And thou, what tears can tell thy doom? |
10096 | And will ye leave her downstricken, A woman, and so old? |
10096 | And yet, what help?... |
10096 | And, to say nothing of Zeus, how can the Goddess of Morning rise and shine upon us uncaring? |
10096 | Argos, belike, or Phthia shall it be, Or some lone island of the tossing sea, Far, far from Troy? |
10096 | But what minion of the Greek Is this that cometh, with new words to speak? |
10096 | Canst thou see help, or refuge anywhere? |
10096 | Dear God, what would they? |
10096 | Deep in the heart of me I feel thine hand, Mother: and is it he Dead here, our prince to be, And lord of the land? |
10096 | Do I not know her? |
10096 | Doth he not go With me, to the same master? |
10096 | For Helen''s sister''s pride? |
10096 | For this land''s sake Thou comest, not for Hellas? |
10096 | For what woe lacketh here? |
10096 | Had ye so little pride? |
10096 | Hath that old hate and deep Failed, where she lieth in her ashen sleep? |
10096 | Heard ye? |
10096 | Here on the shore Wouldst hold them or amid mine own salt foam? |
10096 | How have they cast me, and to whom A bondmaid? |
10096 | How say''st thou? |
10096 | How shall it be? |
10096 | How should a poet carve the funeral stone To tell thy story true? |
10096 | How, for his Spartan bride A tirewoman? |
10096 | How? |
10096 | How? |
10096 | How? |
10096 | I ask not thee; I ask my own sad thought, What was there in my heart, that I forgot My home and land and all I loved, to fly With a strange man? |
10096 | I shall do service in the hall Of them that slew.... How? |
10096 | In the other( Stesichorus,_ Sack of Ilion_(?)) |
10096 | Is it all in vain that our Trojan princes have been loved by the Gods? |
10096 | Is it the Isle Immortal, Salamis, waits for me? |
10096 | Is it the Rock that broods Over the sundered floods Of Corinth, the ancient portal Of Pelops''sovranty?'' |
10096 | Is it the flare Of torches? |
10096 | Is the fall thereof Too deep for all that now is over me Of anguish, and hath been, and yet shall be? |
10096 | Is''t not rare fortune that the King hath smiled On such a maid? |
10096 | Know''st thou my bitter stress? |
10096 | Marked ye? |
10096 | Mother of him of old, whose mighty spear Smote Greeks like chaff, see''st thou what things are here? |
10096 | My daughter? |
10096 | Nay, Hadst thou no surer rope, no sudden way Of the sword, that any woman honest- souled Had sought long since, loving her lord of old? |
10096 | Nay, why, my little one? |
10096 | Nay: Why call I on the Gods? |
10096 | O Fire, Fire, where men make marriages Surely thou hast thy lot; but what are these Thou bringest flashing? |
10096 | O Helen, Helen, thou ill tree That Tyndareus planted, who shall deem of thee As child of Zeus? |
10096 | O thou great wealth of glory, stored Of old in Ilion, year by year We watched... and wert thou nothingness? |
10096 | Or is it tidings heard From some far Spirit? |
10096 | Or what child meanest thou? |
10096 | Out of the tent of the Greek king I steal, my Queen, with trembling breath: What means thy call? |
10096 | Overseas Bear me afar to strange cities? |
10096 | Polyxena? |
10096 | Poseidon, god of the sea and its merchandise, and Apollo( possibly a local shepherd god? |
10096 | Priam, mine own Priam, Lying so lowly, Thou in thy nothingness, Shelterless, comfortless, See''st thou the thing I am? |
10096 | Say then what lot hath any? |
10096 | See''st thou what end is come? |
10096 | Seëst thou, seëst thou? |
10096 | Shall I thrust aside Hector''s beloved face, and open wide My heart to this new lord? |
10096 | Shall the ship go heavier for her sin? |
10096 | She liveth still? |
10096 | Speak first; wilt thou be one In heart with me and hand till all be done? |
10096 | Speak, Friend? |
10096 | Ten years behind ten years athwart his way Waiting: and home, lost and unfriended.... Nay: Why should Odysseus''labours vex my breath? |
10096 | The flame of the cakes of corn, is it gone from hence, The myrrh on the air and the wreathèd towers gone? |
10096 | The sainted of Apollo? |
10096 | Thou hast some counsel of the Gods, or word Spoken of Zeus? |
10096 | Thou of the Ages[47], O wherefore fleëst thou, Lord of the Phrygian, Father that made us? |
10096 | Thou pitiest her? |
10096 | Thy land is fallen and thy lord, and thou A prisoner and alone, one woman; how Canst battle against us? |
10096 | Tis ordered, this child.... Oh, How can I tell her of it? |
10096 | To Odysseus''gate My mother goeth, say''st thou? |
10096 | To watch a tomb? |
10096 | Weak limbs, why tremble ye? |
10096 | Weepest thou, Mother mine own? |
10096 | What fall yet lacketh, ere we touch The last dead deep of misery? |
10096 | What fashion of the laws of Greece? |
10096 | What hope have I To hold me? |
10096 | What is it? |
10096 | What is there that I fear to say? |
10096 | What is this?... |
10096 | What knoweth she of evils like to these, That dead Polyxena, thou weepest for? |
10096 | What lingereth still, O wounded City, of unknown ill, Ere yet thou diest? |
10096 | What lord, what land.... Ah me, Phthia or Thebes, or sea- worn Thessaly? |
10096 | What man now hath her, or what doom? |
10096 | What meanest thou? |
10096 | What means that sudden light? |
10096 | What of Andromache, Wife of mine iron- hearted Hector, where Journeyeth she? |
10096 | What of joy Falls, or can fall on any child of Troy? |
10096 | What of that other child Ye reft from me but now? |
10096 | What seekest thou? |
10096 | What sought ye then that ye came? |
10096 | What was the"device"? |
10096 | What woman''s lips can so forswear her dead, And give strange kisses in another''s bed? |
10096 | When wast thou taken? |
10096 | Where lies the galley? |
10096 | Wherefore should great Hera''s eyes So hunger to be fair? |
10096 | Wherefore? |
10096 | Whither moves thy cry, Thy bitter cry? |
10096 | Whither shall I tread? |
10096 | Who am I that I sit Here at a Greek king''s door, Yea, in the dust of it? |
10096 | Who be these on the crested rock? |
10096 | Who found thee so? |
10096 | Why call on things so weak For aid? |
10096 | Why didst thou cheat me so? |
10096 | Why raise me any more? |
10096 | Why should I speak the shame of them, before They come?... |
10096 | Why will ye slay this innocent, that seeks No wrong?... |
10096 | Will they leave him here to build again The wreck?... |
10096 | Yea, and thou, And these that lie around, do they not know? |
10096 | Yet I would ask thee, what decree is gone Forth for my life or death? |
10096 | and is it come, the end of all, The very crest and summit of my days? |
10096 | p. 35"Why call on things so weak?" |
10096 | who is there That prayeth heaven, and in so strange a prayer? |
13296 | Distinguishedin what? |
13296 | Stands Ulster where it did? |
13296 | That stuff they like up there, do they? 13296 12mo,$ 1.50 TO: FREDERICK JAMES GREGG-Let us promenade our prejudices."--Stendhal(?) |
13296 | 70 in the catalogue)? |
13296 | And Botticelli? |
13296 | And are they any fairer to young talent than official critics? |
13296 | And he adduced certain canvases painted with the misty- edged trees long before-- but why continue? |
13296 | And is there more noble, more virile music in all art than The Surrender of Breda? |
13296 | And the bull- fights? |
13296 | And why not? |
13296 | Balzac, and later Disraeli, asked:"After all, what are the critics? |
13296 | Bles, for example, as seen in the Rijks Museum, is a fascinating subject to the student; but are we really looking at his work? |
13296 | Bruges the Dead? |
13296 | But are you the first to endure them? |
13296 | But only this? |
13296 | But understood? |
13296 | But what can be said that is new about Rubens or Van Dyck? |
13296 | But what of the remainder of this insignificant composition with its toad and cows, its meaningless landscape? |
13296 | But where now is the painter critic and the professional critic? |
13296 | But who shall pass judgment upon this unhappy man? |
13296 | Can the record of criticism made by plastic artists show a generous Robert Schumann? |
13296 | Did Hamerton see a fine plate? |
13296 | Did any of the later Dutch conjurers in paint attain such transparency? |
13296 | Do his friends not overdo their glorification, his critics their censure? |
13296 | Does n''t the perverse clash in such a complex temperament give us exotic dissonances? |
13296 | For sculpture is a static, not a dynamic art-- is it not? |
13296 | Goethe, the imperial the myriad- minded Goethe, the apostle of culture, the model European man of the nineteenth century-- what of him? |
13296 | Had he, Meryon, not written poems himself? |
13296 | Had not the mighty Victor Hugo addressed flattering words to him? |
13296 | Has any one so told the truth concerning the ex- seminarian, casuist, and marvellous prose writer of France? |
13296 | Have they always-- as befits honest critics-- recognised the pupils of other men, pupils and men both at the opposite pole of their own theories? |
13296 | Have you more genius than Chateaubriand and Wagner? |
13296 | Have you seen his Spanish Dancers? |
13296 | He painted the sparkle of the eyes and also the look in them, the challenging glance that asks:"Are we, too, not humans?" |
13296 | He was fanciful rather than poetic, and the picture of Napoleon in hell enduring the reproaches of his victims( why should they be there?) |
13296 | Heine in his Deutschland asks: Kennst du die Hölle des Dante nicht, Die schreckliche Terzetten? |
13296 | How account for the violent changes in popular taste? |
13296 | How can a critic criticise a creator? |
13296 | How does he secure such intensity of pitch in his painting of atmosphere, of sunshine? |
13296 | How many have realised the charm of the rear view of Santa Maria Salute? |
13296 | How to persuade the patient to swallow the dose? |
13296 | II Who was Herri met de Bles? |
13296 | If Degas is an impressionist, pray what then is Monet? |
13296 | If he did not believe, why should he have displayed such continual scorn? |
13296 | If you painted like Monet, paralysis of the optical centre had set in-- but why continue? |
13296 | Into what morgue fell John Martin before his death? |
13296 | Is Saul smiling or crying behind the uplifted cloak? |
13296 | Is all this nothing more than"distinguished"? |
13296 | Is he contemplating in his neurasthenia an attempt on David''s life with a whizzing lance? |
13296 | Is it necessary to add that the handling takes your breath away because of its consummate ease and its realisation of the effects sought? |
13296 | Is it not dangerous to say of a genius that his work alone should count, that his life is negligible? |
13296 | Is it not the last word of the art of Velasquez-- though it preceded The Maids? |
13296 | Is it only a trick of the wrist, a deft blending of colours by this artist, who has been called, wrongfully-- the"Shakespeare of the brush"? |
13296 | Is it young genius in the raw, awaiting the sunshine of success to ripen its somewhat terrifying gifts? |
13296 | Is n''t Candida delicious in green, with black head- dress of lace-- isn''t she bewitching? |
13296 | Is the absolute value of the parts in shadow lowered or raised? |
13296 | Is the secret of the organ tone lost like the varnishing of Cremona fiddles and the blue of the old Delft china? |
13296 | Is there any strain of tendency, any central current to be detected? |
13296 | Is there no midway spot, no safety ground for that weary Ishmael the professional critic to escape being gored? |
13296 | It is something, is it not, to evoke with needle, acid, paper, and ink the dualism of such a brain and temperament as was Renan''s? |
13296 | Music? |
13296 | Must we stop before Mabuse, or before the cattle piece of the Dutch school, seventeenth century? |
13296 | Need we add that after the death of his father he soon wasted a fortune? |
13296 | Need we add that this French author by no means sees Botticelli in the musical sense? |
13296 | Need we say that Degas is a great wit, though not a writer; a wit and a critic? |
13296 | Now, if there is a dark spot in a highly lighted subject it is the question, Who was the first impressionist? |
13296 | Or is the exhibition a huge, mystifying_ blague_? |
13296 | Or of his liver? |
13296 | Or of his soul? |
13296 | Rembrandt is unlike any other Dutch painter-- Hals, Vermeer, Teniers, Van der Heist-- what have these in common with the miller''s son? |
13296 | Sattler, Charlet, Raffet, James Ensor, Rethel, De Groux, Rops, Edvard Münch( did you ever see his woman wooed by a skeleton? |
13296 | Señor Sorolla is also one of the half- dozen( are there so many?) |
13296 | Shelley? |
13296 | Study that Boy With the Sword at the Metropolitan Museum-- is there anything superficial about it? |
13296 | Style, character, paint quality, vision of the beautiful? |
13296 | That fatal(?) |
13296 | The American went to Daumier''s atelier, and seeing a picture on the easel, asked,"How much?" |
13296 | The agony of the man( do you recall The Torture by Hope of Villiers de l''Isle- Adam?) |
13296 | The poet of air, sunshine, and beautiful women-- can we ever forget his Jeanne Samary? |
13296 | The revolt, the passion, the scorn, were they all the result of his health? |
13296 | The spire of Notre Dame and the apsis may be seen up( or is it down?) |
13296 | There is Rops, for example, whose etchings may be compared to Meryon''s; yet who except a few amateurs seeks Rops? |
13296 | This is called_ dissociation_ of tones; and here is a new convention; why banish all save the spectrum? |
13296 | To the layman who asked,"What is impressionism?" |
13296 | To the painter the poet scornfully wrote:"You complain about attacks? |
13296 | Under which king? |
13296 | Was Botticelli a"comprehensive"--as those with the sixth or synthetic sense have been named by Lombroso? |
13296 | Was Carrière a decorative painter by nature-- setting aside training? |
13296 | Was n''t this the exhibition of which Albert Wolff wrote that some lunatics were showing their wares, which they called pictures, etc.? |
13296 | Was not the spiritual impulse missing in this man? |
13296 | What could be more tangibly massive than the plate called Breaking Up of the Hannibal? |
13296 | What crimes were committed to merit such atrocious punishment? |
13296 | What has sugar to do with sound? |
13296 | What if they do not mean much? |
13296 | What is the effect where considerable portions of the scene are suddenly thrown into marked shadow, as well as others illuminated with intense light? |
13296 | What was this shocking canvas like? |
13296 | What would he have said in the presence of this captivating evocation of a historic event? |
13296 | Whatever is to become of poor Piranesi? |
13296 | Where are the polished surfaces of the cultured studio worker; where the bric- a- brac which we inseparably connect with pseudo- Spanish art? |
13296 | Where did he receive his artistic training? |
13296 | Who can tell the renunciations made by the Frenchman in his endeavour to wrest the enigma of personality from its abysmal depths? |
13296 | Who does n''t remember that young lady dressed in white satin and standing with her back to you? |
13296 | Who was he? |
13296 | Why all the excitement in official circles? |
13296 | Why did Goya conceive his_ Caprichos_? |
13296 | Why? |
13296 | Why? |
13296 | Will the eye ever tire of its glorious gloom, its core of tonal richness, its virile exaltation of everyday existence? |
13296 | William Blake is in vogue; perhaps Martin--? |
13296 | Would Baudelaire''s magic verse and prose sound its faint, acrid, sinister music if the French poet had led a sensible life? |
13296 | Yet is Rodin justly appraised? |
13296 | Yet, is there anything sadder under the sun than a soul incapable of sadness? |
13296 | You are also a painter?" |
13296 | ZORN Anders Zorn-- what''s in a name? |
13296 | elle a done un rendezvous avec le valet de chambre?" |
12700 | But when we come to inquire Whence is matter? 12700 Can he answer these questions? |
12700 | Canst thou by searching find out God? 12700 How can the man who has learned but one art procure all the conveniences of life honestly? |
12700 | Oh, what is Heaven but the fellowship Of minds that each can stand against the world By its own meek and incorruptible will? |
12700 | Physician art thou, one all eyes; Philosopher, a fingering slave, One that would peep and botanize Upon his mother''s grave? |
12700 | Scorn triflescomes from Aunt Mary Moody Emerson, and reappears in her nephew, Ralph Waldo.--"What right have you, Sir, to your virtue? |
12700 | Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar? 12700 Shall we judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? |
12700 | What is the remedy? 12700 What?" |
12700 | Who has a part with**** at this next exhibition? |
12700 | Why call him_ the Post_? |
12700 | Why then goest thou as some Boswell or literary worshipper to this saint or to that? 12700 ''How long?'' 12700 ''What is this truth you seek? 12700 ''What will you do, then?'' 12700 ***** What was the errand on which he visited our earth,--the message with which he came commissioned from the Infinite source of all life? 12700 *****Let us then ponder his words:--''Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach and sunsets show? |
12700 | --Of these three questions, What is matter? |
12700 | A hundred and forty?" |
12700 | A little while afterwards he asked of his fellow- traveller, Professor Thayer,"How much did I weigh? |
12700 | After reading what Emerson says about"the masses,"one is tempted to ask whether a philosopher can ever have"a constituency"and be elected to Congress? |
12700 | And how could prose go on all- fours more unmetrically than this? |
12700 | And what shall we do with Pope''s"Essay on Man,"which has furnished more familiar lines than"Paradise Lost"and"Paradise Regained"both together? |
12700 | And will you stop in England, and bring home the author of"Counterparts"with you? |
12700 | Are my friends bent on killing me with kindness? |
12700 | But what is the gift of a mourning ring to the bequest of a perpetual annuity? |
12700 | But what shall we say to the"Ars Poetica"of Horace? |
12700 | But what would youth be without its extravagances,--its preterpluperfect in the shape of adjectives, its unmeasured and unstinted admiration? |
12700 | Can any ear reconcile itself to the last of these three lines of Emerson''s? |
12700 | Can he dispose of them? |
12700 | Can we find any trace of this idea elsewhere? |
12700 | Can you help any soul_? |
12700 | Can you obtain what you wish? |
12700 | Can you see tendency in your life? |
12700 | Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" |
12700 | Do all the women have bad noses and bad mouths? |
12700 | Does this sound wild and extravagant? |
12700 | Genius has given you the freedom of the universe, why then come within any walls? |
12700 | Have you eyes to find the five Which five hundred did survive?" |
12700 | Have you read Sampson Reed''s"Growth of the Mind"? |
12700 | How could the man in whose thought such a meteoric expression suddenly announced itself fail to recognize it as divine? |
12700 | How could they have got on together? |
12700 | How d''ye do? |
12700 | How d''ye do? |
12700 | Is it too late now? |
12700 | Is not the inaudible, inward laughter of Emerson more refreshing than the explosions of our noisiest humorists? |
12700 | Is not this to make vain the gift of God? |
12700 | Is not this to turn back the hand on the dial?" |
12700 | Is there method in your consciousness? |
12700 | Is virtue piecemeal? |
12700 | Is''t not like That devil- spider that devours her mate Scarce freed from her embraces?" |
12700 | One was tempted to ask:"What forlorn hope have you led? |
12700 | Or did----write the novels and send them to London, as I fancied when I read them? |
12700 | Shall we not bid him come, and be Poet and Teacher of a most scattered flock wanting a shepherd? |
12700 | Shall we rank Emerson among the great poets or not? |
12700 | The breeze says to us in its own language, How d''ye do? |
12700 | The clouds are rich and dark, the air serene,_ So like the soul of me, what if''t were me_?" |
12700 | The eye does not bring landscapes into the world on its retina,--why should the brain bring thoughts? |
12700 | The translations excited me much, and who can estimate the value of a good thought? |
12700 | The"Rhodora,"another brief poem, finds itself foreshadowed in the inquiry,"What is Beauty?" |
12700 | They seemed to me to betray the richest invention, so rich as almost to say, why draw any line since you can draw all? |
12700 | Transcendentalism has its occasional vagaries( what school has not? |
12700 | Was he thinking of his relations with Carlyle? |
12700 | We do not want his fragments to be made wholes,--if we did, what hand could be found equal to the task? |
12700 | What am I? |
12700 | What are Olympiads and Consulates to these neighboring systems of being? |
12700 | What can promise more than an Essay by Emerson on"Immortality"? |
12700 | What do you? |
12700 | What does Rome know of rat and lizard? |
12700 | What great discovery have you made? |
12700 | What harm doth it?" |
12700 | What has Emerson to tell us of"Inspiration?" |
12700 | What heroic task of any kind have you performed?" |
12700 | What immortal book have you written? |
12700 | What is Beauty? |
12700 | What is a farm but a mute gospel?" |
12700 | What is the definite belief of Emerson as expressed in this discourse,--what does it mean? |
12700 | What is the use of going about and setting up a flag of negation?''" |
12700 | What is this beauty?'' |
12700 | What is this"genial atmosphere"but the very spirit of Christianity? |
12700 | What man could speak more fitly, with more authority of"Character,"than Emerson? |
12700 | What man was he who would lay his hand familiarly upon his shoulder and call him Waldo? |
12700 | What would it avail to tell you anecdotes of a sweet and wonderful boy, such as we solace and sadden ourselves with at home every morning and evening? |
12700 | When we come to the application, in the same Essay, almost on the same page, what can we make of such discourse as this? |
12700 | Whence is it? |
12700 | Where then did Goethe find his lovers? |
12700 | Where to? |
12700 | Who can give better counsels on"Culture"than Emerson? |
12700 | Who is the owner? |
12700 | Why have you not told me that we thought alike? |
12700 | Why should I cumber myself with regrets that the receiver is not capacious? |
12700 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? |
12700 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of theirs?" |
12700 | Why should you renounce your right to traverse the starlit deserts of truth, for the premature comforts of an acre, house, and barn? |
12700 | Will no_ Angel_ body himself out of that; no stalwart Yankee_ man_, with color in the cheeks of him and a coat on his back?" |
12700 | Wordsworth''s"Ode"is a noble and beautiful dream; is it anything more? |
12700 | You are quite welcome to the lines"To the Rhodora;"but I think they need the superscription["Lines on being asked''Whence is the Flower?''"]. |
12700 | _ New England Reformers_.--Would any one venture to guess how Emerson would treat this subject? |
12700 | and Whereto? |
12700 | and we have already taken our hats off and are answering it with our own How d''ye do? |
12700 | has my stove and pepper- pot a false bottom? |
12700 | or"Out of what great picture have these pieces been cut?" |
12700 | the old mystery remains, If I am I; thou, thou, or thou art I?" |
18278 | Do you think me unfit for it? |
18278 | Hospitable people; are they not, K----? |
18278 | That will do capitally; for if you say,''_ Kateh saket_ Magnesia?'' 18278 What''s that for?" |
18278 | Why does it not explode at once? 18278 Why, what are these, my dear Smith?" |
18278 | Will you oblige me by giving me a pen? |
18278 | Yes, I know the numbers, and can say''_ Kateh saket_,''which means,''how many hours,''or''how far to?'' |
18278 | ''How did that happen?'' |
18278 | *****"Is that smoke or a cloud,"asked Miss Bloomfield,"that rests so constantly upon that mountain?" |
18278 | --"But why not postpone them till near the end of October?" |
18278 | --"Why not, if I find that it will not afford me a living? |
18278 | --"Yes, and I will sign my own papers, and yours too, to save you the trouble,--or your clerk shall?" |
18278 | A colossal infant-- what can be made of it? |
18278 | Am I placed in a post so dangerous, and are contempt and humiliation my only reward? |
18278 | And an infant, too, that must not smile, or he might be taken for a representative of some other love than the celestial?" |
18278 | And how shall this cry be satisfied? |
18278 | And what now_ could_ he do? |
18278 | And who or what, after all, was Alfred Winston? |
18278 | Andate in Magnesia?" |
18278 | But does General Pépé feel that his own withers are unwrung? |
18278 | But what of that? |
18278 | But who ever hears of a title of honour among even the ablest, the most gallant, or the most attached of the Canadian colonists? |
18278 | But, in the name of Heaven, why should the bondholders pay nothing? |
18278 | Can he, hand on conscience, declare himself guiltless of exaggeration? |
18278 | Can it be believed that this is founded on a fair return of incomes by the commercial classes? |
18278 | Did you see those lustrous eyes and graceful head- dress? |
18278 | Have they less than a fourth of the whole income rated to the income tax? |
18278 | He asked the one who sat next him if there were not strangers at that moment in the room speaking? |
18278 | How are the charges of the national establishments to be defrayed? |
18278 | How can these be made to suffer for other men''s offences, or forced to give information which they declare themselves not to possess? |
18278 | How is it done? |
18278 | How long would the commercial or city industry of England stand direct taxes to the amount of 46 per cent on their clear income? |
18278 | I echoed with surprise.--"What do you see so wonderful in the notion of my going into the church?" |
18278 | I told him that I had brought my brief with me,--"A peremptory undertaking, I suppose,"said he, languidly,"to try at the next assizes?" |
18278 | If he with his eyes open loved and suffered, how could he tell but that Mildred might do the same? |
18278 | Is he rich or poor? |
18278 | Is it that 8,500,000 persons now in Ireland, can not pay even what 2,900,000 now pay in Scotland? |
18278 | Is it to be supposed that Ireland was doing nothing during this bustling period of English faction? |
18278 | Is n''t that rather a floorer for us?" |
18278 | Is not virtue so uncompromising as this, very near to rebellion against the gods and destiny?" |
18278 | No one will blame him for running away from Genoa; but ought he to have lingered at Rome? |
18278 | Now, what are those for?" |
18278 | O, mankind, where is your gratitude? |
18278 | Oh, yes, Annapolis must be defended-- Where is Annapolis?" |
18278 | One is sure that they will never hear truth; shall they not even have a chance of reading it?" |
18278 | Presently he said, rather suddenly,"Should you be surprised to hear of my entering the church?" |
18278 | Quis desiderio sit pudor, aut modus Tam cari capitis? |
18278 | Some difference it was necessary to imagine between it and their familiar earth, and could they fancy any thing more bright and beautiful than this?" |
18278 | To a passion which itself is the merest despair, must I add the maddest of jealousies?" |
18278 | To educate this priesthood,--what is it but to perfect an instrument for the restraining and corrupting the education of all the rest of the people? |
18278 | To which of these two classes did he belong? |
18278 | We all sighed at this deplorable infatuation; but what could we do? |
18278 | What amount of excitement would it take to make a genuine Turk open the eyes of astonishment? |
18278 | What can make that impression upon the organ of hearing-- upon the tympanum? |
18278 | What could he be therefore but simply a gentleman? |
18278 | What had he intended to do_ then_? |
18278 | What must have been his feelings? |
18278 | What remained for her but to keep her own heart quite sure? |
18278 | What thing of importance that only a great lawyer could do, did not Follett do? |
18278 | What think you of these colossal allegories? |
18278 | What was that sound of revelry that broke upon the stillness? |
18278 | What, then, comes of its £ 12,000,000 of rental? |
18278 | Where is now the bay of Naples, and star- light, and Vesuvius? |
18278 | Where should he go? |
18278 | Why has not some biographer, curious in the dissection of human vanity, written the real life of Doddington? |
18278 | Why not at once give out all its rage?" |
18278 | Why should I sit any longer perishing in chambers? |
18278 | any blockhead will know that you mean''How far to Magnesia?'' |
18278 | do you?" |
18278 | has the power of morbid attraction been discovered which may draw him from his seat and lead him to any effort of inquiry? |
18278 | shall we reveal?" |
18278 | was she quite sure that she still retained it in undisputed custody? |
18278 | what but misery could he reap from this passion? |
18278 | what should he do? |
18278 | would that man force himself into a seat here, and for what? |
2630 | And what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? |
2630 | Understood? |
2630 | By whom? |
2630 | Has any one ever disputed the contention, thus solemnly enunciated, that the doctrine of evolution was not invented the day before yesterday? |
2630 | Has any one ever dreamed of claiming it as a modern innovation? |
2630 | Vertebrate_ land_-population( Amphibia, Reptilia[?]). |
11571 | An''what is the port you''re plying to? |
11571 | And what is the ship you''re sailin''in? |
11571 | And who''s your skipper, and what is he like? |
11571 | How do we stand now? 11571 Watchman, what of the night?" |
11571 | What shall he have that killed the deer? |
11571 | ''Arris?" |
11571 | ''Ere--''ave a cigarette?"] |
11571 | ( to sentry):"Do you know the Defence Scheme for this sector of the line, my man?" |
11571 | ), who refuse to fight for their country, to do? |
11571 | :"Well, what is it, then?" |
11571 | And how has England taken the news? |
11571 | And then, soon after, tells us they Are feeding nicely all the day, And in the old familiar way? |
11571 | And then, when our last hope has fled, Declares the Huns are either dead Or hopelessly dispirited? |
11571 | And what has England''s answer been, apart from the stubborn and heroic resistance of her men on the Western Front? |
11571 | Austria is suing for peace; Count Tisza asks:"Why not admit frankly that we have lost the War?" |
11571 | Better still was the pointed query of Lord Henry Bentinck,"Is it not possible to take Lord Northcliffe a little too seriously?" |
11571 | But there is a better question than that, and it is this:"What shall they have that preserve the little dears?" |
11571 | But when are you going to fill up that silly gap?" |
11571 | But which straw? |
11571 | But why, he may ask, should he be judged by Lord Hardinge, himself a prospective defendant at the bar of public opinion? |
11571 | CAMOUFLAGE OFFICER:"What''s the matter?" |
11571 | Child- hearted once-- oh, deep defiled, Dare you look now upon a child? |
11571 | DOVE OF PEACE:"Of course, I want to please everybody, but is n''t this a bit thick?"] |
11571 | Did you still hear around you, as you lay, The wings of airmen sweeping by unseen, The thunder of the guns at close of day? |
11571 | Did your heart beat, remembering what had been? |
11571 | Do ye think it will hould?"] |
11571 | Do you know? |
11571 | FIRST LADY:"Why, ca n''t you see the Kangaroo feathers in his hat?"] |
11571 | FOR NATIVES"Who says we are in distress? |
11571 | GERMAN ADMIRAL:"And why the devil do n''t you stop''em when they_ are_ across? |
11571 | GRETCHEN:"Yes, dearest, but may it not show up the Fatherland to the brutal enemy one of these nights?"] |
11571 | Gamp''s_ elusive friend? |
11571 | Had n''t we better give it out that they''re sour?"] |
11571 | Have they not kilt all the half- crown officers and left nothing but the shillin''ones?"] |
11571 | Have you ever butted up against Robinson- Smith at Mudbank? |
11571 | Have you ever tried gargling with salt water?" |
11571 | Have you seen the new-----? |
11571 | Hence the problem:"Which am I( both ca n''t well be right), Pro- German or Pro- Trotskyite?" |
11571 | How could he carry on in a shattered and mourning world? |
11571 | I thought you were a friend of Germany?" |
11571 | I wonder if the long grass waves With wild- flowers just the same, Where Germans made their soldiers''graves Before the English came? |
11571 | If Germany, Austria, and Russia were to be fed, how was it to be done without disregarding the prior claims of Serbia and Roumania? |
11571 | Is it really like that at the Front?" |
11571 | Is not that true of the British race as a whole? |
11571 | Is there anything else to abolish?" |
11571 | Lost touch at the back? |
11571 | MR. PUNCH:"Risky work, is n''t it?" |
11571 | Ma?"] |
11571 | May I ask if you are a relative?" |
11571 | Me? |
11571 | Mother of Pity, what shall I do then? |
11571 | No babes, Sirrah?" |
11571 | Now in God''s name, from Whom your greatness flows, Sister, will you not speak? |
11571 | Now, why, in wonder, do they spell it in that way? |
11571 | OFFICER''S STEWARD:"Will you take your bath, sir, before or after haction?"] |
11571 | OFFICER:"And do you think you could prevent him landing all by yourself?" |
11571 | Or will he be ordered to ring a joy- bell on the anniversary of the inauguration of the German Republic? |
11571 | PAT:"Do they not, thin? |
11571 | PUNCH:"Oh, you are, are you? |
11571 | Parliament has reassembled, and Mr. Punch has been moved to ask Why? |
11571 | RUPPRECHT( of Bavaria):"Well, as one Crown Prince to another, what about your Hohenzollern line?"] |
11571 | SECOND BOLSHEVIK:"What about War?" |
11571 | SECOND LADY:"How do you know?" |
11571 | Slave nation in a land of hate, Where are the things that made you great? |
11571 | THE EAGLE:"Say, Boss, what''s the matter with trying me?"] |
11571 | The idea is, no doubt, to prevent the child when older from asking:"What did you do in the Great War, Daddy?" |
11571 | The last? |
11571 | The latest morning greeting is now:"_ Comment vous Devonportez- vous?_"_ April_, 1917. |
11571 | The liners go their stately way an''the cruisers take their ease, But where would they be if it was n''t for us with the water up to our knees? |
11571 | The problem"Is tea a food or is it not?" |
11571 | The_ Daily Mail_ asks,"Have we a Foreign Office?" |
11571 | Then in days of common sacrifice and peril was it strange That they ratified the union of the past? |
11571 | Then says he''s quite a Sunny Jim, That buoyant health and youthful vim Are sticking out all over him? |
11571 | WILHELM:"Well, what about Calais?" |
11571 | Was it that little village in the wood there down by the river, or was it that place with the cathedral and all them factories?"] |
11571 | What are her most vulnerable points? |
11571 | What are the hundred thousand young men( or is it two? |
11571 | What are you doing now? |
11571 | What did I tell you? |
11571 | What will America say or do? |
11571 | What''s become of Smith- Jones? |
11571 | Where, in a world of blood and tears, can_ Punch_ exercise his function without outraging the fitness of things? |
11571 | Which way is it?" |
11571 | Who comes there?" |
11571 | Who did it?" |
11571 | Who sees the Kaiser in Berlin, Dejected, haggard, old as sin, And shaking in his hoary skin? |
11571 | Who tells us tales of Krupp''s new guns, Much larger than the other ones, And endless trains chock- full of Huns? |
11571 | Why do n''t you''ave a walk down the road, dear?" |
11571 | Why prate of ruined lands out there, Of churches shattered stone by stone? |
11571 | Why should we bleed for others''need? |
11571 | Why, if Sir Douglas Haig asked for reserves, were they not sent sooner? |
11571 | Will it ever come out again? |
11571 | Wo n''t you come downstairs with the rest of us?" |
11571 | Yet listen to this from the_ Neueste Nachrichten_:"Our foes ask themselves continuously, How can we best get at Germany''s vital parts? |
11571 | Yet was it indecisive? |
11571 | You''ve given up the rumpety, then? |
11571 | Your lore-- a hideous mask wherein Self- worship hides its monstrous sin-- Music and verse, divinely wed-- How can these live where love is dead? |
11571 | [ Illustration: ALSO RAN WILHELM:"Are you luring them on, like me?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: ARMISTICE DAY SMALL CHILD( excitedly):"Oh, Mother, what_ do_ you think? |
11571 | [ Illustration: DYNASTIC AMENITIES LITTLE WILLIE( of Prussia):"As one Crown Prince to another, is n''t your Hindenburg line getting a bit shaky?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: Die Nacht am Rhein][ Illustration: PROSPEROUS IRISH FARMER:"And what about the War, your Riverence? |
11571 | [ Illustration: FARMER( who has got a lady- help in the dairy):"''Ullo, Missy, what in the world be ye doin''?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: FIRST CONTEMPTIBLE:"D''you remember halting here on the retreat, George?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: FIRST TRAWLER SKIPPER( to friend who is due to sail by next tide):"Are ye takin''any precautions against these submarines, Jock?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: FOR NEUTRALS"Why do we torpedo passenger ships? |
11571 | [ Illustration: GRANDPAPA( to small Teuton struggling with home- lessons):"Come, Fritz, is your task so difficult?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: LATEST ADDITION TO MINISTRY STAFF:"What''s the tea- time here?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: MADE IN GERMANY CIVILISATION:"What''s that supposed to represent?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: MISTRESS( as the new troops go by):"Which of them is your cousin?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: PORTER:"Do I know if the Rooshuns has really come to England? |
11571 | [ Illustration: THE BULL- DOG BREED OFFICER:"Now, my lad, do you know what you are placed here for?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: THE DEATH LORD THE KAISER( on reading the appalling tale of German losses):"What matter, so we Hohenzollerns survive?"] |
11571 | [ Illustration: THE GRAPES OF VERDUN THE OLD FOX:"You do n''t seem to be getting much nearer them?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: THE NEW- COMER:"My village, I think?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: THE RETURN OF THE MOCK TURTLE- DOVE KAISER}}( breathlessly):"Well?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: VISITOR( at Private Hospital):"Can I see Lieutenant Barker, please?" |
11571 | [ Illustration: VON POT AND VON KETTLE GERMAN GENERAL:"Why the devil do n''t you stop these Americans coming across? |
11571 | [ Illustration:"Have you brought me any souvenirs?" |
11571 | [ Illustration:"How was it you never let your mother know you''d won the V.C.?" |
11571 | [ Illustration:"TWO HEADS WITH BUT A SINGLE THOUGHT"FIRST HEAD:"What prospects?" |
15860 | ''Father, how shall I_ seem_ to love them?'' 15860 And shall you answer it, papa?" |
15860 | And what is it saying? |
15860 | And you wo n''t reconsider? 15860 But where is Kexholm?" |
15860 | But why did n''t you believe him, Harry? |
15860 | Did you know,said Mrs. Arles, after a half- hour''s silence,"that Marlboro''has returned?" |
15860 | Give her name;"Good- looking?" |
15860 | His what? |
15860 | How can I tell? |
15860 | How much money have you in that little purse? |
15860 | I beg your pardon? |
15860 | Lake Ladoga? |
15860 | Marlboro''? |
15860 | Marlboro''? |
15860 | May I speak with you a moment? |
15860 | Miss Changarnier? 15860 Mrs. Maylie,"said I,"do I look like a person who has had a story? |
15860 | Oh, it''s only an inversion of the old problem, If the ton of coal cost ten dollars, what will the cord of wood come to? 15860 One of the boys"--"What one?" |
15860 | Seen Margaret? |
15860 | She has other property? |
15860 | She was apparent heiress? |
15860 | Thank you,said Mr. St. George Erne;"that being settled, will you have the kindness to order rooms prepared for me and my traps?" |
15860 | Then what is it? |
15860 | Well, Marianne, how many yards of this wonderfully cheap carpet do you want? |
15860 | Well, papa,said Marianne,"in your chemical analysis of John''s rooms, what is the next thing to the sunshine?" |
15860 | What are you going to do? |
15860 | What are you here for? |
15860 | What can you find to do? |
15860 | What do you know of Marlboro''? |
15860 | What does she expect to become of her? |
15860 | What is the matter? |
15860 | What is this? |
15860 | What''ll you bet? |
15860 | Where are you going? |
15860 | Who can it be, at this hour? |
15860 | Who doubts that? |
15860 | Who knew it was so late? |
15860 | Who? |
15860 | Why did n''t she tell me? |
15860 | Why did n''t you go with him, Harry? |
15860 | [ N] Will the reader pardon me the transcript of a passage or two? 15860 _ Suomi?_"I asked, calling up a Finnish word with an effort. |
15860 | ("How d''ye do? |
15860 | ***** Why I deliver this horrible verse? |
15860 | All at once he called out,"Which of you chaps has got pluck enough to ride over to Swampsey Village to- morrow, after a young woman he never saw?" |
15860 | And before winter was over, what was I? |
15860 | And does he remember a little spot of garden- ground, walled in by dingy houses, that lies upon the right bank of the river near to Chelsea Hospital? |
15860 | And why? |
15860 | And, once put upon thought, what did I know of Margaret? |
15860 | Arles?" |
15860 | As for Goldsmith''s verse, who does not love it? |
15860 | But ask the beaux of Middlesex, Who know the country well, If Strawb''ry Hill, if Strawb''ry Hill Do n''t bear away the bell? |
15860 | But is Shakspeare''s verse easy reading? |
15860 | But then, if one has a startling fact to tell, why is it not best to tell it out, all at once, and in a startling manner? |
15860 | But what could the shrieks mean? |
15860 | Do n''t you see I''m an icicle?" |
15860 | Do n''t you see?" |
15860 | Do they ever romp and frolic? |
15860 | Do they love plants? |
15860 | Do they sketch or paint? |
15860 | Do they write letters, sew, embroider, crochet? |
15860 | Do you think I do n''t know why my girls have the credit of being the best- dressed girls on the street?" |
15860 | Does not this sound as if I had clipped it from the"Country Gentleman"of last week? |
15860 | Gold did I say? |
15860 | Has the reader ever sailed up the Thames, beyond Westminster? |
15860 | Have n''t I seen you mincing down- stairs, with all your colors harmonized, even to your gloves and gaiters? |
15860 | How did you know?" |
15860 | How does the world know what early disappointment he may be mourning over? |
15860 | How''s yer lady?" |
15860 | How''s your wife?") |
15860 | How, under the sun, had his Cousin Disbrowe got along with her? |
15860 | How?" |
15860 | I see you every day watching the children go past; and then, what have you there? |
15860 | I sent her into my room, and told her to take down that little riding- switch hanging over the mantel"--"What,--the ebony and gold?" |
15860 | I''ve only taken my clothes, as they''d be of no use to him, and"--"Where are you going?" |
15860 | If it is asked, Supposing California capable of producing the amount claimed for her, what could be done with this enormous quantity of wine? |
15860 | If she heard the surf upon the beach? |
15860 | If she saw a light? |
15860 | Is it anything to laugh about, that he has nobody to love him,--nobody he may call his own,--no home? |
15860 | Is it that of the young lady?" |
15860 | Is the man a personal friend, that he wishes to make you a present of a dollar on the yard? |
15860 | Just before she left me, she said,--"Do you hear the surf on the beach?" |
15860 | Kept asking her questions: If the wind had not gone down? |
15860 | Lacks The crowd perception?" |
15860 | May not"A Farmer"take a little pride in such testimony as this? |
15860 | Now do you see? |
15860 | On the very first page, who is"Pentapolin, named o''the Naked Arm"? |
15860 | Sit down and receive our visitor with all good- will and the freedom of a home? |
15860 | Sweet_ lillies_ of the valley, and_ art thou_ removed to a more congenial soil?" |
15860 | Then came questions,--"Who is she?" |
15860 | Was it not rather the bells of a city ages ago submerged, and now sending its ghostly summons up to the pilgrims passing over its crystal grave? |
15860 | What are centaurs to a_ savant_ on his hobby? |
15860 | What books do they read? |
15860 | What did anybody in the place? |
15860 | What do we do? |
15860 | What else?" |
15860 | What is it?" |
15860 | When the captain saw me, he started back and exclaimed,--"What sent you here?" |
15860 | Who said Marlboro''was a master? |
15860 | Who were the"Pisan pair"? |
15860 | Who will set up an altar to almighty"Situations"? |
15860 | Why did no one write?" |
15860 | Why else is it that people are always so glad to see the sun after a long storm? |
15860 | Why must he seize upon this ready- made word? |
15860 | Why, then, object to the Democratic party being replaced in power? |
15860 | Wilbur''s?" |
15860 | Will any couplets of Tennyson reap as large a fame? |
15860 | Will you take the part, and remain with me on the same terms as with my Cousin Erne?" |
15860 | With such an_ esprit de corps_ what excellence have we not a right to expect? |
15860 | Would she be sober, or sociable? |
15860 | You did n''t mind him? |
15860 | _ Wo n''t_ you do this, Mr. Crowfield? |
15860 | or is there some reason why it is undesirable?" |
15860 | pretty, or homely? |
15860 | we say;"but has n''t it been said before?" |
15860 | where is she?" |
15860 | why are bright days matters of such congratulation? |
15860 | you wo n''t break it? |
16106 | Suppose it does,say the two sophists;"is it not better to expose ourselves to the chance of an eventual_ invasion_, than to accept a certain one?" |
16106 | We come now to offer you an admirable opportunity for the application of your-- what shall we say? 16106 What shall be done, then, in an agricultural and manufacturing country?" |
16106 | What shall we do in case of war,say they,"if we have placed ourselves at the mercy of Great Britain for iron and coal?" |
16106 | Again, it will be objected, if we accustom ourselves to depend upon England for iron, what shall we do in case of a war with that country? |
16106 | And I now ask, of what benefit, under these circumstances, is the railway? |
16106 | And why all this? |
16106 | And why does not the fertility of one department paralyze the agriculture of a neighboring and less favored one? |
16106 | And why should nations impose such a restraint upon themselves? |
16106 | And why? |
16106 | And why? |
16106 | And yet it is wrong? |
16106 | Are you ill? |
16106 | But a bag of wheat, an ingot of iron, a quintal of coal-- are they the produce of labor? |
16106 | But by what do we measure our well- being? |
16106 | But how? |
16106 | But in what is this manifested? |
16106 | But is it necessary to take up seriously such abuses of language? |
16106 | But what are humors? |
16106 | But when you put a principle in antagonism with ours, do you, by chance, fancy that you have formed no_ theory_? |
16106 | But which? |
16106 | But who reaps the advantage of this liberality of Nature? |
16106 | But why is this; why should men be so blind as to maintain that scarcity is better than plenty? |
16106 | But, gentlemen, do you believe that merchants''books are good in practice? |
16106 | By our riches? |
16106 | By the result of our effort, or by the effort itself? |
16106 | Can such a question be asked? |
16106 | Can we explain how such a system could be reconciled with the ever- increasing prosperity of nations? |
16106 | Can we hesitate to say? |
16106 | Could we not have attained the same end by lowering the tariff to five dollars? |
16106 | DOES PROTECTION RAISE THE RATE OF WAGES? |
16106 | Did he create the laws of gravitation, of correlation of forces, of affinities?" |
16106 | Did not Nature create them?" |
16106 | Did the Confederates in the late war lack for iron? |
16106 | Do we attack their principles? |
16106 | Do we not hear it complained every day: Our importations are too large; We are buying too much from abroad? |
16106 | Do we prove our doctrine? |
16106 | Do we wish to decide a question in chemistry or geometry? |
16106 | Do you give up the pen for the brush in order to avoid paying tribute to the shoe- black? |
16106 | Do you know how they get rid of it? |
16106 | Does Protection raise the Rate of Wages? |
16106 | Does he not avail himself of the weight of the atmosphere in aid of the steam- engine, as I avail myself of its humidity in aid of the plough? |
16106 | Does not the manufacturer, too, rely upon Nature to second him? |
16106 | Does not the whole economy of society depend on the separation of occupations, on the division of labor; in one word, on_ exchange_? |
16106 | Does not your housekeeper cease making bread at home so soon as she finds it more economical to buy it from the baker? |
16106 | Does progress consist in the relative increase of the second or of the first term of this proportion-- between effort or result? |
16106 | Does the farmer make his clothes? |
16106 | Does the tailor raise the wheat which he consumes? |
16106 | Firstly, this is impossible; and, again, were it possible, how could such a system give relief? |
16106 | For the good of whom? |
16106 | Has it ever been pretended, is it possible to maintain, that scarcity is better than plenty? |
16106 | Has it fallen from the moon? |
16106 | Has not Congress passed laws which prohibit the importation of foreign productions by the maintenance of excessive duties? |
16106 | Have I not a right to look upon your argument as a mere pretext? |
16106 | He throws it into the widest national circulation he can find for it, and receives in exchange, what? |
16106 | How could He will that they may remove war and injustice only by renouncing their own well- being?" |
16106 | How do they succeed in veiling it from them? |
16106 | How does this come about? |
16106 | How is it that every day brings in what is needed, neither more nor less, to this gigantic market? |
16106 | How is the matter managed? |
16106 | How is this abusive trope introduced into the rhetoric of monopolists? |
16106 | I had this question to determine:"Why does any article made, for instance, at Montreal, bear an increased price on its arrival at New York?" |
16106 | If self- renunciation has so many claims for you, who prevents your carrying it into private life? |
16106 | If we then take an account of stock, is it not certain that we shall find more iron in the country, more coffee, more everything else? |
16106 | If, then, there be a general diminution of comforts, how, working men, can it be possible that_ your_ portion should be increased? |
16106 | In effect the question is, are purchases made abroad useful or injurious? |
16106 | In practice, is there one exchange in a hundred, in a thousand, in ten thousand perhaps, where there is a direct barter of product for product? |
16106 | Is it false? |
16106 | Is it not because that sum is the price of production? |
16106 | Is it true that protection, which avowedly raises prices, and thus injures you, proportionably raises the rate of wages? |
16106 | Is not this pure and unadulterated Sisyphism? |
16106 | Is that to say that they are no longer despoiled? |
16106 | Is there any other rule for international exchanges? |
16106 | Is this credible? |
16106 | Is this possible? |
16106 | Now what conclusion do our Congressmen draw from the sums entered into the custom- house, in this operation? |
16106 | Now what does this prove? |
16106 | Now, what is the defect in this argument? |
16106 | Now, why is this bag of wool worth a hundred dollars? |
16106 | On what depends the_ demand_ for labor? |
16106 | On what does the rate of wages depend? |
16106 | See http://www.hti.umich.edu/m/moagrp/ WHAT IS FREE TRADE? |
16106 | Something tells us that it must be wrong; but_ where_ is it wrong? |
16106 | The protectionists ask,"Are we sure that the foreigner will purchase as much from us, as he will sell to us? |
16106 | WHAT IS FREE TRADE? |
16106 | Was he the richer for this course? |
16106 | We exhibit precisely the same amount of reason, when we wish, by the expenditure of millions, to preserve our country-- From what? |
16106 | Well, what of that? |
16106 | What difference, then, is it possible to discover between the petitioners of Bordeaux and the advocate of American restriction? |
16106 | What do you say, and what say we? |
16106 | What is our course under these circumstances? |
16106 | What is, in effect, the prohibitive system? |
16106 | What more does the miller effect who converts it into flour, the baker who turns it into bread? |
16106 | When shall we banish charlatanry from science? |
16106 | When shall we cease to manifest this disgusting contradiction between our writings and our conduct? |
16106 | When shall we have done with such puerile talk? |
16106 | When the Atlantic and Great Western Railway is finished, the question will arise,"Should connection be broken at Pittsburg?" |
16106 | Which is better for man and for society-- abundance or scarcity? |
16106 | Which theory is right? |
16106 | While we point with pride to some prosperous manufacture, can we answer, whence comes the capital with which it is founded and maintained? |
16106 | Who, then, would be the loser? |
16106 | Why not, when they are seriously paraded in newspapers and in books? |
16106 | With what do they upbraid freedom of commerce? |
16106 | Would it be thus with errors which attack the moral world? |
16106 | Would not one suppose us all angels of disinterestedness? |
16106 | Would water, air, earth, fire, be less useful to man whether they were or were not elements? |
16106 | Yet what analogy is there between an exchange and an_ invasion_? |
16106 | and are these humors? |
16106 | no, nothing is more deceiving than theory-- your doctrine? |
16106 | or rather is it not drawn either from agriculture, or stock- breeding, or commerce? |
16106 | your principle? |
16106 | your system? |
16106 | your theory? |
10523 | Is that a curse? |
10523 | Not died for thee?... |
10523 | ''Tis not Alcestis? |
10523 | ''Tis not Alcestis?] |
10523 | ''Tis so? |
10523 | ''Twould please thee, so?... |
10523 | (_ A pause; then suddenly_) Where lies the tomb?--Where shall I find her now? |
10523 | (_ Recovering_) Where am I? |
10523 | (_ Taking the_ LITTLE GIRL_ to her_) What good And gentle care will guide thy maidenhood? |
10523 | -- Does this mean"Go on being hospitable, as you have been,"or"Learn after this not to take liberties with other guests"? |
10523 | --Admetus cast that dear wife to the grave Alone, with none to see? |
10523 | --Dead, and this quiet? |
10523 | --Hear ye no sob, or noise of hands Beating the breast? |
10523 | --No end, no end, Wilt thou lay to lamentations? |
10523 | --Why? |
10523 | --Yet''tis this very day...--This very day? |
10523 | A stranger, or of kin to thee? |
10523 | A wife dead; a dear chair Empty: is that so rare? |
10523 | A woman dead, of no one''s kin; why grieve So much? |
10523 | ADMETUS(_ approaching with awe_), Beloved eyes; beloved form; O thou Gone beyond hope, I have thee, I hold thee now? |
10523 | Again, what are the feelings of Admetus himself? |
10523 | Ah, and what paths are these I tread? |
10523 | Ah, then she may yet... she may yet grow old? |
10523 | Alcestis?... |
10523 | And after, think you he would mannerly Take what was set before him? |
10523 | And aid this house unjustly? |
10523 | And dare I touch her, greet her, as mine own Wife living? |
10523 | And had I turned the stranger from my door, Who sought my shelter, hadst thou praised me more? |
10523 | And he who feeds such beasts, who was his sire? |
10523 | And how can I, forlorn of thee, live on? |
10523 | And is Admetus in his home? |
10523 | And is it life, To live with such an oath hung o''er her head? |
10523 | And more, when bards tell tales, were it not worse My house should lie beneath the stranger''s curse? |
10523 | And now wilt mourn for her? |
10523 | And this good damsel, thou wilt take her home? |
10523 | And thy charge I fain would hold Sacred.--If not, wouldst have me keep her in The women''s chambers... where my dead hath been? |
10523 | And who hath said that Love shall bring More joy to man than fear and strife? |
10523 | Art thou mad? |
10523 | Because none wrongs thee, thou must curse thy sire? |
10523 | Bitter the homeward way, Bitter to seek A widowed house; ah me, Where should I fly or stay, Be dumb or speak? |
10523 | But how... how didst thou win her to the light? |
10523 | But how...? |
10523 | But now How dare I enter in? |
10523 | But where? |
10523 | But why this mourning hair, this garb of woe? |
10523 | Children, ye heard his promise? |
10523 | Died she through me?... |
10523 | Dost comprehend things mortal, how they grow?... |
10523 | Doth it win, with no man''s telling, Some high vision of the truth? |
10523 | For men whom the Gods had slain He pitied and raised again; Till God''s fire laid him low, And now, what help have we? |
10523 | For never shall ye be From henceforth under the same roof with me.... Must I send heralds and a trumpet''s call To abjure thy blood? |
10523 | Friend, why so solemn and so cranky- eyed? |
10523 | Given this form and this story, the next question is: What did Euripides make of them? |
10523 | Go forth, when none is there To give me a parting word, and I to her?... |
10523 | Hath mine own friend so wronged me in his hall? |
10523 | Have they nostrils breathing flame? |
10523 | Heard''st thou not of yore The doom that she must meet? |
10523 | How break the snare That is round our King? |
10523 | How came she to be in Thy house to die? |
10523 | How can an old life weigh against a young? |
10523 | How canst thou? |
10523 | How could I have this damsel in my sight And keep mine eyes dry? |
10523 | How could I lay this woman where my bride Once lay? |
10523 | How could he?... |
10523 | How often with these kings of Ares''kind Must I do battle? |
10523 | How other? |
10523 | How should thy revelling hurt, if that were all? |
10523 | How, master? |
10523 | How? |
10523 | I might have lived to we d some prince of pride, Dwell in a king''s house.... Nay, how could I, torn From thee, live on, I and my babes forlorn? |
10523 | I still fear: what makes your speech so brave? |
10523 | If Heracles set out straight to the grave and Admetus with the procession was returning from the grave, how was it they did not meet? |
10523 | If Milton had had to make a child speak in_ Paradise Lost_, what sort of diction would he have given it? |
10523 | If my truth of tongue Gives pain to thee, why didst thou do me wrong? |
10523 | Is he strange to thee? |
10523 | Is it magnificent hospitality, or is it gross want of tact? |
10523 | Is not life his one desire? |
10523 | Is one in all this land more hospitable, One in all Greece? |
10523 | Is she alive or dead? |
10523 | Is there wit in Death, who seemed so blind? |
10523 | Is this some real grief he hath hid from me? |
10523 | Live? |
10523 | Look in her face; Look; is she like...? |
10523 | Man, hast thou heard nothing of our woe? |
10523 | Must I go starved because some stranger dies? |
10523 | My broad lands shall be made Thine, as I had them from my father.... Say, How have I wronged thee? |
10523 | My son, whom seekest thou... some Lydian thrall, Or Phrygian, bought with cash?... |
10523 | My wife... she whom I buried? |
10523 | Nay, daughter, can the same soul live and die? |
10523 | No mourners''cries For one they can not save? |
10523 | Not easy? |
10523 | O Zeus, What escape and where From the evil thing? |
10523 | Oh, what has happened? |
10523 | Oh, why didst hinder me to cast This body to the dust and die With her, the faithful and the brave? |
10523 | One cometh?... |
10523 | Or doth God mock at me And blast my vision with some mad surmise? |
10523 | Or how could any wife more shining make Her lord''s love, than by dying for his sake? |
10523 | Or, entered, how Go forth again? |
10523 | Otherwise, Let all these questions sleep and just obey My counsel.... Thou believest all I say? |
10523 | Our King is in his house, Lord Heracles.-- But say, what need brings thee in days like these To Thessaly and Pherae''s wallèd ring? |
10523 | P. 30, l. 518 ff., Not thy wife? |
10523 | P. 46, l. 805 ff., A woman dead, of no one''s kin: why grieve so much?] |
10523 | Pheres:"_ I_ greedy? |
10523 | Prince, why wilt thou smite The smitten? |
10523 | Say, is she living still Or dead, your mistress? |
10523 | She hath such tendance as the dying crave? |
10523 | Such mocking beside all my pain shall I Endure.... What profit was it to live on, Friend, with my grief kept and mine honour gone? |
10523 | Surely Admetus suffers, even to- day, For this true- hearted love he hath cast away? |
10523 | Surely not thy wife? |
10523 | THANATOS(_ sneering_) And if words help thee not, an arrow must? |
10523 | The Leader in the dialogue blames him("Art thou mad?") |
10523 | The line( 691)[ Greek: chaireis horon phos, patera d''ou chairein dokeis];("Thou lovest the light, thinkest thou thy father loves it not?") |
10523 | There is no hope, methinks, to save her still? |
10523 | Thou callest him thy friend; how didst thou dare Keep hid from him the burden of thy care? |
10523 | Thou hast touched her? |
10523 | Thou know''st not? |
10523 | Thou lovest this light: shall I not love it, I?... |
10523 | Thou will not grant me, then, this boon? |
10523 | Thou wilt stay Unwed for ever, lonely night and day? |
10523 | Thy words have some intent: what wouldst thou say? |
10523 | Time? |
10523 | To Pherae am I come By now? |
10523 | To break the news gently, or to retort his own mystification upon him? |
10523 | Touched her?... |
10523 | What are we to think of this behaviour? |
10523 | What can I do but weep alone, Alone alway, when such a wife is gone?... |
10523 | What dare ye for him?" |
10523 | What hast thou said? |
10523 | What have I kept away? |
10523 | What lamb on the altar- strand Stricken shall comfort me? |
10523 | What mak''st thou at the gate, Thou Thing of Light? |
10523 | What meaneth this? |
10523 | What must she, Who seeketh to surpass this woman, be? |
10523 | What prize doth call thee, and to what far place? |
10523 | What profit hast thou in such manslaying? |
10523 | What profit will thy dead wife gain thereby? |
10523 | What seekest thou? |
10523 | What tiding shall we hear?... |
10523 | What woman wilt thou find at father''s side? |
10523 | What? |
10523 | When within a thing so sad Lies, thou wilt house a stranger? |
10523 | Where Is grief like mine, whose wife is dead? |
10523 | Where in my castle could so young a maid Be lodged-- her veil and raiment show her young: Here, in the men''s hall? |
10523 | Where is such power? |
10523 | Where shall I turn for refuge? |
10523 | Who is it that has died? |
10523 | Who is it that is dead? |
10523 | Who will be happier, shouldst thou always weep? |
10523 | Why could it not have been some one less important to him? |
10523 | Why here? |
10523 | Why is Admetus here then, not below? |
10523 | Why need she die? |
10523 | Why standeth she so still? |
10523 | Why, for instance, does Heracles mystify Admetus with the Veiled Woman? |
10523 | Wilt overtread The eternal judgment, and abate And spoil the portions of the dead? |
10523 | Wilt say I failed in duty to thine age; For that thou hast let me die? |
10523 | Wrong? |
10523 | Ye shapes that front me, wall and gate, How shall I enter in and dwell Among ye, with all Fortune''s spell Dischanted? |
10523 | says Pheres;"are you cursing because nobody does you any harm?" |
10523 | to affright withal By cursing? |
22903 | What could I answer? 22903 ''Did many of your men die from the wounds?'' 22903 ''Was Mr. Bonham coming?'' 22903 ''What friend should they have at Singapore then?'' 22903 ''What,''I asked,''if you will not attack, are you going to do?'' 22903 ''When would he get one?'' 22903 ''Where would he go to get one?'' 22903 Am I quite sure that the right is on my side? 22903 But he asked me again,''You will give me, your friend, leave to steal a few heads occasionally?'' 22903 CONQUEST AND SELF- CONQUEST; OR, WHICH MAKES THE HERO? 22903 Can this be done at Balambangan? 22903 Can we forget our young children? 22903 How could I trust him afterward?'' 22903 I asked him whether the Kayans used the sumpitan? 22903 Is it a compassionate part to release her after many years of captivity? 22903 PRAISE AND PRINCIPLE; OR, FOR WHAT SHALL I LIVE? 22903 Pangeran Der Macota, what do you say?'' 22903 Since my return here they have proved themselves faithful and ready; but though true in adversity, will they continue equally so in prosperity? 22903 Tell me, would not a man''s life be well spent-- tell me, would it not be well sacrificed, in an endeavor to explore these regions? 22903 The amount of my conversation was as follows: The first topic being the anticipated visit of the English,''Were the English coming?'' 22903 Then came the other Pangerans--''Is there any Pangeran or any young rajah that contests the question? 22903 They had paid 10 pasus; should they, they asked me, pay the rest? 22903 Under these circumstances, could I, he urged upon me, forsake him? 22903 Was it surprising that these people were poor and wretched? 22903 We could build another house; we could plant fruit- trees and cultivate rice; but where can we find wives? 22903 We have now no one to trust but you-- will you help us? 22903 Were they, I asked, willing to force Parembam into payment? 22903 What are all these gewgaws, these artificial flowers, these momentary joys, these pleasures of the sense, before the war of time? 22903 What object, it may be inquired, can the Malays have in destroying their own country and people so wantonly? 22903 What punishment is sufficient for the wretch who finds this state of things so baleful as to attempt to destroy it? 22903 Will you restore our wives and children? 22903 Would they insist on the heads being restored to the Sigos, and receive those of their own people? 22903 by whom had they been slain? 22903 e._, the 6000 peculs which were ready?) 22903 how did they die? 22903 how had they been destroyed? 22903 were the first questions; and''With what intent?'' 23260 And what sort of man is the captain?" |
23260 | Are you going to sea, youngster? |
23260 | Are you much hurt, Jack? |
23260 | But you will let my young friend, Jack Kemp, and your other apprentice, Medley, go with me? |
23260 | Can you be brother Bill? |
23260 | Can you tell me, sir, the names of the English vessels the pirates are supposed to have plundered? |
23260 | Could not you send for them? |
23260 | Do you think so? |
23260 | How could you hear that? |
23260 | The` Lady Alice''are you speaking of? |
23260 | Then what will your wife and daughter do? |
23260 | Were the people on board ill- treated? 23260 What am I to do without my barber and clerk and storekeeper, I should like to know?" |
23260 | What business have we to interfere with the quarrels of foreigners? |
23260 | What can he have seen to alarm him? |
23260 | What can the old man be about? |
23260 | What do you think of those black clouds out there? |
23260 | What if on board that schooner there were others than her crew-- prisoners taken from any vessel they might have pillaged? 23260 What is it you want here, my men?" |
23260 | What is that? 23260 Who are you that''s afther spakin''to me in that way? |
23260 | Who has gone? |
23260 | Who says that? |
23260 | Will they remain on board, or take a passage home in the first full ship they fall in with? |
23260 | Wo n''t you give it up and come on shore with us? |
23260 | And you!--are you brother Jack? |
23260 | Are my wife and daughter well?" |
23260 | Can it come from a ship?" |
23260 | Can you tell me where she is? |
23260 | Did the ruffians take any of them away, or did they merely carry off such valuables and stores and provisions as they could lay hands on?" |
23260 | Directly afterwards the watch on the quarterdeck came hurrying forward with the third mate, who sang out, in a tone of alarm,"Where is that boy?" |
23260 | In what direction could they have been driven? |
23260 | It must ere long come up again-- but could we hold on till then? |
23260 | Should we go back to the Galapagos, look into their harbours, and cruise about those islands? |
23260 | The moment he said this the thought flashed across my mind,"What if she should have fallen in with the` Lady Alice''?" |
23260 | The question was in what direction we should steer? |
23260 | The stranger passing within hail, a voice inquired,"What ship is that?" |
23260 | Was it on account of some unseen danger threatening us? |
23260 | We were just about to rise from our knees when I heard Dan Hogan''s voice exclaim,"Arrah now, you young psalm singers, what new trick are you after?" |
23260 | What could have become of the"Lady Alice"?--had any accident happened to her? |
23260 | What if the pirates had, as I dreaded, attacked the` Lady Alice'', and carried off Mrs Bland and Mary?" |
23260 | What if, while we were congratulating ourselves on being safe on shore, any misfortune should happen to those in whom we were so deeply interested? |
23260 | What resistance could the five or six people left on board offer, even though they might have suspected her character before she got up to them? |
23260 | What was even now going forward on board her, who could tell? |
23260 | have n''t you brought Jack Kemp with you?" |
23260 | what for come ober her now?" |
1174 | And how many dwelling- houses have you? 1174 Are the men of Piraeus,"they asked,"prepared to surrender Piraeus and Munychia in the same way? |
1174 | As long as their own bodies were safe and sound, why need they take to heart the loss of a few wooden hulls? 1174 Do you not see,"he urged,"that your success followed close on the heels of necessity? |
1174 | I ask then is the man who tenders such advice in the full light of day justly to be regarded as a traitor, and not as a benefactor? 1174 Men of Lacedaemon and of the allied states,"he said,"are you aware of a silent but portentous growth within the bosom of Hellas? |
1174 | Such being our unbiased wishes,he continued,"for what earthly reason should( the Hellenes or) the king go to war with us? |
1174 | Was he to continue his advance? |
1174 | Were these magistrates, or merely popular leaders? |
1174 | While, then, I am on my way thither,rejoined Agesilaus,"will you support my army with provisions?" |
1174 | Why yield obedience to these Thirty? |
1174 | ( 14) Or,"are you aware of a new power growing up in Hellas?" |
1174 | ( 14) What is the date of this incident? |
1174 | ( 5) Accordingly the ephors questioned their informant:"How say you the occurrence is to take place?" |
1174 | ( 5) Is it not self- evident that your safety altogether depends upon the sea? |
1174 | ( 7) Then, as the inquiry went on, the question came:"And where did they propose to find arms?" |
1174 | ( 8) In what part of Hellas, tell me, sir, do Hellenes keep a truce with traitors, double- dyed deserters, and tyrants? |
1174 | ( 8) Or,"what consistency is there between these precepts of yours and political independence?" |
1174 | 369? |
1174 | 400(?). |
1174 | 400- 399(?). |
1174 | 401(?). |
1174 | 416? |
1174 | Accordingly he sent to Pharnabazus and put it to him point- blank: Which will you have, peace or war? |
1174 | Again he replied-- How could he trust to their words when they had lied to him already? |
1174 | Agesilaus:"Have you observed how beautiful his son is?" |
1174 | And as to men, which will be the better able to man vessels, think you-- Athens, or ourselves with our stalwart and numerous Penestae? |
1174 | And as to their confident spirit, who shall attempt to describe it? |
1174 | And being asked,"What act( would satisfy him)?" |
1174 | And what shall we say of the Corinthians? |
1174 | And when the latter demurred to that solution, asking"What sort of trial that would be where the offenders were also the judges?" |
1174 | But after dinner, when Cyrus drank to his health, asking him"What he could do to gratify him most?" |
1174 | But tell me, Cinadon,''I said to him,''why have you bidden me count them?'' |
1174 | But the Eleians? |
1174 | But they seemed to tarry a long time, and Agesilaus asked:"What say you, King Otys-- shall we summon him hither ourselves? |
1174 | But what of the man who pleases neither? |
1174 | Can it be our duty at all to spare him? |
1174 | Did you not say just now, Sir, that you came to make an alliance on terms of absolute equality,''share and share alike''? |
1174 | Do you imagine that you may be robbed of the power of life and death over whom you please, should you condescend to a legal trial? |
1174 | Do you know the poem?" |
1174 | Do you not agree? |
1174 | Do you not think that the ephors themselves, and the whole commonwealth besides, would hold this renegade worthy of condign punishment? |
1174 | For what does the alternative mean? |
1174 | For what were their services to you? |
1174 | Had he not been defeated in Lacedaemon, with a large body of heavy infantry, by a handful of men? |
1174 | Had we been forced to meet them vanguard to vanguard, on an equal footing, who could have been surprised? |
1174 | Have I not avenged you of your enemy?" |
1174 | He said,"Men of Athens, do you not see how you are being deluded? |
1174 | He sat down, and then Procles of Phlius got up and spoke as follows:"What would happen, men of Athens, if the Lacedaemonians were well out of the way? |
1174 | How many friends have they left to them to- day? |
1174 | How shall I, who dealt justice upon him, justly suffer death at your hands? |
1174 | How shall you longer be held blameless before that fatherland which honours you and in which you fare so well?'' |
1174 | If danger were ever again to visit Hellas from the barbarian world outside, in whom would you place your confidence if not in the Lacedaemonians? |
1174 | If so, what fairer test of courage will you propose than the arbitrament of war-- the war just ended? |
1174 | If, then, you have no monopoly of justice, can it be on the score of courage that you are warranted to hold your heads so high? |
1174 | In danger, do I say, of losing their lives? |
1174 | Is it not plain that these preparations are for an expedition which will do us some mischief?" |
1174 | Is it not then reasonable that out of agreement should spring concord rather than discord? |
1174 | Is it that you are more just than ourselves? |
1174 | Is it their wide empire of which you are afraid? |
1174 | It is this: Satyrus, bade him"Be silent, or he would rue the day;"to which he made answer,"And if I be silent, shall I not rue it?" |
1174 | Jason, if all you say be true, why do you hesitate? |
1174 | Leotychides:"How so, seeing that I am not dead?" |
1174 | Nor was Thebes an exception; for was not the governor a brother of Agesilaus? |
1174 | Of Pellene( or Pellana) in Laconia, not Pellene in Achaia? |
1174 | Or is it conceivable that he prefers spending money in making others great to finding his favourite projects realised without expense? |
1174 | Or is it on these Laconian friends of yours that you pride yourselves? |
1174 | Or,"upon the strand or coast road or coast land of Achaia"( aliter{ ten aigialon}(?) |
1174 | Otys asked:"Is Spithridates of one mind with you in this proposal?" |
1174 | Otys:"Why not ask if your project pleases Spithridates too?" |
1174 | Ought we not rather, when we know the doublings of his nature, to guard against them, lest we enable him presently to practise on ourselves? |
1174 | Pharnabazus replied:"Shall I tell you plainly what I will do?" |
1174 | Presently the question rose, How they were to get money to pay their guards? |
1174 | Suppose, then, we were to shake hands, from what quarter can we reasonably anticipate danger and trouble? |
1174 | That which I have pictured as desirable, or that which my colleagues yonder are producing? |
1174 | The Thebans, it was certain, would soon be with them; for had they not borrowed ten talents( 20) from Elis in order to be able to send aid? |
1174 | The ephors asked:"How many do you reckon are in the secret of this matter?" |
1174 | The two armies were now close together, when one of the older men lifted up his voice and cried:"Why need we fight, sirs? |
1174 | Then Meidias asked,"And where am I to live, Dercylidas?" |
1174 | Then, again, what was the proper depth of line to be given to the different army corps? |
1174 | Trubner, 1884)? |
1174 | Was Gytheum taken? |
1174 | Was ever bride led home by such an escort of cavalry and light- armed troops and heavy infantry, as shall escort your wife home to your palace?" |
1174 | Was it not the people itself, the democracy, who voted the constitution of the Four Hundred? |
1174 | Was it not, pray, the great king who demanded that all the states in Hellas should be independent? |
1174 | Was not my door open in old days to every comer? |
1174 | Was there not timber enough and to spare in the king''s territory?" |
1174 | Was this portion of the"Hellenica"written before the expedition of Cyrus? |
1174 | Well, then, freedom given and wealth added-- what more would you desire to fill the cup of happiness to overflowing?" |
1174 | Well, then, how does the matter stand? |
1174 | Were ever nuptials celebrated on so grand a scale before? |
1174 | What are you afraid of, that you press forward with such hot haste? |
1174 | What in heaven''s name are we to call him? |
1174 | What then, when he came furnished with vile moneys, to corrupt you therewith, to bribe you to make him once more lord and master of the state? |
1174 | What, I ask you, of a man who so openly studied the art of self- seeking, deaf alike to the pleas of honour and to the claims of friendship? |
1174 | When he had reached that city the first move was made by Tissaphernes, who sent asking,"With what purpose he was come thither?" |
1174 | When the inventory of the paternal property was completed, he proceeded:"Tell me, Meidias, to whom did Mania belong?" |
1174 | When they were seated Dercylidas put certain questions:"Tell me, Meidias, did your father leave you heir to his estates?" |
1174 | Who else but they have now brought it about that we should be fined for appearing at Lacedaemon? |
1174 | Why not rather make truce and part friends?" |
1174 | Will some one of you escort me to the place where the property of Mania and Pharnabazus lies?" |
1174 | With which condition of affairs here in Athens do you think will Thrasybulus and Anytus and the other exiles be the better pleased? |
1174 | Would not leniency towards such a creature be misplaced? |
1174 | and for what purpose but to deter any one else for the future from venturing to expose the proceedings at Phlius?" |
1174 | and what have we Athenians, who are in full agreement with the king, both in word and deed, to fear from him? |
1174 | how much pasturage?" |
1174 | how, again, was he to prevent Pharnabazus from overriding the Hellenic states in pure contempt with his cavalry? |
1174 | or is it not more likely a Persian or native word, Karanos? |
1174 | or is{ koiranos} the connecting link? |
1174 | or why should he expend his money? |
1174 | or why, when we tell them that we have no need of them at present, do they insist on preparing for a foreign campaign? |
1174 | the Achaeans? |
1174 | the Arcadians? |
1174 | they asked,"Why assign to them the privilege of destroying the State?" |
1174 | what evil have we wrought you at any time? |
1174 | what is it really that has brought us here? |
1174 | what landed estates? |
1174 | why do you not march at once against Pharsalia?" |
1174 | why would you slay us? |
1174 | you-- Critias? |
1174 | { karenon})= chief? |
10602 | But,said the Ape,"how shall we first come in, That after we may favour seeke to win?" |
10602 | If this be right, why did they then create The world so faire, sith fairenesse is neglected? 10602 She is the rose, the glory of the day, And mine the primrose in the lowly shade: Mine? |
10602 | What nowe is of th''Assyrian Lyonesse, Of whome no footing now on earth appeares? 10602 Where is,"quoth she,"this whilom honoured face? |
10602 | 1055 The Ape was glad to end the strife so light, And thereto swore: for who would not oft sweare, And oft unsweare, a diademe to beare? |
10602 | 205 Or why be they themselves immaculate, If purest things be not by them respected? |
10602 | 280 How slowly does sad Time his feathers move? |
10602 | 350"What booteth it to have been rich alive? |
10602 | 355 Where then is now the guerdon of my paine? |
10602 | 410 Or where shall I finde lamentable cryes, And mournfull tunes enough my griefe to show? |
10602 | 60 How much lesse those, much higher in degree, And so much fairer, and much more then these, As these are fairer then the land and seas? |
10602 | 65 What of the Persian Beares outragiousnesse, Whose memorie is quite worne out with yeares? |
10602 | And if I starue, who will record my cursed end? |
10602 | And if I waste, who will bewaile my heauy chaunce? |
10602 | And must you of necessitie haue my iudgement of hir indeede? |
10602 | And poure forth fountaines of incessant teares? |
10602 | And whatso heavens in their secret doome 225 Ordained have, how can fraile fleshly wight Forecast, but it must needs to issue come? |
10602 | Asked why? |
10602 | Better a short tale than a bad long shriving: Needes anie more to learne to get a living?" |
10602 | But what can long abide above this ground In state of blis, or stedfast happinesse? |
10602 | But what car''d he for God, or godlinesse? |
10602 | But what needeth this digression betweene you and me? |
10602 | But what on earth can long abide in state? |
10602 | Can griefe then enter into heavenly harts, And pierce immortall breasts with mortall smarts? |
10602 | For why should he that is at libertie Make himselfe bond? |
10602 | Had he required life for us againe, Had it beene wrong to ask his owne with gaine? |
10602 | Heare, thou great Father of the Gods on hie, 55 That most art dreaded for thy thunder darts; And thou, our Syre? |
10602 | Hope ye that ever immortalitie So meane harpes worke may chalenge for her meed? |
10602 | Hope ye, my Verses, that posteritie Of age ensuing shall you ever read? |
10602 | How slowly do the houres theyr numbers spend? |
10602 | Ibimus ergo statim,( quis eutiti fausta precetur?) |
10602 | Is it because your eyes have powre to kill? |
10602 | Is it her nature, or is it her will, To be so cruell to an humbled foe? |
10602 | Is it not Cinthia, she that never sleepes, But walkes about high heaven al the night? |
10602 | Is it so uneath* To leave this life, or dolorous to dye? |
10602 | Is not that name enough to make a living To him that hath a whit of Natures giving? |
10602 | Or brothers blood, the which at first was spilt Upon your walls, that God might not endure Upon the same to set foundation sure? |
10602 | Or can proportion of the outward part 75 Move such affection in the inward mynd, That it can rob both sense, and reason blynd? |
10602 | Or can the sight that is most sharpe and keene Endure their captains flaming head to see? |
10602 | Or shall we tie our selves for certaine yeares 120 To anie service, or to anie place? |
10602 | Or shall we varie our device at will, Even as new occasion appeares? |
10602 | Or some old sinne, whose unappeased guilt Powr''d vengeance forth on you eternallie? |
10602 | Or what can prize** that thy most precious blood? |
10602 | Or who can him assure of happie day? |
10602 | Or who shall dight** your bowres, sith she is dead That was the lady of your holy- dayes? |
10602 | Or whose is that faire face that shines so bright? |
10602 | Or why doe not faire pictures like powre shew, In which oft- times we Nature see of Art Exceld, in perfect limming every part? |
10602 | Or why were not these Romane palaces Made of some matter no lesse firme and strong? |
10602 | Or,_ drere?_] VII. |
10602 | See yee the blindefolded pretie god, that feathered archer, Of louers miseries which maketh his bloodie game? |
10602 | Seeme they comparable to those two which I translated you_ ex tempore_ in bed, the last time we lay togither in Westminster? |
10602 | Seest thou not how all places quake and quiver, 340 Lightned with deadly lamps on everie post? |
10602 | Shall I then silent be, or shall I speake? |
10602 | Those royall ornaments to steale away? |
10602 | Was it a dreame, or did I see it playne? |
10602 | Was this, ye Romanes, your hard destinie? |
10602 | What Timon but would let compassion creepe Into his breast, and pierce his frosen eares? |
10602 | What bootes it then to come from glorious 445 Forefathers, or to have been nobly bredd? |
10602 | What difference twixt man and beast is left, When th''heavenlie light of knowledge is put out, And th''ornaments of wisdome are bereft? |
10602 | What else then did he by progression, But mocke High God himselfe, whom they professe? |
10602 | What furie, or what feend, with felon deeds 45 Hath stirred up so mischievous despight? |
10602 | What hart can feel least touch of so sore launch, Or thought can think the depth of so deare wound? |
10602 | What say I more? |
10602 | What then can move her? |
10602 | What to be great? |
10602 | What wonder then, if with such rage extreme Frail men, whose eyes seek heavenly things to see, At sight thereof so much enravisht bee? |
10602 | What wontlesse fury dost thou now inspire Into my feeble breast, too full of thee? |
10602 | Where be those learned wits and antique sages, Which of all wisedome knew the perfect somme? |
10602 | Where doth she all that wondrous welth nowe hide? |
10602 | Where the great glorie and the auncient praise, In which all worlds felicitie had place, When gods and men my honour up did raise? |
10602 | Where the reward of my so piteous deed? |
10602 | Whereof when he was wakened with the noyse, And saw the beast so small,"What s this,"quoth he,"that gives so great a voyce, That wakens men withall?" |
10602 | Whether shall we professe some trade or skill? |
10602 | Whie then doo foolish men so much despize 145 The precious store of this celestiall riches? |
10602 | Who is the same which at my window peepes? |
10602 | Who now shall give unto my heavie eyes A well of teares, that all may overflow? |
10602 | Who of the Grecian Libbard* now ought heares, That over- ran the East with greedie powre, And left his whelps their kingdomes to devoure? |
10602 | Who then can save what they dispose to spill? |
10602 | Who would not oft be stung as this, To be so bath''d in Venus blis? |
10602 | Whom then shall I-- or heaven, or her-- obay? |
10602 | Why blush ye, Love, to give to me your hand, The pledge of all our band? |
10602 | Why doo they banish us, that patronize The name of learning? |
10602 | Why should ye doubt, then, but that ye likewise 425 Might unto some of those in time arise? |
10602 | Why then doe I, untrainde in lovers trade, Her hardnes blame, which I should more commend? |
10602 | Why then should greatest things the least disdaine, Sith that so small so mightie can constraine? |
10602 | Why will hereafter anie flesh delight In earthlie blis, and ioy in pleasures vaine? |
10602 | Wote ye why his moother with a veale hath coouered his face? |
10602 | [*_ Termes_, extremes(?).] |
10602 | [_ Stal''d_, forestalled(?).] |
10602 | _ O Tite, siquid ego, Ecquid erit pretij?_ But of that more hereafter. |
10602 | _ derne_, lonely? |
10602 | doo I thus crie, And grieve that my remembrance quite is raced* Out of the knowledge of posteritie, And all my antique moniments defaced? |
10602 | from? |
10602 | sullen?] |
10602 | what bootes it to see earthlie thing In glorie or in greatnes to excell, 555 Sith time doth greatest things to ruine bring? |
10602 | what can us lesse than that behove? |
10602 | what delight,"quoth she,"in earthlie thing, Or comfort can I, wretched creature, have? |
10602 | what glory can be got, In slaying him that would live gladly yours? |
10602 | what thing on earth, that all thing breeds, Might be the cause of so impatient plight? |
10602 | what to be gracious? |
10602 | when shall I have peace with you? |
10602 | when will this long weary day have end, And lende me leave to come unto my Love? |
10602 | who shall lead Your wandring troupes, or sing your virelayes*? |
10602 | why are ye so fierce and cruell? |
10602 | wilt thou now carry mee? |
27478 | [ 62] The questions, then, whose answers give the key to the whole Baconian philosophy, may be put briefly thus-- What are[ v.03 p.0147] forms? 27478 (?) 27478 727 Sargon, usurper 722 Sennacherib, his son 705 Esar- haddon, his son 681 Assur- bani- pal, his son 668 Assur- etil- ilani- yukin, his son? 27478 A man was only bound to serve so many( six?) 27478 AYRER, JAKOB(?-1605), German dramatist, of whose life little is known. 27478 AZURARA, GOMES EANNES DE(?-1474), the second notable Portuguese chronicler in order of date. 27478 Are the forms, then, forces? 27478 Assur- sum- lisir? 27478 But is this a view of delight only and not of discovery? 27478 First, what need to dissemble? 27478 How far, then, is such defence or explanation admissible and satisfactory? 27478 How is it that he shares with Descartes the honour of inaugurating modern philosophy? 27478 In tragedy, he asks, who would be Ion of Chios rather than Sophocles; or in lyric poetry, Bacchylides rather than Pindar? 27478 Is it original? 27478 Is it valuable? 27478 Is truth ever barren? 27478 Or was it to be incorporated whole? 27478 Shall he not as well discern the riches of nature''s warehouse as the beauty of her shop? 27478 Shall he not be able thereby to produce worthy effects, and to endow the life of man with infinite commodities? 27478 Sin- sarra- uzur( Sarakos)? 27478 The Code recognizes complete private ownership in land, but apparently extends the right to hold land to votaries, merchants( and resident aliens?). 27478 Thirdly, what matter, I ask, if the description of the instances should fill six times as many volumes as Pliny''s_ History_? 27478 Ussi(? 27478 Was there a_ genuine_ Lucas- Passion? 27478 Were only its German provinces to be included? 27478 What idea had Bacon of science, and how is his method connected with it? 27478 Whence should this be? 27478 _ Dynasty of Sisku(?) 27478 and how is it that knowledge of them solves both the theoretical and the practical problem of science? 27478 of contentment and not of benefit? 11533 And so I fail to please, false lady mine? |
11533 | And who shall match her offspring, If babes are like their mother? 11533 Back,"quoth she, And screamed and stormed;"a sorry clown kiss me? |
11533 | But thou mislik''st my hair? 11533 Didst thou e''er study dreams? |
11533 | Now therefore take and punish And fairly cut away These all unruly tusks of mine; For to what end serve they? 11533 Slumberest so soon, sweet bridegroom? |
11533 | Soul, why deal with me in this wise? 11533 Wilt not speak? |
11533 | A maid, and flout the Paphian? |
11533 | Am I forgot? |
11533 | Am I not fair? |
11533 | Am I transformed? |
11533 | And Ptolemy do music''s votaries hymn For his good gifts-- hath man a fairer lot Than to have earned much fame among mankind? |
11533 | And did not Rhea for a herdsman weep? |
11533 | And lo, what is she but an o''er- ripe pear? |
11533 | And so forsooth you vote My kid a trifle? |
11533 | And to what region then hath flown the cattle''s rightful lord? |
11533 | And what lass flouts thee? |
11533 | And who asked thee, thou naughty knave, to whom belonged these flocks, Sibyrtas, or( it might be) me? |
11533 | Another lies more welcome in thy lap? |
11533 | Are not we made dependent each on each?" |
11533 | Art thou o''erfond of sleep? |
11533 | Art thou on fire? |
11533 | At shearing who''d prefer Horsehair to wool? |
11533 | BATTUS._ What now, poor o''erworked drudge, is on thy mind? |
11533 | But if you consign all my words to the wind And say,''Why annoy me? |
11533 | But pray, Cometas, say, What is that skin wherewith thou saidst that Lacon walked away? |
11533 | But prythee tell me thou-- so shalt thou best Serve thine own interests-- wherefore art thou here? |
11533 | But to what mortal''s roof may I repair, I and my Muse, and find a welcome there? |
11533 | But what''s thy grievance now? |
11533 | But what, for champions such as we, would, seem a fitting prize? |
11533 | But who shall be our judge? |
11533 | But who shall be our umpire? |
11533 | By noon and midday what will be thy plight If now, so soon, thy sickle fails to bite? |
11533 | Can silver move thee? |
11533 | Can you, could damsel e''er, give Love the slip? |
11533 | Canst thou discern it, pray? |
11533 | Canst thou look upon these temples, with their locks of silver crowned, And still deem thee young and shapely? |
11533 | Corinthians bred( to tell you one fact more) As was Bellerophon: islanders in speech, For Dorians may talk Doric, I presume? |
11533 | Dear lad, what can I do? |
11533 | Did Lacon, did Calæthis''son purloin a goatskin? |
11533 | Didst not thou, Zeus, become a wandering bird, To win the love of one who drove a herd? |
11533 | Do the dogs cry? |
11533 | Dost milk them in the gloaming, when none is nigh to see? |
11533 | Dost speed, a bidden guest, to some reveller''s board? |
11533 | Doth he then treasure something sweet elsewhere? |
11533 | Empress Athenè, what strange sempstress wrought Such work? |
11533 | First Lynceus shouted loud from''neath his helm:"Whence, sirs, this lust for strife? |
11533 | First from the mountain Hermes came, and said,"Daphnis, who frets thee? |
11533 | Fly, Eunoä, ca n''t you? |
11533 | For who can fathom all his fellow''s mind? |
11533 | From the palace, mother? |
11533 | Had he withal an understanding heart, To teach him when to rage and when forbear, What brute could claim like praise? |
11533 | Hast seen A wolf?" |
11533 | Hast thou not heard? |
11533 | Hath a near view revealed him satyr- shaped Of chin and nostril? |
11533 | Hath love ne''er kept thee from thy slumbers yet? |
11533 | Have I guessed aright? |
11533 | Have ye not eyes to see Cometas, him who filched a pipe but two days back from me? |
11533 | Have you forgot that cudgelling I gave you? |
11533 | He may have come from sacred Argos''self, Or Tiryns, or Mycenæ: what know I? |
11533 | He scoured far fields-- what hill or oaken glen Remembers not that pilgrimage of pain? |
11533 | Hear''st thou our child, our younger, how he cries? |
11533 | Her modest virtues oft shall men rehearse; Who doubts it? |
11533 | Hewn from hard rocks, untired at set of sun, Milo, didst ne''er regret some absent one? |
11533 | How came it among rivered Nemea''s glens? |
11533 | How fell sage Helen? |
11533 | How slew you single- handed that fell beast? |
11533 | How, when shall we get past This nuisance, these unending ant- like swarms? |
11533 | How? |
11533 | I''ll wash my mouth: where go thy kisses then? |
11533 | I, a leaflet of to- day, I whose breath is in my nostrils, am I wrong to own his sway?" |
11533 | In fair Penëus''or in Pindus''glens? |
11533 | Is his the goat? |
11533 | Is his the horned ram? |
11533 | Is it fair Of access? |
11533 | Is our prattle aught To you, Sir? |
11533 | Is this enjoying wealth? |
11533 | It is right to torment one who loves you? |
11533 | Lad, whom lov''st thou so?" |
11533 | May we not then recognise them by introducing similar assonances, etc., here and there into the English version? |
11533 | My maid, my own, Eyes me and asks''At milking time, rogue, art thou all alone?'' |
11533 | Nay, pile it on: Where are thy wits flown, timorous Thestylis? |
11533 | Need I prate to thee, Sweet Moon, of all we said and all we did? |
11533 | No? |
11533 | Not e''en such grace as from yon spring to sip? |
11533 | Now, all alone, I''ll weep a love whence sprung When born? |
11533 | O Cyclops, Cyclops, where are flown thy wits? |
11533 | O saviours, O companions of mankind, Matchless on horse or harp, in lists or lay; Which of ye twain demands my earliest song? |
11533 | Or hadst thou drunk too deep When thou didst fling thee to thy lair? |
11533 | Or hast thou leadenweighted limbs? |
11533 | Or townward to the treading of the grape? |
11533 | Philondas? |
11533 | Praxinoä in? |
11533 | Pray, does she browse on dewdrops, as doth the grasshopper? |
11533 | Priapus came And said,"Why pine, poor Daphnis? |
11533 | Run,( will ye?) |
11533 | Satyr, ne''er boast:''what''s idler than a kiss?'' |
11533 | Satyr, what mean you? |
11533 | Say''st thou mine hour is come, my sun hath set? |
11533 | Seeking Augéas, or mayhap some slave That serves him? |
11533 | Seest thou yon walls illumed at dead of night, But not by morn''s pure beam? |
11533 | Shall I be flouted, I, by such as thou? |
11533 | Shall thy folly know no bound? |
11533 | Should I say yea, what dower awaits me then? |
11533 | Sibyrtas''bondsman own a pipe? |
11533 | Still haunt the dark- browed little girl whom once he used to tease? |
11533 | Swear not to we d, then leave me in my woe? |
11533 | That learned I when( I murmuring''loves she me?'') |
11533 | The pipe that erst he fashioned is doubtless scored with rust? |
11533 | Then what shall be the victor''s fee? |
11533 | Think''st thou scorn of him? |
11533 | This arm, these gauntlets, who shall dare withstand? |
11533 | This art thou fain to ascertain, and risk a bet with me? |
11533 | Thou wilt not? |
11533 | To Aphroditè then he told his woe:''How can a thing so tiny hurt one so?'' |
11533 | To him said Aphroditè:"So, worst of beasts,''twas you Who rent that thigh asunder, Who him that loved me slew?" |
11533 | Tootling through straws with Corydon mayhap''s beneath thee now? |
11533 | Was not he born to compass noblest ends, Lagus''own son, so soon as he matured Schemes such as ne''er had dawned on meaner minds? |
11533 | We''ve Homer; and what other''s worth a thought? |
11533 | Were ye and song forgot, What grace had earth? |
11533 | What art thou? |
11533 | What boots it to weep out thine eyes? |
11533 | What boots it? |
11533 | What can this mean? |
11533 | What did it stand you in, straight off the loom? |
11533 | What does woman dread? |
11533 | What fires the Muse''s, what the minstrel''s lays? |
11533 | What hero son- in- law of Zeus Hath e''er aspired to be? |
11533 | What is he else? |
11533 | What minstrel loves not well The Tyndarids, and Helen, and the chiefs That trod Troy down for Meneläus''sake? |
11533 | What painter painted, realized Such pictures? |
11533 | What reck''st thou? |
11533 | What time have workers for regret? |
11533 | What wager wilt thou lay? |
11533 | What was Endymion, sweet Selenè''s love? |
11533 | What were they? |
11533 | What, Firefly, is thy sleep so deep? |
11533 | What, again? |
11533 | What, what to my old father must I say? |
11533 | When learned I from thy practice or thy preaching aught that''s right, Thou puppet, thou misshapen lump of ugliness and spite? |
11533 | When? |
11533 | Where are like cities, peopled by like men? |
11533 | Where are the bay- leaves, Thestylis, and the charms? |
11533 | Where are those good old times? |
11533 | Where did he spring from? |
11533 | Where were ye, Nymphs, oh where, while Daphnis pined? |
11533 | Who dreamed what subtle strains our bumpkin wrought? |
11533 | Who own this shore? |
11533 | Who owns these cattle, Corydon? |
11533 | Who thanks us, who, For our good word? |
11533 | Who would not change for this the ocean- waves? |
11533 | Who wrought my sorrow? |
11533 | Whose threshold crossed I not, Or missed what grandam''s hut who dealt in charms? |
11533 | Why be so hot? |
11533 | Why be so timorous? |
11533 | Why no more Greet''st thou thy darling, from the caverned rock Peeping all coyly? |
11533 | Why what ails him now? |
11533 | Why, sword in hand, Raise ye this coil about your neighbours''wives? |
11533 | Wilt thou, to crown our strife, some meed assign? |
11533 | With fists? |
11533 | Yet found he that one cure: he sate him down On the tall cliff, and seaward looked, and sang:--"White Galatea, why disdain thy love? |
11533 | Yet what if all your chests with gold are lined? |
11533 | Yet who, of all that see the gray morn rise, Lifts not his latch and hails with eager eyes My Songs, yet sends them guerdonless away? |
11533 | You note it, I presume, Morson? |
11533 | Your Artemis shall be your saviour still? |
11533 | am I wandering? |
11533 | brutish churl, or o''erproud king? |
11533 | hadst not thou thy lady- loves?" |
11533 | is he at his tricks again? |
11533 | is not''Cleita''s worth''a proverb to this day? |
11533 | or by availing ourselves of what Professor Blackie again calls attention to, the"compensating powers"[B] of English? |
11533 | or does night pass slow?" |
11533 | or fist and foot, eye covering eye? |
11533 | or if not, what can? |
11533 | or when the goat stood handy, suffer her To nurse her firstling, and himself go milk a blatant cur? |
11533 | was the wrestler''s oil e''er yet so much as seen by him? |
11533 | were that fair for either? |
11533 | whence gotst thou that, and how? |
11533 | who listen to our strain? |
11533 | why, like the marsh- born leech, Cling to my flesh, and drain my dark veins dry? |
11159 | ''And you will not answer me?'' 11159 ''Bernard McKey, is he anything to you?'' |
11159 | ''By what right?'' 11159 ''By what?'' |
11159 | ''Could n''t we have a window open?'' 11159 ''Have you energy enough for a walk to the sea- shore?'' |
11159 | ''Not alone?'' 11159 ''O my God, why hast Thou let me do this?'' |
11159 | ''What is it, Abraham?'' 11159 ''What is it? |
11159 | ''What is it?'' 11159 ''What shall I do? |
11159 | ''What then? 11159 ''Where have you been, Lettie?'' |
11159 | ''Who is it, Mary?'' 11159 ''Will you examine the contents,''I asked,''and report to me the result?'' |
11159 | ''You do n''t think it was the medicine that killed her?'' 11159 ''You think so, Chloe? |
11159 | Alive, and not dead? 11159 Am_ I_ in heaven?" |
11159 | And so, Mr. Sidney,said I,"you know all about these parties and the particulars of the forgery?" |
11159 | Are a dozen additional spasms worth living for? |
11159 | Are you going? |
11159 | But one word came from his lips, as he confronted me there, with folded arms; it was,--''When?'' |
11159 | By the way, Doctor, have you seen anything of a little plaid- pattern matchbox? |
11159 | Did you bring my treasures? |
11159 | Did you ever see a genuine Yankee? |
11159 | Do you know anything of Captain H., of the Massachusetts Twentieth? |
11159 | Do you think I should bounce in, in this way, to tell you_ I_ was engaged? |
11159 | Ef yer call that''ere larfin'', could n''t yer cry a little to kind er slick daown the bears? |
11159 | How are you, Boy? |
11159 | How are you, Dad? |
11159 | How is your patient? |
11159 | How long? |
11159 | How many? |
11159 | How much is it? |
11159 | I asked her''if she had told any one else? 11159 I do n''t know whom to guess, Laura; who ever marries after other people''s fancy? |
11159 | I shall see you in the morning? |
11159 | Is it anybody I know, Laura? |
11159 | Is it you? |
11159 | May I get up? |
11159 | Mr. Lincoln defeated? |
11159 | No reprieve? |
11159 | Sue, will seventeen yards do? 11159 Susan, if I never come back, you will be her good friend, too?" |
11159 | The Jew? |
11159 | The cashier? |
11159 | Them? |
11159 | Then it is she? |
11159 | Then there is a new novel out? |
11159 | We wait until we die, before going there,I said;"I am alive, do n''t you see?" |
11159 | Well? |
11159 | Were you with him all night? |
11159 | What State do you come from? |
11159 | What did you do before you became a soldier? |
11159 | What do you mean to do when you get back? |
11159 | What is the matter? |
11159 | What part of Georgia? |
11159 | What then? |
11159 | What, could have happened there, that I had not been missed? 11159 What?" |
11159 | What_ do_ you s''pose_ he_ wants with this thing''? |
11159 | Where now was the Mountain- Pine? 11159 Who are those?" |
11159 | Why do n''t you go, if you forgive me? 11159 Why do n''t you tell him yes, Miss Anna? |
11159 | Why not? 11159 Why should he come to me? |
11159 | Will you go? |
11159 | You remember my son, Cortland Saunders, whom I brought to see you once in Boston? |
11159 | You think he will come? |
11159 | _ Has_ she been spoiled? 11159 ''It is a life, the life of Mary Percival, that last night went out,--and how? 11159 --Where did you go to church, when you were at home?" |
11159 | And who think you are the criminals?" |
11159 | And_ how_, in the name of all that is marvellous,_ could_ you have known Conway to be afflicted with dyspepsia? |
11159 | As for his wound, how could it do otherwise than well under such hands? |
11159 | Can not one live so near to God as that His greatness shall he merged in His goodness? |
11159 | Could I have been mistaken? |
11159 | Do n''t keep that boy waiting,--how do we know what messages he has got to carry? |
11159 | Do they call you Miss Percival in heaven?" |
11159 | Had he given poison to Mary Percival? |
11159 | Has my reader heard enough of it,--a hillock only six thousand feet high? |
11159 | Has nobody got thirteen cents? |
11159 | He turned around with a startled movement, for I was quite close, and asked,''Who is it?'' |
11159 | He was under the effect of opiates,--why not( if his case was desperate, as it seemed to be considered) stop his sufferings with chloroform? |
11159 | He wound his face in between me and the darkening sky; he whispered hoarsely,--"''Do you care for him?'' |
11159 | Hermann?" |
11159 | How could I tell him the deed his hand had done? |
11159 | How could it have been? |
11159 | How could the two harmonize? |
11159 | How should it be effected? |
11159 | How, then, did he acquire this almost miraculous power? |
11159 | How? |
11159 | I ca n''t bear to have Frank throw himself away; she is pretty now, but what will she be in ten years?" |
11159 | I do n''t think the delirium will return before mid- day; can you watch him till then, Anna?" |
11159 | I have great confidence in you; you must never disappoint me,--will you?" |
11159 | I heard one of them ask,''Do you know who it is?'' |
11159 | In one of these, after looking round as usual, I asked aloud,"Any Massachusetts men here?" |
11159 | Is n''t it good that all suppositions are_ not_ based upon truth? |
11159 | It was the same voice that had said to Miss Axtell,"Will you send me out again?" |
11159 | Leduc? |
11159 | Leduc? |
11159 | May I come back at times, and tell you how I endure? |
11159 | No one, not Mr. McKey himself, had asked me; and should I give him, my brother, my answer first? |
11159 | Oh, what if after all there should n''t be such a place?" |
11159 | Philosophers twain we might deem ourselves; but what is a craftsman without tools? |
11159 | She asked,''What is it?'' |
11159 | The directors did not question the fact; but how was it done? |
11159 | Was he going into delirium again? |
11159 | Was it by this cup?'' |
11159 | Was it possible that my Captain could be lying on the straw in one of these places? |
11159 | We could not climb the mountain dark and dim; we would not be idle: what was to be done? |
11159 | Were these the Cyclops of Katahdin? |
11159 | Were they Trolls forging diabolic enginery, or Gypsies of Yankeedom? |
11159 | What could society do without women and children? |
11159 | What do you think Josey would have been, if Mrs. Brooks had been her mother?" |
11159 | What has happened?'' |
11159 | What man of the masses can this one be, thus heralded by the authorities of the nation, and what his labor, so commended by the rulers? |
11159 | What more could I ask to assure me of the Captain''s safety? |
11159 | What right had any other to come in then and there? |
11159 | What should be done? |
11159 | What then? |
11159 | What would you have me to do?'' |
11159 | When I had done, he said,--"''You believe this of me?'' |
11159 | Whence came this love of Africans for harmonious measure? |
11159 | Who were they? |
11159 | Who would not rather wear his decorations beneath his uniform than on it? |
11159 | Why can one recognize the Plymouth May- flower, as soon as seen, by its wondrous depth of color? |
11159 | Why walk you this way, my lady, in the snow and slippery ice? |
11159 | Why, then, should it be strange, if remarkable powers of observation, analysis, and patient and energetic study should accomplish much more? |
11159 | Will you allow me to demonstrate this?" |
11159 | Will you be my rock, set here, in this village? |
11159 | Would Miss Axtell expect me? |
11159 | You say Doctor Percival gave it to her?'' |
11159 | _ Thought not_ mortal, or_ not thought_ mortal,--which was it? |
11159 | did you ask?" |
11159 | do you know what they''ve done in Baltimore?" |
11159 | exclaimed Laura, with a look of intense astonishment,"how could you guess it?" |
11159 | here?" |
11159 | higher than the Arbutus? |
11159 | how could Mr. Bowen let her marry him?" |
11159 | if any one had seen the cup?'' |
11159 | or had she, it might be, forgotten that she had asked my presence? |
11159 | should n''t you be happy about it?" |
11159 | what was it, Chloe?'' |
11159 | when a voice whispered over my shoulder,--"I kinder guess yer''ve ben asleep an''dreamin'', ha''n''t yer?" |
11159 | whom I killed eighteen years ago, have you come to reproach me now? |
11159 | why hath thy Maker so forsaken thee? |
11159 | why not to the other one, to whom he told of Alice''s death two years ago? |
2395 | And whither shall we bear her? 2395 Chalciope,"she said,"I declare that I am your sister, indeed-- aye, and your daughter, too, for did you not care for me when I was an infant? |
2395 | Dear, dear,said Zeus,"what can be done to save the frogs? |
2395 | Demophoön, my son,she cried,"what would this stranger- woman do to you, bringing bitter grief to me that ever I let her take you in her arms?" |
2395 | For what has Heracles come to the country of the Amazons? |
2395 | Have I not performed two of the labors? 2395 How can I allow the cleaning of King Augeias''s stables to you when you bargained for a reward for doing it?" |
2395 | How is it with you, friend Admetus? |
2395 | How may I get to your house? |
2395 | How may I go there with you? |
2395 | How? |
2395 | Is it for the girdle given me by Ares, the god of war, that you have come, braving the Amazons, Heracles? |
2395 | Sister, sister, have you taken the eye? |
2395 | To what god is that sacrifice due? |
2395 | Well, mortal, what would you have from the Graiai? |
2395 | Who are you,he asked,"and from whence came the apple that you had them bring me?" |
2395 | Who are you? |
2395 | Who but Argo is the mother of us all? 2395 Who has slain my brothers? |
2395 | Who is he,she cried,"who has been given this mastery over me?" |
2395 | Who will show the way of escape to the others? |
2395 | Why art thou smitten with despair, thou who hast wrought so much and hast won so much? 2395 Why art thou so smitten with despair?" |
2395 | Why do you not come to the houses? 2395 Why do you stay away from the town, old mother?" |
2395 | Why have you come, and why do you sit here in such great trouble, youth? |
2395 | Why is the house of Admetus so hushed to- day? |
2395 | Wouldst thou cross and get thee to the city of Iolcus, Jason, where so many things await thee? |
2395 | Wouldst thou cross the Anaurus? |
2395 | Wouldst thou cross? |
2395 | And Jason? |
2395 | And one said to the other:"What land is this? |
2395 | And one voice said:"Why has Peleus striven so hard to raise a wall that his son shall fight hard to overthrow?" |
2395 | And the first robber said,"Who began that conflict, the frogs or the mice?" |
2395 | And then she said:"What is this strange sickle- sword that you wear? |
2395 | But why do I speak of other princes beside Celeus, our father? |
2395 | But will you swear that you will bring the magic treasures back to us when you have slain the Gorgon and have taken her head?" |
2395 | Could it be that Heracles had come amongst them? |
2395 | Did Nereus not say that a great labor awaited Heracles, and that in the doing of it he should work out the will of Zeus? |
2395 | Had her nurse heard her say something like this out of her dreams, she wondered? |
2395 | Have I not slain the lion of Nemea and the great water snake of Lerna?" |
2395 | Have you taken the tooth?" |
2395 | He sprang up, and he took the hands of Alcestis and he said,"You, then, will take my place?" |
2395 | Heracles slapped him on the leg and said:"What more of the heroic exploits of the mice?" |
2395 | How can I look upon a woman''s face and remind myself that I can not look upon Alcestis''s face ever again?" |
2395 | How could he, he thought, leave Hypsipyle and this land of Lemnos behind? |
2395 | It was then that Jason cried out:"Ah, when Pelias spoke of this quest to me, why did I not turn my head away and refuse to be drawn into it? |
2395 | O ye gods, have ye no pity for Danae, the mother of Perseus?" |
2395 | Pelias said:"If you have been able to come by those juices, how is it that you remain in woeful age and decrepitude?" |
2395 | She had no tears to shed then, and in a hard voice she asked,"Why did my son slay Plexippus and Toxeus, his uncles?" |
2395 | She said to them:"Where can I go, dear children? |
2395 | What can these men do against us who are winged and who can travel through the ways of the air?" |
2395 | What good will my life and my spirit be to me if they can not win this race for me?" |
2395 | What name have you?" |
2395 | What was their doom to be? |
2395 | Whither have we come? |
2395 | Who are you who speak of juices that can bring back one to the strength and glory of his youth?" |
2395 | Who has slain my brothers?" |
2395 | Who told you the way to our dwelling place? |
2395 | Why should I not strive with Death? |
2395 | Why should they not toil, they who were born for great labors and to face dangers that other men might not face? |
2395 | Will you not take her into your house while I am away on a journey?" |
2395 | Wilt thou come with me, Thetis? |
2395 | With a great fear at her heart she cried out:"Dearest, has any food passed your lips in all the time you have been in the Underworld?" |
2395 | Would Chalciope come to her and ask her, Medea, to help her sons? |
2395 | Would she, not finding an opening to fly through, turn back? |
2395 | he cried,"who speak of the garden watched over by the Daughters of the Evening Land? |
19126 | Can these dry bones live? |
19126 | What does it matter if we are annexed afterwards, so long as we remain neutral now? |
19126 | What have you done? |
19126 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- PALLAS ATHENE"Has it come to this?" |
19126 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- THE WAR MAKERS_ Who are the Makers of Wars?_ The Kings of the Earth. |
19126 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- THEIR BERESINA_"Is it still a long way to the Beresina? |
19126 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- WHAT ABOUT PEACE, LADS? |
19126 | -----------------------------------------------------------------------"IS IT YOU, MOTHER?" |
19126 | And indeed why not? |
19126 | And the child''s mother and sisters-- what of them? |
19126 | And this long, imperturbable,_ verdamte_ Nicholas, who was declared on the highest German authority( and what higher?) |
19126 | And what has he done? |
19126 | And what of the neutrals? |
19126 | And whom did he make her companions and sisters? |
19126 | And, indeed, what else are they? |
19126 | Are visions about? |
19126 | Because art has been created to evil purpose, shall we condemn pictures or statues? |
19126 | Because the Germans have employed gas poisons in warfare, are we to condemn the incalculable gifts of organic chemistry? |
19126 | Besides, if the worst comes to the worst and Germany annexes us, are we quite sure that we shall be in a much worse condition than we are now? |
19126 | But has she not destroyed herself utterly amid the ruins? |
19126 | But here even the terms of surrender are unknowable; and she can only ask"Am I civilized?" |
19126 | But is it? |
19126 | But the lesson? |
19126 | But what is to be done when a fool is born a war- lord by right of primogeniture? |
19126 | But what would the Trentino be worth if Germany and Austria were victorious? |
19126 | But will they always be able to secure so vile a life against the vengeance of history? |
19126 | But will they be able to make him disgorge? |
19126 | Can any Dutchman doubt what would be Holland''s fate if Germany emerged even moderately victorious from this war? |
19126 | Can he restrain himself for good? |
19126 | Can not the higher and finer attributes of mankind be developed and strengthened without this apparently needless waste of agony and life? |
19126 | Did not Monsieur Capus say the other day that Europe"can not allow a return of the cave epoch?" |
19126 | Digging graves for comrades about to be shot? |
19126 | Do Englishwomen wish to talk with any Huns after this war? |
19126 | Do not these suffice? |
19126 | Does it not challenge every human nerve- centre by its horror? |
19126 | Does it not, once proclaimed, by anticipation awake those very emotions of dread and dismay that make the stroke more fatal when it falls? |
19126 | Has his inspiration? |
19126 | Has the artist''s power failed him? |
19126 | Have I invested 300 marks and has the Government got 300, or have both of us got nothing?"] |
19126 | How long, O Lord, how long?" |
19126 | How soon will Fate condescend to crush this painted creature? |
19126 | If the German navy survives the war what memories will it have? |
19126 | In a prison? |
19126 | In face of this, who dare hint they suffered and died in vain? |
19126 | Is God dead? |
19126 | Is human nature only to be redeemed through the Cross, and must Calvary bear again and again its heavy load of human anguish? |
19126 | Is it a wonder that an artist in a Neutral Country should depict German affairs as in this condition, and business done in this manner? |
19126 | Is it indeed meant? |
19126 | Is not this the age of science and Kultur? |
19126 | Is that the irony of the artist, or is it only due to the necessity of making his meaning plain? |
19126 | Is the fate of L19 the fruit of our artist''s stinging reminder that Holland once had nobler spirits and braver days? |
19126 | Lying maimed and broken in a rude hospital? |
19126 | May I build a villa here?"] |
19126 | Mending roads? |
19126 | No one knows what the future may bring; why, therefore, worry about it? |
19126 | No taunt could be too bitter for their lips and none more bitter than the words of Raemaekers:"My sons are lying here-- where are yours?" |
19126 | O man!--was it for this I died? |
19126 | Of lawless force shall lawless Mars complain? |
19126 | Or, more likely still, in a rough unknown stranger''s grave? |
19126 | People ask: Why does God allow it? |
19126 | SHE:"Can they have done it, my dear? |
19126 | Shall not you, her child, Quicken the everlasting fires that glow Upon your birthright''s altar? |
19126 | That will not be easy; and what atonement can be made for the innocent blood which drops from those pitiful spoils? |
19126 | What can stop them and banish these scenes? |
19126 | What do they stand for, these two noble sisters? |
19126 | What does he feel? |
19126 | What does it mean? |
19126 | What has the madness for world conquest done for her now? |
19126 | What have you done? |
19126 | What impression do the frightful losses of his own people make on him? |
19126 | What impression has been made on him by the alternation of victories and failures during the last twenty months? |
19126 | What is all this foolish pother about killing him with bacilli in his cisterns or with a drop of poison in his tea? |
19126 | What is it? |
19126 | What is she cut from love and faith But some wild Pallas from the brain Of Demons, fiery hot to burst All barriers in her onward race For power? |
19126 | What is there I would not do, England, my own? |
19126 | What though dark the day Above the storm- swept frontier that you tread? |
19126 | What will be the feeling of an English mother whose daughter marries a Hun any time within the next twenty years? |
19126 | What, I ask, can you do with such people but either crush or civilize them? |
19126 | When will Bernstorff''s turn come? |
19126 | Where is the boy''s father in Germany? |
19126 | Which side can kill most, and itself outlast the other? |
19126 | Who can not see the cruel drama played out in that Paris street? |
19126 | Who can think unmoved of the happy romance of wedded love, so early and so sadly terminated? |
19126 | Who loves not Knowledge, who shall rail Against her beauty, may she mix With men and prosper, who shall fix Her pillars? |
19126 | Who that has ever clamoured for war can face the unspoken reproach in these pitiful eyes? |
19126 | Who was Caligula, and what does his name mean? |
19126 | Why did He let him be shot down by those Huns?" |
19126 | Why not, it is urged, make the best of present facilities? |
19126 | Why? |
19126 | Will asphyxiating gas, and destruction of non- combatants and neutrals on land and sea, trouble him? |
19126 | Would the hero ancestors, of whom the Dutch so boast, have tolerated this indignity? |
19126 | Yet dare we say"together?" |
19126 | [ Illustration: EUROPE, 1916"Am I not yet sufficiently civilized?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: GALLIPOLI TURKISH GENERAL:"What are you firing at? |
19126 | [ Illustration: IT''S UNBELIEVABLE DUTCH OFFICER:"How can they have soiled their hands by such atrocities?" |
19126 | [ Illustration: KREUZLAND, KREUZLAND ÜBER ALLES BELGIUM, 1914:"Where are our fathers?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: L''AVENIR]----------------------------------------------------------------------- CHRIST OR ODIN? |
19126 | [ Illustration: MURDER ON THE HIGH SEAS"Well, have you nearly done?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: PALLAS ATHENE"Has it come to this?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: SEDUCTION"Ai n''t I a lovable fellow?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: THE CONFEDERATES"Did they believe that peace story in the Reichstag, Bethmann?" |
19126 | [ Illustration: THE HOSTAGES"Father, what have we done?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: THE ORDER OF MERIT TURKEY:"And is this all the compensation I get?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: THE RAID"Do you remember Black Mary of Hamburg?" |
19126 | [ Illustration: THE SELF- SATISFIED BURGHER"What does it matter if we''re annexed afterwards, so long as we remain neutral now?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: THE ZEPPELIN TRIUMPH"But Mother had done nothing wrong, had she, Daddy?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: WAR LOAN MUSIC"Was blazen die Trompeten Moneten heraus?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration: WHAT ABOUT PEACE, LADS?] |
19126 | [ Illustration:"Father, is it still a long way to the Beresina?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration:"Freedom of the land is ours-- why should we not have freedom of the sea?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration:"HAVE ANOTHER PIECE?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration:"IS IT YOU, MOTHER?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration:"MY SIXTH SON IS NOW LYING HERE-- WHERE ARE YOURS?"] |
19126 | [ Illustration:"U''S"HIS MAJESTY:"Well, Tripitz, you''ve sunk a great many?" |
19126 | _ And Wisdom?--does that come by birth?_ Nay then-- too often the reverse. |
19126 | _ And who are these Kings of the Earth?_ Only men-- not always even men of worth, But claiming rule by right of birth. |
19126 | _"Father, is it still a long way to the Beresina? |
19126 | _"Is it still a long way to the Beresina? |
19126 | and what of the Notes which are held? |
19126 | let her work prevail---- Yes, but how do the lines continue? |
19126 | this lamenting strain? |
27421 | And now have I your full confidence? |
27421 | Arrested? |
27421 | But surely you do n''t expect it to rain all the time? |
27421 | But what of the extra ten pounds I insisted on your taking with you in case of emergency? |
27421 | Do you see that? |
27421 | IS IT FINDING FAULT YE ARE? |
27421 | Oh, then_ that_''s all right,she said;"and I do n''t think even he would ever have thought of''impinging''; it''s lovely, is n''t it? |
27421 | Really? |
27421 | She''s very fond of me, are n''t you, pussy? 27421 Surely you''re not going to keep that animal?" |
27421 | Then there was another, something like, Got a lifer seven years ago; Surely you remember Mealy Mike, Robbery with violence at Bow? 27421 Was it necessary for you to come_ here_?" |
27421 | What more do I want? |
27421 | What will happen if you get your feet wet? |
27421 | Who''s''her''? |
27421 | Why did you disgrace us like this? |
27421 | Will it be his destiny to write Or to earn a living with his brains? 27421 ***What is a Penny Roll?" |
27421 | ***** From an examination- paper at a girls''school:--_ Question._ Why are the days in summer longer than those in winter? |
27421 | *****"Question.--How much has the time for crossing the ocean been shortened since the day of Columbus? |
27421 | After all, what was a stray cat compared with one''s marriage vows? |
27421 | After that_ The Daily Horror_ rang up and asked if he would contribute an article to their series on"Is Bigamy Worth While?" |
27421 | And of course we could do it easily, though it would be rather dreadful, would n''t it? |
27421 | And yet it does seem a little----Well, does n''t it? |
27421 | Are our public schools beginning to advertise? |
27421 | By the way"( a little anxiously)"there are n''t any split infinitives in it, are there? |
27421 | Ca n''t you say something-- suggest something?" |
27421 | Did you ever hear of such a thing? |
27421 | Do his''arches''pair with those of BAINES? |
27421 | Extraordinary, is n''t it? |
27421 | HOW ARE THEY SELLING?" |
27421 | He grew suspicious; why was I so interested? |
27421 | How was I to know that I had pitched my tent on private property and was unwittingly trespassing? |
27421 | IF YOU RAN OVER ANYONE YOU MIGHT BE CAPSIZED-- WHAT?" |
27421 | IS KISSING DYING OUT? |
27421 | Is n''t the open country man''s rightful heritage?" |
27421 | It''s true she rushes to and fro With business promptitude, But what about the busy ant? |
27421 | MASSINE?" |
27421 | Men he met in the City said,"How''s that boar- hound of yours?" |
27421 | NINE LIVES SPENT WHERE? |
27421 | Oh, let us clear our minds of cant-- Why_ is_ it that we love her so? |
27421 | SHOULD SERVANTS TELL? |
27421 | THE BARONESS, I PRESOOM?" |
27421 | That we''re"--she dropped her voice and I saw that she could hardly get out the next words--"out- of- date?" |
27421 | We went on discovering things we had n''t known about each other:-- THE TESTING TIME IN CONJUGAL FELICITY, IS IT THE THIRD YEAR? |
27421 | When did you do that?" |
27421 | Who was this Charles? |
27421 | Why do n''t we cast the foullest slur On such a Prussian character? |
27421 | Why is it, then, we do n''t abhor This horrid little prude? |
27421 | Why not adopt it?" |
27421 | Will he share a''loop''with GRAHAME WHITE? |
27421 | Wo n''t it make them sit up? |
27421 | _ Alarmed House Agent._"MADAM, WHAT HAVE YOU DONE TO MY PARTNER?" |
27421 | _ Mistress._"NORAH, WILL YOU TRY TO HAVE THE STEAK A LITTLE MORE UNDERDONE?" |
21196 | Ai nt you a buster? |
21196 | And what is that, pray tell me, love, that paddles off so fast? |
21196 | And you say you''re an American? |
21196 | Ay, is it so? |
21196 | Bailed out, was he? |
21196 | Bettina,said she, addressing her maid in a voice as clouded and rich as the south wind on an à � olian,"how am I to- day?" |
21196 | But what kind of perishable things? |
21196 | Fiddlesticks, is it, sir? 21196 From what part of America?" |
21196 | Had the sufferin''s he had undergone made him delerious? |
21196 | Have you two barns? |
21196 | How do you expect to get over the river when you go back? |
21196 | Lady Albina,said I, in my softest tone,"how are you?" |
21196 | My dear,said I to Mrs. Sparrowgrass,"where did you get these fine potatoes?" |
21196 | My dear,said Mrs. Sparrowgrass,"why do n''t you sell that boat?" |
21196 | On their heads? |
21196 | Sell it? 21196 Throw that in my face agin, will you? |
21196 | Town? |
21196 | What State? |
21196 | What has become of your pontoon train? |
21196 | What was that? |
21196 | What''s that? |
21196 | What,replied Bill,"do you mean to say you do n''t know what a hanthem is?" |
21196 | Where are we now, sir? 21196 Where do you usually put the horses of clergymen who come to see your master?" |
21196 | Who sold the best apples in your town? |
21196 | Who told you that I swore? |
21196 | Why dassent you? |
21196 | Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson, if I may be permitted to ask? |
21196 | Why not? 21196 Why,"says he,"how would the rest of the wimmin round Jonesville feel if I should pick out one woman and wait on her?" |
21196 | Yes, sir; nice ones, ai n''t they? |
21196 | You ai n''t got nuffin''more to say? |
21196 | You ai n''t? 21196 You are not going to waste your ground on muskmelons?" |
21196 | You want a passage to America? |
21196 | *****_ Old Gentleman_( to driver of street- car):"My friend, what do you do with your wages every week-- put part of it in the savings bank?" |
21196 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
21196 | A catbird? |
21196 | Am I to be sacrificed, broiled, roasted, for the sake of the increased vigor of a few vegetables? |
21196 | And now, Melissy Bedott, you ai n''t to have nothin''more to dew with them gals-- d''ye hear? |
21196 | And where''s Kier? |
21196 | Before the whole set school to boot---- What evil genius put you to''t?" |
21196 | Besides, there were two bolted doors and double- deafened floors between us; how could she recognize my voice, even if she did hear it? |
21196 | But at last a wonderful diamond ring, An infant Kohinoor, did the thing, And, sighing with love, or something the same,( What''s in a name?) |
21196 | But my wife Polly, says she,''What on airth are you thinkin''of, Deacon? |
21196 | But what kind of an explanation could I make to him? |
21196 | But when the blow was struck, when I had passed''em by and invited some other, some happier woman, how would them slighted ones feel? |
21196 | But who was to give me back my peas? |
21196 | But why harrow the feelings by lifting the curtain From these scenes of woe? |
21196 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and Deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they? |
21196 | Dickson?" |
21196 | Dis razor hurt you, sah?" |
21196 | Do you see that tree there?" |
21196 | For what says the ballad? |
21196 | Had the sufferin''s of the night, added to the trials of the day, made him crazy? |
21196 | He give the old mare a awful cut and says he:"I''d like to know what you want to be so aggravatin''for?" |
21196 | Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way? |
21196 | His shipmate listened for awhile, and then said:"I say, Bill, what''s a hanthem?" |
21196 | How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When, through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell? |
21196 | How did he git thar? |
21196 | How didst thou acquire this paramount honor and dignity?" |
21196 | How do you s''pose I can do anything with you a- tossin''round so?" |
21196 | How do you s''pose they would enjoy the day, seein''me with another woman, and they droopin''round without me? |
21196 | I says to him in stern tones:"Is this pleasure, Josiah Allen?" |
21196 | I should like to know what arthly reason you had to s''pose old Crane was agreeable to me? |
21196 | In what other painful event of life has a good man so little sympathy as when overcome with sleep in meeting time? |
21196 | Is this the way you answer the question about keepin''the Lord''s day? |
21196 | It skairt him awfully, and says he,"What does ail you, Samantha? |
21196 | JAMES T. FIELDS THE OWL- CRITIC A Lesson to Fault- finders"Who stuffed that white owl?" |
21196 | MR. C."Well, then, I want to know if yu''re willing I should have Melissy?" |
21196 | One day I saw Mr. Bates walking along, and I hailed him:"Bates, those are your cows there, I believe?" |
21196 | One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"What might it be that you''ve got in the box?" |
21196 | Out spoke the ancient fisherman:"Oh, what was that, my daughter?" |
21196 | Pray, what do you know of a woman''s necessities? |
21196 | Putting my head out of the carriage, I said in a petulant and weary tone,''Do you want to see me?'' |
21196 | Recollect wut fun we he d, you''n I on''Ezry Hollis, Up there to Waltham plain last fall, ahavin''the Cornwallis? |
21196 | Says I,"What is the matter, Josiah Allen? |
21196 | Scrutinizing it closely, he turned to the widow and in a low tone asked,''Who sent the pick?''" |
21196 | See-- how long''s Miss Crane ben dead? |
21196 | Somebody ought to get up before the dew is off( why do n''t the dew stay on till after a reasonable breakfast?) |
21196 | Step up an''take a nipper, sir; I''m dreffle glad to see ye;"But now it''s,"Ware''s my eppylet? |
21196 | The fowls of the air have peas; but what has man? |
21196 | Thought ye left me with agreeable company, hey? |
21196 | Wal, I guess I had set there ten minutes or more, when all of a sudden I thought, Where is Josiah? |
21196 | Want Melissy, dew ye? |
21196 | We ca n''t never choose him o''course-- thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round( do n''t you?) |
21196 | Well, what''s_ he_ good for?" |
21196 | What are you off here for?" |
21196 | What can be done with five or six o''clock in town? |
21196 | What if I was? |
21196 | What if my trousers are shabby and worn? |
21196 | What if, seconds hence When I am very old, yon shimmering doom Comes drawing down and down, till all things end?" |
21196 | What is a garden for? |
21196 | What is the matter?" |
21196 | What may not be done at those hours in the country? |
21196 | What''s that in the corner there?" |
21196 | When the flow of language was exhausted he said:"Are you troo?" |
21196 | Where ish de himmelstrahlende Stern---- De shtar of de shpirit''s light? |
21196 | Where ish de lofely golden cloud Dat float on de mountain''s prow? |
21196 | Who ever heard of a comet without a tail, I should like to know? |
21196 | Why did n''t you stay till mornin''? |
21196 | Why, Cappen-- did ye ever hear of such a piece of audacity in all yer born days? |
21196 | With the hoe, the rake, the dibble, the spade, the watering- pot? |
21196 | Wo n''t Stewart, or some of our dry- goods importers, Take a contract for clothing our wives and our daughters? |
21196 | Wo n''t some kind philanthropist, seeing that aid is So needed at once by these indigent ladies, Take charge of the matter? |
21196 | Wo n''t somebody, moved by this touching description, Come forward to- morrow and head a subscription? |
21196 | Wut shall we du? |
21196 | You could n''t come here a minute, could you, without a lot of other wimmen tight to your heels?" |
21196 | You was in a awful takin''to come with''em, and what will they think to see you act so?" |
21196 | [_ Exit Mr. Crane._(_ Enter Melissa, accompanied by Captain Canoot._)"Good- evenin'', Cappen Well, Melissy, hum at last, hey? |
21196 | _ She_: Did n''t you? |
21196 | ai n''t it terrible? |
21196 | are you not a member of the African church?" |
21196 | who said you would n''t?" |
21196 | who would rise at dawn to hear the skylark if a catbird were about after breakfast? |
15272 | 10. Who is the old man in xxx_ seq._? |
15272 | 10. Who were St. George, Phoebus, Titan, Tithonius? |
15272 | 11. Who is the_ woful thrall_ in xxxvii? |
15272 | 12. Who is the_ weary wight_ in xxxiv? |
15272 | 135 XVI Then Una thus; But she your sister deare, The deare Charissa where is she become? |
15272 | 14. Who is the Paynim mentioned in xl? |
15272 | 174, 175 refer? |
15272 | 188, 313, 398? |
15272 | 200- 201? |
15272 | 205 Or who shall not great Nightes children scorne, When two of three her Nephews are so fowle forlorne? |
15272 | 225 XXVI And am I now in safetie sure( quoth he) From him, that would have forced me to dye? |
15272 | 287?-183? |
15272 | 3. Who were the nine muses? |
15272 | 3. Who were the parents and the foster- father of Orgoglio? |
15272 | 335 What justice ° ever other judgement taught, But he should die, who merites not to live? |
15272 | 340 Or let him die, that loatheth living breath? |
15272 | 345 Or thine the fault, or mine the error is, Instead of foe to wound my friend amis? |
15272 | 390 For what hath life, that may it loved make, And gives not rather cause it to forsake? |
15272 | 4. Who were Zeal, Reverence, Obedience, Patience, and Mercy, with the symbolism of each? |
15272 | 405 XLVI Why then doest thou, O man of sin, desire To draw thy dayes forth to their last degree? |
15272 | 5. Who is the_ far renowmed Queene_ in v? |
15272 | 5. Who was Sansfoy? |
15272 | 5. Who was the door- keeper? |
15272 | 555 What need of armes, where peace doth ay remaine,( Said he,) and battailes none are to be fought? |
15272 | 80 Or doen thy feeble feet unweeting hither stray? |
15272 | Ah curteous knight( quoth she) what secret wound Could ever find, ° to grieve the gentlest hart on ground? |
15272 | Ah dearest dame( quoth he) how might I see 340 The thing, that might not be, and yet was donne? |
15272 | And is the point of death now turnd fro mee, That I may tell this haplesse history? |
15272 | But deeds of armes must I at last be faine And Ladies love to leave so dearely bought? |
15272 | But now aread, old father, why of late Didst thou behight me borne of English blood, Whom all a Faeries sonne doen nominate? |
15272 | But what adventure, or what high intent Hath brought you hither into Faery land, Aread Prince Arthur, crowne of Martiall band? |
15272 | But what art thou, that telst of Nephews kilt? |
15272 | By what devices does Spenser obtain the effects of_ terror_? |
15272 | Could so many trees grow together in a thick wood? |
15272 | Could the author have possibly intended in him compliment to Sir Walter Raleigh? |
15272 | Did Una act ungratefully in leaving the Satyrs as she did? |
15272 | Do you think that in his use of hyperbole and impossibilities Spenser shows that he was deficient in a sense of humor? |
15272 | Does Despair show knowledge of the Knight''s past? |
15272 | Does the poet mean that allegiance to queen and country comes before private affection? |
15272 | Has this obscure line any reference to prophecy? |
15272 | How are the adjectives used in l. 57? |
15272 | How did Redcross spend the night before the fight with Sansjoy? |
15272 | How did the two situations affect Una? |
15272 | How does Archimago plan to deceive her? |
15272 | How does Una act on hearing the news of the Knight''s capture? |
15272 | How does Una repay their kindness? |
15272 | How does the knight feel and act while under Archimago''s spell? |
15272 | How does the poet impress the reader with the size of the Dragon? |
15272 | How is expectation aroused in vi? |
15272 | How is the unchangeableness of truth illustrated in this story? |
15272 | How long was he a captive? |
15272 | How only could the lovers be restored to their human shape? |
15272 | How was she treated by them? |
15272 | How was the Redcross Knight received by the King? |
15272 | IS THEN UNJUST, etc., is it then unjust to give each man his due? |
15272 | In heavenly mercies hast thou not a part? |
15272 | In the description of the giant do the last two lines( viii) add to or detract from the impression? |
15272 | In what case is_ way_ in l. 17? |
15272 | In what condition, mental and physical, is the Knight when liberated? |
15272 | In what was the Knight instructed by Faith( xix_ seq_.)? |
15272 | Is Spenser''s character drawing objective or subjective? |
15272 | Is not enough thy evill life forespent? |
15272 | Is not his law, Let every sinner die: Die shall all flesh? |
15272 | Is not short paine well borne, that brings long ease, And layes the soule to sleepe in quiet grave? |
15272 | Is not the measure of thy sinfull hire ° High heaped up with huge iniquitie, Against the day of wrath, to burden thee? |
15272 | Is she over sentimental or ineffective-- and is the pathos of her grief kept within the limits of the reader''s pleasure? |
15272 | Is the description of the wood in vii true to nature? |
15272 | Is then unjust ° to each his due to give? |
15272 | Is this the battell, which thou vauntst to fight With that fire- mouthed Dragon, ° horrible and bright? |
15272 | Its moral significance? |
15272 | L What end( quoth she) should cause us take such paine, But that same end which every living wight Should make his marke, high heaven to attaine? |
15272 | LXII Unworthy wretch( quoth he) of so great grace, ° 550 How dare I thinke such glory to attaine? |
15272 | O how can beautie maister the most strong, And simple truth subdue avenging wrong? |
15272 | O how, said he, mote I that well out find, That may restore you to your wonted well? |
15272 | O what of Gods ° then boots it to be borne, If old Aveugles sonnes so evill heare? |
15272 | O who can tell The hidden power of herbes ° and might of Magicke spell? |
15272 | Of regeneration? |
15272 | Of the resurrection of Christ( the three days)? |
15272 | Or let him die at ease, that liveth here uneath? |
15272 | Or wants she health, or busie is elsewhere? |
15272 | QUESTIONS AND TOPICS( Canto VI) 1. Who rescued Una from Sansloy? |
15272 | Shall he thy sins up in his knowledge fold, And guilty be of thine impietie? |
15272 | To whom does Spenser ascribe the invention of artillery? |
15272 | Under what circumstances does Una meet Archimago? |
15272 | Was it adequate? |
15272 | Was it done? |
15272 | Was it true? |
15272 | Were it not better I that Lady had, Then that thou hadst repented it too late? |
15272 | What additional traits of Una''s character are presented in this Canto? |
15272 | What advantages does each gain? |
15272 | What arbitrary classification of musicians does Spenser make in iii? |
15272 | What are her feelings toward the Knight? |
15272 | What are the moral reflections in stanza i? |
15272 | What are the principal characteristics of the giants of romance as seen in Orgoglio? |
15272 | What became of the rest? |
15272 | What becomes of Una? |
15272 | What customs of the early Christians are referred to in xix? |
15272 | What did she have to do with Fradubio and Fraelissa? |
15272 | What do you learn in this canto of Elizabethan or chivalric manners and customs? |
15272 | What do you learn of the laws, customs, and sentiments of chivalry in this canto? |
15272 | What does Sir Satyrane symbolize in the allegory? |
15272 | What does he symbolize? |
15272 | What does the Squire''s horn symbolize? |
15272 | What dramatic stroke in xxvii? |
15272 | What effect is produced in xxx and how? |
15272 | What elements of beauty are seen in the description of dawn and sunrise in ii? |
15272 | What figure do you find in xxxi? |
15272 | What frayes ye, that were wo nt to comfort me affrayd? |
15272 | What heavens? |
15272 | What hint of the significance of her name in xxi? |
15272 | What illustration is used in viii? |
15272 | What infernal deities are conjured up by Archimago? |
15272 | What is the difference between the two_ wells_ in xliii? |
15272 | What is the difference between_ pastoral_ and_ epic_ poetry? |
15272 | What is the effect of Archimago''s appearance? |
15272 | What is the effect of Duessa''s letter? |
15272 | What is the moral interpretation of xli- xlii? |
15272 | What is the_ case_ of_ heavens_ in l. 193? |
15272 | What light is thrown on her character? |
15272 | What moral reflections are found in i? |
15272 | What moral reflections does the poet make in the introductory stanza? |
15272 | What mysterious power was possessed by his shield? |
15272 | What needs of dainty dishes to devize, 120 Of comely services, or courtly trayne? |
15272 | What news of St. George did he give? |
15272 | What part does Arthur''s Squire play? |
15272 | What part does the Dwarf play? |
15272 | What part of speech is_ wandering_ l. 114? |
15272 | What presents did the Knights exchange at parting? |
15272 | What prophecy was made of the Knight? |
15272 | What references to the Bible do you find? |
15272 | What satire of the Romish priesthood in xviii- xx? |
15272 | What suggestion of the condition of the English roads do you find in st. ii? |
15272 | What was Duessa''s punishment? |
15272 | What was Una''s purpose in bringing the Knight to the House of Holiness? |
15272 | What was his character and education? |
15272 | What was the fate of Sir Terwin? |
15272 | What was the old belief about the penance of witches? |
15272 | What were some of the tortures of the damned? |
15272 | What were the duties of the Squire in chivalry? |
15272 | What wit of mortall wight Can now devise to quit a thrall from such a plight? |
15272 | What_ figure of speech_ is employed in xviii? |
15272 | What_ figure of speech_ is used in xiii, xvi, and xx? |
15272 | When does Spenser drop into a lighter, humorous vein? |
15272 | Where do you find an allegory of baptism? |
15272 | Where do you find reference to mediæval art? |
15272 | Where do you learn of the laws governing such contests? |
15272 | Where does Spenser make happy use of maritime figures? |
15272 | Where does Spenser use classical mythology-- mediæval legends? |
15272 | Where does he follow the Latin rather than the Greek poets? |
15272 | Where is( said Satyrane) that Paynims sonne, That him of life, and us of joy hath reft? |
15272 | Which Muse does he invoke? |
15272 | Which muse does Spenser invoke? |
15272 | Who better can the way to heaven aread, Then thou thy selfe, that was both borne and bred 455 In heavenly throne, where thousand Angels shine? |
15272 | Who then can strive with strong necessitie, 375 That holds the world in his still chaunging state, Or shunne the death ordaynd by destinie? |
15272 | Whom did the dwarf see in the dungeons of Pride? |
15272 | Why Dame( quoth he) what hath ye thus dismayd? |
15272 | Why Dame( quoth he) what oddes can ever bee, Where both do fight alike, to win or yield? |
15272 | Why did the Knight flee from the House of Pride? |
15272 | Why did Æsculapius hesitate to heal Sansjoy? |
15272 | Why is Una described as"luckelesse lucky"? |
15272 | Why should Faith and Hope be represented as betrothed virgins, and Charity a matron? |
15272 | Why this change? |
15272 | Why? |
15272 | With what powerful truths does Una meet the arguments of Despair? |
15272 | XLII Is not his deed, what ever thing is donne 370 In heaven and earth? |
15272 | XLIII But how long time, said then the Elfin knight, Are you in this misformed house to dwell? |
15272 | XLIII Who now is left to keepe the forlorne maid From raging spoile of lawlesse victors will? |
15272 | XLVII Is not he just, that all this doth behold 415 From highest heaven, and beares an equall eye? |
15272 | XLVII O foolish faeries son, what fury mad 410 Hath thee incenst, to hast thy doefull fate? |
15272 | XXX What meane these bloody vowes, and idle threats, Throwne out from womanish impatient mind? |
15272 | XXXIV Say on Fradubio then, or man, or tree, Quoth then the knight, by whose mischievous arts Art thou misshaped thus, as now I see? |
15272 | XXXIX Ah dearest Lord( quoth she) how might that bee, And he the stoughtest knight, that ever wonne? |
15272 | XXXIX What worlds delight, or joy of living speach Can heart, so plung''d in sea of sorrowes deep, And heaped with so huge misfortunes, reach? |
15272 | XXXVIII What franticke fit( quoth he) hath thus distraught Thee, foolish man, so rash a doome to give? |
15272 | _ to viewen_ l. 201? |
15272 | can Night defray The wrath of thundring Jove that rules both night and day? |
15272 | did not he all create To die againe? |
15272 | of_ Sarazin_ in l. 217? |
15272 | what altars? |
15272 | what enraged heates Here heaped up with termes of love unkind, 265 My conscience cleare with guilty bands would bind? |
15272 | what hard mishap is this, That hath thee hither brought to taste mine yre? |
15272 | what then must needs be donne, 420 Is it not better to doe willinglie, Then linger, till the glasse be all out ronne? |
15272 | why hath he me abhord? |
28677 | And how shall we harmonize the quotations? |
28677 | Another step and we have entered on the world of retribution, but what retribution is it? |
28677 | Are we to die as a nation, over the ballot- box? |
28677 | Are you in him? |
28677 | Can we find no brighter, higher principles in the human character? |
28677 | Can you hear a man speaking in a dead language? |
28677 | Can you remove this difficulty? |
28677 | Can you think of your relation and obligation to a being of whom you have never heard or learned? |
28677 | Do we pray one way and vote another? |
28677 | Do you ask how shall I enter the door? |
28677 | Do you say this is not the way? |
28677 | Have you faith in God and in his word? |
28677 | Have you no interest in this open door? |
28677 | How is this? |
28677 | How is this? |
28677 | How is this? |
28677 | How very different is the Christian''s future happy home? |
28677 | How was this? |
28677 | Is it Polytheism or Monotheism? |
28677 | Is it a filthy pool? |
28677 | Is it the world of peace and joy? |
28677 | Is it true of us, that we carry the seeds of our own destruction as a nation in our own bosom? |
28677 | Is its leading thought of many gods, found in all religions? |
28677 | Is the fundamental thought of either found in all the others? |
28677 | It will be of interest also to mark the improvements(?) |
28677 | Now, which is it that shades all religions? |
28677 | O, why should the pages of this book of books be burthened with such things? |
28677 | On Pentecost, when hundreds were convicted of their sins, and said, What shall we do? |
28677 | Second, is religion human or Divine in its origin? |
28677 | Shall we be so foolish? |
28677 | Shall we look to this? |
28677 | Some people say to me:''How can you vote for Garfield when he is a Christian and was a preacher?'' |
28677 | Then, why? |
28677 | They are these: First, was Polytheism or Monotheism the primitive religion? |
28677 | Well, well; how shall we understand this? |
28677 | Were these thoughts the thoughts of men only, or were they too high for us? |
28677 | Were those disciples who received the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins before Pentecost out of Christ-- uncleansed-- unwashed? |
28677 | What was it for? |
28677 | When was this and what was it for? |
28677 | Why is it that all men are not put into Christ? |
28677 | Will any one pretend that Polytheism is the primitive religion? |
28677 | Will you come and enter by the Lord Jesus, become a child of God by faith in Jesus Christ, being baptized into Christ? |
28677 | Will you enter Christ, or wait to be put into Christ? |
28677 | or is it the region of tribulation and anguish? |
17110 | A storm at sea,he answers, and continues,"And what is grander than a storm at sea?" |
17110 | And what is grander than these midnight skies? |
17110 | And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother''s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? 17110 And why,"said Bismarck;"why do they want me to speak; why are they applauding me?" |
17110 | Because my competitors have college education and I have not,do you answer? |
17110 | Because the other fellows have friends and influence and I have none,do you protest? |
17110 | But what shall I do now, General? |
17110 | Friends through duty or comradery? |
17110 | How does---- get along with his father? |
17110 | How have I succeeded? |
17110 | How is Mr.----, of----, in your state? 17110 I fail to see the statesmanship,"said the latter;"will you kindly point it out?" |
17110 | Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye? 17110 Second, Yes or no, do you believe that Christ was the son of the living God, sent by Him to save the world? |
17110 | Third, Do you believe that when you die you will live again as a conscious intelligence, knowing who you are and who other people are? |
17110 | What do you raise on these shaly hills? |
17110 | What have you been doing? |
17110 | What is the grandest thing in the universe? |
17110 | What is the story of your past? |
17110 | What''s this? 17110 Who, by taking thought, can add a cubit to his stature?" |
17110 | Why have you come among us at your age? |
17110 | Why, how old was he? |
17110 | Absurd, is it not? |
17110 | After all, we are living for happiness, are we not? |
17110 | After all, what is the purpose and end of all your labor? |
17110 | Again the Bible:"Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
17110 | Also, it would enable him to live at home with mother, would it not? |
17110 | Among them he said:"And Mr.----, of your state; how is his health? |
17110 | And French? |
17110 | And can we doubt that to- morrow''s national and world problems will be deeper still? |
17110 | And did not the Master, with a wisdom wholly divine, choose as the seed- bearers of our faith throughout the world the neglected men? |
17110 | And do we not here perceive, afar off, one of the vast and glorious tasks for the statesmen of the future? |
17110 | And his words have good sense in them, have they not? |
17110 | And how can you better benefit mankind than by founding a home among your fellow men, a pure, normal, sweet, and beautiful home? |
17110 | And if you are not ready for them, if you are only a rich person or a mere stroller along the highways of life, what is that to them? |
17110 | And it is that you may serve it well that you are going to college at all, is it not? |
17110 | And that is the chief thing, is it not? |
17110 | And that ought to be pleasant to any male creature-- what more can he want? |
17110 | And that will be some years yet, will it not? |
17110 | And we can not change the nature and relations of things now; for"which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature"? |
17110 | And what finer happiness can there be than the certainty that such a life as that will make realities of your dreams? |
17110 | And what greater help than that could there be? |
17110 | And why are you speaking at all, unless it is that you, knowing the truth, are trying to show the truth to others? |
17110 | And why should she assume his labor? |
17110 | And yet, is it not written that"the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life"? |
17110 | And, if so, do you dare to be less than a lawyer? |
17110 | Are they angry? |
17110 | As to whether tobacco is good for a man at any stage of life the doctors disagree, and"where doctors disagree, who shall decide?" |
17110 | But did he give it to himself? |
17110 | But does not that include righteousness in the affairs of our popular government? |
17110 | But have you not chosen the profession of the law? |
17110 | But then_ you_ are a lawyer, are you not? |
17110 | But what has all this to do with the truth? |
17110 | But what of counseling the world respecting the young man? |
17110 | But what of that? |
17110 | But what was a soldier of France in Napoleon''s time to a young American to- day? |
17110 | But why did he want this position? |
17110 | But why the interest of the would- be lawyer, who was"quivering"with ambition? |
17110 | But you who read-- you are willing to put forth extraordinary effort, are you not? |
17110 | By faith? |
17110 | By repentance? |
17110 | Can you not find them in your own town? |
17110 | Christ came to save sinners, but how? |
17110 | Cæsar decided to cross the Rubicon on the instant? |
17110 | Delighted? |
17110 | Did I not make mistakes following such a plan? |
17110 | Did he not even scourge the money- changers from the Temple? |
17110 | Did this dismay the young German- American? |
17110 | Do n''t argue; do n''t explain; but is your mind in a condition where you can answer yes or no?" |
17110 | Do we not find in our daily speech a certain cynicism toward youth? |
17110 | Do you think that is a good training for our generals and admirals? |
17110 | Does it not involve uprightness in public life? |
17110 | Does not our skeptic wisdom paste the label"illusions"over the word"ideals"written on the young man''s brow? |
17110 | Does this comparison not make it clear that woman has by far a more exalted mission than man? |
17110 | Every man would like to have a picture of"the house he was born in"; but who would choose a hotel for a birthplace? |
17110 | Fame? |
17110 | For you want to succeed, do you not? |
17110 | Go back to old conditions?" |
17110 | How could it help prospering? |
17110 | How could such apostles of interrogation convert a world? |
17110 | How could such priests of ice warm the souls of men? |
17110 | How dare you not shoulder your glorious burden with patience, fortitude, and determination? |
17110 | How did that question run? |
17110 | How do you expect to make other people sure of themselves if you are not sure of yourself? |
17110 | How does this young fellow happen to swear? |
17110 | How is it that all these people do not achieve the successes to which their mere thinking entitles them? |
17110 | II THE OLD HOME Do we not pay so much attention to mere material success that we exclude from mind and heart other things more precious? |
17110 | III THE COLLEGE? |
17110 | INDIANAPOLIS,_ May 1, 1905._ CONTENTS PAGE I.--THE YOUNG MAN AND THE WORLD 1 II.--THE OLD HOME 54 III.--THE COLLEGE? |
17110 | If not, why not? |
17110 | If to be a Roman then was greater than to be a king, what is it to be an American now? |
17110 | If you are discouraged because you can not go to college, what will happen to you when life hereafter presents to you much harder situations? |
17110 | If you do not believe in yourself, how do you expect the world to believe in you? |
17110 | In other countries there is in comparison a general atmosphere of"what''s the use?" |
17110 | Is a fellow to have no fun? |
17110 | Is it not plain that the great novel of modern society is yet to be written? |
17110 | Is it not written that"man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God"? |
17110 | Is it to accomplish some good thing for humanity that you want this"career,"which is to keep you single until you are too old to be interesting? |
17110 | Is not our college training responsible for some of this melancholy negativeness of life? |
17110 | Is the soul immortal and what is the soul anyhow?" |
17110 | Is there not a refusal to recognize young manhood''s force until it compels recognition by sheer mastery? |
17110 | It is a one- sided gamble, is it not? |
17110 | Just what is it that you expect to do with these self- centered and single years during which you intend so to help the race? |
17110 | May not the too heavy early education of young girls have something to do with this later desperation of their nerves? |
17110 | Not so bad after all, is it? |
17110 | Or when saw we thee_ sick, or in prison, and came unto thee_? |
17110 | Or, if you live on a farm, do you not see them in your own county? |
17110 | Said one of his admirers:"Why do n''t you go into practise? |
17110 | Strange words, were they not, for a scene of carnage? |
17110 | Surprised? |
17110 | The Christian religion is a livable creed, is it not? |
17110 | The Young Man who Can not Go_ But what of the young man who stands without the college gates? |
17110 | The first question asked always is,"Does he drink?" |
17110 | The mystery of the telegraph( and what is more mysterious?) |
17110 | The only question that he was asking was,"Where is the man who is equal to the job?" |
17110 | The secret of success? |
17110 | Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we_ thee an hungered, and fed thee? |
17110 | There was a nut to crack, was it not? |
17110 | They are for high- grade men-- and that is what you are, is it not? |
17110 | This is a sinister illustration, I know, but it is the truth, and the truth is what you are after, is it not? |
17110 | This is saying much for the Hebrew blood and genius; but have not these Jews given us our moral laws, our spiritual ideals, our sacred faith? |
17110 | Very like Cæsar, was it not? |
17110 | Very well, why should you not do as well? |
17110 | We do not want to become mere machines of success, do we? |
17110 | Well, then, do you imagine that you are going to have an easier time in your business or profession than the officers in our army and navy? |
17110 | What about the father?" |
17110 | What are they to you? |
17110 | What does all this mean? |
17110 | What greater joy can there be for a man than the sheer felicity of doing real work in the world? |
17110 | What is it for? |
17110 | What is it we hear the strong- handed Philistines say in the market- place? |
17110 | What is it you so admire in men whom you think fortunate-- what is it but their mastery of adversity after adversity? |
17110 | What is that which you call success but victory over untoward events? |
17110 | What is the condition of the mind of the young minister? |
17110 | What is the use of the young man stating that?" |
17110 | What kind of training has he had? |
17110 | What of him upon whom Fate has locked the doors of this arsenal of power and life''s equipment? |
17110 | What of the myriads of young Americans like him? |
17110 | What of this young man? |
17110 | What other bad habits has he had, and has he now? |
17110 | What right has any man to vote as he individually thinks best? |
17110 | What said they of the Master? |
17110 | What, no recreation? |
17110 | When present applause or ultimate fame become your chief purpose in life, what are you, after all? |
17110 | When saw we thee_ a stranger, and took thee in? |
17110 | Who are you that you should not be one of them? |
17110 | Who can doubt that in the universal mind there is a question as to the moral element in American business? |
17110 | Who is any man, that he should have a"career"? |
17110 | Who is any one that he should not be one of the people? |
17110 | Who shall deny that the philosophers of India are right, and that mind and character may continue to grow throughout illimitable series of existences? |
17110 | Who was it that spoke about the damnable iteration of the seasons? |
17110 | Why do n''t the doctors begin a crusade about this? |
17110 | Why should it be anything to anybody? |
17110 | Why should it be anything to them? |
17110 | Why take the chance? |
17110 | Why this hazard of your powers, just to find out whether you can resist? |
17110 | Why, how much did he get? |
17110 | Why? |
17110 | Would I help to get a certain man who held a Government position paying him$ 150 a month promoted? |
17110 | Would it be possible to get him a place on some ranch for six or eight months? |
17110 | Yes, and that is the trouble with you, is it not? |
17110 | You are willing to show these favored sons of cap and gown that you will run as fast and as far as they, with all their training, will you not? |
17110 | You see that the German universities have come back to the lecture method exclusively-- or did they ever depart from it? |
17110 | You want it to be a home for the mind as well as the body, do you not? |
17110 | You want to_ start in_ as superintendent of a great system or the head of a mighty business, do you not? |
17110 | _ The people are the government._ What said Lincoln in his greatest utterance? |
17110 | and what does a"career"amount to, anyway? |
17110 | it did n''t enable him to get out into society, was that it? |
17110 | or naked, and clothed thee_? |
17110 | or thirsty, and gave thee drink_? |
17110 | said Bismarck,"suppose I had failed?" |
13725 | ''Thou knowest my need,''I answered;''why dost thou waste thy words? 13725 Are ye merchants,"he said,"or bold buccaneers, who roam the seas, a peril to others, and ever in peril themselves?" |
13725 | Are ye not covered with shame already, by your foul deeds done in this house in the absence of its lord? 13725 Art thou a goddess, or a mortal woman? |
13725 | But tell me truly, how did he with his single hand gain the mastery over such a multitude? |
13725 | Dost thou doubt my power to help thee? 13725 Father,"she said,"may I have the waggon to take the household raiment to the place of washing? |
13725 | Go to,replied his brethren,"if no man is using thee despitefully, why callest thou to us? |
13725 | Hast thou lost thy wits? |
13725 | How say ye, fair sirs? |
13725 | How was it,he asked,"that already in early childhood thou wast cast on the mercy of strangers? |
13725 | How would it be if I showed myself to the wooers? 13725 Is the public voice against thee,"he asked,"or art thou at feud with thy brethren, so that they will not help thee? |
13725 | Is there not one among you,he cried indignantly,"who will speak a word for Telemachus, or testify against the wickedness of these men? |
13725 | Now tell me,began Penelope, when the chair had been brought,"who art thou, and of what country? |
13725 | O my mother,cried Odysseus in deep distress,"why dost thou mock me thus? |
13725 | Of my own free will I lent her,answered the lad,"why should I not help him in his need? |
13725 | Royal son of Atreus,he said, in a voice broken with weeping,"is it here that I find thee, great chieftain of the embattled Greeks? |
13725 | Shall I bring them in,asked the squire,"or send them on to another house?" |
13725 | Shall I not go to Laertes, and tell him also? |
13725 | Shall we, who owe so much to the kindness of strangers, in the long years of our wanderings, send any man from our doors? 13725 Son of Laertes,"he said,"thou man of daring, hast thou reached the limit of thy rashness, or wilt thou go yet further? |
13725 | Son of Laertes,he said,"why goest thou thus unwarily, even as a silly bird into the net of the fowler? |
13725 | Speak not to me of such vanities,answered Penelope;"why should I wish to preserve this poor remnant of my beauty? |
13725 | Thinkest thou that the poor man will win me for his wife if he succeeds? 13725 Thou art mad, nurse,"answered Penelope pettishly, turning in her bed and rubbing her eyes;"why mockest thou me in my sorrow with thy folly? |
13725 | Thou surely art of some country,she said, smiling;"or art thou one of those of whom old stories tell, born of stocks and stones?" |
13725 | Was it that he might suffer as I have suffered, in wandering o''er the deep, while others devour his living? |
13725 | What ails the hounds? |
13725 | What ails thee, Polyphemus,they asked,"that thou makest this dreadful din, murdering our sleep? |
13725 | What can I do? |
13725 | What sayest thou to Athene and her father, Zeus? 13725 Where is thy faith?" |
13725 | Who art thou,he asked,"that comest back in a moment thus wondrously transfigured? |
13725 | Who put such a thought into thy heart? |
13725 | Who put such a thought,he asked,"into thy mind? |
13725 | Why came he hither to bring strife among us? |
13725 | Why comest thou alone? |
13725 | Why didst thou permit him to go on a vain errand? |
13725 | Why should not the stranger try his skill with the rest? |
13725 | Why sit ye thus,he cried,"huddled together like sheep? |
13725 | Why standest thou idle? |
13725 | Why wilt thou take this dreadful journey, thou, an only child, so loved, and so dear? 13725 Wilt thou be ever harping on that string? |
13725 | ''And hast thou a mind to see thy native land again?'' |
13725 | A common question addressed to persons newly arrived from the sea is,"Are you a merchant, a traveller, or a pirate?" |
13725 | Am I not tall and fair, and worthy to be called a daughter of heaven? |
13725 | And art thou indeed the son of Odysseus, whom none could match in craft and strategy? |
13725 | And how did Ægisthus contrive to slay a man mightier far than himself?" |
13725 | And knowest thou aught of my father, Peleus? |
13725 | And what cause has brought all these men hither?" |
13725 | And what if a god should visit this house in some strange disguise, to make trial of our hearts? |
13725 | And where shall I find means to pay back her dower? |
13725 | And who could tell what heavy trials awaited him when once more he set foot on his native soil? |
13725 | And who were thy father and mother?" |
13725 | Antinous heard him to the end with ill- disguised impatience, and then broke out in angry tones:"Who brought this wretched fellow here to vex us? |
13725 | Are there no perils left for thee in the land of the living that thou must invade the very realm of Hades, the sunless haunts of the dead?" |
13725 | Are there not beggars enough here already to mar our pleasure when we sit down to meat? |
13725 | Are they savage and rude, or gentle and hospitable to strangers?" |
13725 | Art thou not ashamed to take sides with this malapert boy, feeding his passion and folly with thy crazy prophecies? |
13725 | Art thou still wandering on thy long voyage from Troy, or hast thou been in Ithaca, and seen thy wife?" |
13725 | Art thou that Odysseus of whom Hermes spake, telling me that he should come hither on his voyage from Troy? |
13725 | Art thou tired of thy life?" |
13725 | As soon as he appeared on the threshold Penelope looked at him reproachfully, and said:"What message bringest thou from thy fair masters? |
13725 | But I fear me greatly that this task is too hard for us; how shall two men prevail against so many? |
13725 | But answer me once more, what means this lawless riot in the house? |
13725 | But come, ye bold wooers, which of you will be the first to enter the lists for this matchless prize, a lady without peer in all the land of Hellas? |
13725 | But tell me now of a truth, art not thou the son of that man? |
13725 | But tell me now, and answer me truly, what was the manner of thy death? |
13725 | But tell me truly, where didst thou moor thy vessel on thy landing? |
13725 | But to Menelaus I would have thee go; him thou must by all means consult; for who knows what he may have learnt on that wondrous voyage? |
13725 | But what am I saying? |
13725 | But what can one do against so many? |
13725 | But what has it availed him? |
13725 | But what miracle was this? |
13725 | But who is that tall and goodly lad, who sits apart, with gloomy brow, and seems ill- pleased with the doings of that riotous crew? |
13725 | But why do I ask? |
13725 | But why do I speak thus to thee? |
13725 | Came he to fight with the Trojans after I was gone, and did he acquit him well? |
13725 | Came it slowly, by long disease, or did Artemis lay thee low in a moment with a painless arrow from her bow? |
13725 | Comest thou for the first time to Ithaca, or art thou an old friend of this house, bound to us by ties of ancient hospitality?" |
13725 | Did I not save him and cherish him when he was flung naked and helpless on these shores? |
13725 | Did he bring any tidings of thy father?" |
13725 | Do they still live, or have they gone to their rest?" |
13725 | Egypt, sayest thou? |
13725 | For what wilt thou say of me, when thou art wandering in distant lands, if I suffer thee to abide here thus poorly clad, unwashed, and uncared for? |
13725 | For who ever beheld such wooing as yours? |
13725 | Foul or fair, what matters it in my widowed state? |
13725 | Had he not borne even worse than this on the day when the Cyclops devoured his comrades in the cave? |
13725 | Has she not grief enough already? |
13725 | Hast thou ever seen such lavish ornament of silver, and gold, and ivory? |
13725 | Hast thou not heard of the fame which Orestes won, when he slew the murderer of his sire? |
13725 | Hast thou not turned my men into swine, and didst thou not seek even now to put thy wicked spells upon me?" |
13725 | Hath any tidings come of the return of those who followed him to Troy, or is it some other business of public moment which has called us hither? |
13725 | He seemed a goodly man; but why did he start up and leave us so suddenly? |
13725 | He was in the prime of his manhood, surrounded by his friends, and in the midst of a joyous revel; who would dream of death and doom in such an hour? |
13725 | Hearts of stone, why did ye not tell me of his going? |
13725 | How camest thou by this raiment? |
13725 | How shall a man cross this dreadful gulf, where no ship is ever seen, on a raft? |
13725 | How was he with such help as Telemachus could give him to overpower and slay a hundred men in the prime of their youth and strength? |
13725 | Hungry and weary as we are, wouldst thou have us turn away from this fair isle, where we could prepare a comfortable meal, and take refreshing sleep? |
13725 | I would fain speak with this stranger; who knows but he may have somewhat to tell me of Odysseus, my lord?" |
13725 | If he killed Polyphemus, how was he to escape from the cavern? |
13725 | Is anyone stealing thy sheep or thy goats? |
13725 | Is it not enough that I have lost my brave father, whose gentleness and loving- kindness ye all knew, when he was your king? |
13725 | Is it their pleasure that my maidens should leave their tasks and spread the board for them? |
13725 | Is my power to be defied, and my worship slighted, by these Phæacians, who are of mine own race?" |
13725 | Is not Odysseus mine? |
13725 | Is their aid enough or shall we look for more?" |
13725 | It was of Antiphus that he thought, as he stood up and made harangue among the elders:"Who has summoned us hither, and what is his need? |
13725 | Know ye when he is to return from Pylos?" |
13725 | Knowest thou not that thou art a child of great hopes, and a favourite of heaven?" |
13725 | Lies she near at hand, or on a distant part of the coast?" |
13725 | Must I show you the way? |
13725 | Now tell me truly, I implore thee, what is this place where I am wandering? |
13725 | Of all his gallant peers, for ten years his companions in many a joyful feast, and many a high adventure, how many were left? |
13725 | Oh, for an hour of life, with such might as was mine when I fought in the van for Greece? |
13725 | Or art thou but the shadow of a shade, a phantom sent by Persephone to deceive me?" |
13725 | Or art thou keeping thy tidings until the wooers return? |
13725 | Or do his looks belie his qualities? |
13725 | Or seeks anyone to slay thee by force or by guile?" |
13725 | Say, hast thou brought any news of thy father?" |
13725 | Say, how comest thou hither, and what arm aimed the stroke which laid thee low?" |
13725 | Say, therefore, who art thou, and where is thy home? |
13725 | Shall I become a byword among the people, as false to the memory of my true lord? |
13725 | Shall we add the horrors of night to the horrors of the sea, and confront the demons of storm that haunt the caverns of darkness? |
13725 | Sweet home of my wedded joy, must I leave thee, and all the faces which I love so well, and the great possessions which he gave into my keeping? |
13725 | Telemachus replied:"How can I drive away the mother who bare me and nourished me? |
13725 | Tell me, how long is it since thou didst receive him, and who art thou, and where is thy home?" |
13725 | Then he called to Odysseus, and said:"How sayest thou, friend, wilt thou be my thrall, and work on my farm among the hills for a fixed wage? |
13725 | Then said Polyphemus, as his great hands passed over his back:"Dear ram, why art thou the last to leave the cave? |
13725 | Then wise Penelope made answer, slumbering right sweetly at the gates of dreams:"Dear sister, what has brought thee hither from thy far distant home? |
13725 | Thinkest thou that every fowl of the air is a messenger from heaven? |
13725 | Thou saidst''twas Ithaca, but in that I think thou speakest falsely, with intent to deceive me; or is this indeed my native land?" |
13725 | Ungrateful men, have ye forgotten all the good deeds that were wrought here by the hands of Odysseus, and all the kindness that ye received from him? |
13725 | Was it not but too probable that he would find his house made desolate, Telemachus dead, and Penelope wedded to another? |
13725 | Wast thou taken captive in war, or did robbers seize thee as thou satst watching sheep on the lonely hills, and sell thee into bondage?" |
13725 | We have slain the noblest in the land, not one, but many, who leave a host of friends to take up their cause: how then shall we escape the blood feud? |
13725 | Were it not better that I took him with me to my farm? |
13725 | What if he had come by his death through this violence? |
13725 | What shall I do? |
13725 | What was he to do with all this wealth? |
13725 | When she had drunk she said:"Whence comest thou, my son? |
13725 | When she observed it, Circe rallied him for his sullenness:"Art thou afraid to eat?" |
13725 | When they had supped, Calypso looked at Odysseus and said:"And wilt thou indeed leave me, thou strange man? |
13725 | Where was Menelaus when that foul deed was done? |
13725 | Who hath moved my bed from its place? |
13725 | Who in all the world will ever draw near to thee again, after the hideous deeds which thou hast wrought?" |
13725 | Who knows but that Odysseus will yet return, and make them drink the cup which they have filled? |
13725 | Who knows but thy master is now in like evil case, grown old before his time through care and misery?" |
13725 | Why didst thou bring this caitiff to the town? |
13725 | Why holdest thou thus aloof from my father, who has come back to thee after twenty years of suffering and toil? |
13725 | Why pierce ye the heart of the lady with your howlings? |
13725 | Why sit ye thus silent? |
13725 | Why will she delay us further? |
13725 | Will not one of you run down to the camp, and ask Agamemnon to send us further succour?'' |
13725 | Wilt thou go begging at other men''s tables, or art thou waiting to taste of my fists?" |
13725 | Wilt thou not repay us by telling something of thyself? |
13725 | With a cry of dismay he sprang to his feet, and cried aloud:"Good lack, what land have I come to now, and who be they that dwell there? |
13725 | With a stern look Odysseus answered him, and said:"What possesses thee, fellow, that thou seekest a quarrel with me? |
13725 | Would ye be for the wooers or for him?" |
13725 | Wouldst thou be wedded in soiled attire, and have all thy friends clad unseemly, to put thee to shame? |
13725 | Wouldst thou destroy him whom thou hast nursed at thine own breast?" |
13725 | Wretch, why dost thou lay snares against the life of my son? |
13725 | and why hast thou disturbed me in the sweetest sleep that ever I had since the fatal, the accursed day when my lord sailed for Troy? |
13725 | art thou there?" |
13725 | cried Antinous,"thinkest thou that there are no better men here than thou art? |
13725 | hast thou no heart at all? |
13725 | he cried,"when shall my troubles have an end? |
13725 | he cried,"would these dastards fill the seat and we d the wife of that mighty man? |
13725 | said the implacable god, shaking his head;"and have the other powers plotted against me in my absence, to frustrate my just anger? |
13725 | she said, smiling:"have I not sworn to do thee no harm? |
13725 | she said,"wilt thou never forget thy cunning shifts, wherein none can surpass thee, no, not the gods themselves? |
13725 | son of Telamon,"he said,"canst thou not forgive me, even here? |
30098 | Could Veronese uphold his picture as decent? |
30098 | Did it, indeed, come down to them from the merchants of Tyre and Carthage? |
30098 | From that wonderful trading race which stretched out its arms all over Europe and penetrated even to our own island? |
30098 | The members of the tribunal demanded"who the boy was with the bleeding nose?" |
30098 | What can be more sympathetic as a personality than the Ariosto of the National Gallery? |
30098 | and"why were halberdiers admitted?" |
23092 | But what would be the use? |
23092 | Why did you hire out as a_ cordon bleu_? 23092 ***** But why linger over these things? 23092 ***** May I be permitted, in this appeal for simplicity of speech, to frame a wish whose fulfilment would have the happiest results? 23092 *****And what about the necessary distinctions in life?" |
23092 | Am I_ not_ blowing trumpets for those who hold trumpet- blowing in horror? |
23092 | And common sense-- do you not find what is designated by this name becoming as rare as the common- sense customs of other days? |
23092 | And what shall we say of the pride of good men? |
23092 | And who will furnish the money? |
23092 | And yet, what would become of us if these cares absorbed us entirely? |
23092 | Are there not various fashions of being vanquished? |
23092 | Are they not unreasonable to complain of envy, after having done everything to provoke it? |
23092 | As the only human means of soothing grief is to share it in the heart, how must a sufferer feel, consoled in this fashion? |
23092 | Ask different people, of very unlike surroundings, this question: What do you need to live? |
23092 | But does their inhumanity or hypocrisy take away the value of the good that others do, and that they often hide with a modesty so perfect? |
23092 | But suppose they are not found? |
23092 | But the middle classes themselves-- do they consider themselves satisfied? |
23092 | But what generally happens in our day? |
23092 | Can you combat it, suppress it? |
23092 | Can you do it? |
23092 | Did our mothers look for pay in loving us and caring for us? |
23092 | Do not the very sinews of virtue lie in man''s capacity to care for something outside himself? |
23092 | Do you think it the height of pleasure for others to admire us, to admit our superiority, and to act as our tools? |
23092 | Does anyone suppose that in this way men can be shaped who shall respect country, religion and law? |
23092 | Does the rain- drop doubt the ocean? |
23092 | Does this mean that in order to defend herself against her enemies and to honor her flag, a country need only be rich? |
23092 | Frank libertinage, does it deaden the sting of the senses? |
23092 | Has drunkenness, inventive as it is of new drinks, found the means of quenching thirst? |
23092 | Has this desirable result been more nearly attained through the great care bestowed upon instruction? |
23092 | Have we the perilous honor of being always in view, of marching in the front ranks? |
23092 | He errs greatly who thinks that the query,"What shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we be clothed?" |
23092 | How can we talk of liberty so long as this grave problem of free- will is not solved? |
23092 | How do you think a man can be amused while he has his doubts whether after all life is worth living? |
23092 | How is it that she passes pure and scathless in the midst of these dark enemies, like the prophet of the sacred legend among the roaring beasts? |
23092 | How much of it do they owe to the unselfishness of the simple- hearted? |
23092 | If in the midst of means continually more and more perfected, the workman diminishes in value, of what use are these fine tools at his disposal? |
23092 | In reality, our language translated into truthful speech would amount to this:"You suffer, my friend? |
23092 | In what does this strength consist, or where is it found? |
23092 | Is it an indifferent matter to add to defeat, discouragement, disorder, and demoralization? |
23092 | Is it liberty still, when it is the prerogative of criminals or heedless blunderers? |
23092 | Is it nothing to be without home and its love, without future, without personal ambition? |
23092 | Is not this better than to covet what one has not, and to give one''s self up to longings for a poor imitation of others''finery? |
23092 | Is there anything in the world so disgusting as to feel one''s self patronized, made capital of, enrolled in a claque? |
23092 | Is this a proper respect-- this respect which does not extend beyond what touches and belongs to ourselves? |
23092 | Is this true of men? |
23092 | It is better to put the question otherwise, and ask: Is my own religion good, and how may I know it? |
23092 | It is true that he feels impelled to run to the succor of these unfortunates, but at the same time he asks himself,"What is the use?" |
23092 | May we be permitted to record here some observations made from life? |
23092 | Need we say that one does not rise to this point of view without a struggle? |
23092 | Of what value is the mercenary journalist? |
23092 | On the various rungs of the bourgeois ladder people reply to the question, what is necessary to live? |
23092 | Shall liberty, then, be proscribed? |
23092 | Should I keep this modesty, this naturalness, this uprightness which uses its own as though it belonged to others?" |
23092 | Since no one can hold life in check, is it not better to respect it and use it than to go about making other people disgusted with it? |
23092 | The papers say enough of those who break windows; but why do they make no mention of those who spend their nights toiling over problems? |
23092 | Then shall we stop the people''s ears, suppress public instruction, close the schools? |
23092 | Then why did they engage themselves with you? |
23092 | To be a painter, does it suffice to arm one''s self with a brush, or does the purchase at great cost of a Stradivarius make one a musician? |
23092 | To console a person, what do we do? |
23092 | To defend your country? |
23092 | To do good? |
23092 | Upon what does it rest its peremptory claims? |
23092 | VII SIMPLE PLEASURES Do you find life amusing in these days? |
23092 | We owe everything to them-- do we not? |
23092 | Well; what remedy for it do you offer? |
23092 | What are this stranger''s rights? |
23092 | What charm could you find in this borrowed language? |
23092 | What conclusion shall we draw from this, if not that with us there is a considerable elasticity in the nature and number of needs? |
23092 | What do we ordinarily do? |
23092 | What does it cost you to speak the truth? |
23092 | What good can come from this habit of exaggerated speech? |
23092 | What is a good lamp? |
23092 | What is the meaning of this persistent instinct which pushes us on? |
23092 | What material things does a man need to live under the best conditions? |
23092 | What would become of filial piety if we asked it for loving and caring for our aged parents? |
23092 | What would you say of a young girl who expressed her thoughts in terms very choice, indeed, but taken word for word from a phrase- book? |
23092 | When damage is done, who should repair it? |
23092 | When shall we be so simply and truly_ men_ as not to obtrude our personal business and distresses upon the people we meet socially? |
23092 | Whence comes it that it lights only an incomplete circle, when in olden times young and old sat shoulder to shoulder? |
23092 | Whence comes their heart- burning? |
23092 | Where can the fault be? |
23092 | Where lies the cause of this phenomenon? |
23092 | Who talk of them? |
23092 | Who then shall give him the first enlightenment and put him in the way he should go? |
23092 | Why does the peasant desert for the inn the house that his father and grandfather found so comfortable? |
23092 | Why should I not say it? |
23092 | Why, under pretext of decorating our homes, do we destroy that personal character which always has such value? |
23092 | Why? |
23092 | Why? |
23092 | Will you wait to find the man who caused the mischief? |
23092 | Without it, what is the most richly decorated house? |
23092 | Would they have succeeded had they met only shrewd men of their own sort, having for device:"No money, no service?" |
23092 | [ A] After this, is there any need to ask if we have become better? |
23092 | its titles? |
23092 | or suppose they can not or will not make amends? |
23092 | the ray mistrust the sun? |
23092 | to take upon one''s self that cross of solitary life, so hard to bear, especially when there is added the solitude of the heart? |
12658 | ''Sas agapo''? |
12658 | ''Tis nothing but money? |
12658 | But why,I asked,"put_ me_ in?" |
12658 | Did you( if questions you permit) At the asylum leave your kit? |
12658 | Excuse me, please-- Who''s in there? |
12658 | Have ye no messages-- no brief, Still sign:''Despair'', or''Hope''? |
12658 | Have you in Heaven no Hell? |
12658 | Horses are trees and the moon is a sneeze? |
12658 | How is it with thee, child of light? 12658 I wonder was you here when Casey shot James King o''William? |
12658 | Make treason odious? |
12658 | May I touch him, mother? |
12658 | May you blow your nose on a paper of pins? |
12658 | O mariner man, why pause and don A look of so deep concern? 12658 O, why does he wear such a ghastly grin?" |
12658 | Out of danger? |
12658 | Out of danger? |
12658 | Out of danger? |
12658 | Out of danger? |
12658 | Seest thou in mine eye, father, anything green? 12658 That''s right, father dear, but how can our eyes Distinguish in dead men the Good and the Wise?" |
12658 | W''at, alas, would be my bloomin''Fate if Philip now I see, Which I lammed?--or my old''oman, Which has frequent basted_ me_? |
12658 | Was the prophecy fulfilled? |
12658 | Was you in Frisco when the water came Up to Montgum''ry street? 12658 What are they that way for, father?" |
12658 | What are those, father? |
12658 | What did they say he was, father? |
12658 | What is that, mother? |
12658 | What made it bleed, father, for every day Somebody passes forever away? 12658 What makes him sweat so?" |
12658 | What''s in the paper? |
12658 | What?--how? |
12658 | Whose shall be first? |
12658 | Why do you this? |
12658 | Why does n''t he end, then, his life with a rope? |
12658 | Why is it, my boy, that you smother your joy, And why do you make no sign Of the merry mind that is dancing behind A solemner face than mine? |
12658 | Will he crack it, mother? |
12658 | You are twins? |
12658 | You never could stomach a Democrat Since General Jackson ran? 12658 You''ve bitten a snake and are feeling bad"? |
12658 | Your nobles are bought? |
12658 | _Does he suffer, mother?" |
12658 | ''T was not your motive? |
12658 | A Pauper._ SUPERINTENDENT: So_ you''re_ unthankful-- you''ll not eat the bird? |
12658 | A merry Christmas? |
12658 | A present? |
12658 | A score? |
12658 | Ambition stayed from trampling whom it meets, Like horses fugitive in crowded streets? |
12658 | Among the rebels when we made a breach Was it to get their banners? |
12658 | And did you attend The neck- tie dance ensuin''? |
12658 | And how can you ever obtain it? |
12658 | And takest thy son for a gaping marine? |
12658 | And want my vote and influence? |
12658 | And why do you sway in your walking, To right and left many degrees, And hitch up your trousers when talking? |
12658 | Are loving looks got out of books, Or kisses taught in college? |
12658 | As her bubble drifted away from the shore, On the glassy billows borne, All cried:"Why, where is Mehitable Moore? |
12658 | Austere incendiary, We''re blinking in the light; Where is your customary Grenade of dynamite? |
12658 | Be loyal to your country, yes-- but how If tyrants hold dominion? |
12658 | Behind you, unsuspected, Have you the axe, fair wench, Wherewith you once collected A poll- tax from the French? |
12658 | But how if, to attract the curious yeoman, The lion owned the show and showed the showman? |
12658 | But now you mention it-- well, well, who knows? |
12658 | But why should I sail o''er the ocean For Landseers and Claudes? |
12658 | Can solitude be lifted up, vacuity refined? |
12658 | Can the slighted Dame Or canting Pharisee no more defame? |
12658 | Can you not rationally be Content without disturbing me? |
12658 | Can you not take a hint-- a wink-- Of what of all this rot I think? |
12658 | Consumption no profit to those who produce? |
12658 | Cried Allen Forman:"Doctor, pray Compose my spirits''strife: O what may be my chances, say, Of living all my life? |
12658 | Death, are you well? |
12658 | Delay responsible? |
12658 | Did you come''der blains agross,''Or''Horn aroundt''? |
12658 | Dinner? |
12658 | Dispute with such a thing as you-- Twin show to the two- headed calf? |
12658 | Do I understand You undertake to prove-- good land!-- That when the crime-- you mean to show Your client was n''t_ there_?" |
12658 | Do the newspaper men print a column or more Of every person whose troubles are o''er?" |
12658 | Dost hear the angels sing?" |
12658 | Filled with astonishment, I spoke:"Thou ancient raven, why this croak? |
12658 | From the regions of the Night, Coming with recovered sight-- From the spell of darkness free, What will Danenhower see? |
12658 | From what you''ve seen and heard, How can you doubt they do? |
12658 | Good for he''s old? |
12658 | Good friend, if any judge deserve your blame Have you no courage, or has he no name? |
12658 | Gravely the Saviour asked:"What did he do To make his impious assertion true?" |
12658 | Greed from exaction magically charmed? |
12658 | He who will never rise though rulers plods His liberties despising How is he manlier than the_ sans culottes_ Who''s always rising? |
12658 | How could her eyes, at rest themselves, be making In me so uncontrollable a shaking? |
12658 | How do you do? |
12658 | How do you yourself explain your dismal tendency to wander By the melancholy City of the Discontented Dead?" |
12658 | How shall I then make romances Mitigating circumstances? |
12658 | How- de- do? |
12658 | I equally despair, For what to me were hope without the passion? |
12658 | I hope I do n''t offend you, sweet, But are you sure that_ you''re_ discreet? |
12658 | I suppose If I stand in and you''re elected-- no? |
12658 | I''m safe? |
12658 | If I leave off_ this_ what will people say? |
12658 | If learning is no guide Why ought one to have been in college? |
12658 | In days o''''49 Did them thar eye- holes see the Southern Cross From the Antarctic Sea git up an''shine? |
12658 | Independent? |
12658 | Is it presumptuous, this counsel? |
12658 | Is laughter lost upon you quite, To check you in your pious rite? |
12658 | Is that what the physician said? |
12658 | JONESMITH(_ continuing to"seek the light"_): What''s this about old Impycu? |
12658 | JONESMITH: Who? |
12658 | Jealousy disarmed? |
12658 | LAWYER.--Eh? |
12658 | LAWYER.--Have you nothing more? |
12658 | Lady Minnow cocked her head:"Mister Picklepip,"she said,"Do you ever think to we d?" |
12658 | Luxurious habits no benefit bring To those who purvey the luxurious thing? |
12658 | Meanwhile the lark, descending, folds his wing And innocently asks:"What!--did I sing?" |
12658 | Merry or sad, what does it signify? |
12658 | Merry? |
12658 | Nanine, Nanine, what ails him That he should sing so ill? |
12658 | No good to accrue to Supply from a grand Progressive expansion, all round, of Demand? |
12658 | O doctor, doctor, how can I Amend my constitution?" |
12658 | O noble antagonists, answer me flat-- What would you do if you did n''t do that? |
12658 | O statesmen, what would you be at, With torches, flags and bands? |
12658 | O very remarkable mortal, What food is engaging your jaws And staining with amber their portal? |
12658 | One hundred and eleven years? |
12658 | Perhaps, you''ve brought the halters You used in the old days, When round religion''s altars You stabled Cromwell''s bays? |
12658 | Pray, good agrarians, what wrong requires Such foul redress? |
12658 | Quid sum miser tunc dicturus, Quem patronem rogaturus, Quum vix justus sit securus? |
12658 | SHAPES OF CLAY BY AMBROSE BIERCE AUTHOR OF"IN THE MIDST OF LIFE,""CAN SUCH THINGS BE?" |
12658 | Says Africa:"Tell me, delectable Pow''rs, What is it that ought to be mine?" |
12658 | Smoke? |
12658 | Smoke? |
12658 | Some asked:"Who was he?" |
12658 | Stealing? |
12658 | Still reeking of the gutter whence you sprung? |
12658 | Suppose that you With agony and difficulty do What I do easily-- what then? |
12658 | Suppose the act was not so overwise-- Suppose it was illegal-- Is''t well on such a question to arise And pinch the Eagle? |
12658 | That''s funny grog To ask a friend for, eh? |
12658 | The Bigot, with his candle, book and bell, Tongue- tied, unlunged and paralyzed as well? |
12658 | The South believed they did; ca n''t you allow For that opinion? |
12658 | The frown began to blacken on his brow, His hand to reach for"Whence?" |
12658 | The rascals? |
12658 | Then, turning from the scene away With a concerted shrug, will say:"H''m, Scarabaeus Sisyphus-- What interest has that to us? |
12658 | They perish-- what is that to thee? |
12658 | To who?" |
12658 | Upon his method will you wreak your wrath, Himself all unmolested in his path? |
12658 | WIFE_( briskly, waking up)_: With her? |
12658 | Was it you To which Long Mary took a mighty shine, An''throwed squar''off on Jake the Kangaroo? |
12658 | Was she less fair that she did bear So light a load of knowledge? |
12658 | Well, well, old Father Christmas, is it you, With your thick neck and thin pretense of virtue? |
12658 | What are your preferences made of? |
12658 | What business is''t of his, I''d like to know? |
12658 | What do you gain by cursing Nick For playing her such a scurvy trick? |
12658 | What gained I so? |
12658 | What he needs-- you know-- a"writ"-- Something, eh? |
12658 | What shall it be-- Marsala, Port or Sherry? |
12658 | What slew the Roman power? |
12658 | What though through long disuse''t is grown A trifle rusty? |
12658 | What wrecked the Roman power? |
12658 | What''s come of him? |
12658 | What''s here? |
12658 | What, madam, run for School Director? |
12658 | What, what? |
12658 | What? |
12658 | What? |
12658 | When legs like his declaim Who can misunderstand? |
12658 | Where are your staves and switches For men of gentle birth? |
12658 | Where now is my prominence, erstwhile in council conspicuous, patent? |
12658 | Where was I? |
12658 | Where was I? |
12658 | While we confirm eternally thy fame, Before our dread tribunal answer, here, Why do no statues celebrate thy name, No monuments thy services proclaim? |
12658 | Who do you Suppose''t was wrote it? |
12658 | Who goes there?" |
12658 | Who knows of a reformed reformer? |
12658 | Why ask me, Gastrogogue, to dine( Unless to praise your rascal wine) Yet never ask some luckless sinner Who needs, as I do not, a dinner? |
12658 | Why did not thy contemporaries rear To thee some schoolhouse or memorial college? |
12658 | Why does n''t he himself, eschewing fear, Publish a book or two, and so appear As one who has the right to be a critic? |
12658 | Why should you at a kind intention swear Like twenty Neroes? |
12658 | Why"merry"Christmas? |
12658 | Why, O, why did God create Such a curse and thrust it on us in our inoffensive state? |
12658 | Why, certainly, man, why not? |
12658 | Will Envy henceforth not retaliate For virtues it were vain to emulate? |
12658 | With Hales and Morgans on each side, How could a fool through lack of knowledge, Vote wrong? |
12658 | Yet now whose praises do the people bawl? |
12658 | You''ll make no bargains? |
12658 | You''re another sort, but you predict That your party''ll get consummately licked?" |
12658 | You? |
12658 | Your air and conversation Are a liberal education, And your clothes, including the metal hat And the brazen boots-- what''s that? |
12658 | Your chains for wit and worth? |
12658 | Your mask and dirk for riches? |
12658 | and"How?" |
12658 | and"Why?" |
12658 | count the effort labor lost When thy good angel holds the reed? |
12658 | give back the flags-- how can you care You veterans and heroes? |
12658 | him? |
12658 | imitate me, friend? |
12658 | inquires the ready scribe--"Who are the chiefs of the marauding tribe?" |
12658 | is there no law To punish men for pillage?" |
12658 | just a mug of blood? |
12658 | know you not we gods protest That all religion is a jest? |
12658 | one cried, With sobs of sorrow crammed;"No more? |
12658 | photograph in colors? |
12658 | the Woman cried;"Oh, why, Does slumber not benumb me? |
12658 | where do the critic''s rights begin Who has of literature some clear- cut notion, And hears a voice from Heaven say:"Pitch in"? |
12658 | where''s my kerchief? |
12658 | where_ are_ we drifting to? |
12658 | you a Senator-- you, Mike de Young? |
12658 | you laugh? |
26719 | Ai n''t we living together? 26719 At that time,"Marie wrote me,"I was a poor, awkward girl, somewhat stupid, perhaps, but who would not be at my age and in the same environment? |
26719 | How be a mouthpiece for the poor? 26719 Of what avail was it, I reflected, to raise one''s voice in the wilderness of theories? |
26719 | ''Do n''t you know your father would kill me if you did not return?'' |
26719 | ''Do you live alone?'' |
26719 | ''Do you mean it, Katie?'' |
26719 | ''Have you any more of them?'' |
26719 | ''What shall I do? |
26719 | ''Why is it improper?'' |
26719 | *****"An hour later, as he was about to descend the stairs, I said:''Charles, when will you come again?'' |
26719 | --_Interior._"What is the value of such an autobiography of a thief as Mr. Hapgood has given us? |
26719 | A moment later, I smiled indeed, when he stepped forward, lifted his hat, and asked with assurance:''May I walk with you? |
26719 | And am I essentially worse than you, or my lady, or anyone whom Society protects and honours? |
26719 | And what is my family and my mother?" |
26719 | And you remember what happened to Gorky, when he was here? |
26719 | Are you going anywhere?'' |
26719 | Are you sure you have taken nothing else which does not belong to you?'' |
26719 | Beauty is like rain to the desert, it is rare, but it vanishes only from the surface of things, and deep down who knows what secret springs it feeds? |
26719 | Besides, how do I know she is n''t playing me some game?'' |
26719 | But how do you suppose that I, for instance, could a few years ago have relished Anatole France? |
26719 | But who knows how much greater things might be, if done freely by free men? |
26719 | Did you ever read George Moore''s Leaves From My Lost Life? |
26719 | Did you ever read Yeats''story''Where There is Nothing?'' |
26719 | Do n''t you think this is a great ambition, to read Swinburne well? |
26719 | Do n''t you think you are perhaps prejudiced too much against certain words because of their associations? |
26719 | Do n''t you understand that I do n''t want you at all?'' |
26719 | Do n''t you want to go back to your last place? |
26719 | Do n''t you want to go out now?'' |
26719 | Do you not hesitate sometimes and doubt that all men are worthy of the better things of life, the coalheaver as well as the banker and artist? |
26719 | Does n''t this prove it?" |
26719 | Even this is sordid, and then, if so, what is the rest?--the daily life filled with brutish and shallow men and women? |
26719 | For instance, my father, do you think he could read Ibsen or any of the others? |
26719 | Have I not always done my duty by her and tried to raise her the best I knew how? |
26719 | Have you ever noticed the searching dry gaze of the poor? |
26719 | He drew me to him in the darkness, and I did not object, why should I? |
26719 | He probably wondered what sort of a girl this was who had given herself so easily? |
26719 | He tried hard to speak with fervour, but there is no fire in him, and what is a poet without fire? |
26719 | How can art master the master- problem? |
26719 | How can people be gourmands? |
26719 | How can this be? |
26719 | How could he be fair when he had no understanding of the nature of actuality? |
26719 | How did Marie feel about all this? |
26719 | How do any good by a social enthusiasm merely expressed in theory? |
26719 | How is it that she allows you to go about with such short dresses? |
26719 | I felt like shouting at them,''you fools, why do n''t you help yourselves?'' |
26719 | I finished making the bed in a hurry and went into the presence of Mrs. Belshow, who said to me:"''My dear child, how old are you?'' |
26719 | I suppose you have read of the Caruso affair-- how he kissed a woman in Central Park, or wanted to, and the howl it made? |
26719 | I would only smile and say,''I do n''t want to know anything about you, why ca n''t you treat me the same way?'' |
26719 | In the first place, why did you pull me on last Saturday night, and who are you to turn me down like this?'' |
26719 | Is it not wonderful? |
26719 | Is n''t she beautiful, a real dream?'' |
26719 | Is that fair to me?'' |
26719 | Must I put these classic souls of art in the same category? |
26719 | My life was and is a preparation-- for what? |
26719 | O, God, what have I done to deserve this? |
26719 | Perhaps it was as well, for what''s the use in casting pearls before swine? |
26719 | She pointed an accusing finger at me and asked coldly,''Where did you get this?'' |
26719 | Since they are much too cold- blooded for immortality, what do they know about it? |
26719 | So, I wrote, I could not go back, and how, without him, could I go forward? |
26719 | Suppose your daughter should not be an exception, how would you feel then?... |
26719 | The truth, how can we stand it, or stand for it? |
26719 | There was even a chance of being saved, if the doomed one could find the right expression, some little sentence that would affect the brutal(?) |
26719 | This, too, of course, came little by little, but do you wonder I loved a man who showed me a new world and who taught me I was not bad? |
26719 | What did it not do for me, and what has it not done for me since? |
26719 | What harm had I done by my reading? |
26719 | What right have you to act in this lying way?'' |
26719 | What should we do without them? |
26719 | What was her condition at the time, and her attitude toward this strange man, so different from every other she had met? |
26719 | What was it that kept Marie in all really essential ways out of this class of social victims? |
26719 | What was to be done? |
26719 | What will become of her? |
26719 | What will become of me?'' |
26719 | What would I do without them? |
26719 | When I am no longer capable of abandoning myself, why continue? |
26719 | When calm came again she said to him:"Terry, how can we live together?" |
26719 | Where was the opportunity for the quiet development and care of an infant? |
26719 | Who was this girl who had given herself to him once and only once? |
26719 | Who would take care of you?'' |
26719 | Why did she not die when a baby? |
26719 | Why is it that for many rich men a working girl half fed and badly dressed is so much more attractive than a fine woman of the town or a nice lady? |
26719 | Why not resist, why not defend myself? |
26719 | Why should I regret what I am, anyway? |
26719 | Why, these American stiffs, what do they mean by morality? |
2119 | A thousand times over, Schmettau must have asked himself,''Why was I in such a hurry? 2119 ACH KINDER, Alas, children, you are badly wounded, then?" |
2119 | And for me, what orders has Excellency? |
2119 | And now suddenly, on the Tuesday morning, What is this? 2119 And what is this one hears from Gohfeld in the evening? |
2119 | JA, your Majesty: but how goes the Battle? |
2119 | May not it be another Rossbach( if we are lucky)? |
2119 | N''Y A- T- IL DONC PAS UN BOUGRE DE BOULET QUI PUISSE M''ATTEINDREE( Is there no one b---- of a ball that can reach me, then)? |
2119 | Northeast? 2119 Not in Sommerfeld?" |
2119 | Schmettau had been over- hasty; what need had Schmettau of haste? 2119 The Caudine Forks;""Scene of Pirna over again, in reverse form;""Is not your King at last over with it?" |
2119 | The King does not see his way, then, after all? |
2119 | The King of Prussia? |
2119 | Think you there is any pleasure in leading this dog of a life[ CHIENNE, she- dog]? 2119 What rage animates you against Maupertuis? |
2119 | What, from Rothe Vorwerk to Big Hollow, no passage, say you; no crossing? |
2119 | Why not in Nanci here? |
2119 | Will not Excellency Soltikof, who disdains idleness, go himself upon Silesia, upon Glogau for instance, and grant me a few days? |
2119 | Would not Dantzig by ourselves be the advisable thing? |
2119 | ''Fatherly? |
2119 | ''May not some of them belong to Polish Majesty?'' |
2119 | ''You?'' |
2119 | ''Your obstinate Town can be bombarded, then,--cannot it?'' |
2119 | ( Answer, evasive on this point):"Are you bandaged, though? |
2119 | --To which Schmettau answers:''Can Durchlaucht think us ignorant of the common rules of behavior to Persons of that Rank? |
2119 | --not even the 800 wagons are ready for us;''Ca n''t your baggages go in boats, then?'' |
2119 | 537- 563; BERICHT VON DER UNTERNEHMUNG DES PRINZEN HEINRICH IN FRANKEN, IM JAHR, 1759;_ Helden- Geschichte,_ v. 1033- 1039; Tempelhof,??? |
2119 | 537- 563; BERICHT VON DER UNTERNEHMUNG DES PRINZEN HEINRICH IN FRANKEN, IM JAHR, 1759;_ Helden- Geschichte,_ v. 1033- 1039; Tempelhof,??? |
2119 | 537- 563; BERICHT VON DER UNTERNEHMUNG DES PRINZEN HEINRICH IN FRANKEN, IM JAHR, 1759;_ Helden- Geschichte,_ v. 1033- 1039; Tempelhof,??? |
2119 | ?, et seq.] |
2119 | A Siege of Colberg, however, there is actually to be: Second Siege,--if perhaps it will prove luckier than the First was, two years since? |
2119 | A very disappointing circumstance to Soltikof;"Austrian Junction still a problem, then; a thing in the air? |
2119 | ALDER Waste? |
2119 | About seven in the morning Maguire had his Messenger in Dresden,''Your Excellency''s Paper ready?'' |
2119 | After all, I am so used to treacheries and bad manoeuvres,"--what matters this insignificant one? |
2119 | And first of all, concerning the enigma"What is Luc?" |
2119 | And if not, what becomes of you? |
2119 | And who, in the interim, will watch Daun and his enterprises? |
2119 | And with regard to the requisition of proviant, they answered in a scornful angry key,''Proviant? |
2119 | At once thither;--and leave Glogau and the Russians to their luck,--which in such case, what is it like to be? |
2119 | Beautifully written too, says Retzow; but what, in the eyes of this King, is beautiful writing, to knowing your business well? |
2119 | But again, did not his Majesty expect, do not these words"a bout"still seem to expect, a bit of fighting with somebody or other? |
2119 | But can English readers consent to halt in this hot pinch of the Friedrich crisis; and read the briefest thing which is foreign to it? |
2119 | But in the northwest part, those Fincks and Wunsches, Excellenz?" |
2119 | But it must have been an interesting discovery to Daun, if he foreshadowed to himself what results it would have on him:"Taking the defensive, then? |
2119 | Continue that, and what becomes of Soltikof and me? |
2119 | Daun has a horror at weakening himself to that extent; but what can he do? |
2119 | Daun is off from Triebel Country to this dangerous scene; indignantly cashiers Deville,''Why did not you attack these Ziethen people? |
2119 | Did, all that Monday, his best to prepare himself; called in his outposts("Was not I ordered?" |
2119 | Does it depend on me? |
2119 | Et qu''auraient- ils a craindre en se revoltant?... |
2119 | Finck had not a gun or a man in it:"Had not I order?" |
2119 | Friedrich had observed his fiery ways on the day of Leuthen:"Hah, a new Winterfeld perhaps?" |
2119 | Friedrich takes the road for Guben; reaches Markersdorf( twenty miles''march, still seven or eight from Guben); falls upon-- What phenomenon is this? |
2119 | From Triebel he sends the news at gallop to Lieberose and Soltikof:"Rejoice with us, Excellenz: did not I predict it? |
2119 | Had not you 10,000, Sir?'' |
2119 | Has not Daun good reason now to be proud of the cunctatory method? |
2119 | Have you been let blood?" |
2119 | He has now no Winterfeld, Schwerin, no Keith, Retzow, Moritz:--whom has he? |
2119 | He makes charming verses, in times when another could not write a line of prose; he deserves to be happy: but will he be so? |
2119 | He was of that sad Zittau business of the late Prince of Prussia''s,--Goltz, Winterfeld, Ziethen, Schmettau and others? |
2119 | Hear the stiff Answer that comes:"''Conditions of Peace,''do you call them? |
2119 | How can Daun, if himself merely speculative, calculative, hope that Soltikof will continue acting? |
2119 | I grieve to resemble Cassandra with my prophecies; but how augur well of the desperate situation we are in, and which goes on growing worse? |
2119 | I will forget who took Peitz: perhaps Haddick, of whom we have lately heard so much? |
2119 | I, can I join myself to that set? |
2119 | IS HE STILL IN BERLIN; OR WHERE IN THE UNIVERSE IS HE? |
2119 | If he run to save Hanover from Broglio, he loses Westphalia: Osnabruck( his magazine)? |
2119 | If they will stand fight? |
2119 | In his place one might have, at least, shot out a spy or two? |
2119 | In the hope probably of finding something of human provender withal? |
2119 | Into the Night; men and goods, every item:--who shall say whitherward? |
2119 | Is it to be a mere fighting for meal? |
2119 | Maupertuis, say you? |
2119 | Meal? |
2119 | Monsieur, my ammunition is in Posen; my bread is fallen scarce; in Frankfurt can you find me one horse more?'' |
2119 | Or of what use was it anywhere? |
2119 | Or will not he perhaps go, of himself, when the rough weather comes?''" |
2119 | Or would readers care to glance into the very fact with their own eyes? |
2119 | Our Court will cheerfully furnish money, instead of meal."--"Money? |
2119 | Possibly a high career lying ahead;--a man that may be very valuable to Friedrich, who has now so few such left? |
2119 | Provisions of meal? |
2119 | QUESTION,"WHO WROTE Matinees du Roi de Prusse?" |
2119 | Reflect that even Kings make peace after long battling; can not you ever make it? |
2119 | Renounced thoughts of Italy:''Europe bleeding, and especially France and Prussia, how go idly touring?'' |
2119 | Serene Highness gets on horseback; but what can that help? |
2119 | Shall he manoeuvre himself out, and march away, bread- carts, baggages and all entire? |
2119 | Soltikof understands the congratulations very well; but as to that of trampling out, snorts an indignant negative:''Nay, you, why do n''t you try it? |
2119 | That is Retzow''s notion: who knows but there may be truth in it? |
2119 | The case is critical; especially this Haddick- Loudon part of it: add 30 or 36,000 Austrians to Soltikof, how is he then to be dealt with? |
2119 | The poor Fortress of Peitz was taken again;--do readers remember it,"on the day of Zorndorf,"last year? |
2119 | There is such a thing as being too cunctatory, is not there, your Excellency? |
2119 | They say Prince Henri took the liberty of counselling him, even of entreating him:"Leave well alone; why run risks?" |
2119 | To the disgust of Serene Highness:''Which of you did stand, then? |
2119 | Too close? |
2119 | Uncertain still what it is,--if not the Austrians altogether? |
2119 | Upon which there is a Surgeon instantly brought; reprimanded for neglect:"Desperate, say you? |
2119 | WHAT IS PERPETUAL PRESIDENT MAUPERTUIS DOING, ALL THIS WHILE? |
2119 | Was it their blame, led as they were?'' |
2119 | What finer example to follow than that of those heroes? |
2119 | What on earth can this be? |
2119 | What the LUC in Voltaire is? |
2119 | What, this beautiful, what, this grand genius, Whom I admired with transport, Soils himself with calumny, and is ferocious on the dead? |
2119 | Which indeed the soldier who would know his business--(and not knowing it, is not he of all solecisms in this world the most flagrant?) |
2119 | Why Schmettau did not shoot forth a spy or two, to ascertain for him What, or whether Nothing whatever, was passing outside Dresden? |
2119 | Why does n''t Ferdinand cross Weser, re- cross Weser; coerce Broglio back; and save Hanover? |
2119 | Will not Austria vindicate its claim? |
2119 | With his own eyes he sees Reichsfolk marching, in quantity, southeastward by the Elbe shore:"Intending towards Dohna, as is like?" |
2119 | Yes, to Glogau possibly enough,"thinks Daun:"Or may not he, cunning as he is and full of feints, intend a stroke on Bautzen, in my absence?" |
2119 | You too without it? |
2119 | ]): but both are of one mind; both are on one problem,"What is to be done with that impassable dike?" |
2119 | a Prag, a Kolin, Leuthen, Rossbach;--must there still be others, then, to the misery of poor mankind?" |
2119 | inquires he of Captain Sydow, who is on guard at the Prussian end;"How dared you make this change, without acquainting the Second in Command? |
2119 | not close enough?'' |
2119 | not far enough? |
2119 | thinks Contades( as Ferdinand wished him to do):''Is our skilful enemy, in this extreme embarrassment, losing head, then? |
2119 | thinks Daun:"You, Zweibruck, Haddick, Maguire and Company, you are 36,000 in Saxony; Finck has not 12,000 in the field: How is this?" |
2119 | thinks Wedell:"Can not we burst in on their flank, as they march yonder, those awkward fellows; and tumble them into heaps?" |
30800 | Can the earth be ungrateful? 30800 Do n''t you think it is selfish to keep it all to yourselves?" |
30800 | How dare they complain? |
30800 | Höder, why do you not do Balder honor? |
30800 | My good woman,said he,"will you give me one of your cakes? |
30800 | See yonder little people,he said,"do you hear what they are saying as they run about so wildly? |
30800 | What is the price? |
30800 | What is the secret of fire which the pine trees know? |
30800 | Could you not give them one small spark? |
30800 | Do you all know the little striped chipmunk which lives in our woods? |
30800 | Do you know what Sisyphus is making? |
30800 | Do you? |
30800 | Does she so soon forget Persephone?" |
30800 | How can you kill such a small soft beast? |
30800 | In wonder, Shiva said,"What are you doing, little foolish, gray, geloori? |
30800 | One day when Phaethon was telling his companions about his father, the sky king, they laughed and said,"How do you know that Helios is your father? |
30800 | Shall a princess die for the lack of one poor fox? |
30800 | She asked every one she met these questions,"Have you seen Persephone? |
30800 | She carried them to the king and said,"Choose, Oh wise king, which are the real flowers?" |
30800 | The emperor in grief and anger cried,"Must my child perish? |
30800 | The emperor said,"Ito, is she, who brought this blessing, paid?" |
30800 | Where is Persephone?" |
30800 | Who could wish to hurt the gentle Balder? |
30800 | Why do you tire yourself with such hard labor?" |
29929 | ''He was asked by the men that looked over the gate-- Whence come you and what would you have?'' |
29929 | ''Look at the generations of old; did any ever trust in the Lord and was confounded?'' |
29929 | ''Once they had forced Emmanuel out of the Kingdom of the Universe, and why, thought he, might they not do it again?'' |
29929 | Art thou a buyer and do things grow dear? |
29929 | Art thou a seller and do things grow cheap? |
29929 | Art thou to buy or sell? |
29929 | But''how could he tell but that St. Paul, being a subtle and cunning man, might give himself up to deceive with strong delusions?'' |
29929 | Do you know him? |
29929 | Emmanuel would answer,''Is Old Good Deed yet alive in Mansoul? |
29929 | Had he faith? |
29929 | He was asked why he did not go to church? |
29929 | He was crying''in the bitterness of his soul, How can God comfort such a wretch as I am?'' |
29929 | How then shall a man of tender conscience do, neither to wrong the seller, buyer, nor himself in the buying and selling of commodities?'' |
29929 | How was he to be rid of it? |
29929 | How were they to stand? |
29929 | In the midst of changing circumstances the central question remains the same-- What am I? |
29929 | Is it not far more likely that he found all the indulgences which money could buy and the rules of the prison would allow? |
29929 | Is sin divine?'' |
29929 | Lord, shall I honour Thee most by believing that Thou wilt and canst, or him, by believing that Thou neither wilt nor canst? |
29929 | Man Friday on reading it would have asked even more emphatically,''Why God not kill the Devil?'' |
29929 | Oh, how she flies and sings; But could she do so if she had not wings? |
29929 | Pliable, Mr. Obstinate, Mr. Facing- both- ways, Mr. Feeble Mind, and all the rest? |
29929 | The tempter followed me with,"But whither must you go when you die? |
29929 | Then said they,''Have you none?'' |
29929 | Was Bunyan legally convicted or not? |
29929 | Was he elected? |
29929 | Was there any point in which he was better than Judas? |
29929 | What did it mean? |
29929 | What evidence have you for heaven and glory, and an inheritance among them that are sanctified?" |
29929 | What shall I do? |
29929 | What was he that God should care for him? |
29929 | What was it? |
29929 | What will become of you? |
29929 | Who can not recognise the truth of this? |
29929 | Who does not know the miry slough too? |
29929 | Who has not groaned over the follies and idiocies that cling to us like the doggerel verses that hang about our memories? |
29929 | Why had he been picked out to be made a Son of Perdition? |
29929 | _ Town Clerk._ Have you much knowledge of him? |
29929 | _ Town Clerk._ Where did you hear him say so? |
29929 | _ Town Clerk._ Where did you hear him say these things? |
29929 | and what am I to do? |
29929 | what is this world in which I appear and disappear like a bubble? |
29929 | who made me? |
30865 | Desirable to know whether President willing to take steps towards mediation, and if so, which and when? 30865 How does Mexican question stand? |
30865 | And again:''What difference does it make? |
30865 | And how could the policy which I recommended have yielded practical results, seeing that I was never able, or even allowed, to carry it through? |
30865 | But whence would he have obtained this butt- end? |
30865 | Did the Americans want to secure a fresh diplomatic success against us? |
30865 | Had Mr. Wilson, after January, 1917, really come to the definite conclusion that he held the proofs of Germany''s war guilt and lust of world empire? |
30865 | If I understand you correctly, my lord, G. H. Q. did not even feel the need of speaking with the Ambassador just recently returned from America? |
30865 | If it be only a struggle for a new balance of power, who will guarantee, who can guarantee, the stable equilibrium of the new arrangement? |
30865 | They had already carried their principle with the settlement of the_ Arabic_ case; was their object now to make a still greater splash? |
30865 | What attitude the Republican candidate would adopt on this matter? |
30865 | Who, at that time, could have compelled us to accept terms which we regarded as incompatible with Germany''s position in the world? |
30865 | Why should the enemy publish their archives? |
30865 | _ McCumber:_ Do you believe that, if Germany had been guilty of no act of injustice against our own citizens, we should have come into this war? |
30865 | _ McCumber:_ You believe that we should have come in whatever happened? |
1349 | * On being asked for their opinion, they replied vaguely,How should we know? |
1349 | An inn? |
1349 | And does harmony generally reign in peasant households? |
1349 | And what did we Russians do all this time? 1349 And what is a Feldsher?" |
1349 | And what is the effect of an inhibition? |
1349 | And what kind of faith have they? |
1349 | And when will there be some? |
1349 | And why do you wish to know? |
1349 | And why has he not been taken there? |
1349 | And you always bring home a big pile of money with you? |
1349 | Are our brothers dying, and do your wives and children remain without a bit of bread? |
1349 | Are the Molokanye, then, very bad people? |
1349 | Are you, too, a Nihilist? |
1349 | Do we require Manchuria? |
1349 | Do you hear that, ye orthodox? 1349 Hot, very hot?" |
1349 | How can that be? 1349 How could he be taken? |
1349 | How shall I tell you? |
1349 | Is it better than the faith of the Molokanye? |
1349 | Is it not rather dangerous,I inquired,"to take the law thus into your own hands? |
1349 | Is it to the east, or the west? |
1349 | Is it very far away? |
1349 | Ivanofka? |
1349 | Now? |
1349 | So you have an assistant, have you? |
1349 | The Zemstvo is the new local administration, is it not? |
1349 | The town,he was wo nt to say on such occasions,"has been entrusted to me by his Majesty, and you dare to talk to me of the law? |
1349 | Then you must expose yourself to all kinds of extortion? |
1349 | Very well, you shall have four,says the leading spirit to Ivan; and then, turning to the crowd, inquires,"Shall it be so?" |
1349 | We listened to these words with deep reverence, and gave a tacit consent; and what was the result? 1349 What do you say, little father?" |
1349 | What have you done with the Son of God? 1349 What is that? |
1349 | What is the use of applying to the justices? 1349 What preparations have we made,"they asked,"for the struggle with civilisation, which now sends its forces against us? |
1349 | What''s this? |
1349 | What, pray, could they work at? |
1349 | Where have you taken us to? |
1349 | Where is that country? |
1349 | Who knows if they will marry? |
1349 | Who knows? |
1349 | Who pays for the war? |
1349 | Why, then, do you think their faith is so much worse than that of the Mahometans? |
1349 | ''* Are not the Russians a religious people?" |
1349 | ''What need we care,''we said,''for the reproaches of foreign nations? |
1349 | ( Who knows what sort of a fellow he is?) |
1349 | ("Kak vam skazat''? |
1349 | ("There is not enough land"); and one notices that those who look a little ahead ask anxiously:"What is to become of our children? |
1349 | ("What is to be Done? |
1349 | * Where were our millions of soldiers? |
1349 | A very ingenious defence of all kinds of rascality, is n''t it?" |
1349 | And how did Napoleon get to Wilhelmshohe? |
1349 | And is not the proprietor of a few hundred morgen in Germany often richer than the Russian noble who has thousands of dessyatins? |
1349 | And supposing they succeeded in starting the new system, where was the working capital to come from? |
1349 | And then, who knows what they do with people in the hospital?" |
1349 | And then? |
1349 | And to these reproaches what could they reply? |
1349 | And what have you done? |
1349 | And what is done with all the money that is taken from them? |
1349 | And what is the nature of the process? |
1349 | And what then will the hungry Proletariat do? |
1349 | And why do the people not respect the clergy? |
1349 | And why was the railway constructed in this extraordinary fashion? |
1349 | Arbiter:"If the Tsar can make as much money as he likes, why does he make you pay the poll- tax every year?" |
1349 | Arbiter:"Who, then, receives them?" |
1349 | Are not the landed proprietors of England-- the country in which serfage was first abolished-- the richest in the world? |
1349 | But does not the Commune, as it exists, prevent good cultivation according to the mode of agriculture actually in use? |
1349 | But is there any reasonable chance of these sanguine expectations being realised? |
1349 | But perhaps''all men''does not include publicans and sinners?" |
1349 | But the Emperor? |
1349 | But what does it prove? |
1349 | But what does the word"retreat"mean in this case? |
1349 | But what has all this to do, it may be asked, with the aforementioned Volkerwanderung, or migration of peoples, during the Dark Ages? |
1349 | But what kind of service? |
1349 | But what of their Panslavist aspirations? |
1349 | But what, it may be asked, has social reform to do with natural science? |
1349 | But where is there a man of original genius? |
1349 | But where were the Conservatives all this time? |
1349 | But why, it may be said, should the widow not accept provisionally the five shares, and let to others the part which she does not require? |
1349 | But would they be able to accomplish it? |
1349 | Could you get an Englishman to work at that rate?" |
1349 | Did ye never hear tell o''John Abercrombie, the famous Edinburgh doctor?" |
1349 | Do you agree?" |
1349 | Do you think he''s a baby? |
1349 | Does the reader suspect that I have here chosen an extremely exceptional case? |
1349 | Does, then, the existence of the Mir prevent the peasants from manuring their fields well? |
1349 | Has the material and moral condition of the peasantry improved since the Emancipation? |
1349 | Have they been indirectly indemnified for the loss of serf labour by subsequent economic changes? |
1349 | Have you any Aborigines Protection Society in this part of the world?" |
1349 | He knows that the contract is unfair to him, but what is he to do? |
1349 | He would introduce the gold currency as recommended; but how was the requisite capital to be obtained? |
1349 | Here he wrote and published, with the permission of the authorities and the imprimatur of the Press censure, a novel called"Shto delat''?" |
1349 | How are our little horses to drag these big ploughs? |
1349 | How are we to economise? |
1349 | How came it that for two or three years no voice was raised and no protest made even against the rhetorical exaggerations of the new- born liberalism? |
1349 | How can she remain in the place after her husband was killed in a duel by a brother officer? |
1349 | How could agricultural or industrial progress be made without free labour? |
1349 | How could the Government take active measures for the spread of national education when it had no direct control over one- half of the peasantry? |
1349 | How could this be explained except by the radical defects of that system which had been long practised with such inflexible perseverance? |
1349 | How did this important change take place, and how is it to be explained? |
1349 | How far have they succeeded in making the transition from serfage to free labour, and what revenues do they now derive from their estates? |
1349 | How have they acted, for instance, towards the Zemstvo? |
1349 | How many?" |
1349 | How was that possible? |
1349 | How, it may be asked, did a work of this sort find its way to such a place? |
1349 | How, then, does the Commune distribute the land? |
1349 | How, then, the reader may ask, is an issue to be found out of the present imbroglio? |
1349 | I enquire of him when my case is likely to come on, and receive the laconic answer,''How should I know?'' |
1349 | If it took three years for the preparatory investigation of a district and a half, how many years will be required for eleven districts? |
1349 | If the peasant was indolent and careless even under strict supervision, what would he become when no longer under the authority of a master? |
1349 | If the profits from farming were already small, what would they be when no one would work without wages? |
1349 | In answer to the question, Who effected this gigantic reform? |
1349 | In reply to his question,"Well, children, what do you want?" |
1349 | In spite of his efforts, Ivan could not get much further than the"Kak vam skazat''?" |
1349 | In such cases what is the jury to do? |
1349 | Instead of adopting this simple procedure, what does the Zemstvo do? |
1349 | Is annexation followed by assimilation, or do the new acquisitions retain their old character? |
1349 | Is history about to repeat itself, or are we on the eve of a cataclysm? |
1349 | Is it a mere barbarous lust of territorial aggrandisement, or is it some more reasonable motive? |
1349 | It is only too true, but who is to blame? |
1349 | Many a proprietor who had formerly vegetated in apathetic ease had to ask himself the question: How am I to gain a living? |
1349 | Might not such a class be created in Russia? |
1349 | Of the latter they would probably say,"Kto ikh znact?" |
1349 | On such occasions he may stand back a little from the crowd and say,"Well, orthodox, have you decided so?" |
1349 | Or will it impinge on our Indian frontier, directed by those who desire to avenge themselves on Japan''s ally for the reverses sustained in Manchuria? |
1349 | Other countries, it is said, have existed and thriven under free political institutions, and why not Russia? |
1349 | That field belongs to the landlord?" |
1349 | That the Russian people are morally inferior to the German? |
1349 | The important question for the general public is: How do the institutions work in the local conditions in which they are placed? |
1349 | The welfare of the agriculturists, who constitute nine- tenths of the whole population, was being ruthlessly sacrificed, and for what? |
1349 | Then arose, all along the line of the defeated, decimated revolutionists, the cry,"What is to be done?" |
1349 | Then why not take covered sledges on such occasions? |
1349 | Thereupon a more experienced orator comes forward and a characteristic conversation takes place:"Have we much land of our own, my friends?" |
1349 | Very soon English goods will no longer find foreign markets, and how will the hungry Proletariat then be fed? |
1349 | Was it not you who got drunk and beat your wife till she roused the whole village with her shrieking? |
1349 | Was it obtained from some other race, or is it indigenous? |
1349 | Was such a thing ever heard of? |
1349 | Was the movement, then, merely an outburst of childish petulance? |
1349 | What better opening could be desired? |
1349 | What do they expect from us in return? |
1349 | What emperor was this? |
1349 | What has it done for Russia in the past, and what is it doing in the present? |
1349 | What is Gogol?" |
1349 | What is Lermontoff? |
1349 | What is Pushkin? |
1349 | What is a Nihilist?" |
1349 | What is his relation to the Synod and to the Church in general? |
1349 | What is our famous poet Zhukofski? |
1349 | What is the secret of this expansive power? |
1349 | What is this Feldsher?" |
1349 | What is your opinion?" |
1349 | What then could they seek to defend? |
1349 | What will his first step be? |
1349 | What will it be in the future?" |
1349 | What would they become when this guidance and salutary restraint should be removed? |
1349 | What, then, are the relations between Church and State? |
1349 | What, then, was Emancipation? |
1349 | When a parish priest dies, what is to become of his wife and daughters?" |
1349 | When any great enterprise is projected, the first question is--"How will this new scheme affect the interests of the State?" |
1349 | Whence, then, was it derived? |
1349 | Where am I to get the money to pay a labourer?" |
1349 | Where could he get that money? |
1349 | Where was the well- considered plan of defence? |
1349 | Where were the representatives of the old regime, who had been so thoroughly imbued with the spirit of Nicholas? |
1349 | Who is to carry him? |
1349 | Who knows but my children may be very glad some day to have a share of the Commune land?" |
1349 | Who, then, are the Terrorists, who have assassinated so many great personages, including the Grand Duke Serge? |
1349 | Whom shall we choose?" |
1349 | Why are they bearing hardships and taking so much trouble? |
1349 | Why should he trouble himself with these new schemes, when he might live comfortably as he was? |
1349 | Why should his Reverence meddle with things that do n''t concern him?" |
1349 | Why should not Russia follow the example of England and Tuscany? |
1349 | Why should she be a pariah among the nations? |
1349 | Why, then, did the peasant often prefer the northern forests to the fertile Steppe where the land was already prepared for him? |
1349 | Will he not, if he have merely an ordinary moral character, consider himself justified in inventing a few falsehoods in order to effect his escape? |
1349 | Will it confine itself for some years to a process of infiltration in Mongolia and Northern Thibet, the line of least resistance? |
1349 | You are not in a hurry, I hope?" |
1349 | You can?" |
1349 | You have been on the Sheksna?" |
1349 | You know what these words mean?" |
1349 | retorts the woman, wandering from the subject in hand;"what did YOU do last parish fete? |
1349 | that is to say,"How am I to tell you?" |
12632 | ''What do you do there?'' 12632 ''You know something about Falstaff, eh?'' |
12632 | A wot, sir? |
12632 | And so,he said,"you read Charles Lamb in America?" |
12632 | Did the epigram still live in his memory? |
12632 | Did you read the article on your friend De Quincey in the last Westminster? 12632 Do you hear that, Mary?" |
12632 | Have I space to say that I am very truly yours? 12632 Have you any idea of any such person to whom you could recommend me? |
12632 | Have you ever read these novels? |
12632 | How did Guizot bear himself? 12632 How is that, sir?" |
12632 | How''s missis, sir? |
12632 | I am not a hard man, am I, Procter? |
12632 | Is not Whipple coming here soon? |
12632 | Miss me? 12632 Not a bad one, is it?" |
12632 | P.S.--Can you contrive to send Mr. Willis a copy of the prose book? 12632 Think of reading in America? |
12632 | Was it not yesterday we spoke together? |
12632 | Was n''t it good of him,said the old man, in his tremulous voice,"to think of_ me_ before he had been in town twenty- four hours?" |
12632 | Well, my son,says the fond mother, looking up from her knitting- work,"what have you got for us to- night? |
12632 | What are you doing in America? 12632 Who is your fat friend?" |
12632 | Who would risk publishing a book for_ me_, the most unpopular writer in America? |
12632 | _ Who_ is going to elope? |
12632 | ''What ages?'' |
12632 | ( Is that her real name?) |
12632 | After all,--unless one could be Shakespeare, which( clearly) is not an easy matter,--of what value is a little puff of smoke from a review? |
12632 | Ah, dear me, I suspect that both William Shakespeare and Ben Jonson will survive him; do n''t you? |
12632 | Ah, my very dear friend, how can I ever thank you? |
12632 | Am I to return Dr. Parsons''s? |
12632 | And do you think it would be worth while? |
12632 | And how do you like the undertaker? |
12632 | And if I should be gone, will you let poor K---- have one? |
12632 | And is he of any profession? |
12632 | And will you also give him the time and place for Gad''s? |
12632 | Are all people of black blood cruel, cowardly, and treacherous? |
12632 | Are you acquainted with him?'' |
12632 | Are you equal to two nights running of good time?" |
12632 | As I do n''t know Mr. Eytinge''s number in Guildford Street, will you kindly undertake to let him know that we are going out with the great Detective? |
12632 | As I rose to take leave he said,--"Have I ever given you one of Lamb''s letters to carry home to America?" |
12632 | B., how many?'' |
12632 | But what did he die of?" |
12632 | But what have I to do with politics, or you? |
12632 | But when did the Times do justice to any one? |
12632 | But you will come this spring, will you not? |
12632 | By the by, are they on foolscap? |
12632 | By the way, are you not charmed at the Emperor''s marriage? |
12632 | By the way, when_ will_ you finish the bridge? |
12632 | Ca n''t you arrange it so that two or three or more sheets may be sent at once, on stated days, and so my journeys to the village be fewer? |
12632 | Ca n''t you bring Whipple with you?" |
12632 | Ca n''t you do it in the Transcript, and send her a copy? |
12632 | Can you contrive to send a copy of your edition of"Atherton"to Mr. Hawthorne? |
12632 | Could this be done with the Wonder- Book? |
12632 | Did I ever tell you a pretty story of him, when he was in England after Strasburg and before Boulogne, and which I know to be true? |
12632 | Did I tell you that I had been reading Louis Napoleon''s most charming three volumes full? |
12632 | Did I tell you that they are going to engrave a portrait of me by Haydon, now belonging to Mr. Bennoch, for the Dramatic Works? |
12632 | Did Mr. Whittier send his works, or do I owe them wholly to your kindness? |
12632 | Did ever mortal preside with such felicitous success as did Mr. Quincy? |
12632 | Did not he also like Dr. Holmes? |
12632 | Did you ever spend a winter in England? |
12632 | Did you get my last unworthy letter? |
12632 | Do it, or not?" |
12632 | Do they commit suicide in despair, or wrench open tight drawers and cupboards and hermetically sealed bottles for practice? |
12632 | Do they live in the house where we breakfasted?.... |
12632 | Do they sell crabs, shrimps, winkles, herrings? |
12632 | Do you ever reprint French books, or ever get them translated? |
12632 | Do you know him? |
12632 | Do you know one General G.? |
12632 | Do you remember his name? |
12632 | Do you think Mr. Hector Bossange could help me to that, or to any others not printed in the Memories? |
12632 | Does he depend altogether upon literature, as too many writers do here? |
12632 | For a title how would this do:''A Wonder- Book for Girls and Boys''; or,''The Wonder- Book of Old Stories''? |
12632 | Had I noticed George Lafayette especially?" |
12632 | Had he gone down in the drift, utterly exhausted, and was the snow burying him out of sight? |
12632 | Has Mrs. Craig written to you to tell you of her marriage? |
12632 | Has he not invited the world to enjoy the loveliness of its solitudes with him, and peopled its haunts for us again and again? |
12632 | Have they ever been tried in America? |
12632 | Have you happened to see Bulwer''s King Arthur? |
12632 | Have you republished"Alton Locke"in America? |
12632 | Have you seen Alexander Smith''s book, which is all the rage just now? |
12632 | Have you seen Matthew Arnold''s poems? |
12632 | Have you seen"Alton Locke"? |
12632 | Have you seen_ Esmond_? |
12632 | Have you such fancies in America? |
12632 | He looked dismally perplexed, and turning to me said imploringly in a whisper,"For pity''s sake, what shall I write? |
12632 | How can I thank you enough for all these enjoyments? |
12632 | How could he help it? |
12632 | I am writing on the 8th of May, but where is the May of the poets? |
12632 | I asked Mrs. K----, the famous actress, who was at the experiment:"What do_ you_ say? |
12632 | I asked him if he was sure it was n''t''cricketing''state of health? |
12632 | I have rather a distaste to a double title? |
12632 | I hope you may have met with the little touch of Radicalism I gave them at Birmingham in the words of Buckle? |
12632 | I like all that, do n''t you? |
12632 | I noticed that he gazed at them anxiously with fork upraised; then he whispered to me, with a look of anguish,"How shall I do it?" |
12632 | I said,"is he dead?" |
12632 | I suppose Mr. Ticknor tells you the book- news? |
12632 | I trust, my dear Eugenius, that you have recognized yourself in a certain Uncommercial, and also some small reference to a name rather dear to you? |
12632 | I wonder if you ever received a list of people to whom to send one or other of my works? |
12632 | If you can not, will you defer our Boston dinner until the following Sunday? |
12632 | If''The Scarlet Letter''is to be the title, would it not be well to print it on the title- page in red ink? |
12632 | In one of his letters he says to me:--"Did not I suggest to you, last summer, the publication of the Bible in ten or twelve 12mo volumes? |
12632 | In the mean while will you take the trouble to send the enclosed and my answer, if it be fit and proper and properly addressed? |
12632 | Is American literature rich in native biography? |
12632 | Is he a widower, or a bachelor, or a married man? |
12632 | Is he young? |
12632 | Is it Jones, or Smith, or----? |
12632 | Is it any matter under which title it is announced? |
12632 | Is it in woman''s heart not to love such a man? |
12632 | Is it safe, then, to stake the fate of the book entirely on this one chance? |
12632 | Is it so? |
12632 | Is not Louis Napoleon the most graceful of our European chiefs? |
12632 | Is not that delightful? |
12632 | Is not this curious in your republic? |
12632 | Is pickled salmon vended there? |
12632 | Is there any complete edition of his Lectures and Essays? |
12632 | Is this the end of all things? |
12632 | Johnson, how many?'' |
12632 | Little Emily R---- read from her book with a chirping lisp:--"O, what''s the matter? |
12632 | M----''s little dog too, Mrs. Bouncer, barked in the greatest agitation on being called down and asked by M----,"Who is this?" |
12632 | Mary B---- began:--"Oft I had heard of Lucy Grey"; Nancy C---- piped up:--"''How many are you, then,''said I,''If there are two in heaven?'' |
12632 | May I ask you to give the enclosed to dear Dr. Parsons? |
12632 | May I ask you to transmit the accompanying letter to Mrs. H----? |
12632 | May I have a few copies of that engraving when you come to England? |
12632 | May I inquire the name of the writer? |
12632 | May I put in the story of Washington''s ghost? |
12632 | My youth? |
12632 | Need I say that I like him_ very_ much? |
12632 | Now do n''t you in your own heart and soul quarrel with me for this long silence? |
12632 | Now we have the book, do you remember through whom you sent the notices? |
12632 | Now will you and Fields come and pass Sunday with us there? |
12632 | Or of any such agent here? |
12632 | Seven miles out are the Goodwin Sands,( you''ve heard of the Goodwin Sands?) |
12632 | Shall I go on?'' |
12632 | Shall you republish his wife''s new edition? |
12632 | So what is to be done? |
12632 | Soon he burst out with,"Is my nose so d----y sharp as that?" |
12632 | Sweet mother, is it so? |
12632 | Tell me, too, what is become of Mr. Cooper, that other great novelist? |
12632 | That would be an affliction; for what nations should be friends if ours should not? |
12632 | The men taking their stand in exact line at the starting- post, the first tree aforesaid, received from The Gasper the warning,"Are you ready?" |
12632 | The other President goes on nobly, does he not? |
12632 | The oyster- cellars,--what do they do when oysters are not in season? |
12632 | The oyster- openers,--what do_ they_ do? |
12632 | Then quickly stepping into the entry with a roll of manuscript in his hands, he said:"How in Heaven''s name did you know this thing was there? |
12632 | There are very interesting men in this place,--highly interesting, of course,--but it''s not a comfortable place; is it? |
12632 | There was something hideous in the way this woman kept repeating,"Ye''ll pay up according, deary, wo n''t ye?" |
12632 | This can never be the case, surely? |
12632 | Turning to me, Wordsworth asked,"Do you know the meaning of this figure?" |
12632 | Was it because of its fancied resemblance to St. Paul''s or the Abbey? |
12632 | Was there ever such a night before in our staid city? |
12632 | Were ever heard such cheers before? |
12632 | Were not you charmed with the bits of sentiment and feeling that come out all through our hero''s Southern progress? |
12632 | What becomes of all the riches of the soul, the piles and pyramids of precious thoughts which men heap together? |
12632 | What blunder cauthed by chill delay( thee Doctor Johnthon''th noble verthe) Thuth kept my longing thoul away, from all that motht I love on earth? |
12632 | What do you say to my_ acting_ at the Montreal Theatre? |
12632 | What do you say to that profound reflection? |
12632 | What do you say to_ that_? |
12632 | What do you think of Mrs. Gamp? |
12632 | What do you think of a"Fowl de poulet"? |
12632 | What do you think of this incendiary card being left at my door last night? |
12632 | What had become of him? |
12632 | What has occurred since? |
12632 | What if you insert the following? |
12632 | What images do I associate with the Christmas music as I see them set forth on the Christmas tree? |
12632 | What is it called? |
12632 | What is the American opinion of that great experiment; or, rather, what is yours? |
12632 | What is''t that ails young Harry Gill?" |
12632 | What part was De Tocqueville taking in the fray? |
12632 | What place can we fancy for such a reptile, and what do we learn from such a career? |
12632 | What will they administer in such a case? |
12632 | What, for instance, could be more heart- moving than these passages of his on the death of little children? |
12632 | When he pronounced the lines:--"My name on earth was ever in thy prayer, And must thou never utter it in heaven?" |
12632 | When shall you begin that_ bridge_? |
12632 | When will you want it back? |
12632 | Where are Shakespeare''s imagination, Bacon''s learning, Galileo''s dream? |
12632 | Where is the sweet fancy of Sidney, the airy spirit of Fletcher, and Milton''s thought severe? |
12632 | Where would I like to sit? |
12632 | Who does not know Cobham Park? |
12632 | Who knows but that I shall have to add Vienna and Rome to my whereabouts? |
12632 | Who knows? |
12632 | Who was it that thus summoned all this witchery, making such a tumult in young Hawthorne''s bosom? |
12632 | Who was the Mr. Blackstone mentioned in"The Scarlet Letter"as riding like a myth in New England History, and what his arms? |
12632 | Who was this mysterious young person that had crossed his boyhood''s path and made him hers forever? |
12632 | Whose daughter was she that could thus enthrall the ardent young man in Salem, who knew as yet so little of the world and its sirens? |
12632 | Why ca n''t you come and stay a day or two with us, and drink some spruce beer?" |
12632 | Why do n''t you? |
12632 | Why should n''t she have her paper, and I my pleasure, without your wicked, wicked sneers and imperence? |
12632 | Will she succeed? |
12632 | Will you call upon him sometimes? |
12632 | Will you remember me cordially to Sumner, and say I thank him for his welcome letter? |
12632 | Will you remember me to him most gratefully and respectfully? |
12632 | Will you say everything for me to my many kind friends, too many to name? |
12632 | Will you take care that it is duly honored? |
12632 | Will you tell Fields, with my love,( I suppose he has n''t used_ all_ the pens yet?) |
12632 | Will you write to me there, to the care of the Earl of Mulgrave, and tell me what you have done? |
12632 | Would not dear Dr. Holmes have a sympathy with Mr. Dillon? |
12632 | Would not you have been sorry if that pony had died? |
12632 | You are enjoying your holiday? |
12632 | You are not angry, are you? |
12632 | You do n''t happen to have in Boston-- have you?--a copy of"Les MÃ © moires de Lally Tollendal"? |
12632 | You know that his second wife( an excellent one) presented him lately with a little boy? |
12632 | You remember what Mr. Hawthorne says of the appearance of his drowned heroine,--which is right? |
12632 | You''ll excuse east- winds, wo n''t you, if they shake the flowers roughly when you first set foot on the lawn? |
12632 | Your spear- grass is showing its points, your succulent grass its richness, even your little plant[?] |
12632 | [ Is it lawful-- would that woman in the black gaiters, green veil, and spectacles, hold it so-- to send my love to the pretty M----?] |
12632 | and are maturing schemes for coming here next summer? |
12632 | and are still thinking sometimes of our Boston days, as I do? |
12632 | and who is the author? |
12632 | and will you see that those lodging- house people do not neglect him? |
12632 | and will you, above all, do for him what he will not do for himself, draw upon me for what may be wanting for his needs or for his comforts?" |
12632 | brimstone or brandy? |
12632 | from a cousin; shall I secure this prize? |
12632 | or a"Paettie de Shay"? |
12632 | or shall I keep it till you come to fetch it? |
12632 | or"Celary"? |
12632 | or"Murange with cream"? |
12632 | said I to the very queer small boy,''where do you live?'' |
12632 | what do I see? |
12632 | what does this mean? |
12632 | what''s the matter? |
12632 | who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost clew regain? |
30625 | IS THIS A DAGGER THAT I SEE BEFORE ME?] |
30625 | _ Not dancing to- night, Mr. Sprawle? 30625 _ Pray bring your friend_;"_ i.e._,"Does n''t he know how overcrowded my rooms are already?" |
30625 | _ Shall we take a turn round now?__ i.e._,"She ca n''t waltz any more than a crane, and parading is better than hopping." |
30625 | _ Would you like to look at the papers?__ i.e._,"May keep her tongue still for a few minutes." |
30625 | & c.,& c.[_ They dance as before.__ Tommy._ JANE,_ is_ your palate parching up in horrible aridity? |
30625 | ( with tremulous politeness)._ The shades of JANE and TOMMY, I presume? |
30625 | ***** Could n''t Slander and Libel causes be appropriately heard in Sir JAMES HANNEN''S Admiralty Court, as"Running Down Cases?" |
30625 | Ask, where is he now? |
30625 | Been eatin''berries-- where did they get_ them_ idees? |
30625 | But-- as your Uncle-- I beseech you wo n''t attempt to touch them? |
30625 | Ca n''t I take him with me? |
30625 | Can it be possible that here is another mistake? |
30625 | Did n''t I? |
30625 | Divided strength is slight; But what will they say when our myriads assemble in banded might? |
30625 | Do n''t I know? |
30625 | Have them still? |
30625 | How doth the little busy"B"Employ each leisure hour? |
30625 | I have never incited to violence, and wherefore? |
30625 | I''m feeling better than I did at first-- You''re looking flushed, though not, I hope, with thirst? |
30625 | Ought he to have hanged the architect instead of encouraging him? |
30625 | Re- enter Farmer C.__ Farmer C._ Been looking for your little niece and nephew? |
30625 | Should I sell, or continue to hold? |
30625 | Suddenly up gets HARCOURT; wants to know who is responsible for the design of new police buildings on Thames Embankment? |
30625 | They call us craven- hearted, but what matter what they say? |
30625 | U._ The children-- gone? |
30625 | What does HARCOURT want to know about it? |
30625 | What next, and next? |
30625 | What should I do with mine? |
30625 | What would be your advice? |
30625 | Wherefore does crowded House cheer and laugh when HARCOURT gives notice to call attention to building on Home Office Vote? |
30625 | Why is PLUNKET so studious in repudiating all responsibility for the thing? |
30625 | [_ Stealing off.__ Tommy._ What, Uncle, going? |
30625 | [_ Stumbles over the children._ What''s here? |
30625 | _ Jane._ Oh, TOMMY, you are half afraid you''ve ate enough to poison you? |
30625 | _ Jane._ Uncle, what is the joke? |
30625 | _ Jane._ You seem to me tormented by a tendency to queasiness? |
30625 | _ The W. U._ Yes, searching for them everywhere--_ Farmer C.( ironically)._ Oh,_ hev''_ you? |
30625 | why all this merriment? |
29546 | ''Being without anxiety or fear,''said New,''does this constitute what we should call the superior man?'' 29546 And how much is paid per day when a single day''s labor is wanted?" |
29546 | But is n''t the system weakening now? |
29546 | But where are the bereaved families? |
29546 | Do you know what has brought about the change in China? |
29546 | Have you had plenty chow- chow? |
29546 | If we are to die, we shall die; why offend the gods by attempting interference with their plans? |
29546 | See that grave over there? 29546 The Master replied,''When a man looks inward and finds no guilt there, why should he grieve? |
29546 | You are married, of course? |
29546 | ''Absence of grief and fear?'' |
29546 | And the buggies, carriages, and automobiles: what on earth has become of them? |
29546 | And those two men bowing to each other as they meet-- are they rehearsing as Alphonse and Gaston for the comedy show to- night, or are they serious? |
29546 | And what may we do for the conservation of these qualities? |
29546 | And why? |
29546 | At first you ask,"But why are there no windows in the houses? |
29546 | But, after all, reverting to the question of mourning, why should the Hindu mourn for his dead? |
29546 | Could n''t they get anybody to have you?" |
29546 | Do you wonder that I avoided telling the Japanese educational officer just how our provision for farm boys and girls compared with Japan''s? |
29546 | Has America given anything more than a half- hearted assent to the idea? |
29546 | How about two of twelve each?" |
29546 | How do Kipling''s verses go? |
29546 | How then can you expect the poor, ignorant Chinaman to shake off the clutches of opium?" |
29546 | One of the greatest and wealthiest temples in Kyoto is more notorious right now for the vices of its sacred(?) |
29546 | Or if a doctor, lawyer, teacher, or preacher, how much income? |
29546 | Or if a manufacturer, how much business? |
29546 | Or if a newspaper man, how much circulation? |
29546 | Or if a railroad man, how much traffic? |
29546 | Or if you are a banker, what sort of deposits could you get among such a people? |
29546 | Or of what should he be afraid?''" |
29546 | Rather should America ask:"If Japan in a primitive stage of industrial evolution is doing so much, how much more ought we to do?" |
29546 | Snapshots of Japanese Life and Philosophy 9 What a Japanese City Is Like Strange Clothing of the Japanese Who Ever Saw So Many Babies? |
29546 | Surely the people could leave openings in the clay walls that would give light and ventilation?" |
29546 | The Master said,''If a man look into his heart and find no guilt there, why should he grieve? |
29546 | Then the babies-- who ever saw as many babies to the square inch? |
29546 | Was it not an Oriental prophet who wrote:"My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge?" |
29546 | What can be the effect of your new tariff except to increase the burdens of the farmer for the benefit of the manufacturer?" |
29546 | What is the lesson of it all? |
29546 | What need to produce what can not be taken to market? |
29546 | What shall be the outcome? |
29546 | Where three or four farms come near together, why should not the dwellings be grouped near a common centre? |
29546 | Why is it that the Oriental gets such low wages, and has such low earning power? |
29546 | Why may not our civic improvement associations, women''s clubs, etc., get an idea here for our American towns? |
29546 | or what should he fear?''" |
29546 | said Niu,''Is this the mark of a princely man?'' |
29546 | the zenana women will ask when an American Bible- woman calls on them; and, if the answer is in the negative,"Why not? |
29546 | { 261} XXVI WHAT THE ORIENT MAY TEACH US But, after all, what may the Orient teach us? |
29546 | { 34} V DOES JAPANESE COMPETITION MENACE THE WHITE MAN''S TRADE? |
29546 | { 9} II SNAPSHOTS OF JAPANESE LIFE AND PHILOSOPHY"What is a Japanese city like?" |
31301 | Had they not,he asks,"their game to preserve; their borough interests to strengthen, dinners to eat and give?... |
31301 | And after all, who are the poor? |
31301 | Are we not shortsightedly preparing for calamities far more destructive, and more enduring than the political murders of the last thirty years? |
31301 | But do we believe that it is so? |
31301 | But, after all, why should we consider which path we should follow, that of resistance, or that of submission, before we know where we are going? |
31301 | Can we regret it? |
31301 | Do we applaud the superior strength or cunning of Cain, or pretend that the discovery of gun- powder strengthened the arm of the_ good_? |
31301 | Do we go about the streets giving prizes to octogenarians, or put down to wickedness the early death of a child? |
31301 | Is there anything in the English or American past, to justify us in believing that they will part more willingly with wealth than with power? |
31301 | Is thrift taxed, which seems able to bear, or prodigality, which spares nothing? |
31301 | It is our duty to deal with this thought in its nakedness, and each of us answer for himself, this question: Shall I kneel down? |
31301 | Somebody has been saying to us; Just let us own blocks of southern railroad stock and who will bid us ride on a Jim Crow car? |
31301 | Upon whose shoulders falls the lash of scorn and punishment? |
31301 | What hunter can_ aim_ his gun at a bird which rises from beneath his feet? |
31301 | What is that survival, which we must fight for; what is this conquest, which gilds ignoble stooping? |
31301 | What, then, does the history of the American people teach us? |
31301 | Who could it have been, who offered us this advice? |
31301 | Why then, should we otherwise regard long life in a whole people? |
31301 | Will he not rather fire at a bird which is coming or going? |
31301 | Will they continue their devastating progress over the earth, never resting until they have extinguished every other race? |
22716 | ''"Monsieur,"said I,"pray forgive me if my question seems impertinent, but are you extremely fond of eggs?"'' |
22716 | ''A fine lofty name,''replied his friend,''but would n''t Turchetil Brown sound rather funny nowadays?'' |
22716 | ''An advantageous purchase''say the dictionaries; but if the price drop subsequently is it advantageous to_ you_? |
22716 | ''Charnay,''he said;''you know Charnay, then? |
22716 | ''Did you notice?'' |
22716 | ''Eggs, perhaps, and tea, with bread and butter''--could she turn the eggs into an omelette? |
22716 | ''Good gracious,''he said,''did n''t Jones tell you? |
22716 | ''How about Chinese music? |
22716 | ''Is there no other ancient name in your family that would do?'' |
22716 | ''It is mine,''says Praktikos,''may I not clothe it in the colours of the rainbow if it please me?'' |
22716 | ''Mexico?'' |
22716 | ''Our thoughts are heard in heaven''wrote a neglected poet, and are not books''sepulchres of thought''? |
22716 | ''Rather young, were you not, when you were there?'' |
22716 | ''Rather,''said he:''Have n''t you read Conway''s book? |
22716 | ''Really?'' |
22716 | ''Sixpence, did you?'' |
22716 | ''Something wrong?'' |
22716 | ''Sporting,''was it not? |
22716 | ''What an interesting man he must be,''I replied,''but why do you laugh?'' |
22716 | ''What do ye now,''says Caxton in''The Order of Chivalry,''''but go to the baynes and playe atte dyse? |
22716 | ''Will Monsieur require anything to be cooked for him to- night?'' |
22716 | ''With what discourses should we feed our souls?'' |
22716 | ''You are fond of travel, are you not?'' |
22716 | ''Young? |
22716 | ''[ 10] There must be many such houses still extant in London, and who knows what there may be in their long- disused attics? |
22716 | ''[ 28] Perchance you may prefer to have them, if it be possible, in the original editions? |
22716 | (_ Written in a breviary in the Library of Gonville and Caius College._) WHEREIN lies the charm of an old book? |
22716 | A goodly list? |
22716 | And is it meet that we should repay their constant friendship with indignity? |
22716 | And what are the great books of the world? |
22716 | And what is freedom from interruption but another name for solitude? |
22716 | Are books on table- manners published nowadays? |
22716 | But as she seemed so proud of her achievement, could she be induced to part with the precious tome? |
22716 | But is it a matter for so much pride after all? |
22716 | But there is another immediate consideration:_ shall it have notes?_ And this raises such a momentous point that I almost hesitate to approach it. |
22716 | But this brings up again the old question,''May we not do what we like with our own volumes?'' |
22716 | But what constitutes a bargain from the collector''s point of view? |
22716 | But what of the many hours of leisure in every man''s life, when no mental recreation is needed? |
22716 | But who has not suffered under the tedious and tiresome verbosity of editors? |
22716 | But who makes a practice nowadays of putting books into his suit- case or gladstone- bag? |
22716 | Chivalry? |
22716 | Could he see it? |
22716 | Did he know the customer, and if so would he try to buy it back? |
22716 | Did n''t he explain to you about me and my travels?'' |
22716 | Did n''t he tell you that I had never been out of Europe? |
22716 | Did they have many travellers there? |
22716 | Do all book- collecting doctors garner only herbals and early medical works? |
22716 | Do you prefer to take the chance of having to wait years for a book which you urgently want, or to pay a longish price and possess it at once? |
22716 | Does the poet- collector specialise in poetry, the freemason in masonic books, the angler in works dealing only with his pastime? |
22716 | Ever been there?'' |
22716 | For was it not upon this very day that the vision of the Holy Grail was vouchsafed to them as they sat at meat within the castle hall? |
22716 | Has anyone yet attempted to form a collection of books printed in Barbadoes or Java, in Donegal or Dover? |
22716 | Have novels been our reading hitherto? |
22716 | Have they not taught us, guided us, advised us, soothed us, and amused us from our youth up? |
22716 | Have you ever taken into your hands some choice gem of your collection without wishing that there were others in your library of the same genus? |
22716 | How long would such a tiny volume, with its 130 thin paper leaves, bear the rough and greasy handling of chefs and''pastissiers''? |
22716 | How then shall we start to make acquaintance with these classics? |
22716 | How then should he have approached the subject? |
22716 | If you read at all, why not read good healthy stuff, which will be of permanent use to you in your journey through the world? |
22716 | In its contents? |
22716 | In its scarcity, then? |
22716 | Is it a particular knowledge of a certain subject? |
22716 | Is it but curiosity to know how others have passed their lives, mere idle inquisitiveness? |
22716 | Is it necessary, however, or indeed wise, that any man''s mental pabulum should consist entirely of novels? |
22716 | Is not''The Civil War and Restoration''writ big about them all? |
22716 | Is there anywhere a collection of books in the English tongue printed at Paris? |
22716 | Is there no other treatment for them than a visit to the binder''s? |
22716 | Is there not, then, any alternative to preserving one''s volumes in a disreputable condition? |
22716 | Is your purse a light one? |
22716 | Is your purse a long one? |
22716 | Must they be re- bound in leather or cloth? |
22716 | Must we read them all? |
22716 | Or is it that we may store up in our minds what these great ones said and did upon occasions that may occur to us some day? |
22716 | Or was it the scene of some homeric combat_ seul à seul_? |
22716 | Or who has explored the lumber accumulated in many a disused cellar within a quarter of a mile of the Mansion House? |
22716 | Perhaps, however, you too have been guilty of these lapses, reader? |
22716 | Poultry, we know, can be obstinate wildfowl, but who nowadays would write of their''husbandlye ordring and governmente''? |
22716 | Preposterous tales? |
22716 | Should the dealer send it for him by carrier? |
22716 | Surely his reading of these dubious memoirs has been a most mistaken course and a lamentable waste of time? |
22716 | Surely no man is such a giant among his fellows that he may allow the life- works of the greatest geniuses of this world to be spurned underfoot? |
22716 | Ten francs, twenty- five, a hundred? |
22716 | Then another thought entered his mind: how much should he offer her for it? |
22716 | Then wherein lies the old book''s charm? |
22716 | These and many other kindred thoughts passed rapidly through his mind as he repeated slowly''en plus de soixante façons?'' |
22716 | Was not a priceless manuscript, a Household Book of the Black Prince, discovered only a few years ago in the office of a city lawyer? |
22716 | What are such crude exactitudes to us? |
22716 | What bibliophile does not prefer the companionship of his books to that of all other friends? |
22716 | What book- collector, I do not mean book- speculator, does not smoke a pipe? |
22716 | What book- lover does not love a garden? |
22716 | What book- lover does not sympathise with that great man Lenglet du Fresnoy? |
22716 | What does the average man read then? |
22716 | What have these purely Eastern tales to do with us? |
22716 | What is it that makes a man a specialist? |
22716 | What sane man, reading''The Faerie Queene,''could think that it purported to depict actual scenes or incidents? |
22716 | What shall we do with our volumes in''original boards, uncut''when their paper backs become tattered, their labels illegible? |
22716 | What true book- lover could find it in his heart wantonly to injure a good book? |
22716 | What will be your feelings as you handle the repaired copy? |
22716 | Where and when did Malory meet Caxton, who lived for some years about that time at Bruges, discovering that they possessed the same literary tastes? |
22716 | Where are these volumes now? |
22716 | Where will you find a business man of thirty years of age whose delight in his leisure time is the reading of Horace or Homer? |
22716 | Who could hesitate to assign a period to these? |
22716 | Who has confined his attentions to the early Saracenic literature of North Africa? |
22716 | Who has not heard of Sinbad or the Roc, of Scheherazade or of Haroun al Raschid? |
22716 | Who has not read at least some of these glorious tales? |
22716 | Who has not suffered from the idle chatter, or even worse-- the lowered voice, that often assails the ear when working in our larger public libraries? |
22716 | Who has not suffered from their enervating effects? |
22716 | Who has seen the original issue of''Gude and Godlie Ballatis,''printed at Edinburgh in 1546? |
22716 | Who is there, outside Olympus, that can master any of these at sight? |
22716 | Who nowadays keeps a commonplace book? |
22716 | Who nowadays, outside the universities, reads these ancient classics? |
22716 | Who, beside ourselves, shall decide what we shall read? |
22716 | Why devour garbage when rich meats are constantly about you? |
22716 | Why is it that biography has such a peculiar fascination for most men? |
22716 | Why is it that we all have some acquaintance at least with the Arabian Nights? |
22716 | Why not? |
22716 | Why this extraordinary difference in price? |
22716 | Why?'' |
22716 | With what books shall we begin, with what continue? |
22716 | [ 56] Need we say that this practice should not necessarily be confined to works of reference? |
22716 | a large- paper copy? |
22716 | said he,''why, bless me, what''s this--1707--that rascal Curll''s edition-- where did you get this?'' |
21514 | ''And what is her name?'' |
21514 | ''And what was?'' |
21514 | ''But what is the objection?'' |
21514 | ''But what made you think of balloons?'' |
21514 | ''Do you know the number of miles in direct distance from Timbuctoo to the top of Chimborazo?'' |
21514 | ''Does she say why she ca n''t?'' |
21514 | ''How could I overlook it?'' |
21514 | ''I think,''said his host,''I may now ask you the Homeric question--(Greek phrase){1} 1 Who, and whence, are you? |
21514 | ''Is it clear,''she asked,''that they did so?'' |
21514 | ''Then why not now?'' |
21514 | ''Then,''he said,''as I have done or left undone some things to please you, will you do this one thing to please me?'' |
21514 | ''What are the odds?'' |
21514 | ''What comfort,''said the other,''when she wo n''t have me?'' |
21514 | ''Who wo n''t have you?'' |
21514 | ''You have put the question?'' |
21514 | ''Young ladies?'' |
21514 | 043- 12] Was the young lady over fastidious, or were none among the presented worthy, or had that which was to touch her heart not yet appeared? |
21514 | 071- 41] The doctor approaching kindly inquired,''What is the matter?'' |
21514 | 1( Greek passage)--Pindar? |
21514 | 4 Quid placet aut odio est, quod non mutabile credas? |
21514 | Am I too frank with you?'' |
21514 | And have you not still many, and among them one very devoted lover, who would bring you title as well as fortune? |
21514 | And how could a bachelor invite them?'' |
21514 | And if such be the lot of the lights of the world, what can humbler men expect? |
21514 | And if you know her, ai n''t she a beauty?'' |
21514 | And what have I to expect if I let the four times seven days pass by? |
21514 | And what may it signify? |
21514 | Are these Your modern triumphs? |
21514 | Ask a candidate for a clerkship what are his qualifications? |
21514 | Ballot? |
21514 | But do you observe how her tragic severity has passed away? |
21514 | But how did you become acquainted?'' |
21514 | But how many of our legislators could answer the question? |
21514 | But how much did she get for it? |
21514 | But supposing it were a negative, what certainty had he that a negative from Morgana would not be followed by a negative from Melpomene? |
21514 | But what if seven apple- faced Hedgerows should propose simultaneously, seven notes in the key of A minor, an octave below? |
21514 | But what is that stained glass window? |
21514 | But what makes you think of such a thing? |
21514 | But wherefore are we here? |
21514 | But wherefore does my mind discourse these things to me, suspending dismal images on lovely realities? |
21514 | But whither passed the virgin saint, To slumber far away, Destined by Mary to endure, Unaltered in her semblance pure, Until the judgment- day? |
21514 | But why do you come to me? |
21514 | But why should I trouble myself with matchmaking? |
21514 | But why should it be there? |
21514 | But, again and again, why should I trouble myself with matchmaking? |
21514 | CIRCE There is yet An ample field of scientific triumph: What shall we show him next? |
21514 | Cioccolata? |
21514 | Cleander asks him-- Is''t in your power, some hours before my death, To give me warning? |
21514 | Did any of the same objections apply to them all? |
21514 | Did she associate Morgana with herself and Orlando with me? |
21514 | Did she intend a graceful hint to me not to lose_ my_ opportunity? |
21514 | Did you ever meet him again? |
21514 | Do I regret that I did not? |
21514 | Do you not feel mortified? |
21514 | Do you play?'' |
21514 | Does Moneygrub of Muckborough know? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ A weapon of war? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ And at what time do they usually play on them? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ And so you seven young friends have each a different favourite among the seven sisters? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ And that old church? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ And why not when you have company? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ But who does prefer it? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ Competitive examination for clerks, and none for legislators, is not this an anomaly? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ Do you think it would be reciprocated? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ Now, what are these three pictures in one frame, of chapels on hills? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ The beauty of it? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ Then, I presume, these are pieces of ornamental furniture, for the use of occasional visitors? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ These flints, and no other traces of men, among the bones of mammoths? |
21514 | Dr. Opimian._ Why not propose to them yourselves? |
21514 | Falconer._ All the seven married? |
21514 | Falconer._ Candid, as usual,_ Harry._ But do you think Dorothy would make a good farmer''s wife? |
21514 | Falconer._ Do you not think she could recall him to his first ardour if she exerted all her fascinations for the purpose? |
21514 | Falconer._ Do you place Donizetti above Mozart? |
21514 | Falconer._ Have you heard that he is a suitor to Miss Gryll? |
21514 | Falconer._ Have you known him long? |
21514 | Falconer._ Should you include the probability of his being accepted in your estimate of his social successes? |
21514 | Falconer._ What say you to Haydn? |
21514 | Falconer._ Would you like to hear them? |
21514 | For what? |
21514 | For, let us see, what is the epitome of a newspaper? |
21514 | GRYLLUS For what good end? |
21514 | GRYLLUS With what design? |
21514 | Gryll._ None of these objections applied to Lord Curryfin? |
21514 | Gryll._ To Mr. Enavant? |
21514 | Gryll._ To Mr. Geront? |
21514 | Gryll._ To Mr. Larvel? |
21514 | Gryll._ To Mr. Long Owen? |
21514 | Gryll._ To Sir Alley Capel? |
21514 | Gryll._ To Sir John Pachyderm? |
21514 | Gryll._ While we are on the subject of misnomers, what say you to the wisdom of Parliament? |
21514 | Had it a handle? |
21514 | Had mortified vanity any share in it? |
21514 | Have you any special favourite among the Odes of Pindar?'' |
21514 | He asked them,''Why they left his home?'' |
21514 | How many has modern progress added to them? |
21514 | However, doctor, what say you to a glass of old Madeira, which I really believe is what it is called? |
21514 | I pray you, what can mortal man do better Than live his daily life as pleasantly As daily means avail him? |
21514 | I suppose there is an agistor{ 1} among you? |
21514 | In the first place, what was your objection to the Honourable Escor A''Cass? |
21514 | Is it not strange that candidates for seats in Parliament should not be subjected to competitive examination? |
21514 | Is there a hole for a handle? |
21514 | Madama, molto compita, voleté caffè? |
21514 | Might she not subject her after- life to repentance, if her first hope should fail her when the second had been irrevocably thrown away? |
21514 | Miss, said I, do you like anybody better? |
21514 | Mr. MacBorrowdale will join us? |
21514 | No: this was beneath_ Morgana._ Then why was it there? |
21514 | Of our astounding progress of intellect? |
21514 | On the other hand, could he bear to see the fascinating Morgana metamorphosed into Lady Curryfin? |
21514 | Opimian._ Surely, doctor, you do not think this Agapemone right? |
21514 | Ought there to be? |
21514 | Our art of choosing the most unfit man by competitive examination? |
21514 | Our higher tone of morality? |
21514 | Our march of mind? |
21514 | Our vast diffusion of education? |
21514 | Shall I recommend my young friend to wrap up the heads of his Vestals in a_ vitta?_ It would be safer for all parties. |
21514 | She does not; why not? |
21514 | Should not you like to see him, Morgana? |
21514 | Si nous étions battus, on aurait donc- haussé? |
21514 | Tell me candidly, do you not think it is so? |
21514 | The doctor asked,''What he had been reading of late? |
21514 | The patient dies without a pill: For why? |
21514 | Then, what good have we got from America? |
21514 | This was ill; but in the midst of the contending forces which severally acted on him, how could he make it well? |
21514 | Voleté ponce? |
21514 | Voleté rak? |
21514 | Was he himself blameless in the matter? |
21514 | Was her mind turning to Lord Curryfin? |
21514 | Was it anything like regret that, in respect of the young lord, she too had lost her opportunity? |
21514 | What do you suppose these lines represent? |
21514 | What good of any kind, from the whole continent and its islands, from the Esquimaux to Patagonia? |
21514 | What is that wondrous sound, that seems like thunder Mixed with gigantic laughter? |
21514 | What is this tomb, with flames bursting from it, and monks and others recoiling in dismay? |
21514 | What is your opinion, Mr. MacBorrowdale? |
21514 | What more would you wish in that quarter? |
21514 | What rivalry could stand against her? |
21514 | What say you to the bald Venus of the Romans--_Venus Calva_?'' |
21514 | What say you, doctor? |
21514 | What say you?'' |
21514 | What was a select party without women? |
21514 | Where are we now? |
21514 | Where do you find her? |
21514 | Who can say which is best for him? |
21514 | Who cares to hear sacred music on a piano? |
21514 | Who on earth can have amused himself with drawing a misshapen flint? |
21514 | Who was dying of fear but I? |
21514 | Who was he? |
21514 | Who? |
21514 | Wordsworth''s question, in his Poets Epitaph, Art thou a man of purple cheer, A rosy man, right plump to see? |
21514 | You could not help yourself: What heart were his that could resist That melancholy smile? |
21514 | You shall be my guiding star, and the only question I shall ask respecting my conduct in life will be, Whether it pleases you?'' |
21514 | _ Algernon._ And what said the doctor? |
21514 | _ Algernon._ But how if the absentee himself had been weighed against another in that one''s own balance? |
21514 | _ Algernon._ May I ask if you read Latin? |
21514 | _ Algernon._ What was it? |
21514 | _ Algernon._ You are fond of Italian literature? |
21514 | _ Dorothy._ Is that your case, Master Harry? |
21514 | _ Dorothy._ What do you mean, Master Harry? |
21514 | _ Harry Hedgerow._ Have they a merry Christmas at the Grange, sir? |
21514 | _ Harry._ How should you like to see a fine lady in the Tower, looking at you as much as to say, This is mine? |
21514 | _ Harry._ Why, suppose he should get married, Miss Dorothy? |
21514 | _ Harry._ You know where he is now? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ And what part is she to take in the Aristophanic comedy? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ Because you could not respond to it? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ Do you count it nothing to have substituted civilised for savage men? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ I mean your opinion of Greek perspective? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ My hand, is it not? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ Or closer? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ What is your opinion, Mr. MacBorrowdale? |
21514 | _ Lord Curryfin._ Who could be insensible to charms like yours, if hope could have mingled with the contemplation? |
21514 | _ Miss Gryll._ And if he were free to offer himself to you, and if he did so offer himself, you would accept him? |
21514 | _ Miss Gryll._ But do you think you would in my case have done as I did? |
21514 | _ Miss Gryll._ But how was it, that, having so many admirers as you must have had, you still remained single? |
21514 | _ Miss Gryll._ But pray, doctor, what is this new science? |
21514 | _ Miss Gryll._ Well, Mr. MacBorrowdale, have you no ghost story for us? |
21514 | _ Miss Gryll._ What is that story, doctor? |
21514 | _ Miss Ilex._ How can it be otherwise? |
21514 | _ Miss Ilex._ In my young days ghosts were so popular that the first question asked about any new play was, Is there a ghost in it? |
21514 | _ Miss Niphet._ How did she take leave of you, crying or laughing? |
21514 | _ Miss Niphet._ How thrives your suit with Miss Gryll? |
21514 | _ Miss Niphet._ Nothing? |
21514 | _ Miss Niphet._ What shall I call you? |
21514 | _ Morgana._ Forgive you? |
21514 | _ Morgana._ Shall I imagine what you wish to say, and say it for you? |
21514 | and the more readily because of a newly- perceived obstacle? |
21514 | or for Morgana herself? |
21514 | or for them? |
21514 | { 1} What say you to the fish? |
31477 | Could his... well, problem be explained? |
31477 | Somethingwas evidently being done in the strictest sense of the word, but what? |
31477 | What the hell is he up to? |
31477 | Where is the larger, more important fruit? 31477 After all, in this practical world who has use for dreamers? 31477 Are we to believe each one came to naught as the sceptics predicted? 31477 But... titles? 31477 By epic standards, how many Bocas are there worthy of a balladeer and myth maker? 31477 Craving? 31477 Credible Boca may be, but understandable? 31477 Diamondhead or Copperback? 31477 Did they care that Marx disapproved? 31477 Did they know Marx''s friend and colleague, Engels, kept a mistress? 31477 His finished verbal passion? 31477 If none of these breathes vigour or tonic through my nostrils, what of tubs of fresh water? 31477 Is it the axe- murderer, with green garbage bag in the shadows? 31477 Is it the dandelion, so ant- encrusted, that yellow pollen dangles from a shiny abdomen suggestive of some actor''s smeared and garish make- up? 31477 Itch before the scratch? 31477 Justtitles", said others nervously? |
31477 | Male crazies? |
31477 | Melaque after dark or was it Aguascalientes''? |
31477 | Monterrey at sunset prior to"the"pop festival or Morelia, on eve of feasts to that native patriot''? |
31477 | Or the cicada''s song, difficult to describe, laundering thick summer heat? |
31477 | Perhaps, then, the Red Admiral butterfly especially active at the close of day and drawn to wooden lawn- furniture or the exposed human limb? |
31477 | Soirèe intimée, apèrtif, digestif? |
31477 | WANDERLUST Who administers to my needs? |
31477 | What good are titles without textual description, chapters, scenes, the"overview?" |
31477 | What is not a longing''? |
31477 | What? |
31477 | Wrong- minded''? |
31477 | XI Who wants, after all, discarded body parts brought to such an ignoble end? |
31477 | Yet do we ever thought over what we taut( in our heads) we are? |
31391 | ''But the child?'' |
31391 | ''D''yez know where she gets her pride and the courage to dare me? |
31391 | ''Did you come for my blessing?'' |
31391 | ''Does Janie know, Patrick?'' |
31391 | ''Sure what wud a poor ould woman like me have to settle? |
31391 | ''Sure, your Reverence''s sermon, I mane, what else?'' |
31391 | ''The same was on my tongue,''said one and the other, and almost simultaneously both cried,''Why should you go? |
31391 | ''What black work is this, my fine fellow?'' |
31391 | ''What do you mean by that?'' |
31391 | ''What do you want of me?'' |
31391 | ''Why could n''t she have fancied a lad of the kindly neighbours?'' |
31391 | Am I the same woman that used to rustle so cheerfully down the nursery corridor to share that happy afternoon tea? |
31391 | And the youngest, Patrick, answered in the same strain,''Was n''t the Island good enough for her but she must go to foreign lands?'' |
31391 | But they found Murty Meehan with the smoking gun in his hand, and what more evidence could be wanted? |
31391 | Could n''t your Reverence do it for us?'' |
31391 | Could n''t your Reverence say the words over us? |
31391 | Did they think it something supernatural? |
31391 | Do you see anything of Con Daly in her?'' |
31391 | Do you think God will listen to the like of you or let harm befall me and mine because of your curse?'' |
31391 | He said, gently:''And why, Patrick, are you bent on leaving the farm and bettering yourself?'' |
31391 | Said I not that in the Island the way of transgressors is hard? |
31391 | Said I not they were seldom visited? |
31391 | The husband cried out:''Has he hurt you, my Love?'' |
31391 | They remembered a thousand unearthly ways in her; and which of them had ever seen her pray? |
31391 | What face was it rose against his mind, continually blotting out the fair and sweet face of his love? |
31391 | Which of us shall try our luck first?'' |
31391 | Who knows but that there might be the truth behind it?'' |
31391 | Why did two such men as you care for me? |
31391 | You never knew your sister- in- law was married, Mrs. Laffan? |
21088 | A shark, Massa Jackson, for true, hey? |
21088 | Am dat you, Mass''Tom? |
21088 | And I suppose it corroborates your observation of yesterday, eh? |
21088 | And all of us go home together, instead of my being sent to England alone to school? |
21088 | And does the weed grow to the bottom? |
21088 | And have all of you been equally busy? |
21088 | And if mother does not mind, you will let me go, then, in the_ Josephine_ with Captain Miles, eh, dad? |
21088 | And what is the Gulf Stream, captain? |
21088 | And what''s her name, dad? |
21088 | And where is the other sort? |
21088 | And where shall we get to if we continue running on the same as now? |
21088 | And wo n''t we touch the Gulf Stream, then? |
21088 | And you''ve found out now, Tom, the truth of the old proverb,` more haste, worse speed,''eh, my dear? |
21088 | Anybody fighting, eh? |
21088 | Anybody seen the steward? |
21088 | Anyone gone overboard? |
21088 | Are they dangerous at all, captain? |
21088 | Are you all right there? |
21088 | Are you going to carry on still before it, sir? |
21088 | Are you really so glad to leave us all? |
21088 | Aye,he replied;"something like` the blind leading the blind,''eh? |
21088 | Aye,responded the first mate who stood by the binnacle;"the question, though, is, what change?" |
21088 | Aye,said Captain Miles;"but, how''s Gottlieb going on-- are you better, my man?" |
21088 | Beginning to feel peckish, eh? |
21088 | Better, Tom? |
21088 | Bottom? 21088 But how did I get here?" |
21088 | But how did I get home, mother? |
21088 | But how did you get off from the shore and overhaul the ship? |
21088 | But how do you know the Gulf Stream from the rest of the ocean? |
21088 | But how long can we stop like this? |
21088 | But in what direction are we going, eh, captain? |
21088 | But what causes it? |
21088 | But what causes the trade- winds? |
21088 | But where is Jake? |
21088 | But, do n''t you think, sir, we may be running into the worst part of the gale? |
21088 | But, how about our lodging for the night? |
21088 | But, the glass is going down, Marline,rejoined Captain Miles;"and do n''t you notice the sea is getting a bit cross off our port bow? |
21088 | But, was there no one else with you? |
21088 | But, what can you do? |
21088 | But, what is the cause of them? |
21088 | But, where''s Moggridge? |
21088 | D''ye, massa? |
21088 | Dat for true, right on de mush heap dar? |
21088 | Davis? |
21088 | Dere, on manure heap-- see? |
21088 | Did he? 21088 Did n''t I tell you so?" |
21088 | Did you ever see a whirlwind when you were at Grenada, Tom? |
21088 | Do you forget all about going to town to meet your father, and how your pony threw you over his head at the foot of Constitution Hill? |
21088 | Do you know what day it is? |
21088 | Do you think she really will? |
21088 | Do you think that men are dogs to waste their lives for nothing? 21088 Do you think the masts will stand it, sir?" |
21088 | Do you think we can right her, sir? |
21088 | Do you think, sir,I then inquired,"that one would have sunk us, if it had burst over the_ Josephine_?" |
21088 | Do you want water? 21088 Dying? |
21088 | Eh, what, what? |
21088 | Golly, bosun, does you mean dat? |
21088 | Guess where we are, Marline? |
21088 | Ha, Tom,he said,"you''re just in time to see us cross our yards again-- not a bad job, eh?" |
21088 | Hallo, Master Tom,said he,"got your sea- legs again?" |
21088 | Have you heard the gun fire yet? |
21088 | Hey, Pomp catch him''guana? |
21088 | How are you, Master Tom-- glad to go to sea, eh? |
21088 | How can duppy come in de daylight, hey? 21088 How can um cook w''en dere''s nuffin''to cook, an''no place to cook in?" |
21088 | How far have we run, sir, do you think, since last night? |
21088 | How have you contrived to come here? |
21088 | How is she going? |
21088 | Hullo, Master Tom, not turned in yet? |
21088 | Hullo, Tom, what''s the matter? |
21088 | I did n''t say so, did I? |
21088 | I have lost all count nearly of time during this awful week!--Saturday, is it not-- or Monday? |
21088 | I say, Marline,called out the captain presently,"as you are nearest the signal halliards, do you think you can manage to run them clear?" |
21088 | If the masts had been badly stayed they would have gone in the height of the hurricane; and then, where would we be now? |
21088 | Indeed? |
21088 | Indeed? |
21088 | Is that the Gulf- weed you told me about, captain? |
21088 | Is that the ship, dad? |
21088 | Is the tackle all sound? |
21088 | Look where? |
21088 | Lucky, you call it? |
21088 | Marline, you''re all right, eh? |
21088 | May I go, too, and see what they are doing, Captain Miles? |
21088 | Medicine, eh? |
21088 | No, sir,I replied;"have you been long over it?" |
21088 | Now, who''s got a knife handy? |
21088 | Oh, Captain Miles,said I,"you do n''t think I''m a shark, do you?" |
21088 | Oh, has she come in to town to see the youngster off? |
21088 | Poor Prince is n''t hurt, is he? |
21088 | Really? |
21088 | Right her? 21088 S''pose we fiss for um wid sumfin'', so as make um swim roun''t''oder side ob ship, hey?" |
21088 | Say, captain,said Mr Marline, who was the first to bestir himself,"do you think there''s any prospect of our righting the ship?" |
21088 | Shall I get over and clear it, sir? |
21088 | Shall I get you some water? |
21088 | Shall I go and hail Captain Miles now, sir? |
21088 | Shall you shape a straight course for the Channel, sir? |
21088 | Sorry to leave mother and the girls, I suppose? 21088 Stand it? |
21088 | Thanks, Miles,replied my father;"but, wo n''t you come round with us to Jenny Gussett''s Hotel and have some lunch? |
21088 | There must be a good deal of wind at the back of it; but, why does n''t it keep a straight course towards us, eh sir? |
21088 | There, Marline, what do you think of that? |
21088 | There, Marline,he cried,"what do you think of that, eh? |
21088 | Wat for you come hyar? |
21088 | Wat happen'', eh, Mass''Tom? 21088 We can talk over the bills of lading and so on, while the youngster has a run round to see what a ship is like, eh?" |
21088 | Well, not quite so bad as that, youngster,he replied with one of his cheery laughs;"but, quite as impetuous sometimes, eh, Master Tom?" |
21088 | Well, what is it? |
21088 | Well, what is it? |
21088 | Well, what is the matter? |
21088 | Well, youngster, how did you like being strung up at the yard- arm? |
21088 | What are you going to do? |
21088 | What do you mean by coming for your grog at four bells, eh? 21088 What do you take us for, Cap''en Miles?" |
21088 | What had the shark to do with the weather? |
21088 | What is a water- spout? |
21088 | What is all the row about? |
21088 | What is that there to the left? |
21088 | What is that? |
21088 | What is the matter? |
21088 | What say you to getting the anchors aboard and unshackling the cables, eh? 21088 What the dickens do you mean by shipping yourself aboard my vessel in this fashion without leave or license?" |
21088 | What''s the matter with me? 21088 What''s the matter?" |
21088 | What''s the matter? |
21088 | What''s the row forward? |
21088 | What''s up now? |
21088 | What, Mass''Tom, he catchee''guana, for suah? |
21088 | Where can he be? |
21088 | Where''s the''guana? |
21088 | Where? |
21088 | Where? |
21088 | Who''s man enough to follow me? |
21088 | Why did n''t you sling her? |
21088 | Why does it not stop there? |
21088 | Why does the boatswain say that? |
21088 | Why is she not hoisted inboard as well? |
21088 | Why, how did you come here? |
21088 | Why, what has happened, Jake? |
21088 | Why, what have you got to do with it, Tom Eastman? |
21088 | Why, what is the matter? |
21088 | Yes,said dad; and turning to me he added,"You would like to go over the_ Josephine_, would you not, Tom, now you are on board her?" |
21088 | You did n''t? |
21088 | You said, captain,I observed,"that the great currents of the ocean are produced by the trade- winds?" |
21088 | You savvy I tell you, Mass''Tom, I''se come back from de hill''fore Pomp get him cutlash to cut um guinea- grass, hey? |
21088 | You tell me de galley am right an''safe, for true, hey? |
21088 | You tink youself one fine gen''leman now, I s''pose? |
21088 | You''re right, sir,replied Mr Marline;"but have you sounded her yet to see if we have shipped much water?" |
21088 | ` Can you sing hymn, den?'' 21088 ` Say, Quashee,''he asked of the other,` can you pray, sonny?'' |
21088 | An iguana? |
21088 | But, how many of us have escaped?" |
21088 | But, what''s the matter, my man? |
21088 | But, where is the sugar I told you to get out, Jake?" |
21088 | Ca n''t you see how the poor thing is trying hard to free herself now?" |
21088 | Ca n''t you see it for yourself?" |
21088 | Dear me, what on earth could I have been thinking of?" |
21088 | Do you know that had you fallen on your head in the street when Prince pitched you over, nothing could have saved your life? |
21088 | Do you want me to take him home with me this voyage, eh?" |
21088 | Down with the helm sharp, do n''t you hear?" |
21088 | Have I had the fever again, or what?" |
21088 | Have all you men,"he called out aloud,"lashed yourselves securely?" |
21088 | Have you looked at the glass, eh?" |
21088 | Have you observed how he copies him in every particular?" |
21088 | How do they recover it? |
21088 | How-- by whom?" |
21088 | I cried out,"what is the matter with the top of my head-- where is my hair gone? |
21088 | I daresay you fellows feel a bit hungry, eh?" |
21088 | I need not describe the meeting with dad in the first place, nor the way in which my mother and sisters, dear little Tot included, welcomed me? |
21088 | I suppose that was the reason he looked so very strangely when he tried to clutch me before he jumped into the sea?" |
21088 | I wonder, though, how these other fellows are getting on in the chains amidships? |
21088 | Jake can take him down along with me, so as to be on the safe side, eh?" |
21088 | Jake, you know your way below, I believe?" |
21088 | Say, Mass''Tom, um like manacou?" |
21088 | Shall I get you some?" |
21088 | That jolly old fellow who came out to Mount Pleasant last year and showed me how to make a kite?" |
21088 | Um railly goin''leabe de plantashun for true, hey?" |
21088 | Well, Mr Marline, and how goes it?" |
21088 | What can it mean?" |
21088 | What do you mean by galloping down Constitution Hill as if you were after a pack of foxhounds? |
21088 | What do you say, Master Tom, eh?" |
21088 | What do you think of that, eh?" |
21088 | What was to be done? |
21088 | Where is he?" |
21088 | Who do you think? |
21088 | Who was right and who was wrong?" |
21088 | Who''peak de trute now, hey? |
21088 | Whose boat was it?" |
21088 | Why do n''t you go aloft yourself, if you are so anxious about the job?" |
21088 | You have` poor greatness, with dry rations,''hey?" |
21088 | You remember my poor frients Hermann?" |
21088 | You say you set it by the ship''s time on Thursday?" |
21088 | and for how long?" |
21088 | cried Captain Miles,"why did you not tell us of this before?" |
21088 | exclaimed Captain Miles;"what''s the matter?" |
21088 | exclaimed the captain confronting them,"what the dickens do you mean by kicking up all this bobbery? |
21088 | have you got the axe?" |
21088 | he cried out to the first mate when he reached the deck,"what is the meaning of this? |
21088 | he cried,"what are you doing here? |
21088 | he retorted,"how about my poor chronometers? |
21088 | observed Mr Marline slyly in his dry way;"I think she gave you one or two on account before she performed the happy despatch, eh?" |
21088 | sell Mount Pleasant?" |
21088 | what is that?" |
21088 | what''s the matter now?" |
21088 | what''s the matter?" |
18885 | ''But dey''ll gib a nigga her food, cap''n-- nebber make her pay for a han''fu''of meal an''a lash o''bacon?'' 18885 ''But dey''ll''low me two suits?'' |
18885 | ''But we ai n''t got to pay for clothes? 18885 ''But were you not allowed to see your own children?'' |
18885 | ''Does your husband treat you badly?'' 18885 ''Hannah,''I said, after I had heard the accusation of the people in the house where the crime was committed,''what have you to say?'' |
18885 | ''How do you wear her out?'' 18885 ''Likely shoats, ai n''t dey?'' |
18885 | ''Murdered them?'' 18885 ''Oh,''I said,''she wants to leave you?'' |
18885 | ''That''s all right?'' 18885 ''What do you complain of?'' |
18885 | ''What do you want?'' 18885 A very pleasant- spoken young gentleman, ai n''t he?" |
18885 | Am I such a terrible burden, then? |
18885 | Am I? 18885 And are you not more Percival than Thorne still?" |
18885 | And is this all there is in this system of notation? |
18885 | And what sort of a place is that? |
18885 | And why not? 18885 Are you a babbling child?" |
18885 | Are you a pagan, Hyacinthe King? |
18885 | Are you going to save him trouble by making his pretty speeches for him, too? |
18885 | But I thought you were to come in for no end of money? |
18885 | But does any one go? |
18885 | But how do_ you_ come to know anything about it? 18885 But what makes it hard to get along?" |
18885 | But, Cap,I said,"you can not defend the custom of tearing children from their mothers?" |
18885 | But,I said eagerly,"you do not deny that slavery was a curse to the country-- to Southerners most of all?" |
18885 | Buttered toast? 18885 Can you do what I tell you to do? |
18885 | Can you learn to dance, mademoiselle-- learn to dance''superbly''? |
18885 | Can you wait until I go round up to the top and get a rope? |
18885 | Did Lydia Bryant make those flowers? 18885 Did n''t you want a grocer, Miss Lisle? |
18885 | Did you convince her? |
18885 | Did you expect me? |
18885 | Did you never eat asparagus before, Washington? |
18885 | Do you like it? |
18885 | Florence--the young man catches her in his arms--"who has-- What do you mean? |
18885 | For what you said about Percival Thorne? 18885 Gone to the bookseller''s,"said Percival:"shall we walk on and meet him?" |
18885 | Help you? |
18885 | How are your noble and princely son and your beautiful and angelic daughter? |
18885 | How better? |
18885 | How can I do it? |
18885 | How did Beppo get here? |
18885 | How do you do? |
18885 | How in the world did you get here, Helen? |
18885 | How is this? |
18885 | How soon? |
18885 | Hyacinthe King, the great actress, my dear: could anything be more delicious? |
18885 | I have not seen her since breakfast.--Suppose you look her up, Floyd? 18885 I knew her father in my young days-- Ernest King-- the Kings of Essex, you know?" |
18885 | I supposed it was right to show them in here to write it-- wasn''t it? |
18885 | In Bellevue street? |
18885 | Is grandpa rich? |
18885 | Is it true that you need nothing? |
18885 | Is it true? |
18885 | Is that funny? |
18885 | Is there any danger? |
18885 | Maclony? 18885 May I see you sometimes?" |
18885 | Miss Bryant, have you a moment to spare? |
18885 | Mr. Lisle broke it, did n''t he? 18885 My dinner is ready?" |
18885 | Not like tea? 18885 Not one word for me?" |
18885 | Not that nasty Miss Bryant? 18885 Oh, grandpa,"said she softly,"why may I not ask her to come here? |
18885 | Somebody to lunch, eh? 18885 Spalagus-- spalagus? |
18885 | Standon Square? |
18885 | That''s right, is n''t it? |
18885 | To whom? 18885 To whom?" |
18885 | Well? |
18885 | What am I to do? |
18885 | What became of her? |
18885 | What do you say to a walk as soon as you get away? |
18885 | What do you think, Floyd,he said to me in a thick, unnatural voice--"what do you think of the way my only grandchild treats me? |
18885 | What does mother say? |
18885 | What for? |
18885 | What shall I do? |
18885 | What time? 18885 What would you?" |
18885 | What you call HIM? |
18885 | What you call--_him_? |
18885 | What? 18885 When he''s drunk?" |
18885 | Where did I get them? 18885 Where did you get them, Bertie?" |
18885 | Where do you generally go? |
18885 | Where is Helen? |
18885 | Who gave them to you? |
18885 | Who knows at what moment they may go over to the Russians? |
18885 | Why begrudge us a few years of happiness together? |
18885 | Why do you laugh? |
18885 | Will you ring for tea and candles, sister? |
18885 | Yelly? 18885 You like waiting, do n''t you?" |
18885 | You like-- see-- him-- dead man? |
18885 | You mean to say,''Why do I, a man professing to love one woman, constantly seek the society of another?'' 18885 You relieved G---- of the--th regiment?" |
18885 | You saw me yesterday? |
18885 | You were in Virginia? |
18885 | You wish to know if you have a talent for my art? |
18885 | You-- want_ me_--here George Washington tapped himself on the savage breast--"eat-- with_ you_?" |
18885 | Your violets? 18885 Your what, dear child?" |
18885 | Your what? |
18885 | ''Mars''Cap''n,''she said,''ca n''t I go home ef I choose?'' |
18885 | ''What fo''she done slap Mars''Tom?'' |
18885 | ("Behind his back?" |
18885 | And Hyacinthe in her dream says,"Is what they say the truth?" |
18885 | And Love asks,"What would you?" |
18885 | And am I like what you expected to see?" |
18885 | And she added aloud,"Then the pleasure comes all the more unexpected, do n''t it?" |
18885 | And was Bellevue street to be his world? |
18885 | And what was the something she had heard of for herself? |
18885 | And why did n''t you say there were rooms in this very house? |
18885 | And yet, with it all, how could Judith complain? |
18885 | Angel or devil? |
18885 | Anything against the landlady?" |
18885 | Are n''t you better than I am? |
18885 | Being a person well used to gratifying himself, he asks his question:"Supposing that it had not been true, what would you have had to say to me then?" |
18885 | Bertie glanced round at the furniture, cheap, mean and shabby:"You think I should have too much smashing to do?" |
18885 | Bertie was indignant:"Why should you, who have an ear and a soul for music, be tortured by such an incapable as that? |
18885 | But does he, practically? |
18885 | But then your sister is not coming here to live with you, as they told me? |
18885 | But was she to be the highest type of womanhood that he would meet henceforth? |
18885 | But what avails description? |
18885 | But where are their bones? |
18885 | By the way, I wonder if Lydia ever made buttered toast for Thorne? |
18885 | Can you tell me?" |
18885 | Conversations like the following occurred many times a day:"''No money, Mars''Cap''n? |
18885 | Could the"we"who were to arrive imply that she meant to accompany her brother? |
18885 | Dey allers''lows a nigga two suits a year--_allers_? |
18885 | Do not you?" |
18885 | Do you think I shall make myself ill? |
18885 | Does he not also make the same note for C sharp and D flat? |
18885 | Does he suppose I have a grudge against them?" |
18885 | Floyd?" |
18885 | For people can not be the same to us: how should they, Mr. Thorne? |
18885 | Had it dropped out by accident? |
18885 | Had she seen those and the_ Language of Flowers_? |
18885 | Have you a grandfather?" |
18885 | Have you got everything?" |
18885 | He answered her:"And you can not?" |
18885 | He begins to fear that she is losing her mind, but he speaks gently to her:"Have we met before, then?" |
18885 | He felt as if a white dove had lighted on the town, yet he laughed at his own feelings; for what did he know of her? |
18885 | He held the door open while she went out with her load, and then he came back rubbing his hands:"Well, are you grateful? |
18885 | Heard you ever these peculiar airs before? |
18885 | His perplexity was, What was Miss Lisle going to do? |
18885 | How about Bellevue street? |
18885 | How are the Chinese, for example, to"improve"their system of writing? |
18885 | How had it fared with that scion of a mighty father? |
18885 | How if this should suit Bertie Lisle? |
18885 | How is she to get over? |
18885 | How_ could_ you?" |
18885 | I do n''t know why there should be so much more to do: you do n''t help her to clean the kettles or the steps in the general way, do you? |
18885 | I hated to part from my mother, who had grown of late so inestimably dear to me; I should miss the boys; what could make up to me for Georgy? |
18885 | I repeat some bit of a poem, but it wo n''t do: what is the next line? |
18885 | I shall go home with you to- morrow, and--""Will it take place at once?" |
18885 | I suppose Bertie will make his début next Sunday? |
18885 | I suppose St. Sylvester''s_ is_ your parish church?" |
18885 | I thought your grandfather died last summer?" |
18885 | If Mr. Lisle prospered in America and summoned his son to share his success, would he have strength to cling to poverty and honor in England? |
18885 | Is every idea presented by a clear and precise symbol? |
18885 | Is it that the musical ear is a rare gift? |
18885 | Is she better than she was last year?" |
18885 | Is there a stationer''s handy?" |
18885 | It contained a half sheet of paper, on which Bertie had scrawled in pencil,"Why did you abuse Bellevue street? |
18885 | It seems to me that in marrying me she will gain much: what can she lose?" |
18885 | No time like the present, is there?" |
18885 | Not I: why should I? |
18885 | Oh, did n''t I tell you? |
18885 | On the thirteenth a question suggested itself to him:"Was she-- could she be-- always running up and down stairs? |
18885 | Or did it happen that just when he went out and came back--?" |
18885 | Or had Bertie merely defended his violets for fun, and thrown them away as soon as her back was turned? |
18885 | Or what had happened to them? |
18885 | People have different ideas of art, but shall I therefore wound Miss Bryant''s feelings?" |
18885 | Raymond?" |
18885 | Reverse"One counted them at break of day, and when the sun set where were they?" |
18885 | Say, Cupid? |
18885 | Shall he, or shall he not, put a certain question to her, or leave the matter at rest for ever? |
18885 | Shall she wade? |
18885 | She turns startled and looks at him:"Who wants me? |
18885 | Should she let him pay for it? |
18885 | Sylvester''s?" |
18885 | Sylvester''s?" |
18885 | That was a mistake?" |
18885 | The old lady looked at her and held out her hands:"My dear, is the time always so long since you parted?" |
18885 | They attain to a remarkable size in Brenthill, have you noticed?" |
18885 | Thorne could hardly find time to greet him before he questioned eagerly,"You have really taken the rooms here?" |
18885 | Thorne?" |
18885 | Thorne?" |
18885 | Thorne?" |
18885 | Thus Miss King, adding with severity,"May I inquire, Hyacinthe, where you went?" |
18885 | Was n''t it strange that when your letter came from Brenthill we should remember that an old friend of my mother''s lived there? |
18885 | Was not her father an Englishman, I should like to know? |
18885 | Was the ruin so complete that she too must face the world and earn her own living? |
18885 | We ai n''t got to pay for dat ar, for sure?'' |
18885 | What amplification would not weaken instead of heightening the effect of"the copse- wood gray that waved and wept on Loch Achray"? |
18885 | What are you looking at?" |
18885 | What are you reading? |
18885 | What could I do without her? |
18885 | What could she say against him? |
18885 | What do you know about such things?" |
18885 | What do you mean by that, sir?" |
18885 | What do you mean?" |
18885 | What do you think? |
18885 | What does beauty mean if it be not the blossoming of inner perfection into outward loveliness? |
18885 | What is your age, my boy?" |
18885 | What right, then, has the former to complain? |
18885 | What seest thou, child, in these dry eyes of mine? |
18885 | What shall we do with the North- west Passage when we have found it? |
18885 | What will you think of me?" |
18885 | What wonder if I have never forgotten a single incident of those too swiftly succeeding days? |
18885 | What would become of me, living alone, with no company but the gibbering shapes mocking at me out of the corners?" |
18885 | What you call him?" |
18885 | What''s wrong? |
18885 | What, indeed, could she lose? |
18885 | Where in this entire country will you find a more liberal patron of the arts than I? |
18885 | Where shall I seek? |
18885 | Where were you, Miss Chicken?" |
18885 | Where will you find, too, such a delightful flavor of ancient mystery as in the old chronicles which tell of these people? |
18885 | Where''s the harm? |
18885 | Who sent you to fetch me?" |
18885 | Who was he, what was he, so resplendent and shining among all these old Greeks? |
18885 | Why, Chloe,''I added,''what do_ you_ mean by complaining? |
18885 | Why, do n''t they gib deir niggas a cabin?'' |
18885 | You know him, aunt?" |
18885 | You used often to come at one time, when I was away?" |
18885 | did you? |
18885 | do we still keep holy honor, home, faith, prayer, truth and noble sorrow?" |
18885 | her trembling lips whisper, and she looks about her on the rocks as if to say,"Oh, is there_ no_ other way out of this wretched predicament?" |
18885 | how might it fare with her own possible offspring? |
18885 | our marriage? |
18885 | said he with considerable force and earnestness,"or have you enough of a man''s knowledge to have learned to respect the infirmities of other men?" |
18885 | suddenly growing very plaintive,"why did you let me smell the nasty things?" |
18885 | where?" |
22591 | All our reverses, our despondence, our despairs,said Curtis,"bring us to the inevitable issue, shall not the blacks strike for their freedom? |
22591 | But how did they exhibit their hatred of corruption? 22591 But why should slaves be excluded?" |
22591 | But, sir, am I on that account to indulge my individual resentment in the prostration of my private and political adversary? 22591 Could anything but a desire to buy the South at the presidential shambles dictate such an outrage? |
22591 | Do the business interests of the country dread a return of the Democratic party to power? 22591 Do you not think matters may be adjusted at Baltimore?" |
22591 | Do you still think Seward ought to be excused? |
22591 | Do you think the South will secede? |
22591 | Does that statement cover appointments? |
22591 | Even if Judge Robertson''s name should be sent in? |
22591 | For what is this convention held? |
22591 | Have we got to surrender a page of the next_ Weekly_ to Raymond''s bore of an address? |
22591 | Have you no enemy in front? 22591 How long is this procession?" |
22591 | How so? |
22591 | If the platform is not a matter of much consequence,he demanded,"why press that question to the disruption of the party? |
22591 | If they were,he asked,"how and when did they become so? |
22591 | If you do not nominate Seward, where will you get your money? |
22591 | Is Mr. Lincoln honest? |
22591 | Seward,replied Weed,"is it not better to be alive in a carriage with me than to be dead and set up in bronze? |
22591 | Shall I tell you what this collision means? 22591 Shall we take the American party?" |
22591 | The question is simply this,he said;"Shall we have compromise_ after_ war, or compromise_ without_ war?" |
22591 | Then who are you? |
22591 | What are we coming to,asked Senator Trumbull of Illinois,"if arrests may be made at the whim or the caprice of a cabinet minister? |
22591 | What is the annual amount of patronage of the national government in this State? |
22591 | When in conversation with Conkling, I mentioned Blaine''s remark, he said,''Do you believe one word of that?'' 22591 Where is my friend George?" |
22591 | Who are these men who, in newspapers or elsewhere, are cracking their whips over me and playing schoolmaster to the party? 22591 Who''s Clark?" |
22591 | Why does he persist in giving them weapons with which they may defeat his renomination? 22591 Why should we now make any concessions to them? |
22591 | Why surrender before the battle for fear of having to surrender after the battle? 22591 Why,"he asked,"should I exclude the foreigner to- day? |
22591 | Will you sanction it? |
22591 | With what great measure of statesmanship is his name conspicuously identified? 22591 [ 1163] Why, then, it was asked, did Greeley''s friends put him into a contest already settled? |
22591 | [ 1611] Convertible into what kind of coin? 22591 ''Major,''I said,''is there anything non- committal about that?'' 22591 ''Then you do n''t know what happened at Batavia yesterday?'' 22591 ''What, then,''you say;''can nothing be done for freedom because the public conscience is inert?'' 22591 ''Who is he?'' 22591 ''You have been east?'' 22591 After Van Buren had reported, the question arose, should the Comptroller be sustained, or should the report of Van Buren''s committee be accepted? 22591 After the two conventions adjourned the question of chiefest interest was, would Tilden seek the nomination at Cincinnati? 22591 And is it not needed when its taking helps us and hurts our enemy? 22591 And what have I to lose by withdrawing and leaving the party unembarrassed? 22591 Are they making sacrifices, when they do that which is required by the common welfare? 22591 Besides, if he intended to withdraw, why did Kelly assemble his convention? 22591 But the party-- the country? 22591 But those who clung to the party organisation, what did they do? 22591 But were there no beneficial results, no accruing advantages, to himself? 22591 But why did he not say so? 22591 But why should negroes do anything for us, if we will do nothing for them? 22591 By what specific act, at what precise time, did any one of those States take itself out of the American Union? 22591 Can you afford to erect such a government of blacks over the white men of this continent? 22591 Can you safely deny us these things? |
22591 | Coin of depreciated value, or the fixed monetary standard of the commercial world? |
22591 | Could he have it? |
22591 | Could one be made at the close of the session? |
22591 | Did he not attain, in the sixteen years, a high position, world- wide reputation, and an ample fortune? |
22591 | Did men from the interior of the State understand that Hoffman for governor means a ring magnate for United Sates senator? |
22591 | Did they say that liberty was suspended? |
22591 | Did they say that men might be deprived of the right of trial by jury? |
22591 | Did they say that men might be torn from their homes by midnight intruders?... |
22591 | Did they wish to humiliate him? |
22591 | Did you notice the nominations sent in yesterday? |
22591 | Do you comprehend the terrible significance of those words? |
22591 | Do you not think, in the struggle for the Union, that the withdrawal of negro help from the enemy weakens his resistance to you? |
22591 | Do you think the people would sustain us if we undertook to throw it away? |
22591 | Do you think we, who represent this majority, will throw it away? |
22591 | Do you want to make traitors out of loyal men? |
22591 | Does he want the Rebels routed, or would he prefer to have them conciliated?" |
22591 | Does not every man know that we must have a united North to triumph? |
22591 | Does the doctrine that in war laws are silent, please them when put in practice in the streets of New York?" |
22591 | Grave doubt obtained as to the government''s physical ability to succour the fort, but, assuming it possible, was it wise as a political measure? |
22591 | Have you any States to spare? |
22591 | Hold that Constitution, and liberties, and laws are suspended? |
22591 | How can you blame the South for hesitating when you hesitate? |
22591 | If secession be not lawful, then, what is it? |
22591 | If slaves are property, is there any question that by the law of war such property, both of enemies and friends, may be taken when needed? |
22591 | If so, to which faction? |
22591 | If we will do what? |
22591 | If, as you pretend, you wish the blacks of this State to have the ballot, why do you not give it to them? |
22591 | In this crisis may not some other person bear away the palm? |
22591 | Is he a man to make a reputation while his country is in danger? |
22591 | Is it a man to go to a convention representing others, and then determine as he individually prefers what he will do? |
22591 | Is it for that five hundred men, the selected pride of the Republican party of this State, have come here to meet together? |
22591 | Is there a senator upon the other side who to- day will agree that we shall have equal enjoyment of the territories of the United States? |
22591 | Is there one who will deny that we have equally paid in their purchases, and equally bled in their acquisition in war? |
22591 | It is true they say we are all on one platform, but when did we get there? |
22591 | May not this contest have a similar result? |
22591 | Members recognised each other by the casual inquiry,"Have you seen Sam?" |
22591 | Now, the question is, whom shall we place upon the altar as a vicarious sacrifice? |
22591 | On July 27, 1854, the New York_ Independent_ asked:"Shall we have a new party? |
22591 | Or shall we do as our fathers did under circumstances of like trial, when they battled against the powers of a crown? |
22591 | Perhaps you would like the nomination for Vice- President?" |
22591 | Preserve it? |
22591 | Senators no longer exchanged their impressions, or asked"How long?" |
22591 | Shall we report ourselves to the Whig party? |
22591 | Shall we unite ourselves to the Democratic party? |
22591 | Should he follow such a precedent and save his party, perhaps his country, from the dire ills so vividly portrayed by Hamilton? |
22591 | Should it be Bigelow for a third term, or Beach, the choice of the ring? |
22591 | Should it be the old ticket or a new one? |
22591 | Suppose refugees from the South and peace men from the North hold a convention of the States, how can their action keep Lee out of Pennsylvania? |
22591 | Ten days later, in the midst of riot and bloodshed, the_ World_ said:"Will the insensate men at Washington now give ear to our warnings? |
22591 | That what negroes can do as soldiers leaves so much less for white soldiers to do? |
22591 | The Hards who are so stern in defending the aggressions, and in rebuking the Administration through whose agency they are committed? |
22591 | The people of Mississippi ask, what is the construction of the platform of 1856? |
22591 | The question in 1820 was, shall the canal be built? |
22591 | The question was, should they strike out the only resolution having the slightest significance in the minority report? |
22591 | The question was, would the State be safer in the hands of a well- known Democratic statesman like Dix than in the control of Fenton and the Radicals? |
22591 | Then, is this the observance of your contract? |
22591 | They ask which is right and which is wrong? |
22591 | Was it by the ordinance of secession? |
22591 | Were the men who made these exposures renominated? |
22591 | Were their arms victorious? |
22591 | What are his present opinions about the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia?'' |
22591 | What became of the gentlemen who seceded? |
22591 | What could he say, therefore, that would settle anything? |
22591 | What further need, then, for bleeding our exhausted treasury? |
22591 | What is it but nullification by the wholesale? |
22591 | What is it but the same party which has led in the commission of all those aggressions, and claims exclusively the political benefits? |
22591 | What is it-- this secession? |
22591 | What is the use of a delegate? |
22591 | What makes it so? |
22591 | What would be the effect of the other plan? |
22591 | What would happen if our ships were suffered to go to Europe and the Indies? |
22591 | What, then, is the meaning and purpose of constantly accusing Republicans of this State of unfriendly bias? |
22591 | When he laughingly inquired,''Who?'' |
22591 | Where is it? |
22591 | Whose is the fault if the Union be dissolved? |
22591 | Why better_ after_ the retraction than_ before_ the issue? |
22591 | Why did you not tell us in the beginning of this debate that the whole fight was against the man and not upon the platform? |
22591 | Why do n''t you talk with him?" |
22591 | Why should we continue a war from the prosecution of which we have nothing to gain, they asked? |
22591 | Why should we love a government that has no dignity and no power? |
22591 | Why should we preserve it, if it would be the thing these gentlemen would make it? |
22591 | Why, then, go to all this trouble, when a complete organisation is at hand ready for use? |
22591 | Why, then, it was asked, did he advocate Dix the day before? |
22591 | Will it have the necessary information? |
22591 | Will she sacrifice her commerce, her wealth, her population, her character, in order to strengthen the arm of her oppressors? |
22591 | Will that restore them? |
22591 | Will the States agree to surrender? |
22591 | Will the election of Cleveland increase it? |
22591 | Will the general government have leisure to examine the state laws? |
22591 | Will there be a vacancy in the Board of Regents this winter? |
22591 | Will they now believe that defiance of law in the rulers breeds defiance of law in the people? |
22591 | Will you give them control in the United States Senate and thus in fact disfranchise the North? |
22591 | Would Kelly himself be the first to commit this unpardonable sin? |
22591 | Would the chair include these contested delegations in the roll- call? |
22591 | You will ask impatiently,''Has he a heart?'' |
22591 | [ 1063] Suddenly the President changed his tone to one of amnesty and reconciliation, and in answering the question,"who has influenced him?" |
22591 | [ Footnote 1574: Curtis declined chiefly from the motive ascribed in Lowell''s lines:"At courts, in senates, who so fit to serve? |
22591 | [ Footnote 785:"Do you pretend to know more about military affairs than General Scott? |
22591 | and if they, on the promise of freedom, stake their lives to save the Union, shall the promise not be kept? |
22591 | and upon whose authority did he withdraw Dix''s name? |
22591 | exclaimed Seward, in astonishment;"then who is governor?" |
22591 | or the Softs who protest against the aggressions, while they sustain and invigorate the Administration? |
22591 | or"What next?" |
32182 | And how about Racine? |
32182 | 18,"was any man called being circumcised?"). |
32182 | A grain of sand is brought; out of it he makes an island( America?). |
32182 | Americans?). |
32182 | And if we are asked,"Which is the more original?" |
32182 | And, further, in the case of slaves, does the consciousness of Christian manhood give a new motive for trying to gain worldly freedom? |
32182 | Did any of them confer the right to a consciousness of God''s special favour? |
32182 | How far must a woman of the lower classes who became a Christian subject herself to the restrictions of a higher class of society? |
32182 | How should reasonable order be maintained in the wholly democratic forms of the church devotional meeting? |
32182 | Might a woman, as a free child of God, take part in the Christian public meeting? |
32182 | Mixed marriages, too, had their problems; ought the believing wife to separate herself? |
32182 | Ought the believing husband to insist that his heathen wife stay with him against her will? |
32182 | Was it a denial of the faith to eat such food or not? |
32182 | What degree of freedom was permissible to a Christian woman? |
32182 | What value should be assigned to the different religious functions or"spiritual gifts"? |
32182 | [ 14] Speculation opened the usual deep problem; whence came the gods? |
32182 | [ 18] In some districts the demiurge was called Khn[=u]mu; it was he who modelled the egg( of the world?) |
27129 | I have e''en great mind of thee? |
27129 | My heart where have you laid? 27129 Our Lord which is the rat,""What shall we have to our supper?" |
27129 | Three beans in a pound of butter? |
27129 | Was Raleigh retired there,writes Mr. W. J. Linton(_ Rare Poems_, p. 257),"during some season of her displeasure? |
27129 | What is our life? |
27129 | What needeth all this travail and turmoiling? |
27129 | Who shall this marriage make? |
27129 | hammers? |
27129 | ''Want ye ony music here?'' |
27129 | ''What though,''quoth he,''he madly did aspire And his great mind made him proud Fortune''s thrall? |
27129 | ):--"Joan, quoth John, when will this be? |
27129 | 1. Who made thee, Hob, forsake the plough And fall in love? |
27129 | 158, are subscribed"W. S.":--"O when will Cupid show such art To strike two lovers with one dart? |
27129 | A king? |
27129 | Am I the worst of men? |
27129 | And what news have you got, sir? |
27129 | And wot you why? |
27129 | Ay me, can every rumour Thus start my lady''s humour? |
27129 | But I love and I love, and who thinks you? |
27129 | Can I abide this prancing? |
27129 | Can Love be rich, and yet I want? |
27129 | Can a creature, so excelling, Harbour scorn in beauty''s dwelling, All kind pity thence expelling? |
27129 | Can true love yield such delay, Converting joy to pain? |
27129 | Canst thou love and burn out day? |
27129 | Canst thou love and lie alone? |
27129 | Dare you haunt our hallow''d green? |
27129 | Do you not know how Love lost first his seeing? |
27129 | Fair, I confess there''s pleasure in your sight; Sweet, you have power, I grant, of all delight; But what is all to me if I have none? |
27129 | Fie then, why sit we musing, Youth''s sweet delight refusing? |
27129 | Fire that must flame is with apt fuel fed, Flowers that will thrive in sunny soil are bred: How can a heart feel heat that no hope finds? |
27129 | For who a sleeping lion dares provoke? |
27129 | For why? |
27129 | Had I her fast betwixt mine arms, Judge you that think such sports were harms; Were''t any harm? |
27129 | Have I found her? |
27129 | How shall I then describe my Love? |
27129 | I asked you leave, you bade me love; is''t now a time to chide me? |
27129 | I can not come every day to woo?" |
27129 | I that loved and you that liked shall we begin to wrangle? |
27129 | If I go abroad and late come in,--"Sir knave,"saith she,"Where have you been?" |
27129 | If Love be just, then just is my desire; And if unjust, why is he call''d a God? |
27129 | If all things life present, Why die my comforts then? |
27129 | If my cares served her alone, Why is she thus untimely gone? |
27129 | Is Love a boy,--what means he then to strike? |
27129 | Is Love my judge, and yet am I condemned? |
27129 | Is he a God,--why doth he men deride? |
27129 | Is he a man,--why doth he hurt his like? |
27129 | Is this fair excusing? |
27129 | Is this fair excusing? |
27129 | Is this fair excusing? |
27129 | Is this fair excusing? |
27129 | Kind in unkindness, when will you relent And cease with faint love true love to torment? |
27129 | Lost is our freedom When we submit to women so: Why do we need''em When, in their best, they work our woe? |
27129 | No I have no means of trying: If I should, yet at first sight She would answer with denying: What remains but only dying? |
27129 | No, my sight is lost with eying: Shall I speak and beg relief? |
27129 | No, my voice is hoarse with crying: What remains but only dying? |
27129 | Now every tree renews his summer''s green, Why is your heart in winter''s garments clad? |
27129 | Now what is love, I pray thee feign? |
27129 | Now what is love, I pray thee say? |
27129 | Now what is love, I pray thee show? |
27129 | Now what is love, I pray thee tell? |
27129 | O fools, can you not see a traffic nearer In my sweet lady''s face, where Nature showeth Whatever treasure eye sees or heart knoweth? |
27129 | O say, alas, what moves thee To grieve him so that loves thee? |
27129 | O say, dear life, when shall these twin- born berries, So lovely- ripe, by my rude lips be tasted? |
27129 | O sweet, alas, what say you? |
27129 | O then why Should she fly From him to whom her sight Doth add so much above her might? |
27129 | O, Mistress, in thy sanctuary Why wouldst thou suffer cold disdain To use his frozen cruelty, And gentle pity to be slain? |
27129 | O, did ever voice so sweet but only feign? |
27129 | O, tell me, restless soul, what uncouth jar Doth cause in store such want, in peace such war? |
27129 | O, why is the good of man with evil mixt? |
27129 | On a time the amorous Silvy Said to her shepherd,''Sweet, how do you? |
27129 | Or can he love on whom no comfort shines? |
27129 | Or is he blind,--why will he be a guide? |
27129 | Or vex her with unkindness? |
27129 | Puddy came to the mouse''s wonne,''Mistress mouse, are you within?'' |
27129 | Robert Greene has a somewhat similar description of Love("What thing is Love? |
27129 | Say, Joan, quoth John, what wilt thou do? |
27129 | Shall I abide this jesting? |
27129 | Shall I come, sweet Love, to thee When the evening beams are set? |
27129 | Shall I laugh at her denying? |
27129 | Shall I look to ease my grief? |
27129 | Shall I not excluded be, Will you find no feignèd let? |
27129 | Shall I not pluck( sweet, say not_ nay_) those cherries? |
27129 | Shall I tempt her with delight? |
27129 | Shall I then with patient mind Still attend her wayward pleasure? |
27129 | Shall I try her thoughts and write? |
27129 | Shall I turn her from her flying? |
27129 | Shall I woo her in despight? |
27129 | Shall a frown or angry eye, Shall a word unfitly placèd, Shall a shadow make me flie As if I were with tigers chasèd? |
27129 | Shall we go dance the round, the round, Shall we go dance the round? |
27129 | She whom then I lookèd on, My remembrance beautifying, Stays with me though I am gone, Gone and at her mercy lying: What remains but only dying? |
27129 | Sleep is a reconciling, A rest that peace begets; Doth not the sun rise smiling When fair at ev''n he sets? |
27129 | Sweet, stay awhile; why will you rise? |
27129 | Tell me when wilt thou marry me, My corn and eke my calf and rents, My lands and all my tenements? |
27129 | The love of change hath changed the world throughout, And what is counted good but that is strange? |
27129 | The one of them said to his make[18]-- Where shall we our breakfast take? |
27129 | The young nymphs all are wedded: Ah, then why do I tarry? |
27129 | Then came out the dusty mouse:"I am Lady of this house: Hast thou any mind of me?" |
27129 | Then, sweet, let us embrace and kiss: Shall beauty shale[16] upon the ground? |
27129 | There is a look of him about this song, not unlike the lines to Cynthia; and what mistress but Majesty should appoint his place of retirement? |
27129 | Think you to escape me now With slipp''ry words beguiling? |
27129 | Think''st thou to seduce me then with words that have no meaning? |
27129 | Think''st thou, Kate, to put me down With a''No''or with a frown? |
27129 | This is my choice: for why? |
27129 | Thus saith my Galatea: Love long hath been deluded, When shall it be concluded? |
27129 | Weep you no more, sad fountains; What need you flow so fast? |
27129 | Wha is''t that sits next the wa'', But Lady Mouse, baith jimp and sma''? |
27129 | What dost thou serve? |
27129 | What hast thou left wherewith to move my mind, What life to quicken dead desire? |
27129 | What heart can not a modest beauty move? |
27129 | What is her name who bears thy heart Within her breast? |
27129 | What is our life? |
27129 | What is''t that sits next the bride, But the sola puddy wi''his yellow side? |
27129 | What search hath found a being, where I am not, if that thou be there? |
27129 | What shall I do? |
27129 | What then is love, sings Corydon, Since Phyllida is grown so coy? |
27129 | What? |
27129 | When did I err in blindness? |
27129 | When he came to the merry mill- pin,--"Lady Mouse, been you within?" |
27129 | When, when is''t, brother? |
27129 | Wherefore did she thus inflame My desires heat my blood, Instantly to quench the same And starve whom she had given food? |
27129 | Whither so fast? |
27129 | Who be they? |
27129 | Who can tell what thief or foe, In the covert of the night, For his prey will work my woe, Or through wicked foul despite? |
27129 | Who seeing clear day once will dream of night? |
27129 | Who would have thought of such a change? |
27129 | Why are you Ladies staying, And your Lords gone a- maying? |
27129 | Why have ye cast it forth as nothing worth, Without a tomb or grave? |
27129 | Why should not she Still joy to reign in me? |
27129 | Why suffers my content? |
27129 | Yet what is love, I pray thee say? |
27129 | You woods, in whom dear lovers oft have talked, How do you now a place of mourning prove? |
27129 | _ Gillian._ For me? |
27129 | a play of passion: Our mirth? |
27129 | dancing, brother Abram, dancing? |
27129 | happy he, who not affecting( Wilbye) Have I found her? |
27129 | if you can tell, Where doth Human Pity dwell? |
27129 | my dear, why weep ye? |
27129 | then why sleep ye? |
27129 | thus''reave me Of my heart and so leave me? |
27129 | where, brother, where? |
27129 | which way they list? |
27129 | who comes here with bag- piping and drumming? |
27129 | why do you sleep When lovers wanton sports do keep? |
27129 | { deinos Erôs, deinos; ti de to pleon, ên palin eipô, kai palin, oimôzôn pollaki, deinos Erôs?} |
18350 | And this-- will you have this? |
18350 | My dear master, how can I choose out of so many jewels, when each one is perfect in its beauty? 18350 What would you have me say?" |
18350 | (_ Melolontha fullo._)] Now what did the ancient naturalist mean by the term"fuller beetle"? |
18350 | Among the theorists of our day, is there any so far- sighted as to be able to solve this enigma? |
18350 | And by whom? |
18350 | And how, in a soil as dry as a cinder, is the plaster made with which the walls are covered? |
18350 | And the others? |
18350 | And the worker-- in what condition is it? |
18350 | And what did they find? |
18350 | And what without the blackbird and its rivalry of song were the reawakening of the woods in spring? |
18350 | And why? |
18350 | Are my beetles hoary with age? |
18350 | Are there not sometimes unexpected accidents? |
18350 | Are these splendid plumes merely items of finery, or do they really play a part in the perception of the effluvia which guide the lover? |
18350 | Are you afflicted with any kidney trouble, or are you swollen with dropsy, or have you need of some powerful diuretic? |
18350 | As one does not speak of the"egg- box"of the titmouse, meaning"the nest of the titmouse,"why should I invoke the box in speaking of the Mantis? |
18350 | Buried under this short column of powdery earth, will it be able to gain the surface? |
18350 | But at what stage does it take the first sip? |
18350 | But do they do so in order to help it? |
18350 | But do they respect one another when there is no previous wound? |
18350 | But does the Mantis really employ two secretions? |
18350 | But how are the two series of scales obtained, and the fissures, the gates of exit which they shelter? |
18350 | But how did it get there, so far from the point of entry? |
18350 | But how? |
18350 | But in the case of the Great Peacock or the Oak Eggar, what molecules are actually disengaged? |
18350 | But is not the material detached simply thrust back behind the excavator as the work progresses? |
18350 | But is the grub capable of fasting for any length of time when once hatched? |
18350 | But what are we to say in palliation of the vegetarians? |
18350 | But what are we to say of the Great Peacock moth and the Oak Eggar, both of which find their captive female? |
18350 | But what cares the Ant for this expression of sovereign contempt? |
18350 | But what is the object of this atrocious custom? |
18350 | But what were these four bundles of tissue while still enclosed in their sheaths? |
18350 | But you, which do you prefer?" |
18350 | By what aberration does the mother abandon her children to starvation on this totally insufficient vegetable? |
18350 | Can we speak of vision in this connection? |
18350 | Could this unfortunate creature have fled and saved himself, being thus attacked in the performance of his functions? |
18350 | Couldst thou eat it, with thy beak? |
18350 | Crook- fingers, big- bellies, what do you say, Who govern the world with the cash- box-- hey? |
18350 | Deceived by a fallacious odour, were they endeavouring to lay and establish their eggs as they would have done under the shelter of a corpse? |
18350 | Deprived of their antennæ, would they be able to find the captive, now placed at a considerable distance from her original position? |
18350 | Deprived of their beautiful plumes, were they ashamed to appear in the midst of their rivals, and to prefer their suits? |
18350 | Did it think out a plan and work out a scheme of its own devising? |
18350 | Did the ingenious insect conceive the undertaking? |
18350 | Did the two masters, in the unfettered gaiety of a language less reserved than our own, ever mention the virtues of the haricot? |
18350 | Did they halt in order to take a little nourishment by implanting their proboscis? |
18350 | Did they prove that the lack of antennæ rendered them incapable of finding the cage in which the prisoner waited? |
18350 | Did we receive, together with the vegetable, the name by which it is known in its native country? |
18350 | Did you come from Central Asia with the broad bean and the pea? |
18350 | Did you make part of that collection of seeds which the first pioneers of culture brought us from their gardens? |
18350 | Do they die a natural death, and do the survivors then clean out the bodies? |
18350 | Do they hear their brother gnawing at the walls of his lodging? |
18350 | Do they perish outside when the more precocious have one by one taken their places in their vegetable larder? |
18350 | Do they wish to take flight and escape? |
18350 | Do you suffer from any nephritic irritation or from stricture? |
18350 | Do you wish to convince yourself of the efficiency of this mechanism? |
18350 | Does he never perform useful work? |
18350 | Does it really terrify its prey? |
18350 | Does not this lack of growth during November, the mildest month of winter, prove that no nourishment is taken until the spring? |
18350 | Does she employ the rostrum to place the egg in its position at the base of the acorn? |
18350 | Does she perhaps emit vibrations of such delicacy or rapidity that only the most sensitive microphone could appreciate them? |
18350 | Does the bee count upon its sting? |
18350 | Does the female answer the chirp of her_ innamorata_ by a similar chirp? |
18350 | Does the insect really require to emit these resounding effusions, these vociferous avowals, in order to declare its passion? |
18350 | Does the lover make use of his faculty as a means of seduction and appeal? |
18350 | Does the word as a matter of fact come from the American Indians? |
18350 | Does the_ Hydnocystis_ possess a very keen odour, such as we should expect to give an unmistakable warning to the senses of the consumer? |
18350 | Does this actually mean that there are several grubs in the pea? |
18350 | Food? |
18350 | For example, who is there that does not, at least by hearsay, know the Cigale? |
18350 | For whom did I take it? |
18350 | From the moment when the chilblain and the nest of the Mantis were known by the same name were not the virtues of the latter obvious? |
18350 | From what vermin does he free our beds and borders? |
18350 | Had my butterflies apprehensions similar to Master Mouflard''s? |
18350 | Had the Great Peacock butterfly outstripped and anticipated mankind in this direction? |
18350 | How are they warned that the place is taken? |
18350 | How did so much material contrive to occupy so little space? |
18350 | How did they learn of what was happening in my study? |
18350 | How does the mother know that honey, in which she herself delights, is noxious to her young? |
18350 | How does this communal feast terminate? |
18350 | How far is this title deserved? |
18350 | How is it that the Mantis, for who knows how many ages, has been able to outstrip our physicists in this problem in calorics? |
18350 | How is it then that the acridian trusts to a hold so easily broken? |
18350 | How is the convexity of the cymbals altered? |
18350 | How many were there? |
18350 | How shall I dare to appear before the other dogs?" |
18350 | How then is the feeble vibration of the cymbals re- enforced until it becomes intolerable? |
18350 | How then is the sound engendered? |
18350 | I opened my eyes wide,"What is that?" |
18350 | If odour, as we understand it, is the dog''s only guide, how does he manage to follow that guide amidst all these totally different odours? |
18350 | If the root were to fail, and the reservoir of the intestine were exhausted, what would happen? |
18350 | In a word, does she, after her fashion, employ a system of wireless telegraphy? |
18350 | In her long embrace of the poisoned bee, how does Philanthus avoid this sting, which does not willingly give up its life without vengeance? |
18350 | In what fencing- school did the slayer learn that terrible upward thrust beneath the chin? |
18350 | Is he warned of the contents of the subsoil by a general emanation, by that fungoid effluvium common to all the species? |
18350 | Is it not thinkable that they are able to detect, in the gaseous atmosphere, floating particles that are not gaseous? |
18350 | Is it really an odour such as we perceive and understand? |
18350 | Is it really efficacious? |
18350 | Is it the only point that is vulnerable? |
18350 | Is it their custom to kill the wounded and to eviscerate such of their fellows as suffer damage? |
18350 | Is it to be found elsewhere? |
18350 | Is the honey- fed grub, inversely, killed by carnivorous diet? |
18350 | Is the presence of this source of sap fortuitous? |
18350 | Is the song a means of charming, of touching the hard of heart? |
18350 | Is this fluid, evacuated by the intestine, a product of urinary secretion-- simply the contents of a stomach nourished entirely upon sap? |
18350 | Is this practice of post- matrimonial cannibalism a general custom in the insect world? |
18350 | Is this the result of a struggle between rivals? |
18350 | May it not-- Yes!--But, after all, who knows? |
18350 | May not the central portion of the pea be the feeding- bottle of the Bruchid? |
18350 | Might not the Balaninus follow an analogous method? |
18350 | Must I amalgamate some more or less appropriate words of Greek and fabricate a portentous nomenclature? |
18350 | Must not the larva of the Cigale bore its passage in some such fashion? |
18350 | Now are we to take their interminable chant for a passionate love- song? |
18350 | Now the question arises: What is the object of these musical orgies? |
18350 | Now what has happened that these lives around the privileged one should be thus annihilated? |
18350 | Now, what does the Mantis do? |
18350 | Of the sixteen, how many returned to the cage that night? |
18350 | Or is it the result of deliberate choice on the part of the larva? |
18350 | Or is the population being reduced at the expense of sound and healthy insects? |
18350 | Organise something? |
18350 | Perhaps; but how are we to know? |
18350 | Sacred provocations of lovers, are they not in all ages the same? |
18350 | Scientific dreams? |
18350 | Shall we conclude that the Cigale is deaf? |
18350 | Shall we credit it to the Bruchus? |
18350 | Should I begin all over again in the fourth year? |
18350 | So again we will ask: by what process did the egg of the elephant- beetle reach a point so far from the orifice in the acorn? |
18350 | Then why this fruitless labour? |
18350 | They are peaceful intruders, to be sure; but even were they dangerous, did they threaten to rifle the nest, would she attack them and drive them away? |
18350 | Think you the ant will lend an ear? |
18350 | This archetype, the co- ordinator of forms; this primordial regulator; have you got it on the end of your syringe? |
18350 | This conjugal fidelity is delightful; but is it really the rule? |
18350 | To thee what matters winter? |
18350 | To what ideal height will the process of evolution lead mankind? |
18350 | To what should we attribute this superior fertility? |
18350 | To which of the two performers should the palm be given? |
18350 | To- day it is not my intention to sing your merits; I wish simply to ask you a question, being curious: What is the country of your origin? |
18350 | Under the shining head of the Decticus, behind the long face of the cricket, who is to say what is passing? |
18350 | Was I not right to insist? |
18350 | Was I to find such an insect? |
18350 | Was it confusion on their part, or want of guidance? |
18350 | Was it not rather exhaustion after an attempt exceeding the duration of an ephemeral passion? |
18350 | Was it to enjoy the spectacle of a frenzied massacre? |
18350 | Was the beak thrust into the depths of the base merely to obtain, from the choicer parts, a few sips of nutritious sap? |
18350 | Was the beetle piercing the fruit merely to obtain drink and refreshment? |
18350 | Was the whole undertaking merely a matter of personal nourishment? |
18350 | Was Æsop really its author, as tradition would have it? |
18350 | Were you known to antiquity? |
18350 | What are the motives that safeguard the germ? |
18350 | What are these frenzied creatures doing? |
18350 | What are these insects doing? |
18350 | What are these spots, of which I count five, six, and even more on a single pea? |
18350 | What are they doing up there during the fortnight of their festival? |
18350 | What are we to conclude from all this? |
18350 | What are we to conclude from this persistence of the orchestra, its lack of surprise or alarm at the firing of a charge? |
18350 | What are we to give him to eat? |
18350 | What are you going to do with it? |
18350 | What becomes of the earth which is removed? |
18350 | What change occurs in the stomach of the insect that the adult should passionately seek that which the larva refuses under peril of death? |
18350 | What connection has the subject of this chapter with the fuller of cloth? |
18350 | What could the earth do with such prodigality? |
18350 | What do these four huntresses, and others of similar habits, do with their victims when the crops of the latter are full of honey? |
18350 | What do these suns warm? |
18350 | What do they perceive at that distance? |
18350 | What do they want? |
18350 | What do we learn from the slaughter- houses of Chicago and the fate of the beetle''s victims? |
18350 | What does it really represent, as seen from below? |
18350 | What does she require? |
18350 | What does the empty stomach mean? |
18350 | What else do we notice? |
18350 | What formerly was woman? |
18350 | What game does the Gardener Beetle hunt? |
18350 | What had my penny bargain in store for me? |
18350 | What has occurred? |
18350 | What is going to happen next? |
18350 | What is her object when, before proceeding to sink her hole, she inspects her acorn, from above, below, before and behind, with such meticulous care? |
18350 | What is it? |
18350 | What is the nest to her? |
18350 | What is the object of this long perforation, which often occupies more than half the day? |
18350 | What is the result? |
18350 | What is the use of this embarrassing pike, this ridiculous snout? |
18350 | What is there, up there? |
18350 | What is to become of all these supernumeraries, perforce excluded from the banquet for want of space? |
18350 | What name are we to give to this initial phase of the Cigale-- a phase so strange, so unforeseen, and hitherto unsuspected? |
18350 | What organ does this sense affect? |
18350 | What place has maternal foresight here? |
18350 | What profit could life hold henceforth? |
18350 | What sense is it that informs this great butterfly of the whereabouts of his mate, and leads him wandering through the night? |
18350 | What should we do, poor folk as we are, if the_ Courcoussoun_ robbed us of it?" |
18350 | What then has happened, that this unhappy insect should be impaled like a specimen beetle with a pin through its head? |
18350 | What then is the use of the enormous fan- like structure of the male antennæ? |
18350 | What use are the claws of this tiny flea against rock, sandstone, or hardened clay? |
18350 | What was happening in this big- bellied body; what transmutations were accomplished, thus to affect the whole countryside? |
18350 | What was lacking to this egg, that it should fail to produce a grub? |
18350 | What was the lure that so deceived them? |
18350 | What will emerge from these miserable coverings? |
18350 | What would be the use of sight underground? |
18350 | What would happen if I imprisoned her in an opaque receptacle? |
18350 | What would it be upstairs, where the prisoner was, the cause of this invasion? |
18350 | What, then, is meant by the non- appearance of those whose antennæ I removed? |
18350 | When and how? |
18350 | When shall we see the end of it? |
18350 | When the joys of liberty have been tasted will they return-- to- night, to- morrow, or later? |
18350 | Whence comes wheat, the blessed grain which gives us bread? |
18350 | Whence did they come? |
18350 | Whence does it come? |
18350 | Whence, then, arose the errors of his tale? |
18350 | Where are the twelve cubic inches of earth that represent the average volume of the original contents of the shaft? |
18350 | Where did they first go, these veterans of a day? |
18350 | Where in the entomological world shall we find a more famous reputation? |
18350 | Where is it, this original pea, in the world of spontaneous vegetation? |
18350 | Where shall the deadly blow be delivered? |
18350 | Where, and how? |
18350 | Who can explain this strange contrast in habits? |
18350 | Who does not know this superb moth, the largest of all our European butterflies[3] with its livery of chestnut velvet and its collar of white fur? |
18350 | Who has struck the blow? |
18350 | Whom shall we hold responsible for these strange mistakes? |
18350 | Why did Ovid, so prodigal of detail, neglect to mention a dish so appropriate to the occasion? |
18350 | Why did the other twelve fail to appear, although furnished with their supposed guides, their antennæ? |
18350 | Why did their feathery"feelers"leave them in ignorance of events which would have brought flocks of the other Eggar? |
18350 | Why is a vegetable diet the rule in the hives of bees from the very commencement, when the other members of the same series live upon animal food? |
18350 | Why is the larva of the Osmia, which thrives upon albumen, actually fed upon honey during its early life? |
18350 | Why is this particular portion left untouched? |
18350 | Why is this point attacked rather than another? |
18350 | Why should not the domain of smell have its secret emanations, unknown to our senses and perceptible to a different sense- organ? |
18350 | Why should there not be insects with similar habits among the amateurs of corpse- like savours? |
18350 | Why so many grubs to each pea when one pea is sufficient only for one grub? |
18350 | Why such protracted efforts? |
18350 | Why this cellular envelope? |
18350 | Why, indeed, should the insect wander to right or to left upon a twig which presents the same surface all over? |
18350 | Why? |
18350 | Why? |
18350 | Will you give it the structure of a living edifice? |
18350 | Will you inject it with a hypodermic syringe between two impalpable plates to obtain were it only the wing of a fly? |
18350 | Will you tell me how you made the discovery?" |
18350 | With the bean did those ancient teachers also involuntarily bring us the insect which to- day disputes it with us? |
18350 | With what object are these perforations made, so laborious and yet so often unused? |
18350 | Would he, in some distant hedge, receive warning of the bride who waited on my study table? |
18350 | Would it approve of the mixture? |
18350 | Would not such a receptacle arrest or set free the informing effluvia according to its nature? |
18350 | Would the famous Bombyx issue from it? |
18350 | Would the little ogre pass without repugnance from the gamey flavour of a corpse to the scent of flowers? |
18350 | Would they return to the call that attracted them the night before? |
18350 | Yet can he find the truffle at a hundred yards? |
18350 | Yet who has told you, O man of little faith, that what is useless to- day will not be useful to- morrow? |
18350 | You flash pearls, emeralds, and rubies before my astonished eyes: how should I decide to prefer the emerald to the pearl? |
18350 | can they feel the vibration set up by his nibbling mandibles? |
18350 | if you see them why do you not seize them in your talons, crush the pigmies at their work, so that you may proceed with your travail in security? |
18350 | or do they succumb to the intolerant teeth of the first occupants? |
18350 | or his master, in the complete absence of a trail? |
18350 | without therapeutic means, without emetics or stomach- pumps, how is a stomach intact and in good order to be persuaded to yield up its contents? |
3229 | ''And what are strength and courage? 3229 ''Oh Paris, what is power? |
3229 | Art thou a gibbering ghost with war outworn, And thy faint life in Hades not begun? 3229 Me, in my bloomless youth, a maiden child, From Artemis''pure altars and her fane, And bare me, with Pirithous the wild To rich Aphidna? |
3229 | This sign Cassandra show''d to Priam: straight The King wax''d pale, and ask''d what this might be? 3229 What wilt thou with me, mistress of all woe? |
3229 | According to a statement attributed to Stesichorus( 635, 554, B.C.? |
3229 | Art thou a man that holdst my grief in scorn, And yet dost live, and look upon the sun? |
3229 | But, oh ye foolish people, deaf and blind, What Death is coming on you from the sea?" |
3229 | For thither had she brought them by her skill; But Helen saw her not,--nay, who can see A Goddess come or go against her will? |
3229 | Say, wilt thou bear me to another land Where thou hast other lovers? |
3229 | What must I endure Whose soul, for all thy craft, is never tamed? |
3229 | What wilt thou with me? |
3229 | Whose heart, for all thy wiles, is ever pure? |
3229 | who is first or last Of men and gods, unnumber''d and unnamed? |
32362 | Why so? |
32362 | A Bishop then said to the groom,"Perhaps you do not know this man?" |
32362 | And what can I say of the Night, a statue not rare only, but unique? |
32362 | But what a waste of time is this? |
32362 | But what shall I say of the Dawn, a nude woman, who is such as to awaken melancholy in the soul and to render impotent the style of sculpture? |
32362 | Gli amorosi pensier''già vani e lieti Che sien''or'', s''a due morti mi avvicino? |
32362 | The Pope flew into a rage and said:"I have had this desire for thirty years, and now that I am Pope do you think I shall not satisfy it? |
32362 | This Urbino was his man of all work, and had served him a long time; and Michelagnolo said to him:"If I die, what will you do?" |
32362 | What greater vanity is there than that of those who concern themselves more with the name than the fact? |
32362 | Wherefore, when it was finished, the man gazed at it marvelling; and Michelagnolo said:"What do you think of it?" |
32362 | Who is there who has ever seen in that art in any age, ancient or modern, statues of such a kind? |
33203 | Audis ut resonet lætis clamoribus æther, Et plausu et ludis Austria cuncta fremat? |
33203 | Ch''amor, d''amor ribello, Di se stesso e di Psiche oggi sia preda? |
33203 | Chi le saette? |
33203 | Etrusca attollet se quantis gloria rebus Conjugio Austriacæ Mediceæque Domus? |
33203 | Flora lieta, Arno beato, Arno umil, Flora cortese, Deh qual più felice stato Mai si vide, mai s''intese? |
33203 | Pater Arne tibi, et tibi Florida Mater, Gloria quanta aderit? |
33203 | QUID TOT NUNC REFERAM INSIGNES PIETATE VEL ARMIS MAGNANIMOSQUE DUCES EGREGIOSQUE VIROS? |
33203 | Quid statis juvenes tam genialibus Indulgere toris immemores? |
33203 | When Giovio had finished his discourse, the Cardinal turned to me and said:"What do you say, Giorgio? |
33203 | Will not that be a fine work and a noble labour?" |
33203 | ma chi sia che cel creda? |
2198 | Alas, with all these RUCCHE, RUCCHE,said the female dove,"what''s the matter now?" |
2198 | And is it possible,said the ogress,"that the world is lost to this poor Prince, and that no remedy can be found for his malady?" |
2198 | And, pray, who will come so far to see you? |
2198 | But what is it? |
2198 | Have I, forsooth, to tell you my affairs? |
2198 | Nay, but if any one should come,added Fabiella,"would you be displeased?" |
2198 | Softly, mother,replied Vardiello,"matters are not so bad as they seem; do you want more than crown- pieces brand new from the mint? |
2198 | Then do you really love her? |
2198 | What do I think of it? |
2198 | What serpent are you talking of? |
2198 | What shall we do with her? |
2198 | What to do? |
2198 | What way is there,said the King,"to free you from the claws of this syren?" |
2198 | What would you have me do? |
2198 | Where is the counterpane? |
2198 | Who are you,said he,"and whom do you want?" |
2198 | Why do you miscall me? |
2198 | Why should I be displeased? |
2198 | Why so? |
2198 | A month of which, when you want to call a man presumptuous, you say, What cares March?'' |
2198 | After all tis a first fault, and the King is a man of reason; but let the worst come to the worst, what great harm can he do me? |
2198 | Ah, vile, false creature, who has cast so base a spell on her? |
2198 | Am I indeed to comb and wait upon dogs?" |
2198 | Among other things the ogress said to her husband,"My pretty Hairy- Hide, tell me what news; what do they say abroad in the world?" |
2198 | And as Miuccio was going out of the palace gate, the bird met him, and said,"Whither are you going?" |
2198 | And from what mountains was the snow taken to sprinkle over this bosom-- snow contrary to nature, that nurtures the flowers and burns hearts?" |
2198 | And his mate answered,"What''s the matter, husband, that you are lamenting so?" |
2198 | And making a reverence to the King, the old man said to him,"What would your Majesty give to have this noble brother return to his former state?" |
2198 | And should he by chance hear of it, what will he do to me? |
2198 | And the King answered,"Would you give the blood of your children?" |
2198 | And what can you do in the world?" |
2198 | And what is your trade, if it is a fair question?" |
2198 | And what is your trade?" |
2198 | And what soul more hard than marble has destroyed this beautiful flower- pot? |
2198 | And when another said to him,"How do you sell your cloth?" |
2198 | And when the old woman asked her for a little piece of cake she answered gruffly,"Have I nothing to do, forsooth, but to give you cake? |
2198 | And who has given you poison?" |
2198 | And why leave your house, your hearth, your home? |
2198 | Are these the thanks I get for freeing you from rags that you might have hung distaffs with? |
2198 | Are you indeed the pretty mischief- maker? |
2198 | Are your eyes bewitched, or are you blind? |
2198 | As my grandfather used to say, Are we living under the Turks? |
2198 | At last the Prince said to his own daughter, as if in mockery,"And what would you have, child?" |
2198 | At length he said,"Who has made this great blot of ink on the fine paper upon which I thought to write the brightest days of my life? |
2198 | But being afraid to land them on account of the shoals and shallows, he said,"Where would you like me to land you? |
2198 | But see you not this golden chain upon my foot, by which the sorceress holds me prisoner? |
2198 | But what do I say? |
2198 | But whenever any one asked him,"What cloth have you there?" |
2198 | But where shall I look? |
2198 | But why do I complain of my father when I have brought this ill upon myself? |
2198 | But why do we wait? |
2198 | But why do you torment the very life out of you in this way? |
2198 | But, my soul, why do I ask for a prescription? |
2198 | Can you give me those few pence you owe me? |
2198 | Do you drive from your sight her who is the apple of your eye? |
2198 | Do you not know that I have more regard for your life than for my own? |
2198 | Do you not see that your illness is an illness to me? |
2198 | Do you take me to be so foolish as to give you what belongs to me? |
2198 | Do you think me a fool, and that I do n''t know what I am about? |
2198 | Do you wish to see me pine and pant, and die by inches? |
2198 | From what mine has this treasure of beauteous things come to light? |
2198 | Have you eaten the brains of a cat, O sister, that you have driven our advice from your mind? |
2198 | Have you had a quarrel with any one? |
2198 | Have you lost your wits? |
2198 | Have you the cramp, that you do n''t run? |
2198 | Have you the pip, that you do n''t answer? |
2198 | Her whole face became crimson as she said,"If I could induce this maiden to resign her claims, would you then consent to my wish?" |
2198 | Here she saw a huge whale, who said to her,"My pretty maiden, what go you seeking?" |
2198 | How comes it that I find this touchstone, where I left a mine of silver, that was to make me rich and happy?" |
2198 | I am running away before I have seen the wolf; let me open my eyes and ears and look about; may there not be some other as beautiful? |
2198 | In a few days it had grown as tall as a woman, and out of it came a fairy, who said to Zezolla,"What do you wish for?" |
2198 | Is it for a girl to teach her father, forsooth? |
2198 | Is it possible that the world should be lost to me? |
2198 | Is it possible, husband, that you are determined to keep them here to plague my very life out? |
2198 | Is it thus you repay the benefits she has done you: she who took you out of the claws of the ogress and gave you life and herself too? |
2198 | Is my life a black goat- skin rug that you are for ever wearing it away thus? |
2198 | Is there a warrant out against you? |
2198 | Is there anything new?" |
2198 | Is there no way of ridding the house of these creatures? |
2198 | Is there such a dearth of women, or is the race extinct?" |
2198 | Is this my reward for having put good clothes on your back when you were a poor, starved, miserable, tatter- shod ragamuffin? |
2198 | Is this the love you show to her whom you used to call the joy of your soul? |
2198 | Is this the sinecure you give me for having given you a kingdom? |
2198 | Is this, O Father, the affection you bear to your own child? |
2198 | Know you that this is the beautiful maiden whom you wounded with the hairpin? |
2198 | Know you that this is the pretty dove which you ordered to be killed and cooked in a stewpan? |
2198 | Must I then be the husband of a she- goat? |
2198 | Oh where, at what shop of the wonders of Nature, was this living statue made? |
2198 | Oh, father, why have you ruined me? |
2198 | On the shore of Amalfi?" |
2198 | On the way she met Thunder- and- Lightning, who, seeing her walking at a quick pace, said to her,"Whither are you going, wretched girl? |
2198 | Or is the ass dead?" |
2198 | Prithee, how long has a child hardly out of the nursery dared to oppose my will? |
2198 | Renzolla, hearing herself addressed in this off- hand way, replied,"Do n''t you know me, you old goat- beard?" |
2198 | So Moscione had compassion on them, and said,"My masters, how is it you have the head to stand in this furnace, which is fit to roast a buffalo?" |
2198 | So he said,"Friend, will you buy my cloth? |
2198 | So saying she broke the pitcher and returned home; and when her mistress asked her,"Why have you done this mischief?" |
2198 | So the mason called the lad, and Moscione said to him,"Tell me, by the life of your father, what is your name? |
2198 | So they all went on together and travelled ten miles farther, when they met another man, to whom Moscione said,"What is your name, my brave fellow? |
2198 | Tell me, tell me, O cruel man, what incantation was it you made, and what spell did you employ, to bring me within the circle of this cask?" |
2198 | Then Filadoro, throwing herself at the feet of Nardo Aniello, shedding a torrent of tears, said merely,"What have I done to you?" |
2198 | Then embracing his brother fervently, he said to him,"What falcon is that you are carrying on your fist?" |
2198 | Then her father said to her,"Who would ever have told me, my child, that I should see you in this plight? |
2198 | Then his mother, who had no other joy in the world, sat down by his bedside, and said to him,"My son, whence comes all this grief? |
2198 | Then she said to her,"What you doing up there, pretty lass?" |
2198 | Then the King replied,"If you knew that the life of the dragon was the prop of your life and the root of your days, why did you make me send Miuccio? |
2198 | Then the King said to Cannetella,"Well, my life, how does this youth please you?" |
2198 | Then the Prince said,"My dear bear, will you not cook for me, and give me my food, and wait upon me?" |
2198 | Then the Queen said to herself,"What can I lose by satisfying this silly girl, in order to get from her these beautiful things?" |
2198 | Then the cat, who heard this fine reward when she least expected it, began to say,"Is this the return you make for my taking you from beggary? |
2198 | Then the oak, making lips of its bark and a tongue of its pith, said to Cianna,"Whither are you going so sad, my little daughter? |
2198 | What East the pearls to string these teeth? |
2198 | What Ethiopia the ivory to form these brows? |
2198 | What India gave the gold for these hairs? |
2198 | What Tyre the purple to dye this face? |
2198 | What cause have you had to commit this homicide? |
2198 | What country are you from? |
2198 | What course shall I take? |
2198 | What expedient shall I adopt? |
2198 | What fair white creature is this come forth from a yellow rind? |
2198 | What has befallen you? |
2198 | What is to be done? |
2198 | What lovely maiden sprung from a citron- pip?" |
2198 | What melancholy humour has seized you? |
2198 | What say you now? |
2198 | What seashore the carbuncles that compose these eyes? |
2198 | What shall I resolve on? |
2198 | What son of perdition has taught you these capers and put these words into your mouth?" |
2198 | What sweet fruit, from the sour juice of a citron? |
2198 | What will it matter a hundred years hence? |
2198 | When Fioravante heard of this he went again to the old woman and said to her,"What shall I give you now? |
2198 | When Nardo Aniello heard this, he answered,"If you have magic power, as you say, O beauty of the world, why do we not fly from this country? |
2198 | When his wife heard this, she said,"Who knows, husband, but this may be a lizard with two tails, that will make our fortune? |
2198 | Whence are you, and what is your trade?" |
2198 | Whence are you, if one may ask? |
2198 | Where are the eyes that transfixed me? |
2198 | Where are you hidden, you naughty fellow?" |
2198 | Where are you, you rogue? |
2198 | Where are you? |
2198 | Where shall I find a woman equal in beauty to my wife? |
2198 | Where were you born? |
2198 | Wherefore all this trifling? |
2198 | Wherefore do you want to send me to death? |
2198 | Whither, O whither would you go wandering about, wasting your life? |
2198 | Who can approach yon horrid dragon, that carries terror in his look, sows fear, and causes dismay to spring up? |
2198 | Who can climb this tower? |
2198 | Who can describe the shouting and leaping for joy that there was? |
2198 | Who can pass this lake? |
2198 | Who has brought you to this sad condition?" |
2198 | Who has hung with mourning this newly white- washed house, where I thought to spend a happy life? |
2198 | Who has locked up so rich a treasure in a leathern chest? |
2198 | Who has painted red the windows of the sun? |
2198 | Who has played me this trick? |
2198 | Who has shut up so smooth a creature in a prison woven of hair? |
2198 | Who has without a doctor''s licence bled the chief vein of my life? |
2198 | Who is in fault? |
2198 | Who is the wicked soul that has set this die on the table? |
2198 | Who is there to tell my husband? |
2198 | Who knows but this lizard may put an end to all our miseries? |
2198 | Who now can tell the least part of the delight the King felt at this good turn of fortune? |
2198 | Whoever beheld so miserable an inheritance?" |
2198 | Why do n''t you cause this tub to be changed into a fine ship and run into some good harbour to escape this danger?" |
2198 | Will you have him a scholar or a dunce? |
2198 | Would it not have been worse if he had broken my head? |
2198 | You are expelled from life, and do you not go mad? |
2198 | You are young, you are loved, you are great, you are rich-- what then is it you want, my son? |
2198 | You have fallen from all happiness, and will you not cut your throat? |
2198 | a boy, or man in years? |
2198 | and can not I have a wife as white and red as this stone, and with hair and eyebrows as black as the feathers of this raven?" |
2198 | and who has thus trumped my card? |
2198 | are you deaf, that you do n''t hear? |
2198 | brown or fair or ruddy? |
2198 | cried Grannonia,"how came you to do that? |
2198 | replied Tittone,"what can I do to serve thee? |
2198 | small in the waist or round as an ox? |
2198 | tall as a maypole or short as a peg? |
2198 | what are your commands?" |
2198 | what country are you from? |
2198 | where are you, my myrtle? |
2198 | where have you been all this time?" |
2198 | why do ye not give answer to your mother, who once gave you the blood in your veins, and now weeps it for you from her eyes? |
2198 | why have not my mother and father a share in this happiness? |
2198 | you make me be beaten? |
2120 | A glass of burgundy[ poisoned burgundy], your Highness? |
2120 | Among the thousand ill strokes of Fortune, does there at length come one pre- eminently good? 2120 And the Moral?" |
2120 | And you are again our Gracious King, then? |
2120 | Are you( ER) the Professor Gellert? |
2120 | At Schonbrunn, in the short hours, Kappel finds Frau Kappel in state of unappeasable curiosity:''What can it be? 2120 Austria willing for Treaty; is your Majesty willing?" |
2120 | Be swift enough, may not we cut through to Jauer, and get ahead of Daun? |
2120 | But why does n''t it change? 2120 Can it be good,"she might privately think withal,"to begin our reign by kindling a foolish War again?" |
2120 | Can the Reichshofrath say our junction is not complete? |
2120 | Can you repeat any of your Fables? |
2120 | Commissariat horses, drivers? 2120 Eight regiments, you said? |
2120 | Hanover not in real danger,argues he;"if the French had it, would not they, all Europe ordering them, have to give it up again?" |
2120 | Havana, what shall we do with it? |
2120 | Have not you a brother at Freyberg? |
2120 | Have you never been out of Saxony? |
2120 | How can I? 2120 How these things will end?" |
2120 | How, would you wish one Augustus, then, for all Germany? |
2120 | Inevitable, then? 2120 Intending to enclose us in this bad pot of a Seichau; no crossing of the Katzbach, or other retreat to be left us at all?" |
2120 | Meaning to try it then? |
2120 | Peace coming? |
2120 | Perhaps by Jauer, then, still? 2120 Push westward, nearer the King? |
2120 | So? 2120 The Sisyphus stone, which we had got dragged to the top, the chains all beautifully slack these three months past,--has it leapt away again? |
2120 | Their cash is out: except prayer to the Virgin, what but Peace can they attempt farther? 2120 Through, no: and were we through, is not there the Rohrgraben?" |
2120 | Well, this is one good Author among the Germans; but why have not we more? |
2120 | What do you think, is Homer or Virgil the finer as an Epic Poet? |
2120 | What is it, then? |
2120 | What is that you are cooking? |
2120 | What is your complaint? 2120 What to do with it?" |
2120 | Why all this dodging, and fidgeting to and fro? 2120 Why did not Friedrich stay altogether, and wait here?" |
2120 | ''And do you know where the Kallenberg lies?'' |
2120 | ''Are you a Protestant?'' |
2120 | ''Behind Strehlen, say you? |
2120 | ''Better surrender to Christian Austrians, had not you?'' |
2120 | ''How long have you been in prison?'' |
2120 | ''March? |
2120 | ''Sweep rapidly past Ferdinand,--cannot we? |
2120 | ''That is a Letter to me,''answers the Good- man:''What have you to do with it?'' |
2120 | ''The Lager- Haus, say you? |
2120 | ''Were you well treated?'' |
2120 | ''You shall go for soldiers, then;--possibly you will prefer that, you fine powdered velvet gentlemen? |
2120 | ),--are you able to prevent even that? |
2120 | --"''Five thalers bounty for artillery men"say you? |
2120 | --''Perhaps that is because you favored the Reichsfolk while here?'' |
2120 | --and ended by saying:"Succeed here, and all may yet be saved; be beaten here, I know the consequences: but what can I do? |
2120 | --and would try a spoonful of it, in such company; while the rough fellows would forbid smoking,"Do n''t you know he dislikes it?" |
2120 | --surely that is loyal, and not in the old cat''s- paw way? |
2120 | --to replace Czernichef, and the blank he has left there? |
2120 | 592 n."October 5th"( ACCEPTANCE of the resignation, I suppose?) |
2120 | A Gottsched inclined to the Socinian view? |
2120 | A mere adjunct, or auxiliary, we: and we are a Feldmarschall; and you, what is your rank and seniority?" |
2120 | A position not to be attacked on that southern front, nor on either of its flanks:--where can it be attacked? |
2120 | A sally into Brandenburg: oh, could not you? |
2120 | After two such Victories, and such almost miraculous recovery of himself, who shall say what resistance he will not yet make? |
2120 | Alas, is our Czar regardless of Holy Religion, then? |
2120 | All the more, as Division Three is likewise got across from Estremadura, invading Alemtejo: what is to keep these Two from falling on Lisbon together? |
2120 | Am I here to inquire which of you shows bravery, which poltroonery?"'' |
2120 | And does order forward, hither, thither, masses of force to support the De Ligne, the O''Kelly, among others,--but who can tell what to support? |
2120 | And then, on more reflection, Broglio afterwards:''Or not till the 15th, M. le Prince; till I reconnoitre ye and drive in his outposts?'' |
2120 | And where are these to come from; England and its help having also fallen into such dubiety? |
2120 | Are not all men equal?" |
2120 | Artillery recruits are scarce in the extreme; demand bounty: five thalers, shall we say?" |
2120 | Breslau road? |
2120 | Busy about many things;--"using the altar,"it seems,"by way of writing- table[ self or secretaries kneeling, shall we fancy, on those new terms? |
2120 | But a certain Sergeant, Fugleman, or chief Corporal, stept out, saluting reverentially:"Regiment Bernburg, IHRO MAJESTAT--?" |
2120 | But having solidly eaten out said Magazine, what could Hulsen do but again move rearward? |
2120 | But why weary you with such details of my labors and my sorrows? |
2120 | Butturlin and the Russians grumble to themselves:"And you to take all the credit, as you did at Kunersdorf? |
2120 | Can there by no method be some distant notion afforded of them to the general reader? |
2120 | Cautious Henri never would make the smallest attack on Soltikof, but merely keep observing him;--the end of which, what can the end of it be? |
2120 | Choiseul frankly admits that he has come to the worst: ready for concessions, but the question is, What? |
2120 | Consideration is:"To Holstein? |
2120 | Did not they cancel it, and flatly refuse?" |
2120 | Did you ever hear such a cannonade before? |
2120 | Do n''t speak to me of dangers; the last Action costs me only a Coat[ torn, useless, only one skirt left, by some rebounding cannon- ball?] |
2120 | Embarrassing? |
2120 | Engaged, yes, and alas with what? |
2120 | Ephraim and Itzig, mint- masters of that copper- coinage; rolling in foul wealth by the ruin of their neighbors; ought not these to bleed? |
2120 | Fancy Loudon''s astonishment, on the third day:"While we have sat consulting how to attack him, there is he,--unattackable, shall we say?" |
2120 | For which he severely suffered: and perhaps repented,--who knows? |
2120 | For which, after all, is not everybody thankful, less or more? |
2120 | Fouquet has obeyed to the letter:"Did not my King wrong me?" |
2120 | Fouquet lost, Glatz unrelieved-- Nay, just before marching off, what is this new phenomenon? |
2120 | Friedrich''s grief about Berlin we need not paint; though there were murmurs afterwards,"Why did not he start sooner?" |
2120 | Going upon Glogau; upon Breslau?" |
2120 | Goltz and Gudowitsh are engaged on Treaty of Peace; Czar frankly gives up East Preussen,"Yours again; what use has Russia for it, Royal Friend?" |
2120 | HENRI..."I confess I am in great apprehension for Colberg:"--shall one make thither; think you? |
2120 | Have not you heard, then? |
2120 | Have you read La Fontaine?" |
2120 | He asked me,"Do n''t you know the rules of war, then; that you fire after chamade is beaten?" |
2120 | He has an Anti- Danish Russian Army just now in that neighborhood; he will not be safe in Holstein;--where will he be safe?" |
2120 | He passionately entreats Czernichef to be helpful to him,--which Czernichef would fain be, only how can he? |
2120 | Heyde consults his people:''KAMERADEN, what think you should I do?'' |
2120 | How a Baron, hitherto of honor, could all at once become TURPISSIMUS, the Superlative of Scoundrels? |
2120 | How form in order of battle here, with Ziethen''s batteries shearing your columns longitudinally, as they march up? |
2120 | How get these masses of enemies lured away, so that you could try such a thing? |
2120 | How is this fire to be got under? |
2120 | Human talent, diligence, endeavor, is it but as lightning smiting the Serbonian Bog? |
2120 | I asked the Commandant, who was behind me, which way I should march; to the Crown- work or to the Envelope? |
2120 | I can not; how can I? |
2120 | I know not if you have arranged with Duke Ferdinand for a proportionate succor, in case his French also should try to penetrate into Saxony upon me? |
2120 | I suppose these are bad times, are not they?" |
2120 | I took arrangements with General Fouquet[ about that long fine- spun Chain of Posts, where we are to do such service?] |
2120 | If Most Christian Majesty and his Pompadour will continue this War, is it he, or is it you, that can furnish the Magazines? |
2120 | If even this day it be allowed us? |
2120 | If everybody will do miracles, can not we perhaps still manage it, in spite of Fate?''" |
2120 | Impregnable, under Prince Henri in far inferior force: how will you take it from Daun in decidedly superior? |
2120 | Intends to finish Silesia altogether;--cannot he, after such a beginning upon Glatz last Year? |
2120 | Is it DIE GELEHRTE KRANKHEIT( Disease of the Learned,"Dyspepsia so called)? |
2120 | Is not Tottleben gone? |
2120 | Let them fall off into Peace, like ripe pears, of themselves; we can then turn round and say,''Save you harmless? |
2120 | Liegnitz itself, was not that( as many opine) a disaster due to cunctation, not of Loudon''s? |
2120 | Loudon aiming for Neisse, do n''t you think? |
2120 | No getting across the Rohrgraben on them, says your Excellenz? |
2120 | No use marching thitherward farther:--whither now, therefore? |
2120 | Nobody knows better than Friedrich in what perilous crisis he now stands: beaten here, what army or resource has he left? |
2120 | Nobody seems to be able for his business; Lefebvre a blockhead( DUMMER TEUFEL), who knows nothing of mining: the Generals, too, where are they? |
2120 | Not far from the Lordship Casserey, where there is a Water- mill, the King asked me,''Have n''t you missed the Bridge here?'' |
2120 | One of the King''s first questions was:''But how have I offended Warkotsch?'' |
2120 | Or Destiny, perhaps, may have tried him sufficiently; and be satisfied? |
2120 | Or awkward Inadvertence only, practically meaning little or nothing?" |
2120 | Or perhaps it will be a second Maxen to his Majesty and us, who was so indignant with poor Finck?" |
2120 | Or, again, TO HENRI: Berlin? |
2120 | Perhaps a sudden clutch at Lacy, in the opposite direction, might be the method of recalling Daun, and reaching him? |
2120 | Perhaps by a Surprisal; by extreme despatch?'' |
2120 | Perhaps it will be some days yet before he do anything?'' |
2120 | Perhaps, at heart still Lutheran, and has no Religion?" |
2120 | Poor Paul, does not he father himself, were there nothing more? |
2120 | Readers recollect one Blucher"Prince of Wahlstatt,"so named from one of his Anti- Napoleon victories gained there? |
2120 | Saxony is all theirs; can not they maintain Saxony? |
2120 | Since September 18th, there had been three Cabinet- Councils held on this great Spanish question:"Mystery of treachery, meaning War from Spain? |
2120 | Six yards? |
2120 | So that, at Parchwitz, next morning( August 16th), the question,"To Glogau? |
2120 | Some of my Commissariat people have been misbehaving? |
2120 | Some stroke at the enemy on their south or southwestern side, where we have not molested them all day? |
2120 | That is the barbaric Russian notion:''who are you, ill- formed insolent persons, that give a loose to your tongue in that manner? |
2120 | The 4 or 5,000 good muskets lying on the field, shall not we take them also? |
2120 | The King is far away; what are Eugen''s 5,000 against these? |
2120 | The alloy this Year became as 3 to 1:--what other remedy? |
2120 | The outer world, especially the Vienna outer world, is naturally a little surprised:"How is this, Feldmarschall Daun? |
2120 | The sentries are in mutual view: each Camp could cannonade the other; but what good were it? |
2120 | The unspeakable Sovereign Woman, is she verily dead, then, and become peaceable to me forevermore?" |
2120 | Then the Turks; the Danes,--"Might not the Danes send us a trifle of Fleet to Colberg( since the English never will), and keep our Russians at bay?" |
2120 | There ensued about the banks of the Fulda, and the question, Shall we be driven across it sooner or not so soon? |
2120 | To Breslau?" |
2120 | To Friedrich the Russian movements are, and have been, full of enigma:"Going upon Colberg? |
2120 | To which of the gods, if not to Soltikof again, can he apply? |
2120 | Towards sunset of the 29th, exuberant joy- firing rises far and wide from the usually quiet Austrian lines,--"Meaning what, once more?" |
2120 | We are over with it, then?" |
2120 | We have bread only for eight days; our Magazines are at Schweidnitz and Breslau: what is to be done? |
2120 | We outnumber them,--but as to trying fight in any form? |
2120 | We spoke of the Choiseul Peace- Negotiation; of an offer indirectly from King Carlos,"Could not I mediate a little?" |
2120 | Well, have you one?" |
2120 | What can this be? |
2120 | What has it come to? |
2120 | What have you to do here? |
2120 | What is the use of such talk?'' |
2120 | What is to be done? |
2120 | What ought an Army- Chaplain to preach or advise? |
2120 | When Bamberg was ransomed, Spring gone a year,--Reich and Kaiser, did they respect our Bill we had on Bamberg? |
2120 | Where are our recruits, our magazines, our resources for a new Campaign? |
2120 | Where do you come from?" |
2120 | Where is the place to trample on it, before opening door or window, or saying a word to the King or anybody? |
2120 | Whether Austria''s and the world''s prophecy would have been fulfilled? |
2120 | Who the weakest- headed was( perhaps JOMINI, among the widely circulating kind? |
2120 | Why do n''t you close on him at once, if you mean it at all? |
2120 | Why does no one undertake a Translation of Tacitus?" |
2120 | Why have we no good Historians? |
2120 | Will this make no impression? |
2120 | Would modern Friends of Progress believe it? |
2120 | Yes: but if Broglio have 130,000, what will it come to? |
2120 | [ An uncommonly broad neckcloth on it, did you observe?] |
2120 | and perhaps from her Papa,"Shall SHE, think you, O my ditto?" |
2120 | answers Pitt, with a flash as if from the empyrean:"Who sent for Most Catholic Majesty?" |
2120 | as who had not? |
2120 | counted he:"What Alliance can there be with that ever- fluctuating People? |
2120 | interrupts My Lady, who was sitting there:''Herr Good- man, what is that?'' |
2120 | probably firing withal; and getting killed in consequence? |
2120 | where is the King?" |
2116 | ''But what am I to do now? 2116 ''Did you study BIBLICA diligently?'' |
2116 | ''Hm, Copy? 2116 ''Is Teutschland a Nation; is there in Teutschland still a Nation?'' |
2116 | ''That is he who had such quarrelling with Wolf?'' 2116 ''The grand May Review at Berlin just ahead, wo n''t you look in; it is straight on your road home?'' |
2116 | ''Thetics and Exegetics with Fortsch[ How the deuce did Fortsch teach these things? 2116 ''Under what Pro- rector were you inscribed?'' |
2116 | ''What form of Government do you reckon the best?'' 2116 ''What other useful Courses of Lectures( COLLEGIA) did you attend?'' |
2116 | ''What years?'' 2116 ''Where did you( ER) study?'' |
2116 | ''Who were your other Professors in the Theological Faculty?'' |
2116 | And why? |
2116 | Beaten my Jew, have n''t I? |
2116 | Did you ever hear of anything so shocking? |
2116 | Do you see the man in the garden yonder, sitting smoking his pipe?'' 2116 He made thousand protestations of his fidelity to your Majesty; became pretty weak[ like fainting, think you, Herr Resident? |
2116 | I must tell you a story of the King of Prussia''s regard for the Law of Nations,continues he to Walpole? |
2116 | Inn, Baireuth, say you? 2116 Meaning battle and wrestle again?" |
2116 | Not much above a million of you, say the French;"and surely there is room enough East of the Alleghanies? |
2116 | Ocean Highway to be free; for the English and others who have business on it? |
2116 | Saxe having eaten Bergen- op- Zoom before our eyes, what can withstand the teeth of Saxe? |
2116 | Something real this time? |
2116 | Sunset? |
2116 | Surely not ill, your Majesty; and much better in late years,answered Sulzer.--"In late years: why?" |
2116 | The King has held his Consistory; and it has there been discussed, Whether your case was a mortal sin or a venial? 2116 The King of France continues me as Gentleman of the Chamber, say you; but has taken away my Title of Historiographer? |
2116 | Their Captain WAS, first, to be Lacy, old Marshal Lacy; then, failing Lacy,''Why not General Keith?'' 2116 Well, Monsieur Sulzer, how are your Schools getting on?" |
2116 | What would your Majesty think to be elected Stadtholder of Holland? 2116 Which Discovery, then?" |
2116 | Who is this Voltaire? |
2116 | Why does n''t Voltaire come; as Quantz of the Flute has done? |
2116 | Yours? 2116 ''A L''ENFER?'' 2116 ''Austrian Officer?'' 2116 ''But how can one create Something out of Nothing?'' 2116 ''Did the King bid me wait? 2116 ''Hm, Steuer- Scheine, and the Jew Hirsch to be Court- Jeweller, you say?'' 2116 ''How is it, O flower of human thinkers, that I can not get on with his Majesty, or make the least way?'' 2116 ''Let us carry our own goods at least, Silesian linens, Memel timbers, stock- fish; what need of the Dutch to do it?'' 2116 ''MA CHERE COUSINE,''could I have believed it, at one time? |
2116 | ''Obscurities?'' |
2116 | ''One would like it, of all things,''answered the other:''but the King?'' |
2116 | ''Prize Courts? |
2116 | ''Was the like ever heard of?'' |
2116 | ''What will the handsome Compensation be, I wonder?'' |
2116 | ''What?'' |
2116 | ''Why not go on with your expenditures, ye Sea- Powers? |
2116 | ''Why starve our Italian Enterprises; heaping every resource upon the Netherlands and Saxe?'' |
2116 | ''s short statement; and made answer:"Monsieur, and is it you that will pick holes in the King''s Law? |
2116 | ( Are We a Hackney- Coachman, then?) |
2116 | --"Amiable young Nobleman, is not it one''s duty to salute, in passing such a one? |
2116 | --"But your written promise to Voltaire?" |
2116 | --"Inclination rather to good?" |
2116 | --''If it is still time to declare[ to announce in Saxony and demand payment for] Notes one holds on the Steuer? |
2116 | --''Very well,''answered he;''but where will you find Kings of that sort?'' |
2116 | --''Were you ever in Germany?'' |
2116 | --''Yes, Monsieur; and what should we do with that?'' |
2116 | --''You are in a circle,''said I;''how will you get out of it?'' |
2116 | --Voltaire can at once have: but to get it in the friendly shape, and as if for a time only? |
2116 | --but what farther can he do?'' |
2116 | --for what will a poor man not do in extreme stress of Fortune? |
2116 | 209,? |
2116 | 220 n.] Could there be a phenomenon more indisputably of bramble nature? |
2116 | ?^( p.212 Book XVI) VOILA!] |
2116 | A Bookseller Gosse[ read JORE, your Majesty? |
2116 | ACH, MEIN LIEBER SULZER, you do n''t know( do you, then?) |
2116 | Ah, could not one get to some Country Lodge near you,''the MARQUISAT''for instance? |
2116 | And Leibnitz discovered it, so far as true?" |
2116 | And Versailles, with its sulky Trajans, its Crebillon cabals, what charm is in Versailles? |
2116 | And gave rise to many conjectures among the idle of mankind,"What, on Earth, or under Earth, can be the meaning of it?" |
2116 | And is not England drowned too?" |
2116 | And now there will be peace in our garden of the gods, and perpetual azure will return? |
2116 | And now, Friedrich''s Ownership of Silesia recognized by all the Powers to be final and unquestionable, surely nothing more is wanted? |
2116 | And so poor Fred is ended;--and sulky people ask, in their cruel way,"Why not?" |
2116 | And then the Pompadour, could she, Head- Butterfly of the Universe, be an anchor that would hold, if gales rose? |
2116 | And this is the noble Lady''s way of thinking, up in her fine Schloss yonder? |
2116 | And why? |
2116 | And yet Phoebus Apollo going about as mere Cowherd of Admetus, and exposed to amuse the populace by his duels with dogs that have bitten him? |
2116 | And yet-- and yet--?" |
2116 | At the name Keith, a slight shadow( very slight, for how could Keith help himself?) |
2116 | At what date? |
2116 | Breeches- pocket MINUS most other requisites: alas, with such methods as you have, what can come of it? |
2116 | But are there no obscene details at all, then? |
2116 | But what then? |
2116 | By Henzi?'' |
2116 | Can money and life be spent better? |
2116 | Clever, but wrong, do you say? |
2116 | Could not Suspicion-- why can not she!--take her natural rest; and all these terrors vanish? |
2116 | Do not imagine you will make people believe that black is white; when one[ ON, meaning_ I_] does not see, the reason[ sic]? |
2116 | Do readers recall the circumstance? |
2116 | Does any reader know the Dollart? |
2116 | Enumerate, then, do me the pleasure of enumerating, What he contrived that the Heavens answered Yes to, and not No to? |
2116 | France, Spain, Sardinia, the Italian Petty Principalities and Anarchies: suppose they tug and tussle, and collapse there as they can? |
2116 | French Tragedies played at Berlin, I myself taking part; an Englishman Envoy of France there: strange circumstances these, are n''t they?" |
2116 | Friedrich does cast it out, more and more, henceforth,--"ACH, MEIN LIEBER SULZER, what was your knowledge, then, of that damned race?" |
2116 | Friedrich never would bite at this salutary scheme for strengthening the House of Austria:''A bad man, is not he?'' |
2116 | Friedrich, now that Voltaire has fallen widower, renews his pressings,"Why do n''t you come?" |
2116 | HAVE BEEN LAYING IT ON TOO THICK( No date; IN VERSE).--"Marcus Aurelius was wo nt to"--(Well, we know who that is: What of Marcus, then?) |
2116 | Had no hand, he, I hope, in that latter atrocity? |
2116 | Had not Britannic Majesty, for his dear Daughter''s sake, come to the rescue in this crisis, where had we been? |
2116 | Have not we gained Fontenoy, Roucoux, Lauffeld; and strong- places innumerable[ mostly in a state of dry- rot]? |
2116 | He has three"--what shall we call them? |
2116 | He is come''on pressing business,''--perhaps not of stage- diamonds alone? |
2116 | He looked fixedly at me, for a while; and then said, without farther preface,''Who are you, Monsieur?'' |
2116 | Heavens, what?" |
2116 | How am I to live, if you take my very money from me?'' |
2116 | How, in the name of wonder, it can be; and even, Whether it is at all? |
2116 | Is not that a gracious little touch? |
2116 | It is to the good Plougher, not ultimately to the good Cannonier, that those portions of Creation will belong? |
2116 | It is well known there have been, to the metaphysical head, difficulties almost insuperable as to How, in the System of Nature, Motion is? |
2116 | It will be very difficult, my friend;--why did not you yourself do it? |
2116 | Jew Ephraim( exaggerative and an enemy to this Hirsch House) answers,''Justly? |
2116 | Leave was at once granted him, almost huffingly; we hope not with too much readiness? |
2116 | Linsenbarth answers his own"And why?" |
2116 | Live silent there, and see your face sometimes?" |
2116 | Manoeuvred about; bewildering the mind of Royal Highness and the Stadtholder("Will he besiege Breda? |
2116 | My Discovery an Error? |
2116 | Nay, when the Judges, not hiding their surprise at the form of this Document, asked, Will you swear it is all genuine? |
2116 | Not much real money: except, indeed, the money were offered you gratis, from other parties interested? |
2116 | Nous sommes de mene metier; Faut- il de moi vous defier, Et cacher vos bonnes fortunes?" |
2116 | Oh, M. de Voltaire, and why not leave it to him, then? |
2116 | Oh, my President, that DIRA REGNANDI CUPIDO!--"Question is, however, What the Academy will do? |
2116 | On the other hand, Voltaire has been asking himself,''My 450 pounds worth of Jewels, were they justly valued, though?'' |
2116 | Our portfolios and CASSETTE( money- box) were thrown into an empty trunk[ what else could they be thrown into?] |
2116 | POTSDAM PALACE( No date): SIRE, NZAY I CHANGE MY ROOM?... |
2116 | Perhaps M. de Voltaire did say it:--why not, had it only been prudent? |
2116 | Perhaps all this will be more effective than Congresses of Breda? |
2116 | Practical"BLASPHEMY,"is it not, if you reflect? |
2116 | Quand pourrai- je d''une style honnete Dire:''Le cul de mon heros Va tout aussi bien que sa tete''?" |
2116 | Readers have heard of that"TRAJAN EST- IL CONTENT?" |
2116 | Rubrics, vanished Shadows, nearly all those high Dames and Gentlemen; LA PAUVRE Saint- Pierre,"eaten with gout,"who is she? |
2116 | Special Commission?'' |
2116 | That it is in my power to stick you into a hole underground for the rest of your life? |
2116 | That, think you?" |
2116 | The 60,000 Austrians are but 30,000; the-- In fact, you will have to make Peace, what else?" |
2116 | The Officers noticed this; came straight to me, and said,''What letters has He there, then?'' |
2116 | The Piece has nothing noisy, nothing untrue; but what has it of importance? |
2116 | The exact number of soldiers I can not learn:"a SCHILDWACHE of the Town- guard[ means one; surely does not mean Four?] |
2116 | The incalculable Yankee Nations, shall they be in effect YANGKEE("English"with a difference), or FRANGCEE("French"with a difference)? |
2116 | The meetings are occasionally of stormy character; Voltaire''s patience nearly out:"But did n''t I return you that Topaz Ring, value 75 pounds? |
2116 | Then as to''Dissecting the Brains of Patagonians;''what harm, if you can get them gross enough? |
2116 | Then too, in the Court- circle itself,"is Trajan pleased,"or are all things well? |
2116 | They tempt one to ask, What is the good of wit, then, if this be it? |
2116 | Think what a stab; crueler than daggers through one''s heart:"Crebillon?" |
2116 | Tie some tin- canister to your too- sensitive tail? |
2116 | To provide for your own paltry kindred in the State- employments; to palaver grandly with all comers; and publish melodious Despatches of Van Hoey? |
2116 | To which Friedrich answered,"Subsidies, your Excellency?" |
2116 | Twenty pounds a Year certain; let us guess it twenty, with glebe- land, piggeries, poultry- hutches: who is now to get all that? |
2116 | Was there ever seen such a Paper; one end of it contradicting the other? |
2116 | Was there ever seen such radiancy of valor? |
2116 | Was there ever such a Pluto varnished into Literary Rose- pink? |
2116 | What have we to do with them? |
2116 | What if it should even lose Italy? |
2116 | What is to be done with such an Ass of Balaam? |
2116 | What is to become of us; whose is America to be?" |
2116 | What say you?'' |
2116 | What? |
2116 | Who can have done it? |
2116 | Why he fell upon so ambitious a title for his Royal Cottage? |
2116 | Will he do this, will he do that?") |
2116 | Will perhaps be printed by some inquiring PITTSBURGHER, one day, after good study on the ground itself? |
2116 | Yes;--and how many Ploughed Fields bearing Crop have you? |
2116 | Your road lies that way, then? |
2116 | Yours, of all people''s?" |
2116 | [ L''ECHANGE, The Exchange, or WHEN SHALL I GET MARRIED? |
2116 | [ ONLY proof:^????? |
2116 | [ ONLY proof:^????? |
2116 | [ ONLY proof:^????? |
2116 | [ ONLY proof:^????? |
2116 | [ ONLY proof:^????? |
2116 | ], all or the best part of them, which I have here in pawn for Papa''s Bill: 650 pounds was it not? |
2116 | asked the King one day,--long after this, but nobody will tell me exactly when, though the fact is certain enough:"How goes our Education business?" |
2116 | can it be possible? |
2116 | cries he,( can not I be allowed to-- to vomit, then?''" |
2116 | crosses the mind:"Is this, by ill luck, the Feldmarschall Keith?" |
2116 | hysterically shrieks Voltaire:"in the wrong, were n''t you, then; and fined thirty shillings?" |
2116 | in the Garden?'' |
2116 | in the declaration?'' |
2116 | mere echo answering, What,--till a Signora Sister of Barberina the Dancer''s answered:''Try Berlin, and King FRIDERICO IL GRANDE there? |
2116 | says he, quite historically: Yes, Why? |
2116 | thinks Friedrich:"Sure enough, this is a strange Trismegistus, this of mine: star fire- work shall we call him, or terrestrial smoke- and- soot work? |
2116 | thought his cattle:--but, after all, how could he well help it, with such a set? |
28926 | What shall we do? |
28926 | -- End of the Peninsula campaign-- Fifty or sixty thousand dead-- Who is responsible? |
28926 | -- End of the Peninsula campaign-- Fifty or sixty thousand dead-- Who is responsible? |
28926 | 11._--Will any body in this country have the patriotic courage to reform the army? |
28926 | 258_ Consummatum est!_-- Will the outraged people avenge itself? |
28926 | 92 What will McClellan do? |
28926 | And what is the army for? |
28926 | And where has Seward acquired all this information? |
28926 | Archbishop Hughes is to influence Paris and France,--but whom? |
28926 | Are his heart, his soul, and his convictions to be looked for in the debate, or in the proclamation? |
28926 | Are the European statesmen to be prepared beforehand, or are they to be befogged and prevented from judging for themselves? |
28926 | Are we already so far? |
28926 | But does Mr. Lincoln perceive other, more awful, signs of the times? |
28926 | But if the rebellion is crushed before January 1st, 1863, what then? |
28926 | But is that all which is needed in these terrible emergencies? |
28926 | But is this the condition of the Union? |
28926 | But will they have the energy? |
28926 | Can Seward be fool enough to irritate England, and entangle this country? |
28926 | Can Seward for a moment believe that Wikoff knows Europe, or has any influence? |
28926 | Can anybody be a more noble incarnation of the American people than J. S. Wadsworth? |
28926 | Can it be ignorance of this elementary knowledge with which is familiar every corporal in Europe? |
28926 | Can this man never go out from this rotten treadmill? |
28926 | Curious way of treating and dealing with rebellion, with rebels and traitors; why not arrest them? |
28926 | Do these mummies intend to conduct a war without boldness? |
28926 | Do they believe they can awake enthusiasm for their persons? |
28926 | Do they not know better here in the ministry and in the councils? |
28926 | Do they not know better? |
28926 | Do those Fabiuses know what they talk about? |
28926 | Does Seward believe it? |
28926 | Does he see the bloody handwriting on the wall, condemning his unnatural, vacillating, dodging policy? |
28926 | Has Scott used up his energy, his sense, and even his military judgment in defending Washington before the inauguration? |
28926 | Has he not studied Napoleon''s wars? |
28926 | Have they no blood; are they fishes? |
28926 | Here,_ our great rulers and ministers_ shut the more closely their mind''s(?) |
28926 | How are we to understand this man? |
28926 | How can the Minister of Foreign Affairs advise the President to resort to such a measure? |
28926 | How could it have been otherwise? |
28926 | How far the diplomats sent by the administration are prepared for this task? |
28926 | How will foreign nations behave? |
28926 | How will the Congress act? |
28926 | How will the people stand this masterly administrative demonstration? |
28926 | I am sure that McClellan may lose the whole army, and why not if he continues as he began? |
28926 | If he was so pugnacious in January, why has he not made with the same number of men a flying expedition only to Centreville, right under his nose? |
28926 | If the rebels turn loyal before that term? |
28926 | If the treasonable revolt is conceded to the Cotton States, on what ground can it be denied to the thus called Border States? |
28926 | Is Seward so ignorant of international laws, of general or special history, or was it only said to throw dust? |
28926 | Is he too old, or too much of a Virginian, or a hero on a small scale? |
28926 | Is it possible to say such trash even as a joke? |
28926 | Is that all that he knows of that hateful watchword-- strategy-- nausea repeated by every ignoramus and imbecile? |
28926 | Is there any thing in the world capable of opening this people''s eyes? |
28926 | Is there no penitentiary for all this mob? |
28926 | Is this man mad? |
28926 | Mr. Mercier retorted,"How can you, sir, have such notions? |
28926 | Mr. Seward, Mr. Seward, why is your name to be recorded among the most ardent supporters of this_ strategy_? |
28926 | O Mr. Seward, Mr. Seward, who is it that contributed to turn the current against the cause of right and of humanity? |
28926 | Of what earthly use can be such_ politique provocatrice_ towards England? |
28926 | Oh, why has he established his headquarters in the city, among flunkeys, wiseacres, and spit- lickers? |
28926 | Oh, why this Congress possesses not the omnipotence of an English Parliament? |
28926 | Or does his imagination or his patriotism carry him away or astray? |
28926 | Or is it only to give some money to a hungry, noisy, and not over- principled office- seeker? |
28926 | The men will come; but will statesmanship and generalship come with them? |
28926 | The rebels act in this manner; but what point was found out, what blows were ever dealt by McClellan? |
28926 | The vessel and the crew are excellent, and would easily obey the hand of a helmsman, but there is the rub, where to find him? |
28926 | This movement was perhaps necessary, and could not be avoided; but why at the start had such a basis been selected? |
28926 | Very well; but why not use for it the best, the most decided, and the most thorough means and measures? |
28926 | Was it ignorance in McClellan, or his inborn disrespect of truth, or disrespect of the country, or something worse, that made him make such a report? |
28926 | Was it neutral or honest? |
28926 | Was not some Union- searching at the bottom of that stoppage? |
28926 | Were the Magyars recognized as such in 1848-''49? |
28926 | What a thoughtlessness to press on Russia the convention of Paris? |
28926 | What an idea have those Americans of sending a secret agent to Canada, and what for? |
28926 | What are doing in Europe all these various agents of Mr. Seward, and paid by Uncle Sam? |
28926 | What can I do, what can I do? |
28926 | What can signify his close alliance with such outlaws as Wikoff and the Herald, and pushing that sheet to abuse England and Lord Lyons? |
28926 | What is the matter with Scott, or were the halo and incense surrounding him based on bosh? |
28926 | What is the matter? |
28926 | What is the use of urging on the foreign Cabinets-- above all, England and France-- to rescind the recognition of belligerents? |
28926 | What is this administration about? |
28926 | What is this wheel within a wheel? |
28926 | What sacrifice the official leaders and pilots? |
28926 | What the d---- is Seward with his politicians''policy? |
28926 | What will McClellan do? |
28926 | What will Mr. Seward say to it? |
28926 | What will Seward and Chase say to it, and even old Abe, who himself dreams of re- election, or at least his friends do it for him? |
28926 | What will be its march-- what stages? |
28926 | What will be the result of this experimentalization, so contrary to sound reason? |
28926 | What will he do with 600? |
28926 | What will the anglophiles of Boston say to this? |
28926 | When are his great plans to burst out? |
28926 | When will they begin to see through McClellan, and find out that he is not the man? |
28926 | When will they start, when begin to mould an army? |
28926 | When will we deal blows? |
28926 | When, oh, when will come the opposite? |
28926 | Which of the two will be Mr. Lincoln''s fate? |
28926 | Who around me approaches this ideal? |
28926 | Who is to be taken in? |
28926 | Why did not McClellan take_ the road_ himself, after Hooker was obliged to leave the field? |
28926 | Why does Mr. Seward dabble in war and strategy at home? |
28926 | Why does not the administration call for more on the North, and on the free States? |
28926 | Why shows he not a little_ strategy_ under his nose here? |
28926 | Why? |
28926 | Will Halleck warn the country against McClellan''s incapacity? |
28926 | Will McClellan display unity in conception, and vigor in execution? |
28926 | Will it be one more illusion to be dispelled? |
28926 | Will it turn out that the same men who are to- day at the head of affairs will be the men who shall bring to an end this revolt or revolution? |
28926 | Will the cowardly murderers be exemplarily punished? |
28926 | Will the shallow rhetors, will the would- be leaders in the Congress, be as subservient to the bunglers as they have been up to this hour? |
28926 | Will this McClellan ever advance? |
28926 | Will this outraged people avenge itself on the four or five diggers? |
28926 | Yes, Stanton is, but how about some others? |
28926 | _ Consummatum est!_-- Will the outraged people avenge itself? |
28926 | _ Quousque tandem_--O SEWARD--_abutere patientiam nostram?__ Sept. |
28926 | _ Who began the civil war?_ is repeatedly discussed by those quill cut- throats and allies on the Thames and on the Seine. |
28926 | all these Weeds, Sandfords, Hughes, Bigelows, and whoever else may be there? |
28926 | and, above all, what are the so expensive commander and his staff for? |
28926 | what are they about? |
34533 | Why then should the_ Andrena_ feel alarm? 34533 1187?) 34533 ;_ ki_, what? 34533 ;_ kon_, what( adjective)? 34533 According to Leo Africanus, at the close of the 14th or very early in the 15th century their rich town of Zibid( Aidhab?) 34533 On the 11th of that month Gobryas was despatched to put an end to the last semblance of resistance in the countryand the son(?) |
34533 | The names of these five bells were thus:--Peter, Magdalen,(?) |
18545 | ''Lest the pond murmur:Who is this stranger?"''" |
18545 | ''Terrible days, do you say, Aimeri? 18545 A bit used up, is n''t he?" |
18545 | And Chevalier? |
18545 | And since then he has never reappeared? |
18545 | And the solid sort of person found by your mother, he, too, does not count any more? |
18545 | And you, Monsieur Marc, do n''t you feel qualms in the stomach? |
18545 | Are n''t you going to unfasten your cloak? |
18545 | Are you crazy? 18545 Are you on good terms with her?" |
18545 | Are you pleased with the play, Master? |
18545 | Are you subject to attacks of dizziness? |
18545 | Are you well up in the Revolution? |
18545 | But,objected Trublet,"what do you want me to say?" |
18545 | By the way, gentlemen, what say you to the Imperial decree concerning the actors of Paris, dated from the Kremlin? 18545 Can you,"she inquired;"guarantee that there is nothing after death?" |
18545 | Chevalier? 18545 Chevalier?" |
18545 | Come now, my darling, how can you suppose that a priest, a priest in his surplice, would show himself in a restaurant? |
18545 | Did everything go off well to- night? |
18545 | Do n''t you love your own Félicie? 18545 Do n''t you think there''s something queer about that cab?" |
18545 | Do we rehearse to- day? |
18545 | Do you know Nanteuil is engaged at the Comédie- Française? |
18545 | Do you know anyone who knows the Minister? |
18545 | Do you know,said Ellen Midi to Falempin,"that Nanteuil is going to join the Comédie- Française?" |
18545 | Do you like those machines? |
18545 | Do you sometimes feel as though you must laugh or cry for no apparent reason, about nothing at all? |
18545 | Do you suppose that is easy in our profession? 18545 Doctor,"inquired Constantin Marc,"are you by chance one of those who do not admire War? |
18545 | During your sleep? |
18545 | Félicie, why on earth are you poking about in my wardrobe like that? |
18545 | Félicie, you surely can not have forgotten our little room, in the Rue des Martyrs? |
18545 | Had he any talent? |
18545 | Have you seen Trublet? 18545 How are you getting on yourself, Meunier? |
18545 | How are you, Doctor Socrates? |
18545 | How did she manage it? |
18545 | How do you expect me to know that? |
18545 | I? 18545 I?" |
18545 | In my wardrobe? |
18545 | Is Nanteuil wounded? |
18545 | Is The Hague a pretty place? |
18545 | Is n''t it queer? 18545 Is n''t somebody following us?" |
18545 | Is n''t that Baron Deutz? |
18545 | It has not stopped here? 18545 It was not for that you came, was it?" |
18545 | It''s ridiculous, is n''t it? |
18545 | Mademoiselle Nanteuil, it''s your cue----Where has Nanteuil got to? 18545 May I?" |
18545 | Monsieur Constantin Marc, have you read_ Les Soirées de Neuilly_? |
18545 | Monsieur Girmandel? 18545 Montparnasse? |
18545 | No more? |
18545 | Oh, Monsieur Chevalier, why did n''t you stay till the end? 18545 Quite sure?" |
18545 | Really? |
18545 | Really? |
18545 | So much the better? |
18545 | So you approve of the morals of that gawk of a Perrin, do you? 18545 So you are making your début at the Comédie? |
18545 | So you look after the job at night, old fellow? |
18545 | Tell me, Monsieur Deutz, when you met me yesterday, were you in very bad company that you did not raise your hat to me? |
18545 | That you, Chevalier? 18545 Then are you a believer?" |
18545 | They say she is still very beautiful, your mother, is it so? |
18545 | Was he dead when you saw him? |
18545 | Well, then, in what way is his death deplorable? |
18545 | Well, then? 18545 Well, then?" |
18545 | Well, what would you have done, had you known it? |
18545 | Were you wretched, Robert, when you were away from me? |
18545 | What are you talking about? |
18545 | What did you do there? |
18545 | What do I see there at the back of the stage? 18545 What do we know about it?" |
18545 | What else, my dear? |
18545 | What has become of him? |
18545 | What has come over you? 18545 What have you got in your glove- box?" |
18545 | What is that,she asked,"that big dark ball on the poplar?" |
18545 | What on earth do you mean? |
18545 | What then? |
18545 | What''s that? 18545 What''s the matter?" |
18545 | What, Baron Deutz? 18545 What, you have not read_ Les Soirées de Neuilly_, by Monsieur de Fongeray? |
18545 | What? |
18545 | When do you make your début at the Comédie? |
18545 | When you told me that you wanted me, I did n''t keep you waiting, did I? 18545 Whence do you obtain custom and tradition?" |
18545 | Whence do you receive authority? 18545 Where are we going?" |
18545 | Where is the stomach exactly? |
18545 | Where? |
18545 | Who, then? |
18545 | Whom do you expect to follow us? |
18545 | Why do they insist on my being nothing but an_ ingénue_? |
18545 | Why does it stop here? |
18545 | Why not? 18545 Why wo n''t you?" |
18545 | Why? |
18545 | Why? |
18545 | Why? |
18545 | Why? |
18545 | Will Monsieur de Ligny be arrested? |
18545 | Will you have some tobacco, old fellow? |
18545 | You are not a Parisian? |
18545 | You are sure you were not sleeping? |
18545 | You ask me why it was he rather than another? 18545 You believe then, doctor, that Chevalier was fully and entirely morally responsible?" |
18545 | You did not go with women, I should hope? |
18545 | You promise? |
18545 | You really think so, Madame Doulce? 18545 You think it witty, I suppose, to talk nonsense when anyone asks you a serious question?" |
18545 | You think not? |
18545 | You think then that one can be cured if one wills it? |
18545 | You will excuse me? |
18545 | You will prevent me? 18545 You would not care to go back to our house out there?" |
18545 | You? |
18545 | _So then, it is for Nanteuil''s sake that he blew out his brains? |
18545 | _Tell me, Dutil, how could that little Nanteuil, who is pretty and intelligent, get herself mixed up with a dirty mummer like Chevalier?" |
18545 | _Who is taking the part of Florentin?" |
18545 | ''The pistol?'' |
18545 | ''The sabre, the knife?'' |
18545 | ''Will you fight with the sword?'' |
18545 | Adolphe Meunier, the poet, laying his hand on his shoulder said:"Everything going well, Romilly?" |
18545 | And she gave utterance to a general reflection:"Robert, have you noticed that people are never natural? |
18545 | And she had replied indignantly:"Chevalier? |
18545 | And what would become of me? |
18545 | And you?" |
18545 | And, while she was undressing, the lines surged to her lips, and she whispered them:"Moi, j''ai blessé quelqu''un? |
18545 | Are we going to spend our lives staring at each other like this, wild with each other, full of despair and rage? |
18545 | Are you sure of that?" |
18545 | Are you well again now?" |
18545 | As Robert, in the bed, listened in silence, she went up to him and shook him:"Then it''s all the same to you if I carry on with Pradel?" |
18545 | At school his masters used to ask him:''Why are you laughing?'' |
18545 | At the mere mention of the name of Agnès, the doctor murmured delightedly from among his cushions:"Mes yeux ont- ils du mal pour en donner au monde?" |
18545 | Awakened by the light of the candle and by the mouse- like noise made by the seeker, Madame Nanteuil demanded:"Who is there?" |
18545 | Before leaving the house, Ligny asked Madame Simonneau:"Where have you put him?" |
18545 | Besides, I am not particularly in love with Marivaux----What are you laughing at, doctor? |
18545 | But it''s true-- what are we doing like this? |
18545 | But see, Félicie, remember----"But she was losing patience:"Well, what do you want me to remember?" |
18545 | But was Chevalier a man quite like all the rest? |
18545 | But was he a medical man, able to judge with certainty? |
18545 | But what did that prove? |
18545 | But what if he had seen incorrectly? |
18545 | But what is the good of a ridiculous and declamatory suicide? |
18545 | But what would you have?" |
18545 | But what''s the good of being a great artist if one is n''t happy? |
18545 | Can we rebel against them? |
18545 | Can you perhaps tell me?''" |
18545 | Chevalier, following up his idea, inquired:"You would hardly say that Girmandel was still a young man, would you?" |
18545 | Choking with astonishment and anger, he stammered:"Have n''t the right to? |
18545 | Constantin Marc, appearing with Nanteuil, hastily exclaimed:"What about my scenery, Monsieur Pradel?" |
18545 | Could n''t he, if his determination was irrevocable, have carried it out discreetly, with proper pride? |
18545 | Could n''t the fellow have killed himself at home? |
18545 | Did n''t she know how to behave? |
18545 | Did she behave like a woman of the town? |
18545 | Did she lack a certain sense of niceness which warns women as to what they may or may not do? |
18545 | Did she not exercise a certain selection? |
18545 | Do n''t you think that is so?" |
18545 | Do you hear, Félicie?" |
18545 | Do you know Claude Bernard?" |
18545 | Do you know how Romilly would have me say:''I do not fear you''? |
18545 | Do you know of anything more stupid or more odious than the sort of people we have seen demanding justice? |
18545 | Do you mind?" |
18545 | Do you still see him?" |
18545 | Do you think he is faithful to her? |
18545 | Do you think it never happens that actors, by their carelessness or clumsiness, ruin a work which was meant to reach the heights? |
18545 | Do you think that sort of thing natural?" |
18545 | Do you?" |
18545 | Does a man retain his powers of judgment in the first moments of surprise and horror? |
18545 | Does n''t it flatter your vanity to possess a little woman who makes people cheer and clap her, who is written about in the newspapers? |
18545 | Does she think people have forgotten her adventures? |
18545 | Fagette, my child, what the mischief are you doing at a ball given by the Minister of Police, if you have n''t any stockings with golden clocks? |
18545 | Have I been brought up any worse than other women? |
18545 | Have I less religion than they have? |
18545 | Have I put my foot in it? |
18545 | Have n''t the right to? |
18545 | Have you heard what he did to Marie- Claire? |
18545 | Having dismissed them, he inquired, as he signed some letters:"Well, Madame Doulce, what news do you bring?" |
18545 | He asked himself anxiously, with a feeling of real uneasiness:"What in the world would he do if he came back, that dismal actor fellow? |
18545 | He questioned her:"Then the others?" |
18545 | He? |
18545 | He? |
18545 | Her gaze met the call to rehearsal lying open on the bedside table, and she sighed:"What is the use of my being a great actress if I am not happy?" |
18545 | How are you, my friend?" |
18545 | How can you expect Chevalier to get out through the dormer- window? |
18545 | How does Madame Colbert make out that I owe her thirty- two francs? |
18545 | How is it possible to relieve and console without lying?" |
18545 | I must have the Revolution_ in_ me, do you understand?" |
18545 | In your days, did actresses control their-- how did you put it? |
18545 | Is it true what they say, that Jeanne Perrin gives money to women? |
18545 | Is n''t it so?" |
18545 | Is n''t_ La Mère confidente_ by Marivaux?" |
18545 | It is kind of him, is n''t it?" |
18545 | Madame Doulce was there, of course? |
18545 | May we not therefore consider that their own responsibility is full-- like the moon?" |
18545 | Maybe you''ve heard of the war of the Prussians, young man?" |
18545 | Michon, do n''t my stays crease at the back, on the right?" |
18545 | Nanteuil repeated:"''Terrible days, do you say, Aimeri? |
18545 | Now why do you want this unfortunate Chevalier to go to church?" |
18545 | Of what was he capable? |
18545 | Only a fortnight ago he asked me, in the theatre,''Who is that little fair- haired woman?'' |
18545 | Pointing to a cab which had just passed them, she exclaimed:"Robert, did you see?" |
18545 | Proclamation,''Do you understand?" |
18545 | See?" |
18545 | Seeing her so collected and serene, he said to her:"You yourself are not of a nervous temperament?" |
18545 | She had stopped on the topmost step in front of the doors, and was chatting with Constantin Marc and a few journalists:"... Monsieur de Ligny? |
18545 | She inquired:"Where do I make my entrance from?" |
18545 | She raised her spiteful little face, and replied:"And if he is my lover?" |
18545 | She was wo nt to ask herself:"Why is one made like that, with a head, arms, legs, hands, feet, chest, and abdomen? |
18545 | She''s got a cheek of her own to show herself here, do n''t you think?" |
18545 | So do not be astonished when you see----""Did you invent that precious story, doctor?" |
18545 | So it''s you? |
18545 | Subtle, intellectual, is n''t it?" |
18545 | Suddenly she released herself:"Do n''t you hear the gravel creaking?" |
18545 | Sur lui, sans y penser, fis- je choir quelque chose?" |
18545 | Tell me, Robert, how many really well- made women have you ever seen? |
18545 | That''s not too much, is it?" |
18545 | The old man who did not understand, inquired:"Where is it, your works?" |
18545 | Then, flitting off to another idea:"Tell me; Socrates, how comes it that you saw this sordid individual rather than another? |
18545 | There are those who have asked, what was the cause of so cruel an end? |
18545 | To whom could we apply for a certificate?" |
18545 | Was he the sort of man to commit a crime, to do something dreadful? |
18545 | Was n''t I right? |
18545 | Was she pleased with Félicie?" |
18545 | Was she wanting in taste? |
18545 | We shall be blocking up the door?" |
18545 | Well, Madame Doulce, what news?" |
18545 | What are you doing there?" |
18545 | What are you thinking of, my friend?" |
18545 | What did he say?" |
18545 | What did those words portend? |
18545 | What does a generation of living folk amount to, in comparison with the numberless generations of the dead? |
18545 | What does it matter, since I love you? |
18545 | What else, indeed, will permit them to hope?" |
18545 | What good did it do to him to torment her? |
18545 | What harm is she doing us?" |
18545 | What if he had taken a mere graze of the skin for a serious lesion of the brain and skull? |
18545 | What is our will of a day before the will of a thousand centuries? |
18545 | What is to become of him?" |
18545 | What more can I tell you?" |
18545 | What was he going to do? |
18545 | What will you do with absolute power, you simpletons?" |
18545 | What''s to- day? |
18545 | What? |
18545 | When the cab stopped, she said:"You will not be vexed with me, will you, my own Robert, at what I am going to say? |
18545 | When the presiding judge of the court- martial asked him:''Who were your accomplices?'' |
18545 | Where are you going?" |
18545 | Where is Romilly? |
18545 | Where is the colonel of the 10th cohort? |
18545 | Who could tell what she would say? |
18545 | Why did she take lovers of that type? |
18545 | Why indeed should not humanity abolish the law of murder? |
18545 | Why is one made like that and not otherwise? |
18545 | Why should I fear you? |
18545 | Why should not humanity succeed in changing nature to the extent of making it pacific? |
18545 | Why should not humanity, miserably puny though it is and will be, succeed, some day, in suppressing, or at least in controlling the struggle for life? |
18545 | Will you?" |
18545 | Would he once more have to see him prowling round Félicie?" |
18545 | Would he return to the Odéon? |
18545 | Would he stroll through its corridors displaying his great scar? |
18545 | You are not ill, are you? |
18545 | You do n''t feel like going back to the works yet?" |
18545 | You do n''t want to go back to the works, eh?" |
18545 | You hear me? |
18545 | You know the Odéon?" |
18545 | You tell me I have n''t the right?" |
18545 | You''ll take a cup of tea, wo n''t you, Monsieur de Ligny?" |
18545 | You? |
18545 | inquired Dr. Hibry, who was a lover of the theatre,"Chevalier? |
18545 | ma surprise est, fis- je, sans seconde; Mes yeux ont- ils du mal pour en donner au monde?" |
18545 | qui pourrait, lui dis- je, en avoir été cause? |
10422 | A what? |
10422 | Again? |
10422 | Am I strong enough to face my Marcia? |
10422 | Am I to sit here while the whole world makes itself ridiculous by staring at me? |
10422 | And is it seemly, Commodus, that I should speak to you before a gladiator? |
10422 | And what has he done, do you say? 10422 And you?" |
10422 | Are you like all other women? |
10422 | Are you looking for nobility? 10422 Are you mad then, too?" |
10422 | Are you never serious? |
10422 | Are you ready to die, Galen? |
10422 | Are you weary of life? |
10422 | Are you, too, a god-- like Commodus-- that you can see so shrewdly? |
10422 | As you love me, will you wear this? |
10422 | But I thought you were Pertinax''friend? |
10422 | But how could you denounce her? 10422 But what would be the use?" |
10422 | Can Livius have lied? |
10422 | Can you imagine me a god? |
10422 | Could you ever afford to ignore me and intrigue behind my back? |
10422 | Did he tell you names? |
10422 | Did n''t Pertinax see some one''s body kicked into the bushes? |
10422 | Did you send that Christian into the tunnel to kill Commodus? |
10422 | Do you mean it is common gossip in the palace? |
10422 | Do you mean, they strike tonight, and have n''t warned me? |
10422 | Do you not trust me? |
10422 | Do you prefer to tell Caesar how true you have been to that oath? 10422 Do you wish to get both of us into trouble?" |
10422 | Does he look like him? |
10422 | Evil-- but for whom? |
10422 | For love of you, what have I not done? |
10422 | For whom then? |
10422 | Galen, have you-- will that poison kill him? |
10422 | Gold? |
10422 | Has he a javelin under the cloak? |
10422 | Has it ever occurred to you to wonder how many soldiers in the legions in the distant provinces were certified as dead before they left Rome? |
10422 | Have n''t you a man in here who might be made nervy enough to kill him? |
10422 | Have you had any dealings with Sextus? |
10422 | He will return the compliment and show us how to despise at wholesale, eh? 10422 How do you know?" |
10422 | How is our astrologer? |
10422 | How long will you last? 10422 How long?" |
10422 | How much did you drink? |
10422 | How so? |
10422 | I? 10422 Idiocy? |
10422 | If I did not, could I stand before you and receive these insults? |
10422 | If I should do it? |
10422 | If I should marry you and make you empress,he said,"how long do you think I should last after that? |
10422 | If Marcia should do it--? |
10422 | If he will be advised by you? |
10422 | If it were n''t that he might change his mistress at the same time--"You would betray me-- eh? |
10422 | If so, of what am I accused? |
10422 | If you ca n''t think for yourself, do you expect to benefit the world by thinking? |
10422 | If you have a fever, should n''t I bring Galen? |
10422 | In this storm, Commodus? 10422 Is n''t it their turn for a respite? |
10422 | Is that fellow to be trusted? |
10422 | Is that why you sacrificed a white bull recently? |
10422 | Is this Marcia''s doing? 10422 Is this a tribunal?" |
10422 | Know him? |
10422 | Know you a poison,asked Marcia,"that will not harm one who merely tastes it, but will kill whoever drinks a quantity? |
10422 | Liberties? |
10422 | Love him? 10422 May we depend on you?" |
10422 | Narcissus? 10422 Not for yourself, Galen?" |
10422 | O Hercules, my Roman Hercules-- does love, that makes us women see, put bandages on men''s eyes? 10422 Pertinax, what will become of you? |
10422 | Poison for Commodus? |
10422 | Rome is full of poisoners, but has n''t Pertinax a sword? |
10422 | Shall I name all Rome? |
10422 | Shall we hear what Sextus has to say to that? |
10422 | So Pertinax shall drink this? |
10422 | The bricks and mortar? 10422 The point is not, who shall kill Commodus? |
10422 | Then you do n''t like me? |
10422 | There is a robber at large, named Maternus-- you have heard of him? 10422 To whom? |
10422 | Well, is n''t that better than risking your neck trying to make and unmake emperors? |
10422 | Well, then, what do we go to talk about? |
10422 | What are all these women doing? |
10422 | What can I do for you? 10422 What choice is there than that which Paris made?" |
10422 | What did I warn you? |
10422 | What do they propose to substitute in popular esteem? |
10422 | What does Sextus intend? 10422 What does she want with Livius? |
10422 | What else do you know about Maternus? |
10422 | What else? |
10422 | What has happened to you, Galen? 10422 What has happened?" |
10422 | What is the matter with your police? 10422 What is then?" |
10422 | What name will you take? 10422 What now, Narcissus? |
10422 | What now? |
10422 | What now? |
10422 | What odds? 10422 What of it? |
10422 | What pledge do you propose to offer me? |
10422 | What will you advise him about Sextus? |
10422 | What? |
10422 | What? |
10422 | When I pass through the streets I read men''s faces--"Snarled, have they? 10422 When did you see Sextus last?" |
10422 | When did you write? |
10422 | When? 10422 Where did you get this bauble?" |
10422 | Where is Flavia Titiana? |
10422 | Where is Marcia? 10422 Where is Sextus?" |
10422 | Where is he? |
10422 | Which is it to be? |
10422 | Who cares how they behave in Rome? 10422 Who enabled me?" |
10422 | Who is the magician? 10422 Who is this? |
10422 | Who is to be the next to try to reason with her-- you? |
10422 | Who killed him? |
10422 | Who knows what names are on the lists already? 10422 Who knows?" |
10422 | Who now? |
10422 | Who slew my shadow? 10422 Whom do you propose to visit in the palace?" |
10422 | Whom would she nominate? 10422 Whose death?" |
10422 | Whose soul should grow sick sooner than that of Commodus? |
10422 | Whose was it? |
10422 | Whose was the star that fell? |
10422 | Whose will it be? 10422 Why am I called Commodus?" |
10422 | Why be jealous of the Christians? |
10422 | Why do n''t you? |
10422 | Why do you laugh, Galen? |
10422 | Why not then? 10422 Why not? |
10422 | Why should I have? 10422 Why waste time?" |
10422 | Why? |
10422 | Will you not wish me success? |
10422 | Will you teach your grandmother to suck eggs? 10422 With what result? |
10422 | Yet what else is there in the world except to be a Roman citizen? |
10422 | You find me not man enough for the senate to make a god of me-- is that it, Galen? |
10422 | You have heard of her latest indiscretion? |
10422 | You heard Galen? |
10422 | You indiscreet? 10422 You mean me? |
10422 | You promised her, of course? |
10422 | You understand me? |
10422 | You will let him go? |
10422 | You will not say farewell? |
10422 | You will obey? |
10422 | You? |
10422 | Your duty? 10422 Am I to tell the emperor that robbers in the mountains and the laxity of local government make the selection of Antioch unwise? |
10422 | And now Bultius Livius-- have you heard about it?" |
10422 | And what has come over Marcia that she accepted it?" |
10422 | And you admire that monster?" |
10422 | Are some more of her Christians in the carceres, I wonder? |
10422 | Are you mad? |
10422 | Are you no more than Flavia Titiana''s cuckold and Cornificia''s plaything?" |
10422 | Are you the man they call Maternus?" |
10422 | Are you the only Roman? |
10422 | Are your lips wet? |
10422 | But Pertinax-- did he not bid you warn me?" |
10422 | But are you sure he favors Pertinax?" |
10422 | But do you suppose I did not fail in certain instances? |
10422 | But have you ever seen an eagle rob a fish- hawk of its catch?" |
10422 | But where is Marcia?" |
10422 | But where would you find another Commodus if some lurking miscreant should stab me from behind? |
10422 | But who shall be raised in his place? |
10422 | By Romulus and Remus, what is happening to Rome? |
10422 | Can you imagine the great Julius hesitating to destroy a friend or spare an enemy?" |
10422 | Can you imagine what Rome would be like without him? |
10422 | Commodus''? |
10422 | Cornificia at last broke on his reverie:"You wish to join them, Pertinax? |
10422 | Did n''t Marcus Aurelius beget him from his own loins, and was n''t Marcus Aurelius the greatest of all philosophers? |
10422 | Did n''t he surround young Commodus with all the learned idealists he could find? |
10422 | Did they come to his aid when the senate and his friends deserted him?" |
10422 | Did they guard the tunnel? |
10422 | Do I love Rome? |
10422 | Do I love her? |
10422 | Do n''t you hate to be currycombed by a rascal with corns on his fingers?" |
10422 | Do n''t you know that Marcia protects Maternus? |
10422 | Do you appreciate that? |
10422 | Do you follow me?" |
10422 | Do you hear me, Marcia? |
10422 | Do you never learn by your mistakes?" |
10422 | Do you realize what that means? |
10422 | Do you see how deep my blade went? |
10422 | Do you take us for madmen?" |
10422 | Does Cornificia endure such peasant talk? |
10422 | Evil? |
10422 | Has Pertinax no iron in him? |
10422 | Has Rome no iron left? |
10422 | Having destroyed it, why did he then tell the slaves who he was? |
10422 | He poisoned his own father; why not you? |
10422 | He will ascend the throne unguilty of his predecessor''s blood--""And you?" |
10422 | Her voice was almost hoarse:"What is it? |
10422 | How do you suppose I have escaped capture? |
10422 | How is this for a proposal?" |
10422 | How shall a man answer that? |
10422 | How will that affect Pertinax, except to make him emperor?" |
10422 | How? |
10422 | I am responsible to--""Did you hear?" |
10422 | If I can persuade Marcia that her life is in danger from Commodus--""But how?" |
10422 | If he runs and hides, we shall all be accused of having helped him to escape; whereas--""What?" |
10422 | If they prefer to turn on me, what matter? |
10422 | If you keep killing all the best ones off at practise, what shall we do when the day comes? |
10422 | Is Pertinax its victim? |
10422 | Is he a two- headed witness who shall swear my life away? |
10422 | Is it absent, too? |
10422 | Is it jealousy?" |
10422 | Is it right, in a crisis, to put me off with subtleties?" |
10422 | Is n''t that a confusion for you? |
10422 | Is no sword left in Rome? |
10422 | Is she obscure? |
10422 | Is there no light?" |
10422 | Is this Marcia''s expedient to keep me out of the arena? |
10422 | Is this some new scheme of hers to keep me from enjoying my manhood? |
10422 | Is this the murderer? |
10422 | It was Galen who spoke next:"Pertinax, if you might choose an emperor, whom would you nominate? |
10422 | Know you a safe poison, Galen?" |
10422 | Marcia''s? |
10422 | Mine? |
10422 | Norbanus, you accept my leadership?" |
10422 | Now then-- what do you want in writing? |
10422 | Now-- any weapons underneath that tunic?" |
10422 | Now-- do you love me?" |
10422 | Octavian and Anthony were under oath; and how long did that last? |
10422 | Or do you keep it to impose on us as a relief from her more noble conversation? |
10422 | Or has some handsomer Adonis won your Venus from you? |
10422 | Or is he a Christian?" |
10422 | Otherwise, how should an outlaw whose face is so well known that you recognized him instantly-- how should he dare to approach the palace?" |
10422 | Otherwise-- you understand?" |
10422 | Ride to a conference do we? |
10422 | Sextus retorted with a challenge:"Now will you send for your commander? |
10422 | Shall I betray my friends to save my own old carcass? |
10422 | Shall I poison the man whom I taught as a boy? |
10422 | Shall I refuse, and be drowned in the sewer by Marcia''s slaves? |
10422 | Shall I run away and hide, at my age, and live hounded by my own thoughts, fearful of my shadow, eating charity from peasants? |
10422 | Shall he do this, or do that? |
10422 | Shall we exchange him for a weak- kneed theorist?" |
10422 | Should he change the name? |
10422 | So you recover, Albinus? |
10422 | Some of us might go down in the scramble, but--""Does Marcia give Christian reasons to the emperor?" |
10422 | Something colorless that can be mixed with wine? |
10422 | Something without flavor? |
10422 | The Christians, I suppose, have been telling you to keep me out of the arena? |
10422 | The arena where a man salutes a dummy emperor before a disguised one kills him? |
10422 | The crucified too?--what about Maternus?" |
10422 | The marble that the slaves must haul under the lash? |
10422 | The ponds where they feed their lampreys on dead gladiators? |
10422 | The problem is, who shall warn Marcia? |
10422 | The senate, where they buy and sell the consulates and praetorships and guaestorships? |
10422 | The temples where as many gods as there are, Romans yell for sacrifices to enrich the priests? |
10422 | The tribunals where justice goes by privilege? |
10422 | Then the emperor''s voice again:"Is that you, Marcia? |
10422 | They despise their''Roman Hercules''( Commodus''favorite name for himself)--who does n''t? |
10422 | Three, or is it four, Livius? |
10422 | To kill Caesar himself?" |
10422 | To me?" |
10422 | Were n''t you in Cornificia''s house, with the guard at the gate? |
10422 | What can I do?" |
10422 | What do you and I need beyond clothing, a weapon, armor, a girl or two and a safe place for retreat? |
10422 | What do you know about poisons?" |
10422 | What else does any man receive who serves Rome? |
10422 | What has happened to upset you?" |
10422 | What has happened?" |
10422 | What has happened?" |
10422 | What if he should turn around and secure himself and his estates by telling Commodus all he knows? |
10422 | What is Commodus without his dummy? |
10422 | What is evil but the likeness of a deed-- its echo-- its result-- its aftermath? |
10422 | What is it, Stilchio? |
10422 | What is the latest news about the other factions?" |
10422 | What kind of aftermath should that deed have?" |
10422 | What kind of bond? |
10422 | What plot have you discovered now? |
10422 | What then? |
10422 | What will she do to me next? |
10422 | What will you do? |
10422 | What woman can remember you are anything but Caesar when you smile at her? |
10422 | When the time comes to slay Commodus-- but is Commodus dead? |
10422 | Where are those men who are to try to kill me at my birthday games?" |
10422 | Where is Marcia?" |
10422 | Where is Narcissus? |
10422 | Where is Narcissus?" |
10422 | Where is his admission paper?" |
10422 | Where is the messenger?" |
10422 | Where was it he heard-- who told him-- that Maternus had been caught? |
10422 | Which oath holds the first one or the second?" |
10422 | Who are you, that you should lecture me?" |
10422 | Who can get past the praetorian guard?" |
10422 | Who did it, I say?" |
10422 | Who did it? |
10422 | Who did it? |
10422 | Who do you suppose has fallen foul of her?" |
10422 | Who else wants to bet?" |
10422 | Who hatched it? |
10422 | Who is it you have brought?" |
10422 | Who is this?" |
10422 | Who is to act Perseus?" |
10422 | Who knows that you mixed any poison?" |
10422 | Who knows what Bultius Livius may have told him? |
10422 | Who knows what Sextus is doing? |
10422 | Who knows which of us will be alive tomorrow morning? |
10422 | Who shall aspire to the throne if Commodus dies?" |
10422 | Who will lend me a dagger? |
10422 | Who would believe it? |
10422 | Who would like to bet with me?" |
10422 | Whose name do you guess comes first?" |
10422 | Why are you irresolute?" |
10422 | Why are you vexed?" |
10422 | Why did n''t she summon the praetorians and hand you over to them?" |
10422 | Why has he put Galen first, I wonder?" |
10422 | Why should I set Rome above my own convenience?" |
10422 | Why should he choose that place, of all places in the world, and midnight, to destroy the identification parchment? |
10422 | Why should he visit Daphne? |
10422 | Why the bitter mood?" |
10422 | Why? |
10422 | Why?" |
10422 | Why?" |
10422 | Would you like to attempt it? |
10422 | You are quite sure? |
10422 | You ask me what is Rome? |
10422 | You have contracted to deliver fifty bales at yesterday''s price? |
10422 | You have turned your back upon the better part of Rome to--""Better part?" |
10422 | You let yourself be killed like any sow under the butcher''s knife, and dare to leave me shadowless? |
10422 | You see this powder? |
10422 | You think you will slay Commodus? |
10422 | You want to ruin me? |
10422 | You? |
10422 | Yours? |
26163 | ***** Must we then give up fathoming the depths of life? |
26163 | ***** To what date is it agreed to ascribe the appearance of man on the earth? |
26163 | And this effect, could hardly be called a phenomenon of"adaptation": where is the adaptation, where is the pressure of external circumstances? |
26163 | And what was the principle discovered by Galileo? |
26163 | Are there not some objects privileged? |
26163 | Are we not free to direct our attention where we please and how we please? |
26163 | But can an organic structure be likened to an imprint? |
26163 | But contingent in relation to what? |
26163 | But do we ever think true duration? |
26163 | But does duration really play a part in it? |
26163 | But does it fabricate in order to fabricate or does it not pursue involuntarily, and even unconsciously, something entirely different? |
26163 | But how can we fail to see that intelligence is supposed when we admit objects and facts? |
26163 | But how do we fail to see that the symmetry is altogether external and the likeness superficial? |
26163 | But how does he fail to see that the real result of this so- called division of labor is to mix up everything and confuse everything? |
26163 | But in what direction can we go beyond them? |
26163 | But is it not plain that science itself invites philosophy to consider things in another way? |
26163 | But is it the mechanism of parts artificially isolated within the whole of the universe, or is it the mechanism of the real whole? |
26163 | But is it thus that matter presents itself? |
26163 | But may it not be the same in the case of every acquired peculiarity that has become hereditary? |
26163 | But of what? |
26163 | But what can remain of matter when you take away everything that determines it, that is to say, just energy and movement themselves? |
26163 | But what does the word"cause"mean here? |
26163 | But what shall we say of the little beetle, the Sitaris, whose story is so often quoted? |
26163 | But with what time has it to do? |
26163 | But, even if we accept this notion of the evolutionary process in the case of animals, how can we apply it to plants? |
26163 | But, in speaking of a progress toward vision, are we not coming back to the old notion of finality? |
26163 | But, in the adaptation of an organism to the circumstances it has to live in, where is the pre- existing form awaiting its matter? |
26163 | But, in time thus conceived, how could evolution, which is the very essence of life, ever take place? |
26163 | But, in what it affirms, does it give us the solution of the problem? |
26163 | Can the form, without matter, be an object of knowledge? |
26163 | Can we go further and say that life, like conscious activity, is invention, is unceasing creation? |
26163 | Created by life, in definite circumstances, to act on definite things, how can it embrace life, of which it is only an emanation or an aspect? |
26163 | Deposited by the evolutionary movement in the course of its way, how can it be applied to the evolutionary movement itself? |
26163 | Does science thus get any nearer to life? |
26163 | Does the state of a living body find its complete explanation in the state immediately before? |
26163 | Essentially practical, can it be of use, such as it is, for speculation? |
26163 | For what is reproduction, but the building up of a new organism with a detached fragment of the old? |
26163 | How can I suppress all this? |
26163 | How can we speak, then, of an incoherent diversity which an understanding organizes? |
26163 | How comes it, then, that affirmation and negation are so persistently put on the same level and endowed with an equal objectivity? |
26163 | How could mere chance work a recasting of the kind? |
26163 | How could the part be equivalent to the whole, the content to the container, a by- product of the vital operation to the operation itself? |
26163 | How could they be anything else? |
26163 | How does it go to work? |
26163 | How eliminate myself? |
26163 | How is this point to be determined? |
26163 | How must this solidarity between the organism and consciousness be understood? |
26163 | How otherwise could we understand that it passes through distinct and well- marked phases, that it changes its age-- in short, that it has a history? |
26163 | How then can the idea of Nought be opposed to that of All? |
26163 | How then could the plant, which is fixed in the earth and finds its food on the spot, have developed in the direction of conscious activity? |
26163 | How then has the plant stored up this energy? |
26163 | How, for instance, from childhood once posited as a_ thing_, shall we pass to adolescence, when, by the hypothesis, childhood only is given? |
26163 | How, in that case, can the variation be retained by natural selection? |
26163 | How, then, could this occur in the domain of life, where, as we shall show, the interaction of antagonistic tendencies is always implied? |
26163 | How, then, having posited immutability alone, shall we make change come forth from it? |
26163 | How, then, shall we choose between the two hypotheses? |
26163 | How, then, shall we expect it to develop an organ such as the eye? |
26163 | How, with what is made, can we reconstitute what is being made? |
26163 | In this privileged case, what is the precise meaning of the word"exist"? |
26163 | In vain, we shall be told, you claim to go beyond intelligence: how can you do that except by intelligence? |
26163 | In what drawer, ready to open, shall we put it? |
26163 | In what garment, already cut out, shall we clothe it? |
26163 | Is consciousness here, in relation to movement, the effect or the cause? |
26163 | Is it a complex movement? |
26163 | Is it a simple movement? |
26163 | Is it extension in general that we are considering_ in abstracto_? |
26163 | Is it impossible? |
26163 | Is it matter that is in question? |
26163 | Is it not obvious that to think here of the intelligent, or of the absolutely intelligible, is to go back to the Aristotelian theory of nature? |
26163 | Is it not plain that life goes to work here exactly like consciousness, exactly like memory? |
26163 | Is it not plain that this is to oppose the full to the full, and that the question,"Why does something exist?" |
26163 | Is it probable that mammals and insects notice the same aspects of nature, trace in it the same divisions, articulate the whole in the same way? |
26163 | Is it so with the laws of life? |
26163 | Is it the question of mind? |
26163 | Is it the same with the unconsciousness of instinct, in the extreme cases in which instinct is unconscious? |
26163 | Is it this, or that, or the other thing? |
26163 | Is it, finally, the question of the correspondence between mind and matter? |
26163 | Is my own person, at a given moment, one or manifold? |
26163 | Is our attention called to the internal change of one of these states? |
26163 | Is the existence of matter of this nature? |
26163 | Is there not a wonderful division of labor, a marvellous solidarity among the parts of an organism, perfect order in infinite complexity? |
26163 | Is this what I have really seen in turning over the leaves of the book? |
26163 | Is this, properly speaking, a"division of labor"? |
26163 | Let me come back again to the sugar in my glass of water:[106] why must I wait for it to melt? |
26163 | May one say that it has_ innate_ knowledge of each of these relations in particular? |
26163 | Must we not be struck by this feebleness of deduction as something very strange and even paradoxical? |
26163 | Now, does an unintelligent animal also possess tools or machines? |
26163 | Now, has it arisen so, as a matter of fact? |
26163 | Now, how can the forms be passing, and on what"stick"are they strung? |
26163 | Now, how did the astronomical problem present itself to Kepler? |
26163 | Now, in what does the progress of the nervous system itself consist? |
26163 | Now, was it necessary that there should be a series, or terms? |
26163 | Now, what do the laws of Kepler say? |
26163 | Now, whence comes the energy? |
26163 | Or, are we considering the concrete reality that fills this extension? |
26163 | Should the same be said of existence in general? |
26163 | Suppose an elastic stretched from A to B, could you divide its extension? |
26163 | Suppose these other forms of consciousness brought together and amalgamated with intellect: would not the result be a consciousness as wide as life? |
26163 | Then, what is it to think the object A non- existent? |
26163 | We should willingly accept the second formula; but by creation must we understand, as the author does, a_ synthesis_ of elements? |
26163 | What can it do, except objectify the distinction with more force, push it to its extreme consequences, reduce it into a system? |
26163 | What does it mean, to say that the state of an artificial system depends on what it was at the moment immediately before? |
26163 | What if we go beyond it in one of its directions? |
26163 | What is it that obliges me to wait, and to wait for a certain length of psychical duration which is forced upon me, over which I have no power? |
26163 | What is the essential object of science? |
26163 | What is the most general property of the material world? |
26163 | What is there at the base of this belief? |
26163 | What must the result be, if it leave biological and psychological facts to positive science alone, as it has left, and rightly left, physical facts? |
26163 | What, indeed, could the unification of physics be? |
26163 | What, then, do we find? |
26163 | What, then, if it be ignorant of all things, can it know? |
26163 | When I enter a room and pronounce it to be"in disorder,"what do I mean? |
26163 | When, how and why do they enter into this body which we see arise, quite naturally, from a mixed cell derived from the bodies of its two parents? |
26163 | Whence comes this determination? |
26163 | Whence does it come? |
26163 | Whence, then, the structural analogy? |
26163 | Where does the activity of instinct begin? |
26163 | Where, then, does the vital principle of the individual begin or end? |
26163 | Wherein consists the difference of attitude of the two sciences toward change? |
26163 | Wherein, then, is the difference between the two sciences? |
26163 | Who has made this explosive? |
26163 | Why not with an infinite velocity? |
26163 | Why should not the unique impetus have been impressed on a unique body, which might have gone on evolving? |
26163 | Why should these causes, entirely accidental, recur the same, and in the same order, at different points of space and time? |
26163 | Why should we speak of it? |
26163 | Why with this particular velocity rather than any other? |
26163 | Why, even, into terms entirely intelligible? |
26163 | Why, in other words, is not everything given at once, as on the film of the cinematograph? |
26163 | Why, then, should instinct be resolvable into intelligent elements? |
26163 | Will it not, therefore, be better to stick to the letter of transformism as almost all scientists profess it? |
26163 | Will they always escape us? |
26163 | Would not this twofold effort make us, as far as that is possible, re- live the absolute? |
26163 | Would the doctrine be affected in so far as it has a special interest or importance for us? |
26163 | [ 35] What more could the most confirmed finalist say, in order to mark out so exceptional a physico- chemistry? |
26163 | [ Footnote 74: See, in particular, among recent works, Bethe,"Dürfen wir den Ameisen und Bienen psychische Qualitäten zuschreiben?" |
26163 | and where does that of nature end? |
26163 | is consequently without meaning, a pseudo- problem raised about a pseudo- idea? |
31726 | And Ramiro? |
31726 | Can that man who wanders yonder Be a lover or a dunce? 31726 Could''st thou ne''er surprise the spirit In her bright eyes unawares? |
31726 | Dearest friend, what may it profit To repeat the old refrain? 31726 Did she ne''er express compassion For thy tender situation? |
31726 | Hast thou ravished, Zeus, my daughter? 31726 Have I not poured the sweetest wine Daily for thee, my spouse? |
31726 | Hear''st thou the wild winds rustling? 31726 Say, why waxed thy cheek so pallid? |
31726 | See''st thou not, oh Don Fernando, Yonder man in sable mantle? |
31726 | Tell me, tell me, my belovèd, Didst thou not erewhile swear falsely? |
31726 | Tell me, tell me, my belovèd, Looks thy heart on me with favor? |
31726 | Wherefore, wherefore, beauteous lady, Are thy lovely glances fastened Yonder in the hall''s far corner? |
31726 | Who towards that gloomy strand Herald of my grief will be? 31726 Wilt thou not rise, my Henry? |
31726 | And asked if we had not met before At the house of the Spanish Ambassador? |
31726 | And have I not with roses, dear, Each day enwreathed thy brows?" |
31726 | And how was my married sweetheart? |
31726 | And wilt thou force my haughty lips To beg and supplicate? |
31726 | And with thine eyes so lovely Thou hast stung me to the core, And hast compassed my undoing-- My darling, what wouldst thou more? |
31726 | Can these be already the fires of hell, That shall glow eternally? |
31726 | Can these tears so softly flowing Be my very own I hear? |
31726 | Come, kiss me quick, and tell me now, What lack''st thou here, I pray? |
31726 | Could I guess that you had chosen, Lady, such a grand hotel? |
31726 | Could''st thou never in her glances Read thy love''s reciprocation? |
31726 | Couldst thou not hold me steadfast with thine eyes? |
31726 | Did I not always promise thee I should be something great? |
31726 | Did not my pallid cheek betray My love''s unhappy fate? |
31726 | Dost thou hate me then so fiercely, Hast thou really changed so blindly? |
31726 | E''en such is life, my child, a constant moan-- A constant parting, evermore good- byes, Could not thy heart cling fast unto mine own? |
31726 | From set of sun till morning rise, Each hour does she persist,''Oh wherefore did you close mine eyes, When on my mouth you kissed?" |
31726 | Has the earth again grown young? |
31726 | Hast thou not sworn a thousand times To leave me never again? |
31726 | Hear''st thou the Lord in the dark sea, With thousand voices speaking? |
31726 | How can''st thou slumber calmly, Whilst I alive remain? |
31726 | Is it but the moonlight breaking Through the dark fir- branches''space? |
31726 | Is it thy soul, with secret influence, Thy lofty soul piercing all shows of sense, Which soareth, heaven- born, to heaven again? |
31726 | Is not that thy gentle face? |
31726 | Is not this thy white veil floating? |
31726 | Know''st thou the ancient ballad Of that dead lover brave, Who rose and dragged his lady At midnight to his grave? |
31726 | My sweetheart, where is she? |
31726 | Now that heaven smiles in favor, Like a mute shall I still languish,-- I, who when unhappy, ever Sang so much about mine anguish? |
31726 | Oh I have loved full many a lass, And many a worthy fellow, Where have they gone? |
31726 | Or indeed, art thou beside me, Weeping, darling, close anear? |
31726 | Or, love- smitten by her charms, Hath, o''er Orcus''s night- black water, Pluto snatched her in his arms? |
31726 | Say, ungrateful lips, how can you Breathe an evil word of scorning, Of the very man who kissed you So sincerely, yestermorning? |
31726 | See''st thou o''erhead the thousand lights Of God''s own glory breaking? |
31726 | Shall all hours be sweet as this is, Silly darling, safe from change? |
31726 | Tell me, what signifies man? |
31726 | That thou minglest still the pangs of death With thy most peculiar bliss? |
31726 | The people stand in a circle near, And the priestly anthems cease; Who is the pilgrim wan and wild, Who falleth upon his knees? |
31726 | The sea- mews moan, entreating, What does the mad surf say? |
31726 | The thrush is perched on the bough: She springs and sings up yonder--"Oh, why so sad art thou?" |
31726 | They roll with surging power, Nor rest, nor fail-- And then ebb slow and slower-- Of what avail? |
31726 | Thou hast diamonds, and pearls and jewels, All thy heart covets in store, And the loveliest eyes under heaven-- My darling, what wouldst thou more? |
31726 | Thou large- eyed little darling, Do I not always say I love thee past all telling-- Love gnaws my heart away? |
31726 | Three holy kings from the land of the West Go asking whoso passes,"Where is the road to Bethlehem, Ye gentle lads and lasses?" |
31726 | Thy brown- black eyes in pity, Mine own eyes, wistful scan,"Who art thou, and what lack''st thou, Thou strange, unhappy man?" |
31726 | Upon thine eyes, so lovely, Have I written o''er and o''er Immortal songs and sonnets-- My darling, what wouldst thou more? |
31726 | What means this lonely tear- drop That blurs my troubled sight, From olden times returning Back to mine eyes to- night? |
31726 | What through my spirit hisses? |
31726 | Whence does he come? |
31726 | Wherefore filled thine eyes with shadows?" |
31726 | Who can curb the lordless waters? |
31726 | Who dwells yonder above the golden stars?" |
31726 | Who these furious winds can bridle? |
31726 | Why trembles thy foam- white hand?" |
31726 | Wilt thou bid me to the wedding?" |
31726 | With thy shield and thy wisdom, could''st thou not avert The ruin of the gods? |
31726 | clearly scanned, Let thy little white heart kiss me-- White heart, dost thou understand? |
31726 | for the curtain moves not-- there she lies, There slumbers she still-- and dreams about me? |
31726 | my ghost, my double, Why dost thou ape my passion and tears, That haunted me here with such cruel trouble, So many a night in the olden years? |
31726 | what meaneth this? |
31726 | whither does he go? |
2167 | And Caesar? |
2167 | And how is this to be done? |
2167 | And where is such a man to be found? |
2167 | And who,said Mr Cowley,"levied that army? |
2167 | But whom can your party produce as rivals to these two famous leaders? |
2167 | Cicero? 2167 Do you fly from my thanks, dear Zoe?" |
2167 | Good day, my friend,he would say,"what situation have you in my family?" |
2167 | How are you after your last night''s exploit? |
2167 | In the name of Belus, how can this have happened? |
2167 | Italy seems not to feel her sufferings,exclaims her impassioned poet;"decrepit, sluggish, and languid, will she sleep forever? |
2167 | Nay,said I,"if you desire fresh air and coolness, what should hinder us, as the evening is fair, from sailing for an hour on the river?" |
2167 | Then, you dog,quoth the squire,"what do you mean by coming here? |
2167 | What is that to me? 2167 What woman is?" |
2167 | When I consider--is not that the beginning of it? |
2167 | When will rulers learn that, where liberty is not, security end order can never be? 2167 Who then,"said one of the judges,"are the wretches who sent us this poison?" |
2167 | Why not? 2167 Why so? |
2167 | You barbarous Scythian, who had the care of your education? |
2167 | ''What shall the honest man do in my closet? |
2167 | ), and rob on the highway? |
2167 | A bed of daffodils? |
2167 | A small celandine? |
2167 | A tragedy of yours? |
2167 | And did not Demosthenes also deny the story respecting his childish nickname, which Mr Mitford has nevertheless told without any qualification? |
2167 | And did the Squire Don, or the great Sir Lewis, that lived at that time, or the Germains, say a word against us for it? |
2167 | And from me, Alcibiades? |
2167 | And pray what may your piece be about? |
2167 | And were those privileges therefore enjoyed more fully by the people? |
2167 | And what are those stories? |
2167 | And what have you chosen? |
2167 | And what other merits do his friends claim for him? |
2167 | And what part are you to play? |
2167 | And why? |
2167 | And, if he knew it, should he not have stated it? |
2167 | Any love for her? |
2167 | Are not you initiated, Chariclea? |
2167 | Are you afraid of Ceres and Proserpine? |
2167 | Are you not afraid of the thunders of Jupiter? |
2167 | Are you to be of Catiline''s party this evening?" |
2167 | At what alehouse is not his behaviour discussed? |
2167 | But am I, therefore, to pronounce Demosthenes profligate and insincere? |
2167 | But for what was done after that he had solemnly given his consent to the Petition of Right, where shall we find defence? |
2167 | But had he not read the Petition of Right? |
2167 | But had his father, had that queen, sworn like him, to abstain from those rigours? |
2167 | But here where was the oppression? |
2167 | But what if you are killed? |
2167 | But what shall we say for these men? |
2167 | But where would have been that strong impression of reality, which, in accordance with his plan, it should have been his great object to produce? |
2167 | But who considered it as such? |
2167 | But who shall estimate her influence on private happiness? |
2167 | But who would send it in for thy rewards? |
2167 | But why, in the name of wonder, are we to attack them? |
2167 | But, I say, this is very well for her, and for Lord Caesar, and Squire Don, and Colonel Von;--but what affair is it of yours or mine? |
2167 | But, if it be as you say, how can you maintain that England hath been so greatly advantaged by the rebellion?" |
2167 | Caesar, how dare you insult me thus?" |
2167 | Caesar, were not all the same oaths sworn yesterday to Valeria? |
2167 | Can I be cheerful when you are going to leave me, Alcibiades? |
2167 | Chariclea, why do you look so sad? |
2167 | Did he not declare it to be law? |
2167 | Did not Charles accept it? |
2167 | Did they never confine insolent and disobedient men but in due course of law? |
2167 | Did they never lay hands on the purses of their subjects but by Act of Parliament? |
2167 | Do I know that you are my father? |
2167 | Do we not perpetually see men of the greatest talents and the purest intentions misled by national or factious prejudices? |
2167 | Do you hear? |
2167 | Do you know that I am your father? |
2167 | Do you remember Anacreon''s lines? |
2167 | Do you seriously suppose that one who has studied the plays of that great man, Euripides, would ever begin a tragedy in such a ranting style? |
2167 | Does Mr Mitford know that Demosthenes denied this charge, and explained the nickname in a perfectly different manner? |
2167 | Does it arise from its being a multiple of seven? |
2167 | Does not Anaxagoras mention, among his other discoveries, that when a man has nothing to eat he dies? |
2167 | Dormira sempre, e non fia chi la svegli? |
2167 | Dost thou not remember how thou didst praise it? |
2167 | First, then, we must inquire what is knowledge? |
2167 | From the clouds? |
2167 | From the mountains? |
2167 | From the ocean? |
2167 | From what does it derive its power? |
2167 | Had he any thought of her? |
2167 | Had not proclamation been made from his throne, Soit fait comme il est desire? |
2167 | Had they not destroyed the Courts of the High Commission and the Star Chamber? |
2167 | Had they not reversed the proceedings confirmed by the voices of the judges of England, in the matter of ship- money? |
2167 | Had they not sent Strafford to the block and Laud to the Tower? |
2167 | Had they not taken from the king his ancient and most lawful power touching the order of knighthood? |
2167 | Had they, like him, for good and valuable consideration, aliened their hurtful prerogatives? |
2167 | Has Mr Mitford ever read the speech of Demosthenes on the Embassy? |
2167 | Has a gentleman nothing to do but to hear the complaints of clowns? |
2167 | Has this principle any reference to the sabbatical ordinance? |
2167 | Have you not heard that men who have been shut up for many years in dungeons shrink if they see the light, and fall down if their irons be struck off? |
2167 | He had pawned those solemn pledges, and pawned them again and again; but when had he redeemed them? |
2167 | He, the favourite of the high- born beauties of Rome, the most splendid, the most graceful, the most eloquent of its nobles? |
2167 | Hemlock? |
2167 | How can you talk so, when you know that I believe all that foolery as little as you do? |
2167 | How can you talk so? |
2167 | How could it be otherwise? |
2167 | How should you like such an office? |
2167 | If he be insatiable in plunder and revenge, shall we pass it by because in meat and drink he is temperate? |
2167 | If he break his word to his people, is it a sufficient defence that he keeps it to his companions? |
2167 | If he have lived like a tyrant, shall all be forgotten because he hath died like a martyr? |
2167 | If he oppress and extort all day, shall he be held blameless because he prayeth at night and morning? |
2167 | If his life might justly be taken, why not in course of trial as well as by right of war? |
2167 | In what print- shop is not his picture seen? |
2167 | In what region of the infernal world do you expect your domicile to be fixed? |
2167 | Indeed who is not tired to death with pure description of scenery? |
2167 | Is it a reed shaken with the wind? |
2167 | Is it just that where most is given least should be required? |
2167 | Is it not therefore plain that they desired these things only in order that, by refusing, his Majesty might give them a pretence for war? |
2167 | Is such a show as you make to be supported on nothing? |
2167 | Is this a history, or a party- pamphlet? |
2167 | Must they besides all this have full power to command his armies, and to massacre his friends? |
2167 | Now, tell me as a friend, Caius-- is there no danger?" |
2167 | Of what was your father thinking when he sent for an old Stoic with a long beard to teach you? |
2167 | Oh, Kutusoff, bravest of the Russians, wherefore was I not permitted to fall by thy victorious sword?" |
2167 | Or from love strong as death, and jealousy cruel as the grave? |
2167 | Or is it to contemplate a mighty and wayward mind laid bare before us to the inmost recesses? |
2167 | Or is it to the order of rhymes that these singular properties are attached? |
2167 | Or politic that where there is the greatest power to injure there should be no danger to restrain? |
2167 | Or shall you sit starved and thirsty in the midst of fruit and wine like Tantalus? |
2167 | Or will your tragedy, like your speech, serve equally for any subject? |
2167 | Poor fellow? |
2167 | Pray, what think you of these doings at St Dennis''s?" |
2167 | Proclamation is made--"Who wishes to speak?" |
2167 | Remember you not,"and Mr Milton smiled, but somewhat sternly,"what Dr Cauis saith in the Merry Wives of Shakspeare? |
2167 | Secondly, what is a father? |
2167 | Shall he, therefore, vex it for ever, lest, in going out, he for a moment tear and rend it? |
2167 | Shall you roll a stone like Sisyphus? |
2167 | Then what, in the name of Bacchus, do you make him say? |
2167 | Then what, in the name of Juno, is your scheme? |
2167 | Think you, because I do not shut myself up to meditate, and drink water, and eat herbs, that I can not write verses? |
2167 | Thinkest thou that they will exchange them for thy slaves and thine asses? |
2167 | Ungrateful wretch; dare you talk so? |
2167 | Was it not as fully enacted as ever were any of those bills of the Long Parliament concerning which you spoke? |
2167 | Was it not enough that they had filled his council- board with his enemies, and his prisons with his adherents? |
2167 | Was it not enough that they had raised a furious multitude, to shout and swagger daily under the very windows of his royal palace? |
2167 | Was it not enough that they had taken from their king all his oppressive powers, and many that were most salutary? |
2167 | Was the court of Star Chamber less active? |
2167 | Well: and when are you to make your first speech? |
2167 | Were not the ordinary fluctuations of popular feeling enough to deter any coward from engaging in political conflicts? |
2167 | Were the ears of libellers more safe? |
2167 | Were they less arbitrary? |
2167 | Were we again to give subsidies, and receive nothing but promises? |
2167 | Were we to be deceived again? |
2167 | What are votes, and statutes, and resolutions? |
2167 | What arms or discipline shall resist the strength of famine and despair? |
2167 | What can we look upon which is not a memorial of change and sorrow, of fair things vanished, and evil things done? |
2167 | What can you say against him? |
2167 | What do you mean? |
2167 | What further could they desire?" |
2167 | What have they done for Rome?--What for mankind? |
2167 | What indeed? |
2167 | What is it that we go forth to see in Hamlet? |
2167 | What is its history but an uninterrupted record of servile compliances-- of paltry artifices-- of deadly quarrels-- of perfidious friendships? |
2167 | What is the use of them? |
2167 | What mercenary warrior of the time exposed his life to greater or more constant perils? |
2167 | What more could they ask? |
2167 | What now? |
2167 | What pledge could he give which he had not already violated? |
2167 | What quibble can you make upon that? |
2167 | What say you to a tragedy? |
2167 | What say you to politics,--the general assembly? |
2167 | What sea, what shore did he not mark with imperishable memorials of his friendship or his vengeance? |
2167 | What shall I sing? |
2167 | What think you, Alcibiades? |
2167 | What was the evil which had not been removed? |
2167 | What was the favour which had not been granted? |
2167 | What would thy prize profit any who have vineyards in rich soils?" |
2167 | What, does not your play open with the speech of Prometheus? |
2167 | What, in the name of Jupiter, is the use of all these speculations about death? |
2167 | What?" |
2167 | When the crowd remarked him-- But where are you going? |
2167 | When? |
2167 | Where? |
2167 | Which even of their cruel and unreasonable requisitions, so as it were not inconsistent with all law and order, was refused? |
2167 | Which of their just demands was not granted? |
2167 | Which of them? |
2167 | Who can expound this to us?" |
2167 | Who commissioned those officers? |
2167 | Who does not know the name of Solicitor Nap? |
2167 | Who does not shudder at the caldron of Macbeth? |
2167 | Who does not sympathise with the rapture of Ariel, flying after sunset on the wings of the bat, or sucking in the cups of flowers with the bee? |
2167 | Who feels for me any esteem,--any tenderness? |
2167 | Who shall dissolve that terrible tribunal, which, in the hearts of the oppressed, denounces against the oppressor the doom of its wild justice? |
2167 | Who shall repeal the law of selfdefence? |
2167 | Who will shed a tear over the nameless grave which will soon shelter from cruelty and scorn the broken heart of the poor Athenian girl? |
2167 | Whom do you mean by the first men in Athens? |
2167 | Whom had Sparta to ostracise? |
2167 | Whose lines are those, Alcibiades? |
2167 | Why do you laugh? |
2167 | Why do you pace up and down with such long steps? |
2167 | Why do you stare? |
2167 | Why so, sweet Chariclea? |
2167 | Will there be none to awake her? |
2167 | Would you have me betray my sex? |
2167 | Would you have me forget his Phaedras and Sthenoboeas? |
2167 | Would you stifle your mistress? |
2167 | Yet what benefit has literature derived from its labours? |
2167 | Yet, sure, Mr Milton, whatever you may think of the character of King Charles, you will not still justify his murder?" |
2167 | You ask what more the Parliament could desire? |
2167 | You have no objection to meet the Consul?" |
2167 | Zoe, my love, my preserver, why are your cheeks so pale? |
2167 | fleas with wax? |
2167 | repeated Caesar, with a short, fierce, disdainful laugh:"what danger do you apprehend?" |
2167 | say"The land where thou art prosperous is thy country?" |
2167 | what do you mean?" |
2167 | what noise was that?" |
2167 | what will become of me? |
2167 | who is it? |
31017 | What songs did the sirens sing? |
31017 | ( Where, indeed, would any novelist be if it were not for women?) |
31017 | ( Why not, after that omelette in Ariadne?) |
31017 | A monster? |
31017 | All for Strauss? |
31017 | Also sprach Tolstoy in that madman''s book called What is Art? |
31017 | And I say: what are all his vapourings and fatidical croonings on the tripod of pseudo- prophecy as compared to Anna Karenina? |
31017 | And Leonardo da Vinci-- what of that incomparable genius? |
31017 | And are there more than thirty- five works by this master of cool, clear daylight? |
31017 | And is n''t it simply the incommensurable emotion evoked by the genius of the painter or sculptor? |
31017 | And now it''s high time to answer my question: Who owns the thirty- fifth Vermeer? |
31017 | And now we hear the question: Who owns the thirty- fifth Vermeer, Vermeer of the magical blue and yellow? |
31017 | And the Intoxicated Servant? |
31017 | And their successors? |
31017 | And then how about La Débâcle, which has 229,000 copies to its credit? |
31017 | And what of the banalities of Bruckner? |
31017 | And what would this critic have said of the De Profundis of Maxim Gorky? |
31017 | Are there still darker depths to be explored? |
31017 | As this picture is purely symbolical, it is not open to objections; but is n''t it rather amusing? |
31017 | But Nietzsche, was he not an old bachelor, almost as censorious as his master, that squire of dames, Arthur Schopenhauer? |
31017 | But aside from his powerful personality and remarkable craftsmanship, who is there that ca n''t be matched by our own men? |
31017 | But here in America,"the colourless shadow land of fiction,"is there no tragedy in Gilead for souls not supine? |
31017 | But what does that prove? |
31017 | But what was the matter with George Tesman? |
31017 | But why must it be vast? |
31017 | But why publish to the world these intimate soul processes, fascinating as they are to laymen and psychologists alike? |
31017 | Disease? |
31017 | Dissipation? |
31017 | Eternal? |
31017 | First let us ask: Who was Jan Vermeer, or Van der Meer? |
31017 | Had n''t they better awaken to the truth that they are no longer attractive, or indispensable? |
31017 | Has Schnitzler succeeded in making a play of heterogeneous material? |
31017 | Has n''t Whitman asked in Calamus, the most revealing section of Leaves:"Do you suppose yourself advancing on real ground toward a real heroic man?" |
31017 | He tells us much of his painful methods of writing("what do I want with fame when I''m writing for daily bread?" |
31017 | He would have welcomed Maeterlinck''s test question:"Are you of those who name or those who only repeat names?" |
31017 | How a man lacking the critical faculty may be misled is to be seen in What is Art? |
31017 | How does Schoenberg do it? |
31017 | How does he pull off the trick? |
31017 | How render the sumptuous assonance and solemn rhythms of Marche Funèbre: O convoi solennel des soleils magnifiques? |
31017 | I wonder why? |
31017 | If that were the case, what about Dickens and Thackeray as exceptions? |
31017 | If the public can endure Brieux''s Damaged Goods, why not Musik? |
31017 | If this new music is so distractingly atrocious what right has a listener to bother about Pierrot? |
31017 | In what then consists the originality of the Futurists? |
31017 | Is Parsifal a reformation of Gluck? |
31017 | Is all this to be the music of to- morrow? |
31017 | Is great art always slightly morbid? |
31017 | Is he American? |
31017 | Is it any wonder Turgenieff remonstrated with him? |
31017 | Is it because of their isolation in the stone jails we call museums? |
31017 | Is n''t it time for the ruder sex to organise as a step toward preserving their fancied inalienable sovereignty of the globe? |
31017 | Is n''t this lucid? |
31017 | Like the others? |
31017 | Mental overwork-- which is the same thing? |
31017 | Must they continue to peer through the studio spectacles of their grandfathers? |
31017 | Need we consider the respective positions of Bruckner or Mahler, one all prodigality and diffuseness, the other largely cerebral? |
31017 | Now, will some astronomer tell us if such a thing is possible in Syrian skies?) |
31017 | Or else because their hopeless perfection induces a species of exalted envy? |
31017 | Or that their immortality yields inch by inch to the treacherous and resistless pressure of the years? |
31017 | Or was the music to blame? |
31017 | Realism? |
31017 | Reticence is a distinctive quality of this author; after all, is n''t truth an idea that traverses a temperament? |
31017 | Something cleaner than Edam or Marken? |
31017 | Such stories as Qui Sait? |
31017 | The music of to- day may be the music of to- morrow, but if it is not, what then? |
31017 | Their disparate tendencies bring to the lips the old query, Under which king? |
31017 | There are no landscapists like ours-- is it necessary to count them off name by name? |
31017 | VII THE MAGIC VERMEER I Who owns the thirty- fifth canvas by Jan Vermeer of Delft? |
31017 | Was n''t it George Saintsbury who once remarked that all discussion of contemporaries is conversation, not criticism? |
31017 | Was n''t the Elizabethinum Roman Catholic, after all? |
31017 | What did I hear? |
31017 | What has speed to do with painting on a flat surface, painting in two dimensions of space? |
31017 | What is the actual condition of Russian literature at the present time? |
31017 | What is the matter with the men nowadays? |
31017 | What is the name of your favourite heroine? |
31017 | What matter the tools if they have, these young chaps, individuality? |
31017 | What next? |
31017 | What other composer, besides Handel, Haydn, Mozart-- yes, and also Beethoven-- Gluck, Meyerbeer, Verdi, Puccini, so doted on the box- office? |
31017 | What the moral? |
31017 | What was the cause of his downfall? |
31017 | What was the matter with my own ego? |
31017 | What''s Pierrot to him or he to Pierrot? |
31017 | Where are Cyrill Kistner, Hans Sommer, August Bungert, and the others? |
31017 | Which of the pair is the thirty- fifth Vermeer? |
31017 | Who may say? |
31017 | Who owns the thirty- fifth Vermeer? |
31017 | Who shall say? |
31017 | Whom should you like to meet in that long corridor of time leading to eternity, the walls lined with the world''s masterpieces of portraiture? |
31017 | Why did not Tolstoy select Tristan and Isolde if he wished some fleshly music, some sensualistic caterwauling, as Huxley phrased it? |
31017 | Why melancholy? |
31017 | Why mention names? |
31017 | Why not keep watch with his God in silence and alone? |
31017 | Why not let her go out of the world in bliss? |
31017 | Why not? |
31017 | Why should he enrich the haughty music publisher or the still haughtier intendant of the opera- house? |
31017 | Why should n''t he? |
31017 | Why, they ask, should we look behind us, when we have to break into the mysterious portals of the impossible? |
31017 | Will he shoot himself? |
31017 | Will there ever be a new way of seeing as well as representing life, animate and inanimate? |
31017 | Witness his tart allusion to Swinburne''s criticism of himself:"Is n''t he the damnedest simulacrum?" |
31017 | Worldly Wiseman, can that fellow Admirable Crichton do so many things so well when it takes all my time to do one thing badly? |
31017 | Would Maupassant have reached the sunlit heights, as Tolstoy believed? |
31017 | Would it not be the logical thing for Yasnaya Polyana to be the model village of Russia? |
31017 | why art thou so unfathomable?" |
26275 | A whole month the monarch entertained me;what was again the interest? |
26275 | All feast from day to day with endless change of meats;why ask whence the viands come? |
26275 | How shall I escape afterward, if I succeed? |
26275 | Ill- fated man,she cries,"why hast thou so angered Neptune?" |
26275 | No more honor for me from mortals or Gods,cries Neptune,"if I can be thus defied?" |
26275 | Phæacians, how does this man seem to you now in form, stature, and mind? |
26275 | Shall I drop into the sea and perish, or shall I still endure and stay among the living? |
26275 | Telemachus was much the first to observe her;why just he? |
26275 | Why art thou last to leave, who wast always first? 26275 Why dost thou a God ask me a God why I come?" |
26275 | A foolish question has been asked here and much discussed: How did Ulysses know what his companions said during his sleep? |
26275 | A great change in manner of treatment; why? |
26275 | Above all, does Menelaus love me still? |
26275 | Again the question comes up: what is it to know Homer? |
26275 | An idyllic spot and forever beautiful; who but Homer has ever gotten so much poetry out of a pig- sty? |
26275 | And indeed what can he gain thereby? |
26275 | And what is the connection with the preceding portion of the poem? |
26275 | And, Will he return home? |
26275 | Are literal rocks passed by putting wax into the ears of the crew and by tying the captain to the mast? |
26275 | Are they transformed men, or merely wild animals tamed? |
26275 | As that father is not present the question arises, Where is he? |
26275 | At once she recognizes who it is:"Art thou that wily Ulysses whose coming hither from Troy in his black ship has often been foretold to me?" |
26275 | But after such a fit, he is ready for action:"when I had enough of weeping and rolling about, I asked Circe: Who will guide me?" |
26275 | But can the mortal hide himself from the deity, specially from the deity of wisdom? |
26275 | But for what purpose? |
26275 | But if it be utterly rotten, what then? |
26275 | But is not Ulysses himself inhuman and uncharitable toward his poor beggar rival? |
26275 | But is this separation never to be overcome? |
26275 | But the aid for such an enterprise-- whence? |
26275 | But the singer is tired and sleepy; moreover has he not told the essence of the matter in this portion of his song? |
26275 | But what else is allegory but this embodiment of subjective wisdom? |
26275 | But what if he falls out with both? |
26275 | But what is the attitude of the Suitors toward such a view? |
26275 | But what is this thought? |
26275 | But what reader ever found these few lines tiresome? |
26275 | But where is this Syria? |
26275 | But who are the Cyclops? |
26275 | But who are these spirits or weird powers dwelling in the lone island or in the solitary wood? |
26275 | But who has not felt that in the preceding division the three Greek heroes were under the inevitable penalty of their own deeds? |
26275 | But who was the author of such work? |
26275 | But why did Helen do thus? |
26275 | But why should the Læstrigonians be portrayed as giants? |
26275 | But why this blame? |
26275 | Can not the other two adventures be derived in a general way from the experiences of the Underworld? |
26275 | Can we not see Orient and Occident imaging themselves in their respective ideal products? |
26275 | Can we not see that herein is an attempt to rise out of that twofold prison of the spirit, Space and Time, into what is true in all places and times? |
26275 | Cunning indeed she has and boundless artifice; what shall we make of her? |
26275 | Did he not see the limits of his world? |
26275 | Did they get their knowledge from Egypt or Chaldea? |
26275 | Did they not undergo all this severing of the dearest ties for the sake of Helen, for the integrity of the family, and of their civil life also? |
26275 | Do they still retain their affection for their families? |
26275 | Does he not show within himself a deep scission-- between his desire to return and his deed? |
26275 | Does her end justify her means? |
26275 | Does not the man at times conceal himself to the God, by self- deception, self- excuse, by lying to his higher nature? |
26275 | Does she not thus announce to the much- enduring man that she is free, though under a good deal of pressure? |
26275 | Does the poet hint through a side glance the real state of the case? |
26275 | Dost thou long to see the eye of thy ruler, which has been put out by that vile wretch, Nobody?" |
26275 | Doth he live? |
26275 | Finally comes the demand: who art thou and why didst thou weep? |
26275 | For has he not the proof in his own heart? |
26275 | For is not the career of every true hero or heroine vicarious to a certain degree? |
26275 | For is not the universal man all men-- both himself and others in essence? |
26275 | Has a change come over the Goddess through this visit from Olympus? |
26275 | Has he not negatived Polyphemus, who was himself a negative, so carefully and fully defined by the poet at the start? |
26275 | Has it any connection with the other songs of this Book, or with Homer in general? |
26275 | Has not the poet derived the noble Arete and Alcinous and institutional Phæacia from the savage Cyclops? |
26275 | Have the Gods, then, nothing to do in this world? |
26275 | He dares not kill the giant outright,"with my sharp sword stubbing him where the midriff holds the liver,"for how could they then get out? |
26275 | He denies his own reason; how then can he rise after a fall? |
26275 | He must have looked within in order to see his world; where else was it to be found in any such completeness? |
26275 | He recognizes this descent to Hades as the greatest deed of Ulysses:"What greater deed, rash man, wilt thou plan next?" |
26275 | How can we best see the sweep of these eight Books and their organic connection with the total Odyssey? |
26275 | How could he, with his bent toward the godless? |
26275 | How shall he know the truth of the reality about him in his new situation, how understand this world of wisdom? |
26275 | How shall we consider this prophecy? |
26275 | In fact, how can they have any unity? |
26275 | In general, the question comes up: What constitutes a lie? |
26275 | In such case is not the God also hidden, in fact compelled to assume a mask? |
26275 | In the harbor of Piræus the hackman will ask the traveler:"Do you want my_ amaxa_?" |
26275 | In the second place one asks very emphatically: Why this present treatment of the Gods on Homer''s part? |
26275 | Indeed have we not just seen him in the fierce conflict between knowing and doing, which he has not been able to unify in the last adventure? |
26275 | Indeed what else could he do? |
26275 | Indeed what use is there of rising? |
26275 | Indeed whom else ought he to find? |
26275 | Insane laughter of the Suitors, yet with eyes full of tears, and with hearts full of sorrow: what does it all forbode? |
26275 | Is it a wonder that Pallas, taking the human shape of Mentor, comes and speaks to him? |
26275 | Is it not manifest that we have passed out of dualism into unity, out of strife into harmony? |
26275 | Is not this a glorious starting- point for a poem which proposes to reveal the ways of providence unto men? |
26275 | Is she justified? |
26275 | Is she right? |
26275 | Is such deception allowable under the circumstances? |
26275 | Is the disguise of Ulysses justifiable? |
26275 | Is the subtlety of Penelope morally reprehensible? |
26275 | Is there to be no positive result of such bloody work? |
26275 | Is there to be no return to the East and completion of the world''s cycle? |
26275 | Is this test of charity, selected by the poet here, a true test of such characters? |
26275 | It is certainly a product of early Greek poesy; can it be organically jointed into anything before it and after it? |
26275 | It is to be noticed, however, that Pallas has little to do with Ulysses in Fableland; for is she not substantially negated? |
26275 | Knowledge and suffering-- are they not the two poles of the universal character? |
26275 | Lofty is the response of Ulysses:"O Circe, what right- minded man would endure to touch food and drink before seeing his companions released?" |
26275 | Mark the words of Ulysses:"Woman, thou hast spoken a painful word,"when she commanded the bed to be removed;"who hath displaced my bed?" |
26275 | Menelaus holds the Old Man fast, and asks: What God detains me from my return? |
26275 | Moreover he was one of those who returned home successfully, can he tell how it was done? |
26275 | Nor should we fail to scan her second question:"Do you not say that you have come hither a wanderer over the deep?" |
26275 | Now what is this problem? |
26275 | Now what will he do? |
26275 | Now what? |
26275 | One asks: Is not this imaginative form still a vital element of education? |
26275 | Onward the wanderer, now with his single ship, has to sail again; whither next? |
26275 | Our first question is, why call in a goddess for such a purpose? |
26275 | Pallas appears to Ulysses,"but Telemachus beheld her not;"Why? |
26275 | Pallas has at last to come and to answer his two troublesome thoughts:"How shall I, being only one, slay the Suitors, being many?" |
26275 | Pass them the man must; what is to be done? |
26275 | Prophetic Circe can tell all this, for does it not lie just in the domain of her experience, which has also been twofold? |
26275 | She has to obey, for is she not really conquered by Ulysses? |
26275 | She must not be seen with Ulysses; men with evil tongues would say:"What stranger is this following Nausicaa? |
26275 | She takes pleasure in the exercise of her gift, who does not? |
26275 | So much for Circe in her new relation in the present Book; how about Ulysses? |
26275 | So the old Greek poet must have thought; was he very far from right? |
26275 | Soon by the light of his fire he sees the lurking strangers and asks,"Who are you?" |
26275 | Soon, however, we catch the reason of her conduct in the question:"Stranger, where did you get those garments?" |
26275 | Such continual recurrence of the God''s interference with the course of events-- what does it mean? |
26275 | Such is her lively admiration now, but what means this? |
26275 | Such is the promise, has it not been fulfilled? |
26275 | Such is this ideal world of Phæacia, still ideal to- day; for where is it realized? |
26275 | Such was the supreme test, that of charity; how will the Suitors treat the poor beggar? |
26275 | Telemachus is to see Helen; what does that signify in education? |
26275 | The highest and the humblest of the social order are here placed side by side; with what result? |
26275 | The old dispute as to conduct rises in full intensity: Does the end justify the means? |
26275 | The present Tale seeks to give an answer to the two main questions of Telemachus: Where is my father now? |
26275 | The question arises: Did Homer find those Tales already collected? |
26275 | The question is, How can they truly get back after so long a period of violence? |
26275 | The question of the hour is, How shall I get out of the difficulty? |
26275 | The question rises, Why does the poet hold it so necessary to keep the matter secret from Eumæus? |
26275 | The question, therefore, is at present: How shall this man come into the knowledge of the Goddess? |
26275 | The reader naturally asks, will there be any return to the Orient after the grand Greek separation, first heralded on the plains of Ilium? |
26275 | The rest of the companions were ordered aboard, they obeyed; off they sail again on the hoary deep-- whitherward? |
26275 | The result is when the other Cyclops, roused by the cries of Polyphemus, ask him from outside the cave: What is the matter? |
26275 | Then why should the Suitors injure the son because they have been wheedled by the mother? |
26275 | There he sacrifices to the Highest God, Zeus, who, however, pays no heed-- how is it possible? |
26275 | This fact we may accept; but the question comes up: Is Homer such a balladist and nothing more? |
26275 | This test is that of humanity, of charity toward a beggar; how will the Suitors behave toward him? |
26275 | Unquestionably a glorious ideal is set up before the Sisterhood of all time for emulation; or is it unattainable? |
26275 | Was it a hostile act on her part? |
26275 | Was not Troy destroyed because of a wrong done to the Greek Family? |
26275 | Was there some intimate personal relation figured in this character which we still seem to feel afar off there in antiquity? |
26275 | What are these shapes and why? |
26275 | What are we doing now but trying to grasp Proteus in this exposition? |
26275 | What can be the matter? |
26275 | What did not Telemachus see and hear at Sparta? |
26275 | What did these companions do? |
26275 | What does all this mean? |
26275 | What does he get? |
26275 | What does it all mean? |
26275 | What does this suggest to the reader-- this duplication of the threefold form of the Book? |
26275 | What else can she do? |
26275 | What else indeed has man to do? |
26275 | What else indeed is Gravitation? |
26275 | What experience has called forth such a marvelous character? |
26275 | What follows? |
26275 | What have we to encounter? |
26275 | What hint lies in that? |
26275 | What is the ground of such a marked transition? |
26275 | What is the location of the Læstrigonians? |
26275 | What is the outcome? |
26275 | What is thy relation to Troy? |
26275 | What men are here-- wild, insolent, unjust, or are they hospitable, reverencing the Gods? |
26275 | What motive for weeping? |
26275 | What next? |
26275 | What reason for it? |
26275 | What shall I do with this world of the senses? |
26275 | What then? |
26275 | What then? |
26275 | What then? |
26275 | What will Ulysses do in such extremity? |
26275 | What will the Suitors do? |
26275 | What will this discipline be? |
26275 | What, then, is left for the poor mortal? |
26275 | When did it take place, at what period during the struggle? |
26275 | Whence did she obtain them? |
26275 | Wherein does the negative nature of Hades lie? |
26275 | Wherein is the escort by the Phæacians a violation of the divine order as voiced by the Supreme God? |
26275 | Which is paramount? |
26275 | Whither now does he go? |
26275 | Whither? |
26275 | Who are present? |
26275 | Who can not feel that this touch is taken from life, is an echo of his own experience in some princely hall? |
26275 | Who does not love this fealty of the old bard to the highest order of things? |
26275 | Who is this Goddess? |
26275 | Who is this stranger anyhow? |
26275 | Who will recognize her? |
26275 | Who, then, according to the theory, put these ballads together? |
26275 | Why a Goddess here? |
26275 | Why is he thus repelled by Family and State? |
26275 | Why just that in her case? |
26275 | Why not? |
26275 | Why should he not be angry at the man who seeks to tame him? |
26275 | Why should he not make a philologer and a professor the author of the Homeric poems? |
26275 | Why then introduce the Goddess at all? |
26275 | Why then regard them as Gods? |
26275 | Why this change in the everlasting powers? |
26275 | Why this difference? |
26275 | Why this interference from above? |
26275 | Why? |
26275 | Why? |
26275 | Will they answer the call of their wives? |
26275 | Will they behave toward him as Eumæus has? |
26275 | Will you still keep sneaking through the house by night to spy out women?" |
26064 | After going into a war for humanity, were we so craven that we should seek freedom from further trouble at the expense of civilization? |
26064 | After this flat contradiction of the court''s former dictum, what happened? |
26064 | And next, shall we not probably fare best in the end if we try to profit somewhat by the experience others have had in like cases? |
26064 | And why is life impossible to Americans in Manila and Cebu and Iloilo, but attractive to the throngs of Europeans who have built up those cities? |
26064 | Are the American people to rise to the occasion? |
26064 | Are the old energy and the old courage gone? |
26064 | Are the people now lacking in the enterprise and vigor which Mr. Casserly claimed for them? |
26064 | Are they to be as great as their country? |
26064 | Are they to be our wards, objects of our duty and our care; or are they to be our full partners? |
26064 | Are we content, for example, with the way we have dealt with the negro problem in the Southern States? |
26064 | Are we not morally culpable and disgraced before the civilized world if we leave it as bad or worse? |
26064 | Are we not, then, bound in honor and morals to see to it that the government which replaces Spanish rule is better? |
26064 | Are we to be discouraged by the cry that the new possessions are worthless? |
26064 | Are we to believe those men of to- day who tell us it is not worth crossing? |
26064 | Because they are helpless and needy and on our hands, must we take them into partnership? |
26064 | Because we are going to help them, are we bound to marry them? |
26064 | Brushing aside, then, these bugbears, gentlemen, what are the obvious duties of the hour? |
26064 | But does not this, if applied to the present situation, seem also to miss an important distinction? |
26064 | But have the Californians of this generation abandoned the bridge? |
26064 | But is it to the interest of the sincere and patriotic among the discontented to produce either result? |
26064 | But is that all? |
26064 | But is there not another question, more important, which first demands consideration? |
26064 | But what does our experience show? |
26064 | But what, then, are we going to do with Porto Rico? |
26064 | But who believes he can stop the avalanche? |
26064 | But why not turn over that commercial center and the island on which it is situated to the Tagals? |
26064 | But would a wise man kick the stepping- stone away? |
26064 | By what right do statesmen now venture to think that they can leave our national interests out of the account? |
26064 | Can a nation with safety set such limits to its development? |
26064 | Can there be a doubt of the duty to make the best of it? |
26064 | Can we grow tobacco in Cuba, but not in Cebu; or rice in Louisiana, but not in Luzon? |
26064 | Can we mine all over the world, from South Africa to the Klondike, but not in Palawan? |
26064 | Can your Scott shipyards only turn out men- of- war? |
26064 | Can your Senator Perkins only run ships that creep along the coast? |
26064 | Cloud, and even come down, if they liked, to St. Paul and Minneapolis? |
26064 | Did I hear a public opponent but personal friend over there murmur as his reply,"Not much of anything"? |
26064 | Did Mr. Seward betray the Constitution and violate his oath in buying Alaska without the purpose of making it a State? |
26064 | Did he himself, then, carry his own words to such extremes as these professed disciples now demand? |
26064 | Did she deserve so badly of us that, even in a hurry, we should do this thing to her in the name of humanity? |
26064 | Do we remember his birthday and forget his words? |
26064 | Do you ask how? |
26064 | Do you know of any other civilized nation of the first or even of the second class that would n''t jump at that option on the Philippines? |
26064 | Does peace pacify? |
26064 | Does protection protect? |
26064 | Does the prospect alarm? |
26064 | Has it grown old before its time; is its natural strength abated? |
26064 | Has it? |
26064 | Has our system been found weaker, then, than other forms of government, less adaptable to emergencies, and with people less fit to cope with them? |
26064 | Has the race shriveled under these summer skies? |
26064 | Has the soul of this people shrunk within them? |
26064 | Have the grandsons so degenerated that they are incapable of colonizing at all, or of managing colonies? |
26064 | Have the limits he scorned been since assigned, and do the Californians of to- day assent to the restriction? |
26064 | Have we not a better and more urgent use for our time now than in showing why some of us would have liked them settled differently? |
26064 | Have we the right to decide whether we shall hold or abandon the conquered territory, solely, or even mainly as a matter of national policy? |
26064 | Have you considered for whom we hold these advantages in trust? |
26064 | Have you considered what urgent need there will be for those new fields? |
26064 | How can it be? |
26064 | How could a government that put it down rest on the consent of Sulu? |
26064 | How could men representing this country, jealous of its honor, or with an adequate comprehension either of its duty or its rights, do otherwise? |
26064 | How else have these blessings been generally diffused? |
26064 | How long do you expect to keep New Mexico out, or Oklahoma, or Arizona? |
26064 | How often in the history of the world has barbarism been replaced by civilization without bloodshed? |
26064 | How soon are our people going to flee from Arizona? |
26064 | How was it then with some at the West who are discontented now? |
26064 | How were our own liberty and justice established and diffused on this continent? |
26064 | How? |
26064 | II WAS IT TOO GOOD A TREATY? |
26064 | In the absence, then, of any law- making power in the Territory, to what source must the people look for the laws by which they are to be governed? |
26064 | In the debate with Mr. Calhoun in February, 1849, Mr. Webster said:"What is the Constitution of the United States? |
26064 | Is China to be our model, or Great Britain? |
26064 | Is a six- thousand- mile extension to a through line worthless? |
26064 | Is it any one with the glorious history of this continental colonization bred in his bone and leaping in his blood? |
26064 | Is it consistent with that spirit to hold territory permanently, or for long periods of time, without admitting it to the Union? |
26064 | Is it for that pitiful result that a civilized and Christian people is giving up its sons and pouring out blood and treasure in Cuba? |
26064 | Is it not evident that such was the case here? |
26064 | Is it said that elsewhere on the Pacific we can do as well without a controlling political influence as with it? |
26064 | Is it said that the commercial opportunities in the Orient, or at least in the Philippines, are overrated? |
26064 | Is it said that this is Imperialism? |
26064 | Is it said this danger is imaginary? |
26064 | Is it said we could keep them out as we have kept out sparsely settled New Mexico? |
26064 | Is our national motto to be,"Quixotic on the one hand, Chinese on the other"? |
26064 | Is that the feast to be set before the laboring men of this country? |
26064 | Is that the real inwardness of the Trojan horse pushed forward against our tariff wall, in the name of humanity, to suffering Porto Rico? |
26064 | Is the broad ocean too deep for him or too wide? |
26064 | Is there any need to debate whether the American people will abandon it now? |
26064 | Must they be developed through the territorial stage into independent States in the Union? |
26064 | Need we give it more attention now than Marshall did then? |
26064 | Or did it entitle them to suppose that he could? |
26064 | Or do you think it better that your Pacific railroad should end in the air? |
26064 | Or, better still, are we to follow the instincts of our own people? |
26064 | Said Mr. Webster:"What is Florida? |
26064 | Senator Davis has asked? |
26064 | Shall we trade them for something nearer home? |
26064 | Since when did such a war become wrong? |
26064 | Suppose Livingston had rejected the offer? |
26064 | That being so, do those of you who regret it prefer to lose all influence over the outcome? |
26064 | Thus men often say,"If you believe in liberty for yourself, why refuse it to the Tagals?" |
26064 | To what corner of the world would they not need to carry their commerce? |
26064 | WAS IT TOO GOOD A TREATY? |
26064 | WAS IT TOO GOOD A TREATY? |
26064 | Was Governor Haight alone, or was he in advance of his time? |
26064 | Was it the demonstration that what we needed was to sit under the live- oaks and"develop the individual man,"nor dare to look beyond? |
26064 | Well, if the elephant must be on our hands, what are we going to do with it? |
26064 | Well, then, how shall the islands be treated? |
26064 | Were we to be reproached for that? |
26064 | What demands on tropical productions would they not make? |
26064 | What do the American people in general, and without distinction of party, look to them for? |
26064 | What have the Tagals done for us that we should treat them better and put them on a plane higher than any of these? |
26064 | What holds a nation together, unless it be community of interests, character, and language, and contiguous territory? |
26064 | What is this increase in the shipping at your wharves? |
26064 | What luck did you have in keeping out others-- even Utah, with its bar sinister of the twin relic of barbarism? |
26064 | What outlets for their adventurous youth would they not require? |
26064 | What place was there in the American system for territories that were never to be States, for colonies, or for the rule of distant subject races? |
26064 | What shall be the policy with which, when order has been inexorably restored, we begin our dealings with the new wards of the Nation? |
26064 | What was to be done with them? |
26064 | What wise man, at least, will take the risk of starting it? |
26064 | What would more thoroughly insure its speedily flying to pieces than the lack of every one of these requisites? |
26064 | What, then, can we do with them? |
26064 | What, then, is the conclusion of the whole matter? |
26064 | Which way do the interests of California and the city of San Francisco lie? |
26064 | Which way do your interests lie? |
26064 | Who dare say that a self- respecting Power could have sailed away from Manila and repudiated the responsibilities of its victorious belligerency? |
26064 | Who disputes it now? |
26064 | Who fancies that we could then keep San Domingo and Haiti out, or any West India island that applied, or our friends the Kanakas? |
26064 | Who imagines that we can take in Porto Rico and keep out nearer islands when they come? |
26064 | Who says so? |
26064 | Who supposes that to be the liberty for which Aguinaldo is fighting? |
26064 | Who thinks he can lay his hand on the rugged edge of the Muir Glacier and compel it to advance no farther? |
26064 | Why did n''t you do it?" |
26064 | Why distress ourselves with the thought that this is only the beginning, that it opens the door to unlimited expansion? |
26064 | Why is every room taken in your big buildings? |
26064 | Why mourn because of the precedent we are establishing? |
26064 | Why mourn over our present course as a departure from the policy of the fathers? |
26064 | Why, at the first Apache outbreak after the Gadsden Purchase, did we not hasten to turn over New Mexico and Arizona to_ their_ inhabitants? |
26064 | Why? |
26064 | Why? |
26064 | Why? |
26064 | Would a government that stopped that be without just powers till the slaveholders had conferred them at a popular election? |
26064 | Would it be without just powers because the pirates did not vote in its favor? |
26064 | Would this generation judge that they had been equal to their opportunities or their duties? |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Does Debt Follow Sovereignty?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Does Peace Pacify?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Does the Monroe Doctrine Interfere?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Has the State Lost Heart and Shriveled?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Have they any Value?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: The Policy for our Dependencies] How shall we set about it? |
26064 | [ Sidenote: The Trouble they Give-- are they Worth it?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Where is your Real Interest?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Why Take Sovereignty?] |
26064 | [ Sidenote: Will the Constitution Permit Withholding Statehood?] |
26064 | or who believes our grandchildren will be violating the Constitution in keeping it out? |
26064 | or, if not, how govern or get rid of them? |
15422 | A very rude gentleman? |
15422 | Ah, captured in a ship? |
15422 | Ah,sighed a soft voice,"what a strange sash, and furred vest, and what leopard- like teeth, and what flaxen hair, but all mildewed;--is that he?" |
15422 | Ah-- sure?--Is your lady within? |
15422 | All your expenses shall be paid, not to speak of a compensation besides,said the Squire;"will you go?" |
15422 | Am I to steal from here to Paris on my stocking- feet? |
15422 | Am I to sweep the chimney? |
15422 | And I am to be buried alive here? |
15422 | And did the girl grow as close to your heart, lad? |
15422 | And what port are we bound to, now? |
15422 | And where goes he? |
15422 | And you cease your squeaking, will ye? |
15422 | Any money to buy one? |
15422 | Are we to sink the cutter, sir? |
15422 | Aye? 15422 Aye?" |
15422 | Barn- yard? |
15422 | Be free with me? 15422 Belong to the maintop? |
15422 | Boys, is this the way you treat a watchmatedemanded Israel reproachfully,"trying to cheer up his friends? |
15422 | But ball, captain; what''s the use of powder without ball? |
15422 | But halloo, what''s your hurry, friend? |
15422 | But how about our little scheme for new modelling ships- of- war? |
15422 | But what do you say? 15422 But when will that be?" |
15422 | But where am I to take him, sir? |
15422 | But where does Horne Tooke live? |
15422 | But where does it go to, Squire Woodcock? 15422 But where''s the rest of them?" |
15422 | But who_ is_ this ere singing, leaning, yarn- spinning chap? 15422 Can you really speak true?" |
15422 | Captain Paul, I do n''t like our ship''s name.--Duras? 15422 Captain Paul,"said Israel, on the way,"can we two manage the sentinels?" |
15422 | Captain Paul?--Paul Jones? |
15422 | Cock of the walk? |
15422 | Come to call on the Ambassador? |
15422 | Come, come, Captain,said Doctor Franklin, soothingly,"tell me now, what would you do with her, if you had her?" |
15422 | Come, what do ye standing there, fool? 15422 Did ye get a ball in the windpipe, that ye cough that way, worse nor a broken- nosed old bellows? |
15422 | Did you ever see that old granny? 15422 Did you go to sea young, lad?" |
15422 | Did your shipmates talk much of me? |
15422 | Do I dream? |
15422 | Do you give me your honor as a lady that it is as you say? |
15422 | Do you strike? |
15422 | Do you strike? |
15422 | Do you strike? |
15422 | Do you strike? |
15422 | Do you think so? 15422 Does it, gentlemen? |
15422 | Does this road go to London, gentlemen? |
15422 | Eh? |
15422 | Eh?--eh?--how''s that? |
15422 | Ever at sea? |
15422 | Fought like a devil-- like a very devil, I suppose? |
15422 | General Lord Howe? 15422 God bless your noble Majesty?" |
15422 | Going to limp to Lunnun, eh? 15422 Ha,--who are you, pray?" |
15422 | Halloo,said the strange sailor,"who be you? |
15422 | Has any man here a bit of pipe and tobacco in his pocket? |
15422 | He was Squire Woodcock''s friend, was n''t he? 15422 Helped flog-- helped flog my soldiers?" |
15422 | Horne Tooke? 15422 How could he, sir?" |
15422 | How do you do, Doctor Franklin? |
15422 | How many glasses of port do you suppose a man may drink at a meal? |
15422 | How? 15422 How? |
15422 | I suppose,said the Doctor, upon Israel''s concluding,"that you desire to return to your friends across the sea?" |
15422 | I wonder now what O- t- a- r- d is? |
15422 | I''m a topmate; ai n''t I, lads? |
15422 | Is that cheaper, Doctor? |
15422 | Is the Earl within? |
15422 | It is so late, I will stay here to- night,he said;"is there a convenient room?" |
15422 | It''s white wine, ai n''t it? |
15422 | Jump on board, sir, from the enemy? 15422 Keep quiet, will ye? |
15422 | Kings as clowns are codgers-- who ai n''t a nobody? |
15422 | Lean off me, will ye? |
15422 | Lonely? 15422 Men, does this man belong to your mess?" |
15422 | Mr. Officer- of- the- deck, what does this mean? 15422 Mr. Selkirk? |
15422 | My good fellow,said the knight looking sharply upon Israel,"tell me, are all your countrymen like you? |
15422 | My good friend,said the man of gravity, glancing scrutinizingly upon his guest,"have you not in your time, undergone what they call hard times? |
15422 | My honest friend, did you not have a visitor, just now? |
15422 | No, no-- I am--"Afraid, would you say? 15422 Now tell me, sir, if you please,"he continued,"what brings out his Majesty''s ship Drake this fine morning? |
15422 | Now, my kind friend,said Israel,"can you tell me where Horne Tooke and John Bridges live?" |
15422 | Oh, Doctor, that reminds me; what is O- t- a- r- d, pray? |
15422 | Oh, you are in a great hurry to get rid of the king''s service, ai n''t you? 15422 Out of his mind?" |
15422 | Please, ladies,half roguishly says Israel, taking off his hat,"does this road go to London?" |
15422 | Ports, sir, ports? |
15422 | Saucy cur,cried the woman, somehow misunderstanding him;"do you cunningly taunt me with_ wearing_ the breeches''? |
15422 | Shall I stop to take a meal anywhere, Doctor, as I return? 15422 Some experience with the countesses as well as myself, eh? |
15422 | Tell me how I may do it? |
15422 | Tell me,demanded the officer earnestly,"how long do you remember yourself? |
15422 | The point is now-- do you repose confidence in my statements? |
15422 | Then, sir, permit me to ask what is your occupation in life-- in time of peace, I mean? |
15422 | Very straight streets, ai n''t they? |
15422 | Well, Captain Paul, do n''t you like Doctor Franklin? 15422 Well, boys, what''s the good word?" |
15422 | Well, my good fellows, what can I do for you this afternoon? |
15422 | Well, what name have you gone by among your shipmates since you''ve been aboard? |
15422 | Were you at Bunker Hill?--that bloody Bunker Hill-- eh, eh? |
15422 | What are those men''s names? |
15422 | What are you laughing at? |
15422 | What are you looking at so, father? |
15422 | What do you suppose a glass of port costs? |
15422 | What do you want of me, neighbor? |
15422 | What for? |
15422 | What is all this? |
15422 | What place is yon? |
15422 | What ports have we touched at, sir? |
15422 | What ship are you? |
15422 | What signifies who we be-- dukes or ditchers? |
15422 | What sort of a place is Boston? |
15422 | What street and number? |
15422 | What the devil,roared a voice from within,"knock up a man this time of night to light your pipe? |
15422 | What think you, Israel, do they know who we are? 15422 What was the next port, sir?" |
15422 | What was you doing yesterday? |
15422 | What will the loon do with the pipe? |
15422 | What would you with powder and ball, pray? |
15422 | What''s the captain''s name? |
15422 | What''s the matter with ye, Phil? |
15422 | What''s your name? 15422 What''s_ my_ name, sir?" |
15422 | What, pray, would you have? |
15422 | What-- what is that, Doctor? |
15422 | What? 15422 What?" |
15422 | What?--what sort of men were they, did you say? |
15422 | What_ ports_, sir? |
15422 | When did we fire the first gun? |
15422 | Where did we fire the first_ shotted_ gun, sir?--and what was the name of the privateer we took upon that occasion? |
15422 | Where did you come from? 15422 Where did you get so much money?" |
15422 | Where does Mr. Bridges live? |
15422 | Where shall I take him, sir? |
15422 | Where''s your hoe? |
15422 | Who are you? |
15422 | Who may it be, sir, that I have the happiness to see? |
15422 | Who the deuce_ are_ you? |
15422 | Who the devil are_ you_, making this row here? |
15422 | Whose house stood here, friend? |
15422 | Why not sleep together? |
15422 | Why, Squire Woodcock, what is the matter with your chimney? |
15422 | Why, ai n''t Mr. Selkirk in? |
15422 | Why, would you not like to have a pair of new boots against your return? |
15422 | With nothing at all for our pains? |
15422 | With_ me_? |
15422 | Yees goin''to Lunnun, are yees? 15422 Yes, sir-- who shall I say it is?" |
15422 | You ca n''t tell me, then, where to find Horne Tooke? |
15422 | You had news from Whitehaven, I suppose, last night, eh? |
15422 | You hate''em, do ye? |
15422 | You know all about the place, Captain? |
15422 | You rascal,said this person,"why did your paltry smack give me this chase? |
15422 | You talk like a tax- gatherer,rejoined Allen, squinting diabolically at him;"what is my occupation in life? |
15422 | You wo n''t? 15422 _ Who_ persecutes you?" |
15422 | A sailor of the Captain who flogged poor Mungo Maxwell to death?" |
15422 | Afraid of the vowed friend and champion of all ladies all round the world? |
15422 | And now, who are you, my friend? |
15422 | And what can I_ not_ do with her? |
15422 | And what is signified by his being led about?" |
15422 | Are not men built into communities just like bricks into a wall? |
15422 | Are you a forecastleman?" |
15422 | Are you down in the ship''s books, or at all in the records of nature?" |
15422 | Be you a waister, or be you not?" |
15422 | Been set upon, and persecuted, and very illy entreated by some of your fellow- creatures?" |
15422 | Besides, what should he do with the purse, if not use it for his own? |
15422 | Brave chaps indeed!--Have you chosen your man?" |
15422 | But did n''t we pepper her, lads? |
15422 | But he drowned the thought by still more recklessly spattering with his ladle:"What signifies who we be, or where we are, or what we do?" |
15422 | But how much good bread will three pence English purchase?" |
15422 | But how now? |
15422 | But poor Israel, who also had conquered a craft, and all unaided too-- what had he? |
15422 | But pray, now that I look at you, are not you the hero I caught dodging round, in his shirt, in the cattle- pen, inside the fort? |
15422 | But pray, what are you doing now? |
15422 | But tell me the truth, are you not a seafaring man, and lately a prisoner of war?" |
15422 | But what did you? |
15422 | But what was now to be done? |
15422 | But where are the rest of the crew?" |
15422 | But why talk? |
15422 | But would he leave him to perish piecemeal in the wall? |
15422 | Captain?" |
15422 | Could he lie to a King? |
15422 | D''ye see the fire yet, lad, from the south? |
15422 | D--- n ye, Yankee, do n''t ye know no better?" |
15422 | Did n''t you try to do something to him?" |
15422 | Did you ever drive spikes?" |
15422 | Did you ever sail out of Whitehaven?" |
15422 | Did you ever see him?" |
15422 | Do n''t you know your old friend? |
15422 | Do n''t you remember my measuring you?" |
15422 | Do you remember yesterday morning? |
15422 | Do you remember yesterday?" |
15422 | Do your boots pinch you, my friend, that you lift one foot from the floor that way?" |
15422 | Does it go to London? |
15422 | Does the gentleman give much away?" |
15422 | For who does not shun the scurvy wretch, Poverty, advancing in battered hat and lamentable coat? |
15422 | Going a little airing?" |
15422 | Has n''t he been the prime man to get this fleet together? |
15422 | Have I not already by my services on the American coast shown that I am well worthy all this? |
15422 | Heed how I talk of that toad- hearted king''s lick- spittle of a scarlet poltroon; the vilest wriggler in God''s worm- hole below? |
15422 | Hereupon everybody laughed, equally at the manner as the words, and the nettled farmer retorted:"Conjurer, eh? |
15422 | How did you get here? |
15422 | How is Poor Richard?" |
15422 | How many have we wounded, do ye know? |
15422 | How was it all? |
15422 | How''s that?" |
15422 | I am he, I say, who answered your Lord Howe,''You,_ you_ offer_ our_ land? |
15422 | I suppose it''s superstition, but I''ll change Come, Yellow- mane, what shall we call her?" |
15422 | I wonder if Dr. Franklin understands that? |
15422 | I wonder if they ever make pumpkin pies in Paris? |
15422 | I wonder now if I am right in my understanding of this alphabet? |
15422 | I wonder what Doctor Franklin is doing now, and Paul Jones? |
15422 | I wonder what''s in that? |
15422 | If he thinks me such a very sensible young man, why not let me take care of myself?" |
15422 | If you should be discovered in my house, and your connection with me became known, do you know that it would go very hard with me; very hard indeed?" |
15422 | In God''s name how came you here?" |
15422 | In view of this battle one may ask-- What separates the enlightened man from the savage? |
15422 | Is civilization a thing distinct, or is it an advanced stage of barbarism? |
15422 | Is it not so?--eh? |
15422 | Is the gold band too much?" |
15422 | Is this the courier? |
15422 | It would hardly be fair now to swop my new boots for those old fire- buckets, would it?" |
15422 | My honest friend, are you not my guest? |
15422 | My man, will you go a cruise with Paul Jones? |
15422 | Now ca n''t you couple the two? |
15422 | Now, do you not think that for one man to swallow down seventy- two two- penny rolls at one meal is rather extravagant business?" |
15422 | Or does nature in those fierce night- brawlers, the billows, set mankind but a sorry example? |
15422 | Or were you fired aboard from the enemy, last night, in a cartridge? |
15422 | Presently, while looking up at a grated embrasure in the tower, he started at a voice from it familiarly hailing him:"Potter, is that you? |
15422 | She has a nice tapering waist, has n''t she, through the glass? |
15422 | Sir,"he continued, addressing the captive,"will you let me ask you a few plain questions, and be free with you?" |
15422 | Special?" |
15422 | Stop, have you the exact change ready? |
15422 | Tell me at once who are you?" |
15422 | Tell me, are you the possessor of a liberal fortune?" |
15422 | That instant another report was heard, followed by the savage hail--"You down sail at last, do ye? |
15422 | The Yankee courier? |
15422 | Then turning derisively upon the private:"You object to my way of taking things, do ye? |
15422 | Then why not let the bottles stay, Doctor, and save yourself all this trouble?" |
15422 | To what end do you lead that man about?" |
15422 | Waddles about in farthingales, and carries a peacock fan, do n''t he? |
15422 | Was it locked? |
15422 | Was n''t that a fine hoax we played on''em? |
15422 | Well, what news? |
15422 | Were you going to try''em on, just to see how they fitted?" |
15422 | What are they about? |
15422 | What are you talking about? |
15422 | What brought you here?" |
15422 | What could he say? |
15422 | What d''ye say, men?" |
15422 | What do you say?" |
15422 | What do you think of my Scotch bonnet?" |
15422 | What do you think of that? |
15422 | What does it all mean? |
15422 | What does the King of France with such a frigate? |
15422 | What is it?" |
15422 | What mess do you belong to?" |
15422 | What other sort would you have?" |
15422 | What pamphlet is this? |
15422 | What plebeian Lear or Oedipus, what Israel Potter, cowers there by the corner they shun? |
15422 | What say you? |
15422 | What to do next? |
15422 | What wants the fellow of more prefaces and introductions?" |
15422 | What''s that mean?--Duras? |
15422 | What''s this for? |
15422 | What''s your business? |
15422 | What''s your name? |
15422 | What''s your text?" |
15422 | What, afraid again?" |
15422 | When would his father take him there? |
15422 | Where are you stationed? |
15422 | Where do you sleep?" |
15422 | Where''s the rest of your gang?" |
15422 | Where-- where am I to take him?" |
15422 | Who are ye? |
15422 | Who are you, any way? |
15422 | Who are you? |
15422 | Who are you?" |
15422 | Who are you?" |
15422 | Who is he? |
15422 | Who is this strange man? |
15422 | Who knows? |
15422 | Who put these things here? |
15422 | Who would live a doddered old stump? |
15422 | Who_ are_ you?" |
15422 | Why at one given stone in the flagging does man after man cross yonder street? |
15422 | Why can not men be peaceable on that great common? |
15422 | Why did you jump on board here, last night, from the enemy?" |
15422 | Why do n''t you say_ Sir John_ like the rest?" |
15422 | Why do ye sir me?--eh? |
15422 | Why not wait till she comes out?" |
15422 | Why talk of Jaffa? |
15422 | Why then do you seek to degrade me below my previous level? |
15422 | Will you be a sailor of mine? |
15422 | Wonder now whether Paris lies on the Way to Wealth? |
15422 | Would it be dishonest under the circumstances to appropriate that purse? |
15422 | You are a runaway prisoner of war, eh? |
15422 | You do n''t ever munch sugar, do you? |
15422 | You have sought this place to be safe from pursuit, eh? |
15422 | You know''em?" |
15422 | You wo n''t betray me for that?" |
15422 | ai n''t that a sort of rumbling in the wall? |
15422 | and where are you going?" |
15422 | and where did you come from last?" |
15422 | asked Paul eagerly;"what ship? |
15422 | demanded Paul, with a look as of a parading Sioux demanding homage to his gewgaws;"what did they say of Paul Jones?" |
15422 | eh? |
15422 | eh? |
15422 | eh?" |
15422 | have n''t you heard that that bloody pirate, Paul Jones, is somewhere hanging round the coasts?" |
15422 | howled Paul,"how came the lanterns out? |
15422 | in an English revenue cutter?" |
15422 | seeing Israel fairly departing--"where''re you going?" |
14752 | Almighty Father,he cried, raising his eyes and hands towards heaven,"why dost thou think me worthy of such shame as this? |
14752 | And how happens that? 14752 And pray what would satisfy you?" |
14752 | And what is there in this magnificent golden rose to make you cry? |
14752 | And what manner of youth is he? |
14752 | And will you carry me back when I have seen it? |
14752 | And will you never regret the possession of it? |
14752 | Are ye traders, or, haply, pirates? |
14752 | Are you indeed,he exclaimed,"come to me at last, my son? |
14752 | Art thou mad, O foster- son of Zeus? 14752 Barbarous wretch,"cried Mezentius,"thinkest thou to affright me with thy weapons, now that thou hast robbed me of my son? |
14752 | But can I do nothing to help them? |
14752 | Did you ever hear the like? |
14752 | Do you not know that this island is enchanted? 14752 Do you, indeed, my dear child?" |
14752 | Does it presume to be green, when I have bidden it be barren until my daughter shall be restored to my arms? |
14752 | Does the earth disobey me? |
14752 | Does your majesty intend to throw doubt on my story? |
14752 | Foolish woman,answered Ceres,"did you not promise to intrust this poor infant entirely to me? |
14752 | Have I not said that I doubted not? |
14752 | Have the proud lords come home from their ambush, or are they still waiting out yonder to take me as I return? |
14752 | Have they undergone a similar change, through the arts of this wicked Circe? |
14752 | Have you anything to tell me, little bird? |
14752 | How could it fail? |
14752 | Is it a wholesome wine? |
14752 | Is it much farther? |
14752 | Is it not a very pleasant stream? |
14752 | Light of my eyes, dear son, have you come home at last? 14752 My child,"said she,"did you taste any food while you were in King Pluto''s palace?" |
14752 | My pretty bird,said Eurylochus,--for he was a wary person, and let no token of harm escape his notice,--"my pretty bird, who sent you hither? |
14752 | O my son,he exclaimed,"was I possessed with such a fond desire of life as to suffer thee to offer thyself in my place to the relentless foe? |
14752 | Oh, my sweet violets, shall I never see you again? |
14752 | Oh, where is my dear child? |
14752 | Pray what is the matter with you, this bright morning? |
14752 | Pray, my good host, whence did you gather them? |
14752 | Pray, my young friend,said he, as they grew familiar together,"what may I call your name?" |
14752 | Pray, nurse,the queen kept saying,"how is it that you make the child thrive so?" |
14752 | Quicksilver? 14752 That little bird which met me at the edge of the cliff,"exclaimed Ulysses;"was he a human being once?" |
14752 | The Golden Touch,asked the stranger,"or your own little Marygold, warm, soft, and loving as she was an hour ago?" |
14752 | The Golden Touch,continued the stranger,"or a crust of bread?" |
14752 | Then you are not satisfied? |
14752 | Thoughtest thou, my father,he cried,"that I should flee and leave thee behind? |
14752 | Well, friend Midas,said the stranger,"pray how do you succeed with the Golden Touch?" |
14752 | What ails thee, my son? |
14752 | What can have befallen you? |
14752 | What could induce me? |
14752 | What does she possess that I have not in greater abundance? 14752 What does this mean?" |
14752 | What ill fortune brings thee into perils so great? 14752 What is the matter, father?" |
14752 | What is there to gratify her heart? 14752 What is your name, my fair minstrel?" |
14752 | What mean you, little bird? |
14752 | What news, good Eumæus? |
14752 | What,said Hecate,"the young man that always sits in the sunshine? |
14752 | Where are your two and twenty comrades? |
14752 | Where is Proserpina? |
14752 | Where is my child? 14752 Where was the sound, and which way did it seem to go?" |
14752 | Whither are you going in such a hurry, wise Ulysses? |
14752 | Whither,he cried,"my fellow countrymen, do you fly? |
14752 | Who are ye? |
14752 | Who knows? |
14752 | Who, O Deïphobus,he exclaimed,"could have inflicted such shameful wounds upon you? |
14752 | Why do you come alone? |
14752 | Why do you worship Latona before me? |
14752 | Why should you be so frightened, my pretty child? |
14752 | Why,she cried,"should I yet live, when thou, my son, my boast, my glory, art dead? |
14752 | Why,submissively answered Juno,"dost thou tease me, who am already oppressed with anguish for the fate of the people I befriend? |
14752 | Will not you stay a moment,asked Phoebus,"and hear me turn the pretty and touching story of Proserpina into extemporary verses?" |
14752 | Will the dog bite me? |
14752 | Will you trust the child entirely to me? |
14752 | Wretch,cried Circe, giving him a smart stroke with her wand,"how dare you keep your human shape a moment longer? |
14752 | A plague on you, swineherd, where are you taking that pitiful wretch? |
14752 | Alas, what had he done? |
14752 | Am I permitted once more to see your face, and to listen to the tones of your dear voice? |
14752 | Am I preserved at the cost of these cruel wounds? |
14752 | And Achilles wondered to see him, and said,"Who art thou that standest against me?" |
14752 | And Anna her sister heard it, and rushing through the midst called her by name:"O my sister, was this thy purpose? |
14752 | And Hector answered, but Patroclus was dead already,"Why dost thou prophesy death to me? |
14752 | And Mercury spake, saying,"Son of Venus, canst thou sleep? |
14752 | And Ulysses made answer,"What think you, if Father Zeus and the goddess Athene stood by our side? |
14752 | And can there be nation so savage that it receiveth not shipwrecked men on its shore, but beareth arms against them, and forbiddeth them to land? |
14752 | And do n''t you see how careful we are to let the surf wave break over us every moment or two, so as to keep ourselves comfortably moist? |
14752 | And hast thou no fear of winter storms that vex the sea? |
14752 | And he caught the reins and said,"What meaneth this sound of trouble and wailing that I hear?" |
14752 | And he cried out aloud to Achilles,"Surely, thou thinkest this very day to sack the proud city of Troy? |
14752 | And he is not ill- looking?" |
14752 | And her sister made answer,"Why wilt thou waste thy youth in sorrow, without child or husband? |
14752 | And his wrath was greatly kindled, and he cried with a dreadful voice,"Shalt thou who art clothed with the spoils of my friends escape me? |
14752 | And if I had perished, what then? |
14752 | And now do ye answer me this, Whence come ye, and whither do ye go?" |
14752 | And now tell me: would you rather go in alone and face the princes while I wait here, or will you stay behind and let me go in first? |
14752 | And now what shall I do? |
14752 | And now, my little auditors, shall I tell you something that will make you open your eyes very wide? |
14752 | And shall I suffer this city to be destroyed? |
14752 | And the Cyclops knew him as he passed, and said,--"How is this, thou who art the leader of the flock? |
14752 | And the spirit spake, saying,"Why art thou vainly troubled? |
14752 | And what can I do with all this treasure? |
14752 | And what could that favor be, unless to multiply his heaps of treasure? |
14752 | And what is the message which you bring?" |
14752 | And what was to be done? |
14752 | And when Æneas and Achates heard these things they were glad, and would have come forth from the cloud, and Achates said,"What thinkest thou? |
14752 | And why arouse me from the sleep that sweetly bound me and kept my eyelids closed? |
14752 | And why need you lie to please me? |
14752 | And your companion there? |
14752 | And, truly, my dear little folks, did you ever hear of such a pitiable case in all your lives? |
14752 | Another beggar, I suppose, to hang about the doors and cringe for the scraps and spoil our feasts? |
14752 | Are birds careful? |
14752 | Are not these gems, which I have ordered to be dug for you, and which are richer than any in my crown,--are they not prettier than a violet?" |
14752 | Are you not terribly hungry? |
14752 | Art thou he that shall rule Italy and its mighty men of war, and spread thy dominion to the ends of the world? |
14752 | As for me, I shall first go to my home, and to my wife and my little son; for who knoweth whether I shall ever return to them again?" |
14752 | But Antinous rebuked him, and spoke to him, and said,--"Leiodes, what words have passed the barrier of your teeth? |
14752 | But Apollo stood by Æneas, and spake to him:"Æneas, where are now thy boastings that thou wouldst meet Achilles face to face?" |
14752 | But Athene taunted Ulysses and spurred him to the fight:"Have you lost your strength and courage, Ulysses? |
14752 | But Eumæus only said,"How could I neglect a stranger, though he were a worse man than you? |
14752 | But Queen Juno spake to Juturna, the sister of Turnus, saying,"Seest thou how these two are now about to fight, face to face? |
14752 | But Telemachus said to her,"Mother, why make me think of trouble now, when I have just escaped from death? |
14752 | But Ulysses ate and drank eagerly, and when his strength had come again he asked Eumæus,"My friend, who is this master of yours you tell me of? |
14752 | But all the while the righteous Æneas, having his head bare, and holding neither spear nor sword, cried to the people,"What seek ye? |
14752 | But are you quite sure that this will satisfy you?" |
14752 | But as for the men of Troy, and their deeds in arms, who knows them not? |
14752 | But come, tell me, where have you left your ship?" |
14752 | But how can I shun the battle, like a coward, to be the mock of the Trojans, and of the Trojan dames with trailing robes? |
14752 | But how should he tell this purpose to the queen? |
14752 | But how thinkest thou to make the war to cease?" |
14752 | But shall I not go to Laertes on my way and tell him too? |
14752 | But tell me who is that huge Achaian warrior? |
14752 | But the suitors all broke into uproar in the hall, and a rude youth would say,"Where are you carrying the curved bow, you miserable swineherd? |
14752 | But what shall this profit you or me if this city being safe, nevertheless our children stand in peril of slavery and shame?" |
14752 | But when Dido saw it she called to Anna her sister and said,"Seest thou how they hasten the work along the shore? |
14752 | But who let it fly no man knoweth; for who, of a truth, would boast that he had wounded Æneas? |
14752 | But why do I hesitate? |
14752 | But why do I thus ponder in my mind? |
14752 | But why should there be war between us? |
14752 | But Æneas came on, shaking his spear that was like unto a tree, and said,"Why delayest thou, O Turnus? |
14752 | But, a little farther on, what should she behold? |
14752 | Can the two of us make head against the throng?" |
14752 | Can you guess who I am? |
14752 | Can you tell me what has become of my dear child Proserpina?" |
14752 | Carest thou not for her whom thou leavest to die? |
14752 | Did he pity my love? |
14752 | Did not Ulysses once shield your father from his enemies and save his life? |
14752 | Did not your majesty stake your crown against my lute, and can the royal word be broken? |
14752 | Did the roots extend down into some enchanted cavern? |
14752 | Did you not say he was lost for Agamemnon''s sake? |
14752 | Do the Achaians press thee hard? |
14752 | Do you dare to make war upon us after having slain our oxen, and to banish the innocent Harpies from the kingdom which is theirs by right? |
14752 | Do you imagine that earthly children are to become immortal without being tempered to it in the fiercest heat of the fire? |
14752 | Do you see that tall gateway before us? |
14752 | Do you see this splendid crown upon my head? |
14752 | Do you think I could pray to Zeus after that without a fear? |
14752 | Do your people hate you, or will your brothers give you no support? |
14752 | Dost thou come to make prayers to Father Zeus, from the Citadel? |
14752 | Dost thou not remember how thou fleddest before me in the day that I took Lyrnessus?" |
14752 | For if the immortal Gods have made him a great warrior, do they therefore grant him leave to speak lawless words? |
14752 | For what doth it profit me that thou shouldst die? |
14752 | For what hope was left? |
14752 | For who should move away the great rock that lay against the door of the cave? |
14752 | For why should I dissemble? |
14752 | For why should I wait for Turnus till it please him to meet me in battle?" |
14752 | Has he as strange a one?" |
14752 | Hast thou forgotten thy father Anchises, and thy wife, and thy little son? |
14752 | Hast thou heard evil news from Phthia? |
14752 | Hast thou no care for me? |
14752 | Hast thou no pity for thy infant child, and for thy hapless wife, who soon will be a widow? |
14752 | Have I not faithfully kept my promise with you? |
14752 | Have I not seen Murranus die, and Ufens the Æquian? |
14752 | Have you burnt your mouth?" |
14752 | Have you fought them for ten years without learning their devices? |
14752 | Have you not everything that your heart desired?" |
14752 | How comes it that this impulse possesses them?" |
14752 | How is it that Homer makes his stories seem so real? |
14752 | How many are they and what manner of men? |
14752 | How many days, think you, would he survive a continuance of this rich fare? |
14752 | How ready would you be to aid Ulysses if he should come from somewhere, thus, on a sudden, and a god should bring him home? |
14752 | How shall I venture again to enter the walls of Laurentum or look upon my camp? |
14752 | How, then, if I go forth to meet him? |
14752 | I, who have always fought in the van of battle, and won glory for my father and myself? |
14752 | If thou thyself forgettest these things, dost thou grudge to thy son the citadels of Rome? |
14752 | In those days, spectacles for common people had not been invented, but were already worn by kings; else, how could Midas have had any? |
14752 | Instead of his ordinary milk diet, did he not eat up two of our comrades for his supper, and a couple more for breakfast, and two at his supper again? |
14752 | Is any one robbing thee of thy sheep, or seeking to slay thee by craft or force?" |
14752 | Is it because I too am a king that you desire so earnestly to speak with me? |
14752 | Is it so hard to face the suitors in your own house and home? |
14752 | Is it to bring victory to the Greeks? |
14752 | Is there nothing which I can get you to eat?" |
14752 | Is this what thy mother promised of thee, twice saving thee from the spear of the Greeks? |
14752 | May I not run down to the shore, and ask some of the sea- nymphs to come up out of the waves and play with me?" |
14752 | Nay, quietly lay it by; and for the axes, what if we leave them standing? |
14752 | Nevertheless she dissembled with her tongue, and spake:"Who would not rather have peace with thee than war? |
14752 | No suitors indeed have pleased thee here or in Tyre, but wilt thou also contend with a love that is after thine own heart? |
14752 | O husband, husband, why did n''t we go without our supper?" |
14752 | Oh, what shall I do? |
14752 | On which side of us does it lie? |
14752 | Or art thou weeping for the Greeks, because they perish for their folly?" |
14752 | Or shall I fly by another way, and hide me in the spurs of Ida? |
14752 | Pray, why do you live in such a bad neighborhood?" |
14752 | Proserpina, did you call her name?" |
14752 | Quicksilver?" |
14752 | Seest thou Priam? |
14752 | Shall I ever be a coward and a weakling, or am I still but young and can not trust my arm to right me with the man who wrongs me first? |
14752 | Shall I never hear them again? |
14752 | Shall Troy be burnt and King Priam be slain, and she take no harm? |
14752 | Shall she see again her home and her children, with Trojan women forsooth to be her handmaidens? |
14752 | Shall this land see Turnus flee before his enemies? |
14752 | Shall we shut ourselves up in the city, where all our goods are wasted already, buying meat for the people? |
14752 | Should we still need other help?" |
14752 | So he made you a present of his cloak too, did he?" |
14752 | So you have made a discovery, since yesterday?" |
14752 | Tell me now, what is the most wicked thing, and what the cleverest, you ever did in your life?" |
14752 | Tell me, for pity''s sake, have you seen my poor child Proserpina pass by the mouth of your cavern?" |
14752 | Tell me, now, do you sincerely desire to rid yourself of this Golden Touch?" |
14752 | Tell me, you naughty sea- nymphs, have you enticed her under the sea?" |
14752 | Terrible was the flash of his eyes as he cried,"Art thou come, child of Zeus, to see the insolence of Agamemnon? |
14752 | The Almighty Father saith to thee,''What meanest thou? |
14752 | The Etrurian, on the other hand, replied,"Spiteful foe, why dost thou threaten and insult before thou strikest? |
14752 | The sickness which great Zeus may send, who can avoid? |
14752 | Then Achilles looked up to heaven and groaned, crying out,"O Zeus, will none of the Gods pity me, and save me from the River? |
14752 | Then Achilles was mad with anger, and he thought in his heart,"Shall I arise and slay this caitiff, or shall I keep down the wrath in my breast?" |
14752 | Then Hector stood over him and cried,--"Didst thou think to spoil our city, Patroclus, and to carry away our wives and daughters in the ships? |
14752 | Then Venus spake thus:"What meaneth all this rage, my son? |
14752 | Then came his mother, hearing his cry, from where she sat in the depths of the sea, and laid her hand on him and said,--"Why weepest thou, my son? |
14752 | Then he cried aloud to Juno, entreating her:"O Juno, why doth thy son torment me only among all? |
14752 | Then said Cincinnatus, being not a little astonished,"Is all well?" |
14752 | Then said he, not without tears,"Is there any land, O Achates, that is not filled with our sorrows? |
14752 | Then she kissed the bed and cried,"Shall I die unavenged? |
14752 | Then she smote upon her breast and tore her hair, and cried,"Shall this stranger mock us thus? |
14752 | Then spake Jupiter to Juno, where she sat in a cloud watching the battle,"How long wilt thou fight against fate? |
14752 | Then the son of Oïleus, Ajax, rebuked him in boorish fashion:"Idomeneus, why chatterest thou before the time? |
14752 | Then they turned in fury on Ulysses:"Madman, are you shooting at men? |
14752 | Then was his wrath kindled, and he spake to himself,"Shall this evil woman return safe to Sparta? |
14752 | Then wise Ulysses answered her and said,"Lady, why urge me so insistently to tell? |
14752 | Thinkest thou that there is care or remembrance of such things in the grave? |
14752 | Thou hast thy Carthage; why dost thou grudge Italy to us? |
14752 | To whom Æneas,"I have not seen nor heard sister of thine, O virgin-- for what shall I call thee? |
14752 | Was he moved at all my tears? |
14752 | Was it to see thy brother die? |
14752 | Was it well that Juturna-- for what could she avail without thy help?--should give back to Turnus his sword? |
14752 | Were the pile and the sword and the fire for this? |
14752 | What are all the splendors you speak of, without affection? |
14752 | What can I do better than set a thief to catch a thief?" |
14752 | What can have been the matter with them?" |
14752 | What do you think has happened? |
14752 | What doest thou here? |
14752 | What evil word is this that has fallen from thy lips? |
14752 | What harm can the lady of the palace and her maidens do to mariners and warriors like us?" |
14752 | What have I done to merit such a punishment? |
14752 | What have I to do with the strife and sorrow of men?" |
14752 | What purpose hast thou now in thy heart? |
14752 | What shall I do? |
14752 | What though I stand on the farther shore, Others have crossed the stream before-- Why weep in vain? |
14752 | Where is Glaucus? |
14752 | Whether shall we fly into the sea, or force our way toward the Trojans?" |
14752 | Which of these two things do you think is really worth the most,--the gift of the Golden Touch, or one cup of clear cold water?" |
14752 | Who could remember to be careful when he was to fly for the first time? |
14752 | Who set my bed elsewhere? |
14752 | Who then could bend a bow? |
14752 | Why camest thou down from heaven? |
14752 | Why did I not tear him to pieces, and slay his companions with the sword, and serve up the young Ascanius at his meal? |
14752 | Why did not I think of him before? |
14752 | Why do you fly from me? |
14752 | Why drawest thou back? |
14752 | Why lookest thou not to Italy? |
14752 | Why mock me when my heart is full of sorrow, telling wild tales like these? |
14752 | Why should I be blamed more than others that help the men of Troy? |
14752 | Why tarriest thou here? |
14752 | Why will you not speak to me? |
14752 | Why wouldst thou not suffer that I should die with thee? |
14752 | Why, then, count this a shame? |
14752 | Will not you like to ride a little way with me, in my beautiful chariot?" |
14752 | Will you go with me, Phoebus, to demand my daughter of this wicked Pluto?" |
14752 | Wilt thou not then be content? |
14752 | Would he be less so by dinner- time? |
14752 | Would you support the suitors or Ulysses? |
14752 | Wouldst thou indeed save a mortal long ago doomed by Fate? |
14752 | Yet you waste his substance and would murder his son?" |
14752 | Yet, what other loaf could it possibly be? |
14752 | You have been gathering flowers? |
14752 | [ Illustration:"DEAR SON, HAVE YOU COME HOME AT LAST? |
14752 | can ye see the horses as I do? |
14752 | cried little Marygold, who was a very affectionate child,"pray what is the matter? |
14752 | cried these kind- hearted old people,"what has become of our poor neighbors?" |
14752 | do you smell the feast? |
14752 | hath Zeus, the son of Cronos, laid on any other goddess in Olympus such grievous woes as on_ me_, unhappy that I am? |
14752 | he cried,"how can I testify my reverence for thy filial piety and thy undaunted valor? |
14752 | he exclaimed with tears,"was it then a true rumor that reached me of your having died after my departure, and by your own hand? |
14752 | nor taste those nice little savory dishes which my dearest wife knew how to serve up?" |
14752 | or why are ye thus come at the bidding of your master, King Porsenna, to rob others of the freedom that ye care not to have for yourselves?" |
14752 | seest thou not what perils surround thee, nor hearest how the favorable west wind calls? |
14752 | thou who wert once accounted wise-- what is this that thou hast done? |
14752 | what madness is this? |
14752 | what power drave thee to these savage shores? |
14752 | what words are these which have passed the barrier of thy teeth? |
14752 | whither am I borne? |
14752 | why comest thou to our house, thou, an infrequent guest?" |
14752 | why dost thou, being a mortal man, pursue_ me_ with thy swift feet, who am a deathless god?" |
14752 | why hast thou left the field? |
14752 | wouldst thou again deceive me? |
11010 | ''Jamne igitur laudas quod se sapientibus unus Ridebat?'' |
11010 | --This deep World Of Darkness do we dread? |
11010 | --What if we find Some easier Enterprise? |
11010 | --Why delays His Hand to execute, what his Decree Fix''d on this day? |
11010 | Addison''Qui mores hominun multorum vidit?'' |
11010 | Ah, why should all Mankind, For one Man''s Fault, thus guiltless be condemn''d, If guiltless? |
11010 | Am I against all Acts of Charity? |
11010 | And God said,--What? |
11010 | And did no one tell you any thing of the Behaviour of your Lover Mr._ What dye call_ last Night? |
11010 | And how necessary is it to repeat Invectives against such a Behaviour? |
11010 | And how pitiful a Trader that, whom no Woman but his own Wife will have Correspondence and Dealings with? |
11010 | And this you say is your way of Wit? |
11010 | And who is it, says the Dervise, that lodges here at present? |
11010 | And who, says the Dervise, was the last Person that lodged here? |
11010 | And who, says the Dervise, will be here after you? |
11010 | And will he die to Expiate those very Injuries? |
11010 | As he our Darkness, can not we his Light Imitate when we please? |
11010 | Barr? |
11010 | Being in one of my witty, merry Fits, I ask''d him how long he had been in that Condition? |
11010 | Budgell Quid frustra Simulacra fugacia captas? |
11010 | But alas, I have not yet begun my Story, and what is making Sentences and Observations when a Man is pleading for his Life? |
11010 | But have I now seen Death? |
11010 | But how dye think I served him? |
11010 | But how few Ounces of Wooll do we see upon the Backs of those poor Creatures? |
11010 | But how few are there who seek after these things, and do not rather make Riches their chief if not their only Aim? |
11010 | But how is it, Sir, that my Appetites are increased upon me with the Loss of Power to gratify them? |
11010 | But if the ambitious Man can be so much grieved even with Praise it self, how will he be able to bear up under Scandal and Defamation? |
11010 | But is this then the Saviour? |
11010 | But it may be askd to what good Use can tend a Discourse of this Kind at all? |
11010 | But perhaps it is nothing to you that he is to be married to young Mrs.--on_ Tuesday_ next? |
11010 | But pray, says he, you that are a Critick, is this Play according to your Dramatick Rules, as you call them? |
11010 | But since Opinions are divided in this Particular, why may not the same Persons make use of both? |
11010 | But to cut short my Story; what can a Man do after all? |
11010 | But what Heart can conceive, what Tongue utter the Sequel? |
11010 | But what can not a great Genius effect? |
11010 | But what do they mean by all other Places? |
11010 | But when will that Time come, says_ Alcibiades_, and who is it that will instruct us? |
11010 | But whither am I strayed? |
11010 | But why do I say Envied? |
11010 | But why do I thus complain? |
11010 | Can not you distinguish between the Eyes of those who go to see, from those who come to be seen? |
11010 | Can not you possibly propose a Mean between being Wasps and Doves in Publick? |
11010 | Can there be a more astonishing Thought in Nature, than to consider how Men should fall into so palpable a Mistake? |
11010 | Can you oblige any Man of Honour and Virtue? |
11010 | Can you visit a sick Friend? |
11010 | Cui leges imponit, praescribit, jubet, vetat quod videtur? |
11010 | Did I request thee, Maker, from my Clay To mould me Man? |
11010 | Did you never see the Attendance of Years paid, over- paid in an Instant? |
11010 | Did you so, Sir? |
11010 | Dixerit e multis aliquis, quid virus in angues Adjicis? |
11010 | Do n''t you think she is in Love with me? |
11010 | Do not the very cruellest of Brutes tend their young ones with all the Care and Delight imaginable? |
11010 | Do not we observe, that a Lamb sucking a Goat changes very much its Nature, nay even its Skin and Wooll into the Goat Kind? |
11010 | Do you ever read the SPECTATORS? |
11010 | Do you never go to Plays? |
11010 | Does he live like a Gentleman who is commanded by a Woman? |
11010 | Does it not yet come into your Head, to imagine that I knew my Compliance was the greatest Cruelty I could be guilty of towards you? |
11010 | Does not a haughty Person shew the Temper of his Soul in the supercilious Rowl of his Eye? |
11010 | Ejicit? |
11010 | Ere- while they fierce were coming, and when we, To entertain them fair with open Front, And Breast,( what could we more?) |
11010 | First, tell us, why did any come? |
11010 | For how can she be call''d a Mother that will not nurse her young ones? |
11010 | For what should a poor Creature do that has lost all her Friends? |
11010 | Forlorn of thee, Whither shall I betake me, where subsist? |
11010 | Have there not been more unhappy and unnatural Passions than mine? |
11010 | He had not been long in this Posture before he was discovered by some of the Guards, who asked him what was his Business in that Place? |
11010 | He to whom she gives Law, grants and denies what she pleases? |
11010 | Hold, are you mad? |
11010 | How can I live without thee; how forego Thy sweet Converse and Love so dearly join''d, To live again in these wild Woods forlorn? |
11010 | How could you entertain such a Thought, as that I should hear of that silly Fellow with Patience? |
11010 | How different from this manner of Education is that which prevails in our own Country? |
11010 | How is the Mind of Man ignorant of Futurity, and unable to bear prosperous Fortune with Moderation? |
11010 | How many Children do we see daily brought into Fits, Consumptions, Rickets,& c., merely by sucking their Nurses when in a Passion or Fury? |
11010 | How many Men of Honour exposed to publick Obloquy and Reproach? |
11010 | How many Persons of undoubted Probity, and exemplary Virtue, on either Side, are blackned and defamed? |
11010 | How must a Man have his Heart full- blown with Joy in such an Article of Glory as this? |
11010 | How often have I, deceived by a Lovers Credulity, hearkned if she had not something to whisper me? |
11010 | How often is the ambitious Man cast down and disappointed, if he receives no Praise where he expected it? |
11010 | How scandalous( says he) is the Character of Trebonius, who was lately caught in Bed with another Man''s Wife? |
11010 | I have lived to a Fulness of Days and of Glory; what is there that Cæsar has not done with as much Honour as antient Heroes? |
11010 | If Calphurnia''s Dreams are Fumes of Indigestion, how shall I behold the Day after to- morrow? |
11010 | If I had laid out that which I profused in Luxury and Wantonness, in Acts of Generosity or Charity? |
11010 | If I were to speak of Merit neglected, mis- applied, or misunderstood, might not I say Estcourt has a great Capacity? |
11010 | If Men would be content to graft upon Nature, and assist her Operations, what mighty Effects might we expect? |
11010 | If Mr._ Such- a- ones_ Lady? |
11010 | If at any time she sees a Man warm in his Addresses to his Mistress, she will lift up her Eyes to Heaven, and cry, What Nonsense is that Fool talking? |
11010 | If he has not Courage to stand it,( you are a great Casuist) is it such an ill thing to bring my self off, as well as I can? |
11010 | In yonder nether World-- where shall I seek His bright Appearances, or Footsteps trace? |
11010 | Invidiam placare paras virtute relicta? |
11010 | Is it in those who commit, or those who observe it? |
11010 | Is it not Contradiction to say, Illustrious, Right, Reverend, and Right Honourable poor Sinners? |
11010 | It is pleasant enough to hear this Tragical Genius complaining of the great Mischief Andromache had done him: What was that? |
11010 | It is this fatal Hypocrisie and Self- deceit, which is taken notice of in those Words, Who can understand his Errors? |
11010 | It was upon this consideration that Epaminondas, being asked whether Chabrias, Iphicrates, or he himself, deserved most to be esteemed? |
11010 | Know ye not then, said Satan, fill''d with Scorn, Know ye not Me? |
11010 | Laudis amore tumes? |
11010 | Les Dieux, dans son bonheur, peuvent- ils légaler? |
11010 | Minitatur? |
11010 | Must I then leave thee, Paradise? |
11010 | My Orra Moor, where art thou laid? |
11010 | Nor your Cousin_ Such- a- one_? |
11010 | Novel? |
11010 | Now as for the Women; how few of them are there who place the Happiness of their Marriage in the having a wise and virtuous Friend? |
11010 | Now, Mr. SPECTATOR, would it not be a Work becoming your Office to treat this Criminal as she deserve[s]? |
11010 | Now, Sir, what I ask of you, as a Casuist, is to tell me how far in these Circumstances I am innocent, though submissive; he guilty, though impotent? |
11010 | O Friends, why come not on those Victors proud? |
11010 | One who will divide his Cares and double his Joys? |
11010 | Or find some other way to generate Mankind? |
11010 | Ought such a one to be trusted in his common Affairs? |
11010 | Poscit? |
11010 | Pray tell me in what Part of the World your Promontory lies, which you call_ The Lovers Leap_, and whether one may go to it by Land? |
11010 | Pray, Sir, was this Love or Spite? |
11010 | Pray, Sir, what must I do in this Business? |
11010 | Quam porro quis ignominiam, quam turpitudinem non pertulerit, ut effugiat dolorem, si i d summum malum esse decrevit? |
11010 | Qui nihil imperanti negare, nihil recusare audet? |
11010 | Quis novus hic nostris successit sedibus Hospes? |
11010 | Quo teneam vultus mutantem Protea nodo? |
11010 | Quod huic Officium, quæ laus, quod Decus erit tanti, quod adipisci cum colore Corporis velit, qui dolorem summum malum sibi persuaserit? |
11010 | Quæ forma, ut se tibi semper Imputet? |
11010 | Rather, how few are there who do not place their Happiness in outshining others in Pomp and Show? |
11010 | SIR, Is it come to this? |
11010 | Searoom? |
11010 | Shall this Obscure Nazarene command Israel, and sit on the Throne of David? |
11010 | Shall we remember the Folly of last Night, or resolve upon the Exercise of Virtue tomorrow? |
11010 | She came early to_ Belinda_ the next Morning, and asked her if Mrs._ Such- a- one_ had been with her? |
11010 | Should your People in Tragedy always talk to be understood? |
11010 | Sight so deform, what Heart of Rock could long Dry- eyed behold? |
11010 | Since every Body who knows the World is sensible of this great Evil, how careful ought a Man to be in his Language of a Merchant? |
11010 | That Delight and Satisfaction which he takes in the Prosperity and Happiness of another? |
11010 | That inward Pleasure and Complacency, which he feels in doing Good? |
11010 | That secret Rest and Contentedness of Mind, which gives him a Perfect Enjoyment of his present Condition? |
11010 | That while your Petitioners stand ready to receive Passengers with a submissive Bow, and repeat with a gentle Voice, Ladies, what do you want? |
11010 | The Earth trembles, the Temple rends, the Rocks burst, the Dead Arise: Which are the Quick? |
11010 | The Sense of it is as follows: Does a Man reproach thee for being Proud or Ill- natured, Envious or Conceited, Ignorant or Detracting? |
11010 | This I know of Tom, but who dare say it of so known a Tory? |
11010 | This was the Character of those holy Men of old, who in that beautiful Phrase of Scripture are said to have_ walked with God?_. |
11010 | This, perhaps, is not a very courtly Image in speaking of Ladies; that is very true: but where arises the Offence? |
11010 | Thus leave Thee, native Soil, these happy Walks and Shades, Fit haunt of Gods? |
11010 | To descend lower, are not our Streets filled with sagacious Draymen, and Politicians in Liveries? |
11010 | V._ What Phrenzy in my Bosom rag''d, And by what Care to be asswag''d? |
11010 | Vocat? |
11010 | What Actions can express the entire Purity of Thought which refines and sanctifies a virtuous Man? |
11010 | What Wood conceals my sleeping Maid? |
11010 | What a Spur and Encouragement still to proceed in those Steps which had already brought him to so pure a Taste of the greatest of mortal Enjoyments? |
11010 | What a Tax, says he, would they have raised for the Poor, had we put the Laws in Execution upon one another? |
11010 | What are Honour, Fame, Wealth, or Power when compared with the generous Expectation of a Being without End, and a Happiness adequate to that Being? |
11010 | What could I do, But follow streight, invisibly thus led? |
11010 | What gentle Youth I could allure, Whom in my artful Toiles secure? |
11010 | What is the Difference in the Happiness of him who is macerated by Abstinence, and his who is surfeited with Excess? |
11010 | What is the Reason Homers and Virgil''s Heroes do not form a Resolution, or strike a Blow, without the Conduct and Direction of some Deity? |
11010 | What may for Strength with Steel compare? |
11010 | What might not that Savage Greatness of Soul which appears in these poor Wretches on many Occasions, be raised to, were it rightly cultivated? |
11010 | What must I do? |
11010 | What strong Images of Virtue and Humanity might we not expect would be instilled into the Mind from the Labours of the Pencil? |
11010 | What then can be the Standard of Delicacy but Truth and Virtue? |
11010 | What then? |
11010 | When the Mind is thus summed up and expressed in a Glance, did you never observe a sudden Joy arise in the Countenance of a Lover? |
11010 | Where shall we find the Man who looks out for one who places her chief Happiness in the Practice of Virtue, and makes her Duty her continual Pleasure? |
11010 | Which are the Dead? |
11010 | Whither do they carry my Lord, my King, my Saviour, and my God? |
11010 | Who could expect such a Requital of such Merit? |
11010 | Who does thy tender Heart subdue, Tell me, my_ Sappho,_ tell me Who_? |
11010 | Who ever beheld the charming Emilia, without feeling in his Breast at once the Glow of Love and the Tenderness of virtuous Friendship? |
11010 | Who is that yonder buffeted, mock''d, and spurn''d? |
11010 | Who were the Persons that lodged in this House when it was first built? |
11010 | Who would have thought that the clangorous Noise of a Smiths Hammers should have given the first rise to Musick? |
11010 | Whom do they drag like a Felon? |
11010 | Why am I mock''d with Death, and lengthened out To deathless Pain? |
11010 | Why do I overlive? |
11010 | Why else, says he, does_ Cornelia_ always put on a Black Hood when her Husband is gone into the Country? |
11010 | Why may not I hope to go on in my usual Work, and, tho unknown to you, be assistant in all the Conflicts of your Mind? |
11010 | Why should a Man be sensible of the Sting of a Reproach, who is a Stranger to the Guilt that is implied in it? |
11010 | Why sleepst thou Eve? |
11010 | Will it revive him to see you enter, and suspend your own Ease and Pleasure to comfort his Weakness, and hear the Impertinencies of a Wretch in Pain? |
11010 | Will the Bell never ring for Prayers? |
11010 | Will you not hear me? |
11010 | With how many different Circumstances, and with what Variety of Phrases, will they tell over the same Story? |
11010 | With what Confusion is a Man of Figure obliged to return the Civilities of the Hat to a Person whose Air and Attire hardly entitle him to it? |
11010 | With what a Fluency of Invention, and Copiousness of Expression, will they enlarge upon every little Slip in the Behaviour of another? |
11010 | Would you do an handsome thing without Return? |
11010 | You were telling of? |
11010 | [ 1]_ SIR_, Why will you apply to my Father for my Love? |
11010 | [ 5][ Footnote 1: Or Henry Martyn?] |
11010 | [ Footnote 3:--wiser than they: Is not this the Carpenters Son, is not his Mother called Mary, his Brethren, James, Joseph, Simon and Judas? |
11010 | [ Quis talia fando Temperet à lachrymis? |
11010 | _ An ille mihi liber cui mulier imperat? |
11010 | _ Dear Correspondent_, Would you marry to please other People, or your self? |
11010 | _ Socrates_ then asks him, If after[ receiving[ 1]] this great Favour he would be content[ed] to lose his Life? |
11010 | and not fill the World at once With Men, as Angels, without Feminine? |
11010 | did I sollicite thee From Darkness to promote me? |
11010 | do it for an Infant that is not sensible of the Obligation: Would you do it for publick Good? |
11010 | do it for one who will be an honest Artificer: Would you do it for the Sake of Heaven? |
11010 | do you leave your Money at his Shop? |
11010 | et rabidæ tradis ovile lupæ? |
11010 | how glad would lay me down, As in my Mothers Lap? |
11010 | how shall we breathe in other Air Less pure, accustomd to immortal Fruits? |
11010 | is this the Deliverer? |
11010 | is this the way I must return to native Dust? |
11010 | one who will be faithful and just to all, and constant and loving to them? |
11010 | or here place In this delicious Garden? |
11010 | or if he would receive it though he was sure he should make an ill Use of it? |
11010 | or subject himself to the Penalty, when he knows he has never committed the Crime? |
11010 | or treated but as one whose Honesty consisted only in his Incapacity of being otherwise? |
11010 | or would you have me break my Mind yet or not? |
11010 | that peopled highest Heav''n With Spirits masculine, create at last This Novelty on Earth, this fair Defect Of Nature? |
11010 | what signifies one poor Pot of Tea, considering the Trouble they put me to? |
11010 | who can neither deny her any thing she asks, or refuse to do any thing she commands_? |
11010 | who with Care and Diligence will look after and improve the Estate, and without grudging allow whatever is prudent and convenient? |
11010 | with what Anxiety am I necessitated to adore my own Idol? |
30646 | And your father? |
30646 | But if there should be any? |
30646 | But what becomes of the difference between the lazy and the industrious? 30646 Yes,"interjects at this point a capitalist- minded reader,"that is all very well, but by what''legal principle''can society justify such a change?" |
30646 | And Jacob''s anger was kindled against Rachel; and he said, Am I in God''s stead, who hath withheld from thee the fruit of the womb? |
30646 | And is it not similarly with the modern Labor Movement? |
30646 | And murder? |
30646 | And what is the picture presented by these? |
30646 | And who is it that thus raises his hand against the peasant''s property and independence? |
30646 | Are our women unfitter than the far lower negroes, to whom full political equality was conceded in North America? |
30646 | Are the efforts in these directions justified? |
30646 | Are they practical? |
30646 | Are we not counted of him strangers? |
30646 | Are we not in an age that rushes forward, so to speak, with seven- mile boots, and therefore causes all the foes of a new and better world to tremble? |
30646 | Arson? |
30646 | But are we to wonder at that? |
30646 | But how apply such a cure? |
30646 | But how if the deluge were to come before their departure from life? |
30646 | But how is it to- day in this bourgeois society? |
30646 | But who constituted the Roman Commonwealth? |
30646 | But why and wherefor? |
30646 | But why should that be the privilege of the"great souls"only, and not of the others also, who are no"great souls,"and can be none? |
30646 | By what right can woman be refused equality with man? |
30646 | By what right does any claim precedence over another? |
30646 | Called upon to cast her ballot, she will ask, What for? |
30646 | Can Germany perform the same feat alone, unaided? |
30646 | Can a private kitchen be imagined even approximately equipped like that? |
30646 | Contempt for religion? |
30646 | Counterfeiting? |
30646 | Did it consist of the subjugated peoples, the millions of slaves? |
30646 | Did not the Protestant Reformers and modern bourgeoisdom once face overpowering adversaries? |
30646 | Do events point in that direction? |
30646 | Does not the industrialist proceed on that plan? |
30646 | Erinnyes-- Else, thou accursed one, How nourished she thy life within her womb? |
30646 | Erinnyes-- How? |
30646 | He calls out to the rich:"Wretches that you are, what answer will you make to the divine Judge? |
30646 | How can justice be done to- day, when private interests dominate and the interests of the commonweal are made subservient? |
30646 | How could there be any"over- production"when there is no lack of capacity to consume, i. e., of wants that crave satisfaction? |
30646 | How could they discover any, with their short visits and without drawing upon medical advice? |
30646 | How do matters stand in Socialist society? |
30646 | How else can the youth be that is brought up in such an atmosphere? |
30646 | How many of those who live among these semi- savage races, do as much? |
30646 | How many parents are able to follow the course of their children''s education at school, and to take them under the arm in their schoolwork at home? |
30646 | How many workingmen do not allow themselves to be influenced and led without a will of their own? |
30646 | If both questions must be answered in the negative, then this third arises: How can these demands be met? |
30646 | If the question is answered in the negative, this other rises: Can modern society meet the demands? |
30646 | Is it not obvious that our social system suffers of serious ailments? |
30646 | Is not mankind properly divided? |
30646 | Is that right towards a man like me?" |
30646 | Many contrivances are, under the existing system of private enterprise, first of all, a question of money: can the business bear the expenditure? |
30646 | On the one hand the question, What was the former position of woman, what is it to- day, and what will it be in the future? |
30646 | Orestes-- And while she lived, why did you not pursue her? |
30646 | Orestes-- But I was tied by blood- affinity To her who bare me? |
30646 | Perjury, false testimony, cheating, thefts of inheritance, fraudulent failures? |
30646 | She says among other things: With what slanderous dirt does not he( Euripides) besmirch us? |
30646 | That, however, even in the German language the word has a varying meaning may be gathered from the epigram of Schiller:"To what religion I belong? |
30646 | The Prytaneum put the question to the popular assembly of the Athenian citizens:"How is the State to be saved?" |
30646 | The ever- recurring question, what shall be cooked to- day? |
30646 | The question that does rise is, How high will the aspirations of society mount? |
30646 | The question then rises: Has modern society met the demands for a natural life, especially as concerns the female sex? |
30646 | The two hostile principles come here into dramatic vividness of expression: Erinnyes-- The prophet bade thee be a matricide? |
30646 | Unwise women, why wish you to become men? |
30646 | Upon the startled question, put by the stranger,"How can an ox be so large?" |
30646 | Was it not a saying of a celebrated statesman:"The marriage of a Christian stallion with a Jewish mare is to be highly recommended"? |
30646 | Was the Social Democracy crippled because gagged and pinioned by exclusion laws, so that it could not budge? |
30646 | We ask again, Can this be called a rational state of things? |
30646 | We ask, Is such a marriage-- and their number is infinite-- not worse than prostitution? |
30646 | We consider the whole affair strictly confidential and as a matter of honor(? |
30646 | We now come to the other side of the question: Do people multiply indefinitely, and is that a necessity of their being? |
30646 | Were not one time the believers in Christianity a small minority? |
30646 | What becomes of the victims of our social conditions? |
30646 | What cares he about the commonwealth and its well- being? |
30646 | What does it? |
30646 | What more can you want? |
30646 | What of it? |
30646 | What say our agrarians to this opinion of their former political co- religionist? |
30646 | What say the adversaries of the theory of descent in the female line to this sketch drawn from the immediate present? |
30646 | What then? |
30646 | What was it that the Emperor Vespasian said at a somewhat similar juncture? |
30646 | What would become of the world? |
30646 | When does the slanderer''s tongue hold its peace? |
30646 | Whence came that other people? |
30646 | Whence comes it that the children of peasants differ from city children? |
30646 | Whence proceed all these scourges? |
30646 | Whence shall the means come for all that? |
30646 | Where are the private individuals, where the States, able to operate upon the requisite scale? |
30646 | Where is the spot at which could be said:"So far and no farther?" |
30646 | Which of those good old women dared think of occupying her mind with public affairs, as is now done by many women? |
30646 | Who can say where the line is to be drawn to our chemical, physical, physiologic knowledge? |
30646 | Who can tell how general conditions will then be, and what the demands of public interest will be? |
30646 | Who could blame her if, there also, as happens frequently in France, women are seen to waive formal matrimonial contracts? |
30646 | Who is to derive pleasure or satisfaction therefrom, seeing that society removes from him all sources of hatred? |
30646 | Who, to- day, would dare uphold such a position of woman as"natural"without exposing himself to the charge of belittling her? |
30646 | Whom for? |
30646 | Why exert themselves, if the wealth of their parents makes all effort seem superfluous? |
30646 | Why should not in future society the youth of the land, without distinction of sex, be enlisted for such necessary work? |
30646 | Why? |
30646 | Why? |
30646 | Will it pay? |
30646 | Would they mend matters? |
30646 | Wouldst thou renounce the holiest bond of all? |
30646 | [ 122] And how stands it in Paris? |
30646 | [ 180] What does Herr Eugene Richter say to this calculation? |
30646 | between the intelligent and the stupid?" |
30646 | sprechet, herre, wurre ez iht? |
30646 | the Spartan answered laughing:"How is it possible that there could be an adulterer in Sparta?" |
30235 | And will your mother pity me, Who am a maiden most forlorn? |
30235 | Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades? |
30235 | Dost thou not mind, old woman,he said,"How thou madest me sup and dine? |
30235 | Is she not passing fair? |
30235 | O wha is this has done this deed, And tauld the king o''me, To send us out, at this time of the year, To sail upon the sea? 30235 O where will I get a gude sailor, To take my helm in hand, Till I get up to the tall top- mast, To see if I can spy land?" |
30235 | O, have they parishes burnt? |
30235 | O, what have they done? |
30235 | O, who are these,the sheriff he said,"Come tripping over the lee?" |
30235 | Vaine glorious Elfe,( saide he)"doest not thou weet,{21} That money can thy wantes at will supply? |
30235 | What lets but one may enter? |
30235 | What news? 30235 What news? |
30235 | What secret place( quoth he)"can safely hold So huge a masse, and hide from heaven''s eie? |
30235 | _ Must we quote all these good people who have nothing to say? 30235 ''Our work,''said I,''was well begun: Then, from thy breast what thought, Beneath so beautiful a sun, So sad a sigh has brought?'' 30235 ( Said Christabel,)And who art thou?" |
30235 | --_Leigh Hunt._"Has any one, since Shakespeare and Spenser, lighted on such tender and such grand ecstasies?" |
30235 | = Arm''d with thunder, clad with wings.= What do these expressions mean? |
30235 | = Sounds, not arms.= Does the poet allude to the cultivation of oratory and poetry among the Romans and the neglect of military affairs? |
30235 | = as women men.="As women value men,"or"as women by men are valued"--which? |
30235 | = hurled them.= Hurled what? |
30235 | = thrice he slew the slain.= How could he slay the slain? |
30235 | And what can ail the mastiff bitch? |
30235 | And what will you give to a silly old man To- day will your hangman be?" |
30235 | Are all the Aonian{1} springs Dried up? |
30235 | Are honor, virtue, conscience, all exiled? |
30235 | As to be heard where ear is none; As lead to grave in marble stone, My song may pierce her heart as soon; Should we then sing, or sigh, or moan? |
30235 | But who can hope his line should long Last, in a daily- changing tongue? |
30235 | Can she the bodiless dead espy? |
30235 | Death is the end of life; ah, why Should life all labour be? |
30235 | Does she steer the tissued clouds"with radiant feet,"or does she steer herself down the tissued clouds? |
30235 | Fled is that music:--do I wake or sleep? |
30235 | Fond,{39} impious man, think''st thou yon sanguine cloud, Raised by thy breath, has quenched the orb of day? |
30235 | He rolleth in his Recordes; He saith,"How say ye, my lordes? |
30235 | Heard ye the din of battle{26} bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse? |
30235 | Hovered thy spirit o''er thy sorrowing son, Wretch even then, life''s journey just begun? |
30235 | How do the barges differ in appearance and movement from the shallop mentioned two lines below? |
30235 | How happens it, that amongst the least, in spite of pedantrie, awkwardnesses, we meet with brilliant pictures and genuine love- cries? |
30235 | How happens it, that when this generation was exhausted, true poetry ended in England, as true painting in Italy and Flanders? |
30235 | How schal the world be servëd? |
30235 | How will she be enthroned? |
30235 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
30235 | I have said elsewhere:''A simple child That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death? |
30235 | In this wild maze their vain endeavors end: How can the less the greater comprehend? |
30235 | Is it the lay sung in memory of mild Llewellyn? |
30235 | Is not my reason good?" |
30235 | Is the night chilly and dark? |
30235 | Is the sable warrior{23} fled? |
30235 | Is there any peace In ever climbing up the climbing wave? |
30235 | Is there anything in honest poverty to cause one to hang his head, etc.? |
30235 | Is there confusion in the little isle? |
30235 | Is there no pity, no relenting ruth, Points to the parents fondling o''er their child? |
30235 | Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that? |
30235 | Martinmas wind, when wilt thou blaw, And shake the green leaves off the tree? |
30235 | Milton elsewhere says:"Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine, enchanting ravishment?" |
30235 | O gentle death, when wilt thou come? |
30235 | O wherefore should I busk{6} my heid, Or wherefore should I kame my hair? |
30235 | On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I had stood before, When will return the glory of your prime? |
30235 | Or at the casement seen her stand? |
30235 | Or finite Reason reach Infinity? |
30235 | Or have they robbed any virgin? |
30235 | Or is it the lay which soft Llewellyn sang? |
30235 | Or is she known in all the land, The lady of Shalott? |
30235 | Or other men''s wives have ta''en?" |
30235 | Or swynkà « with his handës, and laboure, As Austyn bit? |
30235 | Or where hast thou thy wonne,{31} that so much gold Thou canst preserve from wrong and robbery?" |
30235 | Perhaps it is the owlet''s scritch: For what can ail the mastiff bitch? |
30235 | Said Christabel,"How camest thou here?" |
30235 | Say, heav''nly muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant God? |
30235 | Say, may I be for aye thy vassal blest? |
30235 | Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, or may be again? |
30235 | The lovely lady, Christabel, Whom her father loves so well, What makes her in the wood so late, A furlong from the castle gate? |
30235 | The night is chill; the forest bare; Is it the wind that moaneth bleak? |
30235 | The taverner tooke me by the sleve,"Sir,"sayth he,"wyll you our wyne assay"? |
30235 | Thy beauty''s shield, heart- shaped and vermeil dyed? |
30235 | To what do they refer? |
30235 | Waking or asleep; Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream-- Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? |
30235 | We shall become the same, we shall be one Spirit within two frames, oh wherefore two? |
30235 | What are_ radiant_ feet? |
30235 | What does the word_ sweet_ modify? |
30235 | What fields, or waves, or mountains? |
30235 | What is it breathes life into their books? |
30235 | What is it that will last? |
30235 | What is the meaning of= rains=? |
30235 | What is the meaning of_ humor_? |
30235 | What is this condition which gives rise to so universal a taste for poetry? |
30235 | What kind of glories will Mercy wear? |
30235 | What love of thine own kind? |
30235 | What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain? |
30235 | What picture is presented to the imagination in the first five lines of this stanza? |
30235 | What pleasure can we have To war with evil? |
30235 | What sees she there? |
30235 | What shapes of sky or plain? |
30235 | What thou art we know not;-- What is most like thee? |
30235 | What though the greedy fry Be taken with false baits Of worded balladry, And think it poesy? |
30235 | What was the character of his education and of the other influences which shaped his life and distinguished his works? |
30235 | What were the conditions under which he wrote this piece? |
30235 | What woful stuff this madrigal would be, In some starv''d hackney sonneteer, or me? |
30235 | Where dost Thou careless lie Buried in ease and sloth? |
30235 | Where is it now, the glory and the dream? |
30235 | Where will she sit? |
30235 | Whither is fled the visionary gleam? |
30235 | Who has not felt the same aspirations as regards the world of his mind? |
30235 | Who is this? |
30235 | Why are Mercy''s feet radiant? |
30235 | Why are the Cherubim"helmed,"while the Seraphim are"sworded"? |
30235 | Why are we weighed upon with heaviness, And utterly consumed with sharp distress, While all things else have rest from weariness? |
30235 | Why should we only toil, the roof and crown of things? |
30235 | Why stares she with unsettled eye? |
30235 | Why will the opening of Heaven''s high palace wall be"as at some festivall"? |
30235 | Why_ alien_ corn? |
30235 | [ FROM"WHY COME YE NOT TO COURT?"] |
30235 | and the brook, why not? |
30235 | and what is here? |
30235 | he said,"Or have they ministers slain? |
30235 | lies Thespia waste? |
30235 | of= rain= in the next stanza? |
30235 | thou silly old man, What news, I do thee pray?" |
30235 | thou silly old woman, What news hast thou for me?" |
30235 | we have all that can be performed by elegance of diction or sweetness of versification; but what can form avail without better matter? |
30235 | what ails poor Geraldine? |
30235 | what ignorance of pain? |
30235 | what news? |
30235 | what news? |
30235 | what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll? |
30235 | what traitor could thee hither bring? |
30235 | when I learnt{3} that thou wast dead, Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed? |
3012 | ( 1) And why dress in these miserable tragic rags? |
3012 | ( 1) What do you bring? |
3012 | ( 1) Will you give me back my garlic? |
3012 | AMBASSADOR Do you understand what he says? |
3012 | AMBASSADOR What does he say? |
3012 | AMPHITHEUS Has anyone spoken yet? |
3012 | AMPHITHEUS Oh, Triptolemus and Ceres, do ye thus forsake your own blood? |
3012 | AMPHITHEUS Well? |
3012 | Am I a beggar? |
3012 | And as to the rest, what do you wish to sell me? |
3012 | And this other one? |
3012 | And you, Dracyllus, Euphorides or Prinides, have you knowledge of Ecbatana or Chaonia? |
3012 | Art thou sensible of the dangerous battle we are about to engage upon in defending the Lacedaemonians? |
3012 | BOEOTIAN Anchovies, pottery? |
3012 | BOEOTIAN And what will you give me in return? |
3012 | BOEOTIAN What harm have I done you? |
3012 | But HAVE you brought me a treaty? |
3012 | But as you are so strong, why did you not circumcise me? |
3012 | But come( there are only friends who hear me), why accuse the Laconians of all our woes? |
3012 | But how, great gods? |
3012 | But what else is doing at Megara, eh? |
3012 | But who would make so sorry a deal as to buy you? |
3012 | But will you buy anything of me, some chickens or some locusts? |
3012 | CHORUS Acharnians, what means this threat? |
3012 | CHORUS But what will be done with him? |
3012 | CHORUS Listen to you? |
3012 | CHORUS What do you purport doing? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And Attic figs? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And do we give you two drachmae, that you should treat us to all this humbug? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And how long was he replacing his dress? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And who is this Lamachus, who demands an eel? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And why do you always receive your pay, when none of these others ever gets any? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS And why do you bite me? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS But what is this? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Can they eat alone? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Can you eat chick- pease? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Come, what do you wish to say? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Do you want to fight this four- winged Geryon? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Euripides.... EURIPIDES What words strike my ear? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS How? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is Euripides at home? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is it a feather? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is it salt that you are bringing? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Is this not sufficient to drive one to hang oneself? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Of the Odomanti? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Of what King? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS On what terms? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Phaleric anchovies, pottery? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Prytanes, will you let me be treated in this manner, in my own country and by barbarians? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Take back, take back your viands; for a thousand drachmae I would not give a drop of peace; but who are you, pray? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Well, how are things at Megara? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What DO you bring then? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What can I do in the matter? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What do they like most? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What do you want crying this gait? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What has happened to you? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What is the matter? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What is this? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What medimni? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What other news of Megara? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What plague have we here? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS What then will you say when you see the thrushes roasting? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who am I? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who are you? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who are you? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who dares do this thing? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Who ever saw an oxen baked in an oven? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Why, what has happened? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS Women, children, have you not heard? |
3012 | DICAEOPOLIS''Tis garlic then? |
3012 | Dicaeopolis, do you want to buy some nice little porkers? |
3012 | Did you hear him? |
3012 | Do you hear? |
3012 | Do you mean those of the beggar Philoctetes? |
3012 | Dost thou hesitate and art thou fully steeped in Euripides? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Is it the filthy dress of the lame fellow, Bellerophon? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Now, what tatters DOES he want? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Of Phoenix, the blind man? |
3012 | EURIPIDES What rags do you prefer? |
3012 | EURIPIDES Whatever do you want such a thing as that for? |
3012 | FIRST SEMI- CHORUS But though it be true, need he say it? |
3012 | For ready- money or in wares from these parts? |
3012 | For what sum will you sell them? |
3012 | Friends, do you hear the sacred formula? |
3012 | HERALD Who asks to speak? |
3012 | HERALD Your name? |
3012 | Has he got one of our children in his house? |
3012 | I may not denounce our enemies? |
3012 | I see another herald running up; what news does he bring me? |
3012 | Is it not Straton? |
3012 | Is it not to convict him from the outset? |
3012 | Is this not a scandal? |
3012 | LAMACHUS But what have you said? |
3012 | LAMACHUS What are you then? |
3012 | LAMACHUS Whence comes this cry of battle? |
3012 | LAMACHUS Why do you embrace me? |
3012 | LAMACHUS You are but a mendicant and you dare to use language of this sort? |
3012 | Listen to your long speeches, after you have treated with the Laconians? |
3012 | MEGARIAN And why not? |
3012 | MEGARIAN Are you not holding back the salt? |
3012 | MEGARIAN Is that a little sow, or not? |
3012 | MEGARIAN What else? |
3012 | NICARCHUS Whose are these goods? |
3012 | Of what country, then? |
3012 | SECOND SEMI- CHORUS Where are you running to? |
3012 | SLAVE Who''s there? |
3012 | Shall we wager and submit the matter to Lamachus, which of the two is the best to eat, a locust or a thrush? |
3012 | Speak, Marilades, you have grey hair; well then, have you ever been entrusted with a mission? |
3012 | Suppose that a Lacedaemonian had seized a little Seriphian(4) dog on any pretext and had sold it, would you have endured it quietly? |
3012 | That is what you assuredly would have done, and would not Telephus have done the same? |
3012 | Then our ambassadors are seeking to deceive us? |
3012 | Those in which I rigged out Aeneus(1) on the stage, that unhappy, miserable old man? |
3012 | To be sold or to cry with hunger? |
3012 | What gives him such audacity? |
3012 | What have we here? |
3012 | What is wheat selling at? |
3012 | What think you? |
3012 | What would Marpsias reply to this? |
3012 | Whence has sprung this accursed swarm of Charis(1) fellows which comes assailing my door? |
3012 | Where is Amphitheus? |
3012 | Where is be? |
3012 | Where is the king of the feast? |
3012 | Which would you prefer? |
3012 | Who has mutilated them like this? |
3012 | Will the Great King send us gold? |
3012 | Will they eat them? |
3012 | You really will not, Acharnians? |
3012 | You say no, do you not? |
3012 | You will not hear me? |
3012 | You will say that Sparta was wrong, but what should she have done? |
3012 | a Megarian? |
3012 | a braggart''s? |
3012 | and yet you have not left off white? |
3012 | are such exaggerations to be borne? |
3012 | do you dare to jeer me? |
3012 | do you not at every raid grub up the ground with your pikes to pull out every single head? |
3012 | do you not heed the herald? |
3012 | do you want to make yourself vomit with this feather? |
3012 | fellow, what countryman are you? |
3012 | great baboon, with such a beard do you seek to play the eunuch to us? |
3012 | is it not a sow then? |
3012 | is it not so? |
3012 | of what value to me have been these few pleasures? |
3012 | try not to scoff at my armor? |
3012 | what are you going to say? |
3012 | what are you proposing to do? |
3012 | what bird''s? |
3012 | where must I bring my aid? |
3012 | where must I sow dread? |
3012 | who wants me to uncase my dreadful Gorgon''s head? |
3012 | will you hear them squeal? |
3012 | will you kill this coal- basket, my beloved comrade? |
3012 | you declare war against birds? |
14420 | All these things fill me with admiration,replied Cortado;"but may I trouble your worship to tell me, have you no other penance than this to perform? |
14420 | And do you know how to read, my girl? |
14420 | And is not she a scullion? |
14420 | And pray, my gentleman,said she to Avendaño,"who is to go bail for you? |
14420 | And proceeding in this manner,observed Cortado,"your worships think that your lives are good and holy?" |
14420 | And that is? |
14420 | And what shall I do to keep peace with my own wife? |
14420 | And what you have now said to me you are willing to repeat to your brother, Signor Lorenzo? |
14420 | And who is Don Juanico, your son? |
14420 | And why do you suppose he has done this? 14420 And you, Cortadillo, what may you be good for?" |
14420 | Archduchesses, and at this hour? 14420 Are you servant to one of the gentlemen in the house?" |
14420 | Are you the landlord? |
14420 | But in what manner do you propose to do them honour? |
14420 | But what has this proverb to do with the matter? |
14420 | But where can he be for us to see him,returned the dueña,"since no one but our master ever enters this house?" |
14420 | But where do you suppose,said the other,"that our manager is to find purple robes for twelve cardinals?" |
14420 | Could I not see her? |
14420 | Did you take it from me yourself,he added,"while I was buying in the market, with you standing beside me?" |
14420 | Do n''t you know that I was only joking? 14420 Do they then pay duty on the right of thieving in this country, gallant Sir?" |
14420 | Do you call Costanza a scullion, brother Lope? 14420 Do you call this keeping your word,"said the gentleman,"making a cut on the servant when you should have made it on the master?" |
14420 | Do you know her? |
14420 | Do you know nothing more? |
14420 | From what symptom do you judge me to be so, Señor Doctor? |
14420 | Good woman, angel rather than gitana,cried the lady when she came to herself,"where is the owner of these baubles?" |
14420 | Good- looking? 14420 Hardly have we found her to- day,"he replied,"and already would you have us lose her? |
14420 | Has any lady been confined? |
14420 | Have I not a soul in my body? 14420 Have I not good cause for complaint?" |
14420 | Have I not good cause to be frightened and to run fast,said the man,"since I have escaped by a miracle from a gang of robbers in that wood?" |
14420 | Have a mind, do you say? 14420 Have n''t I told you once to beware, Madame Hemp- sack? |
14420 | Have you anything more to say? |
14420 | Have you ever succeeded, Señor Alchemist,said the mathematician,"in extracting gold from the other metals?" |
14420 | Have you read the lines I gave you the other day? |
14420 | How can that be so,returned Leocadia,"if he has her with him? |
14420 | How comes it that, being a mussulman, thou attackest me in the garb of a Christian? 14420 How comes it, then, that you, being mussulmans are plundering this brigantine, on board of which, as we know, is the cadi of Nicosia?" |
14420 | How goes it, sorry knave? |
14420 | How is it, then, that his clothing is so different? 14420 How is it, then, that throughout the whole city they call her the illustrious scullery- maid, if so be she does not wash dishes? |
14420 | How is that? |
14420 | How should we be provided,returned Rinconete,"but well and amply? |
14420 | How witty you are,said the lady visitor; then turning to the squire,"Do you happen to have a quarto about you, Señor Contreras? |
14420 | I believe you,replied the lady;"but, nevertheless, tell me, I pray you, how this rich sombrero came into your possession, and where is its owner? |
14420 | I do n''t know in what respect you can say that? |
14420 | Income to the devil, and you with it,[16]replied the Sacristan, with more rage than was becoming;"am I in a humour to talk to you about income? |
14420 | Is he so good- looking, señora hostess? |
14420 | Is it not worse to be a heretic or a renegade? 14420 Is it such a bad thing to be a poet?" |
14420 | Is she so truthful then? |
14420 | Is there any more? |
14420 | Is there not another, my son? |
14420 | Is your worship acquainted with any craft? |
14420 | Let him not even think of doing so,returned Rodaja,"for if he find her, what will he have gained but the perpetual evidence of his dishonour?" |
14420 | Many thanks, señor landlord,replied Avendaño;"and will your worship bid them give me a room for myself, and a comrade of mine who is outside? |
14420 | No more? |
14420 | Oh, your worships do not understand, do n''t you? |
14420 | Oho,said he to himself,"that''s what you would be at, is it? |
14420 | Possibly you will ask, my son, if so be you understand me, who made me a theologian? 14420 So these two chaps are engaged, are they?" |
14420 | Tell me, gallant gentlemen,said he,"are you admitted to the Mala Entrada,[17] or not?" |
14420 | Tell me, señor,said Leonisa,"in the conversations you had with the other young man, did he sometimes name this Leonisa? |
14420 | That is all very well, señor,the lady replied;"but where is the real to come from? |
14420 | The first word she uttered was the question,''Do you know me, Signor?'' 14420 Then you would not have him go seek her?" |
14420 | We have not a quarto amongst us all,said Doña Clara,"and you ask for two- and- twenty maravedis? |
14420 | Well, if that be so,said the inexperienced Leonora,"what is to be done, so that the señor maestro may come in?" |
14420 | Well, then, what I want to know is this: are you, perchance, a poet? |
14420 | Well,she cried, suddenly interrupting the speaker,"and then, what did he do? |
14420 | What child is this, gentlemen? |
14420 | What do you say, Ricardo? |
14420 | What does that matter, if you have seen her wash the second, or the fiftieth? |
14420 | What galley is that? |
14420 | What has happened to you, that you seem so frightened and run so fast? |
14420 | What is it, grandmother? |
14420 | What is that you are saying? |
14420 | What is the matter with you, good man? |
14420 | What is the meaning of all this? 14420 What is the name of this woman?" |
14420 | What is the subject of the work? |
14420 | What is this, daughter of my soul? |
14420 | What kind of a protector is he? 14420 What may you please to want, brother?" |
14420 | What means this, Ali Pasha, thou traitor? |
14420 | What need of such haste? 14420 What servants have you in your inn, landlord?" |
14420 | What stops you then from taking the key, señora? |
14420 | What the devil brought you here, man,said one of the gipsies, after they had released him,"at such an hour, away from the high road? |
14420 | What think you? 14420 What''s the good of all that,"( here the negro sighed heavily,)"since I ca n''t get you into the house?" |
14420 | What; is all this? |
14420 | Where is Cornelia? 14420 Where is he, this musician?" |
14420 | Where is the Lady Cornelia? |
14420 | Where, señora? |
14420 | Wherein is my trade an enemy to my lamps? |
14420 | Which of them was it,inquired Chiquiznaque,"that of the merchant at the Cross- ways?" |
14420 | Who doubts it,ejaculated Teodosia, on the other side,"since I am here?" |
14420 | Who gave it me? 14420 Who is there that has not seen one of this sort when he is longing to bring forth some sonnet to the ears of his neighbours? |
14420 | Who keeps the key, then? |
14420 | Who should teach me? |
14420 | Who teaches you these things, girl? |
14420 | Who was on guard to- day,he asked,"in the market of San Salvador?" |
14420 | Who''s come, girl? |
14420 | Who''s there? |
14420 | Who? |
14420 | Why does the lady hostess say that? |
14420 | Why should I go out to wait for you? |
14420 | Why to your sorrow? |
14420 | Why, is it not the same thing as to say,''He who loves Beltran ill, loves his dog ill too?'' 14420 Why, who is to say anything to offend you, especially when I am by? |
14420 | Will you give me a share of your winnings, señors? |
14420 | With great pleasure I will confess,replied Andrew;"but why do they not marry me first? |
14420 | Would it not be better to get rid of all this bother by turning him out of doors? |
14420 | You can do that too? |
14420 | You have been married, then? |
14420 | You mean the ruins of Nicosia? |
14420 | You must love her very much? |
14420 | ''Are you then wounded, madam?'' |
14420 | A madrigal? |
14420 | A voice from within replied,"Are you making fun of me? |
14420 | Am I in bed? |
14420 | Am I in the limbo of my innocence, or the hell of my sins? |
14420 | Am I not fifteen years of age? |
14420 | Am I such a fool that I can not help telling you what should make you doubt my integrity and good behaviour? |
14420 | Am I, perchance, the Monte Testacio[55] of Rome, that you cast upon me so many potsherds and tiles?" |
14420 | And do you really suppose that your brother has gone to Ferrara? |
14420 | And now as to courage: how do you feel yourselves provided in that respect, my children?" |
14420 | And now, if we did not know that Carrizales was asleep, it would not be amiss to ask him, where now were all his jealous cares and precautions? |
14420 | And you, perfidious soldiers of Hassan, what demon has moved you to commit so great an outrage? |
14420 | Are angels coming to stop here to- night?" |
14420 | Being with the man she loves, what question can there be of delusion? |
14420 | Better therefore''twere, methinks, You should not immure me: Do n''t you know without my help You can not secure me? |
14420 | But in return for this good advice I give you, will you not tell me one truth? |
14420 | But of whom do I complain? |
14420 | But tell me, Mr. Sacristan, on your life, what is the amount of the whole yearly income?" |
14420 | But tell me, señor, how or with whom did Ricardo come to this island?" |
14420 | But to drop this subject, tell me, Tomas, how stand your hopes?" |
14420 | But what do you think of these verses?" |
14420 | But what has moved you, Preciosa, to make this inquiry?" |
14420 | But what will you say of my misfortune, which is great beyond compare? |
14420 | But who are you who ask me for water?" |
14420 | But who are you, sir, who know these gentlemen and inquire of me respecting them? |
14420 | But why dwell on the praises of my enemy, or make so long a preface to the confession of my infatuation and my ruin? |
14420 | But why should I weary you by recapitulating every minute detail of my unfortunate attachment? |
14420 | Can it be that there is no true mussulman left to avenge me? |
14420 | Can you part from her who has reared you with the love of a mother?" |
14420 | Close you watch me, mother mine, Watch me, and immure me: Do n''t you know without my help You can not secure me? |
14420 | Creature so heavenly fair, May any mortal genius dare, Or less than tongue divine, To praise in lofty, rare, and sounding line? |
14420 | Did I not wilfully betray myself? |
14420 | Did he confirm his written pledge anew? |
14420 | Did he keep the assignation? |
14420 | Did he relate the manner in which he and she and Ricardo were captured?" |
14420 | Did not my own hands wield the knife that cut down my reputation, and destroyed the trust which my parents reposed in my rectitude? |
14420 | Did you come to thieve? |
14420 | Did you, perchance, imagine that you were coming here to fight your enemies? |
14420 | Did your father know it? |
14420 | Do I love either my brother or the duke so little as not to tremble for both, and not feel the injury of either to my soul?" |
14420 | Do n''t you like that, my boy? |
14420 | Do n''t you wish you may get it? |
14420 | Do you know how to tell fortunes, niña?" |
14420 | Does he still live, or is this the token that he sends me of his death? |
14420 | Don Diego asked Carriazo what was the meaning of these metamorphoses, and what had induced him to turn water- carrier, and Don Tomas hostler? |
14420 | Fear you lest that beacon light From your arms should lure me? |
14420 | For see how rich are their ladies,"he added;"have they not all a very profusion of wealth in their possession? |
14420 | For what is your method of proceeding? |
14420 | Has he forgot the ties by which he has bound himself to me? |
14420 | Have you anything further to report?" |
14420 | Have you anything more to say? |
14420 | Have you so soon forgotten what we have said of those who mix up that language with ordinary conversation? |
14420 | He had set to work with that intention, when she came to herself, saying,"Where am I? |
14420 | He opened it, and said,"What have we here? |
14420 | He saw a door partially opened, approached it, and heard these words uttered in a low voice,"Is it you, Fabio?" |
14420 | Her mother bade her say truly, was she very fond of Don Juan? |
14420 | How came you in that dress? |
14420 | How can you know whether Lorenzo will take you to Ferrara, or to what place indeed he may conduct you? |
14420 | How dare you, to please the lascivious appetite of him who sent you, set yourselves against your sovereign?" |
14420 | How do I know that he will reply with sufficient courtesy to prevent the anger of my brother from passing the limits of discretion? |
14420 | How do we know but he may wish to keep it secret?" |
14420 | How grew such charms''mid gipsy tribes, From roughest blasts without a shield? |
14420 | How is it possible, Mahmoud, that you have not already named her? |
14420 | How is it that he no longer has it, and how did it come into your possession? |
14420 | How is it that she can so well distinguish between casual and culpable evils? |
14420 | How is it that she sins so much from choice, not having the excuse of ignorance? |
14420 | How is it that she understands and speaks so much about God, and acts so much from the prompting of the devil? |
14420 | How is this? |
14420 | How long have you had a guitar? |
14420 | How shall I relate all that Don Rafael now said to Leocadia? |
14420 | How such a perfect chrysolite Could humble Manzanares yield? |
14420 | I inquired of him wherefore he had uttered so cruel a sentence, and committed so manifest an injustice? |
14420 | I mean to ask you, gentlemen, are your worships thieves? |
14420 | If a sword were thrust through my vitals, should I not naturally strive to pluck it out and break it to pieces?" |
14420 | If so, you have come to the right door?" |
14420 | In telling fortunes who can say What dupes to ruin thou beguilest? |
14420 | Is it a new thing for a woman to visit a page, that you make such a fuss about it?" |
14420 | Is it possible that I really see you in this country? |
14420 | Is it possible that your honeyed words concealed so much of the gall of unkindness and disdain? |
14420 | Is it some angel in human shape that sits before me?" |
14420 | Is she a relation of yours?" |
14420 | Is that you?" |
14420 | Is the inclination so slight a thing that it can be moved this way or that at pleasure? |
14420 | Is there any more, my boy?" |
14420 | Is there no restitution to make?" |
14420 | Let me ask you, in the first place, if you knew in our town of Trapani, a young lady whom fame pronounced to be the most beautiful woman in Sicily? |
14420 | Let us say no more now, but go to bed, and to- morrow who knows but we come to our senses?" |
14420 | Meanwhile, I asked myself, how comes this old woman to be at once so knowing and so wicked? |
14420 | My wife and I asked the men- servants who was this lady, what was her name, whence she came, and whither she was going? |
14420 | Nobody enters these doors but the first thing he does is to ask, Who is that beautiful girl? |
14420 | On the road, Rincon said to his new acquaintance,"Does your worship happen to be a Thief?" |
14420 | One of the damsels present, seeing the penury of the house, said to Preciosa,"Niña, will it be of any use to make the cross with a silver thimble?" |
14420 | Or how can I bestow what is so far from being mine? |
14420 | Or would it become a man of truth and honour to feign in matters of such weight? |
14420 | Richard asked them in Spanish what ship was that? |
14420 | Shall I make this more plain to you? |
14420 | Shall I place myself where I may be seen by her?" |
14420 | She therefore replied,"What advice do you then give me, good friend, that may prevent the catastrophe which threatens us?" |
14420 | She took his two hands and said,"Ah, my father, and dear sir, what has the duke come for? |
14420 | Shocked at this, Cornelia said to the priest,"Alas, dear father, have I terrified the duke with the sight of my face? |
14420 | Some one asked Rodaja, who had been the happiest man in the world? |
14420 | Struggling, stumbling, and rising again, he at last reached the spot where Isabella stood, caught her hand in his, and said,"Do you know me, Isabella? |
14420 | Tell me now, on our life, after having beaten and abused you, did not Repolido make much of you, and give you more than one caress?" |
14420 | Tell me, are you not one I have often seen in the capital, something between a page and a gentleman? |
14420 | Tell me, who are these people, whose arrival appears to have upset you?" |
14420 | The duke asked her, was it true her name was Cornelia? |
14420 | The new comer walked up to the pomegranate tree, and said to the poet,"Have you finished the first act?" |
14420 | The people of the house were now lost in wonder, going about and asking each other,"What is all this?" |
14420 | The words were these:-- Silly pate, silly pate, Why run on at this rate? |
14420 | Then what is their breath but pure amber, musk, and frankincense? |
14420 | Thereupon an esquire in attendance on Doña Clara, an elderly gentleman with a long beard, exclaimed,"Call you this a dimple, señora? |
14420 | This is my story, good friend: was I not right in saying it is the result of pure ill luck, rather than disappointed love? |
14420 | This is promising largely for one of my feeble powers; but who can curb his desires? |
14420 | To satisfy herself of this, she said,"Are you asleep, señor? |
14420 | To which Gananciosa replied, taking up the measure as she best might--"For the little brown lad, With a good bright eye, Who would not lose her name?" |
14420 | Was he content when he had obtained from you what you say was his? |
14420 | Was his child such a burden to him that he has thus rejected him from his arm''s?" |
14420 | Was she wife, widow, or maid, and why she wore that pilgrim''s dress? |
14420 | We remained for all that in the hospital that night, and the old woman meeting me alone in the yard, said,"Is that you, Montiel, my son? |
14420 | Were you happy in his arms? |
14420 | What a path is mine; and what issue can I hope for out of the labyrinth in which I am entangled? |
14420 | What authority have I over Leonisa to give her to another? |
14420 | What darkness is this? |
14420 | What did he suppose Costanza could make of them? |
14420 | What do you mean by saying that she is and is not your servant?" |
14420 | What now availed the lofty walls of his house, and the exclusion from it of every male creature? |
14420 | What was the end of this good and wise beginning?" |
14420 | What, you have not yet left off your scampish tricks?" |
14420 | When shall we set out? |
14420 | Where art thou, ingrate? |
14420 | Where have the banns been published? |
14420 | Where is the license of my superior, authorising the espousals?" |
14420 | Where shines that star, which, boding ills, My trembling heart with torment fills? |
14420 | Whither hast thou fled, unthankful man? |
14420 | Whither is the irresistible force of my destiny hurrying me? |
14420 | Who gave it you?" |
14420 | Who has taken them from him? |
14420 | Who the deuce taught you Greek words? |
14420 | Who touches me? |
14420 | Who will have the power to make known that the defence is offensive, the sentinels sleep, the trustees rob, and those who guard you kill you? |
14420 | Why bid that sun no longer cheer With glorious beams our drooping sphere? |
14420 | Why do n''t you go to your fisheries? |
14420 | Why do n''t you jump? |
14420 | Why does not she turn to God, since she knows that he is readier to forgive sin than to permit it? |
14420 | Why in its wrath should Heaven decree That we no more its light should see? |
14420 | Why these arms? |
14420 | Why, Andrew, how will you be able to bear the torture with gauze,[73] when you are overcome by a bit of paper?" |
14420 | Will I ever eat again with him at the same table, or live under the same roof? |
14420 | Will he not speak one word to me? |
14420 | With queen Ginevra? |
14420 | Would you have me lose a hundred crowns, Preciosa? |
14420 | Yet gracious come from ocean''s bed; Why hide from us your radiant head? |
14420 | Yet to whom do all these things belong, if not to the poets? |
14420 | You seem to be complaining?" |
14420 | Your majesty has given me the name of daughter; after that what can I have to fear, or what may I not hope?" |
14420 | [ 23] Is the watch set?" |
14420 | [ 44]_ Calomels_, for calumnies"What do you find lower down?" |
14420 | _ Berg._ But, first of all, pray tell me if you know what is the meaning of the word philosophy? |
14420 | _ Berg._ Have we not said that we are not to speak evil of any one? |
14420 | _ Berg._ How can I go on with my story, if I hold my peace? |
14420 | _ Berg._ What can I say to you, brother Scipio, of what I saw in those slaughter- houses, and the enormous things that were done in them? |
14420 | _ Scip._ And do you complain of that, Berganza? |
14420 | _ Scip._ And what do you infer from that? |
14420 | _ Scip._ Can you not tell me that something now that you recollect it? |
14420 | _ Scip._ Do you call railing philosophising? |
14420 | _ Scip._ How did you set about getting yourself a master? |
14420 | _ Scip._ How so? |
14420 | _ Scip._ What was that? |
14420 | am I become hateful to him? |
14420 | and if Lorenzo should draw the sword, think ye he will have a despicable enemy to encounter? |
14420 | and you ask for two- and- twenty maravedis? |
14420 | besides that she is also the servant of a page and a lackey? |
14420 | but erring widely in their conjectures; for who would have imagined that the gitanilla was the daughter of their lord? |
14420 | continued I,''or attacked by some mortal malady?'' |
14420 | do you hear me? |
14420 | do you say?" |
14420 | exclaimed the licentiate,"are the times of à � sop come back to us, when the cock conversed with the fox, and one beast with another?" |
14420 | for what is there bad in them?" |
14420 | he cried;"do I, indeed, behold the Señor Alferez[58] Campuzano? |
14420 | he is not a gipsy, my child?" |
14420 | how is this? |
14420 | interrupted Cornelia,"how and what is this? |
14420 | miserable creature that I am, tell me, Signor-- tell me at once, without keeping me in suspense, what do you know of him who owned that sombrero? |
14420 | not entered, brave Murcians?" |
14420 | or to kill your father or mother?" |
14420 | replied the Gallician damsel;"a''nt they dainty dears to make a body''s mouth water? |
14420 | said I to myself, who can ever remedy this villany? |
14420 | said Preciosa,"A boy or a girl?" |
14420 | said the hostess;"Going to leave me? |
14420 | was he suffering in any way, and could she do anything for his relief? |
14420 | what good can I hope for in my wretched distress, even should I return to my former state? |
14420 | what is it I behold? |
14420 | where is the life of my life?" |
14420 | who has brought these things here? |
14420 | why does not she leave off being a witch since she knows so much? |
20907 | And how, Socrates,she said with a smile,"can Love be acknowledged to be a great god by those who say that he is not a god at all?" |
20907 | And is that which is not wise ignorant? 20907 And is this wish and this desire common to all? |
20907 | And not only the possession, but the everlasting possession of the good? |
20907 | And what does he gain who possesses the good? |
20907 | And what harm can this confinement do you? |
20907 | And what is the nature of this spiritual power? |
20907 | And what is this? |
20907 | And who are they? |
20907 | And who,I said,"was his father, and who his mother?" |
20907 | And you admitted that Love, because he was in want, desires those good and fair things of which he is in want? |
20907 | And you mean by the happy those who are the possessors of things good or fair? |
20907 | But how can he be a god who has no share in the good or the fair? |
20907 | But in what way would you have us bury you? |
20907 | But what,he says,"has this to do with my being a slave?" |
20907 | But who then, Diotima,I said,"are the lovers of wisdom, if they are neither the wise nor the foolish?" |
20907 | But why of birth? |
20907 | By Heracles,he said,"what is this? |
20907 | By all means; but who makes the third partner in our revels? |
20907 | By those who know or by those who do n''t know? |
20907 | For how,he says,"am I a slave? |
20907 | For just consider, if you transgress and err in this sort of way, what good will you do either to yourself or to your friends? 20907 For what harm did it do me? |
20907 | How can that be? |
20907 | How so? 20907 How? |
20907 | Hush,she cried;"is that to be deemed foul which is not fair?" |
20907 | Is he mortal? |
20907 | Of the ancient deeds handed down by tradition and which no eye of any one who hears us ever saw, why should we speak? 20907 Or against those of us who regulate the system of nurture and education of children in which you were trained? |
20907 | Right opinion,she replied,"which, as you know, being incapable of giving a reason, is not knowledge( for how could knowledge be devoid of reason? |
20907 | Still,she said,"the answer suggests a further question, which is this, What is given by the possession of beauty?" |
20907 | The debt shall be paid,said Crito;"is there anything else?" |
20907 | Then if this be the nature of love, can you tell me further,she said,"what is the manner of the pursuit? |
20907 | Then love,she said,"may be described generally as the love of the everlasting possession of the good?" |
20907 | Then,she said,"let me put the word''good''in the place of the beautiful, and repeat the question, What does he who loves the good desire?" |
20907 | To which may be added that they love the possession of the good? |
20907 | Well; but such a one paid me the utmost regard for so long a time, and did he not love me? |
20907 | What do you mean, Diotima,I said;"is love then evil and foul?" |
20907 | What is he then, Diotima? |
20907 | What say you? 20907 What then is Love?" |
20907 | What then? |
20907 | What then? |
20907 | Why, what has that to do with being slave or free? |
20907 | Will you have a very drunken man as a companion of your revels? 20907 --or rather let us put the question more clearly, and ask, When a man loves the beautiful, what does he love? |
20907 | Again, how much will caged birds suffer in trying to escape? |
20907 | All their fine talk of friendship, with Virtue and The Good, have vanished and flown, who knows whither? |
20907 | Already a far heavier sentence had been passed and was hanging over a man''s head; before that feeling, why should he not take a little pleasure? |
20907 | And Cato himself also smiling a little, said unto them that sat by him: What a laughing and mocking Consul have we, my lords? |
20907 | And are you not a flute- player? |
20907 | And are you not changeable too in love? |
20907 | And because we think right to destroy you, do you think that you have any right to destroy us in return, and your country as far as in you lies? |
20907 | And by what is he overcome? |
20907 | And does not ignorance consist in having a false opinion and being deceived about important matters? |
20907 | And first of all answer this very question: Are we right in saying that you agreed to be governed according to us in deed, and not in word only? |
20907 | And how do you know but that when you cease to be a necessary utensil, he may throw you away, like a broken stool? |
20907 | And how many did Eriphyle live with Amphiaraus, and was the mother of children not a few? |
20907 | And if the Athenians, too, die as soon as you have caught them, of what use are your warlike preparations?" |
20907 | And on another occasion she said to me:"What is the reason, Socrates, of this love, and the attendant desire? |
20907 | And shall that be the premise of our argument? |
20907 | And should your empire supplant ours, may not you lose the good- will which you owe to the fear of us? |
20907 | And this, as possessing measure, must undeniably also be an art and science? |
20907 | And what in the world could there be more holy than these ties? |
20907 | And what says he afterward? |
20907 | And what think you? |
20907 | And when you speak of being overcome, what do you mean, he will say, but that you choose the greater evil in exchange for the lesser good? |
20907 | And who that had sense and reason would wish to be one of those lions? |
20907 | And who would live in sorrow, fear, envy, pity, with disappointed desires and unavailing aversions? |
20907 | And will you, O professor of true virtue, say that you are justified in this? |
20907 | And yet when a kingdom, like a bit of meat, was thrown betwixt them, see what they say--_ Polynices._ Where wilt thou stand before the towers? |
20907 | Are not all actions the tendency of which is to make life painless and pleasant honorable and useful? |
20907 | Are not the qualities which produced such a result worth striving for? |
20907 | Are you going by an act of yours to overturn us-- the laws and the whole state, as far as in you lies? |
20907 | At my first peep into your realm, how could I but admire yourself and all these your disciples? |
20907 | But even were they ever so free, what is that to you? |
20907 | But how, he will reply, can the good be unworthy of the evil, or the evil of the good? |
20907 | But if we be sent for said Cassius: how then? |
20907 | But if you seek it where it is not, what wonder if you never find it? |
20907 | But is not this unjust? |
20907 | But some one will ask, Why? |
20907 | But some one will say,''Of the beautiful in what, Socrates and Diotima?'' |
20907 | But what elation? |
20907 | But what of Socrates, Diogenes, and such wise men? |
20907 | But when it comes to national lies, when one finds whole cities bouncing collectively like one man, how is one to keep one''s countenance? |
20907 | But who can compel me but the master of all, CÃ ¦ sar?" |
20907 | But, dear sirs, do not condemn me unheard; give me trial first...._ Plato._ Pythagoras,[123] Socrates, what do you think? |
20907 | By what? |
20907 | Can I not get possession of them?" |
20907 | Can you explain it? |
20907 | Cassius being bold, and taking hold of this word: Why, quoth he, what Roman is he alive that will suffer thee to die for the liberty? |
20907 | Could he that had found you such have the heart to abuse these benefactors to whom his little fame was due? |
20907 | CÃ ¦ sar feeling himself hurt, took him straight by the hand he held his dagger in, and cried out in Latin: O traitor, Casca, what doest thou? |
20907 | Did justice ever deter any one from taking by force whatever he could? |
20907 | Did not they kiss and fondle each other? |
20907 | Do I not desert the principles which were acknowledged by us to be just? |
20907 | Do men ever devote their attention, then, to[ what they think] evils? |
20907 | Do the laws speak truly, or do they not? |
20907 | Do we then find any of the wicked exempt from these evils? |
20907 | Do you not distinguish the semblances of things? |
20907 | Do you not often see little dogs caressing and playing with each other, so that you would say nothing could be more friendly? |
20907 | Do you not provide such food and clothing and habitation as are suitable to you? |
20907 | Do you not see that there is a mean between wisdom and ignorance?" |
20907 | Do you think that there is?" |
20907 | Does oil mix with water? |
20907 | Doth not your father? |
20907 | For in what are you deficient? |
20907 | For what if they were of a generous, you of a mean spirit; they brave, and you a coward; they sober, and you dissolute? |
20907 | For what is it that every man seeks? |
20907 | For where else can friendship be met, but joined with fidelity and modesty, and the intercommunication of virtue alone? |
20907 | For who has not an idea of evil, that it is hurtful; that it is to be avoided; that it is by all means to be prudently guarded against? |
20907 | Full of astonishment at what he had heard Croesus demanded sharply,"And wherefore dost thou deem Tellus happiest?" |
20907 | Gray, the poet, in one of his letters, inquired,"Is it, or is it not, the finest thing you ever read in your life?" |
20907 | Have not you the use of your senses? |
20907 | Have you never been in love with any one, either of a servile or liberal condition? |
20907 | Have you never borne to be reviled and shut out- of- doors? |
20907 | Have you never flattered your fair slave? |
20907 | Have you never gone out by night where you did not desire? |
20907 | Have you never kissed her feet? |
20907 | Have you never spent more than you chose? |
20907 | Have you not sometimes uttered your words with sighs and groans? |
20907 | How came you to be considered safe? |
20907 | How can you tell, foolish man, if that regard be any other than he pays to his shoes, or his horse, when he cleans them? |
20907 | How shall we answer that, Crito? |
20907 | How think you the man has spoken? |
20907 | I am curious therefore to inquire of thee, whom of all the men that thou hast seen thou deemest the most happy?" |
20907 | I said,"O thou strange woman, thou sayest well, and now, assuming Love to be such as you say, what is the use of him?" |
20907 | I will also tell, if you please-- and indeed I am bound to tell-- of his courage in battle; for who but he saved my life? |
20907 | III OF LIARS AND LYING[125]_ Tychiades._ Philocles, what is it that makes most men so fond of a lie? |
20907 | If they grow their beards and call themselves philosophers and look solemn, do these things make them like you? |
20907 | In leaving the prison against the will of the Athenians, do I wrong any? |
20907 | In the first place, did we not bring you into existence? |
20907 | Is he happy? |
20907 | Is he not like a Silenus in this? |
20907 | Is he raised above desire or fear? |
20907 | Is he secure? |
20907 | Is it from this that you confess yourself unwise? |
20907 | Is it no part of slavery to act against your will, under compulsion, and lamenting? |
20907 | Is not the real explanation that they are out of proportion to each other, either as greater and smaller, or more and fewer? |
20907 | Is that true or not?" |
20907 | Is that, he will ask, because the good was worthy or not worthy of conquering the evil? |
20907 | Is there a trace in their lives of kindred and affinity? |
20907 | It makes me quite angry: what satisfaction can there be to men of their good qualities in deceiving themselves and their neighbors? |
20907 | May I or not?" |
20907 | Must we not agree? |
20907 | Nay, does he not live the more slavishly the more he lives at ease? |
20907 | Now supposing that happiness consisted in making and taking large things, what would be the saving principle of human life? |
20907 | Now what good can they get out of it? |
20907 | Now, what shall we do with him? |
20907 | One of the soldiers seeing her, angrily said unto her: Is that well done Charmion? |
20907 | Or do you decline and dissent from this? |
20907 | Or does he who loves him with a changeable affection bear him genuine good- will? |
20907 | Or even to things indifferent? |
20907 | Or he who now vilifies, then admires him? |
20907 | Or shall I crown Agathon, as was my intention in coming, and go my way? |
20907 | Or who would not have such children as Lycurgus[64] left behind to be the saviors, not only of Lacedà ¦ mon, but of Hellas, as one may say? |
20907 | Ought we not most readily to strain every nerve? |
20907 | Say whether you have any objection to urge against those of us who regulate marriage?" |
20907 | See you how fond he is of the fair? |
20907 | Since, then, neither they who are called kings nor the friends of kings live as they like, who, then, after all, is free?... |
20907 | Socrates alone retained his calmness:"What is this strange outcry?" |
20907 | Some keep tame lions, and feed them and even lead them about; and who will say that any such lion is free? |
20907 | Suppose I ask, why is this? |
20907 | Suppose I say that? |
20907 | Tell us what complaint you have to make against us which justifies you in attempting to destroy us and the state? |
20907 | That venerably bearded sexagenarian, with his philosophic leanings? |
20907 | The world will acknowledge that, will they not? |
20907 | Then, my friends, I said, what do you say to this? |
20907 | Think you it is because he is desirous to pay his fee[ of manumission] to the officer? |
20907 | True, he said; how could they see anything but the shadows if they were never allowed to move their heads? |
20907 | Was it to move out of its place for the folly of your child? |
20907 | Well, and our verdict? |
20907 | Well, and when did you use to sup the more pleasantly-- formerly, or now? |
20907 | Well, then; can he who is deceived in another be his friend, think you? |
20907 | Were not Eteocles and Polynices born of the same mother and of the same father? |
20907 | Were not the laws, which have the charge of this, right in commanding your father to train you in music and gymnastic?" |
20907 | Were they not brought up, and did they not live and eat and sleep, together? |
20907 | Were you never commanded anything by your mistress that you did not choose? |
20907 | What answer shall we make to this, Crito? |
20907 | What are they doing who show all this eagerness and heat which is called love? |
20907 | What do you mean? |
20907 | What do you say? |
20907 | What else is this than slavery? |
20907 | What was this bauble? |
20907 | What will be our answer, Crito, to these and the like words? |
20907 | What, Epicurus, Aristippus, tired already? |
20907 | What, knowest thou not that thou art Brutus? |
20907 | What, then, is this evil-- thus hurtful and to be avoided? |
20907 | When I heard this, I was astonished and said,"Is this really true, O thou wise Diotima?" |
20907 | When he becomes the friend of CÃ ¦ sar, then does he cease to be restrained; to be compelled? |
20907 | When there are a number of horses together, too, how, if they are thus led, can they be prevented from annoying one another? |
20907 | Who would be willing to sacrifice himself to the law of honor when he knew not whether he would ever live to be held in honor? |
20907 | Who would live deceived, erring, unjust, dissolute, discontented, dejected? |
20907 | Who, then, would wish to lead a wrong course of life? |
20907 | Whom can we better credit than this very man who has been his friend? |
20907 | Whom shall we ask? |
20907 | Why do you boast your military expeditions? |
20907 | Why is it? |
20907 | Why seek to cure evil by evil? |
20907 | Why should it be consigned to print? |
20907 | Why then do you confess that you want wisdom? |
20907 | Why, did we appoint you tutor of the cook, man? |
20907 | Why, tell me, all of you, what have such creatures to do with you? |
20907 | Why, then, do you still call yourself free? |
20907 | Why, what could I find to say? |
20907 | Why, what harm has the stone done? |
20907 | Will he not fancy that the shadows which he formerly saw are truer than the objects which are now shown to him? |
20907 | Will he not swiftly pound man and mask together into nothingness with his club, for womanizing and disgracing him? |
20907 | Will you drink with me or not?" |
20907 | Will you laugh at me because I am drunk? |
20907 | Will you then flee from well- ordered cities and virtuous men? |
20907 | Would not he?" |
20907 | Would not mankind generally acknowledge that the art which accomplishes this is the art of measurement? |
20907 | Would not this be in contradiction to the admission which has been already made, that he thinks the things which he fears to be evil? |
20907 | Would the art of measuring be the saving principle or would the power of appearance? |
20907 | Would you not admit, my friends, that this is true? |
20907 | You deprive me of all this, and then ask what harm I suffer?" |
20907 | You would not say this? |
20907 | _ Crito_: I think that you are right, Socrates; how then shall we proceed? |
20907 | _ Crito_: I will do my best...._ Socrates_: Again, Crito, may we do evil? |
20907 | _ Eteocles._ Why askest thou this of me? |
20907 | _ Lucian._ How or when was I ever insolent to you? |
20907 | _ Philocles._ What, Eucrates, of all credible witnesses? |
20907 | _ Philocles._ Why, have you ever known any one with such a strong natural turn for lying? |
20907 | _ Philosophy._ What say you, gentlemen? |
20907 | _ Socrates._ What say you, Empedocles? |
20907 | _ Socrates_: And what of doing evil in return for evil, which is the morality of the many; is that just or not? |
20907 | _ Socrates_: But if this is true, what is the application? |
20907 | _ Socrates_: For doing evil to another is the same as injuring him? |
20907 | _ Socrates_:"And was that our agreement with you?" |
20907 | and do all men always desire their own good, or only some men?--what think you?" |
20907 | and is existence worth having on these terms?... |
20907 | he said; ought we to give them an inferior life, when they might have a superior one? |
20907 | is my happiness then so utterly set at naught by thee that thou dost not even put me on a level with private men?" |
20907 | or rather do I not wrong those whom I ought least to wrong? |
20907 | the law would say;"or were you to abide by the sentence of the state?" |
20907 | what is there in your lives that lends itself to such treatment? |
14994 | ''Tis well thought,the old man made answer;"but where shall I do the deed?" |
14994 | A stranger, sayest thou? 14994 And did men judge of him as living or dead?" |
14994 | And did the King leave any other child behind him? |
14994 | And dost thou not dishonour him when thou honourest his enemy? |
14994 | And hath it aught else, as wealth sufficient? |
14994 | And hath the taking of the city so long delayed him? 14994 And how wilt thou deal with the other?" |
14994 | And is his son yet alive? |
14994 | And is there none that can help thee? |
14994 | And of what country is he, and who is his father? |
14994 | And should it hinder him that there is some stranger dead in the house? |
14994 | And the master of these steeds, whose son is he? |
14994 | And thou wast ready to answer for this deed? |
14994 | And to whom shall I give it? |
14994 | And what if a wife slay her husband? |
14994 | And what is thy name? |
14994 | And where didst thou leave him? 14994 And who are these? |
14994 | And who is master of their army? |
14994 | And who of the men of Trachis is so cunning in leechcraft? |
14994 | And why did my son seek to subdue this city? |
14994 | And why do ye pursue this man? |
14994 | Art thou going a journey from me, my father? |
14994 | Art thou, then, he? |
14994 | Aye,said the Queen,"and I would lead them myself; but where shall I slay him?" |
14994 | Aye,said the old man,"but how wilt thou deal with King Achilles? |
14994 | But if it be so, my sister, how can we avail to change it? |
14994 | But is it not a base thing for a man to lie? |
14994 | But may I not believe that which I have seen with mine own eyes? |
14994 | But say,said the King,"what troubles thee so much?" |
14994 | But say,said the Queen,"who began this battle of ships? |
14994 | But where,answered the Queen,"is it your pleasure that I should be?" |
14994 | But who shall hinder me? |
14994 | But why may I not persuade him, or even constrain him by force? |
14994 | But why slayest thou me in darkness, if this deed be just? |
14994 | But why wilt thou empty thy hands? 14994 But,"said the Queen,"why cometh not the herald himself?" |
14994 | Can I endure to be so base,said the Prince,"hiding that which I should declare, and speaking the thing that is false?" |
14994 | Can it be well to honour them that transgress? 14994 Dead are they? |
14994 | Did aught compel him to this deed? |
14994 | Do not my tidings please thee? |
14994 | Do the men make war with bows? |
14994 | Doth the dead then think so lightly of me? |
14994 | Glad art thou? 14994 Hadst thou then a share in this matter of Troy?" |
14994 | Hast thou hold of her? |
14994 | Hast thou, then, yet worse to bear than these? |
14994 | Hath it, then, so many men that draw the sword? |
14994 | Hath thy lord then suffered some sorrow that he told me not? |
14994 | He hath none-- what need hath the living of a tomb? |
14994 | How daredst thou to transgress the laws? |
14994 | How didst thou learn this? |
14994 | How didst thou slay her? |
14994 | How knowest thou but that such honour pleaseth the Gods below? |
14994 | How sayest thou that they live? 14994 How sayest thou? |
14994 | How so, if this is the body of my Orestes? |
14994 | How so? 14994 How so? |
14994 | How so? |
14994 | How wilt thou do this? 14994 How, then, can they abide the onset of the Persians?" |
14994 | I know thy good will, but what profiteth it? 14994 If thou hast justice, what need of thy bow?" |
14994 | Liveth he, then? |
14994 | Lord of fire, that rulest this land of Lemnos, hearest thou this? |
14994 | Must I make it alone, or with my mother? |
14994 | Nay, what is this? |
14994 | Nay,said the King;"shall I be taught by such an one as thou?" |
14994 | Not akin? 14994 Now what shall I say to my wife? |
14994 | O my sister, wilt thou do this when Creon hath forbidden it? |
14994 | Of what city in the land of Greece are ye? 14994 Payeth he thus some vow, or did some oracle command it?" |
14994 | Sailed he then before you? |
14994 | Sayest thou that I must return? 14994 Sayest thou''without cause''when my brother is dead?" |
14994 | Seest thou this sword whereto I lay my hand? |
14994 | Sendest thou me to dwell elsewhere? |
14994 | Shall I lead the dances, my father? |
14994 | Shall the dead help thee that didst slay thy mother? |
14994 | Shall then the wicked have like honour with the good? |
14994 | Speakest thou of trouble greater than that which I now endure? |
14994 | Tell me now, which of ye two is called Pylades? |
14994 | Tell me, then, who is this woman whom thou hast brought? |
14994 | The people, sayest thou? 14994 Thou art resolved then to do this thing or to die?" |
14994 | What are thy tidings, though I tremble to hear them? |
14994 | What deed? 14994 What ease, when they are past all remedy?" |
14994 | What hast thou to do with that? 14994 What lies are these? |
14994 | What meaneth thy sorrow? 14994 What sayest thou? |
14994 | What sayest thou? 14994 What sayest thou? |
14994 | What sayest thou? 14994 What sayest thou?" |
14994 | What should compel a man to such wickedness? |
14994 | What then? 14994 What then?" |
14994 | What treachery is this? 14994 What troubleth thee, lady, in these news?" |
14994 | What wickedness, then, had these strangers wrought? |
14994 | What will this profit her that is dead? |
14994 | What wilt thou then? 14994 What wrong? |
14994 | What, then, would ye have done? |
14994 | What? 14994 What? |
14994 | What? |
14994 | Where didst thou find it? |
14994 | Where is he? 14994 Who art thou that inquirest thus about matters in Greece?" |
14994 | Who constraineth thee? |
14994 | Who counselled thee to this deed? |
14994 | Who slew her? 14994 Who told thee this tale that thou believest so strangely?" |
14994 | Whom sayest thou they murdered? |
14994 | Why not? 14994 Why should he stand between me and mine?" |
14994 | Wilt thou not speak out thy news and then begone? |
14994 | Wilt thou not tell me thy country? |
14994 | Wilt thou then slay them both? |
14994 | With good intent, thou wicked boy, when she slew her husband? |
14994 | With water from the river, or in the sea? |
14994 | Would ye have commended me the more if I had caused him to depart from this house and this city? 14994 Yet they who attend him please thee not?" |
14994 | And I, if I had an ill purpose, and now have changed it for that which is wiser, dost thou charge me with folly? |
14994 | And King Agamemnon said,''How shall I do this thing, and slay my own daughter, even Iphigenia, who is the joy and beauty of my dwelling? |
14994 | And Menelaüs answered,"Seest thou this letter that I hold in my hand?" |
14994 | And Orestes, whom I barely saved from thy hand, liveth he not in exile? |
14994 | And Philoctetes made answer,"Nay, is not this a fitting thing, seeing of what sire thou art the son, to help a brave man in his trouble?" |
14994 | And Philoctetes made reply,"Knowest thou not whom thou seest? |
14994 | And also how could she, being young, abide in my house, for young I judge her to be? |
14994 | And are ye brothers born of one mother?" |
14994 | And as for this Polynices, thinketh he that signs and devices will give him that which he coveteth? |
14994 | And as he spake these words, he perceived that Medea wept, and said,"Why weepest thou?" |
14994 | And hath not this woman transgressed?" |
14994 | And having sworn it, he said,"But what if a storm overtake me, and the tablet be lost, and I only be saved?" |
14994 | And he answered,"What is it, lady? |
14994 | And he answered,"What sayest thou, lady? |
14994 | And how fares old Nestor of Pylos?" |
14994 | And if I die before my time, what loss? |
14994 | And now King Menelaüs came back, saying that it repented him of what he had said,"For why should thy child die for me? |
14994 | And now think whose should this be but his? |
14994 | And now thou art come, what shall I say? |
14994 | And now what dost thou purpose?" |
14994 | And of the maiden, what shall I say? |
14994 | And one said,"Remember ye not what we saw when the army set forth from the city? |
14994 | And shall not I do pleasure to the dead rather than to the living, seeing that I shall abide with the dead for ever? |
14994 | And shall we not fall into a worse destruction than any, if we transgress these commands of the King? |
14994 | And the Prince said,"What meanest thou by thy''double honour''? |
14994 | And the spirit spake to the Furies, for these were yet fast asleep, saying,"Sleep ye? |
14994 | And the spirit spake, saying,"What trouble is this that seemeth to have come upon the land? |
14994 | And then-- for she took the two for brothers-- she asked them, saying,"Who is your mother, and your father, and your sister, if a sister you have? |
14994 | And thy children-- art thou a mother to them? |
14994 | And what will it profit us if we get great renown, yet die in shameful fashion? |
14994 | And when Death saw him, he said--"What doest thou here, Apollo? |
14994 | And when Ismené saw that she prevailed nothing with her sister, she turned to the King and said,"Wilt thou slay the bride of thy son?" |
14994 | And when he was come to the gates of his palace he cried,"How shall I enter thee? |
14994 | And when he was loath to listen to her, she said,"Seest thou this that I hold in my hand?" |
14994 | And when the Furies saw him they cried,"What hast thou to do with this matter, King Apollo?" |
14994 | And when the King saw him he asked,"What seekest thou, wisest of men?" |
14994 | And when the King saw him, he said,"Art thou content, my son, with thy father''s judgment?" |
14994 | And when the Prince had told his name and lineage, and that he was sailing from Troy, Philoctetes cried,"Sayest thou from Troy? |
14994 | And when the Queen saw him she cried,"What news hast thou of my husband? |
14994 | And when the youth saw this he cried,"Who is it that hath plotted my death? |
14994 | And when they cried,"O my King, who shall do thee due honour at thy burial, and speak thy praise, and weep for thee?" |
14994 | And whence come ye?" |
14994 | And while they went to fetch the maiden Ismené, Antigone said to the King,"Is it not enough for thee to slay me? |
14994 | And who are ye that are so strange of aspect, being like neither to the Gods nor to the daughters of men?" |
14994 | And yet he gave me entertainment?" |
14994 | And yet shall my enemies triumph over me and laugh me to scorn? |
14994 | And yet what profiteth me to live? |
14994 | Are there not, thinkest thou, robes enough and gold enough in the treasure of the King? |
14994 | Art thou not ashamed to work such wrong to a suppliant? |
14994 | Art thou not wife to him that was thy fellow in this deed? |
14994 | Art thou of his kindred?" |
14994 | Art thou, perchance, a kinsman?" |
14994 | As for me I shall fall in this land, for am I not a seer? |
14994 | But Patroclus, where was he when thy father died?" |
14994 | But as for these children, wilt thou not persuade the King that he suffer them to dwell here?" |
14994 | But at the last he said,"Is this the Princess Electra whom I see?" |
14994 | But blood that hath been spilt upon the earth, what charmer can bring back? |
14994 | But come, tell me; where doth he bury her? |
14994 | But how shall I contrive it? |
14994 | But of the end what need to speak? |
14994 | But she said,"What have I done, my son, that thou so abhorrest me?" |
14994 | But tell me now, hath Menelaüs had safe return?" |
14994 | But tell me, messenger, what befell them that escaped from the battle?" |
14994 | But tell me, my lord, why dost thou drive me out of thy land?" |
14994 | But the King was very wroth when he heard this outcry, and cried,"Think ye to make bold the hearts of our men by these lamentations? |
14994 | But the Queen said,"What? |
14994 | But there was a certain Agamemnon, son of Atreus, what of him?" |
14994 | But what had the Greeks to do with child of mine? |
14994 | But what profiteth it to deceive? |
14994 | But what will she say when she knoweth my purpose? |
14994 | But what, I pray thee, bringeth thee to this land?" |
14994 | But when Electra heard it, she said,"Comest thou with proof of this ill news that we have heard?" |
14994 | But when Orestes heard this, he brake in,"Where is this Iphigenia? |
14994 | But when she was gone, Orestes said to Pylades,"Pylades, what thinkest thou? |
14994 | But when the Gods are minded to destroy a man, who is so strong that he can escape? |
14994 | But why art thou silent and castest thine eyes to the ground? |
14994 | But why do I compare myself with you? |
14994 | But why dost thou pamper me with luxury, or make my goings hateful to the Gods, strewing this purple under my feet? |
14994 | But why pitiest thou me as doth no other man? |
14994 | But, hold, was not he that fell in battle with this man thy brother also?" |
14994 | By what Gods shall I swear?" |
14994 | Callest thou this taking vengeance for thy daughter that was slain? |
14994 | Canst thou endure that we should live deprived of the wealth that was our father''s; and also that we should grow old unmated? |
14994 | Did not Zeus slay the man who raised the dead? |
14994 | Did the Greeks begin, or my son, trusting in the greatness of his host?" |
14994 | Didst thou slay thy mother?" |
14994 | Do thou therefore make this recompense, which indeed thou owest to me, for what will not a man give for his life? |
14994 | Dost thou keep watch and ward over this woman with thine arrows and thy bow?" |
14994 | Dost thou not know this Diomed?" |
14994 | Dost thou not see him?''" |
14994 | For being an exile in this city, what could I do better than marry the daughter of the King? |
14994 | For she will cry to me,''Wilt thou kill me, my father?'' |
14994 | For that she is rightly come to the marriage of her daughter who can deny? |
14994 | For the whole host will compel me to this deed?" |
14994 | For we must take husbands to rule over us, and how shall we know whether they be good or bad? |
14994 | For what cause did he slay her? |
14994 | For what woman of the better sort would not do even as I? |
14994 | For when Achilles was dead--""How sayest thou? |
14994 | For who am I that I should transgress against a king? |
14994 | For why, she said, should she struggle against fate which made her to be a slave? |
14994 | From whom didst thou learn this?" |
14994 | Had Death, thinkest thou, desire for my children rather than for his? |
14994 | Had Pallas here a mother? |
14994 | Hast thou not had all happiness, thus having lived in kingly power from youth to age? |
14994 | Hast thou not heard the story of my sorrows?" |
14994 | Hath the dead come back among the living?" |
14994 | Have I not always done due reverence to thee and to my mother? |
14994 | How died he?" |
14994 | How have I wronged thee? |
14994 | How many in number were the ships of the Greeks that they dared to meet the Persians in battle array?" |
14994 | How then shall she not hate me when she seeth me at thy right hand? |
14994 | I am ready to carry off this man with a strong arm; and how, being a cripple, shall he stand against us? |
14994 | In some country of the Greeks, or among barbarians?" |
14994 | Is he yet alive?" |
14994 | Is his wife yet alive?" |
14994 | Is it for them to rule, or for me?" |
14994 | Is it not enough for thee to have kept Admetus from his doom? |
14994 | Is it not said that even the Gods are persuaded by gifts, and that gold is mightier than ten thousand speeches? |
14994 | Is the son of Peleus dead?" |
14994 | Is there a man in Thessaly, nay in the whole land of Greece, that is such a lover of hospitality? |
14994 | Knowest thou what manner of thing the life of a man is? |
14994 | Knowest thou who it is to whom thou speakest?" |
14994 | May I not rule my own household?" |
14994 | Must I be as a slave among them that slew my father? |
14994 | Nothing? |
14994 | O my children, why do ye so regard me? |
14994 | Of what have I defrauded thee? |
14994 | One of thy lord''s children, or the old man his father?" |
14994 | Only he said to himself,"O my dear mother, shall I ever see thee? |
14994 | Or had this accursed father no care for my children, but only for the children of his brother? |
14994 | Or was it for the sake of King Menelaüs his brother? |
14994 | Say, why did ye not pursue her while she lived?" |
14994 | Shall I put fire to the dwelling of the bride, or make my way by stealth into her chamber and slay her? |
14994 | Shall the race of Sisyphus, shall Jason, laugh thee to scorn that art of the race of the Sun?" |
14994 | Shall this land, if thou subduest it by the spear of the enemy, ever make alliance with thee? |
14994 | Shall we stay and listen to her?" |
14994 | Shall ye find elsewhere as fair a land, ye Gods, if ye suffer this to be laid waste, or streams as sweet? |
14994 | Should I, for fear of thee, be found guilty against them? |
14994 | So they went, but the Prince was sorely troubled in his mind and cried,"Now what shall I do?" |
14994 | Speak I plainly?" |
14994 | Tell me, my friends, in what land is this Athens of which they speak?" |
14994 | Tell me, therefore, who is yet alive? |
14994 | Tell me, what trouble hath come upon the land of Persia?" |
14994 | Then King Agamemnon came forth from his tent, saying,"What meaneth this uproar and disputing that I hear?" |
14994 | Then answered King Agamemnon,"What is thy quarrel with me? |
14994 | Then said King Agamemnon,"But how shall I escape from this strait? |
14994 | Then said Philoctetes,"Is this Ulysses that I see? |
14994 | Then said the Furies,"How sayest thou? |
14994 | Then said the King to Antigone,"Tell me in a word, didst thou know my decree?" |
14994 | Then said the goddess,"And whither do ye drive him?" |
14994 | Then she said--"Tell me now, dost thou purpose to slay thy daughter and mine?" |
14994 | Then the Queen said,"Shall I say that this hath happened ill or well? |
14994 | Then why dost thou weep?" |
14994 | Think ye that I had flattered this man but that I thought to gain somewhat thereby? |
14994 | Thinkest thou that Priam would not have walked on purple if perchance he had been the conqueror?" |
14994 | Thinkest thou that thy father loveth it not? |
14994 | Thinketh he that Justice is on his side? |
14994 | Thinketh she to atone in such sort for the blood that she hath shed? |
14994 | To her Orestes answered,"What meanest thou, lady, by lamenting in this fashion over us? |
14994 | Was it not plainly declared?" |
14994 | Well, and if they die, what then? |
14994 | What city will receive me? |
14994 | What hast thou done to me? |
14994 | What hath she to do with Helen? |
14994 | What ill do not I suffer at thy hand and the hand of thy partner? |
14994 | What meanest thou? |
14994 | What meanest thou?" |
14994 | What need to say more? |
14994 | What profit is there in them that sleep? |
14994 | What sayest thou? |
14994 | What sayest thou? |
14994 | What should be done to thee if thou be found doing wrong to me?" |
14994 | When did she slay them?" |
14994 | When didst thou thus?" |
14994 | Where shall I find her?" |
14994 | Whither can I go, for thou and he are gone? |
14994 | Who art thou that thou shouldest bewail her? |
14994 | Who art thou, stranger, that sittest clasping this image? |
14994 | Who hath dared to do this deed?" |
14994 | Who is so nimble of foot that he can spring out of the net which they lay for his feet? |
14994 | Who is this maiden? |
14994 | Who knoweth it not? |
14994 | Who more fit than I? |
14994 | Who now shall stand against this boaster and fear not?" |
14994 | Who then will hold up the torch for the bride?" |
14994 | Who told thee this horrible thing that thou bringest against me?" |
14994 | Whom wilt thou set against this man, O King?" |
14994 | Whom, O King, will thou set against this man?" |
14994 | Whose then could be these offerings on the tomb?" |
14994 | Why blamest thou me if thou couldst not rule thy wife? |
14994 | Why do ye laugh at me that shall never laugh again? |
14994 | Why hast thou left me in my old age?" |
14994 | Why linger ye, ye maids? |
14994 | Why not? |
14994 | Why should I slay my child, and work for myself sorrow and remorse without end that thou mayest have vengeance for thy wicked wife?" |
14994 | Will he not be wroth, hearing that he hath been cheated of his wife?" |
14994 | Wilt thou bury him when the King hath forbidden it?" |
14994 | Wilt thou not take another in her stead?" |
14994 | Wilt thou, if I save thee from this death, carry tidings of me to Argos to my friends, and bear a tablet from me to them? |
14994 | Would she kill me also?" |
14994 | Yet what nobler thing could I have done than to bury my own mother''s son? |
14994 | and for whom must we make lamentation?" |
14994 | he cried,"what shall I do, being bereaved of thee?" |
14994 | how shall I dwell in thee? |
14994 | or that it is an evil thing, yet profitable to me? |
14994 | said he;"is this son yet to be born, or doth he live already?" |
14994 | said the King,"if the ship labour in the sea, and the helmsman leave the helm and fly to the prow that he may pray before the image, doeth he well?" |
14994 | said the elder,"or was he parted from you in a storm?" |
14994 | that Zeus gave this command that this man should slay his mother?" |
14994 | what God hath so smitten thee? |
14994 | what friend shall give me protection? |
14994 | where, then, is his tomb?" |
14994 | who is dead? |
14994 | who will receive me? |
14994 | why lookest thou so solemn and full of care? |
14994 | wilt thou always keep this widowed state?" |
2850 | In qua te quero proseucha? |
2850 | 10 Have not we given you leave to kill such as go beyond it, though he were a Roman? |
2850 | Again, therefore, what mischief was there which Simon the son of Gioras did not do? |
2850 | And are not both the city and the entire temple now full of the dead bodies of your countrymen? |
2850 | And are we then in a clear state of liberty at present? |
2850 | And as for that large open place belonging to Antioch in Syria, did not he pave it with polished marble, though it were twenty furlongs long? |
2850 | And do not you think that God is very angry when a man does injury to what he hath bestowed on him? |
2850 | And do the Romans commit such wickedness as did the king of Assyria, that you may have reason to hope for the like vengeance upon them? |
2850 | And do you still deem it a part of valor to die? |
2850 | And how will you be able to avoid being ashamed, if you do not show equal courage with your commander, when he goes before you into danger? |
2850 | And indeed what greater mischief can the war, though it should be a violent one, do to us than the earthquake hath done? |
2850 | And indeed what was there that could possibly provoke me against thee? |
2850 | And now, vile wretches, do you desire to treat with me by word of mouth? |
2850 | And shall we endeavor to run away from God, who is the best of all masters, and not guilty of impeity? |
2850 | And what do you do now, you pernicious villains? |
2850 | And what nations are there, out of the limits of our dominion, that would choose to assist the Jews before the Romans? |
2850 | And what need I bring any more examples? |
2850 | And what occasion is there now for a war with the Romans? |
2850 | And what other fear could I have? |
2850 | And when Albinus[ for he was then our procurator] asked him, Who he was? |
2850 | And when Pheroras said, Wherein have we done him any harm? |
2850 | And why are we afraid of death, while we are pleased with the rest that we have in sleep? |
2850 | And, after all this, do you expect Him whom you have so impiously abused to be your supporter? |
2850 | And, indeed, why do I relate these particular calamities? |
2850 | Are Nero''s successors till they come to thee still alive? |
2850 | Are not the Illyrlans, who inhabit the country adjoining, as far as Dalmatia and the Danube, governed by barely two legions? |
2850 | Are not the Romans in a manner gotten within the city? |
2850 | Are not we, therefore, ashamed to have lower notions than the Indians? |
2850 | Are not your people dead? |
2850 | Are they in possession of our letters? |
2850 | Are you richer than the Gauls, stronger than the Germans, wiser than the Greeks, more numerous than all men upon the habitable earth? |
2850 | Are your bodies stronger than ours? |
2850 | As for all those of us who have waged war against the Romans in our own country, had we not sufficient reason to have sure hopes of victory? |
2850 | As for themselves, what can they depend on in this their opposition, when the greatest part of their city is already taken? |
2850 | As for you, what have you done of those things that are recommended by our legislator? |
2850 | Besides, can any one be afraid of a war abroad, and that with such as will have comparatively much greater moderation than our own people have? |
2850 | Besides, shall we not bear the lords of the habitable earth to be lords over us, and yet bear tyrants of our own country? |
2850 | But how could that be? |
2850 | But why do I complain of the tyrants? |
2850 | Can any one pretend that I am not the man I was formerly? |
2850 | Could I suspect hatred from thee? |
2850 | Could the hope of being king do it? |
2850 | Did I want money? |
2850 | Did your king[ Hezekiah] lift up such hands in prayer to God against the king of Assyria, when he destroyed that great army in one night? |
2850 | Do they not submit to a single governor, and to the consular bundle of rods? |
2850 | Do you exceed us in courage of soul, and in the sagacity of your commanders? |
2850 | Do you suppose, I pray you, that you are to make war with the Egyptians, and with the Arabians? |
2850 | Dost thou send me to Nero? |
2850 | For why? |
2850 | Hath any one been caught as he went out on this errand, or seized upon as he came back? |
2850 | Have you depended on your multitude, while a very small part of the Roman soldiery have been strong enough for you? |
2850 | Have you relied on the fidelity of your confederates? |
2850 | Have you stronger walls than we have? |
2850 | How long shall I myself spend my blood drop by drop? |
2850 | If so, what we are afraid of, when we but suspect our enemies will inflict it on us, shall we inflict it on ourselves for certain? |
2850 | Indeed what can it be that hath stirred up an army of the Romans against our nation? |
2850 | Is it death? |
2850 | Is it not that we may enjoy our liberty? |
2850 | Is it not the impiety of the inhabitants? |
2850 | Is not Simon become unfaithful to his benefactors? |
2850 | Is not the famine already come against us? |
2850 | Is therefore that most honorable and most natural of our passions utterly lost, I mean the desire of liberty? |
2850 | Is this the first time that they are become sensible how they ought to be punished for their insolent actions? |
2850 | Moreover, did not Palestine groan 17 under the ravage the Assyrians made, when they carried away our sacred ark? |
2850 | Must there not then have been ambassadors sent to confirm the agreements? |
2850 | Must they come from the parts of the world that are uninhabited? |
2850 | No; for who was able to expend so much as myself? |
2850 | Now what crime is there, I pray you, that is so much as kept secret among you, or is concealed by you? |
2850 | Now what crimes were those other sons of mine guilty of like these of Antipater? |
2850 | Now what juster opportunity shall they ever have of requiting their generals, if they do not make use of this that is now before them? |
2850 | Now when almost all people under the sun submit to the Roman arms, will you be the only people that make war against them? |
2850 | Now who is there that revolves these things in his mind, and yet is able to bear the sight of the sun, though he might live out of danger? |
2850 | Now, while you have tyranny in so great a degree walled in, and see your enemies over your heads, to what purpose is it to take counsel? |
2850 | Perhaps you wait for the Romans, that they may protect our holy places: are our matters then brought to that pass? |
2850 | Petronius then quieted them, and said to them,"Will you then make war against Caesar?" |
2850 | Take the victory which is given you: do not you hear what a noise they make? |
2850 | Then does the crier stand at the general''s right hand, and asks them thrice, in their own tongue, whether they be now ready to go out to war or not? |
2850 | To what purpose is it that you would save such a holy house as this was, which is now destroyed? |
2850 | Upon this the woman paused a little, and then said,"Why do I spare to speak of these grand secrets, now Pheroras is dead? |
2850 | Was it not you, and your sufferance of them, that have nourished them? |
2850 | Was not I beloved by thee? |
2850 | What Roman weapons, I pray you, were those by which the Jews at Cesarea were slain? |
2850 | What are the arms you depend on? |
2850 | What are we afraid of, when we will not go up to the Romans? |
2850 | What can a man call this procedure of yours but the sport of fortune, when he sees a whole nation coming to protect a sink of wicked wretches? |
2850 | What confidence is it that elevates you to oppose the Romans? |
2850 | What did Abraham our progenitor then do? |
2850 | What friendship or kindred were there that did not make him more bold in his daily murders? |
2850 | What hinders you from slaying your children and wives with your own hands, and burning this most excellent native city of yours? |
2850 | What is the case of five hundred cities of Asia? |
2850 | What need I speak of the presents he made to the Lycians and Samnians? |
2850 | What preservation can you now desire after the destruction of your temple? |
2850 | What pretense is there for it? |
2850 | What sort of an army do you rely on? |
2850 | What then shall we say to those of Scythopolis, who ventured to wage war with us on account of the Greeks? |
2850 | What therefore do you pretend to? |
2850 | When Sennacherib, king of Assyria, brought along with him all Asia, and encompassed this city round with his army, did he fall by the hands of men? |
2850 | When did we ever conquer any other nation by such means? |
2850 | Whence did our servitude commence? |
2850 | Where is this city that was believed to have God himself inhabiting therein? |
2850 | Where is your fleet, that may seize upon the Roman seas? |
2850 | Where shall I see the head of him which contrived to murder his father, which I will tear to pieces with my own hands? |
2850 | Where then are those people whom you are to have for your auxiliaries? |
2850 | Who could bear to be the first that should set that temple on fire? |
2850 | Who is there among you that hath not heard of the great number of the Germans? |
2850 | Who is there so much his country''s enemy, or so unmanly, and so desirous of living, as not to repent that he is still alive? |
2850 | Who is there that can avoid groans and lamentations at the amazing change that is made in this city? |
2850 | Who is there that does not know that Egypt was overrun with all sorts of wild beasts, and consumed by all sorts of distempers? |
2850 | Who will not, therefore, believe that they will certainly be in a rage at us, in case they can take us alive? |
2850 | Why do you trample upon dead bodies in this temple? |
2850 | Why is it not then a very mean thing for us not to yield up that to the public benefit which we must yield up to fate? |
2850 | Will not you pluck them down from their exaltation? |
2850 | Will you bear, therefore, will you bear to see your sanctuary trampled on? |
2850 | Will you not call to mind, every one of you, the calamities you yourselves have suffered? |
2850 | Will you not carefully reflect upon the Roman empire? |
2850 | Will you not estimate your own weakness? |
2850 | and are not your own very lives in my hands? |
2850 | and are we come to that degree of misery, that our enemies themselves are expected to pity us? |
2850 | and by our own cowardice to lay a base reproach upon the laws of our country, which are so much desired and imitated by all mankind? |
2850 | and canst thou bear to see the light in a state of slavery? |
2850 | and is there not reason to fear he will very soon bring us to the like punishment, while the security the Romans offer us is sure? |
2850 | and what evidence was there brought against them so strong as there is to demonstrate this son to have plotted against me? |
2850 | and what have you not done of those things that he hath condemned? |
2850 | and what have you to support your minds withal? |
2850 | and what is there that can better deserve to be preserved? |
2850 | and when those that are within it are under greater miseries than if they were taken, although their walls be still standing? |
2850 | and when was it that God, who is the Creator of the Jewish people, did not avenge them when they had been injured? |
2850 | and whence he came? |
2850 | and where are those treasures which may be sufficient for your undertakings? |
2850 | and who would not make haste to die, before he would suffer the same miseries with them? |
2850 | and why do we set our soul and body, which are such dear companions, at such variance? |
2850 | and why do you pollute this holy house with the blood of both foreigners and Jews themselves? |
2850 | and why he uttered such words? |
2850 | and will not such things sharpen your souls to revenge? |
2850 | and will you lay steps for these profane wretches, upon which they may mount to higher degrees of insolence? |
2850 | are you so unmindful of those that used to assist you, that you will fight by your weapons and by your hands against the Romans? |
2850 | art thou still fond of life? |
2850 | but if you think all servitude intolerable, to what purpose serve your complaint against your particular governors? |
2850 | do not they submit to two thousand men of the Roman garrisons? |
2850 | for whom shall I preserve thee in this war, this famine, and this sedition? |
2850 | how the Nile failed of water? |
2850 | how the ten plagues of Egypt followed one upon another? |
2850 | how their land did not bring forth its fruit? |
2850 | is not your city in my power? |
2850 | is not your holy house gone? |
2850 | nay, what is there that is not open to your very enemies? |
2850 | nor lay before your eyes what afflictions you yourselves have undergone? |
2850 | or did not I know what end my brethren came to, on whom God inflicted so great a punishment for their evil designs against thee? |
2850 | or of his great liberality through all Ionia? |
2850 | or what amendment of your affairs will it bring you, if you do not now go out to meet them? |
2850 | or what hopes have we of deliverance by thus continuing faithful to such wicked wretches? |
2850 | or what kind of abuses did he abstain from as to those very free- men who had set him up for a tyrant? |
2850 | were not those hands lifted up to God in prayers, without meddling with their arms, when an angel of God destroyed that prodigious army in one night? |
2850 | what is it you depend on? |
2850 | who could be willing that these things should be no more? |
2850 | will not you rise up and turn upon those that strike you? |
31345 | And can this God have a mother? 31345 Can you really wonder that all this should come to an end? |
31345 | Dost thou see aught? |
31345 | What am I? |
31345 | What can I know? |
31345 | Already the Catholic party, in preparation of its commencing atrocities, ominously inquired,"Is the vengeance of God to be defrauded of its victims?" |
31345 | Among such appearances, how shall we select the true one, and, if we make a selection, how shall we be absolutely certain that we are right? |
31345 | Among the great prelates, who was there to stand in the place of those men whose achievements had glorified the human race? |
31345 | And what is the result to which all this carries us? |
31345 | And, even if such a criterion existed, must we not have for it, in its turn, some higher criterion? |
31345 | Are these the deeds of civilized men, or the riotings of cannibals drunk with blood? |
31345 | As to the gods, those dà ¦ mons in whom you trust, did they always save you from calamity? |
31345 | As to the reality of these apparitions, why should a hermit be led to suspect that they arose from the natural working of his own brain? |
31345 | As to the sentiment of patriotism of which you vaunt, was it not destroyed by your own emperors? |
31345 | But how shall we be sure, in any one case, that we have examined all the individuals? |
31345 | But if there be this impossibility of attaining knowledge, what is the use of man giving himself any trouble about the matter? |
31345 | But what is that murmur except the sum of the sounds of all the individual drops? |
31345 | But what is the cause of all this? |
31345 | But what was the cost of all this? |
31345 | But who is that one God? |
31345 | Could a creature bear the uncreated?" |
31345 | Do we ask any proof of the condition of art to which the Egyptians had attained at the time of their earliest monuments? |
31345 | Do we not want some criterion for it? |
31345 | Does the procession of nations in time, like the erratic phantasm of a dream, go forward without reason or order? |
31345 | Has it been annihilated? |
31345 | Has man a criterion of truth?] |
31345 | Hence arises the fourth great question of Greek philosophy: Have we any criterion of truth? |
31345 | How can it be otherwise since they are not permitted to pray in a mosque upon earth? |
31345 | How can there be a religion where there is no God? |
31345 | How could he better find adherents from the centre to the remotest corner of the empire? |
31345 | How else, in this manner, could the like extricate itself from the unlike; the one deliver itself from, and make itself manifest among the many? |
31345 | How is it possible to arrest the spread of a faith which can make the broken heart leap with joy? |
31345 | How long did Hannibal insult them? |
31345 | How shall we ascertain the real state of the case? |
31345 | How shall we understand his faith unless we see it illustrated in his life? |
31345 | How was it possible that unlettered men, who with difficulty can be made to apprehend obvious things, should understand such mysteries? |
31345 | If the divinity is undistinguishable from heat, whither can we go to escape its influences? |
31345 | If things material and tangible, and therefore the most solid props of knowledge, are thus abruptly destroyed, in what direction shall we turn? |
31345 | If thus, in the recesses of the individual economy, these natural agents bear sway, must they not operate in the social economy too? |
31345 | If we rely upon Reason, how do we know that Reason itself is trustworthy? |
31345 | If you ask them how they defend these monstrosities? |
31345 | In such a state of things, what else could be the result than disgust or indifference? |
31345 | In that final moment, what is it that is lost? |
31345 | In what latitude is it that the domain of the physical ends, and that of the supernatural begins? |
31345 | Indeed, do not all our expectations of the stability of social institutions rest upon our belief in the stability of surrounding physical conditions? |
31345 | Is it not best to accept life as it comes, and enjoy pleasure while he may? |
31345 | Is it not reason? |
31345 | Is it surprising that all Asia and Africa fell away? |
31345 | Is there an object presented to us which does not bear the mark of ephemeral duration? |
31345 | Is this world an illusion, a phantasm of the imagination? |
31345 | Of a thousand acts, all of surpassing interest and importance, how shall we identify the master ones? |
31345 | Of what avail is it if a barbarian chieftain drives a horde of his savages through the waters of a river by way of extemporaneous or speedy baptism? |
31345 | Of what use were sacrificial offerings and entreaties directed to phantasms of the imagination? |
31345 | Shall we begin our studies by examining sensations or by examining ideas? |
31345 | Shall we find in his private life any explanation of this mystery? |
31345 | Shall we inquire with Spinoza whether we have any ideas independent of experience? |
31345 | Shall we say with Descartes that all clear ideas are true? |
31345 | The pulse of its life- giving artery makes but one beat in a year; what, then, are a few hundreds of centuries in such a process? |
31345 | This being the case, how shall we know that any information derived from such unfaithful sources is true? |
31345 | Thus it appears that the first inquiry made by European philosophy was, Whence and in what manner came the world? |
31345 | To Nature, when she is transmuting a worthless into a better metal, what signify a thousand years? |
31345 | To reason may we not then trust? |
31345 | To what are we to attribute this pause? |
31345 | To what part of the world could the Egyptian travel without seeing in the skies the same constellations? |
31345 | Was it a goose or a god that saved the Capitol from Brennus? |
31345 | Was it a nonentity? |
31345 | Was there not in the streets a profligate rabble living in total idleness, fed and amused at the expense of the state? |
31345 | Were there not natural waters of very different properties? |
31345 | What is God?] |
31345 | What is it that assures us of the unreality of the fiery circle, the rainbow, the spectre, the voices, the crawling of insects upon the skin? |
31345 | What is that something? |
31345 | What is that soul? |
31345 | What is the soul?] |
31345 | What shall we say of such a system and of such a state of things? |
31345 | What should we say of him, who, contemplating it in its state of rest, asserted that it was impossible for it ever to move? |
31345 | What testimony does physiology offer on this point? |
31345 | Where were the gods in all the defeats, some of them but recent, of the pagan emperors? |
31345 | Whereupon she uncovered her face and said,"Dost thou see it now?" |
31345 | Which of these classes shall we regard as the truest and most perfect type? |
31345 | Who was to succeed to Archimedes, Hipparchus, Euclid, Herophilus, Eratosthenes? |
31345 | Why are facts to be burdened with such hypothetical creations, when it is obvious that a much simpler explanation is sufficient? |
31345 | Why was it that civilization thus rose on the banks of the Nile, and not upon those of the Danube or Mississippi? |
31345 | With Plato shall we say it was in one of our prior states of existence, and the long- forgotten transactions are now suddenly flashing upon us? |
31345 | Would any one deny the influence of rainy days on our industrial habits and on our mental condition even in a civilized state? |
31345 | by an exposure of base material in the furnace for a proper season, may we not anticipate the wished for event? |
31345 | hast thou ever said to men, Take me and my mother for two gods beside God? |
31345 | how things do not fall away from the earth on that side? |
31345 | was not Roman idleness the inevitable result of the filling of Italy with slaves? |
31345 | what is it that has come to an end? |
31345 | who to Plato and Aristotle? |
31554 | ''And you are sure you do not deceive yourself? 31554 ''Aye, aye, fellows, what is the matter; why so quiet?'' |
31554 | ''How then do you wish to fight me? 31554 ''How?'' |
31554 | ''No?'' 31554 ''That I am not a Russian, that I am fated to live beyond Russia, that you will have to break all your ties with your country and your family?'' |
31554 | ''That you will have to give up all your habits; that there alone, among strangers, you will perhaps have to toil?'' 31554 ''Tis well.... Are you ready for the sacrifice?" |
31554 | ''To my house?'' 31554 ''You can not?'' |
31554 | ''You come from our house, do n''t you?'' 31554 ''You know I am poor, almost a beggar?'' |
31554 | And art thou ready even for-- crime? |
31554 | For nameless sacrifice? 31554 Have you seen any of my later writings?" |
31554 | O thou, eager to step across this threshold, knowest thou what awaits thee? |
31554 | Would you have us give up,they say,"the fruit of civilization and progress, and return to the primitive life of the days of yore?" |
31554 | ''And is it thus you keep your promise? |
31554 | ''Do you remember?'' |
31554 | ''He is here, he loves; what more is there needed?'' |
31554 | ''I can tell you... do you wish me to tell... why you found me here? |
31554 | ''My boys, my darling boys, what is to become of ye, what is in store for ye?'' |
31554 | ''Why did not we foresee this?'' |
31554 | ''You intended, then, to depart without taking leave of us?'' |
31554 | ... Where then are the flowers?... |
31554 | 25. Who is here right, who is here wrong,--the public with its millions, Tolstoy in his loneliness? |
31554 | And from behind the doors there was heard another voice which spake:"Who is this, and how has he lived on earth?" |
31554 | And from behind the doors was heard a third voice which spake:"Who is this, and how hath he lived on earth?" |
31554 | And how long ago? |
31554 | And plucked by whom? |
31554 | And therefore the unbelievers sneer, and ask,''Is this the man according to God''s own heart?'' |
31554 | And where is their nook this very day? |
31554 | And wherefore left thus here? |
31554 | And why, pray, shall not I laugh?'' |
31554 | Are not ye, my friends, likewise in danger of falling short of the highest because you too do not cast off the scepticism of the heart? |
31554 | Are they all dressed thus in the academy?'' |
31554 | Bloomed where? |
31554 | Boxing?'' |
31554 | But do friends part thus? |
31554 | But now--''"''But now?'' |
31554 | But what if in God''s eyes there be no higher work, nor lower work, but merely work? |
31554 | But write what? |
31554 | Do you know where I was going?'' |
31554 | Faults? |
31554 | For hast thou not writ in thy book, O John, that God is Love, and that whosoever knoweth not Love, knoweth not God? |
31554 | For what is heaven? |
31554 | He puts the to him all- important question,''What direction must I steer for my safety?'' |
31554 | Here I was tormented, like every living soul, with the question,''How can I better my life?'' |
31554 | How then shalt thou now hate me and drive me hence? |
31554 | How? |
31554 | In his search for the answer to the ever- recurring question,"Wherefore shall I live?" |
31554 | In what spring? |
31554 | Is Gogol a realist? |
31554 | Is Turgenef a realist? |
31554 | Is it my mother sitting at the window? |
31554 | Is not a man''s walking, in truth, always that,--''a succession of falls''? |
31554 | Is this my home which rises blue in the distance? |
31554 | Is this the kind of a son you are? |
31554 | Lives he still? |
31554 | Might she perhaps have saved him? |
31554 | Of all acts, is not, for a man,_ repentance_ the most divine? |
31554 | Of what use are alms handed out with one hand, when with the other we uphold idleness which is the creator of the need of alms? |
31554 | On reading Turgenef''s Memoirs of a Sportsman, though it accomplished as much for the serf, you no longer ask,"What has the book done for the serf?" |
31554 | On reading"Uncle Tom''s Cabin,"you involuntarily ask,"What effect has this book had on slavery in America?" |
31554 | Or again; which is a higher work of art, a nocturne by Chopin, or a sonata by Beethoven; an Essay by Macaulay, or a"Decline and Fall"by Gibbon? |
31554 | Or are they too withered, Like unto this unknown floweret? |
31554 | Or shall the neighboring valley Receive my chilled dust? |
31554 | Order? |
31554 | Quiet? |
31554 | She had scarcely time to ask herself,''What is he doing under the apple- tree bareheaded in such weather as this?'' |
31554 | Social brotherhood, too, has been preached for ages, beginning with John the Baptist, who in answer to the question, What are we to do? |
31554 | The boy of nineteen can not endure; go then from Russia he must, but go-- whither? |
31554 | These, then, are the men among whom Tolstoy belongs: which of these the greater, which of these the less? |
31554 | They hardly dare to breathe; they wait; what are they waiting for, Great God? |
31554 | Thou wilt ask: Where are my parents? |
31554 | Was it by a strange hand, was it by a dear hand? |
31554 | Was it in memory of a fated parting? |
31554 | Was it in memory of a lonely walk In the peaceful fields, or in the shady woods? |
31554 | Was it in memory of a tender meeting? |
31554 | Was it not you who was a disciple of Christ, and was it not you who heard from his own lips his teaching, and saw the example of his life? |
31554 | We are of course friends, are not we?'' |
31554 | Wert not thou he that spake in his old age unto men only this one word:''Brethren, love ye one another''? |
31554 | What can I give them? |
31554 | What do they wish of poor me? |
31554 | What have I done to them? |
31554 | What if in God''s eyes there be no higher duty, nor lower duty, but merely duty? |
31554 | What kind of a rig have you on? |
31554 | What, shalt thou do thy duty for the sake of the reward, the mess of pottage it brings, O wretch? |
31554 | When? |
31554 | Wherefore not conquer Fortune as an old woman, if she favor not the young man? |
31554 | Wherefore, then, such misery? |
31554 | Which is higher as a work of art,--that in its sadness unparalleled song of Shakespeare,"Blow, blow, thou Winter wind,"or his"Othello"? |
31554 | Who is called there''the man according to God''s own heart''? |
31554 | Why does neither of them dare to utter a word? |
31554 | Why does not she dare now to look at Solomin, as if he were her accomplice... as if he too were suffering remorse? |
31554 | Why dost thou neigh, O spirited steed; Why thy neck so low, Why thy mane unshaken, Why thy bit not gnawed? |
31554 | Why then did she not stop at that moment and reflect upon these words and this presentiment? |
31554 | Why was the feeling of infinite pity, of desperate regret with which Nezhdanof inspired her mingled with a kind of terror, with shame, with remorse? |
31554 | Will this change of heart likewise have to be brought about by blood and slaughter? |
31554 | You know your parents will never consent to our marriage?'' |
31554 | Your father?'' |
31554 | lives she still? |
3106 | A young man will catch the whole family with this flaming message, but where is that sentiment that once set the maiden heart in a flutter? |
3106 | And how does he find out that? |
3106 | And is this because we do not like to be insulted with originality, or because in our experience it is only the commonly accepted which is true? |
3106 | And what effect would this change in relations have upon men? |
3106 | And what would become of us without Receptions? |
3106 | And would this change be of any injury to them in their necessary fight for existence in this pushing world? |
3106 | Are we exaggerating this astonishing rise, development, and spread of the chrysanthemum? |
3106 | Are we not always trying to adjust ourselves to new relations, to get naturalized into a new family? |
3106 | Art is good in its way; but what about a perfect figure? |
3106 | But is it true that a woman is ever really naturalized? |
3106 | But is it well- founded, is there any more mystery about women-- than about men? |
3106 | But is not the sunshine common, and the bloom of May? |
3106 | But the inquiry has come from many cities, from many women,"Can not something be done to stop social screaming?" |
3106 | Can the lady act? |
3106 | Can training give one an elegant form, and study command the services of a man milliner? |
3106 | Can we reform London and Paris and New York, which our own hands have made? |
3106 | Could these men have conquered the world? |
3106 | DOES REFINEMENT KILL INDIVIDUALITY? |
3106 | Did not Mr. Tupper, that sweet, melodious shepherd of the undisputed, lead about vast flocks of sheep over the satisfying plain of mediocrity? |
3106 | Do not men do the same? |
3106 | Do we not like the books that raise us to the great level of the commonplace, whereon we move with a sense of power? |
3106 | Do you adapt yourself and your surroundings to him, or insist that he shall adapt himself to you? |
3106 | Does anybody regard it as anything but a sham and a burden? |
3106 | Does anything really take the place of that entire ease and confidence that one has in kin, or the inborn longing for their sympathy and society? |
3106 | Does he examine the subject, and try to understand it? |
3106 | Does he study that bill? |
3106 | Does he take pains to inform himself by reading and conversation with experts upon its probable effect? |
3106 | Does it require nowadays, then, no special talent or gift to go on the stage? |
3106 | Does one ever do it entirely? |
3106 | Does our process too much eliminate the rough vigor, courage, stamina of the race? |
3106 | Does she dress for her lover as she dresses to receive her lawyer who has come to inform her that she is living beyond her income? |
3106 | Does she ever lose the instinct of it? |
3106 | Does the gate of divorce open more frequently from following the one theory than the other? |
3106 | Does the time ever come when the distinction ceases between his family and hers? |
3106 | Even throw in goodness, a certain amount of altruism, gentleness, warm interest in unfortunate humanity-- is the situation much improved? |
3106 | Has a novelist the right to subject his creations to tortures that he would not dare to inflict upon his friends? |
3106 | Have they not the time? |
3106 | Have women more time? |
3106 | How do you treat the stranger? |
3106 | How long did"The Country Parson"feed an eager world with rhetorical statements of that which it already knew? |
3106 | If all the artificial round of calls and cards should tumble down, what valuable thing would be lost out of anybody''s life? |
3106 | If he can not be trusted in the matter of worsted- work, why should he have such distinctive liberty in the most important matter of his life? |
3106 | If we can not, where is the difficulty? |
3106 | In a word, if the world were actually all civilized, would n''t it be too weak even to ripen? |
3106 | Is Christmas swelling away? |
3106 | Is any one deceived by it? |
3106 | Is anybody beginning to feel it a burden, this sweet festival of charity and good- will, and to look forward to it with apprehension? |
3106 | Is he ever anything but a sort of tolerated, criticised, or admired alien? |
3106 | Is it in fact till we come to mediaeval times, and the chivalric age, that women are set up as being more incomprehensible than men? |
3106 | Is it in her nature to be? |
3106 | Is it not necessary to have an authentic list of pasteboard acquaintances to invite to the receptions? |
3106 | Is it not necessary to keep up what is called society? |
3106 | Is it only thoughtlessness? |
3106 | Is it true that cultivation, what we call refinement, kills individuality? |
3106 | Is it true that the mental process in one sex is intuitive, and in the other logical, with every link necessary and visible? |
3106 | Is n''t it indeed the golden era of letters? |
3106 | Is not this book pleasing because it is commonplace? |
3106 | Is not this, O brothers and sisters, an evil under the sun, this dinner as it is apt to be conducted? |
3106 | Is the Atlantic shore the only coast where beauty may lounge and spread its net of enchantment? |
3106 | Is the feminine nature any more difficult to understand than the masculine nature? |
3106 | Is the rage for this flower typical of this fast and flaring age? |
3106 | Is the time approaching when we shall want to get somebody to play it for us, like base- ball? |
3106 | Is there a barbaric force left in the world that we have been daintily trying to cover and apologize for and refine into gentle agreeableness? |
3106 | Is there nothing outside of that envied circle which you make so brilliant? |
3106 | Is there nothing stimulating in the conflict of mind with mind? |
3106 | Is there nothing, then, in the exchange of ideas? |
3106 | Is this a hopeless world? |
3106 | Is this an accident, or is it a necessity of the refinement that we insist on calling civilization? |
3106 | Is this an intangible matter? |
3106 | Is this an old sermon? |
3106 | Is your compact, graceful, orderly society liable to be monotonous in its gay repetition of the same thing week after week? |
3106 | It may be that this treatment has excited the sympathy of the world, but is it legitimate? |
3106 | Let it be common, and what distinction will there be in it? |
3106 | Must it always go on by spurts and relapses, alternate civilization and barbarism, and the barbarism being necessary to keep us employed and growing? |
3106 | Must the Congressman read it? |
3106 | Or is there some mistake about our ideal of civilization? |
3106 | Or, worse than that even, that one loses his taste by over- cultivation? |
3106 | Probably when the Great Assize is held one of the questions asked will be,"Did you, in America, ever write stories for children?" |
3106 | SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3106 | Should one take a cynical view of mankind because he perceives this great power of the commonplace? |
3106 | Suppose the proposal were made to women to exchange being mysterious for the ballot? |
3106 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3106 | THE LOSS IN CIVILIZATION Have we yet hit upon the right idea of civilization? |
3106 | That is to say, are not barbarism and vast regions of uncultivated land a necessity of healthful life on this globe? |
3106 | That is, less logical, more whimsical, more uncertain in their mental processes? |
3106 | The Atlantic shore and Europe? |
3106 | The subject is a delicate one, and should not be confused with the broader one, what is the purpose of the higher education? |
3106 | Was there ever a greater exhibition of power, while it lasted? |
3106 | What can be done with those who are described as"East- Londoners"? |
3106 | What can one do with this new favorite? |
3106 | What is gained, he asks, by leaving cards with all these people and receiving their cards? |
3106 | What is this London, the most civilized city ever known? |
3106 | What is this naturalization, however, but a sort of parable of human life? |
3106 | What more can a man do with it? |
3106 | What poet could now sing of the"awful chrysanthemum of dawn"? |
3106 | What satisfaction has a man in it if he really gets to the end of his power to improve it? |
3106 | What went ye out for to see? |
3106 | What would be the effect upon courtship if both the men and the women approached each other as wooers? |
3106 | What would be the effect upon the female character and disposition of a possible, though not probable, refusal, or of several refusals? |
3106 | When a woman makes her tedious rounds, why is she always relieved to find people not in? |
3106 | When she can count upon her ten fingers the people she wants to see, why should she pretend to want to see the others? |
3106 | Where is the primeval, heroic force that made the joy of living in the rough old uncivilized days? |
3106 | Who can tell how much this notion of mystery in the sex stands in the way of its free advancement all along the line? |
3106 | Why does the lady intending suicide always throw on a waterproof when she steals out of the house to drown herself? |
3106 | Why not settle down upon the formula that to be platitudinous is to be happy? |
3106 | Why should not women propose? |
3106 | Why should they be at a disadvantage in an affair which concerns the happiness of the whole life? |
3106 | Why struggle with these things in literature and in life? |
3106 | Will not the wise novelist seek to encounter the least intellectual resistance? |
3106 | Will she press a chrysanthemum, and keep it till the faint perfume reminds her of the sweetest moment of her life? |
3106 | Without the necessity of putting forth this energy, a survival of the original force in man, how long would our civilization last? |
3106 | Would her own sex be considerate, and give her a fair field if they saw she was paying attention to a young man, or an old one? |
3106 | Would it not render that sporadic shyness of which we have spoken epidemic? |
3106 | Would not the lover be spared time and pain if he knew, as the novelist knows, whether the young lady is dressing for a rejection or an acceptance? |
3106 | Would she become embittered and desperate, and act as foolishly as men often do? |
3106 | Would they do it? |
3106 | and if they have, why should they spend it in this Sisyphus task? |
3106 | and is not dressing an art? |
10691 | Allow me to ask, are the United States interested in the laws of nations? |
10691 | And Ohio? |
10691 | And because they side with republican freedom, with civil and religious liberty, against Russo- Austrian despotism? |
10691 | And do you know, gentlemen, whence this absurd theory sprang up on the European Continent? |
10691 | And do you know, gentlemen, which of these numerous addresses were the most glorious to the people of England and the most gratifying to me? |
10691 | And has that sympathy subsided? |
10691 | And if that declaration is made, what will be the consequence of it? |
10691 | And if we have an interest, ought we not to use the rights of an independent State for its protection? |
10691 | And if you answer,"The Union is;"then I ask,"And where is the security of the Union?" |
10691 | And in what condition is Europe now? |
10691 | And is America in the days of steam navigation more distant from Europe to- day, than France was from America seventy- three years ago? |
10691 | And is every one of my down- trodden people a neighbour to every one of you? |
10691 | And is it upon the ruins of Hungary that the absolutist powers are now about to realize this prophecy? |
10691 | And is my nation not a neighbour to your nation? |
10691 | And oh, have I not enough upon these poor shoulders, that I am desired yet to take up additional cares? |
10691 | And shall the United States accept whatever the Czar may be pleased to decide about those common concerns? |
10691 | And shall we sit blindfolded, with our arms crossed, and say to tyranny,"Prevail in every other region of the world?" |
10691 | And still Americans doubt that we are on the eve of a terrible revolution; and they ask, What use can I make of any material aid? |
10691 | And still what was the issue of this malignant plot? |
10691 | And this result, dear friends, is it not achieved? |
10691 | And to what purpose did they speak these words so full of dignity and full of effect? |
10691 | And what does Hungary_ need_ for freedom? |
10691 | And what has become of them? |
10691 | And what is it I say to the people in my public addresses? |
10691 | And what is the principle of such a law of nations, which you as republicans can recognize? |
10691 | And what is this aim which thrills through our bosoms like a magnetic current? |
10691 | And what sort of men are these millions? |
10691 | And what was far more than all this, did it not show that France resolved with all its power to espouse the cause of your independence? |
10691 | And what was more natural, than that, being in the necessity to choose one language, they choose the Magyar? |
10691 | And what will be the consequence? |
10691 | And whence this difference? |
10691 | And whence this striking contrast in the results, when there exists such a striking identity in the antecedents? |
10691 | And whence this striking difference? |
10691 | And who can believe that two hundred millions of that continent, which is the mother of such a civilization, are not to have any future at all? |
10691 | And who is charged by Providence with this task? |
10691 | And who were these volunteers? |
10691 | And why did she not succeed? |
10691 | And why not? |
10691 | And why was that illusory constitution withdrawn? |
10691 | And why? |
10691 | And why? |
10691 | And why? |
10691 | And your Republic? |
10691 | And, gentlemen, what other people, for 1000 years, has not consented to be ruled by despotism? |
10691 | Are they only native- born Americans? |
10691 | Are we to take no heed of their aggressions at our doors? |
10691 | Are you not going on to action, as generous men do, who are conscious of their power and of their aim? |
10691 | Are you to hide your national talent in a napkin, or lend it at usury? |
10691 | Are you, or are you not, come to such a degree of strength and consistency as to be the masters of your own fortunes? |
10691 | Bear that in fulness of age which it never bore in childhood? |
10691 | Besides, what were those powers which interposed their mediation in favour of bleeding Greece? |
10691 | But I am asked, where will I land? |
10691 | But I am often asked,--"What hope has Hungary should she rise again?" |
10691 | But by what means was Louis Napoleon permitted to do even what the people liked to see done? |
10691 | But if Russia is so weak as I have shown her to be, why, you may say, do I ask your support and aid against her interference? |
10691 | But is the present condition peace? |
10691 | But is there a country in the world where such traditions are more largely recorded than my own native land is? |
10691 | But the question is, whether the United States shall take a seat in the great Amphictyonic Council of the nations or not? |
10691 | But this principle being conceded and established, how is it to be enforced? |
10691 | But what is the security of democracy? |
10691 | But when? |
10691 | But where is the action of Providence visible in the failure of 1848? |
10691 | But why do I not plead Erin''s wrongs? |
10691 | But why? |
10691 | But you will ask who are, or who were, the leaders of Germany, with whom I still combine? |
10691 | Can they look on indifferently, because seventy years ago it was a wise doctrine, appropriate to their childhood, not to care about European politics? |
10691 | Could you believe that with such elements the spirit of liberty can be crushed? |
10691 | Did this declaration bring you to a war? |
10691 | Do you forget what you, as a people, owe to_ lawful resistance_? |
10691 | Do you know, gentlemen, what I consider to be your most glorious monument? |
10691 | Do you know, gentlemen, what is the finest speech I ever heard or read? |
10691 | Do you like this position, free republicans of America? |
10691 | Does it suffice that an individual do not himself violate the law? |
10691 | Does she not remind us of the golden image of Nebuchadnezzar, standing on feet of clay? |
10691 | Father Jesuits are in alliance; and why? |
10691 | Had the nations of Europe not your sympathy? |
10691 | Has your prodigious prosperity weakened instead of strengthening your nation''s nerves? |
10691 | Have we not done what ye did? |
10691 | Have we not then an interest in the affairs of Europe? |
10691 | Have you a_ national_ government, or not? |
10691 | Have you not anticipated my wishes? |
10691 | Have you not sanctioned my principles? |
10691 | He proceeded to say: But to what purpose is eloquence here? |
10691 | How could they permit you to become so mighty, as to be not only dangerous by your example, but by your power a certain ruin to despotism? |
10691 | How long has it been a principle of the Roman Catholic religion, that the Romans should not be Republicans? |
10691 | How many are there of your people that know and approve it? |
10691 | How many men- of- war have you in the Mediterranean? |
10691 | How should it not? |
10691 | How then could I imagine that the same Austria which thus spoke would accept the degradation of Russian interference? |
10691 | How then could you believe, that if that hand of Europe, which you grasp every day, remains dirty, you can escape from soiling your own hands? |
10691 | How was it done? |
10691 | I have been often asked, what may be, amidst the present conjunctures, an opportunity to renew our struggle for liberty? |
10691 | I may be permitted to ask,--Is there any truth in the world which may not be distorted into a mockery? |
10691 | I was not so bold as to become the interpreter of your laws, but I have asked, Is that lawful, or is it not? |
10691 | I will only mention your glorious Revolution of 1775. Who made that Revolution? |
10691 | If we take virtue to be love of the laws, and of the Fatherland, dare we say that our age is more virtuous? |
10691 | If you ask,_ how soon_ is such an exclusion of your produce from Europe by Russian influence possible? |
10691 | If, in the holy wafer, He be present dressed or undressed? |
10691 | Indeed, if this principle be allowed, what becomes of the United States? |
10691 | Is it Christian religion which caused these deplorable facts, branding the brow of partly degraded, partly outraged Humanity? |
10691 | Is it but a law for a man where he is alone, and can do but little good? |
10691 | Is it interference I claim? |
10691 | Is it no law more where two are together, and can do more good? |
10691 | Is it not more prudent to prevent a fire, than to quench it when your own house is already in flames? |
10691 | Is it possible that those of this republic should less understand it? |
10691 | Is mankind more virtuous than it has been of yore? |
10691 | Is my down- trodden land not a neighbour to your down- trodden land? |
10691 | Is that neutrality? |
10691 | Is there any interest which could outweigh the interest of justice and of right? |
10691 | Is there still the chill of winter and the gloom of night over thee, fatherland? |
10691 | Is this not enough to make you stand side by side with those principles in behalf of oppressed humanity? |
10691 | Let every people take care of itself, what is that to us?" |
10691 | Let me ask you, gentlemen: are you, the people of the United States, a_ nation_, or not? |
10691 | Let those movements be completed, and whom will you meet? |
10691 | Look to the east where the Koran rules, obstructing with its absolutism the development of human intellect: what do you behold there? |
10691 | Mighty folios have been written about the problem, how many angels could dance upon the top of a needle without touching each other? |
10691 | Must he not so far as is in his power also prevent others from violating the law? |
10691 | My answer is: am I not pleading the principle of Liberty? |
10691 | Neutrality? |
10691 | No European emigrants? |
10691 | No law more when millions are together? |
10691 | Now again the wild beasts are spreading terribly; and why? |
10691 | Now was I not entitled with this precedent before my eyes, to hope that the bloody struggle in Hungary would not be regarded with indifference? |
10691 | Now what is free Gospel? |
10691 | Now, can Hungary be a barrier to secure Europe against this power of Russia? |
10691 | Now, if there are duties in that law comprised, who shall execute them, if free and powerful nations do not execute them? |
10691 | Now, what are the accusations M. Szemere brings forth against Kossuth in reference to the Italian question? |
10691 | Now, what position took the Roman Catholics of Hungary in our past struggle? |
10691 | Of that most important portion of your affairs which concerns your country in its relations with the rest of Europe, what knowledge have you? |
10691 | Often am I asked, what are the instrumentalities for this my activity? |
10691 | Oh, how cupidity has succeeded to misrepresent the word? |
10691 | Or are you already declining? |
10691 | Or has the insatiable thirst of material gain originated a purer patriotism? |
10691 | Or have we not fought to sustain it with equal resolution as your brethren did? |
10691 | Or to the dynasty of Sardinia and Piedmont? |
10691 | Or would you do less for the end than you have done for the means? |
10691 | Our guest crosses the Atlantic, and he is received; and what is the great fact that constitutes his reception? |
10691 | Shall I hate the people of Russia for it? |
10691 | Shall a contest between our own principles and those of our enemies awaken no emotions in us? |
10691 | Shall it hesitate to declare it a justification of a counter- intervention?... |
10691 | That is not the question--_am_ I governor or not governor? |
10691 | That objection seems to me as if somebody were to say,"If the vault of heaven breaks down, what shall we do?" |
10691 | The Bosphorus in the hands of the Sultan, saves the world from Russian dominion; and yet I am asked, what can America do for Europe? |
10691 | The encroaching spirit of Russia.--And by what power has Russia become so mighty? |
10691 | The folly of subtility went so far as to profane the sacred name of God, by disputing if He, being omnipotent, has the power to sin? |
10691 | The only question is, will the United States remain indifferent at the overthrow of the balance of power on earth? |
10691 | They broke the power of Rome and of Paris; will they agree to be governed by St. Petersburg? |
10691 | To the King of Naples perhaps? |
10691 | Was I too sanguine in my wishes to hope, that in these expectations I shall not fail? |
10691 | Was the cause for which we did it not alike sacred and just as yours? |
10691 | Was your government not inclined to recognize nations? |
10691 | Well, gentlemen, shall not America stand up, and with powerful voice forbid Russia to interfere when nations have shaken off their domestic tyrants? |
10691 | Well, to what purpose, then, is eloquence here? |
10691 | Well, where is that Constitution now? |
10691 | Well, why was this not done with Hungary? |
10691 | Were we right to do so, or not? |
10691 | Were your hearts less generous than now? |
10691 | What can be opposed to it? |
10691 | What hindered_ me_ from afterwards crushing it? |
10691 | What honest man of the world would answer so? |
10691 | What is Hungary? |
10691 | What is aristocracy? |
10691 | What is the key of this eternal fond desire, inherited from Peter the Great? |
10691 | What is the key of this rapid wonderful change? |
10691 | What is the meaning of that word"power on earth?" |
10691 | What is the principle of all evil in Europe? |
10691 | What is the sum of all this? |
10691 | What is union to us? |
10691 | What is wanted to that effect? |
10691 | What of those immortal stars on mankind''s moral sky? |
10691 | What of your constitution, the glorious legacy of your greatest man? |
10691 | What people has suffered more than my poor Hungary has from Russia? |
10691 | What remains of their riches, of their splendour, and of their vast dominions? |
10691 | What then is the latter relation? |
10691 | What then would become of your great Union? |
10691 | What was the consequence? |
10691 | What were the petty despots of Italy without Austria? |
10691 | What will be the practical result? |
10691 | What would become of this grand, mighty complex of your republic, should her integrity ever be rent by the fanatics of language? |
10691 | What would become of your country itself, whence the spirit of freedom soars into light, and rising hope irradiates the future of humanity? |
10691 | What would have become of Protestantism when assailed by Charles V, by Philip II, and others? |
10691 | What would he now say, when St. Petersburg is transferred to Paris, and Europe is but an appendage to Russia? |
10691 | What would remain to the oppressed if they were not even permitted to pray? |
10691 | What would the petty princes of Germany have been in 1848 without Prussia? |
10691 | What would your forefathers have thought-- how felt? |
10691 | When have I spoken otherwise than in terms of gratitude, high esteem, and profound veneration about the Congress and Government of the United States? |
10691 | When the prisons of Austria are filled with patriots, is that peace? |
10691 | Whence this afflicting departure from logical coherence in history? |
10691 | Where is a man on earth, with uncorrupted soul and with liberal instincts in his heart, who would not sympathize with poor, unfortunate Ireland? |
10691 | Where is a man, loving freedom and right, in whom the wrongs of Green Erin would not stir the heart? |
10691 | Where is the man whom the Lord has chosen to establish thy realm? |
10691 | Where is the power, the splendour, and the glory of all those mighty nations? |
10691 | Where may be said to begin or terminate the ideas which are in the ascendant in Europe and in America?" |
10691 | Which is it? |
10691 | Which is the nation to achieve that triumph of Christianity by protecting justice out of charity? |
10691 | Which shall do it, if not yours? |
10691 | Whither else could Italy look for freedom and independence, if not to that party which Mazzini leads? |
10691 | Who can dare to affirm that he represents the Catholic religion, if three millions of Catholic Romans do not represent it? |
10691 | Who can tell what will be the character of the next 15th of March? |
10691 | Who could forbear warmly to feel for the fatherland of the Grattans, of O''Connells, and of Wolfe Tones? |
10691 | Who dares now to charge me that that cause is hostile to the Roman Catholic religion? |
10691 | Who ever heard me say one single word of complaint or dissatisfaction against your national government? |
10691 | Who is your hero? |
10691 | Who knows what the future may bring forth? |
10691 | Who makes war? |
10691 | Who stood god- father at the birth of the Queen of the West? |
10691 | Who were those from New York city, and of other regiments? |
10691 | Who, then, are they? |
10691 | Whoever comes to tender me his hand as a confederate, I do not ask who he is, where he comes from?--but I ask,"What do you weigh? |
10691 | Why not? |
10691 | Why not? |
10691 | Why, in this enlightened age, are we not looking for virtuous inspirations to the god- like characters of these olden times? |
10691 | Why? |
10691 | Why? |
10691 | Why? |
10691 | Why? |
10691 | Why? |
10691 | Why? |
10691 | Will the United States remain inactive, while free institutions are systematically extinguished? |
10691 | Will the expectations which the mighty outburst of New York''s heart foreshadowed, be realized? |
10691 | Will the last, and worst, prove luckier? |
10691 | Would it not be ridiculous to lay the man into the child''s cradle, and to sing him to sleep by a lullaby? |
10691 | Would you have the_ advantages_ of the connection, without the_ duties_ which spring out of it? |
10691 | Yes, gentlemen, may I hope that celebration will take place under the blessings of liberty in the year 1889? |
10691 | You have grown prodigiously by your freedom of seventy- five years; but what is seventy- five years as a charter of immortality? |
10691 | and are you willing to abandon the law and rights of society to the mercy of the allied despots, who have united to crush them everywhere? |
10691 | and how shall this be accomplished? |
10691 | and in that capacity be a devoted ally and obedient servant to the Czar of Russia, the sworn enemy and bloody persecutor of Roman Catholicism? |
10691 | and is the cause of freedom not the cause of Ireland? |
10691 | and that the high priest of the Roman church should be a despotic sovereign over the Roman nation? |
10691 | and what was Prussia, when her capital was in the hands of the people, but for the certainty of the Czar''s support? |
10691 | and you believe that Germany will bear that in the nineteenth century which it never yet has borne? |
10691 | are we not yet revenged? |
10691 | but all my people collectively, is it_ not_ a neighbour to you? |
10691 | can they permit any interpolation in the code of these laws without their consent? |
10691 | has it abated? |
10691 | has it made mankind more devoted to their country, more ready to sacrifice for public interest? |
10691 | is it checked? |
10691 | no power on earth to cheer us by a word of approbation of our legitimate defence? |
10691 | or is the discontent of all the nations peace? |
10691 | or those who attack others? |
10691 | or what are your prospects or means of organization?" |
10691 | or will the ray of consolation pass away like an electric flash? |
10691 | those who defend themselves? |
10691 | thou family link between nations; thou rock of their security; thou deliverer of the oppressed; when comes thy realm? |
10691 | to what purpose is the immortal light of Heaven beaming in man''s mind, if it be wise not to make any use of it? |
10691 | what are rights? |
10691 | what avail laws? |
10691 | what forces have you organized? |
10691 | what is community of interests to us? |
10691 | what is freedom? |
10691 | what is geography? |
10691 | what power do you command? |
10691 | who is the man to reform, not Christian creeds, but Christian morality? |
10691 | who murder, not some few sailors, but whole peoples? |
10691 | who rob, not some hundred weight of merchandize, but the freedom, independence, welfare, and the very existence of nations? |
10691 | who shed blood, not by drops, but by torrents? |
1971 | ''Well, well,''I shall say,''have you any kidneys?'' 1971 ''You have no mother?'' |
1971 | Afforestedtoo? |
1971 | Am I to go on or stop? |
1971 | And Panky-- what about him? |
1971 | And did not this heartless wretch, knowing how hungry you must both be, let you have a quail or two as an act of pardonable charity? |
1971 | And he must have changed his dress? |
1971 | And he never said anything about the other money he left for me-- which enabled me to marry at once? 1971 And he?" |
1971 | And how about Hanky? |
1971 | And how many skeletons do you suppose are lying at the bottom of this pool? |
1971 | And now please, how long have you been married? |
1971 | And now, my boy,he said to a very frank and ingenuous youth about half way up the class,"and how is truth best reached?" |
1971 | And our father planned all this, without saying a word to me about it while we were on our way up here? |
1971 | And that is why you tried to find me at Fairmead? |
1971 | And the people at Sunch''ston? 1971 And the third man?" |
1971 | And what are you going to do about the four black and white horses? |
1971 | And what do they say in Sunch''ston about our father''s second visit? |
1971 | And what, pray, have you done with all these things? |
1971 | And what, pray, my man,he said somewhat peremptorily to my father,"are those two plucked quails doing? |
1971 | And what,said George,"did my father, as I shall always call him, say to all this? |
1971 | And who, in the name of all that we hold most sacred, do you take him to have been-- for I see you know more than you have yet told me? |
1971 | And why not? |
1971 | And yet, is there not reason? 1971 And you are not yet quite twenty?" |
1971 | And you have duly punished her for it? |
1971 | And you said? |
1971 | Any family? |
1971 | Are we to foster the belief that it was indeed the Sunchild who interrupted Hanky''s sermon? |
1971 | Are you going to say anything to the Professors? |
1971 | At what o''clock? |
1971 | Because yesterday-- was it not?--was the first of the two days agreed upon between you and our father? |
1971 | Bless my heart-- what? 1971 But did he,"I asked,"try to prick the bubble of Sunchildism?" |
1971 | But he saw that even though Higgs were to shew himself and say who he was, it would mean death to himself and no good to any one else? |
1971 | But surely you believe me? |
1971 | But this,said Yram,"being gold, is a large sum: can you indeed spare it, and do you really wish George to have it all?" |
1971 | But were there,I said,"any storks?" |
1971 | But where and how? |
1971 | But you did not know this when I was walking with you on Friday? |
1971 | But you knew who I was when you called me Panky in the temple? |
1971 | But, Mayoress,said Panky, who had not opened his lips so far,"are you sure that you are not too hasty in believing this stranger to be the Sunchild? |
1971 | Can you ask Mrs. Humdrum to bring her grand- daughter with her to- morrow evening? |
1971 | Can you not trust me to take everything as said? |
1971 | Did the King,I asked,"increase your salary?" |
1971 | Did you examine the man''s boots? |
1971 | Did you go to Erewhon, and were you ill- treated there? |
1971 | Did you really see him ascend? |
1971 | Do I understand, then,said Yram, as I suppose we may as well call her,"that you were out all last night? |
1971 | Do you know how he had been spending the last two days or so before he got down to your hut? |
1971 | Do you mean to say that my father left me this by his will? |
1971 | Do you think we shall ever get rid of Sunchildism altogether? |
1971 | Have you met any suspicious characters between here and the statues? |
1971 | How can I look him in the face? |
1971 | How did you know,said she,"that he was Professor Panky? |
1971 | How do you do, Professor Panky? |
1971 | How long did he stay with you? |
1971 | How long,he said to himself,"will it be before they are at one another''s throats?" |
1971 | I intend to report every word of it; but that is not the point: the question is what you gentlemen will swear to? |
1971 | I know the tree; have you got the nuggets here? |
1971 | I know you would; but you remember Mrs. Humdrum? 1971 I suppose he had a dark complexion and black hair like the rest of us?" |
1971 | I suppose the blanket and the rest of the kit are still in the tree? |
1971 | I understand, then,said George, appearing to take no notice of Hanky''s innuendo,"that you will swear to the facts as you have above stated them?" |
1971 | I will be obedience itself-- but you will not ask me to do anything that will make your mother or you think less well of me? |
1971 | If Satan himself is at times transformed into an angel of light, are not angels of light sometimes transformed into the likeness of Satan? 1971 In what part of the preserves?" |
1971 | Is my father with you? |
1971 | It is a pity you should do that,said Hanky musingly:"the things are interesting as curiosities, and-- and-- and-- what will you take for them?" |
1971 | My dear Mayoress, how can you ask such a question? 1971 No one in the house knows of your having run this errand for me?" |
1971 | Now tell me,said George, glad to change the subject,"what will those three men do about what you said to them last night? |
1971 | Now, my boys,he said,"Why is it so necessary to avoid extremes of truthfulness?" |
1971 | Of course he was swarthy like the rest of us? |
1971 | On the other hand, what business have I with''would be''or''would not be?'' 1971 Or when we are waking, how powerfully does not the life we are living in others pain or delight us, according as others think ill or well of us? |
1971 | Shall I have to see him? |
1971 | Shall I say more now,she said, seeing how grave he looked,"or shall I leave you, and talk further with you to- morrow?" |
1971 | Talking of the Sunchild,said Panky;"did you ever see him?" |
1971 | Tell the King? |
1971 | That you are to be canonised at the close of the year along with Professors Hanky and Panky? |
1971 | The light hurts you? |
1971 | Then the poacher is still at large? |
1971 | Then you have come all this way for me, when you were wanting to get married? |
1971 | Then you would have us uphold Sunchildism, knowing it to be untrue? |
1971 | Then, sir, had I not better leave you? |
1971 | There is nothing in it; but what were your measurements? |
1971 | This,he said,"is a solemn covenant, is it not?" |
1971 | Was his manner friendly? |
1971 | What are you doing here among the common people? 1971 What could we do? |
1971 | What did he say to this? |
1971 | What do you think, Panky,he added, turning to his brother Professor,"had we not better stay here till sunrise? |
1971 | What gift can be more invaluable? |
1971 | What have I done to deserve so much goodwill? 1971 What if they are? |
1971 | What is the matter? |
1971 | What monstrous absurdity is this? |
1971 | What were his words? |
1971 | What, my dearest mother, does all this mean? 1971 What,"he said to me, very coherently and quietly,"was I to do? |
1971 | When did you tell the King? |
1971 | When shall you see him? |
1971 | Where did you meet him? |
1971 | Who ever heard the Sunchild claim relationship with the air- god? 1971 Who, sir, will believe anything else? |
1971 | Why, can you not see? |
1971 | Will you hold up yours, Professor Hanky,said George,"if I release you?" |
1971 | Would that be a bargain? |
1971 | Yes( with a blush),"and are you?" |
1971 | Yes, but where in the world were you? |
1971 | Yes,was the answer,"but a man can dye his hair, can he not? |
1971 | Yesterday? 1971 You are sure they had been killing quails?" |
1971 | You hear that, Hanky? 1971 You know me?" |
1971 | You say your wife is dead, and that she left you with a son-- is he like George? |
1971 | ''Can this man,''he asked,''be said to have been truly born till many a long year after he had been reputed as truly dead? |
1971 | *****"Now what,"said Panky as they went upstairs,"does that woman mean-- for she means something? |
1971 | 3, and the hour noon as near as may be?" |
1971 | After a time he said,"And what do you good people hereabouts think of next Sunday''s grand doings?" |
1971 | After some little silence my father said,"And may I ask what name your mother gave you?" |
1971 | After such a day, and such an evening, how could any one have slept? |
1971 | Almost immediately, Dr. Downie said,"And now, Mr, Higgs, tell us, as a man of the world, what we are to do about Sunchildism?" |
1971 | Am I on my head or my heels?" |
1971 | Am I, or am I not, to have the sworn depositions of both you gentlemen to the fact that the prisoner is the man you saw with quails in his possession? |
1971 | And how about the quails he had so innocently killed? |
1971 | And how many more had he not in like manner brought to the verge of idiocy? |
1971 | And how was he to get enough Erewhonian money to keep him going till he could find some safe means of selling a few of his nuggets? |
1971 | And how, my dearest boy, as I look upon you, can I feign repentance? |
1971 | And now, may I tell my mother that you will put yourself in her, and the Mayor''s, and my, hands, and will do whatever we tell you?" |
1971 | And should he have to be thrown into the Blue Pool by George after all? |
1971 | And that son? |
1971 | And the young? |
1971 | And what bird did those bones belong to which I see lying by the fire with the flesh all eaten off them? |
1971 | And why had Coldharbour become Sunchildston? |
1971 | Are the under- rangers allowed not only to wear the forbidden dress but to eat the King''s quails as well?" |
1971 | As for current gossip, people would talk, and if the lad was well begotten, what could it matter to them whose son he was? |
1971 | As soon as it was over George said:-"Are you quite sure you have made no mistake about the way in which you got the permit out of the Professors?" |
1971 | As soon as my father could speak he said,"But how did your mother find out that I was in Erewhon?" |
1971 | As the singers kept on repeating the question, I kept on saying sorrowfully to myself--''Ah, where, where, where?'' |
1971 | At any rate you will have sausages?'' |
1971 | But I hope you had enough provisions with you?" |
1971 | But I suppose the snow is all gone by this time?" |
1971 | But on Friday evening? |
1971 | But what about the Mayor?" |
1971 | But who can say? |
1971 | But why would not my mother let your father tell me? |
1971 | But would you not like to send some present to the Mayor, Yram, their other children, and Mrs. Humdrum''s grand- daughter?" |
1971 | By the way, you have received no illumination this morning, have you?" |
1971 | CHAPTER IX: INTERVIEW BETWEEN YRAM AND HER SON"What did you think of Panky?" |
1971 | Can any one believe that he would go on rolling that stone year after year and seeing it roll down again unless he liked seeing it? |
1971 | Can there be a doubt that the vicarious life is the more efficient? |
1971 | Can you do this? |
1971 | Can you interpret?" |
1971 | Did he say anything about Higgs?" |
1971 | Did he say in what part of the preserves he had been?" |
1971 | Did he talk to you about me?" |
1971 | Did he tell you so?" |
1971 | Do they believe as you and I do, or did they merely go with the times? |
1971 | Do we mind this? |
1971 | Do you mean to Blue- Pool the Professors or no?" |
1971 | Do you remember the drink you taught us to make of corn parched and ground? |
1971 | Do you see him? |
1971 | Do you see the head- boy-- the third of those that are coming up the path? |
1971 | Do you think they would have stood his being jobbed into the rangership by any one else but Yram?" |
1971 | Does the child never break anything by accident?" |
1971 | For had it not been irresistible, was it to be believed that astute men like Hanky and Panky would have let themselves be drawn into it? |
1971 | For to live is to be influenced, as well as to influence; and when a man is dead how can he be influenced? |
1971 | George laughed, and said,"On purpose to hide?" |
1971 | Had their views about machinery also changed? |
1971 | Had this been the meaning of his having followed him to Fairmead? |
1971 | Has it got well about among them, in spite of your admirable article, that it was the Sunchild himself who interrupted Hanky?" |
1971 | Has yours been different?" |
1971 | Have I said enough, or shall I say more?" |
1971 | Have you any decided opinions upon the subject?" |
1971 | Have you any red mullets?'' |
1971 | He then added, appealing to Panky, who was on the Mayoress''s left hand,"but we had rather a strange adventure on our way down, had we not, Panky? |
1971 | He then turned to his class and said--"And now tell me what did the Sunchild tell us about God and Mammon?" |
1971 | How can I thank you?" |
1971 | How can she detect lying in other people unless she has had some experience of it in her own practice? |
1971 | How could it be that when the means of resistance were so ample and so easy, the movement should nevertheless have been irresistible? |
1971 | How could she doubt? |
1971 | How could your mother have found out by that time that I was in Erewhon? |
1971 | How did he know but that Hanky and Panky might have driven over from Sunch''ston to see Mr. Turvey, and might put up at this very house? |
1971 | How do you know that the foot- tracks were made by the prisoner?" |
1971 | How many such stories, sometimes very plausibly told, have we not had during the last twenty years? |
1971 | How, again, had they converted the King-- if they had converted him? |
1971 | How, he wondered, were they getting on, and what had they done with the things they had bought from him? |
1971 | Humdrum?" |
1971 | Humdrum?" |
1971 | I have done you nothing but harm?" |
1971 | I must not stay another moment; but tell me this much, have you seen any signs of poachers lately?" |
1971 | I remember having heard an anthem in my young days,''O where shall wisdom be found? |
1971 | I wonder which of them it was? |
1971 | If the devil is not so black as he is painted, is God always so white? |
1971 | If they had been wrong in thinking such a thing impossible, in how much else might they not be mistaken also? |
1971 | In what part of the preserves did you fall in with him?" |
1971 | Is it because you think I am like your son, or is there some other reason?" |
1971 | It a man and a woman might rise from the earth and disappear into the sky, what else might not happen? |
1971 | Let us now talk about this morning-- did you mean to declare yourself?" |
1971 | Look at this thigh- bone; was there ever a quail with such a bone as that?" |
1971 | Luncheon being over I said--"And are you married?" |
1971 | May I ask which of you two gentlemen is Professor Hanky, and which Professor Panky?" |
1971 | Might they not be as mistaken, as they had just proved to be about the tracks? |
1971 | Miss La Frime to Mrs. Humdrum:"You know how he got his professorship? |
1971 | No? |
1971 | Now what does the man"( who on enquiry my father found to be none other than Mr. Turvey himself)"say about honesty?" |
1971 | Now, how, I wonder, did he find that out?" |
1971 | Now, tell me what I asked you-- Why are you here?" |
1971 | On what dust- heap had it not been thrown how many long years ago? |
1971 | On which side of Panky did Hanky sit, and did they sit north and south or east and west? |
1971 | Or was there an exception made about any machine that he had himself carried? |
1971 | Panky assented, but then, turning sharply to my father, he said,"My man, what are you doing in the forbidden dress? |
1971 | Panky did not hold up his, whereon Hanky said,"Hold up your hands, Panky, ca n''t you? |
1971 | Presently Hanky said to my father quite civilly,"And what, my good man, do you propose to do with all these things? |
1971 | Presently Yram turned to Hanky and said--"By the way, Professor, you must have found it very cold up at the statues, did you not? |
1971 | Presently he smiled, and said,"Of course I do, but it is you who should forgive me, for was it not all my fault?" |
1971 | She laughed genially as she added,"Can you throw any light upon the question whether I am likely to get my three dozen? |
1971 | Should I not speak out, come what may, when I see a whole people being led astray by those who are merely exploiting them for their own ends? |
1971 | Should the body prove, as no doubt it would, to be that of the Sunchild, what is to become of Sunchildism?" |
1971 | Should we not first settle, not what, but who, we shall allow the prisoner to be, when he is brought up to- morrow morning? |
1971 | Something, therefore, he would say, but what? |
1971 | The felt or the unfelt? |
1971 | Then I may say to my mother that you will be good and give no trouble-- not even though we bid you shake hands with Hanky and Panky?" |
1971 | Then how about the watch? |
1971 | Then she had never forgotten him? |
1971 | Then the Mayor doubtless had light hair too; but why did not those wretches say in which month Yram was married? |
1971 | Then to my father,"How many brace have you got?" |
1971 | Then turning to his grandfather, he said,"You have the record of Mr. Higgs''s marks and measurements? |
1971 | Then, turning to my father, he said,"You can see this, my man, can you not, as soon as it is pointed out to you?" |
1971 | Then, turning to the Ranger, he said,"I gather, then, that your mother does not think so badly of the Sunchild after all?" |
1971 | Though I could do but little, ought I not to do that little? |
1971 | To- day is Thursday-- it is the twenty- ninth, is it not? |
1971 | To- morrow we can rest; what, I wonder, can we do on Saturday? |
1971 | Was he being lured on to his destruction by some malicious fiend, or befriended by one who had compassion on him and wished him well? |
1971 | Was there anything strange about his way of talking?" |
1971 | Was there ever any lunatic, and was he found?" |
1971 | Were you to deliver them plucked? |
1971 | What can I say to thank you?" |
1971 | What completer proof can we have that livingness consists in deed rather than in consciousness of deed? |
1971 | What could an eagle matter on the liver of a man whose body covered nine acres? |
1971 | What could it all mean? |
1971 | What could it matter to them whether the sieves got full or no? |
1971 | What could she think? |
1971 | What day of the week do you make it?" |
1971 | What did my own instinct answer? |
1971 | What did that good fellow''s instinct-- so straight from heaven, so true, so healthy-- tell him? |
1971 | What evidence can you have of this but the word of a foreign devil in such straits that he would swear to anything?" |
1971 | What is coming?" |
1971 | What man of ordinary feeling would not under these circumstances have tried to dissuade them from deposing as they have done?" |
1971 | What o''clock do you make it?" |
1971 | What other children has she besides yourself?" |
1971 | What other like fatal error might he not ignorantly commit? |
1971 | What then had been its inner history? |
1971 | What though Tantalus found the water shun him and the fruits fly from him when he tried to seize them? |
1971 | What was he to say when people asked him, as they were sure to do, how he was living? |
1971 | What were the Danaids doing but that which each one of us has to do during his or her whole life? |
1971 | What will you swear to?" |
1971 | What would have happened if he had tried to sell them in Coldharbour? |
1971 | What would the conscience of any honourable man answer? |
1971 | When the servants had left the room, Yram said to Hanky,"You saw the prisoner, and he was the man you met on Thursday night?" |
1971 | When you were born he took to you at once, as, indeed, who could help doing? |
1971 | Where do you think I may be mistaken?" |
1971 | Where is the Act?" |
1971 | Where is your dear mother? |
1971 | Which is his truest life-- the one he is leading in them, or that equally unconscious life residing in his own sleeping body? |
1971 | Which will carry the day?" |
1971 | Which, then, of this man''s two lives should we deem best worth having, if we could choose one or other, but not both? |
1971 | Who can doubt? |
1971 | Who could tell but that he might see Panky too? |
1971 | Who did he say he was?" |
1971 | Who has ever partaken of this life you speak of, and re- entered into the womb to tell us of it? |
1971 | Why are you not in ranger''s uniform, and what is the meaning of all those quails?" |
1971 | Why bring a smaller charge when you must inflict the death penalty on a more serious one? |
1971 | Why did you not send me word when you found what had happened? |
1971 | Why do you wish us all well so very heartily? |
1971 | Why have you come here?" |
1971 | Why have you not taken your place in one of the seats reserved for our distinguished visitors? |
1971 | Why not have left us to find it out or to know nothing about it? |
1971 | Why should I? |
1971 | Why was this?" |
1971 | Why, I wonder, could not the Queen have put the clothes on a dummy that would show back from front? |
1971 | Will they pay any attention to it?" |
1971 | You do not know who they were? |
1971 | You here, again, Mr. Higgs? |
1971 | You know, perhaps, that Professor Hanky, whose name I see on your permit, tried to burn her alive?" |
1971 | You like her as a wife for George?" |
1971 | and is it not God- given as much as instinct? |
1971 | but why?" |
1971 | he asked;"and what, pray, do you think it all was?" |
1971 | he had said with a laugh,"what does it matter?" |
1971 | look at his blue eyes and his eyelashes?" |
1971 | or come after me? |
1971 | said I,"what have you been telling the King?" |
1971 | shouted Hanky;"do you mean to murder us?" |
1971 | what temple?" |
1971 | what was that? |
26294 | ''But what do you want fish for?'' |
26294 | ''But,''says my adversary,''for what purpose save evil did you dissect the fish brought you by your servant Themison?'' |
26294 | ''Is it reasonable,''I ask,''to demand of any one the reasons of another person''s private opinions?'' |
26294 | ''What is your point then? |
26294 | ''What then?'' |
26294 | ''What,''he asks,''induced a free woman to marry you after thirteen years of widowhood?'' |
26294 | ''Why do you search for fish? |
26294 | ''Why, before she married you, did she express certain opinions in a letter?'' |
26294 | ''Why,''says my accuser,''have you sought out particular kinds of fish?'' |
26294 | ''[ 26] Would you have anything more? |
26294 | (_ Cassius Longinus and Corvinus Celer give evidence._) Is it as I said? |
26294 | A small dowry instead of a large one? |
26294 | And how did they secure possession of that letter which must, as is usual in such affairs, have been sent to Pudentilla by some confidential servant? |
26294 | And what made his slave suspect that the walls had been blackened by night in particular? |
26294 | And why did so suspicious and conscientious a slave allow Quintianus to leave the house before having it cleaned? |
26294 | And why did you read out this evidence from a written deposition? |
26294 | And why should I seek to seduce her by flattery so absurd and coarse? |
26294 | Are you ignorant of the fact that there is nothing more pleasing for a man to look upon than his own image? |
26294 | Are you not at last ashamed of all your slanders? |
26294 | As for his colour, what can I say? |
26294 | But are all persons, who are the objects of love, magicians, just because the person in love with them chances to say so in a letter? |
26294 | But does that prove that whoever acquires fish is_ ipso facto_ a magician? |
26294 | But how did you proceed? |
26294 | But of what use are fish save to be cooked and eaten at meals? |
26294 | But why do I speak of groves or shrines? |
26294 | But why do I speak of these slaves? |
26294 | But why should I speak further of man? |
26294 | But, I ask you, is any one who does that a magician? |
26294 | Can not you conceive the possibility that she should show any affection save the affection of a mother for her son? |
26294 | Could anything be added to such a panegyric as this, delivered by the lips of an ex- consul? |
26294 | Could she prove it with one word? |
26294 | Did I need such a crowd to help me by holding the lustral victims during the lengthy rite? |
26294 | Did he covet her wealth? |
26294 | Did you come here to accuse me or to ask me questions? |
26294 | Did you hear the phrases which your brother Pontianus used in speaking of me? |
26294 | Did you, Aemilianus, write what has just been read out? |
26294 | Do you bring that as a reproach against me which is one of the reasons for the admiration with which Maximus and myself regard Aristotle? |
26294 | Do you dare then, Aemilianus, to match yourself against Avitus? |
26294 | Do you deny this, Aemilianus? |
26294 | Do you hear the condemnation of your lie? |
26294 | Do you hear these cries of protest that arise from all present? |
26294 | Do you hear, you who so rashly accuse the art of magic? |
26294 | Do you want to prove that he had a fit in my presence? |
26294 | Does night smoke differ from day smoke in being darker? |
26294 | Does not the opposition of these sophistic arguments remind you of brambles, that the wind has entangled one with another? |
26294 | Does the mere fact of my being a poet make me a wizard? |
26294 | Else tell us what you asked for? |
26294 | Else why did you not ask the gods for something? |
26294 | Else why did you write it? |
26294 | For on that assumption what living man could be more eloquent than myself? |
26294 | For what ampler commendation, what purer testimony could I produce in my support, what more eloquent advocacy? |
26294 | For what hound, what vulture hovering in the Alexandrian sky, could sniff out anything so far distant as Oea? |
26294 | For what man among you would pardon me one solecism or condone the barbarous pronunciation of so much as one syllable? |
26294 | Has he returned to Alexandria out of disgust at the state of his house? |
26294 | Has lying made you blind, or shall I rather say that from force of habit you are incapable of speaking the truth? |
26294 | Have I passed by the black- tail and the''thrush'', The sea- merle and the shadow of the sea? |
26294 | Have you breathed silent prayers to heaven in some temple? |
26294 | Have you found the book? |
26294 | Have you written a petition on the thigh of some statue? |
26294 | Have your advocates really never read that Marcus Antonius, a man who had filled the office of consul, had but eight slaves in his house? |
26294 | How did the fact of her having a fit profit Apuleius?'' |
26294 | How have you dealt with the mother that bore you? |
26294 | How may I hope adequately to celebrate the honour to which your kindness has prompted you? |
26294 | How may my speech repay you worthily for the glory conferred by your action? |
26294 | I ask you, what is there lacking? |
26294 | I who am fool enough to speak seriously of such things in a law- court? |
26294 | If she had called me a consul, would that make me one? |
26294 | If that is so, why should I be forbidden to learn the fair words of Zalmoxis or the priestly lore of Zoroaster? |
26294 | If they be good, why do you accuse him? |
26294 | If you had discovered such definite proof of my sorceries, why did you not insist on my producing it in court? |
26294 | If you refuse, why did you demand the appearance of such a housefull? |
26294 | Injury, did I say? |
26294 | Insane? |
26294 | Is Epicurus right when he asserts that images proceed forth from us, as it were a kind of slough that continually streams from our bodies? |
26294 | Is Phaedra the only woman whom love has driven to write a lying letter? |
26294 | Is he washing his walls? |
26294 | Is it just to reproach a man for that which is regarded as no reproach to the animal kingdom, to the eagle, to the bull, to the lion? |
26294 | Is it likely that I should have permitted so large a number to be present on such an occasion, if they were too many to be accomplices? |
26294 | Is it not rather an insult to so distinguished a citizen as Claudius Maximus, and a false and slanderous persecution of myself? |
26294 | Is my name ever mentioned in the deed of sale? |
26294 | Is that sufficient? |
26294 | Is the price paid for this trifling property such as should excite any prejudice against me, or did my wife give me even so much as this small gift? |
26294 | Is the result of your uncle''s teaching this, that, if you were sure your sons would be like yourself, you should be afraid to take a wife? |
26294 | Is this a magic symbol or one that is common and ordinary? |
26294 | Is this a skeleton, this a goblin, is this the familiar spirit you asserted it to be? |
26294 | Is this the way to bring an accusation? |
26294 | Is this the way to indict a man on so serious a charge? |
26294 | Is this your letter? |
26294 | Is this your signature? |
26294 | Nay, what is there that does not absolutely convict you of obvious falsehood? |
26294 | Now what has it to do with the malpractices of the black art, if I write poems in praise of the boys of my friend Scribonius Laetus? |
26294 | Now, do you think it more the business of a magician than of a doctor, or indeed of a philosopher, to know and seek out remedies? |
26294 | Or did you infer that the fish were wanted for evil purposes because I paid to get them? |
26294 | Or do you regard it as disgraceful to pay continual attention to one''s own appearance? |
26294 | Or is it nothing mysterious and yet something connected with magic? |
26294 | Or is there something mysterious in fish and fish alone, hidden from all save sorcerers only? |
26294 | Or should we accept the view maintained by other philosophers that rays are emitted from our body? |
26294 | Quite natural, was it not? |
26294 | Sane, do you say? |
26294 | She excludes her devoted husband from the inheritance in favour of her most unfilial son? |
26294 | So that is the charge you bring against me? |
26294 | Tell me now, what is your contention? |
26294 | Tell me, what were the words with which she ended the letter, that poor bewitched, lunatic, insane, infatuated lady? |
26294 | That fishermen sought to procure me the fish? |
26294 | That she should refund her dowry to her sons rather than leave it in my possession? |
26294 | That that very Carbo who obtained supreme control of Rome had fewer by one? |
26294 | The hand of Philomela or Medea or Clytemnestra? |
26294 | The man who is quarrelling over the boundaries of lands, or he whose theme is the boundaries of good and evil? |
26294 | The orator when he wrangles with his opponent or the philosopher when he rebukes the vices of mankind? |
26294 | They realized, moreover, its strange absurdity( for who ever heard of fish being scaled and boned for dark purposes of magic? |
26294 | Was he in love with her beauty? |
26294 | Was it a marriage? |
26294 | Was it also some boy that bewitched him? |
26294 | Was it that you might have complete freedom for inventing lies in the absence of the subject of your slanders? |
26294 | Was it the colour of the smoke? |
26294 | Was she mad or sane when she wrote? |
26294 | Were they to count the grains of incense? |
26294 | What Palamedes, what Sisyphus, what Eurybates or Phrynondas could ever have devised such guile? |
26294 | What am I to do with men so stupid and uncivilized? |
26294 | What can the hands do, if they are fettered, or what the feet, if they are shackled? |
26294 | What can[58] the mind that rules and directs us do, if it be relaxed in sleep or drowned in wine or crushed beneath the weight of disease? |
26294 | What clearer evidence of the falseness of your accusations could be desired? |
26294 | What credence do you expect us to give you after this? |
26294 | What did he seek to get from her by so doing? |
26294 | What else is the significance of statues and portraits produced by the various arts? |
26294 | What else should the wretch do? |
26294 | What had I to gain by my magic that should lead me to attempt to win Pudentilla by love- philtres? |
26294 | What had I to gain from her? |
26294 | What had you hidden in your handkerchief?'' |
26294 | What has become of that ferocious utterance with which you opened the indictment, couched in the name of my step- son? |
26294 | What if I take such interest and possess such skill in medicine as to search for certain remedies in fish? |
26294 | What if a young man or even an old man had fallen in my presence through a sudden stroke of disease or merely owing to the slipperiness of the ground? |
26294 | What if she had called me a painter, a doctor, or even an innocent man? |
26294 | What is it that you want? |
26294 | What is it you want? |
26294 | What is more readily come by than madness of speech and worthlessness of character? |
26294 | What is the result? |
26294 | What is there in the whole affair that could give you or any one else[29] a handle for accusing me? |
26294 | What is there left, Aemilianus, that in your opinion I have failed to refute? |
26294 | What is there that a philosopher should be ashamed to own? |
26294 | What is this parable, you ask me? |
26294 | What lacks there now to the honour of my statue, save the price of the bronze and the service of the artist? |
26294 | What lacks there to sanction and establish my glory and to set it on the topmost pinnacle of fame? |
26294 | What magic can surpass this? |
26294 | What more do you demand?'' |
26294 | What more would you have? |
26294 | What motives for resentment has Aemilianus against me, even assuming him to be correctly informed when he accuses me of magic? |
26294 | What need had I of flattery, if I put my trust in magic? |
26294 | What need have we of change of governors? |
26294 | What of his lyre that flashes gold, gleams white with ivory, and shimmers with rainbow gems? |
26294 | What of his robes so fine in texture, so soft to the touch, aglow with purple? |
26294 | What of his song, so cunning and so sweet? |
26294 | What other motives can you allege? |
26294 | What profit of these short years, these fleeting months of office? |
26294 | What remains, in which any suspicion of sorcery can lie concealed? |
26294 | What shall I do? |
26294 | What then was his motive? |
26294 | What think you? |
26294 | What think you? |
26294 | What think you? |
26294 | What was the result? |
26294 | What, then, can such circumstances as these add to or take away from his virtues or his vices? |
26294 | What, then, is their claim to distinction? |
26294 | When does one and the same mirror seem now to withdraw the image into its depths, now to extrude it forth to view? |
26294 | Where in the world is Crassus? |
26294 | Which do you think should pay greatest attention to the decorousness of his appearance in the delivery of a speech? |
26294 | Which of these two points is of the slightest value as affording suspicion of sorcery? |
26294 | Which of us is most to blame? |
26294 | Who can call this a crime in a philosopher which would be no crime in a butcher or cook? |
26294 | Who did not recognize her mother''s pupil, when they saw her dyed lips, her rouged cheeks, and her lascivious eyes? |
26294 | Who ever heard any orator produce such likely ground for suspicion, such apt conjectures, such close- reasoned argument? |
26294 | Who is there of such gentle temper, but that this would wake him to fury? |
26294 | Who of you will suffer me to stammer in disorderly and faulty phrases such as might rise to the lips of madmen? |
26294 | Who would endure it if you made this a ground for accusing me of being a poisoner, merely because those drugs are capable of killing a man? |
26294 | Why again and under what circumstances are left and right reversed? |
26294 | Why are you silent? |
26294 | Why are you silent? |
26294 | Why are you struck dumb? |
26294 | Why did those feathers lie like lead and await the arrival of Crassus for so long? |
26294 | Why did you examine a sick woman? |
26294 | Why did you not add''He whom I indict is my teacher, my step- father, my mediator''? |
26294 | Why do I mention this? |
26294 | Why do concave mirrors when held at right angles to the rays of the sun kindle tinder set opposite them? |
26294 | Why do not you go farther and accuse me on many similar grounds? |
26294 | Why do not you prove me a magician by my own deeds instead of having recourse to the mere words of another? |
26294 | Why do you draw back? |
26294 | Why do you hesitate? |
26294 | Why do you refuse to look at it, now that you are free from all anxiety about the inheritance of your mother''s fortune? |
26294 | Why do you refuse to question them? |
26294 | Why do you turn pale? |
26294 | Why do you turn pale? |
26294 | Why is it that the strength of your speech lies in mere noise, while it is weak and flabby in point of facts? |
26294 | Why look round? |
26294 | Why should I only complain of what is past? |
26294 | Why then attribute his fall to magic rather than disease? |
26294 | Why this silence? |
26294 | Why, again, should I write in such faulty words, such barbarous language, I whom my accusers admit to be quite at home in Greek? |
26294 | Will any one, who chances to remember it, repeat the beginning of that particular passage in my discourse? |
26294 | Will you persist in this attitude, Aemilianus, if I can show that my verses were modelled upon Plato? |
26294 | Will you then deny that Solon was a serious man and a philosopher? |
26294 | With what more auspicious theme could I engage your ears? |
26294 | Would you accept any of these statements, simply because she had made them? |
26294 | Would you have me be ignorant, be silent, as to these details? |
26294 | Would you like me to tell you what I had wrapped up in a handkerchief and entrusted to the care of Pontianus''household gods? |
26294 | You have demanded fifteen slaves to support an accusation of magic; how many would you be demanding if it were a charge of violence? |
26294 | and it was a mere slip of the tongue when you indicted me for practising the black art? |
26294 | have I passed by Scarus? |
26294 | is this the way you accuse your victims? |
26294 | or a seasonable banquet? |
26294 | or any other crowded ceremony? |
26294 | or to knock Thallus down? |
26294 | or you who are slanderous enough to include such charges in your indictment? |
26294 | or, as is more likely, is the glutton feeling ill after his debauch? |
26294 | to know how far such things reveal the workings of providence, or to swallow all the tales his father and mother told him of the immortal gods? |
26294 | you asked,''Did she die?'' |
27868 | Suppose it were_ that_? 27868 370 XV SUICIDE OR HYPNOSIS? 27868 And are the noises of the outside world propagated through half an inch of wood in such a way as to make differences perceptible? 27868 And which is the Mulciber, the Vulcan, the artist- engraver that engraves the covering of the egg so prettily? 27868 And why should it change, this instinct, so logical in its workings? 27868 Are not those who accept them as sound evidence just a little too simple? 27868 Are these really the larvæ that turn into the pseudochrysalids? 27868 Besides, why should he need special defensive artifices? 27868 But are these two anecdotes really true? 27868 But how to stock the cage? 27868 But in that case what exquisite subtlety must we not take for granted? 27868 But is not this the invariable conclusion to which the study of instinct always leads us? 27868 But is this influence so powerful as they say? 27868 But then why do the cells usurped by the Sitares retain not the slightest trace of the forcible entry which is indispensable? 27868 But to which of the insects shall we go first? 27868 But what am I saying? 27868 But what conditions? 27868 But what is this curious shell in which the Sitaris is invariably enclosed, a shell unexampled in the Beetle order? 27868 By what sense then can they distinguish the thorax of an Anthophora from a velvety pellet, when sight and touch are out of the question? 27868 CHAPTER XV SUICIDE OR HYPNOSIS? 27868 Can he be threatened by the birds? 27868 Can he owe his long period of inertia to the fact that he is one of the Tenebrionidæ, or Darkling Beetles? 27868 Can he turn it on or down or put it out as he pleases? 27868 Can it be need of food that drives it from the substratum and sends it to the sunlight so soon as the wing- cases have assumed their vermilion hue? 27868 Can it be sound? 27868 Can it be that my hypnotic tricks are less efficacious with small birds than with large ones? 27868 Can it be the temperature? 27868 Can it be weight? 27868 Can it smell? 27868 Can the comparative frequency of this or the other provender have brought about the formation of two trade- guilds? 27868 Can the structure, perchance, be obeying other rules than those of environment? 27868 Can these armour- wearers, so sturdy in appearance, be weaklings? 27868 Can these be the sowing of a bandit, the spawn of a Midge? 27868 Can they be as harmless as their peaceful frolics seem to proclaim? 27868 Can they? 27868 Can this be because the jewel of the pampas dispenses with the father''s collaboration? 27868 Can we even be sure that the one to disappear returns and forms one of the band? 27868 Can you be a knacker, a worker in putrid sausage- meat, like_ Phanæus Milon_? 27868 Could the Clythra, an exceptional ceramic artist, work without a base and without a guide? 27868 Could there be a similarity of habits between the two kinds of insects? 27868 Did the Necrophori lay it bare with the express purpose of making it fall? 27868 Do my Goose, my Turkey and the others resort to trickery with the object of deceiving their tormentor? 27868 Do they involve the consequences deduced from them? 27868 Do they judge their new lodging by sight? 27868 Do you or do you not enjoy gleams of reason? 27868 Does he serve an apprenticeship? 27868 Does he work badly at first, then a little better and then well? 27868 Does it compare? 27868 Does it contain the dead insect? 27868 Does it contain the grub, shrivelled by desiccation? 27868 Does it fast during the extreme heat? 27868 Does it reason? 27868 Does it work on the same principles? 27868 Does not this placid quiescence point to the absence of a sense of smell? 27868 Does the grub employ it to keep itself cool, to protect itself against the attacks of the sun? 27868 Does the perturbing problem of an end occur to its dense brain? 27868 Does the trajectory imply the minimum of work? 27868 Does the wood guide the insect, adult or larva, by its structure? 27868 Ebony, metal, the gem: have they the same origin here then? 27868 Every instinctive action no doubt has its motive; but does the animal in the first place judge whether the action is opportune? 27868 For on what are we to base our conviction when we imagine that we are stating a law? 27868 From this muddle shall we draw a conclusion which will set our minds at rest? 27868 Furthermore, have these talents developed by degrees? 27868 Had my captives invited this one? 27868 Has he an opaque screen which is drawn over the flame at will, or is that flame always left exposed? 27868 Has it a compass? 27868 Has it actually perceived the mechanism of the hanging? 27868 Has it the power to foresee an ending, an attribute which in its case would be inconvenient and useless? 27868 Has the Glow- worm a free control of the light which he emits? 27868 Has the puny creature a name? 27868 Has there been an internecine battle inside the poor wretch''s body? 27868 Has this pigmy of the family the same talents as the giant, the ravager of the oak- tree? 27868 Hatched inside the trunk, will the long- horned Beetle be able to clear itself a way of escape? 27868 Have the nomenclators catalogued it? 27868 Have they eaten one another up, leaving only the strongest to survive, or the one most favoured by the chances of the fight? 27868 Have we done the trick this time? 27868 Have you the bucolic tastes of your rival in finery, the Splendid Phanæus? 27868 Have you within you the humble germ of human thought? 27868 How can time and experience be factors of instinct? 27868 How did the Lamb become a Wolf? 27868 How did we, the little Rodez schoolboys, learn the secret of the Turkey''s slumber? 27868 How does the Lily- beetle live during the summer, before the return of the green foliage dear to its race? 27868 How does the clumsy insect manage to accomplish so delicate and complex a piece of building? 27868 How does the pigmy measure the enormous monument that is the human body? 27868 How does the wood- eating insect guide itself in the thickness of a tree- trunk? 27868 How has this tiny creature made its way from the underground lodging where the eggs are hatched to the fleece of a Bee? 27868 How is it that this object, whatever the quality of its surface, will sometimes suit them and sometimes not? 27868 How is this long period of solitude and captivity spent? 27868 How many were there on the larva''s back? 27868 How then do they recognize the nature of the object to which they have just moved? 27868 How will the germ and the young larva manage to breathe under that clay casing, which intercepts the access of the air? 27868 I ought to have expected this: had I not just seen them wandering without pause upon the everlastings enveloped with cottony flock? 27868 If it has nothing to serve as a mould and a base, how does it set to work to assemble the first layers of paste into a neatly- shaped cup? 27868 If its baby- flannel is so good to start with, what will the future ulster be, when the stuff, brought to perfection, is of much better quality? 27868 If the creature were really shamming, what need would it have of these minute preliminaries to the awakening? 27868 If they have issued from the same stock, how have they acquired such dissimilar talents? 27868 If they spring from a common stock, how did the consumption of flesh supplant the consumption of honey? 27868 In its present state, of what use would eyes be to it at the bottom of a clay cell, where the most absolute darkness prevails? 27868 In what diggings does it find its gold nuggets? 27868 Is he advising his collaborators of what he has discovered? 27868 Is he arranging the work with a view to their establishing themselves elsewhere, on propitious soil? 27868 Is instinct derived from the organ, or is the organ instinct''s servant? 27868 Is it by touch, by some sensation due to the inner vibrations of living flesh? 27868 Is it really a group of eggs? 27868 Is it the capsule of a plant, from which the lid has dropped, allowing the seeds to fall? 27868 Is it the grub''s object to disgust its enemies? 27868 Is it the stone of some unknown fruit, emptied of its kernel by the patient tooth of the Field- mouse? 27868 Is the Scorpion dead? 27868 Is the Snail really dead? 27868 Is the compass a chemical influence, or electrical, or calorific, or what not? 27868 Is the difficulty of pairing in a transversal position the explanation of the long grappling- irons thrown out to a distance? 27868 Is the insect capable of doing so? 27868 Is there any one in the world who can flatter himself that he has escaped the spoiler? 27868 Is there not something here to guide the sapper? 27868 Is there on this side of the dividing line a paint- stuff and on the other side a dye- stuff, absolutely different in character from the first? 27868 Is this a matter of practice, or is it an increase of cunning employed in the hope of finally tiring a too persistent enemy? 27868 Is this culinary procedure undertaken in respect of the larvæ, which might be incommoded by the fur? 27868 Is this manoeuvre really thought out? 27868 It remembered, compared, judged, reasoned: does the drowsy, digesting paunch remember? 27868 Might we not one day be able to benefit by this hint? 27868 Need I add that the grub lies down and goes to sleep, for the nymphosis, with its head against the door? 27868 Now what can the gorgeous foreigner do? 27868 Now what do we find under the shelter of the oak? 27868 Now what symptoms herald their return to activity? 27868 O delightful days when we put the Turkeys to sleep, can I recover the skill which I then possessed? 27868 Of poor intellectual repute, does the Turkey deserve his name for stupidity? 27868 Of what use are these obstacles? 27868 Or can it be simply a caprice of fashion, an outlandish fancy? 27868 Or did they, on the contrary, dig at its base solely in order to bury that part of the Mole which lay on the ground? 27868 Or is it just a casual result, a mere loss of hair due to putridity? 27868 Safety? 27868 The radiating denticulations of the forehead, the insect''s gambols in the bright sunlight? 27868 The sound of what, in the silence of solitude? 27868 Their meal? 27868 Then what can be the meaning of this pseudochrysalid stage, which, when passed, leads precisely to the point of departure? 27868 Then what do you want, you fiendish little creatures? 27868 Then why are they there? 27868 There is the eternal question, if we do not rise above the commonplace: how did the insect acquire so wise an art? 27868 They obtain nothing, therefore, from the Anthophora''s body; but perhaps they nibble her fleece, even as the Bird- lice nibble the birds''feathers? 27868 This again is possible: who would venture to set tooth to such a heap of filth? 27868 This love of tropical temperature suggests the following question: what would happen if I were to chill the creature in its immobile posture? 27868 To adorn itself like this, in what Golconda does the insect gather its gems? 27868 To go from the murky heart of the tree to the sun- steeped bark, why does he not follow a straight line? 27868 Under ordinary conditions would the adult Oil- beetle have emerged from her cell at this period? 27868 Under these conditions can the pill- shaped cell be constructed? 27868 Was I wrong? 27868 Was it, so far as they were concerned, a choice dictated by the foresight of instinct, or just simply the result of a lucky chance? 27868 Was the passage also carried through the bark? 27868 We can understand the object of the feminine beacon; but of what use is all the rest of the pyrotechnic display? 27868 Well, has the insect, or rather, has any kind of animal, a presentiment that its life can not last for ever? 27868 Were they very wrong? 27868 What are the two inseparables doing? 27868 What becomes of it once the egg is exhausted? 27868 What becomes of its excretions? 27868 What can be the nature of that singular lid whereof the Cerambyx furnishes me with the first specimen? 27868 What can be the psychology of a creature possessing such a powerful digestive organism combined with such a feeble set of senses? 27868 What can be the visual impression of the insect when face to face with that monstrosity, man? 27868 What can he do? 27868 What can the grub''s palate appreciate in this monotonous fare? 27868 What can this envelope be, so remarkable for its elegance, with its spiral mouldings, its thimble- pits and its hop- scales? 27868 What can this something be, unless it be food? 27868 What did the Megathopæ, the Bolbites, the Splendid Phanæus eat and knead, before the arrival of the present purveyor? 27868 What do these imprints mean? 27868 What do your flanks contain? 27868 What does he find before him? 27868 What does it care for our hunting, whether we be children or scientists? 27868 What does it keep in the back- shop? 27868 What does it know of the outside world? 27868 What does it want? 27868 What does the little that we have learnt teach us? 27868 What has become of the other two, both males? 27868 What has become of the others? 27868 What has the Clythra wherewith to achieve its ideal jewel? 27868 What have the lessons of touch and taste contributed to that rudimentary receptacle of impressions? 27868 What have we learnt from him? 27868 What is his manner of consuming it? 27868 What is his object in thus sponging himself, in dusting and polishing himself so carefully? 27868 What is it seeking? 27868 What is it? 27868 What is the object of these extravagant arms, these curious grappling- irons out of all proportion to the insect''s size? 27868 What is the purpose of this nasty great- coat? 27868 What is there behind all this? 27868 What name shall we give to that form of existence which, for a time, abolishes the power of movement and the sense of pain? 27868 What shall I give my famished nurselings? 27868 What sign denotes that one of the five who was able, in so rational a manner, to call for help? 27868 What then is the guide? 27868 What trade do you follow under your torrid sun, O gleaming carbuncle? 27868 What use would it have for such a prerogative, loving repose as it does and destined to put on fat in its cell, without roaming in quest of food? 27868 What were they doing there, all these feverish workers? 27868 What will be the result of the experiment? 27868 What will become of these little bodies and so many other pitiful remnants of life? 27868 What will happen in the midst of that profound silence? 27868 What will the motionless insect do if I carry it thither, from my table to the window, into the bright light? 27868 What will they do now? 27868 What would happen under the natural conditions? 27868 What would it be if they had to pass through a thickness of oak? 27868 What would it do with sight, in the murky thickness of a tree- trunk? 27868 What would the Decticus do with nutritive reserves, seeing that he is near his end, now that the nuptial season has arrived? 27868 What, then, did the man with the Frog, of whom Gleditsch tells us, really see? 27868 When Macleay[25] gave the Sacred Beetle the name of Heliocantharus, the Black- beetle of the Sun, what had he in mind? 27868 When and how did it get in? 27868 When and how does it deliver its attack? 27868 When will she wake up? |
27868 | Whence did it derive the motives of its actions? |
27868 | Where could it find, even with chance assisting, a better plan? |
27868 | Where sounds are lacking, of what use is the faculty of discerning them? |
27868 | Who does not know it, at least by name? |
27868 | Who has not seen it roam amid the grass, like a spark fallen from the moon at its full? |
27868 | Who will explain to me this predilection for the Orthopteron in a tribe whose chief, the Oil- beetle, accepts nothing but the mess of honey? |
27868 | Who would look for virtue in such a quarter? |
27868 | Why do insects which appear close together in all our classifications possess such opposite tastes? |
27868 | Why not? |
27868 | Why not? |
27868 | Why prolong the agony of the impotent and the imbecile? |
27868 | Why should not the insect''s organism, so delicate and subtle, give way beneath the grip of fear and momentarily succumb? |
27868 | Will it be the same, because of similarity of structure, with other members of the same group? |
27868 | Will it once more cover me with confusion? |
27868 | Will the Capricorns come out, or not? |
27868 | Will the find thus hanging where it chances to fall remain unemployed? |
27868 | Will the grave- digger find himself helpless against such an obstacle, which must be an extremely common one? |
27868 | Will the insect pick itself up? |
27868 | Will they scrape at the foot of the gibbet in order to overturn it? |
27868 | With what natural enemy shall I confront the big Scarites, motionless on his back? |
27868 | Without a good dose of this quality, a mental defect in the eyes of practical folk, who would busy himself with the lesser creatures? |
27868 | Would it not be possible to find a defensive system of equal value without resorting to detestable filth? |
27868 | [ 4] But what can such a cuirass avail against the bandit''s ruthless pincers? |
12175 | A French prince?--in this village? |
12175 | A hand at primero, sir? |
12175 | A warrant? 12175 Afterwards?" |
12175 | Afterwards? |
12175 | And afterwards? |
12175 | And am_ I_ not a man of honor? |
12175 | And did you hear anything, Master Busy? |
12175 | And it led to naught? |
12175 | And so the exiled prince lodged in your cottage, mistress? |
12175 | And what is your stake, Master Lambert? |
12175 | And yet... good master? |
12175 | And you will be happy, Sue? |
12175 | Are you not playing rather high, gentlemen? |
12175 | Art winning, Endicott? |
12175 | At what hour does Master Skyffington arrive? |
12175 | Be the quality here? |
12175 | Because I am poor and must work in order to live, am_ I_ to be condemned unheard? 12175 Because? |
12175 | But do you think that he will play? |
12175 | But how? 12175 But if you lose that?" |
12175 | But in Heaven''s name, what does it all mean? |
12175 | But what in the name of common sense is a French prince doing in Acol village? |
12175 | But what is it, master? |
12175 | But where is our gracious hostess? |
12175 | But, Mother..."I pray you, my son,she retorted with unusual acerbity,"do you want a million or do you not?" |
12175 | By that gentleman? |
12175 | Can naught be done, Marmaduke? |
12175 | Can you read it? |
12175 | Can you suggest anything, my dear Editha? |
12175 | Come,he said lightly,"will you not kiss me, my beautiful Suzanne? |
12175 | Could it be bats, master? |
12175 | Did anyone ever see such accursed luck? |
12175 | Did you think that you could dictate your own terms quite so easily? |
12175 | Disgrace? |
12175 | Do you think that I have been blind these last few weeks? 12175 Eh? |
12175 | Eh? 12175 Eh? |
12175 | Eh? 12175 Endicott understands?" |
12175 | Enter, my fine lady, I pray thee, enter,said the Quakeress;"art also a party to these cross- questionings? |
12175 | Evil ways? 12175 Explained? |
12175 | Friend, what dost thou here? |
12175 | Go? 12175 Had she ceased to trust her romantic prince then?" |
12175 | Have I not run the gravest possible risks for your sake, and those without murmur or complaint, for the past six months? 12175 Have you arranged everything, Mistress Endicott?" |
12175 | Have you been scouring the chimney, good master? |
12175 | Have you seen the body, Boatfield? |
12175 | He has returned? |
12175 | Him? |
12175 | How can I, mine impatient friend? |
12175 | How can I? |
12175 | How can you let your usual clients know? 12175 How cross you are,"she retorted with childish petulance,"what have I done that you should be so unkind?" |
12175 | How do we stand? |
12175 | How much longer are you going to fuss about, my good woman? |
12175 | I am only a little dazed... as any man would be who had been dreaming... and saw that dream vanish away...."Dreaming? |
12175 | I am right, am I not, good Master Lambert? |
12175 | I do not know,she repeated,"what is it to thee, where he is? |
12175 | I grieved terribly when I heard... about you... at first...she said almost gaily now,"yet somehow I could not believe it all... and now....""Yes? |
12175 | I have brought the proofs,he said, as if wishing to conciliate a dangerous enemy,"we need not stand so near the edge, need we?" |
12175 | I have never deceived anyone in my life before.... How could I live a lie? 12175 I thank thee... they be doing nicely, thank the Lord... six of them and... eh? |
12175 | If she discover you, before... before..."Before she is legally my wife? 12175 Impudence? |
12175 | In the name of Heaven, Master Segrave, what ails you? |
12175 | Indeed? |
12175 | Indeed? |
12175 | Is everything arranged? |
12175 | Is not the word of an honest man sufficient for thee? |
12175 | Is that what you mean... hem... what_ thou_, meanest, Master Busy? |
12175 | Is that you, Editha? |
12175 | It is indeed late, gracious lady,he said gently,"and the park is lonely at night... will you not allow me to walk beside you as far as the house?" |
12175 | It is not faced,he said,"what shall we do?" |
12175 | Knew what? |
12175 | Lord, Master Busy,she said demurely,"how was a poor maid to know that you meant it earnestly?" |
12175 | Meant it earnestly? |
12175 | Mistress de Chavasse,she said quietly,"will you be good enough to explain by what right you have spied on me to- night? |
12175 | Money and securities? |
12175 | No trouble with our henchmen? |
12175 | Not in the elm trees of a surety, Master Busy? |
12175 | Now, wilt question me again, man? |
12175 | Of a surety, mistress... and if thou wouldst allow me to... to..."To what, Master Busy? |
12175 | Offended me? |
12175 | One moment, mistress? |
12175 | Or the payment insufficient? |
12175 | Perfectly,said the woman, with perceptible hesitation,"but...""What ails you, mistress?" |
12175 | Put up thirty- two...."But if you have not thirty- two guineas to put up? |
12175 | Refuse? |
12175 | Sad? 12175 Sad?" |
12175 | Shall we continue the game? |
12175 | Shall we go within? |
12175 | Shall we proceed with our business, master? |
12175 | Sir Marmaduke is without just at present, Master Lambert,she stammered shyly,"... and...""Yes? |
12175 | Sir Marmaduke? 12175 Spying? |
12175 | Spying? |
12175 | Squire Boatfield is here and Sir Marmaduke de Chavasse,replied Lambert,"what is it, Mat? |
12175 | Surely your love for me can dispense with Sir Marmaduke''s consent...."A secret marriage? |
12175 | Surely, my lord, you are not leaving off, too? |
12175 | That clew? |
12175 | That girl? 12175 The devil himself hath been faithful to you, Master Lambert..."said Segrave tonelessly,"you have the hell''s own luck.... What do I pay you now?" |
12175 | Then what am I to do? |
12175 | Then why have married her? |
12175 | Then you believed me guilty? |
12175 | Thou knowest what I think of thy lazy foreign ways... why dost thou not do a bit of honest work, instead of hanging round her ladyship''s skirts? 12175 Thou wouldst think''tis an ordinary house... wouldst thou not?" |
12175 | Thou wouldst wish to know what I was doing up in that forked tree? |
12175 | Thou''lt not fail me? |
12175 | Title and vast estates? |
12175 | To- night? |
12175 | Unkind? |
12175 | We two then, Master Lambert,said Segrave with ever- growing excitement,"what say you? |
12175 | Well? 12175 Well?" |
12175 | What are they saying, lad? |
12175 | What can I do now? 12175 What could there be going on?" |
12175 | What do you mean? |
12175 | What do you mean? |
12175 | What do you mean? |
12175 | What does he mean? |
12175 | What dost thou mean? |
12175 | What happened? |
12175 | What happens, Master Hymn- of- Praise? 12175 What is he saying, my dear?" |
12175 | What is it, Lambert? |
12175 | What is it, Mat? |
12175 | What is it? |
12175 | What is the arrangement? |
12175 | What is the pother about this foreigner, eh, Boatfield? |
12175 | What is the warrant for? |
12175 | What matter if all the world were against you? |
12175 | What may that be, pray? |
12175 | What more lies are we to hear? |
12175 | What of that? |
12175 | What right have you to ask? |
12175 | What was that? |
12175 | What were that? |
12175 | What were the use? 12175 What were the use? |
12175 | What''s to be done? |
12175 | When shall we meet again, my prince? |
12175 | Where art going? |
12175 | Where is your nephew Adam? |
12175 | Where shall I sign? |
12175 | Which is it? |
12175 | Who is in the know? |
12175 | Who we both are? |
12175 | Who... who are you? |
12175 | Why? |
12175 | Will it not keep? |
12175 | Will one of you gentlemen teach me the game? |
12175 | Will you ever forgive me? |
12175 | Will you join me, squire? |
12175 | Will you prove it to me? |
12175 | Will you tell them, I pray you, sir, that you know me to be a man of honor, incapable of such villainy as they suggest? 12175 Will your Honor sign a warrant?" |
12175 | With that man? |
12175 | Yes, yes, I know,he replied,"am I not used to seeing that your social duties oft make you forget your husband?" |
12175 | Yes... afterwards? 12175 Yes?" |
12175 | Yet it is so simple,he replied,"did you not ask me awhile ago if nothing could be done?" |
12175 | You are not afraid? |
12175 | You are not leaving off playing, Sir Michael? |
12175 | You can suggest a motive for the crime? |
12175 | You can write your name? |
12175 | You have brought those proofs? |
12175 | You have done your duty: but you could not help admitting me, could you? 12175 You heard? |
12175 | You love someone else? |
12175 | You mean that you could never love me? |
12175 | You refuse? 12175 You said, Master Skyffington, did you not,"she said,"that after to- day no one had the slightest control over my actions or over my fortune?" |
12175 | You think that she would have fallen in love with her middle- aged guardian? |
12175 | You would dare? 12175 You would denounce me?" |
12175 | You? 12175 Young Squire Delamere committed suicide... you remember him? |
12175 | Your bitter enemy? 12175 Your letter to Master Skyffington, Sir Marmaduke,"replied the young man,"will you be pleased to sign it?" |
12175 | ... And now?" |
12175 | ... And what happened, good master?" |
12175 | ... Are you not afraid of what she might do? |
12175 | ... Can you see in them the reflex of those shameful deeds which have been imputed to me? |
12175 | ... Did you perchance think that I cared? |
12175 | ... What may that be?" |
12175 | ... You get up at dawn and go to bed at sunset? |
12175 | ... You? |
12175 | ... and now?" |
12175 | ... and to break my heart?" |
12175 | ... and? |
12175 | ... art anxious to probe the secrets which the old woman hath kept hidden within the walls of this cottage?" |
12175 | ... how can I continue?" |
12175 | ... on thy knees, I say... beg her pardon for thy foul language... now at once... dost hear? |
12175 | ... or the small hours of the morn?" |
12175 | ... speak out? |
12175 | ... the heiress, eh, friend? |
12175 | ... what? |
12175 | ... when Sue has discovered how she has been tricked? |
12175 | ... will that satisfy you? |
12175 | ... you saw just now? |
12175 | ...""Did he go out alone?" |
12175 | ..."he asked,"what is it, wench? |
12175 | A broken sigh escaped her lips, or was it the sighing of the wind in the elms? |
12175 | A dull, tired voice had just said feebly:"Is Sir Marmaduke de Chavasse within?" |
12175 | A secret marriage? |
12175 | Am I not tied to the strings of your kirtle by lasting bonds of infinite gratitude?" |
12175 | And the bridegroom? |
12175 | Are ye still hard of hearing?" |
12175 | Are you not losing, too?" |
12175 | Art accusing him perchance of doing away with that foreign devil?" |
12175 | At first I used to believe their stories...""At first?" |
12175 | But if not the stranger, then who was it, who was dead? |
12175 | But what of the mother who had on her soul the taint of the murder of her child? |
12175 | But will you not own, Editha, that''tis worth the risk?" |
12175 | But you,"she added with pathetic anxiety,"you do care for me still? |
12175 | Did I not compromise my reputation for you by meeting you alone... of nights? |
12175 | Did the first thought of fear, or misgiving cross her mind at this moment? |
12175 | Did you wish to see Sir Marmaduke?" |
12175 | Do I look like a liar and a cheat? |
12175 | Does he?" |
12175 | Double or quits?" |
12175 | Double or quits?" |
12175 | Doubtless worthy Mistress Lambert will be awaiting you, or is it the sick mare down Minster way that hath first claim on your amiability? |
12175 | Eleven? |
12175 | Else how to account for such a brutal act? |
12175 | Face to face? |
12175 | Forgotten? |
12175 | Had he not every excuse? |
12175 | Had he not trodden it three nights ago, on his way to meet the smith? |
12175 | Hast brought ink or paper?" |
12175 | Hath my guardian perchance set you to dog my footsteps?" |
12175 | Have you a horse here?" |
12175 | Having found it, what would they do? |
12175 | He did not actually see you, Marmaduke, did he?" |
12175 | He drew nearer to Sir Marmaduke, looked down on him silently for a second or two, then muttered through his teeth:"You have the proofs?" |
12175 | He is back in these parts, you know?" |
12175 | His own doublet and breeches, shoes and stockings were in the pavilion: would he ever be able to get at them without a light? |
12175 | How soon would the watches find the body? |
12175 | I am mad when you are not nigh me.... You do not know-- how could you? |
12175 | I do n''t wonder that harm hath come to him....""You remember him well, mistress?--him and the clothes he used to wear?" |
12175 | I had no thought-- how could I have? |
12175 | I have felt lonely and....""Not unhappy?" |
12175 | I have worked hard to get it and would not fail for lack of a simple ceremony... moreover...""Moreover?" |
12175 | I mean Hymn- of- Praise, dear... secret service? |
12175 | I shall have full control of my money?" |
12175 | I told thee, wench, did I not? |
12175 | I?" |
12175 | In an instant, stricken at first dumb with surprise and horror, but quickly recovering the power of speech, Adam Lambert murmured:"You? |
12175 | Is a whole life''s record of self- education and honest labor to be thus obliterated by the word of my most bitter enemy?" |
12175 | Is that not so?" |
12175 | It seems passing strange, does it not?" |
12175 | Jealous? |
12175 | Knew what? |
12175 | Lord Walterton, flushed with wine, more than with anger, constituted himself the spokesman of the party:"Who are you?" |
12175 | Midnight? |
12175 | Milk for breakfast, eh? |
12175 | Mistress Endicott, can none of these wenches discourse sweet music whilst we do homage to the goddess of Fortune? |
12175 | Mistress Lambert is your aunt?" |
12175 | Money taken from an unsuspecting parent, guardian or master, which? |
12175 | My partner, didst thou say, sweet Charity? |
12175 | My tinder- box....""Thy what? |
12175 | Oh, mistress?" |
12175 | On the other hand, would it not be ten thousand times more dangerous to go back to the cottage now and risk meeting Richard Lambert face to face? |
12175 | One point occurred to her now, which caused her to ask anxiously:"Have you not made your reckonings without Richard Lambert, Marmaduke? |
12175 | Pray, mistress, will you deign to tell me if in this your bidding you have asked Sir Marmaduke for his opinion?" |
12175 | Shall we say that he will fly up into the clouds and her Highness the Princess will know him no more?" |
12175 | She heard the cry of some small bird attacked by a midnight prowler; was it the sparrow- hawk after its prey? |
12175 | She seemed satisfied at this assurance, for she now spoke in less aggressive tones:"Are you so sure of the girl, Marmaduke?" |
12175 | Sir Michael, try my system.... Overbury, art a laggard? |
12175 | Someone who really knew? |
12175 | Spying, didst thou say?" |
12175 | Squire Boatfield, almost paralyzed with astonishment, had murmured half stupidly:"Adam Lambert... dead? |
12175 | Sue once more tried to lead Mistress Lambert gently away, but she pushed the young girl aside quite firmly:"Ye do n''t believe me?" |
12175 | That is what we are, Sir Marmaduke de Chavasse; and now prithee tell me, who the devil art thou?" |
12175 | The Lord Saviour was a carpenter and not a prince.... My brother is a student and a gentleman-- as good as any prince-- understand? |
12175 | The Lord love you, Master Hymn- of- Praise, and pray do you call half an hour at the skittle alley''evil ways''?" |
12175 | The hour was not very late, and had she not commanded him to go? |
12175 | Then as the Quakeress did not reply, he added almost savagely:"Why do n''t you answer, woman? |
12175 | Then, if he had never loved her, why had he pretended? |
12175 | This is a republic now... understand? |
12175 | To offend his generous employer, and to bring opprobrium and ridicule on himself which would of necessity redound against Sir Marmaduke also? |
12175 | To- night especially....""Why especially to- night?" |
12175 | Was it not natural that she did not care to look on him after he had angered her so? |
12175 | Was it the contrast between two men, which unaccountably sent a thrill of disappointment, almost of apprehension, through her heart? |
12175 | Was the subtle change in him as well as in her? |
12175 | What could he say? |
12175 | What does happen?" |
12175 | What matter? |
12175 | What right had he to condemn what she approved? |
12175 | What think you of my chances now?" |
12175 | What warrant?" |
12175 | What? |
12175 | What?" |
12175 | When and where wilt meet me?" |
12175 | When wilt meet me? |
12175 | Where did you find it?" |
12175 | Where was it done? |
12175 | Whither?" |
12175 | Who knows but what old Noll''s police- patrol is lurking in this cutthroat alley? |
12175 | Why do you not pay the girl''s arrears to- day?" |
12175 | Why have deceived her with a semblance of passion? |
12175 | Will you deign to explain?" |
12175 | Will you go to London to- morrow?" |
12175 | Will you honor my poor house, mistress? |
12175 | Will you speak?" |
12175 | Wilt question me again? |
12175 | Wilt question me? |
12175 | Would the body be immediately identified by the clothes upon it? |
12175 | Would the disappearance of Adam Lambert be known at once and commented upon in connection with the crime? |
12175 | You?" |
12175 | and what had Adam Lambert to do with the whole terrible deed? |
12175 | and you, too, ma''am? |
12175 | but Master Busy,"she rejoined coyly,"methought I was to be your... hem... thy partner in life... and so...""My partner? |
12175 | but he was murdered,"said Squire Boatfield firmly,"the question only is by whom?" |
12175 | but why should you take so gloomy a view of the situation? |
12175 | do you not?" |
12175 | do you recognize your humble servant at last, fair Editha?" |
12175 | eh?" |
12175 | ejaculated Mistress Charity, who was the first to recognize in the sooty wraith the manly form of her betrothed,"where have ye come from, pray?" |
12175 | ejaculated Sir Marmaduke with a loud oath, which he contrived to bring forth with the violence of genuine wrath,"Money and securities? |
12175 | exclaimed Dame Harrison sharply,"and pray, good Sir Marmaduke, where did you go a- fishing to get such a bite?" |
12175 | he added peremptorily,"have you brought the money?" |
12175 | he added superciliously,"is she not?" |
12175 | he asked somewhat unsteadily,"and what do you want?" |
12175 | he muttered apologetically, and clutching at his collar, which seemed to be choking him,"what news-- er-- I pray you, ma''am?" |
12175 | he repeated anxiously,"what does it mean?" |
12175 | he retorted blandly,"why should you be anxious? |
12175 | he sighed in utter dejection,"when that happy time comes... but...""You do not trust me?" |
12175 | how?" |
12175 | how?" |
12175 | murmured Mistress Lambert, timorously, as she clung with pathetic fervor to the young girl beside her,"what is the trouble?" |
12175 | my adored lady,"he entreated,"in the name of Heaven listen to me.... You do believe, do you not, that I am your friend? |
12175 | or would doubt on that score arise in the minds of the neighboring folk? |
12175 | queried the old woman in her trembling voice,"what are they saying? |
12175 | quoth her brother- in- law, lightly greeting her,"up betimes like the lark I see.... Are you going without?" |
12175 | said Mistress de Chavasse curtly, but peremptorily,"what of to- night? |
12175 | she asked,"afterwards?" |
12175 | she cried angrily,"are you ever going to tell us what did happen whilst you were there?" |
12175 | she murmured,"what''s to be done?" |
12175 | she queried, shuffling a little nearer to him,"I am somewhat hard of hearing... as thou knowest....""Have you seen my tinder- box?" |
12175 | she said impatiently,"but you have some news, of course?" |
12175 | she whispered, and then repeated once again:"Who are you?" |
12175 | that you cared for me like... like this.... You believe me, good master, do you not?" |
12175 | the little pigs?" |
12175 | think you I can stay here all this while and listen to your nonsense?" |
12175 | what doth your ladyship here and at this hour?" |
12175 | what is your card, Master Segrave?" |
12175 | what matter the lateness of the hour? |
12175 | what wert thou doing up in the elm tree, friend Hymn- of- Praise?" |
12175 | what? |
12175 | what?" |
12175 | what?" |
12175 | why did the fool get in my way?" |
12175 | why should we stop the game for a trifle?" |
12175 | why should you think so?" |
12175 | you come from the country, master? |
33431 | ''Are you a Catholic?'' 33431 ''But you do not wish to stay in prison?'' |
33431 | ''But, do you know him? 33431 ''Have you been long here?'' |
33431 | ''Here''s a boy what wants to go to Michi_gan_, sir; ca n''t you take him with us?'' 33431 ''She is a beggar, then?'' |
33431 | ''Well, how is she doing now?'' 33431 ''What do you mean?'' |
33431 | ''What other things?'' 33431 But how will it be if you do n''t go, boys? |
33431 | Did ye ever see a cow run_ away_ from a haystack? |
33431 | My dear friend, can you expect boys to be perfect at once? 33431 Well, now, suppose we have a night- school, and learn to write-- what do you say, boys?". |
33431 | Were they right to say that those children belonged to them when they had despised them even to the point of abandoning them to death? |
33431 | What the devil are you looking at me in that way for? |
33431 | What''s broke loose now? |
33431 | Where is your_ mother_, I say? 33431 Why are you here?'' |
33431 | Wo n''t the boy ran away? |
33431 | ''Do you think I can go, sir?'' |
33431 | ''Have you ever been to school, or Sunday School?'' |
33431 | ''Poor fellow,''said some one,''how did you get your living?'' |
33431 | ''What''s that, mister?'' |
33431 | ''Where are your father and mother, my boy?'' |
33431 | ''Where are your other relatives or friends?'' |
33431 | ''Where did you stay?'' |
33431 | ''Would they git schoolin'', sir?'' |
33431 | ''Yes, and wo n''t we_ sell_ some, too?'' |
33431 | ''_''Ah, fellers,_ ai n''t_ that the country tho''--won''t we have nice things to eat?'' |
33431 | ''_''But, where do you stay?'' |
33431 | ''_''Mister, do they make mushmillons in Michi_gan? |
33431 | --by endowment from the State or by private and annual assistance? |
33431 | Again, do you inquire if he is beloved At home? |
33431 | An important question often comes up in regard to our charitable associations:"How shall they best be supported?" |
33431 | And, now, sir( almost fiercely), ca n''t you get me out of this? |
33431 | And, when the children were placed, how were their interests to be watched over, and acts of oppression or hard dealing prevented or punished? |
33431 | At day- break they began to inquire,''Where be we?'' |
33431 | But what can I do, sir?'' |
33431 | But what is the experience of Asylums? |
33431 | But, in looking at the matter soberly, and without pugnacity, does spiritual religion lose anything by giving up these exercises? |
33431 | Ca n''t ye do somethin''?'' |
33431 | Can we not satisfy it innocently? |
33431 | Could ye help us? |
33431 | Did n''t you ever pelt the cattle when you were a boy?" |
33431 | Do you ask if he is a good boy? |
33431 | Do you pay their fare to their new home, and are there any other particulars about which parties would wish to be informed? |
33431 | Do you want to be gentlemen and independent citizens? |
33431 | Do you want to be newsboys always, and shoeblacks, and timber- merchants in a small way by sellin''matches? |
33431 | Do you want to be rowdies, and loafers, and shoulder- hitters? |
33431 | Grasping the boy by the shoulder,"Where''s your mother, I say?" |
33431 | HOW BEST TO GIVE ALMS? |
33431 | HOW SHALL CRIMINAL CHILDREN BE TREATED? |
33431 | HOW SHALL CRIMINAL CHILDREN BE TREATED? |
33431 | Has crime increased with them? |
33431 | Have you others whom you wish to place in situations which we could assure you would be good? |
33431 | How can the children be saved at a moderate expense? |
33431 | How were places to be found? |
33431 | How were the demand and supply for children''s labor to be connected? |
33431 | How were the right employers to be selected? |
33431 | How would_ you_ feel happiest?" |
33431 | If the taste for them were formed, would it not expel the appetite for whisky and brandy, or at least, in the coming generation, form a new habit? |
33431 | If this was the right scheme, why had it not been tried long ago in our cities or in England? |
33431 | John Cochrane out of the window, or rolled the Mayor down- stairs? |
33431 | Mister, be they any sich in Michi_gan?_ Then I''m in for_ that_ place-- three cheers for Michi_gan! |
33431 | Mr. S. felt for him, and said,''Where do you live, my boy?'' |
33431 | Once little Annie was found waiting with her broom in a bitter storm of sleet and hail on a corner, and the teacher asked her why she was there? |
33431 | One beautiful day he went on a spree, and he came home and told me where''s yer mother? |
33431 | One of the mysterious things about this Boys''Hotel is, what becomes of the large numbers that enter it? |
33431 | Or--"My boys, what is the great end of man? |
33431 | Or--"My_ dear_ boys, when your father and your mother forsake you,_ who_ will take you up?" |
33431 | SHOULD LICENSES BE ALLOWED? |
33431 | Several changes of fortune of this kind have made it quite a natural question, when I visit Mrs. Hurley''s School,"What about the heiresses?" |
33431 | She listened, and after a little while, said, in broken English''Do n''t you think better for poor little girls to die than live?'' |
33431 | The next day I and my father went to get some clothes I left there, and the lady would n''t give them up; and what could we do? |
33431 | The only question with the governing power is,"Does it do a work of public value not done by public institutions?" |
33431 | Thus, an old boon companion meets him in the street:"Why, Orful, what the h-- ll''s this about your bein''converted?" |
33431 | Thus--"In this parable, my dear boys, of the Pharisee and the publican, what is meant by the''publican?''" |
33431 | WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH FOUNDLINGS? |
33431 | WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH FOUNDLINGS? |
33431 | We must draw a line; but where? |
33431 | Were they to be indentured, or not? |
33431 | What becomes of the other seven thousand? |
33431 | What can be done for them? |
33431 | What can the poor do? |
33431 | What could he expect in the way of reform in such a case? |
33431 | What else was to be looked for? |
33431 | What have other States done in the matter? |
33431 | What, then, is to be done for these unfortunate foundlings? |
33431 | What, then, is to be done to remedy this terrible evil? |
33431 | When is he happiest? |
33431 | Where do you live? |
33431 | Where do you live? |
33431 | Where''s your father?" |
33431 | Why am I so? |
33431 | Why do n''t you save your money? |
33431 | Why do n''t you show yourself?'' |
33431 | Why much suffer, if good God?'' |
33431 | Why should he be anything but a garroter and thief?" |
33431 | Why should it be increased and established by legal recognition? |
33431 | Why was I ever born? |
33431 | Why we came there for her? |
33431 | Why will our benevolent ladies and gentlemen keep up the old monastic ideas of the necessity of herding these unfortunate children in one building? |
33431 | You feller without no boots, how would you like a new pair, eh? |
33431 | [ Illustration:"PLEASE SIR, MAY I HAVE A BED?" |
33431 | and why she did not go home? |
33431 | can ye help her? |
33431 | said some one,''had you forgotten your mother? |
33431 | what''s up?" |
33431 | will ye not list to the gintleman? |
33123 | ''Is mademoiselle,''he asked me,''is mademoiselle as disdainful of the heart as she is of gold?'' 33123 Ah, I am wrong, am I? |
33123 | And what of your word, Don Ruis? |
33123 | And whom is the missive from? |
33123 | And you say we leave to- night? |
33123 | But how? |
33123 | But if you refuse the gold, what,he asked, almost piteously,"what can I give?" |
33123 | But will you not take them? |
33123 | Could you not stay longer? |
33123 | From whom is it then? 33123 From whom is it?" |
33123 | Good- bye? 33123 Got my traps up?" |
33123 | H''m, let me ask you, did you write to my daughter this morning? |
33123 | H''m, well-- er-- did you, did you begin the letter with a term of endearment? |
33123 | Have you understood me? |
33123 | He was a lightning calculator, was n''t he? |
33123 | How do you know my name? |
33123 | I frightened her, did I not? |
33123 | In the States, I fancy, you have nothing like it? |
33123 | Is Liance never coming? |
33123 | Is there any baccarat going on upstairs? |
33123 | It is late, is it not? |
33123 | It would hardly do for the button- hole, would it? |
33123 | May I not accompany you? |
33123 | May I trouble you? |
33123 | Oh, you were, were you? 33123 Painful? |
33123 | Ruis,he said, leisurely, with the air of one engaging in conversation solely for conversation''s sake,"you know the House of Sandoval?" |
33123 | Sentimental? 33123 Supper is ready, sir; will you come?" |
33123 | Tell me,he added,"do you live here always?" |
33123 | The general''s compliments, sir, and are you ready? |
33123 | The what? |
33123 | To what? |
33123 | Was he bald? |
33123 | What do you think of it there? |
33123 | What do you think of it? |
33123 | What does he mean by saying that my jest is ill- timed? 33123 What shall I do?" |
33123 | What the dickens can have become of him? |
33123 | What was it? |
33123 | Where is Atcheh? |
33123 | Who is it? |
33123 | Why, what has he to write to you about? |
33123 | Why, what is the matter with him? 33123 Why?" |
33123 | Will you order anything before the bar closes? |
33123 | Will you smoke? |
33123 | You are to be with us some time, are you not? |
33123 | You will not be in haste to go, then? |
33123 | You''re an American, are n''t you? |
33123 | ''And how do you like the States?'' |
33123 | ''Does he speak English?'' |
33123 | ''No, your Excellency,''I answered,--you see, I made a dash at Excellency; Prince seemed sort of abrupt, do n''t you think?'' |
33123 | ''Very much,''he answered;''and you?'' |
33123 | ''What shall I do? |
33123 | ''Will you let me love you?'' |
33123 | After all, it was my own suggestion, and, if unconventional, in what does the criterion consist? |
33123 | Am I correctly informed?" |
33123 | And Ruis, the road is not always safe; are you armed? |
33123 | And then, with the appreciation of a gourmet, Tancred added:"It is excellent; may I have another?" |
33123 | And, besides, how was it possible for me to have any doubts about a man who fought as he had over the percentage? |
33123 | Besides, what does he mean by boring every one to death? |
33123 | But do n''t you know that you are absurd? |
33123 | But for what were rupees coined and tips invented? |
33123 | But how is it possible, I asked myself, how can a girl pledge her life to a man of whom she knows absolutely nothing? |
33123 | But how?" |
33123 | But in New York they are more beautiful still, are they not?" |
33123 | But see, what would you? |
33123 | But was it the claret? |
33123 | But was n''t it stupid of him? |
33123 | But what are they when she is not? |
33123 | But what does get into men? |
33123 | But what opportunity is given to the girl whom a man happens to take in and out at dinner, or whom she sees for an hour or two now and then? |
33123 | But why do you not dismount? |
33123 | But why do you not speak to me? |
33123 | But why does he insist on my attention? |
33123 | Did you ever see a child asleep-- a child to whom some wonderful dream has come? |
33123 | Eh, my son? |
33123 | Fairbanks, you do not make a hundred- thousand- dollar sale every day, do you?'' |
33123 | For, practically speaking, what does the average girl know of the man whose name she takes? |
33123 | Had he not understood--? |
33123 | Has she not every opportunity of judging? |
33123 | He laughed, and put it down--""His throat?" |
33123 | I wonder what his sister thought of him? |
33123 | I wonder what that fellow is staring at me for?" |
33123 | In leap- year, perhaps, and in jest, such a thing may occur, but--""They are well behaved, then?" |
33123 | Is it a jest you call it, sir, or did I misunderstand your words?" |
33123 | Is it not exquisite to speak of love when all else is still?" |
33123 | Is it the night? |
33123 | Listen to it, will you? |
33123 | May I ask how you are called?" |
33123 | Now, gentlemen, now--""Have you got a camera concealed about your person?" |
33123 | Now, if the grand duke purchases these rubies, what will my commission be?'' |
33123 | Painful to whom? |
33123 | Suspicious? |
33123 | The Fausta is it?" |
33123 | There, now,_ will_ you be quiet? |
33123 | They might be timid, but is not the surge of the sea a call that stirs the pulse? |
33123 | Through their silence the breeze would have whispered, and who does not know what a breeze can say? |
33123 | Very good; then perhaps you will tell me that the marriage contract is less important than the conveyance of real estate? |
33123 | What do I care?" |
33123 | What is a good synonym for an editor, anyway?" |
33123 | When your husband bought this property did you think him suspicious because he had the title searched? |
33123 | Where did I leave off?" |
33123 | Where was I? |
33123 | Where were you? |
33123 | Where''s that waiter? |
33123 | Whether she had been aware of Mrs. Lyeth''s approach, who shall say? |
33123 | Who is she?" |
33123 | Why do n''t you come when you''re called?" |
33123 | Why should they think that, because a girl is liberal with odd evenings, she is pining for the marriage covenant?" |
33123 | Will his Imperial Highness pay cash for the rubies?''" |
33123 | Will you pay me if I wager and I win? |
33123 | Will you pay me? |
33123 | Yes, sir, I said details,--d- e- t- a- i- l- s. Now wait a minute, will you? |
33123 | Yet, if he did, might not five hundred be as easily borrowed as two hundred and fifty? |
33123 | You call it a jest to surprise a girl in the dark"--"To what?" |
33123 | You do not imagine, do you, that I regret it?" |
33123 | You go there often, do you not?" |
33123 | You were down with the measles, eh? |
33123 | You will like that, will you not? |
33123 | You will like to be back there, will you not?" |
33123 | he continued,"what is the use in being irritated at a beggar who is as ugly as a high hat at the seashore?" |
33123 | the Fausta? |
33123 | what shall I do?'' |
35521 | And pace? |
35521 | Are you a hard rider? |
35521 | Did ye draw now? |
35521 | Does it pull at you? |
35521 | Have we got a good deer to- day? |
35521 | How did you get your fall? |
35521 | Is,''The King of the Golden Mines''any use? |
35521 | Of course you had no pace with so good a point? |
35521 | The best part of it? 35521 Well then, you double- distilled fool, ca n''t you see that your horses are like that post? |
35521 | What is the use? |
35521 | What is time? 35521 _ Et tu brute!_"we exclaim--"Are_ you_ also a brute?" |
35521 | A perfect hunter has preserved the good qualities of each without the faults, but how many perfect hunters do any of us ride in our lives? |
35521 | All he_ does_ say is this--"I wonder when the second horses will come up? |
35521 | And what is the result of this little display of vexation? |
35521 | And why? |
35521 | Are you an admirer of make- and- shape? |
35521 | Are you fond of hounds? |
35521 | By letting his head go, and allowing him to carry us where he will? |
35521 | By pulling at him, then, with main strength, and trying the muscular power of our arms against that of his shoulders and neck? |
35521 | CAN YOU FORGIVE HER? |
35521 | Can anything be more helpless than the young horse you take out hunting the first time he finds himself in a bog? |
35521 | Can it be that the weaker brother is jealous of his pastor''s superiority in the saddle? |
35521 | Do you like to see them_ hunt_? |
35521 | Do you understand kennel management and condition? |
35521 | Does he''lep''well now?" |
35521 | Does it pull at you now?" |
35521 | For him and his companions, question and answer are cut short somewhat in this wise:--"Did you get away with them from the Punchbowl?" |
35521 | Have you ever noticed the appearance of a white horse at the conclusion of some merry gallop over a strongly fenced country? |
35521 | How is this to be effected? |
35521 | How often in a week do you touch it with the spurs? |
35521 | If we follow this cautious advice, who is to solve the important question,"Which way are they gone?" |
35521 | Intellect, nerve, sympathy, confidence, skill? |
35521 | Lastly, do you want to gallop and jump, defeat your dearest friends, and get to the end of your best horse? |
35521 | Perhaps the Ride in Hyde Park is the place of all others where this quality is most appreciated, and, shall we add? |
35521 | Suppose, however, the day is perfectly calm, and there seems no sufficient reason to prefer one course to the other, should we go to right or left? |
35521 | The scarcity of weight- carriers is indisputable, but can we find them here? |
35521 | Then, with everything in their favour, over a fair country, fairly fenced, why should they not ride on and take their pleasure? |
35521 | What are they but the field? |
35521 | What are we to do? |
35521 | What is it then? |
35521 | What is it? |
35521 | What is life? |
35521 | What matter? |
35521 | What matter? |
35521 | What said the wisest of kings concerning a fair woman without discretion? |
35521 | What says Mr. Warburton, favoured of Diana and the Muses? |
35521 | What would you do if you were a beaten fox, and where would you go? |
35521 | Where is our supremacy then? |
35521 | Where should we be but for the gates? |
35521 | Who shall decide between such professors? |
35521 | Who would grudge a journey across St. George''s Channel to find this desirable quality in its highest perfection at Ballinasloe or Cahirmee? |
35521 | Why are so many brilliant horses difficult to ride? |
21700 | ''An oyster may be cross''d in love,''--and why? |
21700 | ''At least,''said Juan,''sure I may enquire The cause of this odd travesty?'' |
21700 | ''Did not the Italian Musico Cazzani Sing at my heart six months at least in vain? |
21700 | ''Have I not had two bishops at my feet, The Duke of Ichar, and Don Fernan Nunez? |
21700 | ''Have you no friends?'' |
21700 | ''Is it for this I have disdain''d to hold The common privileges of my sex? |
21700 | ''Is it,''exclaim''d Gulbeyaz,''as you say? |
21700 | ''No?'' |
21700 | ''Que scais- je?'' |
21700 | ''T is said it makes reality more bearable: But what''s reality? |
21700 | ''Thou ask''st if I can love? |
21700 | ''To be, or not to be? |
21700 | ''To be, or not to be?'' |
21700 | ''Was it for this that no Cortejo e''er I yet have chosen from out the youth of Seville? |
21700 | ''Well, then, your third,''said Juan;''what did she? |
21700 | ''What are ye?'' |
21700 | ''What follow''d?'' |
21700 | ''What friar?'' |
21700 | ''Where is the world?'' |
21700 | ''Where will you serve?'' |
21700 | ''Why,''Replied the other,''what can a man do? |
21700 | ''Will it?'' |
21700 | ''Yes,''said the other,''and when done, what then? |
21700 | ''You were the first i''the breach?'' |
21700 | ''Your names?'' |
21700 | ( Excuse a foreign slipslop now and then, If but to show I''ve travell''d; and what''s travel, Unless it teaches one to quote and cavil?) |
21700 | --''But where is Spain?'' |
21700 | --''What next?'' |
21700 | --''What then?'' |
21700 | --''What, though my soul loathes The effeminate garb?'' |
21700 | --''You led the attack?'' |
21700 | --Ere I decide, I should be glad to know that which is being? |
21700 | --thus, after a short pause, Sigh''d Juan, muttering also some slight oaths,''What the devil shall I do with all this gauze?'' |
21700 | A ball- room bard, a foolscap, hot- press darling? |
21700 | A pair of shoes!--what then? |
21700 | A something all- sufficient for the heart Is that for which the sex are always seeking: But how to fill up that same vacant part? |
21700 | Again-- what is''t? |
21700 | Ah, why With cypress branches hast thou Wreathed thy bowers, And made thy best interpreter a sigh? |
21700 | All the ambassadors of all the powers Enquired, Who was this very new young man, Who promised to be great in some few hours? |
21700 | And Socrates himself but Wisdom''s Quixote? |
21700 | And air-- earth-- water-- fire live-- and we dead? |
21700 | And did he see this? |
21700 | And even if by chance-- and who can tell? |
21700 | And is it thus a faithful wife you treat? |
21700 | And is there not religion, and reform, Peace, war, the taxes, and what''s call''d the''Nation''? |
21700 | And is this blood, then, form''d but to be shed? |
21700 | And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? |
21700 | And now my epic renegade, what are ye at With all the lakers, in and out of place? |
21700 | And should he have forgotten her so soon? |
21700 | And this young fellow-- say what can he do? |
21700 | And thou, Diviner still, Whose lot it is by man to be mistaken, And thy pure creed made sanction of all ill? |
21700 | And thus we see-- who doubts the Morning Post? |
21700 | And what is that? |
21700 | And where are they? |
21700 | And where is''Fum''the Fourth, our''royal bird?'' |
21700 | And where my Lady That? |
21700 | And where the Daughter, whom the Isles loved well? |
21700 | And where-- oh, where the devil are the rents? |
21700 | And wherefore not begin With Carlton, or with other houses? |
21700 | And wherefore not? |
21700 | And whether in his travels he saw Ilion? |
21700 | And why? |
21700 | And, after all, what is a lie? |
21700 | Antonia''s skill was put upon the rack, But no device could be brought into play-- And how to parry the renew''d attack? |
21700 | Apostasy''s so fashionable too, To keep one creed''s a task grown quite Herculean Is it not so, my Tory, ultra- Julian? |
21700 | But all this time how slept, or dream''d, Dudu? |
21700 | But as to women, who can penetrate The real sufferings of their she condition? |
21700 | But for post- horses who finds sympathy? |
21700 | But here again, why will I thus entangle Myself with metaphysics? |
21700 | But how shall I relate in other cantos Of what befell our hero in the land, Which''t is the common cry and lie to vaunt as A moral country? |
21700 | But now at thirty years my hair is grey( I wonder what it will be like at forty? |
21700 | But now the town is going to be attack''d; Great deeds are doing-- how shall I relate''em? |
21700 | But seeing him all cold and silent still, And everybody wondering more or less, Fair Adeline enquired,''If he were ill?'' |
21700 | But to resume,--should there be( what may not Be in these days?) |
21700 | But what if he had? |
21700 | But what is to be done? |
21700 | But what''s this to the purpose? |
21700 | But whether all, or each, or none of these May be the hoarder''s principle of action, The fool will call such mania a disease:-- What is his own? |
21700 | But''why then publish?'' |
21700 | Can every element our elements mar? |
21700 | Could it be pride? |
21700 | Dare you suspect me, whom the thought would kill? |
21700 | Did not his countryman, Count Corniani, Call me the only virtuous wife in Spain? |
21700 | Enough.--The faithful and the fairy pair, Who never found a single hour too slow, What was it made them thus exempt from care? |
21700 | For me, I know nought; nothing I deny, Admit, reject, contemn; and what know you, Except perhaps that you were born to die? |
21700 | Go-- look at each transaction, Wars, revels, loves-- do these bring men more ease Than the mere plodding through each''vulgar fraction''? |
21700 | Great Socrates? |
21700 | Gulbeyaz was the fourth, and( as I said) The favourite; but what''s favour amongst four? |
21700 | Had Adeline read Malthus? |
21700 | Had Buonaparte won at Waterloo, It had been firmness; now''t is pertinacity: Must the event decide between the two? |
21700 | Has madness seized you? |
21700 | Hast ever had the gout? |
21700 | Have you explored the limits of the coast, Where all the dwellers of the earth must dwell? |
21700 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set where were they? |
21700 | He obey The intellectual eunuch Castlereagh? |
21700 | He said,--and in the kindest Calmuck tone,--''Why, Johnson, what the devil do you mean By bringing women here? |
21700 | He was''free to confess''( whence comes this phrase? |
21700 | He with the beardless chin and garments torn?'' |
21700 | Heaven knows? |
21700 | Here we are, And there we go:--but where? |
21700 | How can you do such things and keep your fame, Unless this world, and t''other too, be blind? |
21700 | How get out? |
21700 | How shall I spell the name of each Cossacque Who were immortal, could one tell their story? |
21700 | I ask in turn,--Why do you play at cards? |
21700 | I said it was a story of a ghost-- What then? |
21700 | I said that Lady Pinchbeck had been talk''d about-- As who has not, if female, young, and pretty? |
21700 | I say I do believe a haunted spot Exists-- and where? |
21700 | I wonder if his appetite was good? |
21700 | I wonder( although Mars no doubt''s a god Praise) if a man''s name in a bulletin May make up for a bullet in his body? |
21700 | I''ll have another figure in a trice:-- What say you to a bottle of champagne? |
21700 | I''m serious-- so are all men upon paper; And why should I not form my speculation, And hold up to the sun my little taper? |
21700 | If he must fain sweep o''er the ethereal plain, And Pegasus runs restive in his''Waggon,''Could he not beg the loan of Charles''s Wain? |
21700 | Is it for this I scarce went anywhere, Except to bull- fights, mass, play, rout, and revel? |
21700 | Is it for this that General Count O''Reilly, Who took Algiers, declares I used him vilely? |
21700 | Is it for this, whate''er my suitors were, I favor''d none-- nay, was almost uncivil? |
21700 | Is not all love prohibited whatever, Excepting marriage? |
21700 | Is the poor privilege to turn the key Upon the captive, freedom? |
21700 | Is''t English? |
21700 | It is a pleasant voyage perhaps to float, Like Pyrrho, on a sea of speculation; But what if carrying sail capsize the boat? |
21700 | Let spendthrifts''heirs enquire of yours-- who''s wiser? |
21700 | Love bears within its breast the very germ Of change; and how should this be otherwise? |
21700 | Methinks Love''s very title says enough: How should''the tender passion''e''er be tough? |
21700 | Must we but weep o''er days more blest? |
21700 | Nothing more true than not to trust your senses; And yet what are your other evidences? |
21700 | Now Julia found at length a voice, and cried,''In heaven''s name, Don Alfonso, what d''ye mean? |
21700 | Now-- that the rabble''s first vain shouts are o''er? |
21700 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
21700 | Or do they benefit mankind? |
21700 | Or how is''t matter trembles to come near it? |
21700 | Or modesty, or absence, or inanity? |
21700 | Or pray Medea for a single dragon? |
21700 | Or rather, who can not Remember, without telling, passion''s errors? |
21700 | Or, if it were, if also his digestion? |
21700 | Philosophy? |
21700 | Pray tell me, can you make fast, After due search, your faith to any question? |
21700 | Redeeming worlds to be by bigots shaken, How was thy toil rewarded? |
21700 | Religion? |
21700 | Romilly? |
21700 | Serious? |
21700 | Shall the Muse tune it ye? |
21700 | She did not run away, too,--did she, sir?'' |
21700 | She knew not her own heart; then how should I? |
21700 | Ship off the Holy Three to Senegal; Teach them that''sauce for goose is sauce for gander,''And ask them how they like to be in thrall? |
21700 | So the end''s gain''d, what signifies the route? |
21700 | So they lead In safety to the place for which you start, What matters if the road be head or heart? |
21700 | That violent things more quickly find a term Is shown through nature''s whole analogies; And how should the most fierce of all be firm? |
21700 | The Honourable Mistresses and Misses? |
21700 | The devil can tell: Where Grattan, Curran, Sheridan, all those Who bound the bar or senate in their spell? |
21700 | The joys of mutual hate to keep them warm, Instead of love, that mere hallucination? |
21700 | The landed and the monied speculation? |
21700 | The matron frown''d:''Why so?'' |
21700 | The nations are In prison,--but the gaoler, what is he? |
21700 | The simple olives, best allies of wine, Must I pass over in my bill of fare? |
21700 | The spirit of these walls?'' |
21700 | The struggle to be pilots in a storm? |
21700 | The third time, after a still longer pause, The shadow pass''d away-- but where? |
21700 | The wind? |
21700 | Their natures? |
21700 | This being the case, may show us what Fame is: For out of these three''preux Chevaliers,''how Many of common readers give a guess That such existed? |
21700 | Ungrateful, perjured, barbarous Don Alfonso, How dare you think your lady would go on so? |
21700 | Was ever everybody yet so quite? |
21700 | Was it not so, great Locke? |
21700 | We whose minds comprehend all things? |
21700 | Were there not also Russians, English, many? |
21700 | What a strange thing is man? |
21700 | What are the fillets on the victor''s brow To these? |
21700 | What are the hopes of man? |
21700 | What are we? |
21700 | What fear you? |
21700 | What is the end of Fame? |
21700 | What may this midnight violence betide, A sudden fit of drunkenness or spleen? |
21700 | What say you, child?'' |
21700 | What will become on''t-- I''m in such a fright, The devil''s in the urchin, and no good-- Is this a time for giggling? |
21700 | What''s to be done? |
21700 | What, silent still? |
21700 | Where My friends the Whigs? |
21700 | Where are the Dublin shouts-- and London hisses? |
21700 | Where are the Grenvilles? |
21700 | Where are the Lady Carolines and Franceses? |
21700 | Where are those martyr''d saints the Five per Cents? |
21700 | Where is Lord This? |
21700 | Where is Napoleon the Grand? |
21700 | Where is his will? |
21700 | Where is the arch Which nodded to the nation''s spoils below? |
21700 | Where is the unhappy Queen, with all her woes? |
21700 | Where is the world of eight years past? |
21700 | Where little Castlereagh? |
21700 | Where the triumphal chariots''haughty march? |
21700 | Where''s Brummel? |
21700 | Where''s George the Third? |
21700 | Where''s Long Pole Wellesley? |
21700 | Where''s Whitbread? |
21700 | Who advertise new poems by your looks, Your''imprimatur''will ye not annex? |
21700 | Who has its clue? |
21700 | Who hold the balance of the world? |
21700 | Who in a row like Tom could lead the van, Booze in the ken, or at the spellken hustle? |
21700 | Who keep the world, both old and new, in pain Or pleasure? |
21700 | Who make politics run glibber all? |
21700 | Who now Can tax my mild Muse with misanthropy? |
21700 | Who on a lark, with black- eyed Sal( his blowing), So prime, so swell, so nutty, and so knowing? |
21700 | Who queer a flat? |
21700 | Who reign O''er congress, whether royalist or liberal? |
21700 | Who rouse the shirtless patriots of Spain? |
21700 | Who would not sigh Ai ai Tan Kuuerheian That hath a memory, or that had a heart? |
21700 | Who would suppose thy gifts sometimes obdurate? |
21700 | Who( spite of Bow Street''s ban) On the high toby- spice so flash the muzzle? |
21700 | Why Preach to poor rogues? |
21700 | Why call the miser miserable? |
21700 | Why call we misers miserable? |
21700 | Why do their sketches fail them as inditers Of what they deem themselves most consequential, The real portrait of the highest tribe? |
21700 | Why drink? |
21700 | Why go to Newgate? |
21700 | Why waltz with him? |
21700 | Why, I pray, Look yes last night, and yet say no to- day? |
21700 | Why, I''m posterity-- and so are you; And whom do we remember? |
21700 | Why, do n''t you know that it may end in blood? |
21700 | Without a friend, what were humanity, To hunt our errors up with a good grace? |
21700 | Would you have endless lightning in the skies? |
21700 | Yes; but which of all her sects? |
21700 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet, Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
21700 | You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
21700 | You have your salary; was''t for that you wrought? |
21700 | a fifth appears;--and what is she? |
21700 | a schoolboy or a queen? |
21700 | and greater Bacon? |
21700 | and silent all? |
21700 | and whence came we? |
21700 | and where art thou, My country? |
21700 | behind, To feel, in friendless palaces, a home Is wanting, and our best ties in the tomb? |
21700 | but still he slept:--''But yesterday and who had mightier breath? |
21700 | can I prove''a lion''then no more? |
21700 | can love, and then be wise? |
21700 | concern? |
21700 | cries Young, at eighty--''Where The world in which a man was born? |
21700 | did you ever see a ghost? |
21700 | had he quite forgotten Julia? |
21700 | have you never heard of the Black Friar? |
21700 | how d''ye cal Him? |
21700 | how the devil got we in? |
21700 | let him but be shown-- I hope he''s young and handsome-- is he tall? |
21700 | must I go to the oblivious cooks, Those Cornish plunderers of Parnassian wrecks? |
21700 | now that you have thrown Doubt upon me, confusion over all, Pray have the courtesy to make it known Who is the man you search for? |
21700 | or their sovereigns, who employ All arts to teach their subjects to destroy? |
21700 | or was it a vapour? |
21700 | quoth Juan, turning round;''You scarcely can be thirty: have you three?'' |
21700 | said Juan,''shall it e''er be told That I unsex''d my dress?'' |
21700 | then what is life or death? |
21700 | think you this a lion''s den? |
21700 | this a plight? |
21700 | to them of ready cash bereft, What hope remains? |
21700 | what are ye who fly Around us ever, rarely to alight? |
21700 | what dark eye meets she there? |
21700 | what is every other wo? |
21700 | what is it in this world of ours Which makes it fatal to be loved? |
21700 | what is man? |
21700 | what is philanthropy? |
21700 | what is theogony? |
21700 | what shall be Our ultimate existence? |
21700 | what to their memory can lack? |
21700 | what''s his lineage? |
21700 | what''s our present? |
21700 | what''s that? |
21700 | what''s to be done? |
21700 | where''s my pocket- handkerchief?'' |
21700 | which was and is, what is cosmogony? |
21700 | who can tell? |
21700 | who would lose thee? |
21700 | who''d have thought it?'' |
21700 | why dost not pause? |
21700 | why the liver wilt thou thus attack, And make, like other nymphs, thy lovers ill? |
21700 | with sword drawn and cock''d trigger, Now, tell me, do n''t you cut a pretty figure? |
21700 | ye lords of ladies intellectual, Inform us truly, have they not hen- peck''d you all? |
21700 | ye modern heroes with your cartridges, When will your names lend lustre e''en to partridges? |
21700 | ye shades Of Pope and Dryden, are we come to this? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: And do you not think that I would enquire? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: And was there not a time when I did so think? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: And what should he do, Socrates, who would make the discovery? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: At what? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: But do you not think that I could discover them? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: But what can we do? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: But what was I to do, Socrates, when anybody cheated me? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: But, Socrates, if the two sons of Pericles were simpletons, what has that to do with the matter? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: But, perhaps, he does not exist; may I not have acquired the knowledge of just and unjust in some other way? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Did I, then? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Do you mean by''how,''Socrates, whether we suffered these things justly or unjustly? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Do you mean to say that the contest is not with these? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: How can we, Socrates? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: How could we? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: How so? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: How was that? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: I entirely believe you; but what are the sort of pains which are required, Socrates,--can you tell me? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: In what respect? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Of whom are you speaking, Socrates? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Once more, what do you mean? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Perhaps, Socrates, you are not aware that I was just going to ask you the very same question-- What do you want? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: The Muses do you mean, Socrates? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: There again; what do you mean? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What am I to consider? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What are they? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What caution? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What do you mean, Socrates; why do you say so? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What do you mean? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What do you mean? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What do you mean? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What have you in your thoughts, Socrates? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What is it? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What is that? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What ought I to have said? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What qualities? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: What was that? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Who is he, Socrates? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Why are you so sure? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Why is that? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Why, are they not able to teach? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Why, did you not say that I know nothing of the just and unjust? |
1676 | ALCIBIADES: Why, what others are there? |
1676 | And are you, Alcibiades, a freeman? |
1676 | And do you know whether you are a freeman or not? |
1676 | And does that which gives it to the state give it also to the individual, so as to make him consistent with himself and with another? |
1676 | And what is the aim of that other good counsel of which you speak? |
1676 | And what is their aim? |
1676 | And what is your motive in annoying me, and always, wherever I am, making a point of coming? |
1676 | And who do them? |
1676 | At what price would you be willing to be deprived of courage? |
1676 | But granting, if I must, that you have perfectly divined my purposes, why is your assistance necessary to the attainment of them? |
1676 | But has he the knowledge which is necessary for carrying them out? |
1676 | But to be good in what? |
1676 | But to command what-- horses or men? |
1676 | But what business? |
1676 | But when is a city better? |
1676 | Can we really be ignorant of the excellent meaning of the Delphian inscription, of which we were just now speaking? |
1676 | Can you tell me why? |
1676 | Did you never observe how great is the property of the Spartan kings? |
1676 | Does Alcibiades know? |
1676 | Does he cut with his tools only or with his hands? |
1676 | Does he not take care of them when he takes care of that which belongs to his feet? |
1676 | Does he take care of himself when he takes care of what belongs to him? |
1676 | Does not the art of measure? |
1676 | Equestrian affairs? |
1676 | For who always does justice to himself, or who writes with equal care at all times? |
1676 | Have you not remarked their absence? |
1676 | He is going to persuade the Athenians-- about what? |
1676 | How can there be agreement about matters which the one party knows, and of which the other is in ignorance? |
1676 | I who put the question, or you who answer me? |
1676 | Is he good in the sense which Alcibiades means, who is also bad? |
1676 | Is it not disgraceful? |
1676 | Is it not true? |
1676 | Is not that clear? |
1676 | Let me begin then by enquiring of you whether you allow that the just is sometimes expedient and sometimes not? |
1676 | Look at the matter thus: which would you rather choose, good or evil? |
1676 | Now is this courage good or evil? |
1676 | Or did you think that you knew? |
1676 | Or is self- knowledge a difficult thing, which few are able to attain? |
1676 | SOCRATES: A difference of just and unjust is the argument of those poems? |
1676 | SOCRATES: A man is a good adviser about anything, not because he has riches, but because he has knowledge? |
1676 | SOCRATES: About that again the diviner will advise better than you will? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Again, he who cherishes his body cherishes not himself, but what belongs to him? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Again; you sometimes accompany the lyre with the song and dance? |
1676 | SOCRATES: All just things are honourable? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And Alcibiades is my hearer? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And I am the lover who goes not away, but remains with you, when you are no longer young and the rest are gone? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And I called the excellence in wrestling gymnastic? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And I in talking use words? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And I was right? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And a man is good in respect of that in which he is wise? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And about number, will not the same person persuade one and persuade many? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And all this I prove out of your own mouth, for I ask and you answer? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And are honourable things sometimes good and sometimes not good, or are they always good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And are some dishonourable things good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And are you going to get up in the Athenian assembly, and give them advice about writing? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And are you not aware of the nature of this perplexity, my friend? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And are you now conscious of your own state? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And as much as is best? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And as much as is well? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And at such times as are best? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And before they have virtue, to be commanded by a superior is better for men as well as for children? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And by gymnastic we take care of our hands, and by the art of graving rings of that which belongs to our hands? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And by gymnastic we take care of the body, and by the art of weaving and the other arts we take care of the things of the body? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And by how much greater? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And can not you persuade one man about that of which you can persuade many? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And can there be any matters greater than the just, the honourable, the good, and the expedient? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And can they teach the better who are unable to teach the worse? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And can we ever know what art makes a man better, if we do not know what we are ourselves? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And can you be persuaded better than out of your own mouth? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And can you tell me on what grounds the master of gymnastics would decide, with whom they ought or ought not to close, and when and how? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And did you not say, that if I had not spoken first, you were on the point of coming to me, and enquiring why I only remained? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do we by shoemaking take care of our feet, or by some other art which improves the feet? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do we know of any part of our souls more divine than that which has to do with wisdom and knowledge? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do you know anything but what you have learned of others, or found out yourself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do you know how to ascend into heaven? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do you know how to escape out of a state which I do not even like to name to my beauty? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do you mean by friendship agreement or disagreement? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do you think and perplex yourself about the preparation of food: or do you leave that to some one who understands the art? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And do you think that you will sustain any injury if you take care of yourself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And does he use his eyes in cutting leather? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And does not a man use the whole body? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And does the body rule over itself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And evil in respect of that in which he is unwise? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And failing, will he not be miserable? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And for as long a time as is better? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And happiness is a good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And have I not been the questioner all through? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And he who acts well is happy? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And he who knows not the things which belong to himself, will in like manner be ignorant of the things which belong to others? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And how can you say,''What was I to do''? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And how does this happen? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And if any one has fallen in love with the person of Alcibiades, he loves not Alcibiades, but the belongings of Alcibiades? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And if he falls into error will he not fail both in his public and private capacity? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And if he knows not the affairs of others, he will not know the affairs of states? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And if so, not he who has riches, but he who has wisdom, is delivered from his misery? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And if they know, they must agree together and not differ? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And if we did not know our own belongings, neither should we know the belongings of our belongings? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And if we want to instruct any one in them, we shall be right in sending him to be taught by our friends the many? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And in like manner the harper and gymnastic- master? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And in the same way the instrument of the harper is to be distinguished from the harper himself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And in this case, too, is your judgment perplexed? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And is not the same person able to persuade one individual singly and many individuals of the things which he knows? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And is self- knowledge such an easy thing, and was he to be lightly esteemed who inscribed the text on the temple at Delphi? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And is the art of the pilot evil counsel? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And is the good expedient or not? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And life and courage are the extreme opposites of death and cowardice? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And more than four years ago you were a child-- were you not? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And most mischievous and most disgraceful when having to do with the greatest matters? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And now let me ask you what is the art with which we take care of ourselves? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And private individuals? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And self- knowledge we agree to be wisdom? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And so you will act rightly and well? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And sometimes honourable and sometimes not? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And suppose that you were going to steer a ship into action, would you only aim at being the best pilot on board? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And taking proper care means improving? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And talking and using words have, I suppose, the same meaning? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And that of which you can persuade either is clearly what you know? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And that which is better is also nobler? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And that which uses is different from that which is used? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the courage which is shown in the rescue is one thing, and the death another? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the good is expedient? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the greatest goods you would be most ready to choose, and would least like to be deprived of them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the happy are those who obtain good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the honourable is the good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the next step will be to take care of the soul, and look to that? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the reason why you involuntarily contradict yourself is clearly that you are ignorant? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the same art improves the feet which improves the rest of the body? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the same holds of the balance? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the shoe in like manner to the foot? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the soul rules? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the user is not the same as the thing which he uses? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And the user of the body is the soul? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And these, as you were saying, are what perplex you? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And they are honourable in so far as they are good, and dishonourable in so far as they are evil? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And they are not in the habit of deliberating about wrestling, in the assembly? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And they are what you would most desire to have, and their opposites you would least desire? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And they obtain good by acting well and honourably? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And they ought to go to war with those against whom it is better to go to war? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And this is the reason why their arts are accounted vulgar, and are not such as a good man would practise? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And this will be he who knows number, or the arithmetician? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And two years ago, and three years ago, and four years ago, you knew all the same? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And virtue to a freeman? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And was not the art of which I spoke gymnastic? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And we admit that the user is not the same with the things which he uses? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what are the objects in looking at which we see ourselves? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what art makes each individual agree with himself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what art makes each of us agree with himself about the comparative length of the span and of the cubit? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what do you call the art of fellow- citizens? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what is nobler is more becoming? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what is that of which the absence or presence improves and preserves the order of the city? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what is the art which improves our shoes? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what sort of an art is this? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what will become of those for whom he is acting? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of a state? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And when did you discover them-- not, surely, at the time when you thought that you knew them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And when did you think that you were ignorant-- if you consider, you will find that there never was such a time? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And when individuals are doing their own work, are they doing what is just or unjust? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And when individuals do what is just in the state, is there no friendship among them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And when it is better? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And when we take care of our shoes, do we not take care of our feet? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And when you speak of gentlemen, do you mean the wise or the unwise? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And will not he who is ignorant fall into error? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And would a woman agree with a man about the science of arms, which she has never learned? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And would you advise the Athenians to go to war with the just or with the unjust? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And would you have been willing to learn or to examine what you supposed that you knew? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And would you have ever learned or discovered anything, if you had not been willing either to learn of others or to examine yourself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And would you say that they knew the things about which they differ? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And you must give the citizens virtue, if you mean to administer their affairs rightly or nobly? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And you the answerer? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And you would have a proof that they were bad teachers of these matters, if you saw them at variance? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And you would term the rescue of a friend in battle honourable, in as much as courage does a good work? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And you, whom he taught, can do the same? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And, O my friend, is not the condition of a slave to be avoided? |
1676 | SOCRATES: And, if I may recur to another old instance, what art enables them to rule over their fellow- singers? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Are not those who are well born and well bred most likely to be perfect in virtue? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Are they ruling over the signal- men who give the time to the rowers? |
1676 | SOCRATES: As I am, with you? |
1676 | SOCRATES: As I was saying before, you will look only at what is bright and divine, and act with a view to them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: As bad as death, I suppose? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Ask yourself; are you in any perplexity about things of which you are ignorant? |
1676 | SOCRATES: At any rate, thus much has been admitted, that the art is not one which makes any of our possessions, but which makes ourselves better? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But can a man give that which he has not? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But can a man, Alcibiades, agree with a woman about the spinning of wool, which she understands and he does not? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But can they be said to understand that about which they are quarrelling to the death? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But did we not say that the actual ruling principle of the body is man? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But evil because of the death which ensues? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But evil in respect of death and wounds? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But good counsel? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But he who cherishes his money, cherishes neither himself nor his belongings, but is in a stage yet further removed from himself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But he who loves the soul goes not away, as long as the soul follows after virtue? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But he who loves your soul is the true lover? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But how is this, friend Alcibiades? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But if we have no self- knowledge and no wisdom, can we ever know our own good and evil? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But in respect of the making of garments he is unwise? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But is this always the case, and is a man necessarily perplexed about that of which he has no knowledge? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But looking at anything else either in man or in the world, and not to what resembles this, it will not see itself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But may we say that the union of the two rules over the body, and consequently that this is man? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But over men? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But should we ever have known what art makes a shoe better, if we did not know a shoe? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But since neither the body, nor the union of the two, is man, either man has no real existence, or the soul is man? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But the tool is not the same as the cutter and user of the tool? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But what is the other agreement of which you speak, and about what? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But when people think that they do not know, they entrust their business to others? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But would you say that the good are the same as the bad? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But you would admit, Alcibiades, that to take proper care of a thing is a correct expression? |
1676 | SOCRATES: But, perhaps you mean that they rule over flute- players, who lead the singers and use the services of the dancers? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Cities, then, if they are to be happy, do not want walls, or triremes, or docks, or numbers, or size, Alcibiades, without virtue? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Come, now, I beseech you, tell me with whom you are conversing?--with whom but with me? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Did not I ask, and you answer the question? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Do you not see, then, that mistakes in life and practice are likewise to be attributed to the ignorance which has conceit of knowledge? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Do you remember our admissions about the just? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Do you see the reason why, or shall I tell you? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Do you take refuge in them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: For the art which takes care of our belongings appears not to be the same as that which takes care of ourselves? |
1676 | SOCRATES: For the builder will advise better than you will about that? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Have we not made an advance? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Have you not the intention which I attribute to you? |
1676 | SOCRATES: He uses his hands too? |
1676 | SOCRATES: He whose knowledge only extends to the body, knows the things of a man, and not the man himself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: He will not know what he is doing? |
1676 | SOCRATES: He would not go to war, because it would be unlawful? |
1676 | SOCRATES: How? |
1676 | SOCRATES: I am asking if you ever knew any one who did what was dishonourable and yet just? |
1676 | SOCRATES: I suppose that the use of arms would be regarded by you as a male accomplishment? |
1676 | SOCRATES: I suppose that we begin to act when we think that we know what we are doing? |
1676 | SOCRATES: I suppose, because you do not understand shipbuilding:--is that the reason? |
1676 | SOCRATES: I will explain; the shoemaker, for example, uses a square tool, and a circular tool, and other tools for cutting? |
1676 | SOCRATES: In that mirror you will see and know yourselves and your own good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: In the first place, will you be more likely to take care of yourself, if you are in a wholesome fear and dread of them, or if you are not? |
1676 | SOCRATES: In what sort of virtue? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Individuals are agreed with one another about this; and states, equally? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Is anything more required to prove that the soul is man? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Is that a question which a magnanimous soul should ask? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Is this because you think life and courage the best, and death and cowardice the worst? |
1676 | SOCRATES: It is subject, as we were saying? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Leaving the care of our bodies and of our properties to others? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Let me ask you whether better natures are likely to be found in noble races or not in noble races? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Let me take the hand as an illustration; does not a ring belong to the finger, and to the finger only? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Look at the matter yet once more in a further light: he who acts honourably acts well? |
1676 | SOCRATES: No, indeed, and we ought to take counsel together: for do we not wish to be as good as possible? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Nor about divination? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Nor an economist? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Nor are states well administered, when individuals do their own work? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Nor can there be friendship, if friendship is agreement? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Nor men by women when they do their own work? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Nor should we know that we were the persons to whom anything belonged, if we did not know ourselves? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Nor should we know what art makes a ring better, if we did not know a ring? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Not, surely, over horses? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Now let us put the case generally: whenever there is a question and answer, who is the speaker,--the questioner or the answerer? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Now the question which I asked was whether you conceive the user to be always different from that which he uses? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Or about the touch of the lyre? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Or on a voyage? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Or reaping the harvest? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Or suppose that I ask and you tell me the letters which make up the name Socrates, which of us is the speaker? |
1676 | SOCRATES: So you said before, and I must again ask, of whom? |
1676 | SOCRATES: That is to say, I, Socrates, am talking? |
1676 | SOCRATES: That was not what you were saying before; and what do you mean now by affirming that friendship exists when there is no agreement? |
1676 | SOCRATES: That would be the business of the teacher of the chorus? |
1676 | SOCRATES: That would be the office of the pilot? |
1676 | SOCRATES: The bad, then, are miserable? |
1676 | SOCRATES: The husbandmen and the other craftsmen are very far from knowing themselves, for they would seem not even to know their own belongings? |
1676 | SOCRATES: The lover of the body goes away when the flower of youth fades? |
1676 | SOCRATES: The shoemaker, for example, is wise in respect of the making of shoes? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then a man is not the same as his own body? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then about what concerns of theirs will you advise them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then acting well is a good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then by gymnastic we take care of our feet, and by shoemaking of that which belongs to our feet? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then by shoemaking we take care of our shoes? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then he is good in that? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then he who bids a man know himself, would have him know his soul? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then he who is not wise and good can not be happy? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then how can they teach them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then if temperance is the knowledge of self, in respect of his art none of them is temperate? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then if the eye is to see itself, it must look at the eye, and at that part of the eye where sight which is the virtue of the eye resides? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then in taking care of what belongs to you, you do not take care of yourself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then in that he is bad? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then in their knowledge there is no agreement of women and men? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then let me put the matter in another way: what do you call the Goddesses who are the patronesses of art? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then let us compare our antecedents with those of the Lacedaemonian and Persian kings; are they inferior to us in descent? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then neither the physician regarded as a physician, nor the trainer regarded as a trainer, knows himself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then such a man can never be a statesman? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then that is not the principle which we are seeking? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then the art which takes care of each thing is different from that which takes care of the belongings of each thing? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then the money- maker has really ceased to be occupied with his own concerns? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then the rescue of one''s friends is honourable in one point of view, but evil in another? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then the shoemaker and the harper are to be distinguished from the hands and feet which they use? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then there was a time when you thought that you did not know what you are now supposed to know? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then they may be expected to be good teachers of these things? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then this is ignorance of the disgraceful sort which is mischievous? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then to the bad man slavery is more becoming, because better? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then upon this view of the matter the same man is good and also bad? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then vice is only suited to a slave? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then we may truly conceive that you and I are conversing with one another, soul to soul? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then what affairs? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then what are the deliberations in which you propose to advise them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then what do you mean by this friendship or agreement about which we must be wise and discreet in order that we may be good men? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then what is the meaning of being able to rule over men who use other men? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then what shall we say of the shoemaker? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then what will be the subject of deliberation about which you will be justified in getting up and advising them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then who is speaking? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then whom do you call the good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then women are not loved by men when they do their own work? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then you are a good adviser about the things which you know? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then you are not perplexed about what you do not know, if you know that you do not know it? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then you did not learn them by discovering them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then you suppose yourself even when a child to have known the nature of just and unjust? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then you think that cowardice is the worst of evils? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then you, too, would address them on principles of justice? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then, Alcibiades, the just is expedient? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then, if the argument holds, what we find to be honourable we shall also find to be good? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Then, upon your view, women and men have two sorts of knowledge? |
1676 | SOCRATES: There is no subject about which they are more at variance? |
1676 | SOCRATES: They could not teach you how to play at draughts, which you would acknowledge( would you not) to be a much smaller matter than justice? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Those of whom you speak are ruling over men who are using the services of other men? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Very good; and can you tell me how long it is since you thought that you did not know the nature of the just and the unjust? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Very good; but did you ever know a man wise in anything who was unable to impart his particular wisdom? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Very true; and is there not something of the nature of a mirror in our own eyes? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Well, and did Pericles make any one wise; did he begin by making his sons wise? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Well, and in reference to your own case, do you mean to remain as you are, or will you take some pains about yourself? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Well, but are the many agreed with themselves, or with one another, about the justice or injustice of men and things? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Well, but did he make your brother, Cleinias, wise? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Well, but do you imagine that the many would differ about the nature of wood and stone? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Well, naval affairs? |
1676 | SOCRATES: What art makes cities agree about numbers? |
1676 | SOCRATES: What is he, then? |
1676 | SOCRATES: What is the inference? |
1676 | SOCRATES: What sort of affairs? |
1676 | SOCRATES: What things? |
1676 | SOCRATES: What would you say of courage? |
1676 | SOCRATES: What, do you not wish to be persuaded? |
1676 | SOCRATES: When does a man take care of his feet? |
1676 | SOCRATES: When it is well to do so? |
1676 | SOCRATES: When they are doing something or nothing? |
1676 | SOCRATES: When they are sick? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Which is gymnastic? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Which of us now says that two is more than one? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Which of us, then, was the speaker? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Who are good in what? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Who, then, are the persons who make mistakes? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Why, you know that knowledge is the first qualification of any teacher? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Why, you surely know that our city goes to war now and then with the Lacedaemonians and with the great king? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Will you be troubled at having questions to answer? |
1676 | SOCRATES: Yes, I do; and what is the name of the art which is called after them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: You and the state, if you act wisely and justly, will act according to the will of God? |
1676 | SOCRATES: You do, then, mean, as I was saying, to come forward in a little while in the character of an adviser of the Athenians? |
1676 | SOCRATES: You mean about shipbuilding, for example, when the question is what sort of ships they ought to build? |
1676 | SOCRATES: You mean that about them we should have recourse to horsemen? |
1676 | SOCRATES: You mean that we should have recourse to sailors about them? |
1676 | SOCRATES: You mean, when they deliberate with whom they ought to make peace, and with whom they ought to go to war, and in what manner? |
1676 | SOCRATES: You would feel no doubt; and for this reason-- because you would know? |
1676 | Suppose I were to ask you which is the greater number, two or one; you would reply''two''? |
1676 | Suppose that I ask you again, as I did just now, What art makes men know how to rule over their fellow- sailors,--how would you answer? |
1676 | Suppose you were to ask me, what is that of which the presence or absence improves or preserves the order of the body? |
1676 | Surely not about building? |
1676 | Then has he enquired for himself? |
1676 | They can not, of course, be those who know? |
1676 | To take an instance: Would he not say that they should wrestle with those against whom it is best to wrestle? |
1676 | To what does the word refer? |
1676 | Was not that said? |
1676 | Were you then in a state of conscious ignorance and enquiry? |
1676 | What do you say to a year ago? |
1676 | What is that by the presence or absence of which the state is improved and better managed and ordered? |
1676 | Who is he? |
1676 | Why, he asks, should he not learn of them the nature of justice, as he has learned the Greek language of them? |
1676 | Will he not be likely to have his constitution ruined? |
1676 | Will you tell me how? |
1676 | Would not his meaning be:--That the eye should look at that in which it would see itself? |
1676 | You would say the same? |
1676 | and do they not run to fetch the same thing, when they want a piece of wood or a stone? |
1676 | and if men, under what circumstances? |
1676 | and when does he take care? |
1676 | are they not agreed if you ask them what they are? |
1676 | if at the time you did not know whether you were wronged or not? |
1676 | what art can give that agreement? |
36735 | 3, 2c( wherefore do ye tempt the Lord? |
36735 | And the inference is often erroneous, as in the answer to the question,"Was he drunk?" |
36735 | At first, as in the case of the child, the problem of the genesis of things was conceived anthropomorphically: the question"How did the world arise?" |
36735 | HUBERT( Huybrecht) VAN EYCK(? |
36735 | How is it, he asks, that a man is so irresistibly drawn towards a woman? |
36735 | How long is the"transaction"to be treated as lasting? |
36735 | JOHN( Jan) VAN EYCK(? |
36735 | Sed quis absconditos ejus recessus aut subterraneas abyssos pervestigavit? |
36735 | Should the country of refuge try him in its own courts according to its own laws, or deliver him up to the country whose laws he has broken? |
36735 | The two questions, What is the real nature of the transaction referred to in a document? |
36735 | Thus to the question propounded in the New Testament--"Are there few that be saved?" |
36735 | Uriel replies:"Lovest thou that people better than He that made them?" |
36735 | What ought to be treated as"the immediate and natural effect of continuing action,"and, for that reason, as part of the_ res gestae_? |
36735 | When a person who has committed an offence in one country escapes to another, what is the duty of the latter with regard to him? |
36735 | and, What is the meaning of a document? |
36735 | first shaped itself to the human mind under the form"Who made the world?" |
36735 | ii.-iv.? |
36735 | quam multa nobis animalia antea ignota offert novus orbis? |
21735 | A mareeny- piece, you noodle,cried Billy;"do n''t ye onderstand the genel''m''n wot''s a sittin''on judgment on''ee? |
21735 | A nice little buoy this,said Billy, looking at it with the eye and air of a connoisseur;"wot''s its name?" |
21735 | All ready to hoist, Jerry? |
21735 | All ready? |
21735 | All well and hearty, I hope? |
21735 | Am I? |
21735 | Amy, dear,said Katie, with an extremely innocent look at her friend,"do huntsmen in this part of England usually take` everything as they go?'' |
21735 | An''what more did he say? |
21735 | An''who be the lifeboat- men, measter? |
21735 | An''wot are you breakin''the Queen''s laws for like that? |
21735 | And a boy? |
21735 | And how did you expect to escape bein''nabbed and put in limbo as a vagrant? |
21735 | And so,said Katie, still keeping up her fictitious indignation,"you come to beg money from me?" |
21735 | And what do you think? |
21735 | And what if I do risk their lives?--they ai n''t worth much, either,_ I''m_ sure? |
21735 | And why not? |
21735 | And you do n''t know his name, nor where he lives? |
21735 | And you have told me the worst-- told me_ all_? |
21735 | Another loan, I suppose? |
21735 | Any more o''that sort comin''? |
21735 | Anything_ with_ it, sir? |
21735 | Are you one of the stewards? |
21735 | Are you sure that cage is strong enough? |
21735 | Arrah, did n''t ye read of it? |
21735 | At Ramsgate? |
21735 | Billy, my boy,he said, with a leer that was meant to be at once amiable and patronising,"you and I suit each other very well, do n''t we?" |
21735 | But we would n''t go up in thick weather, stoopid,said Moy,--"wot ud be the use? |
21735 | But what makes you think I''m going to leave him? |
21735 | But_ was_ there a boy in it? |
21735 | By the way, what''s that I''ve heard,said Jack Shales,"about Mr Durant findin''out that he''d know''d Billy Towler some years ago?" |
21735 | Can it be,he murmured in a sepulchral voice, looking up with an expression of horror,"that I love them_ both_? |
21735 | Come now, Jack Shales,he added, after a short pause,"ye do n''t call that square, do''ee?" |
21735 | Come, Billy, this ai n''t friendly, is it, after all I''ve done for you? |
21735 | D''ye think the herring are worth that? |
21735 | D''you happen to know a man of the name of Jones in the town? |
21735 | D''you know anything about him? |
21735 | D''you think you could manage that? |
21735 | Did you not refer to him just now? |
21735 | Do n''t Mrs Moy live in Ramsgate? |
21735 | Do n''t these lights sometimes break adrift? |
21735 | Do n''t ye see the fog a- comin''down like the wolf on the fold, an''ai n''t it my dooty to play a little tshune for the benefit o''the public? |
21735 | Do n''t you, Morley? |
21735 | Do you happen to know anything,asked Mr Larks, as he prepared to follow,"about a man of the name of Jones? |
21735 | Do you often see dead bodies floating past? |
21735 | Do you? 21735 Does one of the seven deal largely in cured fish and own a small sloop?" |
21735 | For how much? |
21735 | H''m; how did you make that discovery, my boy? |
21735 | Hallo, Nora,''ow are''ee, gal? |
21735 | Has he not bin good to''ee? |
21735 | Have a pull, lad? 21735 Have some beer?" |
21735 | Have you seen the old gentleman? |
21735 | Have''ee got that work- box done? |
21735 | He has no other faults, I hope? |
21735 | Here you are, putt that in the post at Yarmouth, will''ee, like a good fellow? |
21735 | How can you talk of such a thing at such a time? |
21735 | How did the poor gal take it? |
21735 | How far off may it be? |
21735 | How much, sir? |
21735 | I say, Neptune,he added, looking up into Dick''s face,"wot''s yer name?" |
21735 | I say, my lad,he asked, stopping and becoming suddenly grave,"where d''you come from?" |
21735 | I suppose,he said, pointing towards the sea, as he was about to quit the room,"that that is the floating light?" |
21735 | I wonder, Dick, what ever could have induced Mrs Moy to marry such a fellow as you? |
21735 | I wonder,thought Queeker,"if Fan-- ah, I mean Katie-- could do that sort of thing?" |
21735 | Indeed? |
21735 | Is Mrs Moy at home? |
21735 | Is he aboard just now? |
21735 | Is that tackle rigged, Welton? |
21735 | Is this all you came to tell me? |
21735 | MY DEAREST FANNY,--Is it necessary for me to say that your last short letter has filled my heart with joy? 21735 Me?" |
21735 | Moy, eh? |
21735 | No,replied Jack drily;"not bein''on the sick- list I han''t got time to read the papers, d''ye see?" |
21735 | No; but,said Billy, almost whimpering with anxiety,"is Nora_ really_ ill?" |
21735 | No; that schooner with the raking masts an''topsail? |
21735 | No? 21735 None of''em girls?" |
21735 | Not at all-- a-- no, not at all; the fact is, I ran up the steps rather hastily, and-- how do you do, Miss Durant? 21735 Och, do n''t ye know?" |
21735 | Of course I know that; I''ve heerd''em all call ye that often enough, but I''spose you''ve got another? |
21735 | Oh, that''s a boy, is it? 21735 Oh, that? |
21735 | Oh, there''s a_ boat_ in the secret mission, is there? |
21735 | Open the door, will you? |
21735 | Please, miss,said Billy,"you knows me, I think?" |
21735 | Quite right, quite right-- see a little of life first, eh? 21735 Safe?" |
21735 | Sewed up a mouth cut all the way to the ear? |
21735 | Shall we make for land? |
21735 | Since ye know her so well, Paddy, p''raps you can tell us what''s her cargo? |
21735 | So you managed the insurance, did you? |
21735 | Sorrow wan of me knows, sir, but it conveys the idee somehow; do n''t it, now? |
21735 | Stay,said Jones,"I''ll open the skylight-- don''t you find the cabin close?" |
21735 | Supposin'',said he,"you does lose the sloop an''cargo, why, wot then?--the sloop an''cargo cost somethin'', I dessay?" |
21735 | Talkin''of the Durants, I s''pose ye''ve heard that there''s goin''to be a weddin''in that family soon? |
21735 | That''s splendid, Jerry; but what''s the meanin''of` skurn?'' |
21735 | The North Goodwin; ca n''t''ee read? 21735 Think it''s going to blow hard?" |
21735 | This, then, was the beginning of your love for the profession? |
21735 | To have stopped where he was, I s''pose you would say? |
21735 | Very good,retorted Jones,"and I suppose you do n''t object to earn a little money in an easy way?" |
21735 | Very good,retorted the man, putting on his hat carelessly,"I''ll take back that message with your compliments-- eh?" |
21735 | W''ich d''ye mean? |
21735 | Was it a wooden one? |
21735 | Was there a man in it? |
21735 | We will sit in judgment on the work as it proceeds-- won''t we, Billy? |
21735 | Well, if I had been at the bottom o''the sea, what then? 21735 Well, old Cochin- china, wot''s up?" |
21735 | Well, that_ was_ a tremendous experience to begin with,said Mr Durant, laughing;"and so it made you a doctor?" |
21735 | Well-- ye--"Was it a big one? |
21735 | Were they lost? |
21735 | What are ye howlin''there for, an''blockin''up the Queen''s highway like that, you precious young villain? |
21735 | What are you firing for? |
21735 | What be goin''on here, measter? |
21735 | What brings you so far out of your beat, Walleye? |
21735 | What brutes do you refer to? |
21735 | What dreary darkness would ensue-- what moral wastes devoid of dew-- If no strong hearts of men like you Beat for charming woman? 21735 What game may_ you_ be up to?" |
21735 | What if mothers were no more; If wives and sisters fled our shore, And left no sweethearts to the fore-- No sign of darling woman? 21735 What is it that puzzles you, Katie?" |
21735 | What is it, Moy? |
21735 | What is that fellow about? |
21735 | What is the mate''s name? |
21735 | What is your name, boy? |
21735 | What letter? |
21735 | What was it brought you to Yarmouth, Walleye? |
21735 | What were earth and all its joys; what were wealth with all its toys; what the life of men and boys But for lovely woman? 21735 What''s the name o''the passenger that came aboard at Gravesend, and what makes him take a fancy to such a craft as this?" |
21735 | What''s your business, Morley? |
21735 | What, that blot? |
21735 | Where are they all away to? |
21735 | Where away, Jack? |
21735 | Where does the meet take place to- day, Tom? |
21735 | Where does your brother live? |
21735 | Where_ are_ the stirrups? |
21735 | Who can it be? |
21735 | Who is this little boy, father? |
21735 | Who would rise at duty''s call; Who would fight to win or fall; Who would care to live at all, Were it not for woman? |
21735 | Why do n''t''ee speak to me, Morley? |
21735 | Why is it so fond of him? |
21735 | Why should you wish to give any reason at all, Jim, and above all,_ that_ reason? |
21735 | Why, Jim, is that you, my son? |
21735 | Why, Queeker, you seem to be displeased with that drawing, eh? 21735 Why, what are you all afraid of?" |
21735 | Will you do me the favour to read this letter? |
21735 | Will you? |
21735 | Wot iver is that? |
21735 | Wot then? |
21735 | Wot''s that you''re sayin''about Dick Moy? |
21735 | Would it be a great loss? |
21735 | Would you like to see the meet, Mr Queeker? |
21735 | Yes, what will Neptune say to it? |
21735 | You are Mr Welton, I presume? |
21735 | You are a good swimmer, then, I doubt not? |
21735 | You do n''t mean to tell me,said Billy, catching his breath,"that there warn''t never no such a wessel as the Skylark?" |
21735 | You know nothing more? |
21735 | You remember the story of the ostrich that was run down? 21735 You will leave no stone unturned?" |
21735 | ` Sure it''s niver the dactur''s assistant ye are?'' 21735 ` Was it, though?'' |
21735 | ''Ave''ee seed a ghost?" |
21735 | ''Cause why? |
21735 | ("What indeed?" |
21735 | Ai n''t the gong enough at sich times?" |
21735 | And do n''t I know that the earth is like a orange, flattened at the poles? |
21735 | And do_ you_ come along with us Wel-- Wel-- what''s the name of--? |
21735 | And why do''ee always put me off with vague answers when I git upon that subject? |
21735 | And''ow do''ee like Ramsgate, Nora, now you''ve had a fair trial of it?" |
21735 | And, after all, what is a floating light but a man- of- war? |
21735 | Are you aware, Mr Jones, that your character for honesty has of late been called in question?" |
21735 | Be there mony loifboat men in Ramsgate, measter?" |
21735 | But I can not stick by him if--""If what?" |
21735 | But do you suppose I''d come here for the mere amusement of hearing you give me the lie?" |
21735 | But how comes it, Stanney, that you took kindly to the work at last, for, when I knew you first you could not bear the idea of becoming a doctor?" |
21735 | But one of the bystanders said to me while we were looking at the child,--"` What do you think should be done, sir?'' |
21735 | But what has come o''Billy Towler? |
21735 | But what''s the use of askin''? |
21735 | But what, he thought, was the use of repentance now? |
21735 | But who will blame them for lack of faith in the circumstances? |
21735 | But-- but have n''t we seen it before? |
21735 | By- the- bye, I hope you intend to stay some time, and that you will take up your quarters with me? |
21735 | Ca n''t I read and write, and do a bit o''cypherin''? |
21735 | Come on, will you?" |
21735 | Come to breakfast, I hope? |
21735 | Come, I''ve got a noo boat, what d''ye say to go an''have a sail? |
21735 | Could it not? |
21735 | Could n''t ye lend me your brush, Jack? |
21735 | D''ye see that bit o''floating wreck a- head? |
21735 | D''ye understand that?" |
21735 | D''ye understand?" |
21735 | Dear Jim, you wo n''t forsake him, will you, even though he should insult, even though he should_ strike_ you?" |
21735 | Did n''t I misremember that? |
21735 | Did they take him in at once? |
21735 | Did you ever know such a provoking thing?" |
21735 | Did you ever yet find me out, father, tellin''you a lie?" |
21735 | Do''ee happen to know, Mr Morley,''ow it is that bald heads an''fat corpuses a''most always go together?" |
21735 | Eh, pussy, shall I tread on your tail?" |
21735 | Fanny joins her with a fine contralto, I believe, and Queeker, too, he sings-- a-- a what is it, Queeker?--a bass or a baritone-- eh?" |
21735 | Has he gone back to the what''s-''is- name-- the Cavern, eh?" |
21735 | Has n''t she been a perfect angel to the poor-- especially to poor old men-- since she come to Ramsgate? |
21735 | Have I made all that quite plain to you?" |
21735 | Have you got a father?" |
21735 | Have you never heard of the famous Ramsgate lifeboat?" |
21735 | Have you not heard that we are to have as passengers on the voyage home two leopards, an elephant, and a rhinoceros?" |
21735 | Have you not read of their daring exploits in the newspapers? |
21735 | How did you leave your father, and what brings you here? |
21735 | I hope you are_ quite_ well?" |
21735 | I hope you have n''t hurt yourself?" |
21735 | I suppose you are aware of his_ penchant_ for old women, Fan?" |
21735 | I suppose you will approve my preference of the sea?" |
21735 | I wonder what Neptune will say to that?" |
21735 | I wonder wot my old ooman will say to that?" |
21735 | I''m not in your way, am I?" |
21735 | If you gets on a shoal, wot then? |
21735 | If your ship goes down; w''y, wot then? |
21735 | In the midst of his mirth Mr Durant suddenly turned to Queeker and said--"By the way, what made you so late of coming to- night, Queeker? |
21735 | Is he difficult to hold in?" |
21735 | Is n''t it delightful? |
21735 | Is n''t it strange that papa should have discovered one so soon? |
21735 | It was now Jones''s turn to be angry, yet it was evident that he made an effort to restrain his feelings, as he replied,"Well, what if I have? |
21735 | It wo n''t be all plain sailin'', but what is a man worth if he ai n''t fit to stand a little rough- and- tumble? |
21735 | Jim,"he cried,"surely you do n''t mean to risk your life for a dog?" |
21735 | Nora''s face grew pale as she said--"Oh, Jim, are you_ sure_ there is nothing worse that he is likely to teach him? |
21735 | Now, how comes it that you have turned up in this out- of- the- way part of the world? |
21735 | Now, then, MacGowl, look out-- are you ready?" |
21735 | Now, then, what brought you here?" |
21735 | Of course he began to think,"Is it not possible to prevent this delay?" |
21735 | Oh, wot ever shall I do? |
21735 | Queeker, who had listened up to this point with breathless attention, suddenly said--"D''you mean to say that you_ really_ did that?" |
21735 | Ramsgate, where in all the earth, Beside the lovely sea, Can any town of note or worth Be found to equal thee? |
21735 | So deeply did he take the matter to heart, that he suffered one small boy to inquire pathetically,"if''e''d bin long in that state o''grumps?" |
21735 | That''s the sort o''thing for you and me, Billy, eh boy?" |
21735 | The old gentleman''s expression changed instantly, and he said with much severity--"Well, Mr Jones, what do_ you_ want?" |
21735 | Then, after a pause,` Is the assistant within?'' |
21735 | Was it an iron boat?" |
21735 | Was it too late to mend? |
21735 | Was there any other Jones in the town who owned a small sloop and dealt largely in cured fish? |
21735 | Well, but wot_ is_ your name?" |
21735 | Well, lass, how are''ee; and how''s the old ooman?" |
21735 | What brings you here, lad, at such an hour?" |
21735 | What cared he for love, either successful or unrequited, now? |
21735 | What is the matter with him?" |
21735 | What more could be said of a man- of- war? |
21735 | What should we say of the jeweller who would devote all his time and care to the case that held his largest diamond, and neglect the gem itself? |
21735 | What think you of that, lad?" |
21735 | What were you going to tell me?" |
21735 | What would ye call this now-- a landscape or a portrait?" |
21735 | What''s wrong with it?" |
21735 | What''s''is name-- somebody''s_ son_?" |
21735 | Where do you live?" |
21735 | Where ever have you come from this time?" |
21735 | Where, oh whither shall I fly? |
21735 | Who at such a time would not pray God''s best blessing on the lifeboat, on the stalwart men who man it, and on the noble Society which supports it? |
21735 | Who may_ you_ be?" |
21735 | Who''s to say that I may n''t risk my life if I see fit? |
21735 | Why did n''t you tell me that?" |
21735 | Why do''ee stick by him-- that''s what I want to know-- when everybody says he''ll be the ruin of you? |
21735 | Why not Ramsgate? |
21735 | Why should I leave a poor dog to drown when it will only cost a ducking at the worst? |
21735 | Why should I not say boldly that it''s all for love of you?" |
21735 | Why should the heavenly constellations shine? |
21735 | Why should the noise of mirth and music sound? |
21735 | Why should the weather evermore be fine? |
21735 | Why should this rolling ball go whirling round? |
21735 | Why, wot are''ee starin''at now? |
21735 | Will you step below?" |
21735 | Will''ee go, lad?" |
21735 | Wot on earth_ are_ you up to, and where in all the world are''ee goin''to?" |
21735 | You ai n''t goin''to show the white feather and become a milksop, are you?" |
21735 | You can only die once, d''ye see?" |
21735 | You know the poor feller is in love wi''Jones''s daughter, an''he did n''t like for to help to convict his own father- in- law_ to be_, d''ye see? |
21735 | You remember what his last request was?" |
21735 | You remember when you and I went over it together, Amy?" |
21735 | You ride, of course?" |
21735 | ai n''t that the flash of a gun?" |
21735 | and are them there boys too?" |
21735 | and let be hurl''d Dark, dread, unmitigated darkness o''er the world? |
21735 | and what sort of place is the Grotto? |
21735 | asked Stanley,"and thus become the cause of ships going headlong to destruction?" |
21735 | base ingrate that I am, is there no way; no back- door by which--?" |
21735 | come down, will''ee?" |
21735 | cried Queeker, starting up when this thought struck him, as if it had struck him too hard and he were about to retaliate,--"Why not? |
21735 | d''you know what time it is slack water out there in the afternoon just now?" |
21735 | do n''t''ee see its name up there on its side, in letters as long as yerself?" |
21735 | exclaimed Katie in surprise,"why, how did you manage to get here?" |
21735 | exclaimed the old gentleman in surprise;"come in, my dear sir; did you stumble against the door? |
21735 | got no friends and nothin''to do?" |
21735 | has he?" |
21735 | have n''t we been after it_ all day_?" |
21735 | he cried gaily,"where on earth am I?" |
21735 | he exclaimed in unmitigated surprise;"is it-- can it be? |
21735 | heave us a rope, will you?" |
21735 | it''s you, is it?" |
21735 | now, I fancy?" |
21735 | shouted a voice from below,"wot''s all the hurry?" |
21735 | still in the poetic vein?" |
21735 | that''s stoopid now; I''d''ave''ad some of''em girls for variety''s sake-- wot''s the use of''em?" |
21735 | what is that scamp up to?" |
21735 | what sort of birds?" |
21735 | whistled the boy, opening his eyes and showing his teeth;"beaks an''maginstrates, eh?" |
21735 | why not Ramsgate? |
21735 | why not? |
21735 | will you_ save_ me?'' |
21735 | wot have''ee got here?" |
21735 | ye spalpeen, is that the way ye trait people?'' |
21735 | you''re afraid, are you? |
21735 | young Walleye, why, what ever has come over you?" |
21262 | What dost? |
21262 | With lofty words stout Tragedy,she said,"Why tread''st me down? |
21262 | rebound? |
21262 | (_ Voices without_) What noise is that? |
21262 | (_ after a pause_) Lived he not greatly? |
21262 | --who was he? |
21262 | 10 Ask''st why I change? |
21262 | 10 Could I therefore her comely tresses tear? |
21262 | 10 Fool, can''st thou him in thy white arms embrace? |
21262 | 10 Nor is her husband wise: what needs defence, When unprotected[243] there is no expense? |
21262 | 10 Please her-- her hate makes others thee abhor; If she discards thee, what use serv''st thou for? |
21262 | 10 Venus, why doublest thou my endless smart? |
21262 | 10 Who''ll set the fair- tressed Sun in battle- ray While Mars doth take the Aonian harp to play? |
21262 | 10 Will you make shipwreck of your honest name, And let the world be witness of the same? |
21262 | 20 Another rails at me, and that I write, Yet would I lie with her, if that I might: Trips she, it likes me well; plods she, what than[253]? |
21262 | 20 Of Varro''s name, what ear shall not be told? |
21262 | 20 Perhaps he''ll tell how oft he slew a man, Confessing this, why dost thou touch him than? |
21262 | 20 To Thracian Orpheus what did parents good? |
21262 | 20 What age of Varro''s name shall not be told, And Jason''s Argo,[226] and the fleece of gold? |
21262 | 20 What need''st thou war? |
21262 | 20 What, should I tell her vain tongue''s filthy lies, And, to my loss, god- wronging perjuries? |
21262 | 20 With Venus''game who will a servant grace? |
21262 | 230 Vessels of brass, oft handled, brightly shine: What diffèrence betwixt[15] the richest mine And basest mould, but use? |
21262 | 278- 9--"Art thou some god, some angel, or some devil, That makest my blood cold and my hair to_ stare_?" |
21262 | 30 Exclud''st a lover, how would''st use a foe? |
21262 | 30 Or he who warred and wandered twenty year? |
21262 | 30 Such bliss is only common to us two, In this sweet good why hath a third to do?" |
21262 | 30 Whither go''st thou, hateful nymph? |
21262 | 30 Why see I lines so oft received and given? |
21262 | 340 Then said her Cupid- prompted spirit,"Shall I Sing moans to such delightsome harmony? |
21262 | 39 And sweet- touched harp that to move stones was able? |
21262 | 40 Art careless? |
21262 | 40 Can not a fair one, if not chaste, please thee? |
21262 | 40 Dost punish[208] me because years make him wane? |
21262 | 40 Elms love the vines; the vines with elms abide, Why doth my mistress from me oft divide? |
21262 | 40 Thee, sacred poet, could sad flames destroy? |
21262 | 40 Why grieve I? |
21262 | 60 Can deaf ears[396] take delight when Phæmius sings? |
21262 | 60 What man does good, but he consumes thereby? |
21262 | 60 Why fight''st''gainst odds? |
21262 | 63 when? |
21262 | 680 Why grapples Rome, and makes war, having no foes? |
21262 | 70 What dost, unhappy? |
21262 | 9 when? |
21262 | About thy neck shall he at pleasure skip? |
21262 | Ah, whither is thy breast''s soft nature fled? |
21262 | Alas, he runs too far about the ring; What dost? |
21262 | All[206] could I bear; but that the wench should rise, Who can endure, save him with whom none lies? |
21262 | Am I the only rogue and vagabond in the world? |
21262 | Amber- tress''d[258] is she? |
21262 | And I grow faint as with some spirit haunted? |
21262 | And I may come? |
21262 | And call''st my verse fruits of an idle quill? |
21262 | And fiercely knock''st thy breast that open lies? |
21262 | And first she[344] said,"When will thy love be spent, O poet careless of thy argument? |
21262 | And justly: for her praise why did I tell? |
21262 | And long admiring say,"By what means learned, Hath this same poet my sad chance discern''d?" |
21262 | And look you here-- and there again, look you!--what make you of the picture he hath presented? |
21262 | And pierced my liver with sharp needle- points? |
21262 | And saw you not[ my] Nan to- day, My mother''s maid have you not seen? |
21262 | And shall he triumph long before his time, And, having once got head, still shall he reign? |
21262 | And some one on the earth-- as fair to him-- For, lo you!--is''t not she? |
21262 | And term''st[218] my works fruits of an idle quill? |
21262 | And to its winter, lady? |
21262 | And who, like earth, would spend that dower of heaven, With rank desire to joy it all at first? |
21262 | And why dire poison give you babes unborn? |
21262 | And, O, brought he not back, Through the thick- million''d catacombs of ages, Helen''s unsullied loveliness to his arms? |
21262 | And[437] hidden secrets openly to bewray? |
21262 | Are all things thine? |
21262 | Are you mad? |
21262 | Are you thinking of me? |
21262 | As to your sword and dagger play, I''ve got the trick o''the eye and wrist-- who was he? |
21262 | At last he came: O, who can tell the greeting These greedy lovers had at their first meeting? |
21262 | Aurora, whither slid''st thou? |
21262 | Ay me, poor soul, why is my cause so good? |
21262 | Beauty gives heart; Corinna''s looks excell; Ay me, why is it known to her so well? |
21262 | Because thy belly should rough wrinkles lack, Wilt thou thy womb- inclosèd offspring wrack? |
21262 | Before Callimachus one prefers me far; Seeing she likes my books, why should we jar? |
21262 | Behold, what gives the poet but new verses? |
21262 | But what availed this faith? |
21262 | But what had been more fair had they been kept? |
21262 | But when he lost his hair, where had he been? |
21262 | But why dost thou compare thee to a dog In that for which all men despise a dog? |
21262 | But why doth Crassus tell his lies so rife, Of bridges, towns, and things that have no life? |
21262 | But, Cineas, why expect you more of me Than I of you? |
21262 | But, though I like a swelling flood was driven, And as a prey unto blind anger given, Was''t not enough the fearful wench to chide? |
21262 | Can I but loathe a husband grown a bawd? |
21262 | Can greatness die thus? |
21262 | Can''st touch that hand wherewith some one lies dead? |
21262 | Ceres, what sports[418] to thee so grievous were, As in thy sacrifice we them forbear? |
21262 | Chuff- like had I not gold and could not use it? |
21262 | Clown, from my journey why dost me deter? |
21262 | Continued from this world? |
21262 | Did not Pelides whom his spear did grieve, Being required, with speedy help relieve? |
21262 | Dost joy to have thy hookèd arrows shaked In naked bones? |
21262 | Dost me of new crimes always guilty frame? |
21262 | Envy, why carp''st thou my time''s spent so ill? |
21262 | Ere these were seen, I burnt: what will these do? |
21262 | Err I? |
21262 | Err we? |
21262 | Even her I had, and she had me in vain, What might I crave more, if I ask again? |
21262 | Fool, can''st thou lie in his enfolding space? |
21262 | Golden- haired Ceres crowned with ears of corn, Why are our pleasures by thy means forborne? |
21262 | Great are thy kingdoms, over- strong and large, Ambitious imp, why seek''st thou further charge? |
21262 | Had foreign wars ill- thriv''d, or wrathful France Pursu''d us hither, how were we bested, When, coming conqueror, Rome afflicts me thus? |
21262 | Hard- hearted Porter, dost and wilt not hear? |
21262 | Hath any rose so from a fresh young maid, As she might straight have gone to church and prayed? |
21262 | He said so with his last words!--there stands his friends and brother players-- put them to their Testament if he said not he did it himself? |
21262 | Heaven- star, Electra,[428] that bewailed her sisters? |
21262 | How say you, sweet, will you dance with me? |
21262 | How so? |
21262 | How would''st thou flow wert thou a noble flood? |
21262 | I could always find the soundings of a quart tankard, or empty a pasty in half his time, and swear as rare oaths between whiles-- who was he? |
21262 | I cried;"transport''st thou my delight? |
21262 | I exercise no arts-- Whence is my influence? |
21262 | I knew your speech( what do not lovers see?) |
21262 | I know a wench reports herself Corinne; What would not she give that fair name to win? |
21262 | I[257] think what one undecked would be, being drest; Is she attired? |
21262 | If thy great fame in every region stood? |
21262 | In sleeping shall I fearless draw my breath? |
21262 | In vain, why fly''st back? |
21262 | In woody groves is''t meet that Ceres reign, And quiver- bearing Dian till the plain? |
21262 | Is conquest got by civil war so heinous? |
21262 | Is it? |
21262 | Is''t women''s love my captive breast doth fry? |
21262 | Know''st not this head[401] a helm was wo nt to bear? |
21262 | Knowing her scapes, thine honour shall increase; And what less labour than to hold thy peace? |
21262 | Like a dull cipher, or rude block I lay, Or shade, or body was I, who can say? |
21262 | Look!--said I not so? |
21262 | Mad stream, why dost our mutual joys defer? |
21262 | Mars,''tis thou inflam''st The threatening Scorpion with the burning tail, And fir''st his cleys:[649] why art thou thus enrag''d? |
21262 | May I come? |
21262 | May spells and drugs do silly souls such harms? |
21262 | Men foolishly do call it virtuous: What virtue is it, that is born with us? |
21262 | Mine own desires why should myself not flatter? |
21262 | Must Pompey''s followers, with strangers''aid( Whom from his youth he brib''d), needs make him king? |
21262 | My fingers paddle, too, in blood-- is''t mine? |
21262 | My ways are your ways-- a murrain on your beauties!--has your brain shot forth skylarks as your eyes do sparks? |
21262 | My wench''s vows for thee what should I show, Which stormy south winds into sea did blow? |
21262 | Nay, primrose gentleman, think''st me a saint? |
21262 | Nemesis answers,"What''s my loss to thee? |
21262 | Nor fearèd they thy body to annoy? |
21262 | Nor shamefully her coat pull o''er her crown, Which to her waist her girdle still kept down? |
21262 | Nor that I study not the brawling laws, Nor set my voice to sail in every cause? |
21262 | Nor thunder, in rough threatenings, haughty pride? |
21262 | O faintly- join''d friends, with ambition blind, Why join you force to share the world betwixt you? |
21262 | Of Jason''s Argo and the fleece of gold? |
21262 | Of speaking well why do we learn the skill, Hoping thereby honour and wealth to gain? |
21262 | Or Thamyris in curious painted things? |
21262 | Or any back, made rough with stripes, embrace? |
21262 | Or is I think my wish against the stars? |
21262 | Or is my heat of mind, not of the sky? |
21262 | Or shall I plain some god against me wars? |
21262 | Or songs amazing wild beasts of the wood? |
21262 | Or that I study not the tedious laws; And prostitute my voice in every cause? |
21262 | Or that unlike the line from whence I sprung[219] War''s dusty honours are refused being young? |
21262 | Or that( unlike the line from whence I sprung) War''s dusty honours I pursue not young? |
21262 | Or threads which spider''s slender foot draws out, Fastening her light web some old beam about? |
21262 | Or voice that how to change the wild notes knew? |
21262 | Or why slips down the coverlet so oft? |
21262 | Or woful Hector whom wild jades did tear? |
21262 | Oxen in whose mouths burning flames did breed? |
21262 | Perhaps thy sacred priesthood makes thee loath: Tell me to whom mad''st thou that heedless oath?" |
21262 | Phoebus, what rage is this? |
21262 | Proteus what should I name? |
21262 | Punished I am, if I a Roman beat: Over my mistress is my right more great? |
21262 | Query,"high- aspiring?" |
21262 | Rash boy, who gave thee power to change a line? |
21262 | Save!--is it death I feel-- it can not be death? |
21262 | Say that thy love with Cephalus were not known, Then thinkest thou thy loose life is not shown? |
21262 | Seek you, for chastity, immortal fame, And know that some have wrong''d Diana''s name? |
21262 | Seest thou not yon farmer''s son? |
21262 | Shall I sit gazing as a bashful guest, While others touch the damsel I love best? |
21262 | Shall I, poor soul, be never interdicted? |
21262 | Shall towns be swallow''d? |
21262 | Shall water be congeal''d and turn''d to ice? |
21262 | Should I solicit her that is so just,-- To take repulse, and cause her show my lust? |
21262 | So having paus''d a while, at last she said,"Who taught thee rhetoric to deceive a maid? |
21262 | Speak, when shall this thy long- usurped power end? |
21262 | Such rampired gates besiegèd cities aid; In midst of peace why art of arms afraid? |
21262 | That cry!--what may that mean? |
21262 | The lady, folded In the long mantle, coming down the street? |
21262 | The other smiled( I wot), with wanton eyes: Err I, or myrtle in her right hand lies? |
21262 | The ships, whose godhead in the sea now glisters? |
21262 | The sport being such, as both alike sweet try it, Why should one sell it and the other buy it? |
21262 | The sun turned back from Atreus''cursed table? |
21262 | The true reading is"Flere genis electra tuas, auriga, sorores?" |
21262 | Think''st thou I ne''er saw men in love before? |
21262 | This bed and that by tumbling made uneven? |
21262 | This is the reward Of Marlowe''s love!--why, why did I delay? |
21262 | Thou long time his love did know; Why shouldst thou not use him best? |
21262 | Thou''st been reading much of late, By the moon''s light, I fear me? |
21262 | Thoughtful sir, How fare you? |
21262 | To mine own self have I had strength so furious, And to myself could I be so injurious? |
21262 | To stay thy tresses white veil hast thou none? |
21262 | Ungrate, why feign''st new fears, and dost refuse? |
21262 | Up man!--where art? |
21262 | Vain things why wish I? |
21262 | Was not one wench enough to grieve my heart? |
21262 | We seek that, through thee, safely love we may; What can be easier than the thing we pray? |
21262 | Were love the cause it''s like I should descry him, Or lies he close and shoots where none can spy him? |
21262 | What Tereus, what Iäson you provokes, To plague your bodies with such harmful strokes? |
21262 | What can harm_ me_? |
21262 | What day and night to travel in her quest? |
21262 | What day was that, which all sad haps to bring, White birds to lovers did not[424] always sing? |
21262 | What demon in the air with unseen arm Hath turn''d my unchain''d fury against myself? |
21262 | What dost with seas? |
21262 | What end of mischief? |
21262 | What good to me will either Ajax bring? |
21262 | What have I done to be hung up like a miracle? |
21262 | What helps it me of fierce Achill to sing? |
21262 | What helps it thou wert given to please my wench? |
21262 | What helps my haste? |
21262 | What if a man with bondwomen offend, To prove him foolish did I e''er contend? |
21262 | What is there, in this world, of worth, That we should prize it soe? |
21262 | What is''t comes hither, like a gust of wind? |
21262 | What madness is''t to tell night- pranks[436] by day? |
21262 | What makes my bed seem hard seeing it is soft? |
21262 | What man will now take liberal arts in hand, Or think soft verse in any stead to stand? |
21262 | What mean''st by discarding me, and why is it? |
21262 | What mischief shall ensue? |
21262 | What needs she tire[200] her hand to hold the quill? |
21262 | What profit to us hath our pure life bred? |
21262 | What say_ you_, Master Marlowe? |
21262 | What seats for their deserts? |
21262 | What secret becks in banquets with her youths, With privy signs, and talk dissembling truths? |
21262 | What shall I do? |
21262 | What should I talk of men''s corn reap''d by force, And by him kept of purpose for a dearth? |
21262 | What sweet thought is there but I had the same? |
21262 | What thirsty traveller ever drunk of thee? |
21262 | What to have lain alone in empty bed? |
21262 | What voice is that? |
21262 | What will my age do, age I can not shun, Seeing[383] in my prime my force is spent and done? |
21262 | What''s i''the wind,--nobleman, or gentleman, or a brain fancy-- am not I at hand? |
21262 | What, are there gods? |
21262 | What, doubt''st thou us? |
21262 | What, if thy mother take Diana''s[130] bow, Shall Dian fan when love begins to glow? |
21262 | What, not Alpheus in strange lands to run, The Arcadian virgin''s constant love hath won? |
21262 | What, waste my limbs through some Thessalian charms? |
21262 | When have not I, fixed to thy side, close laid? |
21262 | Whence knows Corinna that with thee I played? |
21262 | Where both deliberate, the love is slight: Who ever lov''d, that lov''d not at first sight? |
21262 | Where''s thy attire? |
21262 | Where-- where? |
21262 | Whither goes my standard? |
21262 | Whither now shall these old bloodless souls repair? |
21262 | Whither runn''st thou, that men and women love not? |
21262 | Whither turn I now? |
21262 | Whither? |
21262 | Who but a soldier or a lover''s bold To suffer storm- mixed snows with night''s sharp cold? |
21262 | Who dares affirm that Sylla dare not fight? |
21262 | Who fears these arms? |
21262 | Who now will care the altars to perfume? |
21262 | Who sees not war sit by the quivering judge, 320 And sentence given in rings of naked swords, And laws assail''d, and arm''d men in the senate? |
21262 | Who should have Priam''s wealthy substance won, If watery Thetis had her child fordone? |
21262 | Who that our bodies were comprest bewrayed? |
21262 | Who thinks her to be glad at lovers''smart, And worshipped by their pain and lying apart? |
21262 | Who''s he? |
21262 | Whose name is it, if she be false or not, So she be fair, but some vile tongues will blot? |
21262 | Why Philomel dost Tereus''lewdness mourn? |
21262 | Why add''st thou stars to heaven, leaves to green woods, And to the deep[289] vast sea fresh water- floods? |
21262 | Why am I sad, when Proserpine is found, And Juno- like with Dis reigns under ground? |
21262 | Why burns thy brand, why strikes thy bow thy friends? |
21262 | Why do the planets Alter their course, and vainly dim their virtue? |
21262 | Why dost thou, Marcus, in thy misery Rail and blaspheme, and call the heavens unkind? |
21262 | Why dost thy ill- kembed tresses''loss lament? |
21262 | Why enviest me? |
21262 | Why gird''st thy cities with a towerèd wall, Why let''st discordant hands to armour fall? |
21262 | Why in thy glass dost look, being discontent? |
21262 | Why in your priest, then, call you that offence, That shines in you, and is[90] your influence?" |
21262 | Why look you sad? |
21262 | Why me that always was the soldier found, Dost harm, and in thy[284] tents why dost me wound? |
21262 | Why might not then my sinews be enchanted? |
21262 | Why should I lose, and thou gain by the pleasure, Which man and woman reap in equal measure? |
21262 | Why should you worship her? |
21262 | Why so, lady? |
21262 | Why stay I? |
21262 | Why tak''st increasing grapes from vinetrees full? |
21262 | Why was I blest? |
21262 | Why weep''st and spoil''st with tears thy watery eyes? |
21262 | Will you for gain have Cupid sell himself? |
21262 | Wilt lying under him, his bosom clip? |
21262 | Wilt nothing do, why I should wish thy death? |
21262 | Wilt promise To see me for one"good night"ere you sleep? |
21262 | Wilt thou live single still? |
21262 | With cruel hand why dost green apples pull? |
21262 | With virgin wax hath some imbast[386] my joints? |
21262 | Would''st swear my life away so lightly? |
21262 | Yet in the meantime wilt small winds bestow, That from thy fan, moved by my hand, may blow? |
21262 | You remember him? |
21262 | [ 130] The original has--"Quid? |
21262 | [ 230] Envy, why twitt''st thou me, my time''s spent ill? |
21262 | [ 311] Why with hid irons are your bowels torn? |
21262 | [ 330] What should I do with fortune that ne''er fails me? |
21262 | [ 363]"At non invidiæ vobis Cephëia virgo est, Pro male formosa jussa parente mori?" |
21262 | [ 452] 10 And some guest viewing watery Sulmo''s walls, Where little ground to be enclosed befalls,"How such a poet could you bring forth?" |
21262 | [ 647] O gods, what death prepare ye? |
21262 | [ 671] Fie, lusty younker, what do you here, Not dancing on the green to- day? |
21262 | [ 672] Fie, Nan, why use thy old lover so, For any other new- come guest? |
21262 | [ Greek: oiktos]? |
21262 | _ crista_? |
21262 | am not I the true gallant of my time? |
21262 | and of heaven reproaches pen? |
21262 | art thou aye gravely play''d? |
21262 | can you tell? |
21262 | canst thou rise with power no more? |
21262 | hath heaven''s strait fingers no more graces For such as Hero[68] than for homeliest faces? |
21262 | her rarest hue? |
21262 | or by my books[425] is she so known? |
21262 | or do the turnèd hinges sound, And opening doors with creaking noise abound? |
21262 | or is''t sleep forbids thee hear, Giving the winds my words running in thine ear? |
21262 | say, Pompey, are these worse Than pirates of Sicilia? |
21262 | shall the earth be barren? |
21262 | shall the thicken''d air Become intemperate? |
21262 | she cries,"to love why art ashamed?" |
21262 | teeth, Thebes''first seed? |
21262 | the Muses''Tempe thine? |
21262 | what colonies To rest their bones? |
21262 | what of them? |
21262 | what store of ground For servitors to till? |
21262 | what to have ta''en small rest? |
21262 | where shall I fall, Thus borne aloft? |
21262 | who cares? |
21262 | who was he? |
21262 | who will not go to meet them? |
21262 | why made king to refuse[393] it? |
21262 | why wanderest here alone? |
21262 | with th''earth thou wert content; Why seek''st not heaven, the third realm, to frequent? |
21262 | with what plague Mean ye to rage? |
10130 | A quarrel already? |
10130 | Ah,said she,"did he marry me to famish me? |
10130 | Alas,said Isabel,"what poor ability is there in me to do him good? |
10130 | And have you nuns no farther privileges? |
10130 | And how stand you affected to his wish? |
10130 | And if I do speak to her, my lord, what then? |
10130 | And what boon has my annual petitioner to beg to- day? |
10130 | And what is her history? |
10130 | And what kind of woman, and of what age is she? |
10130 | And what,said Iago,"if some thoughts very vile should have intruded into my breast, as where is the palace into which foul things do not enter?" |
10130 | And who is mamma? |
10130 | Are not these large enough? |
10130 | Are there no other tokens agreed upon between you, that Mariana must observe? |
10130 | Are you a comedian? |
10130 | Be they of much import? |
10130 | Believe me, king of shadows,answered Puck,"it was a mistake: did not you tell me I should know the man by his Athenian garments? |
10130 | But are you sure,said Ursula,"that Benedick loves Beatrice so entirely?" |
10130 | But thou, O son of Thetis,said he,"why dost thou disparage the state of the dead? |
10130 | But,said Celia,"does it therefore follow that you should love his son dearly? |
10130 | By what? |
10130 | Do not you love him, madam? |
10130 | Do thou then stay, Eurylochus? |
10130 | Do you not know,said I,"how mean It is to be thus begging seen? |
10130 | Have not saints lips, and pilgrims too? |
10130 | Have you e''er learned to read? |
10130 | Here, sir,said Mustard- seed;"what is your will?" |
10130 | How came you into this place,said Juliet,"and by whose direction?" |
10130 | How comes it now, my husband,said she,"O how comes it that I have lost your love?" |
10130 | How is this? |
10130 | How now, Marina,said the dissembling Dionysia,"do you weep alone? |
10130 | How,said Petruchio,"does she say she is busy and can not come? |
10130 | Is he not a handsome man? |
10130 | Is he not able to pay the money? |
10130 | Is it possible? |
10130 | Is not Claudio a villain that has slandered, scorned, and dishonoured my cousin? |
10130 | Is there more work? |
10130 | Is there no remedy? |
10130 | My sweet love,said the queen,"what will you have to eat? |
10130 | No,replied Hero,"but who dare tell her so? |
10130 | Now, sister, what is the comfort? |
10130 | O Circe,he cried;"that is impossible: who shall steer my course to Pluto''s kingdom? |
10130 | O Circe,he replied,"how canst thou treat of love or marriage with one whose friends thou hast turned into beasts? |
10130 | O fie, you naughty child, what have you done? 10130 O was she so?" |
10130 | Plead you to me, fair dame? |
10130 | Pray, Mr. Lamb,said Godwin when he first made Lamb''s acquaintance,"are you toad or frog?" |
10130 | Pray, my good friend,said the king to the old shepherd,"what fair swain is that talking with your daughter?" |
10130 | Tarry, rash fairy,said Oberon;"am not I thy lord? |
10130 | These jests are out of season,said Antipholis:"where did you leave the money?" |
10130 | Think you I can fetch a resolution from flowery tenderness? 10130 Think you on your soul, that Claudio has wronged Hero?" |
10130 | This was your motive for wishing to go to Paris,said the countess,"was it? |
10130 | To what end? |
10130 | To whom should I complain? 10130 To- morrow?" |
10130 | Well, my brave spirit,said Prospero to Ariel,"how have you performed your task?" |
10130 | Well, what is your suit? |
10130 | What desperate adventure has brought Ulysses to these regions,said Achilles,"to see the end of dead men, and their foolish shades?" |
10130 | What does the poetry or the value of the ring signify? |
10130 | What is Fancy? |
10130 | What is the matter, sir? |
10130 | What is the matter? |
10130 | What mean you? |
10130 | What means this woman? |
10130 | What shall become of this? |
10130 | What should I speak? |
10130 | What washing does my daughter speak of? |
10130 | When was this? |
10130 | Whence come you, sir? |
10130 | Where is Cobweb? |
10130 | Where is Pease- blossom? |
10130 | Wherefore,said Miranda,"did they not that hour destroy us?" |
10130 | Which is the Favourite? |
10130 | Whither are you bound? |
10130 | Who governs here? |
10130 | Who has taught you to spell so prettily, my little maid? |
10130 | Who is it that speaks? |
10130 | Who is there? |
10130 | Who is this maid? |
10130 | Who will believe you, Isabel? |
10130 | Why do you give me this shame? |
10130 | Why her unhappy brother? |
10130 | Why not do it, Sir, To- day? |
10130 | Why thus do you cling to my neck, and enfold me, What fear unimparted your quiet devours? |
10130 | Why would she have me killed? |
10130 | Will you allow me, ladies,I continued,"to persuade you to amuse yourselves in this way? |
10130 | Will you kill me? |
10130 | You do-- what sum then usually, my love, Is there deposited? 10130 You might do much,"said Olivia:"what is your parentage?" |
10130 | _ Suffer little Children_...(?) |
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10130 | --"What do you know, Cesario?" |
10130 | --"Where is your sister and Hortensio''s wife?" |
10130 | ---- her memory of Mackery End(? |
10130 | Again the countess repeated her question,"Do you love my son?" |
10130 | And Telemachus said,"Is this the man who can tell us tidings of the king my father?" |
10130 | And he said,"What chief or what ruler is this, that thou commendest so highly, and sayest that he perished at Troy? |
10130 | And now, Hero giving her attendant a hint that it was time to change the discourse, Ursula said,"And when are you to be married, madam?" |
10130 | And now, Thaisa being restored from her swoon, said,"O my lord, are you not Pericles? |
10130 | Anthonio finding he was musing within himself and did not answer, and being impatient for the money, said,"Shylock, do you hear? |
10130 | Are they true? |
10130 | Are you no fairy? |
10130 | As soon as he could speak, he said,"O you gods, why do you make us love your goodly gifts, and then snatch those gifts away?" |
10130 | BROTHER What harm now do I do? |
10130 | Beatrice, who had been listening with breathless eagerness to this dialogue, when they went away, exclaimed,"What fire is in my ears? |
10130 | Bellarius knew her too, and softly said to Cadwal,"Is not this boy revived from death?" |
10130 | Benedick had been listening with great eagerness to this conversation; and he said to himself when he heard Beatrice loved him,"Is it possible? |
10130 | Benedick remained, and assisted Beatrice to recover Hero from her swoon, saying,"How does the lady?" |
10130 | Benedick then said,"Is there any way to show such friendship? |
10130 | Benedick was the first who spoke, and he said,"Lady Beatrice, have you wept all this while?" |
10130 | But Gonerill excused herself, and said, what need of so many as five- and- twenty? |
10130 | But Olivia would not so lose her husband, and she cried,"Where goes my Cesario?" |
10130 | But are you flesh and blood? |
10130 | But had I not once four or five women who attended upon me?" |
10130 | But his father permitted not, but said,"Look better at me; I am no deity, why put you upon me the reputation of godhead? |
10130 | But rove he did: they had not been One short hour the heath upon, When he was no where to be seen;"Where,"said they,"is William gone?" |
10130 | But the officers cared little for hearkening to the complaints of their prisoner, and they hurried him off, saying,"What is that to us?" |
10130 | But who should tell him so? |
10130 | But, good sir, why do you weep? |
10130 | By her care I''m alive now-- but what retribution Can I for a life twice bestow''d thus confer? |
10130 | Can innocence quake? |
10130 | Can this be true? |
10130 | Can you remember a time before you came to this cell? |
10130 | Did I tell this, who would believe me?" |
10130 | Did you ever imagine that a fresh source of the pathetic would burst forth before us in this trodden and hardened world? |
10130 | Did you not name a tempest, a birth and death?" |
10130 | Do I love her, that I desire to hear her speak again, and feast upon her eyes? |
10130 | Do you dare to die? |
10130 | Do you not see you are doing the very same unkind thing to your play- fellow, that they did to you?" |
10130 | Do you remember how you came here?" |
10130 | Do you think that the poet himself had a sight of The fairies he here does so prettily write of? |
10130 | Dromio still answering, that his mistress had sent him to fetch Antipholis to dinner:"What mistress?" |
10130 | EYES Lucy, what do you espy In the cast in Jenny''s eye That should you to laughter move? |
10130 | Emily,"said my mamma;"can you be the little girl, who used to be so distressed because your cousins would not let you play with their dolls? |
10130 | Even for our kitchens we kill the fowl in season; shall we serve Heaven with less respect than we minister to our gross selves? |
10130 | Every morning when she first saw me, she used to nod her head very kindly, and say,"How do you do, little Margaret?" |
10130 | For Lear''s threats, what could he do to him, whose life was already at his service? |
10130 | For am not I a Philistine? |
10130 | From what could vanity proceed In such a little lisping lad? |
10130 | Has a dog money? |
10130 | Has he lost his wealth at sea? |
10130 | Have I not been defended still From dangers and from death; Been safe preserv''d from ev''ry ill E''er since thou gav''st me breath? |
10130 | Have you forgot our school- day friendship? |
10130 | Have you forgot the wicked witch Sycorax, who with age and envy was almost bent double? |
10130 | He had slain Tybalt, but would he also slay himself, slay his dear lady who lived but in his life? |
10130 | He held Ulysses by the wrist, to stay his entrance; and"Whither wouldest thou go?" |
10130 | He replied,"Where is the duke? |
10130 | He then took out the bracelet, and said,"Know you this jewel, sir? |
10130 | He, nothing daunted by the dreadful ceremonies which he saw, boldly answered,"Where are they? |
10130 | Helena, do you love my son?" |
10130 | Her carriage is waiting at the door to take us, but how can we accept of the invitation after what has happened?" |
10130 | Her voice was the little thin note of a sprite-- There-- d''ye think I have made out a fairy aright? |
10130 | How does it chance my daughter is not with you? |
10130 | How does your lady, and how thrives your love?" |
10130 | How have I offended?" |
10130 | How is it that this still lives in your mind? |
10130 | I am not in a sportive humour now: where is the money? |
10130 | I do love nothing in the world so well as you; is not that strange?" |
10130 | I know A Hebrew woman liveth near, Great lady, shall I bring her here?" |
10130 | I pray you tell me this, Bassanio: if he should break this day, what should I gain by the exaction of the forfeiture? |
10130 | I used to tap at my father''s study- door; I think I now hear him say,"Who is there?--What do you want, little girl?" |
10130 | If Ishmael had engaged so much of my thoughts, how much more so must Mahomet? |
10130 | If in her mind some female pangs arose At sight( and who can blame her?) |
10130 | Indignation seized Æolus to behold him in that manner returned; and he said,"Ulysses, what has brought you back? |
10130 | Is it not well done?" |
10130 | Is it possible a cur should lend three thousand ducats? |
10130 | Is not this statue very like your queen?" |
10130 | Is that an answer for a wife?" |
10130 | Is there no possibility of averting this sore evil? |
10130 | Is there not cause?" |
10130 | It is not a spirit?" |
10130 | It is now no world to trust a woman in.--But what says fame? |
10130 | Just as the coach stopped, miss Frederica said,"Will you be friends with me, Emily?" |
10130 | Know you not each thing we prize Does from small beginnings rise? |
10130 | Lady Elizabeth took hold of her hand, and said,"Miss Lesley, will you permit me to conduct you to the drawing- room?" |
10130 | Leave not your sister to another; As long as both of you reside In the same house, who but her brother Should point her books, her studies guide? |
10130 | Leicester''s School_(? |
10130 | Leonato, in the utmost horror, said to the prince,"My lord, why speak not you?" |
10130 | Looking askance On the fair ruddy countenance Of his young enemy--"Am I A dog, that thou com''st here to try Thy strength upon me with a staff--?" |
10130 | Lowly she bends, says,"Shall I go And call a nurse to thee? |
10130 | Mamma said,"Have you nothing to say to these pretty bees, Louisa?" |
10130 | Many years after Lamb wrote to Barton( August 10, 1827):"Did you ever read my''Adventures of Ulysses,''founded on Chapman''s old translation of it? |
10130 | Marina looked towards the sea, her birthplace, and said,"Is the wind westerly that blows?" |
10130 | Miranda hung upon her father, saying,"Why are you so ungentle? |
10130 | My father was astonished; and he said,"Is this the sullen Elinor? |
10130 | My uncle met me in the passage, and said,"Betsy, will you come and walk with me in the garden?" |
10130 | NURSE GREEN"Your prayers you have said, and you''ve wished Good night: What cause is there yet keeps my darling awake? |
10130 | Often she--"Brother, is this the country that I see?" |
10130 | Oh, Isabel, will you not lend a knee?" |
10130 | Or is it the death of some dear friend that has disturbed his mind?" |
10130 | Or was he only very glad? |
10130 | Or was it vanity indeed? |
10130 | Or would the creatures that lived in those wild woods, come and lick his hand, and flatter him? |
10130 | Orlando, wondering what all this meant, asked him what was the matter? |
10130 | PRINCE"Find what?" |
10130 | Papa said,"What makes you bridle and simper so, Emily?" |
10130 | Portia replied,"It is not so named in the bond, but what of that? |
10130 | Pray, let me ask you, if from far you come-- And do n''t you sometimes find it cumbersome?" |
10130 | ROBERT Let''s see, what were the words I spoke? |
10130 | SISTER Then tell me, brother, and pray mind, Brother, you tell me true: What sort of thing is_ fancy_? |
10130 | Said he,"What mov''d thee to come here, To question warlike men? |
10130 | See, Camillo, would you not think it breathed? |
10130 | Shall I draw the curtain?" |
10130 | Should it then be thus? |
10130 | Sits the wind in that corner?" |
10130 | Speak on; where were you born? |
10130 | THE BROKEN DOLL An infant is a selfish sprite; But what of that? |
10130 | THE OFFER"Tell me, would you rather be Chang''d by a fairy to the fine Young orphan heiress Geraldine, Or still be Emily? |
10130 | THE TEXT One Sunday eve a grave old man, Who had not been at church, did say,"Eliza, tell me, if you can, What text our Doctor took to- day?" |
10130 | Taken away by a stranger under a pretence of a short ride, and brought quite to London, do you not expect some perilous end of this adventure? |
10130 | Tell me your name, my most kind virgin? |
10130 | Tell me, if your art can tell so much, if Banquo''s issue shall ever reign in this kingdom?" |
10130 | The Princess''s affections being gain''d, What but her Sire''s approval now remain''d? |
10130 | The coach too full is found to be: Why is it crammed thus? |
10130 | The countess asked Helena if she had not lately an intent to go to Paris? |
10130 | The countess asked her if she found those words in the letter? |
10130 | The duke asked him, if distress had made him so bold, or if he were a rude despiser of good manners? |
10130 | The duke upon this stopped him, saying,"Whither away so fast, Valentine?" |
10130 | The poems"Clock Striking,""Why not do it, Sir, To- day?" |
10130 | The queen asked him if he had forgotten who it was he was speaking to? |
10130 | The queen replied,"What, jealous Oberon, is it you? |
10130 | Then answer''d Jesse''s youngest son In these words:"What have I done? |
10130 | Then said Ulysses,"Tell me who these suitors are, what are their numbers, and how stands the queen thy mother affected to them?" |
10130 | Thus far a gentleman address''d a bird, Then to his friend:"An old procrastinator, Sir, I am: do you wonder that I hate her? |
10130 | To this the bird seven words did say:"Why not do it, Sir, to- day?" |
10130 | Turning to Banquo, he said,"Do you not hope that your children shall be kings, when what the witches promised to me has so wonderfully come to pass?" |
10130 | Valentine, wondering where all this would end, made answer,"And what would your grace have me to do in all this?" |
10130 | WHAT IS FANCY? |
10130 | WHICH IS THE FAVOURITE? |
10130 | WHY NOT DO IT, SIR, TO- DAY? |
10130 | Were you sent here to praise me?" |
10130 | What are the berries now to him? |
10130 | What could I do, sweet Portia? |
10130 | What do you think of Caroline? |
10130 | What fine chisel could ever yet cut breath? |
10130 | What is a doll? |
10130 | What is colour? |
10130 | What is it I dream on? |
10130 | What is its loss? |
10130 | What is this? |
10130 | What is to be said to him, lady? |
10130 | What not a word? |
10130 | What pleasure canst thou promise, which may tempt the soul of a reasonable man? |
10130 | What shall we compare her to? |
10130 | What should poor Pambo do? |
10130 | What should so poor and old a man as you do at the suitors''tables? |
10130 | What should the cause be? |
10130 | What strength may be compar''d to mine? |
10130 | What the bees which he hath slain? |
10130 | What though the coach is crammed full, The weather very warm; Think you a boy of us is dull, Or feels the slightest harm? |
10130 | What was it you told me the other day,--that your niece Beatrice was in love with signior Benedick? |
10130 | What world is this?" |
10130 | What''s learning to the charms of play? |
10130 | What, can not you quit your wiles and your subtleties, now that you are in a state of security? |
10130 | What, do you call this a sleeve? |
10130 | When Hero had recovered from the swoon into which she had fallen, the friar said to her,"Lady, what man is he you are accused of?" |
10130 | When Valentine and Protheus had ended their visit, and were alone together, Valentine said,"Now tell me how all does from whence you came? |
10130 | When Viola asked to see her face, Olivia said,"Have you any commission from your lord and master to negotiate with my face?" |
10130 | When the duke saw Celia and Rosalind, he said,"How now, daughter and niece, are you crept hither to see the wrestling? |
10130 | Where do you live, young maid? |
10130 | Where is Mustard- seed?" |
10130 | Where is my lord? |
10130 | Where is my wife?" |
10130 | Where is the king, and my brother?" |
10130 | Where now are all their anxious thoughts of home? |
10130 | Where was she born? |
10130 | Where were his attendants and retinue? |
10130 | Where were his flatterers now? |
10130 | Who can call any man friend that dips in the same dish with him? |
10130 | Who is it that calls?" |
10130 | Who is so buoyant, free, and proud, As we home- travellers are? |
10130 | Who is this?" |
10130 | Who is to read them, I do n''t know: who is it that reads Tales of Terror and Mysteries of Udolpho? |
10130 | Why do you start and look pale at my words?" |
10130 | Why does Titania cross her Oberon? |
10130 | Why does the tear stand in your eye? |
10130 | Why had her sisters husbands, if( as they said) they had no love for any thing but their father? |
10130 | Why this foolish under- rating Of my first attempts at Latin? |
10130 | Why, when she gently proffers speech, Do you ungently turn your head? |
10130 | Will you be mine, now you are doubly won?" |
10130 | Will you give me leave to dress you?" |
10130 | With sobs why heaves your breast? |
10130 | Would the bleak air, that boisterous servitor, be his chamberlain, to put his shirt on warm? |
10130 | Would the cool brook, when it was iced with winter, administer to him his warm broths and caudles when sick of an over- night''s surfeit? |
10130 | Would those stiff trees, that had outlived the eagle, turn young and airy pages to him, to skip on his errands when he bade them? |
10130 | You are but ten weeks old to- morrow; What can you know of our loss? |
10130 | [ Illustration]"How say you Sir? |
10130 | _ What is Fancy?_(?) |
10130 | _ What is Fancy?_(?) |
10130 | _ Which is the Favourite?_(?) |
10130 | _ Which is the Favourite?_(?) |
10130 | _ Why not do it, Sir, To- day?_(?) |
10130 | _ Why not do it, Sir, To- day?_(?) |
10130 | and she entered, saying meekly to Petruchio,"What is your will, sir, that you send for me?" |
10130 | and think you that you are unknown?" |
10130 | and what cause he had for making such horrid clamours in the night- time to break their sleeps? |
10130 | and wherefore called Marina?" |
10130 | and why would you be so fond to overcome the famous wrestler? |
10130 | are you so soon tired of your country? |
10130 | art thou prepared to share their fate, from which nothing can ransom thee?" |
10130 | asked Bellarius,"and what is your name?" |
10130 | asked Prospero;"by any other house or person? |
10130 | can you bring me to the sight of Isabel, a novice of this place, and the fair sister to her unhappy brother Claudio?" |
10130 | cried Macbeth;"who can unfix the forest, and move it from its earth- bound roots? |
10130 | cried the king;"what need I fear of thee? |
10130 | do you wilfully give way to their ill manners? |
10130 | for what?" |
10130 | guests, what are you? |
10130 | have you dined?" |
10130 | he said,"what madness from heaven has seized you, that you can laugh? |
10130 | her grotto, against which the luxuriant vine laid forth his purple grapes? |
10130 | her grove crowned with alders and poplars? |
10130 | his flatterers? |
10130 | if his fright proceeded from any mortal? |
10130 | if strength or craft had given him his death''s blow? |
10130 | is my son yet alive? |
10130 | little heedless one, why what Could you be thinking on? |
10130 | lives he in Orchomen, or in Pylus, or is he resident in Sparta, in his uncle''s court? |
10130 | merchants or wandering thieves?" |
10130 | must the first word with which you salute your native earth be an untruth? |
10130 | or did not our present please you? |
10130 | or do you mistrust your kinsfolk and friends in such sort, as without trial to decline their aid? |
10130 | or even ten? |
10130 | or five? |
10130 | or has your government been such as has procured ill will towards you from your people? |
10130 | or,"Is this the way you like this done?" |
10130 | said Isabel:"would you preserve your life by your sister''s shame? |
10130 | said Leonato;"What will this do?" |
10130 | said Orlando,"how well appears in you the constant service of the old world? |
10130 | said Titania, opening her eyes, and the juice of the little purple flower beginning to take effect;"Are you as wise as you are beautiful?" |
10130 | said he,"this is Julia''s ring: how came you by it, boy?" |
10130 | said she,"this is Lysander lying on the ground: is he dead or asleep?" |
10130 | said she,"wherefore art thou Romeo? |
10130 | said she,"why was I born to be mocked and scorned by every one? |
10130 | said the old gentleman;"what letter are you reading there?" |
10130 | say, where And in whose care are those few sheep, That in the wilderness you keep? |
10130 | see you not that your meat drops blood? |
10130 | sir, are you here? |
10130 | thy meats, spiced with poison; or thy wines, drugged with death? |
10130 | we being strangers here, how dare you trust so great a charge from your own custody?" |
10130 | what angel is that I see?" |
10130 | what has worked this miracle?" |
10130 | what music is that?" |
10130 | when he might be waited upon by her servants, or her sister''s servants? |
10130 | why are you gentle, strong and valiant? |
10130 | why are you virtuous? |
10130 | why do you weep?" |
10130 | why?" |
10130 | will you lend the money?" |
10130 | would you believe it? |
10130 | yet who more glad to find the fountain of that noble bounty, which they had thought dried up, still fresh and running? |
37160 | ( 1470? |
37160 | 7- 9?) |
37160 | GABRIELI, GIOVANNI( 1557- 1612? |
37160 | GALE, THOMAS(? 1636- 1702), English classical scholar and antiquarian, was born at Scruton, Yorkshire. |
37160 | What was to be thought, he said, of a spiritual guide, who either could not or would not show the wanderer his way? |
3327 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
3327 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
3327 | Cruel wall,they said,"why do you keep two lovers apart? |
3327 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for you worthy of your praise? |
3327 | Have you any doubt of my love? 3327 Have you come at last,"said he,"long expected and do I behold you after such perils past? |
3327 | Have you heard anything of Arion? |
3327 | Have you the head of Medusa? |
3327 | Is it thus I find you restored to me? |
3327 | Most undutiful and faithless of servants,said she,"do you at last remember that you really have a mistress? |
3327 | O ruler of the gods, if I have deserved this treatment, and it is your will that I perish with fire, why withhold your thunderbolts? 3327 Oh, Pyramus,"she cried,"what has done this? |
3327 | Shall such wickedness triumph? |
3327 | Then Bacchus, for it was indeed he, as if shaking off his drowsiness, exclaimed,''What are you doing with me? 3327 Thine oracle, in vain to be, Oh, wherefore am I thus consigned, With eyes that every truth must see, Lone in the city of the blind? |
3327 | Ungrateful man,she exclaimed,"is it thus you leave me? |
3327 | What fault of mine, dearest husband, has turned your affection from me? 3327 What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? |
3327 | What heart had I left me, during all this, or what ought I to have had, except to hate life and wish to be with my dead subjects? 3327 What herb has such a power?" |
3327 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
3327 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Baldur?" |
3327 | Whence came these stories? 3327 Who would not have been moved with these gentle words of the goddess? |
3327 | Why should you wish to behold me? |
3327 | Will nothing satisfy you but my life? |
3327 | ''What will love not discover? |
3327 | ''Why do you refuse me water?'' |
3327 | AEneas, horror- struck, inquired of his guide what crimes were those whose punishments produced the sounds he hear? |
3327 | AEneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination? |
3327 | After having disobeyed my mother''s commands and made you my wife, will you think me a monster and cut off my head? |
3327 | Alcinous says to Ulysses,"Say from what city, from what regions tossed, And what inhabitants those regions boast? |
3327 | And can any other woman dare more than I? |
3327 | And is Lorenzo''s salamander- heart Cold and untouched amid these sacred fires?" |
3327 | And shall I let you go into such danger alone? |
3327 | And what cowardice makes thee sink under this last danger, who hast been so miraculously supported in all thy former?" |
3327 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
3327 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
3327 | As no one came, Narcissus called again,"Why do you shun me?" |
3327 | Boots it th veil to lift, and give To sight the frowning fates beneath? |
3327 | But Psyche said,"Why, my dear parents, do you now lament me? |
3327 | But a voice from the tower said to her,"Why, poor unlucky girl, dost thou design to put an end to thy days in so dreadful a manner? |
3327 | But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? |
3327 | But how? |
3327 | But if I am unworthy of regard, what has my brother Ocean done to deserve such a fate? |
3327 | But shall he then live, and triumph, and reign over Calydon, while you, my brothers, wander unavenged among the shades? |
3327 | But what has become of my glove?" |
3327 | But what if I offer him to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
3327 | But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feat? |
3327 | But what was to attack this terrible and unapproachable monster? |
3327 | But who can withstand Jupiter? |
3327 | But why ask the gods to do it? |
3327 | Could you keep your course while the sphere was revolving under you? |
3327 | Cupid, beholding her as she lay in the dust, stopped his flight for an instant and said,"O foolish Psyche, is it thus you repay my love? |
3327 | Did he fall by the hands of robbers, or did some private enemy slay him? |
3327 | Do you ask me for proof that you are sprung from my blood? |
3327 | Do you ask why?" |
3327 | Do you not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
3327 | Dying now a second time she yet can not reproach her husband, for how can she blame his impatience to behold her? |
3327 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied,"Would you then, Nisus, refuse to share your enterprise with me? |
3327 | For how could Achilles require the aid of celestial armor if he were invulnerable?) |
3327 | Go home to seek the palace, or lie hid in the woods? |
3327 | Had he lost there a father or brother, or any dear friend? |
3327 | Has earth no more Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?" |
3327 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
3327 | Have I not cause for pride? |
3327 | Have they a foundation in truth, or are they simply dreams of the imagination?" |
3327 | Have you any wish ungratified? |
3327 | Have you learned to feel easy in the absence of Halcyone? |
3327 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
3327 | He saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said,"If so charming in disorder, what would it be if arranged?" |
3327 | He talked with the supposed spirit:"Why, beautiful being, do you shun me? |
3327 | He was loth to give his mistress to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a simple heifer? |
3327 | He, starting from his sleep, cried out,"My daughters, what are you doing? |
3327 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
3327 | His father cried,"Icarus, Icarus, where are you?" |
3327 | How could Hercules take his place? |
3327 | How extricate the youth? |
3327 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
3327 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
3327 | I only wished I might have died With my poor father; wherefore should I ask For longer life? |
3327 | I think we shall be conquered; and if that must be the end of it, why should not love unbar the gates to him, instead of leaving it to be done by war? |
3327 | Is it for this that I have supplied herbage for cattle, and fruits for men, and frankincense for your altars? |
3327 | Is this the reward of my fertility, of my obedient service? |
3327 | Leaning over the bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said,"Do you recognize your Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too much changed my visage? |
3327 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
3327 | Nisus said to his friend,"Do you perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
3327 | Oh, spare me one of so many?!" |
3327 | One day the youth, being separated from his companions, shouted aloud,"Who''s here?" |
3327 | Or have you rather come to see your sick husband, yet suffering from the wound given him by his loving wife? |
3327 | Or would it be better to die with him? |
3327 | Sadly needing help, how could he yet venture, naked as he was, to discover himself and make his wants known? |
3327 | Shaking her ambrosial locks with indignation, she exclaimed,"Am I then to be eclipsed in my honors by a mortal girl? |
3327 | Shall I trust AEneas to the chances of the weather and winds?" |
3327 | Shall OEneus rejoice in his victor son, while the house of Thestius( Thestius was father of Toxeus, Phlexippus and Althea) is desolate? |
3327 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Frey exclaimed,"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
3327 | Skrymir awakening cried out,"What''s the matter? |
3327 | Stretching out her trembling hands towards it, she exclaims,"O, dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?" |
3327 | Suppose I should lend you the chariot, what would you do? |
3327 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is that which in the morning goes on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
3327 | The Trojans heard with joy, and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
3327 | The parents consent( how could they hesitate?) |
3327 | The voice said,''Why do you fly, Arethusa? |
3327 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
3327 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
3327 | This is alluded to by Byron, where, addressing the modern Greeks, he says:"You have the letters Cadmus gave, Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
3327 | Through a marble wilderness? |
3327 | To what deed am I borne along? |
3327 | To which question the river- god replied as follows:"Who likes to tell of his defeats? |
3327 | To whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise, What was thy pity''s recompense? |
3327 | Was then the rumor true that you had perished? |
3327 | What advantage to disclose it now? |
3327 | What could Jupiter do? |
3327 | What has become of them?" |
3327 | What have I done that you should treat me so? |
3327 | What have the cranes to do with him?" |
3327 | What is this fighting about? |
3327 | What is''t you do? |
3327 | What shall he do? |
3327 | What shall he do? |
3327 | What should he do? |
3327 | Where are you going to carry me?'' |
3327 | Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? |
3327 | Where is that love of me that used to be uppermost in your thoughts? |
3327 | Who brought me here? |
3327 | Who lived when thou was such? |
3327 | Why do you hang round my neck and still entreat me? |
3327 | Why should Latona be honored with worship rather than I? |
3327 | Why should he alone escape? |
3327 | Why will you not take a lesson from the tree and the vine, and consent to unite yourself with some one? |
3327 | Will any one deny this? |
3327 | Will you kill your father? |
3327 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
3327 | Woe; great Jove have pity, Listen to my sad entreaty, Yet for what can Hero pray? |
3327 | Would you rather have me away?" |
3327 | Yet can ye relieve my grief? |
3327 | Yet where is your triumph? |
3327 | did he say?" |
3327 | said AEneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life, as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
3327 | she cried;"whither do you fly? |
3624 | Alas, sir, how? 3624 Nay?" |
3624 | Now? |
3624 | Whither so fast? |
3624 | ( Hath he not sin that he her thus beguiled?) |
3624 | ), measure(?). |
3624 | Alas, what shall I wretched wight become? |
3624 | And have not the humble"Parson"and his Brother the"Ploughman"that irresistible pathos which Dickens could find in the simple and the poor? |
3624 | And what is better than jasper? |
3624 | And what is better than wisdom? |
3624 | And what is better than woman? |
3624 | And with that word, the hunt breaking up, the knight and the poet depart to a"long castle with white walls on a rich hill"( Richmond? |
3624 | Apart from the character of the"Parson"and from the"Parson''s Tale,"what is the nature of our evidence on the subject? |
3624 | Are not, the poet could not but ask himself, all things vanity;"as men say, what may ever last?" |
3624 | Art thou come hither to have fame?" |
3624 | But say, if I could manage so that the gold is divided between us two, should I not do thee a friend''s turn?" |
3624 | But since Constance was not slain at the feast, it might be asked: who kept her from drowning in the sea? |
3624 | But whence might this woman have meat and drink, and how could her sustenance last out to her for three years and more? |
3624 | Can we not hear"Madame Eglantine"lisping her"Stratford- atte- Bowe"French as if she were a personage in a comedy by Congreve or Sheridan? |
3624 | Death, what aileth thee That thou should''st not have taken me, When that thou took''st my lady sweet? |
3624 | Eke at the feast who might her body save? |
3624 | How, then, is the catastrophe of the action, the falling away of Cressid from her truth to Troilus, poetically explained? |
3624 | Is it to be looked upon as an integral part of the collection; and, if so, what general and what personal significance should be attached to it? |
3624 | Is not the"Summoner"with his"fire- red cherubim''s face"a worthy companion for Lieutenant Bardolph himself? |
3624 | Is that your loss? |
3624 | Is there no morsel bread that ye do keep? |
3624 | Meet, mate(? |
3624 | Therewith the teares fell from his eyes His youngest son, that three years was of age, Unto him said:"Father, why do ye weep? |
3624 | This, then, seems the appropriate place for briefly reviewing the vexed question-- WAS CHAUCER A WYCLIFFITE? |
3624 | What more natural, after this, than the dream which came to him? |
3624 | What need to make a long discourse of what followed? |
3624 | What true poet has sought to hide, or succeeded in hiding, his moral nature from his muse? |
3624 | What? |
3624 | When will the gaoler bring us our pottage? |
3624 | Where be ye, that I may not with you meet? |
3624 | Who, then, fed Saint Mary the Egyptian in the cavern or in the desert? |
3624 | Who, then, kept Jonas in the belly of the whale, till he was spouted up at Ninive? |
3624 | Why liked me thy youth and thy fairness And of thy tongue the infinite graciousness? |
3624 | Why should I tell more of her complaining? |
3624 | Wycliffism: was Chaucer a Wycliffite? |
3624 | quoth I,"where is she now?" |
3624 | should we speak all day of Holy Writ? |
3624 | what may that be? |
3624 | what? |
3624 | when shall my bones be at rest? |
36568 | And what will the people be taught in these schools? |
36568 | And its last word? |
36568 | And the name of the Roman civilization? |
36568 | And the proof? |
36568 | But if no person has seen it, how is it that men have come to believe in its existence? |
36568 | But suppose it were definitely developed, what could it give us? |
36568 | But, if this social power exists, why has it not sufficed hitherto to moralize, to humanize men? |
36568 | But, then, what is their God? |
36568 | Could they have received in the distribution a particle at once divine and stupid? |
36568 | Do you know what took place in the great Social Revolution of 1789- 1793? |
36568 | Do you wish to render its authority and influence beneficent and human? |
36568 | Does it follow that I reject all authority? |
36568 | GOD AND THE STATE Who are right, the idealists or the materialists? |
36568 | How do they get over this? |
36568 | How is this sanction manifested? |
36568 | How solve this antinomy? |
36568 | In France, Chateaubriand, Lamartine, and-- shall I say it? |
36568 | In the name of the bourgeois interest bluntly confessed? |
36568 | In the name of what? |
36568 | Is it necessary to point out to what extent and in what manner religions debase and corrupt the people? |
36568 | Is it not plain that all these governments are systematic poisoners, interested stupefiers of the masses? |
36568 | Is not the number of men who find supreme enjoyment in sacrifice and devotion exceedingly limited? |
36568 | May we not suppose that all men are equally inspired by God? |
36568 | Must it be concluded that this exploitation and this oppression are necessities absolutely inherent in the very existence of human society? |
36568 | Must we, then, eliminate from society all instruction and abolish all schools? |
36568 | Now, where find it if not in religion, that good protectress of all the well- fed and the useful consoler of the hungry? |
36568 | On the contrary, can we not foresee in these new masters the same follies and the same crimes found in those of former days and of the present time? |
36568 | Shall we blame the science of history? |
36568 | To- day even, what is it that kills, what is it that crushes brutally, materially, in all European countries, liberty and humanity? |
36568 | Unless we suppose that the various divine particles have been irregularly distributed, how is this difference to be explained? |
36568 | Was not everybody mistaken? |
36568 | What does it care for the particular conditions and chance fate of Peter or James? |
36568 | What has been and still is the principal object of all her contests with the sovereigns of Europe? |
36568 | What is authority? |
36568 | What is more ancient and more universal than slavery? |
36568 | What matters it? |
36568 | Whence, then, could we derive the power and the wish to rebel against them? |
36568 | Which is the most materialistic, the most natural, in its point of departure, and the most humanly ideal in its results? |
36568 | Which? |
36568 | Who are the real idealists-- the idealists not of abstraction, but of life, not of heaven, but of earth-- and who are the materialists? |
36568 | Why not? |
36568 | Why? |
36568 | [ 7] But until the masses shall have reached this degree of instruction, will it be necessary to leave them to the government of scientific men? |
33677 | And that is? |
33677 | Courage? |
33677 | How do I love thee? 33677 What is your greatest hour?" |
33677 | Why not do right? 33677 Why was I made thus blind and sinful?" |
33677 | _ Therefore the moral question always takes the form of asking: What am I to do? 33677 And are not all such forms of religion, as far as they go, practical? 33677 And by what means shall we decide such questions? 33677 And does the conclusion merely result from our power to form abstract ideas? 33677 And his failure, to what was it due? 33677 And if so,_ why_ is it rational? 33677 And in this case, as you may now say, why use two words at all? 33677 And may not just this be a source of insight which is employed in many of the processes ordinarily known as reasoning processes? 33677 And now, I ask you, What is the spirit which rules such lives? 33677 And so the question has presented itself: Have we any evidence that such a superhuman type of life is a real fact in the world? 33677 And the question: What is it that, on the whole, I would choose to do if I had the power? 33677 And when he returned to battle, what became of Hector? 33677 Are there as many supreme aims of life as there are individuals? 33677 Are there as many ways of salvation as there are religions that men follow? 33677 Are these objections just? 33677 Are they right? 33677 As for our blunders, what more precious privilege do we all claim than the privilege of making our own blunders, or at least a due proportion of them? 33677 But are the partisans of ways of salvation{ 15} confined to such serious and unworldly souls as were the early Buddhists and the ancient moralists? 33677 But can it enter into our will and give us a plan of life? 33677 But can it save us? 33677 But how is this divine to be known? 33677 But is it rational to do this? 33677 But what are the merits of the case? 33677 But what, you may ask, do I mean by the salvation of man or by man''s need of salvation? 33677 But when you form an opinion, what are you trying to do? 33677 But who amongst us ever goes beyond thus confidently holding that he reflects the common- sense of mankind? 33677 But-- so such teachers hold-- why sell all that you have to buy that pearl, when by nature you are able to win it through a reasonable effort? 33677 By revelation? 33677 Can a plain man who is no philosopher feel this need? 33677 Can it direct life? 33677 Can one face{ 243} sorrow with any really deeper trust in life? 33677 Can such an ideal remain wholly a matter of theory? 33677 Can these objects be defined as realities or asvalues"that our social experience sufficiently brings to our knowledge? |
33677 | Can this view satisfy? |
33677 | Can we say that this source gives us genuine insight and is trustworthy? |
33677 | Could one love such a being, or devoutly commune with his perfect but motionless wisdom? |
33677 | Could one steadily conceive God in these terms without constantly renewing one''s power to face the world with courage? |
33677 | Do n''t you see what ails your father''s point of view, and my wife''s? |
33677 | Do they merely say: God is omniscient, therefore our life has its purpose defined, and we are saved? |
33677 | Does it belong only to the childhood of the spirit? |
33677 | Does it teach us about anything that is real; and if this be so, how far does this source of insight go? |
33677 | Does this statement seem to you an absurd quibble? |
33677 | Face such tragedy, however, and what does it show you? |
33677 | For now the question arises: What way leads to salvation? |
33677 | For the question arises: What is it, on the whole, that I choose to do? |
33677 | Granting the validity of the argument sketched in our last lecture, what has the all- wise knower of truth to do with our salvation? |
33677 | Had he chosen to be a hermit, or a saint, or a Stoic, what would just such{ 188} a career and such a reputation have been to him? |
33677 | Has its cause the characters that mark a fitting cause of loyalty? |
33677 | How can a good God permit this horror in my life?" |
33677 | How could he have lost unless he had sought? |
33677 | How does pragmatism view the very problem about the truth and error of our human opinions which has led me to such far- reaching consequences? |
33677 | How does such a view give a man the power to live more reasonably than he otherwise would live? |
33677 | How does the insight of the reason enlighten us in this respect? |
33677 | How is the bank able to recognise this revelation of the depositor''s will? |
33677 | How is this apparition of the divine in the human, of the supernatural in the natural, conceivable? |
33677 | How is tribulation related to religious insight? |
33677 | I"What does one mean by the Reason?" |
33677 | In what sense can there be a religion of the social consciousness? |
33677 | Is it a barren abstraction? |
33677 | Is it consistent only with a highly sensitive and mystical temperament? |
33677 | Is it exclusively connected with the belief in some one creed? |
33677 | Is it not from its very essence an appeal to the will? |
33677 | Is it the fruit of abstract thinking alone? |
33677 | Is it the peculiar possession of the philosophers? |
33677 | Is life really a good at all, since there is so much sorrow in it? |
33677 | Is not such a conception a vitally important spring of action for those who possess it? |
33677 | Is such a direct touch with the divine possible? |
33677 | Is the recognition of an all- seeing insight, as something real, not in itself calming, sustaining, rationalising? |
33677 | Is there any mode of living that is just_ both_ to the moral and to the religious motives? |
33677 | Is there any value in considering this abstract statement of the principles upon which this dilemma seems to be founded? |
33677 | Is this form of consciousness something belonging only to highly and intellectually cultivated souls? |
33677 | May not all genuine demonstration involve synthesis as well as analysis, the making of new constructions as well as the dissection of old assertions? |
33677 | May not analysis be merely an aspect, a part of our live thinking? |
33677 | May there not be another source of knowledge? |
33677 | Must not any prudent person be afraid of life? |
33677 | Must one choose between inarticulate faith and barren abstractions? |
33677 | Must one face the alternative: Either intuition without reasoning, or else relatively fruitless analysis without intuition? |
33677 | Nevertheless, the question: How far is man naturally in danger of missing this supreme goal? |
33677 | Now do you not know people whose religion is of this sort? |
33677 | Now is this conclusion the result of a mere analysis of either of the two assertions made? |
33677 | Now, how shall such a knowledge of the divine autograph have arisen in the mind of the individual believer? |
33677 | Or, on the other hand, does it arise solely through dumb and inarticulate intuitions? |
33677 | Ought n''t one to try to be safe?" |
33677 | Ought the lovers to defy fortune and to ignore obvious worldly prudence? |
33677 | Our question is:"Is there, indeed, such a diviner life?" |
33677 | The problem with which these lectures are to deal is: What are the sources of such insight? |
33677 | The question is, how is this possible? |
33677 | The question remains: Through what source of insight are we able to adjust our daily lives to this divine wisdom and to this divine will? |
33677 | The question: What am I to do? |
33677 | The verdict of humanity? |
33677 | V Now in what way can I hope, you may ask, to answer these impressive and to many recent writers decisive considerations of the pragmatists? |
33677 | We now ask: What is the principle which dominates such lives? |
33677 | Were all of them more or less right? |
33677 | Were any of them wholly deluded? |
33677 | Were not the prophets of Israel social reformers? |
33677 | Were not the world as it now is very evil, what, then, were the call for religion? |
33677 | What does it profit a man, you will say, to view the whole world as the object present to an all- embracing and divine insight? |
33677 | What does poor humanity know as to the real values of our destiny? |
33677 | What has religion had to teach us, some will insistently ask, more saving, unifying, sustaining, than this love of man for man? |
33677 | What is the extent, what are the limitations of the truth that one can hope in this way to gain? |
33677 | What light can my individual experience throw upon vast problems such as this? |
33677 | What man ever finds immediately presented to his own personal insight that totality of data upon which this verdict is said to depend? |
33677 | What need do they show? |
33677 | What would one do for a divine Logos, for an all- observant and all- comprehending seer? |
33677 | Whatever they may think of my philosophy, have I been just to their practical fervour and to their energetic devotion? |
33677 | When did they begin to be really patriots and servants of mankind? |
33677 | When did they begin to be truly and heartily religious? |
33677 | When the plain man feels what I venture thus to formulate, how will he express his longing? |
33677 | Who amongst us personally and individually experiences, at any moment, the confirmation said to be given by the verdict of humanity? |
33677 | Who of us can tell? |
33677 | Who, amongst us, whatever his own cause, is not instructed and aided in his loyalty by the faithful deed of such a devoted soul? |
33677 | Why not choose one who brings no such sorrow with her? |
33677 | Why, then, have I introduced this mere sketch of philosophical idealism into our inevitably crowded programme? |
33677 | Would you forget your lost love, or your dead, or your"days that are no more,"even if you could? |
33677 | Yet how can mortals thus ignorant pretend to get insight into anything that is divinely exalted? |
33677 | { 112} The common- sense of mankind? |
33677 | { 135} Was not my elder friend finding a guiding principle of action in a world where he was often misunderstood? |
33677 | { 143} But does pragmatism forbid us to have religious insight? |
33677 | { 291} Do you serve with all your heart, and soul, and mind, and strength a cause that is superhuman and that is indeed divine? |
36878 | A thousand echoes, from the hills and walls around, answer--_where_? |
36878 | And how did they get here? |
36878 | And should we not expect to find a jet of salt water in the midst of the lake, or such an infusion of salt as to change the character of the lake? |
36878 | And why not equally so in its mythological reproductions? |
36878 | But where are they? |
36878 | But who shall undertake the arduous achievement? |
36878 | Did Tartary, China, or Japan, furnish to America, ages ago, a race of sculptors and palace- builders? |
36878 | Did not Camoens, the solitary pride of Portugal,--he who after his death was honored by the appellation of"_ the great_,"--beg for bread? |
36878 | From what part of the great human family did they spring? |
36878 | From what quarter of the globe did they come? |
36878 | Has not a Tasso from the depths of his poverty, besought his cat to assist him with the lustre of her eyes, that he might pen his immortal verse? |
36878 | Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods? |
36878 | How long shall it be? |
36878 | How old, then, are the works? |
36878 | In what terms of mingled eulogium and execration shall it be couched? |
36878 | May it not be so with the now mysterious relics of the ancient races of America? |
36878 | Now, if the asphaltic ebullition finds its way up through the lakes, would it not, certainly, and from necessity, carry the water along with it? |
36878 | Should Columbus be succored, when Cervantes, suffered and hungered for bread? |
36878 | Still, if it be a redeeming trait, why should we not respect it as such? |
36878 | That it was in fact, in the language of oriental antiquity, a sarcophagus? |
36878 | Was not Hylander compelled to sell his notes on Dion Casseus for a_ dinner_? |
36878 | Were all these great works constructed and finished before the present races of Indians found their way into that part of the Continent? |
36878 | What else than fable is the early history of Rome? |
36878 | What has she now left? |
36878 | What more interesting field for their united labors? |
36878 | When shall the curse of war, which has been laid upon it for so many centuries, be revoked? |
36878 | When shall this land have rest? |
36878 | Which of them will take the hint, and set the ball in motion? |
36878 | Who shall be responsible for its faithful execution? |
36878 | Who shall say it was not so? |
36878 | Who were the builders? |
36878 | Whose history does not present a chapter analogous to this? |
35171 | ''Fore God, the wisdoms and the greatnesses Of seeming, are they hollow all, as things Of naught? |
35171 | ''Tis we, thy children; shall no man aid us? |
35171 | ( How? |
35171 | A deadly wrong they did me, yea within Mine holy place: thou knowest? |
35171 | Ah me, Phthia or Thebes, or sea- worn Thessaly? |
35171 | Ah, husband still, how shall thy hand be bent To slay me? |
35171 | Ah, is it thou? |
35171 | Ah, what bringeth he Of news or judgment? |
35171 | Ah, woe is me; hath Ajax come again? |
35171 | Am I still alone? |
35171 | And Hector''s woe, What is it? |
35171 | And I, whose slave am I, The shaken head, the arm that creepeth by, Staff- crutchèd, like to fall? |
35171 | And comest thou now Forth, and hast decked thy bosom and thy brow, And breathest with thy lord the same blue air, Thou evil heart? |
35171 | And hast thou turned from the Altar of frankincense, And given to the Greek thy temple of Ilion? |
35171 | And her own Prize that God promisèd Out of the golden clouds, her virgin crown? |
35171 | And is it granted that I speak, or no, In answer to them ere I die, to show I die most wronged and innocent? |
35171 | And is this not woe?) |
35171 | And my sons? |
35171 | And this their King so wise, who ruleth all, What wrought he? |
35171 | And this unhappy one-- would any eyes Gaze now on Hecuba? |
35171 | And thou, Polyxena, Where art thou? |
35171 | And thou, what tears can tell thy doom? |
35171 | And will ye leave her downstricken, A woman, and so old? |
35171 | And yet, what help? |
35171 | And, to say nothing of Zeus, how can the Goddess of Morning rise and shine upon us uncaring? |
35171 | Argos, belike, or Phthia shall it be, Or some lone island of the tossing sea, Far, far from Troy? |
35171 | But what minion of the Greek Is this that cometh, with new words to speak? |
35171 | Canst thou see help, or refuge anywhere? |
35171 | Dear God, what would they? |
35171 | Do I not know her? |
35171 | Doth he not go With me, to the same master? |
35171 | For Helen''s sister''s pride? |
35171 | For this land''s sake Thou comest, not for Hellas? |
35171 | For what woe lacketh here? |
35171 | Had ye so little pride? |
35171 | Hath that old hate and deep Failed, where she lieth in her ashen sleep? |
35171 | Heard ye? |
35171 | Here on the shore Wouldst hold them or amid mine own salt foam? |
35171 | How have they cast me, and to whom A bondmaid? |
35171 | How say''st thou? |
35171 | How shall it be? |
35171 | How should a poet carve the funeral stone To tell thy story true? |
35171 | How, for his Spartan bride A tirewoman? |
35171 | How? |
35171 | How? |
35171 | How? |
35171 | How? |
35171 | I ask not thee; I ask my own sad thought, What was there in my heart, that I forgot My home and land and all I loved, to fly With a strange man? |
35171 | In the other( Stesichorus,_ Sack of Ilion_(?)) |
35171 | Is God''s word As naught, to me in silence ministered, That in this place she dies? |
35171 | Is it all in vain that our Trojan princes have been loved by the Gods? |
35171 | Is it the Isle Immortal, Salamis, waits for me? |
35171 | Is it the Rock that broods Over the sundered floods Of Corinth, the ancient portal Of Pelops''sovranty?'' |
35171 | Is it the flare Of torches? |
35171 | Is the fall thereof Too deep for all that now is over me Of anguish, and hath been, and yet shall be? |
35171 | Is''t not rare fortune that the King hath smiled On such a maid? |
35171 | Know''st thou my bitter stress? |
35171 | Marked ye? |
35171 | Mother of him of old, whose mighty spear Smote Greeks like chaff, see''st thou what things are here? |
35171 | My daughter? |
35171 | Nay, Hadst thou no surer rope, no sudden way Of the sword, that any woman honest- souled Had sought long since, loving her lord of old? |
35171 | Nay, why, my little one? |
35171 | Nay: Why call I on the Gods? |
35171 | Nay: Why should Odysseus''labours vex my breath? |
35171 | O Fire, Fire, where men make marriages Surely thou hast thy lot; but what are these Thou bringest flashing? |
35171 | O Helen, Helen, thou ill tree That Tyndareus planted, who shall deem of thee As child of Zeus? |
35171 | O ye Argives, was your spear Keen, and your hearts so low and cold, to fear This babe? |
35171 | Oh, How can I tell her of it? |
35171 | Or is it tidings heard From some far Spirit? |
35171 | Or what child meanest thou? |
35171 | Out of the tent of the Greek king I steal, my Queen, with trembling breath: What means thy call? |
35171 | Overseas Bear me afar to strange cities? |
35171 | Polyxena? |
35171 | Poseidon, god of the sea and its merchandise, and Apollo( possibly a local shepherd god? |
35171 | Priam, mine own Priam, Lying so lowly, Thou in thy nothingness, Shelterless, comfortless, See''st thou the thing I am? |
35171 | Say then what lot hath any? |
35171 | See''st thou what end is come? |
35171 | Seëst thou, seëst thou? |
35171 | Shall I thrust aside Hector''s belovèd face, and open wide My heart to this new lord? |
35171 | Shall the ship go heavier for her sin? |
35171 | She liveth still? |
35171 | Speak first; wilt thou be one In heart with me and hand till all be done? |
35171 | Speak, Friend? |
35171 | The flame of the cakes of corn, is it gone from hence, The myrrh on the air and the wreathèd towers gone? |
35171 | The sainted of Apollo? |
35171 | Thou hast some counsel of the Gods, or word Spoken of Zeus? |
35171 | Thou of the Ages, O wherefore fleëst thou, Lord of the Phrygian, Father that made us? |
35171 | Thou pitiest her? |
35171 | Thy land is fallen and thy lord, and thou A prisoner and alone, one woman; how Canst battle against us? |
35171 | To Odysseus''gate My mother goeth, say''st thou? |
35171 | To watch a tomb? |
35171 | Weak limbs, why tremble ye? |
35171 | Weepest thou, Mother mine own? |
35171 | Weepest thou? |
35171 | What fall yet lacketh, ere we touch The last dead deep of misery? |
35171 | What fashion of the laws of Greece? |
35171 | What hope have I To hold me? |
35171 | What is it? |
35171 | What is there that I fear to say? |
35171 | What is this? |
35171 | What knoweth she of evils like to these, That dead Polyxena, thou weepest for? |
35171 | What lingereth still O wounded City, of unknown ill, Ere yet thou diest? |
35171 | What man now hath her, or what doom? |
35171 | What meanest thou? |
35171 | What means that sudden light? |
35171 | What of Andromache, Wife of mine iron- hearted Hector, where Journeyeth she? |
35171 | What of joy Falls, or can fall on any child of Troy? |
35171 | What of that other child Ye reft from me but now? |
35171 | What seekest thou? |
35171 | What sought ye then that ye came? |
35171 | What was the"device"? |
35171 | What woman''s lips can so forswear her dead, And give strange kisses in another''s bed? |
35171 | When wast thou taken? |
35171 | Wherefore should great Hera''s eyes So hunger to be fair? |
35171 | Wherefore? |
35171 | Whither moves thy cry, Thy bitter cry? |
35171 | Whither shall I tread? |
35171 | Who am I that I sit Here at a Greek king''s door, Yea, in the dust of it? |
35171 | Who be these on the crested rock? |
35171 | Who found thee so? |
35171 | Why call on things so weak For aid? |
35171 | Why didst thou cheat me so? |
35171 | Why raise me any more? |
35171 | Why should I speak the shame of them, before They come? |
35171 | Why will ye slay this innocent, that seeks No wrong? |
35171 | Will they leave him here to build again The wreck? |
35171 | Yea, and thou, And these that lie around, do they not know? |
35171 | Yet I would ask thee, what decree is gone Forth for my life or death? |
35171 | [_ Turning upon the Herald._ Where lies the galley? |
35171 | _ Some Women._ Deep in the heart of me I feel thine hand, Mother: and is it he Dead here, our prince to be, And lord of the land? |
35171 | and is it come, the end of all, The very crest and summit of my days? |
35171 | and wert thou nothingness? |
35171 | p. 35"Why call on things so weak?" |
35171 | who is there That prayeth heaven, and in so strange a prayer? |
37313 | ), Joseph Interpreting Dreams( 1648); Jacob de Wet( 1610?-71? |
37313 | = Esaias Bourse.=--Esaias Bourse( 1630-?) |
37313 | = His Brother Gerard''s Cologne.=--His brother Gerard Berckheyde( 1631- 98?) |
37313 | = Jacob G. Cuijp''s Scène Champêtre.=--Jacob Gerritsz Cuijp( 1594- 1651? |
37313 | = Jan Vonck.=--Jan Vonck( 1630-? |
37313 | = Koninck''s Famous Gold Weigher.=--Of single figures perhaps the most famous is by Salomon Koninck( 1609- 68? |
37313 | = Nicolas Moeyaert''s Best Points.=--A follower of Elsheimer, who later became a disciple of Rembrandt, was Nicolas Moeyaert( 1630-? |
37313 | = Other Painters belonging to the Same Group.=--An interesting and curious work is Shells, by Balthasar van der Ast(?-1656). |
37313 | = Three Excellent Pictures by Hendrik Dubbels.=--Hendrik Dubbels( 1620- 76? |
37313 | = Two Portraits by Mostert, and One by Queborn.=--Jan Mostert( 1474-? |
37313 | = Van Gaesbeeck and Van der Kuyl.=--Adriaen van Gaesbeeck(?-1650), of the same period, was probably one of G. Dou''s pupils. |
37313 | A. Kruseman( 1804- 62), Elisha and the Shunammite; Pieter Pietersz Lastman( 1583- 1633), The Sacrifice of Abraham; Willem de Poorter(?-1645? |
37313 | A. Kruseman( 1804- 62), Elisha and the Shunammite; Pieter Pietersz Lastman( 1583- 1633), The Sacrifice of Abraham; Willem de Poorter(?-1645? |
37313 | And why, indeed, should he do so? |
37313 | Another painter of_ genre_, who is represented here by two charming pictures, is Gysbert van der Kuyl(?-1673). |
37313 | Breughel''s Still- life Pictures.=--His pupil, Abraham Breughel( 1631-? |
37313 | C. van Vliet.=--Hendrik Cornelisz van Vliet( 1608- 66? |
37313 | How did he always know how to discover the paintable spot? |
37313 | How had he observed them? |
37313 | In some of his pictures of this class Steen adds the legend"_ Wat baet hier medecyn-- het is der minne pijn_"( Of what use is medicine here? |
37313 | Is the supply exhausted? |
37313 | Jan Paul Gillemans( 1618-?) |
37313 | On the wall beside it hangs another flower piece by the brush of Elias van Broeck(?-1708). |
37313 | Rachel Ruijsch was a pupil of Willem van Aelst( 1626- 83? |
37313 | Salomon Ruisdael(?-1670) has two fine landscapes, The Halt, dated 1660, and The Village Inn, dated 1655. |
37313 | The latter is particularly interesting, because, although the catalogues give it to Cornelis Drost( 1638-? |
37313 | Who can it be that painted the fine figures in this picture? |
37313 | Who is the hero or heroine of the scene? |
37313 | and King Solomon Sacrificing to Idols; Mechior Brassauw( 1709- 57? |
37313 | de Molyn''s Farm.=--Pieter de Molyn the Elder(?-1661) has a pretty picture of a farm, where two peasant men are talking to a peasant woman. |
29605 | ''And what did the count do?'' 29605 ''And you, Aramis?'' |
29605 | ''But where is he?'' 29605 ''Do you know what the King told me, gentlemen, and that no longer ago than yesternight? |
29605 | ''How can I tell?'' 29605 ''I shall find him there, then?'' |
29605 | ''Is that D''Artagnan''s voice?'' 29605 ''Sir,''replied Aramis gravely,''he is ill-- very ill.''"''Ill, say you? |
29605 | ''Something that happened to yourself?'' 29605 ''Well?'' |
29605 | ''Well?'' 29605 ''What are you going to fight about, Athos?'' |
29605 | ''What do you decide to do?'' 29605 ''What does he mean-- if there is any left?'' |
29605 | ''What is your name, my brave fellow?'' 29605 ''What then, sir?'' |
29605 | ''Where shall I find the governor?'' 29605 ''Why a fool, since he loved her?'' |
29605 | ''Yes; is it disagreeable to you?'' 29605 ''You are wounded?'' |
29605 | A lady? |
29605 | And Miss Lambton? |
29605 | And are you sure it is a Sir Joshua? |
29605 | And is the painting good of that ancient date? 29605 And the ladies?" |
29605 | And was it not me you meant by the treasure you talked of? |
29605 | And what of it, aunt? 29605 And will you let him?" |
29605 | And you bear with his eccentricities in hopes of his succession? |
29605 | Are you making love to this here gal in the very presence of Fanny Smith? |
29605 | But how? 29605 But is Fox nothing?" |
29605 | But is the campaign absolutely coming to an end? 29605 But on thy kalends, why are men, so harsh on other days, Keen to return the kindly look, and change the friendly phrase?" |
29605 | But the life of so many men? |
29605 | But this say further,--why thy gates in war are open, why In peace are closed? |
29605 | But what have dates to do with thee, and wrinkled figs, this tell, And what the honey dew that drops pure from its snowy cell? 29605 But what is to be done in the House, without some hazard of the kind?" |
29605 | But where is the gallery, Mr Howard? |
29605 | But who is he? 29605 But who is he? |
29605 | But will this account for the rapid distinctions of your public life? |
29605 | But wo n''t you think I yield too soon; and without having asked papa''s consent? |
29605 | Did I, madam? 29605 Did he tell you his name?" |
29605 | Did n''t I? 29605 Did you know my great- grandfather, sir?" |
29605 | Do you devote yourself entirely to sketching? |
29605 | Do you object to our duke? |
29605 | Does it go far back in the English school? |
29605 | Gentlemen, shall we say four thousand guineas? |
29605 | Had you heard of our collection, then? |
29605 | Have I not in my time heard lions roar? 29605 Have n''t you heard?" |
29605 | Have you? 29605 How can I refuse, when you tell me your happiness depends on it?" |
29605 | How long will it take you to prepare for the journey? |
29605 | I, sir? |
29605 | Indeed? 29605 Indeed?" |
29605 | Is n''t that your grandfather''s uncle, the general who won the battle of Ramillies against Marlborough''s orders? |
29605 | My dear sir, I do n''t know what you mean-- why-- what-- Have n''t you been in the habit of telling your friends so after dinner?" |
29605 | No lady later than that? 29605 No?" |
29605 | Of course he is,replied Miss Arabel;"or do you think he would venture to speak to_ me_?" |
29605 | Of the pictures, sir? |
29605 | Oh, have you? 29605 Oh, where is it?" |
29605 | Oh-- a student-- are you?--that is-- have I the pleasure of speaking to a painter? |
29605 | Papa''s grandfather? 29605 Pray, what is its history?" |
29605 | Pshaw, do you say, Richards? 29605 Seeing him? |
29605 | Since many gates are thine in Rome, say why dost thou appear In perfect shape and size nowhere but at the forums here? 29605 Suppose I were to invite him to come into the Hall and see the portraits?" |
29605 | Thank you, sir-- seven thousand guineas,he said,"Will any gentleman make an advance?" |
29605 | The Indian, I can tell you----d''ye hear? 29605 The back parlour?" |
29605 | Well, and is not that of the swine perfect?--and what would you have more than perfection? |
29605 | Well? |
29605 | What Indian? |
29605 | What are you up to? 29605 What do you mean, sir? |
29605 | What is their name? 29605 Who is Gus?" |
29605 | Who is he? |
29605 | Who took the furniture? |
29605 | Who? |
29605 | Why not? 29605 Why, Guiscard, what is the matter with you to- night? |
29605 | Why, what in the name of wonder is all this here? |
29605 | _ At noon_, beneath September''s heat, Was it not sweet to feel, Through shadowy grasses at thy feet, Our silver waters steal? 29605 ''Captain,''cried I,''we must not let the George pass us; you ca n''t think of allowing such a thing?'' 29605 ''Captain,''said I,''will you let yourself be beaten out of the field without firing a shot? 29605 ''What do you tell me?'' 29605 ''Where is Athos?'' 29605 ***** Ed io: maestro, che è tanto greve A lor che lamentar li fa si forte? 29605 A certainexcellent equestrian"falling in with Coleridge on horseback, thus accosted him--"Pray, sir, did you meet a tailor along the road?" |
29605 | A country gentleman, a county magistrate, perfectly healthy and tolerably rich, was there any thing wanting to Mr Wilkins''s felicity? |
29605 | Ai n''t I one of her elders? |
29605 | Am I to build my altar in the midst of contending thousands, or on the ground covered with corpses-- in the battle, or on the grave? |
29605 | Am I to kneel on the high- road where the enemy''s armies, fierce with the hope of plunder, are rushing along? |
29605 | And how? |
29605 | And if he had two hundred horse power, what then? |
29605 | And of what disease?'' |
29605 | And scandal says( but then what will not scandal say?) |
29605 | And the question argued at the London dinner- table was-- Could the writer have been other than a devil? |
29605 | And what has been the pretext of his majesty''s ministers? |
29605 | And when he says,''_ Twas thou_, what is the wretch talking to? |
29605 | And why so?'' |
29605 | And you, Porthos, what is the use of your wearing that magnificent embroidered sword- belt, if the weapon it supports is of such small service to you? |
29605 | And you, Porthos?'' |
29605 | And, LADY, why should we not deem That in each echoing hill, And sounding wood, and dancing stream, A language lingers still? |
29605 | Are its lines in harmony with, or in becoming contrast to, the expressive features of the face? |
29605 | Are the hopes of attacking the French so suddenly given up? |
29605 | Are you going a journey? |
29605 | At the close of one of those conversations, fixing his keen grey eye upon me, he said,"Pray, what think you of Parliament?" |
29605 | Ay, indeed-- where did he learn_ that_? |
29605 | Before Jehovah who can stand? |
29605 | But did the reader feel them to be the awful bores which, in fact, they were? |
29605 | But in what way did that operate upon his exertions as a writer? |
29605 | But some will ask-- was Mr Coleridge right in either view? |
29605 | But tell me,"cried he to the passengers and sailors by whom he was surrounded,"who gave him his settler? |
29605 | But what else can one do on a voyage up the Mississippi? |
29605 | But where am I to offer my homage? |
29605 | But who art thou, strange biform god, and what thy power? |
29605 | But why are you so anxious about the daub? |
29605 | But why should I tell tales? |
29605 | But, if so, how much less can it be pretended that satisfaction has been rendered to the claims of Coleridge? |
29605 | By war and tempest to be borne along, To strew, like leaves, the Scythian strand? |
29605 | Can he be apostrophising the knout? |
29605 | Chouse us out of the deer, say ye; and who had a right to hinder him if he had? |
29605 | Come-- shall I go on and give these ladies the facts of some of your other stories, or will you close with my terms at once?" |
29605 | Could it be possible that this was the old gentleman with whom the handsome stranger was on a visit? |
29605 | Could these notions really have belonged to Bowyer, then how do we know but he wrote_ The Ancient Mariner_? |
29605 | D''ye want me to tattoo your black brainpan? |
29605 | Did I say all?" |
29605 | Did he ever say you were an angel?" |
29605 | Did n''t Sir Thomas Lawrence praise some of my pictures, aunt?" |
29605 | Did n''t he say so, Mr Howard?" |
29605 | Did you know him, sir?" |
29605 | Do I ever deviate from the truth, Aunt Susan?" |
29605 | Do n''t you hear when a gentleman speaks to you? |
29605 | Do n''t you think so?" |
29605 | Do you know my aunt Susannah?" |
29605 | Do you know, I say, what his Majesty told me?'' |
29605 | Do you sketch here every day?" |
29605 | Do you study the ninth commandment as much as you used to do?" |
29605 | Does it protect the head from either heat, cold, or wet? |
29605 | Does it set off any of natural beauty of the human cranium? |
29605 | Does the monster wish us to be tallow- chandlers again?" |
29605 | For example, will any man believe this? |
29605 | For instance, what sort of a German scholar was Coleridge? |
29605 | For who, great God, is able to abide thy frost? |
29605 | Guess what she had upon her shoulder, D''Artagnan?'' |
29605 | Had your father risen to be at the top of the profession by that time, with a promise of the chancellorship in his pocket when his father died?" |
29605 | Have I not heard great ordnance in the field, And Heaven''s artillery thunder in the skies? |
29605 | Have I not heard the sea, puft up with wind, Rage like an angry boar chafed with sweat? |
29605 | Have I not in the pitched battle heard Loud''larums, neighing steeds, and trumpets clang?" |
29605 | Have we not gained our point? |
29605 | How do you like it compared to the modern?" |
29605 | How many is there of you?" |
29605 | Howard, Richards, let me have half a dozen dollars, silver dollars, d''ye hear? |
29605 | I said,"what means the piece of money?" |
29605 | I will tell you all about it, boys-- but who is that?" |
29605 | If he has taken to opium- eating, can we help_ that_? |
29605 | If now you ask why copper coins are chiefly my delight, The ancient brass of Rome should I, the ancient Janus, slight? |
29605 | If_ his_ face shines, must our faces be blackened? |
29605 | In alluding to the menace that our allies would soon desert us, I asked,"Is this the magnanimity of party? |
29605 | Is England to be pronounced so poor, or so pusillanimous, that she must give up all hope unless she can be suffered to lurk in the rear of the battle? |
29605 | Is France always to baffle us?" |
29605 | Is a wooden spoon dull? |
29605 | Is he a gentleman?" |
29605 | Is indeed leviathan_ so_ tamed? |
29605 | Is it any of these?" |
29605 | Is it comfortable, portable, durable, or cheap? |
29605 | Is it the wind from tower to tower Low- murmuring at midnight hour? |
29605 | Is this''little body with a mighty heart,''to depend for existence on the decaying strength or the decrepit courage of the Continent? |
29605 | Is your sister any thing like yourself?" |
29605 | It''s our ship; we invented it, they''d have been long enough in the old country before finding such a thing out-- Pshaw, do you say? |
29605 | Mr Roe-- how should I know about law and chancellorships? |
29605 | My power you know-- the god of gates-- now for my figure, why? |
29605 | Our Helen M''Gregor still kept the lead; who the devil could have helped racing? |
29605 | Parleh vouh English? |
29605 | Perhaps you know papa?" |
29605 | Say, when may I call it mine?" |
29605 | Shall we liken it to her tongue''s untiring play? |
29605 | The question narrowed itself to this: which was the more active life? |
29605 | The worth, the warmth, the peace serene, Thou''st known our vales among, Say, shall they be reflected seen Upon thy heart as long? |
29605 | Then I, this further--"Tell me why, when I bring frankincense To Jove or any other god, with thee I still commence?" |
29605 | Twenty pounds ascend in a Scotch mist to the Chancellor of the Exchequer from Leeds; but does it evaporate? |
29605 | Was he dull? |
29605 | Was n''t it funny? |
29605 | Was there no way of getting him introduced to papa? |
29605 | We have forgotten them, eh?'' |
29605 | What ancient naval victory to that of Trafalgar? |
29605 | What can be the reason that we men feel so deucedly cowed and quailed by the petticoats? |
29605 | What could be more appalling to these unhappy beings than the threatened visit, and long- delayed vengeance of the implacable Thomas Roe? |
29605 | What could be more confusing than to have two suns shining at the same time?" |
29605 | What did it matter? |
29605 | What do the other ladies matter to me, whether they''ve got on silk gowns or cotton ones? |
29605 | What doth aggrieve them thus, That they lament so loud? |
29605 | What has he ever called you? |
29605 | What is rum for, if it is n''t to be drank?" |
29605 | What made you think of the black parlour now?" |
29605 | What qualities, either of use or ornament, has it in its favour that it should be the crowning point of a well- dressed man''s toilet? |
29605 | What the devil possessed you, Aramis, to ask me for a guardsman''s uniform, when a priest''s surplice would have fitted you better? |
29605 | What then? |
29605 | What then? |
29605 | What to do? |
29605 | What was the strife around Troy to the battle of Leipsic?--the contests of Florence and Pisa to the revolutionary war? |
29605 | What was their operation? |
29605 | What witness can there be, when I can never bring him to the house?" |
29605 | What''s the row?" |
29605 | When he offers the loan, will he not find them offering the province? |
29605 | Where did you ever hear of such a thing? |
29605 | Where is he?'' |
29605 | Where is the man who shall be equal to these things? |
29605 | Whither has this work, and so many others swathed about with Coleridge''s MS. notes, vanished from the world? |
29605 | Who finished him?" |
29605 | Will have a look at them-- will go on deck? |
29605 | Will this gentleman give ten thousand guineas? |
29605 | Will you destroy yourself, and the steamer, and your fellow- citizens? |
29605 | Will you let me have your answer soon? |
29605 | Will you race with the George Washington?'' |
29605 | Will you sell it or not?" |
29605 | Withdraw from subsequent poetry the images, mythology, and characters of the_ Iliad_, and what would remain? |
29605 | Would the teeth of a crocodile not splinter under that word? |
29605 | Yet, is there nothing but gold that can bribe? |
29605 | You can do that, Mr Tinter?" |
29605 | You can go and take some more lessons in sketching, eh? |
29605 | You keeps cats of course, and all that? |
29605 | You know the_ Paradise Lost_? |
29605 | You''ve thought of my offer, Gus?" |
29605 | [ 23] What is the deadest of things earthly? |
29605 | asked Mr Tinter,"and who was a grocer in the Boro''?" |
29605 | cried D''Artagnan, losing all patience at the innkeeper''s prolixity,--''Athos, what is become of him?'' |
29605 | cried D''Artagnan,''Monsieur Porthos is one of your seconds?'' |
29605 | cried Doughby--"Steward, another glass-- d''ye hear, you cursed neger, where are you hidden? |
29605 | cried I laughing,"what, only the seventh, Doughby? |
29605 | enquired the other--"How do you think shame can have any effect in people so lost to truth, and so encased in ignorance and conceit?" |
29605 | fighting here? |
29605 | ha''n''t ye picked up ne''er a man yet? |
29605 | have you any rough work to do? |
29605 | have you got a headach and want something light? |
29605 | he exclaimed in still greater astonishment,''Monsieur Aramis is the other?'' |
29605 | in what is she more fickle than in dress? |
29605 | is there no bribe in territory? |
29605 | might have settled his claim,) what, says Fire, setting her arms a- kimbo, would they do for_ him_? |
29605 | ne''er a one on you? |
29605 | or shall we not rather say that it is a psychological fact standing_ per se_? |
29605 | repeated every body,"why, who but yourself, Mister Doughby?" |
29605 | says Fire,"is that all? |
29605 | says I,''have myself announced when I go to see my own wife, that is to be? |
29605 | so young, and yet so wicked?'' |
29605 | something handy, useful, comfortable, and withal good- looking?--What do you do? |
29605 | the concomitant effect and consequence of her beauty? |
29605 | when he bids with the subsidy, will he not be outbid with the kingdom? |
29605 | where can those idlers be?'' |
29605 | will they bargain, in sight of the axe? |
29605 | will they be dazzled by your gold, while the French bayonet is startling their eyes? |
29605 | will they dare to traffic in the blood of their people, with the grave dug at their feet? |
29605 | would you put on something that will not spoil by being pulled about, sat on, slept on, and stood on? |
29605 | you have kept him all this time in the cellar?'' |
36228 | ''Richard?'' 36228 ''Shall you be here?'' |
36228 | ''When did he die?'' 36228 Do you know Goring churchyard? |
36228 | Why not let other contributors, besides the novelist, occasionally give you a series? 36228 ''Did I ever see him?'' 36228 23._--Red- wings came within a yard, Velt(?) 36228 A third tale is calledWho Will Win? |
36228 | Again, he is speaking of one of his aunt''s friends, and says, as if he was the author of"Evelina":"How is Mr. A.? |
36228 | All this about Coate? |
36228 | And it is a guarantee of success, even in a money sense; for what publisher would not grasp at a work commended by Disraeli? |
36228 | And the old Christian teaching, the prayer to the Father, the village church and its services, the quiet churchyard-- where are they? |
36228 | And then... then... is he not going to be a great author? |
36228 | And who knows in what direction? |
36228 | And, again, the fact that man, alone of created beings, is able to grasp this, or any other truth, is not that gift everything in itself? |
36228 | Art? |
36228 | But does not S. learn French? |
36228 | But how? |
36228 | But was ever observation more minute? |
36228 | Could the same man, one asks, have written both these passages? |
36228 | Could they not have made Jefferies a police- constable, for instance? |
36228 | Did he himself christen it after the forest which he knew so well? |
36228 | Did not the Brook tell you all about that? |
36228 | Do you not think I am right? |
36228 | Do you want to catch the feeling of the air upon these downs? |
36228 | Does anyone sorrow for the rook, shot, and hung up as a scarecrow? |
36228 | Does this reverie of flowers and waterfall and song form an ideal, a human ideal, in the mind? |
36228 | Does, then, this act of superlative courage, demanded by fearless inquiry, always lead the man who has achieved it towards atheism or agnosticism? |
36228 | Gossip and scandal? |
36228 | Have you ever seen the Exe and Barle? |
36228 | How could that be possible? |
36228 | How many, many years, how many cycles of years, how many bundles of cycles of years, had the sun glowed down thus on that hollow? |
36228 | How was he to be moved? |
36228 | How? |
36228 | How_ could_ such a man write these works, being already five or six and twenty years of age, without revealing himself? |
36228 | Is Life worth Living? |
36228 | Is there anything in the world more truly delightful than the first success in the career you have chosen and ardently desire to adorn? |
36228 | King or Knave? |
36228 | Literature of the day? |
36228 | Maid, Wife, or Widow? |
36228 | May we not say indeed, that never any man has heretofore spoken of Nature as this man speaks? |
36228 | Miss or Mrs.? |
36228 | Miss or Mrs.? |
36228 | Miss or Mrs.? |
36228 | Politics? |
36228 | Really? |
36228 | Since it was formed how long? |
36228 | The Deity-- but, then, what does he mean by a Deity? |
36228 | The man in the hill there----''"''What man?'' |
36228 | The theatre? |
36228 | Then, if he be permitted to reveal these things, what can we who receive this revelation give in exchange? |
36228 | Under which Lord? |
36228 | Under which Lord? |
36228 | Under which Lord? |
36228 | Urban? |
36228 | Was ever leg of mutton thus glorified? |
36228 | Was he, therefore, presumptuous? |
36228 | Was it on the streets of Swindon, that great centre of life and thought? |
36228 | Was not that a fine talk for the child to have with the wheat- ear? |
36228 | Was there ever a more miserable tale of slow torture? |
36228 | Was there ever such a disgrace in the nineteenth century? |
36228 | What are those strange clattering noises, like the sound of men fighting with wooden''back- swords''? |
36228 | What beautiful picture ever really existed save in the sunrise and in the sunset sky? |
36228 | What better beginning could the boy have had? |
36228 | What do we purblind mortals see when we walk through a wood in winter? |
36228 | What inclined the lad to become a journalist? |
36228 | What is it he would find? |
36228 | What is man? |
36228 | What is the reason why a young author so often shows a complete inability to discover how bad his early work really is? |
36228 | What was it like-- the noblest part of himself-- that which would never die? |
36228 | What was that novel? |
36228 | What was the use of compelling him to do that? |
36228 | What was to be done? |
36228 | What will the World Say? |
36228 | What will the World Say? |
36228 | What will the World Say? |
36228 | What wonder could surprise us coming from the wonderful sea?" |
36228 | What words of praise and gratitude can we find in return for this unfolding of the Book of Fleeting Life? |
36228 | What would have been the value of their lives between a finger and thumb that could crack a ripe and strong- shelled walnut? |
36228 | What would he talk about at the club? |
36228 | What, then, shall I publish? |
36228 | What, what shall we say-- what can we say-- to show our gratitude towards one who has conferred these wonderful gifts upon his fellow- men? |
36228 | Where did it come from? |
36228 | Where did the passage- money come from? |
36228 | Where is it, that limbo? |
36228 | Where is it? |
36228 | Where, how, and in what period of his life did he get his urban experience? |
36228 | Who that has seen it can forget the wondrous beauty of the summer morning''s sky? |
36228 | Why can not they be all happy with us as you are, dear? |
36228 | Why can not your people have us without so much labour, and why are so many of you unhappy? |
36228 | Why could n''t I come and settle by? |
36228 | Why did not Jefferies make himself rich with the opportunities he had? |
36228 | Why did not the father interfere? |
36228 | Why do I not write better English, and why have I not a nobler style, and why can not I become the greatest writer who ever lived? |
36228 | Why not keep a spider as well as a cat? |
36228 | Why should not societies exist and flourish for the equally useful object of providing the workman with a garden? |
36228 | Why so very,_ very_ still? |
36228 | Why, then, do you not agree and have all things, all the great earth can give you, just as we have the sunshine and the rain? |
36228 | Why-- why did no one tear him away from his vain and futile efforts? |
36228 | Wife or No Wife? |
36228 | Wife or No Wife? |
36228 | Wine? |
36228 | Without the life and presence of man, what is the beauty of Nature worth? |
36228 | Would four hundred pounds a year-- to Jefferies it would have seemed affluence-- have been too much to pay for such a man? |
36228 | Would you like to see how Jefferies can describe a beautiful woman? |
36228 | You remember those letters in the_ Times_? |
36228 | _ BY MRS. ALEXANDER._ Maid, Wife, or Widow? |
36228 | said Bevis;''are you quite sure you will be here?'' |
36228 | what did this young provincial journalist know of wicked noblemen? |
2893 | Again and again he has told us that he is not a wizard; and if this be so, he can be overcome. ” “ How, husband? ” “ How? |
2893 | Again and again he has told us that he is not a wizard; and if this be so, he can be overcome. ” “ How, husband? ” “ How? |
2893 | Also, Hokosa, I think it likely that although your wife goes out with company, she will return alone. ” “ Why, King? ” asked Hokosa. |
2893 | And shall I abandon the worship of my fathers and change, or strive to change, the customs of my people to follow after dreams? |
2893 | Are the lads ready? |
2893 | Are we to follow our ancient rules and customs, or must we submit ourselves to a new rule and a new custom? |
2893 | Are we witch doctors that we should take refuge in tricks? |
2893 | Are you then better, or greater, or purer than millions who have gone before you, that for you and you alone this thing should be done? |
2893 | Are you weary of your husband, that you fly back to me? |
2893 | At the least I go in faith, fearing nothing, for what has he to fear who knows the will of God and does it? |
2893 | But Umsuka only said:-- “ ‘ My King and yours ’? |
2893 | But if it_ is_ true, why do we never hear of miracles? |
2893 | But if the king should chance to die-- why he is old, is he not? |
2893 | But let it pass, and tell me, having taken me, what is it you propose to do with me? |
2893 | But what do you seek with me, Hokosa? |
2893 | But what is your second plan? ” By way of answer, she pointed to the cliff above them. |
2893 | But who am I that I should give counsel for which none seek? ” “ As God wills, so shall it befall, ” answered Owen wearily; “ but oh! |
2893 | But why are you making fun of me? ” “ I am not making fun of you. |
2893 | But why should I bore you with such talk? |
2893 | CHAPTER IV THE VISION Was it swoon or sleep? |
2893 | CHAPTER XXI HOKOSA IS LIFTED UP “ What would you? ” asked Hokosa of the herald as he halted a short spear- cast from the wall. |
2893 | Can it not be done by trance as aforetime? |
2893 | Can we desert one god and set up another? ” “ What god, King? ” “ I will show him to you, White Man. |
2893 | Can we desert one god and set up another? ” “ What god, King? ” “ I will show him to you, White Man. |
2893 | Choose then: shall we go back or forward? |
2893 | Did Elijah ’s Master forsake him, and shall He forsake us? |
2893 | Did I say that the charm would hurt her? |
2893 | Did I speak to you of vengeance? |
2893 | Did he not bid you also to listen to my counsel? |
2893 | Did he not say: ‘ Even now the heathen is at your gates, and many of you shall perish on his spears; but I tell you that he shall not conquer ’? |
2893 | Did you not drink of a cup, and were not many things mixed in the draught? |
2893 | Did you then think to catch him sleeping? |
2893 | Do you consent? ” “ It is just; we consent, ” said the councillors. |
2893 | Do you purpose to leave us? ” “ No, King, but I believe that ere long I shall be recalled. |
2893 | Do you remember that day when you ate the fruit, how after it I accompanied you to the church yonder and listened to your preaching? |
2893 | Do you suppose that there are many mad clergymen in Africa, Mr. Owen? |
2893 | Fool, am I not a wizard? |
2893 | Had that dream of his been vain imagining, and was all his faith nothing but a dream wondered Owen? |
2893 | Have I not grown up in Umsuka ’s shadow, and shall I cut down the tree that shades me? ” “ What have I to offer you? |
2893 | Have I not grown up in Umsuka ’s shadow, and shall I cut down the tree that shades me? ” “ What have I to offer you? |
2893 | Have I not told you the story of Elijah the prophet and the priests of Baal? |
2893 | Have any of you a boon to ask of the king? ” Men stood forward, and having saluted, one by one asked this thing or that. |
2893 | Have you been ill? ” “ No, Messenger, ” answered Hokosa, “ that is, not in my body. |
2893 | Having hated you so much, shall I seek your forgiveness now? |
2893 | He had entered the Church, but what had he done in its shadow? |
2893 | How are we to be governed henceforth? |
2893 | How would it be were that Maker to command that he should serve Him in this extreme and heroic fashion? |
2893 | I am a stranger here and you are a great man; yet, Hokosa, which of us is the safest this night? ” “ Your meaning? ” said Hokosa sharply. |
2893 | I am a stranger here and you are a great man; yet, Hokosa, which of us is the safest this night? ” “ Your meaning? ” said Hokosa sharply. |
2893 | I have been sick at heart, and therefore I have not come. ” “ What, Hokosa, do your doubts still torment you? |
2893 | I have spoken. ” “ Have you anything to say? ” asked the king of the prisoner. |
2893 | I, who for twenty years have been a soldier of my king and for ten a captain in my regiment? |
2893 | It chanced, however, that I was able to recover Umsuka from his sickness, and Hafela is fled, so why should I bring up the deed against you? |
2893 | Leave him his life who has lost all else. ” “ That he may rebel against me? |
2893 | Let us put him and his doctrines to the trial by fire. ” “ What is the trial by fire? ” asked Owen. |
2893 | Listen, Prince; you come to talk to me of the death of a king-- is it not so? |
2893 | Man, let me hear the trouble, and swiftly, for can not you who are a doctor see that I shall not be here for long to talk with you? |
2893 | Messenger, I am not afraid-- and yet, have you no medicine? |
2893 | Messenger, you are doomed, are you not? |
2893 | Nay; what have you to offer me in return for such a deed as this? |
2893 | Noma, what shall we do with this man who was your husband? |
2893 | Now Hokosa looked at the dust at his feet, then he gazed upwards searching the heavens, and answered:-- “ Did not I tell you yesterday? |
2893 | Now, what is your business with me, and why do you come from the white man ’s countries to visit me? |
2893 | Now, what say you? |
2893 | Now, whether it was by chance or whether his prayer was heard, who can say? |
2893 | Of the councillors and generals, how the land could be protected from its foes when they were commanded to lay down the spear? |
2893 | Of the heads of kraals, how they would grow wealthy when their daughters ceased to be worth cattle? |
2893 | Of the soldiers, whose only trade was war, how it would please them to till the fields like girls? |
2893 | Of the women they asked what would become of them when men were allowed to take but one wife? |
2893 | Shall I gather some of this juice also? |
2893 | The matter, then, resolved itself to this: which of these two rules of life was the right rule? |
2893 | Umsuka stirred a hand, groaned, sat up, and spoke:-- “ What has chanced to me? ” he said. |
2893 | Was it wrong to have done this? |
2893 | What did I tell you, Hokosa? ” Now when he heard his fate, Hokosa bowed his head and trembled a little. |
2893 | What did they talk of in that hut, and who were those men? |
2893 | What have you to say to this demand, Hokosa? ” Now Hokosa stepped forward from where he stood at the head of the company of wizards. |
2893 | What is it? |
2893 | What say you? ” Hokosa turned and talked with the king. |
2893 | What think you of the plan, Noma? ” “ It is deep and well laid, ” she answered, “ and surely it would succeed were it not for one thing. |
2893 | What way shall we turn? |
2893 | What will you pay me, woman, if I give you the medicine which you seek? ” “ Alas, master, I am poor. |
2893 | When, before that hour, you sat in yonder hut bargaining with the Prince Hafela-- the death of a king for the price of a girl-- was I not with you? |
2893 | Where are all your high schemes now? |
2893 | Where is the fruit of wisdom that I gathered for you? |
2893 | Where shall I begin? |
2893 | Which of them should a man follow to satisfy his conscience and to secure his abiding welfare? |
2893 | Whither shall I go? |
2893 | Who am I that I should take vengeance upon one who has repented? |
2893 | Who can say? |
2893 | Why do you tempt me with your doubts? |
2893 | Why do you whisper evil counsel into one ear and into the other prophesy of misfortunes to come? |
2893 | Why should he kill him? |
2893 | Why should he not tell all to the white man, and before he could be delivered up to justice take that poison which he had prepared? |
2893 | Why should this woman have spared him? |
2893 | Why, then, should you reproach me because my ears are not so open as yours, as my heart has not understanding? |
2893 | Will he not certainly strive to grow great again? |
2893 | Will you give her back the basket, or will you not? |
2893 | Will you receive my gift, Hafela? ” “ What will happen if I refuse it? ” asked the prince slowly. |
2893 | Will you receive my gift, Hafela? ” “ What will happen if I refuse it? ” asked the prince slowly. |
2893 | Will you refuse me a second time? |
2893 | Will you yield or be slain? |
2893 | Within twenty years, or ten, or mayhap even one, what would this present victory or defeat mean to him? |
2893 | Worm that you are, has God need of such as you? |
2893 | Would he flinch from the steel, or would he meet it as the martyrs met it of old? |
2893 | Would_ his_ sin find him out? |
2893 | Yesterday you were near to death; say now, had you stepped over the edge of it, where would you be this day? ” Umsuka shrugged his shoulders. |
2893 | Yet how is it to be done without suspicion or discovery? |
2893 | You see that waggon chain? |
2893 | You shall go upon an embassy to the Prince Hafela. ” “ Are you not afraid that I should stop there? ” she asked again, with a flash of her eyes. |
2893 | You teach beautiful things, but say, are you a wizard? |
2893 | and whatsoever ye shall ask in My name, that will I do;”--still hold good to such as do ask and do believe? |
2893 | great doctor, ” she said, “ why do you ask me of my husband? |
2893 | “ Am I still here? ” he asked wondering, of John and Hokosa who watched at his bedside. |
2893 | “ And, Messenger,_ my_ days are also numbered. ” “ How is this? ” asked Owen, “ seeing that you are well and strong. |
2893 | “ Believe in Him and He will save you. ” “ How can we do that, ” asked the king again, “ when already we have a god? |
2893 | “ But tell me, Messenger, why do you speak of yourself as of one who soon will be but a memory? |
2893 | “ Can a wizard cease from wizardry, or a plotter from his plots? |
2893 | “ Can not this be done otherwise? ” “ It can not, ” he answered. |
2893 | “ Did I not tell you it was accursed? ” she wailed. |
2893 | “ Did I not tell you that I was guarded by That which you can not see? ” Hokosa asked contemptuously. |
2893 | “ Do you desire speech with me, Hokosa? ” he asked in his gentle voice. |
2893 | “ Do you sleep? ” he asked. |
2893 | “ Does a buck walk into an open pit? |
2893 | “ Does it please the king to grant leave for my journey? ” she asked, looking up. |
2893 | “ Father, ” he said, “ am I a coward that you should talk to me thus? |
2893 | “ Have I not already told you, and can I not win it with your help? ” “ What dead, husband? ” “ Umsuka the king. |
2893 | “ Have I not already told you, and can I not win it with your help? ” “ What dead, husband? ” “ Umsuka the king. |
2893 | “ Have I not told you that, before I see the signal- fire yonder, the Messenger shall sleep sound? |
2893 | “ Have you heard? ” he said to Noma. |
2893 | “ Have you killed it? ” “ No, Messenger, ” answered the man, “ I dare not. |
2893 | “ Having defied your God so long, shall I grovel to Him at the last? |
2893 | “ How are you named, White Man? ” asked the captain. |
2893 | “ How came he like this? ” he asked. |
2893 | “ How did he know that the breath of the tree is poisonous? ” John wondered. |
2893 | “ How many are killed? ” he asked. |
2893 | “ How many of them are there? ” asked Owen. |
2893 | “ I came but to ask you for a charm to turn my father ’s heart---- ” “ To dust? |
2893 | “ I put ten head of cattle on the Bees; who wagers on the Wasps? ” cried the king. |
2893 | “ Is it Hafela whom I see yonder? ” he asked. |
2893 | “ Is it so? ” she said. |
2893 | “ Let him stay here with me, and set your guard without my gates. ” “ How do I know that he will not murder you, friend? ” asked the king. |
2893 | “ Listen now: what is he, and what did he say? |
2893 | “ Messenger, ” he said, “ is it necessary to baptism that I should confess all my sins to you? |
2893 | “ Must I then put your thoughts in words? ” said this man in a clear quick whisper. |
2893 | “ Of whom do you speak, King? ” asked Owen, who at that moment entered the royal house. |
2893 | “ Say now, how many regiments are hidden in the gorge? ” “ Eight. ” “ Well, I have fourteen; so, being warned, there is little to fear. |
2893 | “ Say out your say, for none are present save us three, and from the Messenger here I have no secrets. ” “ What, Husband, none? |
2893 | “ Tell me, why have you deserted me of late? |
2893 | “ Then, Son of the Great One, why should you waste time in listening to me? |
2893 | “ Thus you may say again before everything is done, husband; but if it be so, why do you love me and tie me to you with your wizardry? |
2893 | “ Vile woman, and double- faced! ” he said, “ why do you push me forward with one hand and with the other drag me back? |
2893 | “ Well, I said that he would be too clever for you, did I not? |
2893 | “ What do you, Messenger? ” asked the leader of the guard, astonished. |
2893 | “ What have you to say? ” asked the king of John. |
2893 | “ What have you to say? ” asked the king, in a cold voice of anger. |
2893 | “ What is that you desire and would do? ” asked Noma, in a hushed voice. |
2893 | “ What is the matter? ” Owen asked. |
2893 | “ What is the matter? ” asked Owen. |
2893 | “ What of it, O King? ” “ This, girl: the prince who was pleased to honour you is now pleased to dishonour you. |
2893 | “ What say I? ” he answered in a slow and quiet voice. |
2893 | “ What shall I do with this? ” she asked. |
2893 | “ What shall chance to me in that hour? ” Hokosa asked eagerly, placing his ears against Noma ’s lips. |
2893 | “ What then is to be done? ” he asked, “ for unless we come at them we can not kill them. |
2893 | “ What were the words that the Messenger spoke to us before he died? |
2893 | “ What will you do now, Hokosa? ” asked Noma his wife upon a certain day. |
2893 | “ What, ” said Nodwengo, “ leaving the aged and the women and children to perish, for how can we take such a multitude? |
2893 | “ Whence come you, pretty one? ” he asked, “ and wherefore come you? |
2893 | “ Whence come you, pretty one? ” he asked, “ and wherefore come you? |
2893 | “ Where is the snake? ” he asked when at length she was out of danger. |
2893 | “ Where then is your spear, Messenger? ” “ Here, ” said Owen, presenting to his eyes a crucifix of ivory, most beautifully carved. |
2893 | “ Who can say? ” he answered. |
2893 | “ Who is God? ” asked the captain. |
2893 | “ Who set them, Hokosa? |
2893 | “ Who set those words between your lips, Messenger? ” he whispered. |
2893 | “ Who told you that this was so? ” asked one of the judges. |
2893 | “ Who went? |
2893 | “ Why are you still afraid? ” asked Owen. |
2893 | “ Why did you give her death- medicine? ” asked Noma of Hokosa, as he stood staring after her. |
2893 | “ Why do you bide by the fire, seeing that it is so hot, Noma? ” he asked. |
2893 | “ Why do you speak thus, Noma? ” he asked. |
2893 | “ Why have you summoned me from my rest, Hokosa? ” muttered the voice from the lips of the huddled corpse. |
2893 | “ Why should I trust you? ” Nodwengo went on vehemently. |
2893 | “ Why should a God die miserably upon a cross? ” asked the king at length. |
2893 | “ Will it kill at once? ” asked Noma. |
2893 | “ Will the storm break to- day? ” asked Owen of Nodwengo, who came to visit him. |
2893 | “ Will you listen to the lies that this renegade tells to work upon your fears? |
2893 | “ Will you not eat? |
2893 | “ Will you turn to Hafela after all? ” “ No, ” answered Hokosa; “ I will consult my ancient lore. |
2893 | “ Would I care to walk down that garden and find myself in Heaven? |
2893 | “ Would you do sacrilege, and offer worship to a man? |
2893 | “ Would you learn, wizard and traitor? ” he cried. |
2893 | “ You would keep this fellow alive? ” she said, “ and yet you would not suffer him to escape. |
2893 | “ Your tale seems full of promise to one who is near the grave; but how can I know that it is more than a dream? |
21578 | A glass of wine, doctor? |
21578 | Ah-- so like you-- so modest-- but do n''t you think the draught is a little dangerous? |
21578 | Am I to have no redress, sir? 21578 And do you_ feel it_?" |
21578 | And must it come to this? |
21578 | And my half- brother? |
21578 | And see that the rooms and the passages are well swept, and that the maids are up betimes in the morning? |
21578 | And so,said his lordship, turning to Joshua,"you are the true and veritable Ralph Rattlin?" |
21578 | And that one, my Josephine? |
21578 | And the ship immediately after struck? |
21578 | And wear the uniform? |
21578 | And what is this honour? |
21578 | And where was the boat all this time? |
21578 | And who gave it you? |
21578 | And who is Mr Matthews? |
21578 | And who is with Sir Reginald? |
21578 | And whom may I thank for that? |
21578 | And yet you will not resume that life for which alone you were educated? |
21578 | And you have not seen her face? |
21578 | And_ he_ my father!--but you,_ you, her friend_? |
21578 | Are we alone, Ralph? |
21578 | Are you a well- grown youth for your age? |
21578 | Are you afraid of taking cold? |
21578 | Bella, dearest, will you marry me? |
21578 | Bump me? 21578 But are you sure of all this, Bill?" |
21578 | But can you not manumit her? |
21578 | But how know you its contents? |
21578 | But the clothes-- the clothes-- these incomprehensible clothes? |
21578 | But what is to be done? |
21578 | But why do I waste my time here? |
21578 | But why examine so many before you spoke to me? 21578 But why washed at this time of day-- and why put on your second best?" |
21578 | But, my dear madam, why may I not gaze upon the countenance that you know is very dear to me? 21578 Ca n''t it be done without blood?" |
21578 | Could you not send her to France? |
21578 | Do you call this a school? 21578 Do you hear the impudent scoundrel? |
21578 | Do you mean the doctor''s, or this? |
21578 | Do you see this scar? |
21578 | Does death absolve us from our oaths? |
21578 | For ever? |
21578 | For true? |
21578 | From whence did you take the tea- kettle? |
21578 | Gone!--where?--with her husband? |
21578 | Had you no friend near you,said Dr Thompson,"at that most unfortunate time?" |
21578 | Halloa!--Pigtop-- what''s in the wind now? 21578 Have you ever committed theft?" |
21578 | Have you spoken to a clergyman? |
21578 | Holloa, shipmate!--fallen foul of a pirate, mayhap-- haven''t slipped your wind, ha''ye, messmate? |
21578 | How does she know what is, or what is not, indelicate? |
21578 | How is it possible? |
21578 | I hope, sir, you do not think me a fool for believing an English officer incapable of a lie? |
21578 | I hope,said he,"you wo n''t want me to wear this livery long?" |
21578 | I presume, Mr Rattlin, that you are a Catholic? |
21578 | I say,said the school- boy wag of the party, applying an old Joe Miller to the occasion,"why is Mr Riprapton like pens, ink, and paper?" |
21578 | I was mad-- do you forgive me, Ralph? |
21578 | In the name of ten thousand decencies, doctor,exclaimed Mr Farmer,"who made you that figure?" |
21578 | Is he stunned? |
21578 | Is not this some book of divine consolation? |
21578 | Is that Mr Ralph Rattlin? |
21578 | Is that brandy before you, Mr Farmer? 21578 Is the deep sea- lead ready?" |
21578 | Is this your writing, sir? |
21578 | Is your code of equity as low as mine? 21578 It''s no change,"said I, getting out, sulkily,"from one school to another-- and do you call this a school?" |
21578 | Major Flushfire, may I claim the privilege of the similar colour of our cloth to entreat the favour of your attention? 21578 Master Rattlin, wo n''t you please to alight?" |
21578 | Miss Tremayne? |
21578 | Mr Farmer, Mr Farmer, do you see the young blackguard? |
21578 | Mr Rattlin, what do you say? |
21578 | Mr Rattlin, what the devil are you about?--where''s the hand stationed to the foresheet? |
21578 | Mr Rattlin, your honour, will you condescend to hear me? 21578 My dear Ralph,"said she,"why are you not in mourning?" |
21578 | None whatever: who could think or frightening them? 21578 O it did, did it? |
21578 | O, by Jasus, and ai n''t she welcome intirely? 21578 Of an interesting physiognomy?" |
21578 | Oh, very, very great-- but why this violence? |
21578 | Oh, where? |
21578 | Pray sir,said he to me,"who is he?" |
21578 | Pray, Mr Rattlin, what_ induced_ you to commit it? |
21578 | Pray, Mr Rattlin, where did Mr Burn''s shot fall? |
21578 | Pray, sir,said I, walking up to him, deliberately and resolutely,"how do_ you_ know that I am a bastard?" |
21578 | Put whom to field- work?--flog whom? |
21578 | Quarter- master,continued Reud,"did you port the helm? |
21578 | Ralph,said he, as he received back the tumbler,"Ralph, are we friends?" |
21578 | Ralph,said he,"did you not see Mr Ford go into the public- house?" |
21578 | Shall I go to the doctor? |
21578 | Shall I introduce him to your lordship? |
21578 | Shall we admit, Sir Reginald, the people who are thundering at the door? |
21578 | Should you? 21578 So you dined in the ward- room, Mr Rattlin?" |
21578 | So you have at length discovered him? |
21578 | So, Master Rattlin,said the worthy gentleman,"you think that you and Frank proved yourselves excellent sportsmen?" |
21578 | Speak, trembler!--is this person the veritable Ralph Rathelin? |
21578 | Tell me, beautiful cause of all our miseries, does your miserable offspring know this? |
21578 | Thank you; but what prevents my impressing you, even as you stand there? |
21578 | Then he was in holy orders? |
21578 | There, Mr Farmer,said the captain exultingly,"did you mark that? |
21578 | To where? |
21578 | Ugh-- hum-- ha-- of dark brown hair, approaching to black? |
21578 | Very well, Joshua; but how came you to know that I went to school at Stickenham? |
21578 | Well, doctor, how are you? |
21578 | Well, gentlemen,said Captain Reud, rising a little chafed,"have you come to a conclusion upon this very plain case? |
21578 | Well, mamma, wo n''t you take me home? 21578 What are they, my little friend?" |
21578 | What can they be doing? |
21578 | What do you mean by those horrible words? 21578 What do you mean by your wood and water?" |
21578 | What do you mean, sir? |
21578 | What do you think of Jemima? |
21578 | What do you think of that shot, Mr Farmer? |
21578 | What name did you go by when under the care of those persons? |
21578 | What, has the ship tumbled overboard, or the pig- ballast mutinied for arrears of pay? |
21578 | What, in the name of pharmacy, is this? |
21578 | What,said I,"could you think so meanly of me? |
21578 | What-- how? 21578 Where are the servants?" |
21578 | Where did you get this, younker? |
21578 | Where does Mr Seabright live? |
21578 | Where is he? |
21578 | Where is that inestimable letter? |
21578 | Where were you, Ralph, when I came? |
21578 | Where will this fellow stop? |
21578 | Where''s the midshipman o''th''watch-- where''s the midshipman o''th''watch? |
21578 | Which way did the lubbers sheer off? 21578 Who is he, may I ask?" |
21578 | Who is old leather- chops-- your father? |
21578 | Who''s afraid? |
21578 | Who, who, who? |
21578 | Who? |
21578 | Why not? 21578 Why the devil need it be a woman, then? |
21578 | Why, Mr Rattlin, why? |
21578 | Why? |
21578 | Will this honour do that for you which my father-- which I-- will do? 21578 Will you carry the keys?" |
21578 | Will you do all this, my generous, my good, my godlike Ralph? |
21578 | You have no relations or friends to assist you? |
21578 | You have: well, my man? |
21578 | You refuse to go? |
21578 | You, Pigtop!--begging your pardon, who the devil would be encumbered with you? |
21578 | You? |
21578 | Zur, may n''t I go and have my cry out with''em, for certain I ha''behaved mortal bad? |
21578 | _ Que voulez- vous_? |
21578 | ''tis too much-- I am affected-- what can I possibly do with him with those black eyes? |
21578 | --bowing round--"Captain Reud will perhaps do me the favour to be of the party?" |
21578 | --the well- acted surprise,"I, sir?" |
21578 | And how did the schooling get on? |
21578 | And how happens it,"said he, turning fiercely to the companion and the nurses,"that my patient was thus left alone with this stripling?" |
21578 | And now, Ralph, on whom have you been in the habit of drawing for your allowance while you were in the West Indies?" |
21578 | And to whom do I owe all this ignominy? |
21578 | And what says your code of honour to such conduct?" |
21578 | Are the ladies at Chatham so remarkable for modesty?" |
21578 | Are we persons to enjoy a repetition of the Black Hole of Calcutta? |
21578 | Are you prepared to be verified?" |
21578 | As we stepped into the midst of these, completely muffled in our cloaks, a fellow came and whispered to us,"Is all ready?" |
21578 | At every murderous lunge that I made at him, I shouted,"Take that Daunton;"or,"Was that well planted, brother?" |
21578 | Bella, dear, if you will not kill me with kindness, what shall I do? |
21578 | Bits of what? |
21578 | But I must not disturb you-- yet, if I dared, I would ask you one question-- oh, in pity answer it-- was she my mother?" |
21578 | But am I on the right lay?" |
21578 | But before this assistance came, what were my feelings? |
21578 | But do you know that I have become a desperate character lately? |
21578 | But is it quite fair, my dear doctor, for you and me to converse in Latin? |
21578 | But was I not really frightened at the whistling of the shot? |
21578 | But were I to dilate upon these horrors, would he not weary of them? |
21578 | But what am I, who thus speak so proudly to a being whom, if I did not know he was treacherous, I should think an angel? |
21578 | But what is mere beauty? |
21578 | But where am I going? |
21578 | But where go to then? |
21578 | But who is my mother? |
21578 | But why give up your good berth on board the_ London_?" |
21578 | Can I see the young man?" |
21578 | Can this be the jovial and rubicund doctor? |
21578 | Captain Reud, do n''t you find this scene rather affecting? |
21578 | Captain Reud, how could you treat a poor lad thus, who respected, who loved you so much?" |
21578 | Come along ye little undersized spalpeen with your officer, wo n''t you?" |
21578 | Could I doubt it at that ecstatic moment? |
21578 | D''ye think that John Gowles need strike such a strip of a thing as that ere twice?" |
21578 | Did I dance? |
21578 | Did I know anything of Mr Rose? |
21578 | Did she ever sleep again? |
21578 | Do n''t you know that the fellow was put on board with` CP''before his name? |
21578 | Do you believe in ghosts?" |
21578 | Do you know that, at his rising and his setting, I have often thought of you? |
21578 | Do you know these-- and these?" |
21578 | Do you think the story about Cain and Abel is true?" |
21578 | Do you think, Mr Pigtop, that Mr Rattlin''s caulking?" |
21578 | Do you think, sir, I should hold now the responsible commission I do hold under his Majesty, if I had been without zeal for the service? |
21578 | Do you understand me, Ralph? |
21578 | Do you wish to enter?" |
21578 | Does not the reader suppose that there was a continual fishing through my bosom of agonised feelings? |
21578 | Each looked at the other with a glance that plainly asked,"Was the voice thine?" |
21578 | Farmer?" |
21578 | Had I a sister? |
21578 | Had I any connections that knew Mr Percival, etcetera? |
21578 | Had Josephine''s nurse and the Obeah woman anything to do with it? |
21578 | Had the wretch a heart, after all? |
21578 | Had they not been led on by hope? |
21578 | Has it put that gay blue jacket on him, or that small sword by his side? |
21578 | Have I, my lord, correctly expressed your intentions?" |
21578 | Have you been to the bank this morning to cash your fifty- pound bill?" |
21578 | Have you counted them?" |
21578 | Have you sufficient money to proceed to London immediately?" |
21578 | Have you, Captain Reud, a glass of water ready, should this amiable youth or myself feel faint during this exciting investigation?" |
21578 | He came close to me, and, without preparation, he electrified me by drawling out,"I say, Rattlin, what a mess you made of it at Aniana? |
21578 | He died young-- where? |
21578 | Here the medical voices preponderated, and expressions such as these became distinct--"Do you accuse me of ignorance, sir- r- r?" |
21578 | His next"excessively droll, is n''t it?" |
21578 | How could my mess- mates possibly go on the quarter- deck, and assist to receive the dignified personage? |
21578 | How does she answer her helm? |
21578 | How is this, Captain Reud? |
21578 | How many sails are there in sight?" |
21578 | How much of all this, thought I, is genuine feeling, how much genuine appetite? |
21578 | How-- for what?" |
21578 | However, the Falcon, one of our men- of- war brigs, was between this schooner and all the convoy, with the signal flying,"May I chase?" |
21578 | I ask you the question advisedly-- I always speak advisedly-- I ask you, do you know what Providence is? |
21578 | I dared not ask the awful question,"Is she dead?" |
21578 | I do n''t mean now, but at the holidays, when all the others go to their mammas? |
21578 | I do not say satisfy it-- a person less careful of the varieties of language would have said satisfy-- an impatience satisfied is what? |
21578 | I have sprung from a beautiful race-- but we must not speak ill of kith and kin, must we, Pigtop?" |
21578 | I hope, Mr Silva, that it is not of that extent to preclude me from asking him to breakfast with us this morning?" |
21578 | I moved: he advanced to my cot with the gentleness of a woman, and softly uttered:--"Ralph, my dear boy, do you sleep?" |
21578 | I suppose you have heard the trivial, foolish, spiteful objection started against a passage I have employed in the second page?" |
21578 | I suppose_ you_ have no objection, Mr Farmer? |
21578 | I think I am dying; will you forgive me?--will you shake hands with me?" |
21578 | I''ve a great mind--""To do what, Mr Farmer?" |
21578 | If I extricate you out of the difficulty, will you own that I have won it?" |
21578 | If I presumed upon this, who shall blame such conduct in a mere boy? |
21578 | If a man comes in our way, why, you know, in self- defence-- hey?" |
21578 | If it''s a fair question, Mr Rattlin, may I presume to ask where you slept last night?" |
21578 | In answer to the signal of the_ Falcon_, which was astern of the convoy, and between it and the gigantic schooner,"Shall I chase?" |
21578 | In the act they are omnipotent, for who would quarrel with a man who is slipping a razor over your carotid artery? |
21578 | Into whose arms was I to be received? |
21578 | Is a British subject to have his slush- tub cannonaded on the high seas, and no redress, sir? |
21578 | Is it not a princely residence?" |
21578 | Is it not difficult to ascertain the nice line that separates excitement from incipient delirium? |
21578 | Is it not so?" |
21578 | Is that other person his son-- a disgraced man? |
21578 | Is that person with the discoloured countenance my friend''s son? |
21578 | Is that prog and that bottle of porter private property?" |
21578 | Is there malice between us?" |
21578 | Is this believed? |
21578 | Just as I was passionately exclaiming,"Sir-- I-- I-- I--"Captain Reud put his hand gently on my shoulder, and said,"Mr Rattlin, what are you about? |
21578 | Man, man, what do you want-- why do n''t you speak?" |
21578 | Massa Ralph, suppose no marry me to- day-- what for you say no yes to dat?" |
21578 | May I be permitted to wish you a good day?" |
21578 | May I sail with you in the capacity of your servant?" |
21578 | Mr Farmer? |
21578 | Mr Ralph Rattlin, you have not yet spoken to me-- indeed, how can you? |
21578 | Mrs Causand sprang up from her sofa, and, standing in all the majesty of her beauty, sternly demanded,"What means this indignity?" |
21578 | My modesty(?) |
21578 | No doubt you went up of your own accord to count the convoy?" |
21578 | Nobody coming to woo- oo- oo?" |
21578 | Now this was tolerably firm, considering the ducking that I had enjoyed, and the hunger, cold, and weariness that I was then enjoying-- enjoying? |
21578 | Now, mind what you say; did you, sir? |
21578 | Now, my dear sir, may I tax your experience to tell us which is the better method of living? |
21578 | Now, what money have you?" |
21578 | Now, what shall I do for you?" |
21578 | Out of my way, man-- what the devil do you want? |
21578 | Pray, sir, who is your father?" |
21578 | Pray, where did you get them?" |
21578 | Providence is, Mr Rattlin-- do you really know what Providence is? |
21578 | Shall I carry, after the manner of Plutarch, the comparison any further? |
21578 | Shall I send you my book,` De Natura Pestium et Pestilentiarum?''" |
21578 | Shall we clap on sail, and give chase?" |
21578 | So you want to get forward, Master Rattlin? |
21578 | Tell me, Miss Tremayne, how comes my patient thus unattended, or rather, thus ill attended?" |
21578 | The scene that ensued-- how can I sufficiently describe it? |
21578 | Then and there, why should I have wished to have crept and grovelled under piled and sordid stone? |
21578 | Then he is the son of somebody, sir?" |
21578 | There must have been some exciting conversation between you, sir( turning to me), and the lady; did you say anything to vex or grieve her?" |
21578 | Vere ist Mr Reepraaptong?" |
21578 | Was I one of two existences, the consciousness of the one nearly, but not quite, blotting out the other? |
21578 | Was I related to my Lord A---? |
21578 | Was I then in a sick- chamber?--was that personification of beauty doomed? |
21578 | Was he a deep hypocrite, or only a self- deceiver? |
21578 | Was not this a state of the supremest happiness? |
21578 | Was the person in the blue silk dress as tall as Jemima; or the other in the white muslin quite as stout? |
21578 | Was your back very sore?" |
21578 | We may ask, where are they? |
21578 | Well, if I make out your commission as my housekeeper, will you do the duties of the office?" |
21578 | Were you removed to a school, by a gentleman in a plain carriage, from those Brandons?" |
21578 | What can I do for you?" |
21578 | What could you expect, Mr Farmer, from such a mere boy? |
21578 | What did I do with it-- saturated as it was with my blood, and owing as I did my life to it? |
21578 | What for you no run, Dorcas, a get me, from Massa Jackson''s store, bottle good port? |
21578 | What frankincense was ever equal to that which nature then spread over the wave and through the air? |
21578 | What is drunkenness? |
21578 | What is this honour, that seems to bid you to break my heart, and make me die of very grief?" |
21578 | What is to be done with the child? |
21578 | What leeway does she make? |
21578 | What then? |
21578 | What will not madness dare? |
21578 | What would you advise me to do?" |
21578 | What, in the name of all that is disastrous, can he want with me?" |
21578 | What, with both?" |
21578 | When it had somewhat subsided, the schoolmaster exclaimed,"There, madam, did n''t I tell you he was a singular lad? |
21578 | Where can I now turn my eyes for solace, but over the vast space that I have passed? |
21578 | Where have you been brought up, Master Rattlin?" |
21578 | Where is Sir Ralph''s[? Sir Reginalds''s] son? |
21578 | Where is Sir Ralph''s[? Sir Reginalds''s] son? |
21578 | Where is that son? |
21578 | Where is your knife? |
21578 | Where''s the boatswain? |
21578 | Which is the way to Sir Reginald''s room? |
21578 | Who can know the heart of man? |
21578 | Who taught her the infinite pathos of that beautiful posture? |
21578 | Whose deadly white face is that, that peers out from under the shadow of an immense green shade? |
21578 | Why did you provoke me?" |
21578 | Why do n''t you love Mr Root?" |
21578 | Why do n''t you love me, Ralph dear?" |
21578 | Why should the exertions of intellect be termed low, in the case of the mechanic, and vast, profound, and glorious, in that of the minister? |
21578 | Why, sir, have you looked upon me as man never before looked? |
21578 | Will it bleed much?" |
21578 | Will you do it?" |
21578 | Will you favour me with any commands? |
21578 | Will you permit me now to say farewell? |
21578 | Will you, will you, Ralph, do this over- cruel thing?" |
21578 | With a calm sneer he said,"May I trouble you, Mr Rattlin, for those letters which I handed over to you for your perusal?" |
21578 | With a very little voice, and a very great submission, mine host squeaked out,"Have you seen the lady''s face?" |
21578 | Wo n''t you, mamma?" |
21578 | Yellow fever!--malignant consumer of the brave!--how shall I adequately apostrophise thee? |
21578 | You Phebe, oder woman of colour dere, why you no take Massa Ralph, and put him in best bed? |
21578 | You go to meeting, I presume?" |
21578 | You spoke of tramping-- have you been a tramper-- a gipsy?" |
21578 | You understand me perfectly-- would it be asking too much to have all the windows closed?" |
21578 | You understand me?" |
21578 | Young gentleman, I am here to verify you-- are you fully prepared, sir, to be, as it were, verified?" |
21578 | _ Did ever anybody know any good come of hoaxing_? |
21578 | and even after this, their hopes and their exertions to end in smoke? |
21578 | and swindled-- only in a small way, of course?" |
21578 | and what shall I call you?" |
21578 | but how, in the name of all that is curious, came you to know that I was here at Port Royal dockyard, and a young gentleman belonging to the_ Eos_?" |
21578 | can_ we_ have any secrets?" |
21578 | droll, is n''t it-- excessively? |
21578 | heh!--but this land breeze- laden, perhaps, with the germs of the yellow- fever-- mephitic-- and all that-- you understand me, Dr Thompson?" |
21578 | how talk of marry me?" |
21578 | is it face you want? |
21578 | pointing to my friend;"and who are you?" |
21578 | said I, half aloud,"does the tyrant mean? |
21578 | said I,"is this all you can show to justify your bragging?" |
21578 | said she, deeply agitated;"my poor boy, why do you cry?" |
21578 | such words are vanities-- but ask me not why? |
21578 | was this well done of you?" |
21578 | what could put that in your foolish noddle?" |
21578 | what could you be about? |
21578 | what do mean by coming to quarters undressed? |
21578 | what have I done, that you should turn me out of your house in my grey hairs-- now I''m dismantled, as it were, and laid up in ordinary?" |
21578 | what were you saying? |
21578 | who are you, and who am I?" |
21578 | whose were to be the beautiful lips that were now longing to kiss me with parental, perhaps fraternal rapture? |
21578 | why come to school then, that''s the way-- droll, is n''t it? |
21578 | why wo n''t a man do-- why wo n''t I do?" |
28294 | And it carried off the eggs too, I suppose? |
28294 | Are you aware of anything he ever did? |
28294 | Art thou, too, fallen, Iberia? 28294 But,"I rejoined,"have you no idea of their number?" |
28294 | Can you tell me,I asked,"who made the world?" |
28294 | Did you ever,whispered my Russian friend,"see such a people?" |
28294 | Do other boys and girls, your acquaintances, go to confession? |
28294 | Do you go to church? |
28294 | Do you go to confession? |
28294 | Do you take the sacrament? |
28294 | Do_ you_ not believe in them? |
28294 | Does the priest ask you about anything else? |
28294 | For what? |
28294 | Has it wrought any of late? |
28294 | Have you any coffee? |
28294 | Have you beef?--Have you cheese?--Have you macaroni? |
28294 | Have you ever heard of Christ? |
28294 | Have you,said the official,"any more?" |
28294 | How are we,abruptly asked the preacher,"to become the sons of God?" |
28294 | How can you avoid confessing? |
28294 | If you confess it a second time, what happens? |
28294 | In what quarter of Rome did she live? |
28294 | Is this Italy? |
28294 | Then, why do n''t you? |
28294 | Was Christ ever on earth? |
28294 | Was Mary ever on earth? |
28294 | Was there,asked Mr Whiteside of a sculptor in Rome,"really affecting yourself, any practical oppression under old Gregory?" |
28294 | Well, when you go to confess, what does the priest ask you? |
28294 | What did she do when here? |
28294 | What does he ask you about them? |
28294 | What does she say? |
28294 | What is that to me? |
28294 | What is the matter? |
28294 | What o''clock is it? |
28294 | What of the night? |
28294 | What shall I have for doing so? |
28294 | When will it be ready for the transport of the cannon? |
28294 | When you confess that you have done a bad action, what then? |
28294 | Where are its temples, its palaces, its vineyards? |
28294 | Where is Christ? |
28294 | Where is she? |
28294 | Where,you exclaim,"are its highways?" |
28294 | Who is he? 28294 Who is she?" |
28294 | Whose Son is he? |
28294 | Again we ask, why is this? |
28294 | Again we say, Where are your subjects, Pio Nono? |
28294 | An hundred thousand? |
28294 | And after this, what can he look for among the ordinary worshippers? |
28294 | And even when he honestly wishes to serve him, what can he do? |
28294 | And how can it be otherwise, when the Church, for reasons best known to itself, denies the people the use of the indispensable instruments? |
28294 | And how can it be otherwise? |
28294 | And how happens it, too, that the Pope is infallible in only one science,--even the theological? |
28294 | And how was this temple built? |
28294 | And to what? |
28294 | And was time to close upon a world shrouded in darkness, with nought but this feeble beacon burning amid the Alps? |
28294 | And what becomes of the families of these unhappy men? |
28294 | And what did they depose? |
28294 | And what is canon law? |
28294 | And what is that work? |
28294 | And what is the aspect of the country? |
28294 | And what the appearance and apparent profession of these men? |
28294 | And what will our country then become? |
28294 | And who are they who tenant these places? |
28294 | And who is he? |
28294 | And why is it so? |
28294 | And why were they brought out of their house of bondage? |
28294 | And why were they there? |
28294 | And why, even to this hour, has it not told us all, but reserved some very important questions for future decision, or revelation rather? |
28294 | And why? |
28294 | And why? |
28294 | As the night grew late, the inquiries became more frequent,"Are we not yet at Rome?" |
28294 | Before decreeing worship to one, would it not be better to let his contemporaries pass from the stage of time? |
28294 | Beneath the dark shadow of the Vatican do they ever think of the sunny and vine- clad hills of their Palestine? |
28294 | But farther, what is the principle of the mass? |
28294 | But how comes this? |
28294 | But how shall I describe or group the horrors that have darkened and desolated the Papal States from that hour to this? |
28294 | But how stands the fact? |
28294 | But of what subjects do these catechisms treat? |
28294 | But should we fall from that happy state, how are we to recover it? |
28294 | But this solitary pillar, which stands erect where so many temples have fallen, with what message is it freighted? |
28294 | But what could they do? |
28294 | But what is the fact? |
28294 | But what sort of farming are we to expect from such corporations as we find in the city of Rome? |
28294 | But where are you to look for justice,--justice in its unmixed, eternal purity,--if not at Rome? |
28294 | But where is the Rome of the Cæsars, that great, imperial, and invincible city, that during thirteen centuries ruled the world? |
28294 | But where was the key that could open that breast, and read the secrets locked up in it? |
28294 | But who is to make them? |
28294 | But why is this? |
28294 | But, pray tell me, why do you permit the cardinals or the Pope ever to die, when the Bambino can cure them?" |
28294 | By the way, why should the profession of astrology and the cognate arts be permitted to only one class of men? |
28294 | Can Infallibility not walk alone, that it uses crutches? |
28294 | Can an infallible man not know truth from error till first he has collected the votes of fallible bishops? |
28294 | Can any sane man doubt that paganism once reigned here? |
28294 | Can he enclose within a little silver box that Almighty One whom the heaven, even the heaven of heavens, can not contain? |
28294 | Can the spirit, I asked myself, ever forget its earthly struggles, or the scene on which they were endured? |
28294 | Can you tell me anything about him?" |
28294 | Condemned to what? |
28294 | Could I, when far away,--in the seclusion of my own library, for instance,--bid the Alps rise before me, in stupendous magnificence, as now? |
28294 | Dare not till the earth God has given you?" |
28294 | Did he hasten to the prison, and beg his prisoner to come forth? |
28294 | Did it not come out of the foul box of Tetzel the indulgence- monger? |
28294 | Did no monk ever think of putting a stained window in the east, and compelling the sun to ogle the world through spectacles? |
28294 | Did not the Marshal Nouilles order a war against bankers? |
28294 | Did not the law of the suspected compel Protestants to nourish soldiers in their houses, as a punishment for refusing to go to mass? |
28294 | Did the ages seem long to him, or was it but as a few days since he left the earth? |
28294 | Did the heart of Gregory relent? |
28294 | Did you don the mail- coat of the warrior, or the white robe of the priest? |
28294 | Did you ever, reader, set foot in a_ diligence_? |
28294 | Do they not still love us? |
28294 | Do they not still think of us? |
28294 | Do we see The robber and the murderer weak as we? |
28294 | During all this time, what way has been made by the Catholic nations? |
28294 | Had he been shot, or what had happened? |
28294 | Had he not often climbed this Capitol? |
28294 | Had not his feet pressed, times without number, this lava- paved road through the Forum? |
28294 | Has he marked that tall thin man who has just passed him,"Walking in beauty like the night?" |
28294 | Has he political papers?" |
28294 | Has its natural canal, the Po, dried up? |
28294 | Has the Creator set limits to the life of kingdoms, as to that of man? |
28294 | Have we considered the infinite degradation of defeat? |
28294 | Have we forgotten the famous declaration of Wiseman, that his grand end in the papal aggression was to introduce canon law? |
28294 | Her great Founder demanded that she should be tried by her fruits; and why should Rome be unwilling to submit to this test? |
28294 | How came these tombstones there, if early Christianity and the early martyrs be a fable? |
28294 | How can a worship in which no one ever joins edify any one? |
28294 | How can it be otherwise? |
28294 | How do they conduct that process at Rome? |
28294 | How is this? |
28294 | How many iron- workmen are there in the Papal States? |
28294 | How much is that? |
28294 | How was I to carry in my pocket such a cage of imps? |
28294 | How was I to sleep at night in their company? |
28294 | How, then, can He be regarded with confidence or love? |
28294 | I looked at the little man in the box, to see how he was taking it; but he was true to his own remark,"What is that to me?" |
28294 | I might have puzzled the boy by asking,"But who made the masons?" |
28294 | I passed three Sabbaths in Rome; I worshipped each Sabbath in the English Protestant chapel; and what did I see at the door of that chapel? |
28294 | I walked under it,--walked round it,--viewed it on all sides; but why should I describe what the engraver''s art has made so familiar all over Europe? |
28294 | I wondered whether that coast had looked as unkindly to Æneas, when first he cast anchor on it after long ploughing the deep? |
28294 | If so, what mean these dungeons? |
28294 | If the Pope believes in his own relics, what conceptions must he have of Peter? |
28294 | If there was no purgatory, how could the painters of an infallible Church ever have given so exact a representation of it? |
28294 | Is Christ''s Vicar a model to all governors? |
28294 | Is he not a priest, and is not Rome his own? |
28294 | Is he not the same man? |
28294 | Is it for the past you mourn?" |
28294 | Is it its noble monuments,--its fine palaces,--its august temples? |
28294 | Is it not strange, then, to confine with bolt and bar beings who intend anything but escape? |
28294 | Is it not that Christ is again offered in sacrifice, and that the pain he endures in being so propitiates God in your behalf? |
28294 | Is it so? |
28294 | Is it the Jesuits? |
28294 | Is it the Pope? |
28294 | Is it the cardinals? |
28294 | Is it when the decree has been voted by the Council that it becomes infallible? |
28294 | Is its soil less fertile? |
28294 | Is not the Papal Government manifestly sacrificing its own interests? |
28294 | Is not, then, the area of Europe that is covered with masses"_ the place where our Lord was crucified_?" |
28294 | Is that the account which we have of his ministry? |
28294 | Is there, then, no immortality in reserve for nations? |
28294 | Is this the man that did make the earth to tremble,--that did shake kingdoms,--that made the world as a wilderness, and destroyed the cities thereof?" |
28294 | Is this the"three- score- and- ten"of nations, beyond which they can not pass? |
28294 | Let any minister or missionary attempt to do so now, and what would be his fate? |
28294 | May not the same principle be applicable, in some extent, to our passage from earth into the world beyond? |
28294 | Must they continue to die? |
28294 | Nay, what is a nation''s duration, when weighed against thine? |
28294 | Now, why is this? |
28294 | Once was he chased from Rome; and now that he is returned, can he call Rome his own? |
28294 | One can hardly see it without asking,"What ails thee? |
28294 | One thousand? |
28294 | Or do ye descry from afar the coming of a better era? |
28294 | Or had the Church completed her triumphs, and finished her course? |
28294 | Or is it when it is confirmed by the Pope that it becomes infallible? |
28294 | Repents, does she? |
28294 | Shall God, indeed, the fowls and manna strew,-- My daily bread? |
28294 | She has grown pitiful, and tender hearted, has she? |
28294 | Should they take it into their head to creep out of my book, and buzz round my bed, would it not give me unpleasant dreams? |
28294 | Take the same Rome six months after his return, and how many do you find in it? |
28294 | Taking advantage of the greater timidity of the female mind, it has become a leading question with the confessor,"Does your husband read the Bible? |
28294 | The Church will stand, doubtless, because they tell us she is founded on a rock; but what will become of the State? |
28294 | The French Prefect, Mr Whiteside tells us, published a statistical account of Rome; and how many paupers does he say there are in it? |
28294 | The beads have been counted, and an Ave Maria said with each; and what more does the Church require? |
28294 | The case being so, where, I ask, are you entitled to look for justice, if not at Rome? |
28294 | The first floor is occupied as a granary; the second floor is occupied as a granary; the third floor,--how is it occupied,--the attic story? |
28294 | The first question that arises is, in what light do the priests in Italy regard their own system? |
28294 | Then, why should affluence, and the other accessories of power, have so uniformly a corrupting and dissolving effect upon society? |
28294 | To what region has she gone where barbarism and vice have not disappeared? |
28294 | To whom did she make her appeal? |
28294 | Violators of the law,--brigands, murderers? |
28294 | Was it then a reality, and not a dream? |
28294 | Was not the law of requisition for the public roads practised to prepare the roads for Queen Marie Leczinska? |
28294 | Was not the law of the maximum, which regulated prices, practised by the regency? |
28294 | Was the Argus of the Vatican asleep when this wolf broke into the fold? |
28294 | Were its cities filled with looms and forges, would not its people have more money to spend on masses and absolutions? |
28294 | Were my reader living in London or in Edinburgh, and wished to visit Chelsea or Portobello, how would he proceed? |
28294 | Were not the commissions called revolutionary tribunals first used against the Protestants? |
28294 | Were not the fusilades first used at the bidding of the priests to crush heresy? |
28294 | Were not the houses burned down of those who frequented Protestant preaching? |
28294 | Were not the properties of the Protestant emigrants confiscated? |
28294 | Were the priests afraid that, if withdrawn for a moment from the influence of their eye, a wail of woe would burst forth from these poor creatures? |
28294 | What are embattled cities and aisled cathedrals to the eternal hills, with their thunder- clouds, and their rising and setting suns? |
28294 | What can they do but beg? |
28294 | What do you see throughout the successive ages? |
28294 | What do you see? |
28294 | What enterprise or interest have a sisterhood of nuns to farm their property? |
28294 | What gulf divides them? |
28294 | What had he seen and felt these four thousand years? |
28294 | What has become of them? |
28294 | What is it that strikes you on first entering the"Holy City?" |
28294 | What is it which has produced this universal slavery? |
28294 | What is it, I repeat, that holds the whole body in subjection, from the Pope down to the friar? |
28294 | What is the Government of the Papal States, but just the Government of the Inquisition? |
28294 | What is to be done with the carcase? |
28294 | What matters it that the Adriatic is no longer the highway of the world''s merchandise, and that India is now closed to Venice? |
28294 | What matters it that, in rooting out British Protestantism, she should shed oceans of blood, and sound the death- knell of a whole nation? |
28294 | What skill or capital have a brotherhood of lazy monks, to enable them to cultivate their lands? |
28294 | What stronger condemnation of their system could they pronounce? |
28294 | What though the Pope reigns over a wasted land and a nation of beggars? |
28294 | What was I to do? |
28294 | What would our country be without its iron,--without its railroads, its steam- ships, its steam- looms, its cutlery, its domestic utensils? |
28294 | When Christianity entered Rome in the person of the Apostle Paul, did the tyrant of the Palatine strike her dumb? |
28294 | When Pio Nono fled from Rome to Gaeta, what was the amount of its population? |
28294 | When did Christ build dungeons, or gather_ sbirri_ about him, or send men to the galleys and the scaffold? |
28294 | When did they come into being, and of what stock are they sprung? |
28294 | When men can be awed neither by painted fiends nor real cannon, what is to awe them? |
28294 | Where are your subjects, Pio Nono? |
28294 | Where have they gone to? |
28294 | Whether, said I to myself, does Italy owe most to its rivers or to its Governments? |
28294 | Who can tell how much the firmness and perseverance of the more prominent actors in these struggles were owing to her wise and affectionate counsels? |
28294 | Who converted Italy into a barbarian and a slave? |
28294 | Who has not heard of the Pra de la Torre, in the valley of Angrona? |
28294 | Who is he, and what does he there? |
28294 | Who kindled that solitary lamp? |
28294 | Who through the deep, and o''er the desert plain Will aid and cheer me, and the path will show? |
28294 | Who, what, and where is he? |
28294 | Why did it not give that creed to the Church in the first century which it kept back till the sixteenth? |
28294 | Why did it permit so many men, in all preceding ages, to live in ignorance of so many things in which it could so easily have enlightened them? |
28294 | Why did it permit so many questions to be debated, which it could so easily have settled? |
28294 | Why did the Papists divide_ territorially_ the country? |
28294 | Why did they assume_ territorial_ titles? |
28294 | Why do ye not, ye glorious mountains, put on sackcloth, and mourn with the mourning nations beneath you? |
28294 | Why does it deal out truth piecemeal,--one dogma in this century, another in the next, and so on? |
28294 | Why does it not tell us all at once? |
28294 | Why erect new houses, when those already built will last their time and the world''s? |
28294 | Why is it that all persons and systems in this world of ours must die in order to enter into life? |
28294 | Why is it that all the functions of nature are beneficent? |
28294 | Why is this? |
28294 | Why is this? |
28294 | Why make provision for posterity, when there is to be none? |
28294 | Why preach liberty to men in chains? |
28294 | Why should Infallibility seek help, which it can not in the nature of things need? |
28294 | Why should the Pope need assessors and advisers? |
28294 | Why should they incur the toil of labouring or thinking in a world that is soon to pass away, and which is as good as ended already? |
28294 | Why these trials shrouded in secrecy? |
28294 | Why this clanking of chains, and that cry which has gone up to heaven, and which pleads for justice there? |
28294 | Why, then, is iron not imported into that country? |
28294 | Why, then, was it not till the sixteenth century that Infallibility gave anything like a fixed and complete creed to the Church? |
28294 | Why? |
28294 | Will any Romanist kindly explain this to us? |
28294 | Will his ride convert him into a heretic, or shake his faith in Peter''s successor? |
28294 | Will no kind hand draw the veil aside but for a moment? |
28294 | Will she now adopt half measures? |
28294 | Will she now falter and draw back,--she that never before feared enemy or spared foe? |
28294 | Will the reader accompany me to another and very different scene? |
28294 | Will the reader go back with me to the point where we began our excursion through Rome,--the Flaminian Gate? |
28294 | Will you permit it? |
28294 | Will you tamely sit still till it has put its foot on your neck, and its fetter on your arm? |
28294 | With such evidence before him as Italy furnishes, can any man doubt what the consequence would be of admitting this system into Britain? |
28294 | Would Christianity ever re- appear? |
28294 | Would any one have been at the pains to have done all this, or could he have done it without being detected? |
28294 | Would it not be better for itself were Italy covered with a prosperous agriculture and a flourishing trade? |
28294 | Would not Sodom have been spared had ten righteous men been found in it? |
28294 | Would they softly speak to us if they could? |
28294 | Yet why blame these poor people? |
28294 | You ask, why do these men remain in a Church which they see to be apostate? |
28294 | and dare I to implore Thy pillar and thy cloud to guide me, Lord? |
28294 | and is it not, to say the least, a needless waste of iron, in a country where iron is so very scarce and so very dear? |
28294 | and is the glory that mantles your summits the kindling of an inward joy at the prospect of coming freedom? |
28294 | and is the region over which he bears sway renowned throughout the earth as the most virtuous, the most happy, and the most prosperous region in it? |
28294 | and may not the very same picture of beauty and grandeur now before my eye be imprinted eternally on the memory of many of the blessed in Heaven? |
28294 | and what the fate of any Roman who might dare to visit him? |
28294 | and why do they so pertinaciously cling to these titles? |
28294 | and why not Piedmont, seeing the Waldensian Church was there? |
28294 | can a priest at any hour he pleases give existence to Him who exists from eternity? |
28294 | if such were Lombardy, what meant the Croat beside me, and the black eagle blazoned on the flag, that I saw floating on the Castle of Milan? |
28294 | in darkness, and in the bowels of the earth? |
28294 | might not the same response as of old be made to this disclaimer,"The voice of thy brother''s blood crieth unto me from the ground?" |
28294 | or do they regard it as indeed founded in truth, and clothed with the sanction of heaven? |
28294 | thought I, if this majestic image has so faded in the interval of a few moments, what will it be years after? |
28294 | what glory is this which begins to burn upon the crest of the snowy Alps? |
28294 | who will break my servile chain? |
28294 | worshipping, are they?" |
36916 | Art Thou the Christ? 36916 Aye, even so"--replied a priest:"Was not that city in the east? |
36916 | I said ye are gods--? |
36916 | Tell me, O priest, was it not worth Eternity of hell, When in your heart dear love had birth? |
36916 | Wherefore upon the rood Christ died, If not our souls to win? |
36916 | Why,you ask me, dearest,"why Did we leave that place-- Is it such a thing to die?" |
36916 | Yes, I forget-- and gladly too-- That ancient Hebrew tale: How God began a thing to do-- Can the Eternal fail? 36916 Your fortune?" |
36916 | A QUESTION Have you Christ found-- Whose eyes are cold And lips are set? |
36916 | Ah, would your will Make mine As grapes bruised for the wine? |
36916 | And would you fare this lonely way, This starry way? |
36916 | Are we not part of the All, and as pure? |
36916 | Are you a liar, a sycophant''s self Sold for a shekel and pandering pelf? |
36916 | Are you a snob or a murderer, thief, Cringing to hell with the devil for chief? |
36916 | Are you come, Laden with sweet spice and gum,"Out of Orphir?" |
36916 | CAN YOU FORGET Can you forget the pyramids, Persepolis and Tyre? |
36916 | Can you forget the barges on the Nile, The sculptor with his chisel and his artist- soul a- fire With a dream of Mother Isis and her smile? |
36916 | Canst thou play thy part With an empty heart, If I fill it full to the brim Of the wine of prayer From the bowl I bear?" |
36916 | Comrade, can this be true That I Must yield or die? |
36916 | Comrade, what befell you That you missed the King Crowned with purple pansies of the day? |
36916 | Dear, do you not know They who drive the patient plough And the furrows sow, Own the sinews of the strong-- Reap the harvest with a song? |
36916 | Dear, there is surprise Blent with hunger and with thirst In your eager eyes, And you whisper:"Is it true?" |
36916 | Did you, dearest, understand Why the scarlet grew On my forehead, when my hand Your fair fingers knew? |
36916 | God does not want your temples, Whose domes are in the sky; With archangelic anthems How dare we mortals vie? |
36916 | God of the lily and vine, Is he not mine? |
36916 | Have you not seen, have you not heard How death rules over all?" |
36916 | I know not what to do or say, I stand with vacant stare Upon the brink of pain to think:"Love, whither dost thou fare?" |
36916 | Know that your shame is the shame of the stream-- Memory floods all its banks, but the end-- What is the end? |
36916 | Know you the Piper? |
36916 | Never more go gladly back? |
36916 | Oh, hark to his cry:"Sabachthani?" |
36916 | Ponder for a space: What if love must lose to gain, Find eternal peace in pain? |
36916 | Prophet, tell us-- who smote Thee?" |
36916 | Said the Aster to the Violet:"What shall the dowry be, And what my stated fortune, If I should marry thee?" |
36916 | Seek you To run me through? |
36916 | THE LONELY ROAD O will you take the lonely road, The upward road, Among the many stars? |
36916 | THE PIPER AND THE REED_ Know you a garden near the road? |
36916 | There she paused and looked on me, Laughing:"Boy, what do you see In my eyes, you tremble so?" |
36916 | Three times I fell, three times I rose To face the menacing of foes-- What gave me strength again to stand? |
36916 | Uncouthly you sprawled And frequently fell, Learning to walk: Was falling a sin, Were bruises a shame, Baby, my brave little baby? |
36916 | Upon the table is a crown-- Where is the King? |
36916 | What are their crowns? |
36916 | What do ye down in Bethlehem? |
36916 | What does it mean that we die? |
36916 | What does it mean we are born? |
36916 | What dreams do you dream, What sounds do you hear Out of the splendour-- Out of the wonder-- Out of the peace Of Rest- A- While Land? |
36916 | What is their palace? |
36916 | What is thy will? |
36916 | What of the night? |
36916 | What thing? |
36916 | What thing? |
36916 | When you awake Will you forget All the old toys, The lessons you learned, The bruises that hurt When you fell down? |
36916 | Where doth he dwell? |
36916 | Who comes there? |
36916 | Who sent thee here? |
36916 | Whose thought begets a flower- form, With leaves for avatars;"Can He who crowns the grass with dew, And gems the wood with rain; Fail of His purpose?" |
36916 | Why-- why Dared we to try, To prove Our love? |
36916 | Why?--Why? |
36916 | Worked your will? |
36916 | who rolled the stone away? |
19923 | A what? |
19923 | And how,asked Uncle Tim,"is all this to be found out?" |
19923 | And what becomes of a thing when it goes into the abstract? |
19923 | And what expect you from beneath this iron shell? |
19923 | And where is the diver so stout to go-- I ask ye again-- to the deep below? |
19923 | Are the Guard among them? |
19923 | Are you aware, Sir,said he,"if Grouchy''s force is arrived?" |
19923 | Are you hurt? |
19923 | Ay, sir,said she,"but do you know of any such person?" |
19923 | But does the world exist? |
19923 | But how if he wakes? |
19923 | But if a man ca n''t believe his eyes,said Uncle Tim,"what signifies talking about it?" |
19923 | But is that a sure way of going to work? |
19923 | Can the change from childhood to manhood be hastened, without prematurely exhausting the faculties of body or mind? |
19923 | Do n''t you hear the governor a callin''? 19923 Do you feel the bottom there, old fellow?" |
19923 | Do you know what day it is? |
19923 | Do you not know me, ye knaves? |
19923 | Do you slide? |
19923 | Do_ I_ look like a bird that knows the flavor of raw vermin? 19923 Doth he resemble an Ethiopian slave, or doth he present the face of an obscure and nameless adventurer? |
19923 | Have they given way, Sir? |
19923 | He maketh the winds His messengers; the momentary fire, His minister;and shall we do less than_ these_? |
19923 | How is this, Sir? |
19923 | In what is he holier than I am? |
19923 | In what part of the field is Buonaparte? |
19923 | Is this a Christian school? |
19923 | Is this_ your_ pleasure? |
19923 | It looks a nice warm exercise that, does n''t it? |
19923 | Just hold me at first, Sam; will you? |
19923 | Look forth from the flowers to the sea; For the foam- flowers endure when the rose- blossoms wither, And men that love lightly may die-- but we? |
19923 | Now the earth,continued the Doctor,"may exist--""Why, who ever doubted that?" |
19923 | Now, art thou a bachelor, stranger? |
19923 | Now,said Wardle, after a substantial lunch had been done ample justice to;"what say you to an hour on the ice? |
19923 | Oh, what is that glides quickly where velvet flowers grow thickly, Their scent comes rich and sickly? |
19923 | Oh, what is that in heaven where grey cloud- flakes are seven, Where blackest clouds hang riven just at the rainy skirt? |
19923 | Oh, what''s that in the hollow, so pale I quake to follow? |
19923 | Or has thy good woman, if one thou hast, Ever here in Cornwall been? 19923 Pray,"said Uncle Tim,"have there been many such things discovered?" |
19923 | Shall we fight or shall we fly? 19923 Shall we not waken him?" |
19923 | Sir? |
19923 | That column yonder is wavering: why does he not bring up his supporting squadrons? |
19923 | That is as the case may be,said he;"this thing or that thing may be dubious, but what then? |
19923 | That is, you refuse the certain means offered to recover him? |
19923 | The stream,he said,"is broad and deep, and stubborn is the foe,-- Yon island- strength is guarded well,--say, brothers, will ye go? |
19923 | Their van will be upon us before the bridge goes down; And if they once may win the bridge, what hope to save the town? |
19923 | Then what is the long and short of it? |
19923 | There we are again,said Uncle Tim;"but what on earth is an abstraction?" |
19923 | These-- these-- are very awkward skates; ai n''t they, Sam? |
19923 | Thy heart soft? 19923 To what purpose?" |
19923 | What differ more( you cry) than crown and cowl? |
19923 | What does it teach? |
19923 | What man? |
19923 | What means this, Marquis? |
19923 | What morning is without? |
19923 | What now? |
19923 | What think ye of him, gallants and beauties? |
19923 | What''s Ney''s force? 19923 What, with Mr. Wilkes? |
19923 | Wouldst thou have an Arab or a Curdman as wise as a Hakim? |
19923 | You drank of the well, I warrant, betimes? |
19923 | You skate, of course, Winkle? |
19923 | ( Are those torn clothes his best?) |
19923 | *****_ It must be so-- Plato, thou reasonest well!-- Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
19923 | *****_ What know we greater than the soul? |
19923 | ----Or in favor of him, George? |
19923 | And a day less or more At sea or shore, We die-- does it matter when? |
19923 | And did they honor those who liv''d, and weep for those who fell? |
19923 | And did they twine the laurel- wreath, for those who fought so well? |
19923 | And does kingly purple, and governing refractory worlds instead of stitching coarse shoes, make it merrier? |
19923 | And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine? |
19923 | And shall I weep that Love''s no more, And magnify his reign? |
19923 | And the dowager lady, your father''s widow, has promised to provide for you-- has she not?" |
19923 | And thrice spoke the monarch:"The cup to win, Is there never a wight who will venture in?" |
19923 | And were one to the end-- but what end who knows? |
19923 | And what cared they for idle thanks from foreign prince and peer? |
19923 | And where are they? |
19923 | And"What mockery or malice have we here?" |
19923 | And, at last, what has all this"Might"of humanity accomplished, in six thousand years of labor and sorrow? |
19923 | And, in six thousand years of building, what have we done? |
19923 | Are honor, virtue, conscience, all exil''d? |
19923 | Are not the streets of the capitals of Europe foul with the sale of cast clouts and rotten rags? |
19923 | Are not we his creatures? |
19923 | Are there balance here, to weigh The flesh? |
19923 | Are these celestial manners? |
19923 | Are we any thing but what we are from him? |
19923 | Are we not as clay in the hand of the potter? |
19923 | Are you acquainted with the difference That holds this present question in the court? |
19923 | Are you answer''d? |
19923 | Are you bought by English gold? |
19923 | Are you cowards, fools, or rogues? |
19923 | Be it so; will you not, then, make as sure of the Life, that now is, as you are of the Death that is to come? |
19923 | Burn the fleet and ruin France? |
19923 | But from this waste of disorder, and of time, and of rage, what_ is_ left to us? |
19923 | But if death is the journey to another place, and there, as men say, all the dead are, what good, O my friends and judges, can be greater than this? |
19923 | But is the sense of honor consistent with a spirit of plunder, or the practice of murder? |
19923 | But no such word Was ever spoke or heard; For up stood, for out stepp''d, for in struck, amid all these,-- A captain? |
19923 | But now that you have put it into my head, seriously, Mr. Thornhill, ca n''t you recommend me a proper husband for her? |
19923 | But when had been marked upon his brow this harrowing care? |
19923 | But wherefore in this presence? |
19923 | But will God in very deed dwell on the earth? |
19923 | But, finding David asleep by the spring, one of the rogues whispered to his fellow--"Hist!--Do you see that bundle under his head?" |
19923 | But, why despair? |
19923 | CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI.--1830-"O where are you going with your love- locks flowing, On the west wind blowing along this valley track?" |
19923 | Can Parliament be so dead to its dignity and its duty as to be thus deluded into the loss of the one and the violation of the other? |
19923 | Can even our ministers sustain a more humiliating disgrace? |
19923 | Can it flow from mercenary motives, or can it prompt to cruel deeds? |
19923 | Can its embers burn below All that chill December snow? |
19923 | Can no prayers pierce thee? |
19923 | Can such an open bosom cover such depravity? |
19923 | Can the minister of the day now presume to expect a continuance of support in this ruinous infatuation? |
19923 | Can then the most generous motive of life, the good of others, be so easily banished the breast of man? |
19923 | Can there be a more mortifying insult? |
19923 | Can._ But, surely, you would not be quite so severe on those who only report what they hear? |
19923 | Can._ How can you be so ill- natured? |
19923 | Care you still soft hands to press, Bonny heads to smooth and bless? |
19923 | Could I tax them with want of taste? |
19923 | Did ever on painter''s canvas live The power of his fancy''s dream? |
19923 | Did ever poet''s pen achieve Fruition of his theme? |
19923 | Did ever racer''s eager feet Rest as he reach''d the goal, Finding the prize achiev''d was meet To satisfy his soul? |
19923 | Did marble ever take the life That the sculptor''s soul conceiv''d? |
19923 | Dilly''s?" |
19923 | Do they dare to resent it? |
19923 | Do we not live upon his meat, and move by his strength, and do our work by his light? |
19923 | Do you think I am so ignorant of the world as to imagine that I am to prescribe to a gentleman what company he is to have at his table?" |
19923 | Dost hear, Tarhay? |
19923 | EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN.--1833- Prithee tell me, Dimple- Chin, At what age does love begin? |
19923 | FREDERICK LOCKER.--1821- And this was your Cradle? |
19923 | Fond impious man, thinks thou yon sanguine cloud, Rais''d by thy breath, has quench''d the orb of day? |
19923 | For is not all the world God''s family? |
19923 | For what to do but plunge and swim? |
19923 | For what? |
19923 | GLORIANA!--the Don may attack us Whenever his stomach be fain; He must reach us before he can rack us,... And where are the galleons of Spain? |
19923 | God send us light!--Who loses then? |
19923 | Gracious God, who was he, weak and friendless creature, that such a love should be poured out upon him? |
19923 | Had she a brother? |
19923 | Had she a sister? |
19923 | Have you been to the wars? |
19923 | Have you seen the tall trees swaying when the blast is sounding shrill, And the whirlwind reels in fury down the gorges of the hill? |
19923 | Having, therefore, engaged the limner, for what could I do? |
19923 | He answered, action: what next? |
19923 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
19923 | Heard ye the din of battle bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse? |
19923 | Heart handfast in heart as they stood,"Look thither,"Did he whisper? |
19923 | How long would he be left uneducated? |
19923 | How much of it is tilled? |
19923 | How much of that which is, wisely or well? |
19923 | How they toss their mighty branches struggling with the tempest''s shock; How they keep their place of vantage, cleaving firmly to the rock? |
19923 | I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it? |
19923 | I was persuaded that if I had come upon him with a direct proposal,"Sir, will you dine in company with Jack Wilkes?" |
19923 | If German steel be sharp and keen, is ours not strong and true? |
19923 | If a step should sound or a word be spoken, Would a ghost not rise at the strange guest''s hand? |
19923 | In deepest forest shade? |
19923 | In spots like these it is we prize Our memory, feel that she hath eyes: Then, why should I be loth to stir? |
19923 | Is Life a poor coil some would gladly be doffing? |
19923 | Is it all a dream then-- the desire of the eyes and the pride of life-- or, if it be, might we not live in nobler dream than this? |
19923 | Is it for thee the lark ascends and sings? |
19923 | Is it for thee the linnet pours his throat? |
19923 | Is it for_ him_ to question the dispensation of the royal favor? |
19923 | Is it love the lying''s for? |
19923 | Is it possible to draw all our passions inward? |
19923 | Is it possible, can it be believed, that ministers are yet blind to this impending destruction? |
19923 | Is our life forever to be without profit-- without possession? |
19923 | Is the sable warrior fled? |
19923 | Is there but one day of judgment? |
19923 | Is there no pity, no relenting ruth, Points to the parents fondling o''er their child? |
19923 | Is thine alone the seed that strews the plain? |
19923 | Is this the honor of a great kingdom? |
19923 | Is this the indignant spirit of England, who"but yesterday"gave law to the house of Bourbon? |
19923 | Is this what has come of our worldly wisdom, tried against their folly? |
19923 | It is his by law; what have I to do with it or its history?" |
19923 | It is not, what is she? |
19923 | Loop up her tresses Escaped from the comb,-- Her fair auburn tresses; Whilst wonderment guesses Where was her home? |
19923 | Might not every naked wall have been purple with tapestry, and every feeble breast fenced with sweet colors from the cold? |
19923 | Mrs. Evergreen? |
19923 | Must it be always thus? |
19923 | Must_ we_ but weep o''er days more blest? |
19923 | My eyes were blinded, your words were few; Do you know the truth now up in heaven, Douglas, Douglas, tender and true? |
19923 | My little flower amidst a weedy world, Where art thou now? |
19923 | Now is there any of the host will dare to venture in?" |
19923 | Now who will stand on either hand, and keep the bridge with me?" |
19923 | O Rose, who dares to name thee? |
19923 | O lonely island of the Rhine,--where seed was never sown, What harvest lay upon thy sands, by those strong reapers thrown? |
19923 | O strong soul, by what shore Tarriest thou now? |
19923 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
19923 | Or ambition win in passion''s strife What its glowing hopes believ''d? |
19923 | Or onward, where the sumach stands array''d In autumn splendor, its alluring form Fruited, yet odious with the hidden worm? |
19923 | Or perhaps it was Fleetwood''s name,--and the Paper, by certain parties, was stolen? |
19923 | Or they lov''d their life through, and then went whither? |
19923 | Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other? |
19923 | Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into nought? |
19923 | Pickwick?" |
19923 | Quoth he,"The she- wolf''s litter stand savagely at bay: But will ye dare to follow, if Astur clears the way?" |
19923 | Reach the mooring? |
19923 | Say, Heavenly Muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant God? |
19923 | Servants of God!--or sons Shall I not call you? |
19923 | Shall all that is glorious, all that is worth the pursuit of great minds, be so easily rooted out? |
19923 | Shall the boiling heat of youth be sunk in pleasures, the ambition of manhood in selfish intrigues? |
19923 | Shall the dead take thought for the dead to love them? |
19923 | Shall the strength of its generations be as barren as death; or cast away their labor, as the wild fig- tree casts her untimely figs? |
19923 | Shall we waken him?" |
19923 | Sir Peter; would you deprive us of our privileges? |
19923 | Six thousand years of weaving, and have we learned to weave? |
19923 | Stay''d we behind that glorious day for roaring flood or linn? |
19923 | Sure, life is dear, and men are brave: They came,--they dropp''d from mast and spar; And who but she could breast the wave, And dive beyond the bar? |
19923 | Take a passenger?" |
19923 | Tell, O tell me, Grizzled- Face, Do your heart and head keep pace? |
19923 | That can, with studied, sly, ensnaring art, Betray sweet Jenny''s unsuspecting youth? |
19923 | The Rhine is running deep and red, the island lies before,--"Now is there one of all the host will dare to venture o''er? |
19923 | The helmet was hastily unclosed, and the wounded man, gazing wildly on the skies, replied,"What would you more? |
19923 | The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed to- day, Had he thy reason, would he skip and play? |
19923 | The old Stoics, when you told them of a sad story, would still answer,"_ What is that to me?_"Yes, for the tyrant hath sentenced you also to prison. |
19923 | The old lord in his saddle turn''d, and hastily he said,"Hath bold Duguesclin''s fiery heart awaken''d from the dead? |
19923 | The soul of Græme is with us still,--now, brothers, will ye in?" |
19923 | The swarm, that in thy noontide beam were born? |
19923 | Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leapt on board:"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?" |
19923 | Thine the full harvest of the golden year? |
19923 | Think you that judgment waits till the doors of the grave are opened? |
19923 | To be rich, to be famous? |
19923 | Was thy own life merry, for example, in the hollow of the tree; clad permanently in leather? |
19923 | We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty- three?" |
19923 | We set our streams to work for us, and choke the air with fire, to turn our spinning- wheels,--and--_are we yet clothed_? |
19923 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carv''d tables serve my turn, But_ all_ must be of buhl? |
19923 | Well, what is that? |
19923 | What are these Compared with duty here? |
19923 | What can ennoble sots, or slaves, or cowards? |
19923 | What can we oppose to the combined force of our enemies? |
19923 | What care I for his_ patriotic friends_? |
19923 | What do I take to be the explanation of this? |
19923 | What do you take me for? |
19923 | What do you think of Miss Simper? |
19923 | What does he but soften Heart alike and pen? |
19923 | What hand but would a garland cull For thee who art so beautiful? |
19923 | What has it_ done_? |
19923 | What have we accomplished with our realities? |
19923 | What have we done in all these thousands of years with this bright art of Greek maid and Christian matron? |
19923 | What have we done? |
19923 | What if my house be troubled with a rat, And I be pleas''d to give ten thousand ducats To have it ban''d? |
19923 | What if the foot, ordain''d the dust to tread, Or hand, to toil, aspir''d to be the head? |
19923 | What if the head, the eye, or ear repin''d To serve mere engines to the ruling mind? |
19923 | What is ambition compared to that, but selfish vanity? |
19923 | What is it? |
19923 | What is your present situation there? |
19923 | What love was ever as deep as a grave? |
19923 | What matter''d it that men should vaunt and loud and fondly swear, That higher feat of chivalry was never wrought elsewhere? |
19923 | What means the war- like song, the dance of braves, And bustle in our town? |
19923 | What noble Lucumo comes next to taste our Roman cheer?" |
19923 | What novelty is worth that sweet monotony where everything is known, and_ loved_ because it is known? |
19923 | What rack exceeds the torture of an excited brain and an exhausted body? |
19923 | What saw the winter moon that night, as, struggling through the rain, She pour''d a wan and fitful light on marsh, and stream, and plain? |
19923 | What say you, scholar, to the providence of an old angler? |
19923 | What see I now? |
19923 | What signifies beauty, Mr. Thornhill? |
19923 | What signifies counting the spots of dirt that we are about to wash from our hands?" |
19923 | What virtue had such honey''d words the exiled heart to cheer? |
19923 | What would not a man give if he might converse with Orpheus and Musæus and Hesiod and Homer? |
19923 | What wouldst thou have a good great man obtain? |
19923 | What wounded man inquires whether the surgeon that tents his gashes have clean hands or not?--Come, shall we to this toy?" |
19923 | What''s the soft South- wester? |
19923 | What, are you answer''d yet? |
19923 | What, silent still? |
19923 | What, then, can you do? |
19923 | What, then, you will say, is wanting here? |
19923 | When does Love give up the chase? |
19923 | When does hoary Love expire, When do frosts put out the fire? |
19923 | Where is that man? |
19923 | Where lies it? |
19923 | Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? |
19923 | Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew? |
19923 | Who can over- ride you? |
19923 | Who ever can unriddle that mystery? |
19923 | Who has the forehead to do so? |
19923 | Who was her father? |
19923 | Who was her mother? |
19923 | Who were they?--Whence?--And why? |
19923 | Who would not have said that I was that enemy most dangerous to Richard, whose enmity was to be ended by marriage with his kinswoman? |
19923 | Whom we have left in the snow? |
19923 | Why did n''t you write to us? |
19923 | Why did you not come from Portsmouth?" |
19923 | Why dost thou stay, and turn away? |
19923 | Why should I hesitate? |
19923 | Why should I spare you? |
19923 | Why should they bring the laurel- wreath,--why crown the cup with wine? |
19923 | Why should this sorrow weigh upon my heart, And other lonely things on earth have rest? |
19923 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
19923 | Why sweat they under burdens? |
19923 | Why, at least, did no smile of welcome brighten upon his face? |
19923 | Will any answer that they_ are_ sure of it, and that there is no fear, nor hope, nor desire, nor labor, whither they go? |
19923 | With pure heart newly stamp''d from Nature''s mint--( Where did he learn that squint?) |
19923 | Wonderful like is the case of boldness in civil business; what first? |
19923 | You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet; Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
19923 | You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
19923 | You''ll take me with you when you go again? |
19923 | Your armies in the last war effected everything that could be effected; and what was it? |
19923 | Your hearts are wholly in this world-- will you not give them to it wisely, as well as perfectly? |
19923 | [_ Aside.__ Lady Sneer._ Sir Peter, you are not going to leave us? |
19923 | [_ Presents a letter.__ Bassanio._ Why dost thou whet thy knife so earnestly? |
19923 | [_ Pulling her forward.__ Iena._ Dare you enforce a weak and helpless girl, Who thought to move you by her misery? |
19923 | _ Bassanio._ Do all men kill the things they do not love? |
19923 | _ Boswell._"Provided, Sir, I suppose, that the company which he is to have is agreeable to you?" |
19923 | _ Crab._ Who? |
19923 | _ Does_ it vanish then? |
19923 | _ Duke._ How shalt thou hope for mercy, rend''ring none? |
19923 | _ Duke._ This letter from Bellario doth commend A young and learnèd doctor to our court:-- Where is he? |
19923 | _ Duke._ What, is Antonio here? |
19923 | _ Enter_ NERISSA,_ dressed like a lawyer''s clerk.__ Duke._ Came you from Padua, from Bellario? |
19923 | _ Harrison._ What tidings bring you from the Prophet''s Town? |
19923 | _ Iena._ And risk our all? |
19923 | _ Iena._ Dares the Prophet now Betray Tecumseh''s trust, and break his faith? |
19923 | _ Iena._ Should he fail? |
19923 | _ Johnson._"And if Jack Wilkes_ should_ be there, what is that to_ me_, Sir? |
19923 | _ Johnson._"Well, Sir, and what then? |
19923 | _ Johnson._"What do you mean, Sir? |
19923 | _ Lady Sneer._ Come, ladies, shall we sit down to cards in the next room? |
19923 | _ Lady Sneer._ Lady Teazle, I hope we shall see Sir Peter? |
19923 | _ Lady Teaz._ And am I to blame, Sir Peter, because flowers are dear in cold weather? |
19923 | _ Lady Teaz._ Then why will you endeavor to make yourself so disagreeable to me, and thwart me in every little elegant expense? |
19923 | _ Lady Teaz._ Well, then, and there is but one thing more you can make me to add to the obligation, that is----_ Sir Pet._ My widow, I suppose? |
19923 | _ Lady Teaz._ What''s the matter, Mrs. Candour? |
19923 | _ Lady Teaz._ What, the fat dowager who was at Mrs. Quadrille''s last night? |
19923 | _ Lady Teaz._ What, would you restrain the freedom of speech? |
19923 | _ Lefroy._ What tidings have you glean''d of Iena? |
19923 | _ Mamatee._ And risk your life? |
19923 | _ Mar._ How is it possible I should? |
19923 | _ Portia._ Art thou contented, Jew? |
19923 | _ Portia._ Come, merchant, have you anything to say? |
19923 | _ Portia._ Do you confess the bond? |
19923 | _ Portia._ Is he not able to discharge the money? |
19923 | _ Portia._ Is your name Shylock? |
19923 | _ Portia._ It is not so express''d; but what of that? |
19923 | _ Portia._ What mercy can you render him, Antonio? |
19923 | _ Portia._ Why doth the Jew pause? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven: Shall I lay perjury upon my soul? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ Hates any man the thing he would not kill? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ Is it so nominated in the bond? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ Is that the law? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ On what compulsion must I? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ Shall I not have barely my principal? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong? |
19923 | _ Shylock._ What, would''st thou have a serpent sting thee twice? |
19923 | _ Sir Pet._ Madam, I say, had you any of these little elegant expenses when you married me? |
19923 | _ Sir Pet._ This, madam, was your situation; and what have I done for you? |
19923 | _ Sir Pet._ Very well, ma''am, very well; so a husband is to have no influence, no authority? |
19923 | _ Sir Pet._ When an old bachelor marries a young wife, what is he to expect? |
19923 | a lieutenant? |
19923 | a mate,--first, second, third? |
19923 | action: what next again? |
19923 | and silent all? |
19923 | and was not this place well chosen to eat it? |
19923 | and where art thou, My country? |
19923 | and your labour for that which satisfieth not? |
19923 | boldness: what second and third? |
19923 | but the Crown, from itself and by itself, declares an unalterable determination to pursue measures-- and what measures, my Lords? |
19923 | but, what has she? |
19923 | can you guess, Sir?" |
19923 | cries Hervé Riel:"Are you mad, you Malouins? |
19923 | does not this meat taste well? |
19923 | exclaimed the Templar, in a tone where alarm mingled with surprise and scorn--"and to whom I pray thee?" |
19923 | father, my father, what more can there rest? |
19923 | from the heart of that far- floating gloom, Like the wing of the cygnet-- what gleams on the sea? |
19923 | he said,"are you come back? |
19923 | he who is without reason and conscience, how shall he be endowed with the spirit of God? |
19923 | let their beds Be made as soft as yours, and let their palates Be season''d with such viands? |
19923 | or what signifies all the virtue, and all the qualifications in the world, in this age of self- interest? |
19923 | quoth false Sextus;"will not the villain drown? |
19923 | remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old?_ WHITTIER. |
19923 | said Conrade irresolutely,"what would you have me say? |
19923 | said Uncle Tim,"pray, what do you make of the abstraction of a red cow?" |
19923 | said the Grand Master,"up, for shame-- or, if you must needs confess, am not I here?" |
19923 | said the Grand Master.--"Hermit, prophet, madman-- say, if thou darest, in what thou excellest me?" |
19923 | say''st thou?" |
19923 | she bade:"what strength have you? |
19923 | spoken, out of the thick death- slumbers, in answer to Thurloe''s_ question_"Richard?" |
19923 | that his Greatness should lack us!-- But where are the galleons of Spain? |
19923 | the secret which makes one little hand the dearest of all? |
19923 | these The ways that win, the arts that please? |
19923 | this our mightiest possible, against their impotent ideal? |
19923 | was it possible? |
19923 | what dost thou say? |
19923 | what had you to do with the fashion before you married me? |
19923 | what is my fault, That ye should hide the happy earth from me? |
19923 | what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll? |
19923 | wherefore with thine own hand?" |
19923 | work''d solely for thy good Thy joy, thy pastime, thy attire, thy food? |
19923 | would you have me be out of the fashion? |
38539 | A single issue was placed before the country-- Was the Irish Church to be, or not to be, disestablished? |
38539 | As the general election approached the only question submitted to the electors was-- Do you approve or condemn Lord Beaconsfield''s foreign policy? |
38539 | Being remonstrated with for selling a_ mullah_, he said,"Why not? |
38539 | The Koran, the word of God, is sold; why not sell the expounder thereof?" |
23183 | ''Shall reform committees dare to call out the National Guard at their pleasure?'' 23183 ''Will you dare to call out the National Guard?'' |
23183 | A Frenchman? |
23183 | Albert,she said, in a low, musical voice,"do you, indeed, love me as you say?" |
23183 | Albert? |
23183 | Am I not always your own, dearest? |
23183 | An assassination? |
23183 | And Giovanni Massetti? |
23183 | And Odillon Barrot? |
23183 | And all the grand objects for which you have been striving with your noble colleagues for years and years are at length accomplished, are they not? |
23183 | And am I then so disinterested? |
23183 | And are the National Guard turning out in good numbers? |
23183 | And are you alone, as I recommended? |
23183 | And do you not know-- you, a journalist-- that for three leagues around, in every direction, every railway radiating from Paris has been torn up? 23183 And do you now regret those words?" |
23183 | And do you really love me with all your soul? |
23183 | And for what are we to wait and hope, for which we have not already in vain waited and hoped the past ten years? |
23183 | And he accepted your apology? |
23183 | And he has celebrity also as a writer, has he not? |
23183 | And how chanced it that you saved your head, Lucien? |
23183 | And how progresses our principles, Louis, among the people? |
23183 | And if we do not comply? |
23183 | And is Giovanni Massetti likewise so bound? |
23183 | And is a recluse, like Morrel''s beautiful wife? |
23183 | And is he not a nobleman? |
23183 | And is it not true-- the accursed tyrants? |
23183 | And is married again? |
23183 | And our friends-- Lamartine-- Louis Blanc? |
23183 | And shall we go now, Edmond? |
23183 | And that hour, when will it come? |
23183 | And that is? |
23183 | And that object? |
23183 | And the Countess of Dino? |
23183 | And the Marshal Duke of Islay-- where is he? |
23183 | And the Ministers, what do they? |
23183 | And the Ministry? |
23183 | And the guests? |
23183 | And the hour? |
23183 | And the peers-- what of them? |
23183 | And the play, what think you of that? |
23183 | And the rendezvous? |
23183 | And the result of this triumph of the people you believe has advanced the cause of human happiness? |
23183 | And then the left cheered? |
23183 | And they were at once assailed? |
23183 | And to whose favor does he owe his wonderful advancement, Beauchamp? |
23183 | And what answer did he return? |
23183 | And what care we whom the boys marry, so long as marriage takes them out of France? 23183 And what did Barrot reply to that?" |
23183 | And what did he say? |
23183 | And what did you reply? |
23183 | And what have I accomplished, Louis? |
23183 | And what next? |
23183 | And what said Dupin? |
23183 | And what said Guizot then? |
23183 | And what said Guizot? |
23183 | And what said Guizot? |
23183 | And what think you really induced him to surrender himself? |
23183 | And what took you to Marseilles, Lucien? |
23183 | And what was done with it? |
23183 | And what was the result? |
23183 | And where go they? |
23183 | And where is to be the end of all these things? |
23183 | And whither-- and why? |
23183 | And who are those men just entering the box? |
23183 | And who are you? |
23183 | And who blew his brains out in despair? |
23183 | And who is herself, Lucien? |
23183 | And who is that dark, dignified man in the Turkish costume, around whom the ladies have clustered so inquisitively? |
23183 | And who is this M. Dantès,asked Ledru Rollin,"if you will suffer me to interrupt?" |
23183 | And who is to be my successor? |
23183 | And who now? |
23183 | And why did you refuse to head the Government, Edmond? |
23183 | And why think you that, dear? |
23183 | And why was all this despondency, my dear Armand? |
23183 | And why? |
23183 | And you really wish a sermon from me, old comrades, with patience as the text? |
23183 | And you will not see him again? |
23183 | Any more discoveries, Debray? |
23183 | Apropos of dying,said the Secretary,"do you remember how fast people died at M. de Villefort''s house about that time?" |
23183 | Are our plans all complete? |
23183 | Are the ten years on which we have now entered to be characterized by the fruitless efforts of the past? 23183 Are there no printed copies left?" |
23183 | Are they not of the people? 23183 Are you a magician?" |
23183 | Are you quite sure you love me for myself and not because of the resemblance you say I bear to the woman you once so ardently admired? 23183 Arrest-- arrest me?" |
23183 | Beware of Giovanni, Espérance-- and why? |
23183 | Bound by an oath? |
23183 | But all is over now, is it not? |
23183 | But can the masses read the papers? |
23183 | But do you observe how few of them are armed? |
23183 | But how about the coldness existing between us? |
23183 | But how do you account for this wonderful change, this unprecedented fever for Fourierism? |
23183 | But is this man actually so wealthy? |
23183 | But may you not be mistaken, may you not be the victim of some delusion? |
23183 | But of what words did this famous libel actually consist? |
23183 | But the Municipal Guard and the Line? 23183 But what brings them to the theatre at this hour?" |
23183 | But where is M. Dantès? 23183 But where now is Madame de Morcerf? |
23183 | But who really are M. Dantès and his wife? |
23183 | But why did you quarrel in the first place? 23183 But why does not the Countess marry again?" |
23183 | But why should you achieve triumphs for others to enjoy, Edmond? |
23183 | But you will go home with me now, Edmond, will you not? |
23183 | But your commission, Monsieur? |
23183 | But,he added, after an instant''s thought,"why should we go to Rome? |
23183 | By whom presented? |
23183 | By whom-- by whom? |
23183 | Can nothing be done? |
23183 | Can the Ministry maintain itself? |
23183 | Can this be so? |
23183 | Captain,said Bertuccio,"can you tell me whither we are bound? |
23183 | Come, come, my daughter, answer me,said the Deputy, kindly,"did I do right? |
23183 | Despise you? 23183 Did he ever question you about me?" |
23183 | Did he not remain behind with Zuleika and myself? |
23183 | Did the Viscount Massetti administer the oath of silence to you? |
23183 | Did you question the Viscount? |
23183 | Did you, Lamartine? |
23183 | Do I doubt you, Giovanni? 23183 Do any women dwell among them?" |
23183 | Do they know each other, then? |
23183 | Do you advise abdication? |
23183 | Do you doubt me, Zuleika, do you doubt me? |
23183 | Do you hear that, Beauchamp? |
23183 | Do you know the exact facts of the case, M. Albert? 23183 Do you know, Count, who this M. Dantès really is?" |
23183 | Do you know, Marrast, anything of his past history? |
23183 | Do you mean Benedetto? |
23183 | Do you observe, Beauchamp, how strangely fascinated with the new cantatrice seems the young officer of the Spahis who accompanies the Countess? |
23183 | Do you think us robbers? |
23183 | Does it still exist on both sides? |
23183 | Does your Majesty hear that? |
23183 | Espérance? |
23183 | From whom is the letter? |
23183 | Has Lucien been here? |
23183 | Has he a wife? |
23183 | Has not the Minister a hand in this mysterious disappearance of Communist literature? |
23183 | Has the Viscount been guilty of any impropriety toward you? |
23183 | Have I ever passed one night from your arms, my Mercédès, since we were we d? |
23183 | Have they children? |
23183 | Have you ever before seen lightning such as this on a calm night? |
23183 | Have you forgotten the Countess de Morcerf? |
23183 | Have you heard Bugeaud''s remark at noon, when looking upon the Place de la Concorde? |
23183 | Have you not heard of the occurrence of this evening in the Chamber? 23183 He is rich, then?" |
23183 | Heard you ever such a magnificent contralto? |
23183 | His quarrel with Espérance? 23183 How many drops of this is the greatest number your master has ever taken?" |
23183 | How much? |
23183 | I find you in private conference, do I not, Messieurs? |
23183 | I have heard that an assault was made on the armory of our friends, the Leparge Brothers, for weapons; is it so? |
23183 | If you doubt the stability of your Ministry, who can trust them? |
23183 | In what year was the insurrection of Armand Barbes and Martin Bernard? |
23183 | Is all well, Edmond? |
23183 | Is he a Greek? |
23183 | Is he married? |
23183 | Is it M. Dantès she gazes at? |
23183 | Is it so? |
23183 | Is it true,asked Flocon,"that the rappel has been beaten to- day?" |
23183 | Is that a cannon? |
23183 | Is the position of your friends then so perilous? |
23183 | Is the procession still to take place? |
23183 | Is there any other course left? |
23183 | Is there then no shadow of a hope? |
23183 | Is there to be a banquet? |
23183 | It was about this time that Fieschi exploded his infernal machine at the King, was it not? |
23183 | It''s true, then, as I have sometimes suspected, that the wires radiate from the Minister''s sanctum to the editor''s? |
23183 | May we not gather wisdom, which shall conduct us to success in the future, from the very errors and disasters of the past? |
23183 | Messieurs, what do the people demand? |
23183 | Monte- Cristo, my husband, where are you? |
23183 | My lord,she cried, in accents broken by extreme agitation and emotion,"am I not your slave?" |
23183 | Not even with barricades? |
23183 | Saw you ever such a magnificent bust? |
23183 | Shall I reveal to you the Ministerial tactics for the morrow''s apprehended insurrection? |
23183 | Shame? |
23183 | She is not in Paris? |
23183 | So you would not desert me, darling? |
23183 | The Count of Monte- Cristo you mean? |
23183 | The Count of Monte- Cristo? |
23183 | The most significant shout before the office of Foreign Affairs was this,said Ledru Rollin--"''Countess of Leven, where is the Minister?''" |
23183 | The name of Morrel I have seen before in the''Moniteur,''but Joliette-- who is he? |
23183 | Then who administered that oath to Giovanni? |
23183 | There was a splendid ball at the Tuileries that night, was there not? |
23183 | Thus much for to- day,said Marrast;"what of to- night?" |
23183 | To consult? |
23183 | To what am I indebted for the honor of this unexpected visit, my dear Count? |
23183 | Was it not because our noble and gifted friend was essentially a soldier, not a civilian, not a statesman, not a revolutionist? 23183 Was there ever a grander spectacle than that in the Place de la Concorde at noon? |
23183 | We meet to- night at the office of''Le National?'' |
23183 | Wealth must yield in power to thee, for what wealth can rival thy achievements or secure thy results? 23183 Well, dear?" |
23183 | Well, dear? |
23183 | Well? |
23183 | What am I to understand by that? |
23183 | What are we to do? |
23183 | What did he say to them? |
23183 | What do you mean by friend? |
23183 | What do you mean? |
23183 | What do you suppose it portends? |
23183 | What have I done to turn you thus against me? |
23183 | What have I to fear? |
23183 | What have you done to require pardon? |
23183 | What have you done? 23183 What is demanded?" |
23183 | What is his name? |
23183 | What is that, Zuleika? |
23183 | What is the matter, my lord? |
23183 | What is their strength? |
23183 | What is your name, young patriot? |
23183 | What kind of men are they? |
23183 | What makes you think I have such influence over this Roman brigand? |
23183 | What man, Haydée? |
23183 | What more could a man resolved to be a military immortal desire? 23183 What news?" |
23183 | What of the National Guard? |
23183 | What of the blouses and the barricades? |
23183 | What of the night, watchman? |
23183 | What right have you to speak? |
23183 | What say you, Edmond,asked Lamartine,"will your wife spare you long enough from her pillow to make with me a brief tour of the town?" |
23183 | What think you? |
23183 | What was discussed? |
23183 | What was that shock? |
23183 | What was the vote on the question to postpone consideration of the impeachment? |
23183 | What were the circumstances? |
23183 | What? |
23183 | Whence do you come, Monsieur? |
23183 | Whence do you come? |
23183 | Where? |
23183 | Whither so early this disagreeable morning? |
23183 | Who are these men? |
23183 | Who attended the Chamber of Deputies to- day? |
23183 | Who is that tall, dark military man, with the heavy moustache, now making his way into the Minister''s box? |
23183 | Who is the leader of the band? |
23183 | Who really are any of us? |
23183 | Who really is any one in Paris,continued Marrast,"the blood- royal always and alone excepted?" |
23183 | Who were repulsed? |
23183 | Who would suppose our cold, calculating, ambitious, haughty, talented and opulent diplomat and aristocrat had so much blood in his veins? 23183 Who, in the name of all that is mysterious and heroic, is this same Joliette? |
23183 | Whom can you mean, Debray? |
23183 | Why are you up so late, my child? |
23183 | Why child,said her father, in a startled tone,"what is the matter with you? |
23183 | Why did we not all become Spahis and win immortality, as some of our generals have? |
23183 | Why do n''t she marry, Lucien? |
23183 | Why do you ask? |
23183 | Why? |
23183 | Will I not? 23183 Will not the result of such enlightenment and excitement prove, as it ever has proved, anarchy, revolution, guilt, blood? |
23183 | Will you always love me as you do now, Zuleika? |
23183 | Will''La Réforme''appear in the morning? |
23183 | With your permission, Armand? |
23183 | Write to Vampa? 23183 You can not mean Eugénie Danglars, daughter of the bankrupt baron, whom our unhappy friend Morcerf was once to have we d?" |
23183 | You do n''t suppose I ever asked her the question, do you? |
23183 | You do not mean to say he was here, in this room? |
23183 | You have spoken to Espérance then on the subject? |
23183 | You mean Joliette? |
23183 | You remember your conversation with my daughter just before you and she parted, do you not? |
23183 | You rescued him, did you not, Alexis? |
23183 | You think there is hope, then? |
23183 | You want money? |
23183 | You will pardon my protracted absence, when I tell you it has been unavoidable-- will you not, Mercédès? |
23183 | You would not suppose all that man''s life passed in a camp, would you? |
23183 | ''Can you quell an insurrection, General?'' |
23183 | ''The Laborer of Lyons,''is it not?" |
23183 | ''What if the order be to become a turnkey?'' |
23183 | ''What is your plan, Marshal?'' |
23183 | A shadow crossed the young man''s brow, and he quickly asked:"Is it about the Viscount Massetti?" |
23183 | A simple plan, is it not? |
23183 | Albert, Albert, are you satisfied with my explanation and do you still think me worthy of you?" |
23183 | Am I not right?" |
23183 | And did the guilty suffer alone? |
23183 | And how was constituted the Provisional Government whose power was thus implicitly obeyed? |
23183 | And now, Messieurs, will you permit me to suggest the propriety of our separation? |
23183 | And what did you do when he refused to speak?" |
23183 | And what said the Chamber?" |
23183 | And who shall tell the day or the hour when the people, in their majesty and might, shall rise to avenge their wrongs? |
23183 | And whom think you, among crowds of others, I encountered there? |
23183 | And why?" |
23183 | Are you a soldier and do you fear? |
23183 | Are you bound by oath to preserve silence concerning this matter?" |
23183 | Are you going to give me the money?" |
23183 | Armand Carrel fell without hope; and are we wiser than they? |
23183 | As he paused the figure of a man emerged from behind a huge fragment of rock and thus hailed him:"Are you the Count of Monte- Cristo?" |
23183 | At that moment Col. Textorix, of the National Guard, rushed up and exclaimed:"Brothers, will you slay brothers?" |
23183 | At what terrible catastrophe do these men aim? |
23183 | Beauchamp, just come?" |
23183 | But Vampa? |
23183 | But do you know that Espérance shot and killed the miscreant who held his pistol to my temple and was about to blow out my brains?" |
23183 | But does not discretion sometimes win what boldness would sacrifice? |
23183 | But have you discovered who are the other couple in the box?" |
23183 | But how was that proof to be obtained? |
23183 | But is it true that his brother- in- law owes his rapid rise to his influence at Court?" |
23183 | But tell me, Count, is the Minister really the husband of the beautiful Leven, or is she only his par amours?" |
23183 | But tell me, love, is all over? |
23183 | But was I happy? |
23183 | But what can not uncounted wealth achieve, directed by genius and intelligence?" |
23183 | But who are those, Beauchamp?" |
23183 | But who knows? |
23183 | But why did I not hear you?" |
23183 | By the by, Debray, is M. de Villefort still an inmate of the Maison Royale de Charenton?" |
23183 | Can he so have accustomed his system to poisons, that, as with the King of Pontus, they are ineffectual to help or to harm him? |
23183 | Comrades, what says the past, the past ten years, in whose events we have all so intimately mingled? |
23183 | Could that be the fearful secret? |
23183 | Dantès?" |
23183 | Dantès?" |
23183 | Dantès?" |
23183 | Dantès?" |
23183 | Did I do right?" |
23183 | Do you accept the gift?" |
23183 | Do you ever meet with it, Messrs. editor and Secretary-- I mean the name of our brilliant friend, Albert de Morcerf? |
23183 | Do you know who this Luigi Vampa is?" |
23183 | Do you observe how incessantly his keen black eye flashes around the house, beneath his huge glasses?" |
23183 | Do you refer particularly to any individual?" |
23183 | Do you remember the Count of Monte- Cristo, Messieurs?" |
23183 | Does that notorious brigand posses a knowledge of this unfortunate matter?" |
23183 | Eh, Louis?" |
23183 | Had Espérance and the Viscount been concerned in the abduction? |
23183 | Had Espérance been misled by Vampa and the Viscount? |
23183 | Had he discovered too late the infamy of the affair and challenged Massetti on that account? |
23183 | Has anything happened to young Massetti?" |
23183 | He moved toward her as if to seize her in his arms; then, suddenly checking himself, he asked, with a convulsive gasp:"And that man-- that one?" |
23183 | He rang the bell, and, when the concierge appeared, said to her:"Is the Viscount Massetti at home?" |
23183 | He summoned the captain of the Alcyon and said to him:"Giacomo, you have sailed the Mediterranean all your life, have you not?" |
23183 | How can the King abrogate that law? |
23183 | How comes he here?" |
23183 | How would the sacrifice of Carrel, Marrast, Cavaignac, or of any of those twelve brave men have been repaid, or made up? |
23183 | If we were to be ruled by a king, what cared we whether that king were Henry V. or Louis Philippe? |
23183 | Is M. Dantès here?" |
23183 | Is it the Countess he gazes at?" |
23183 | Is not that enough?" |
23183 | Louis, is it you?" |
23183 | Louis?" |
23183 | Luigi Vampa? |
23183 | M. Dantès smiled as he said:"That makes all the difference in the world, does n''t it, Mademoiselle?" |
23183 | Mercédès?" |
23183 | Now, if you have finished your questions, pray who are you?" |
23183 | Now, tell me, is the Viscount Massetti as blameless in this affair as you are?" |
23183 | Now, what to Republicans were the quarrels of Legitimists and Orléanists? |
23183 | Pass the night here?" |
23183 | Shall I give you the Marshal''s reply, my friend?" |
23183 | Shall I tell you?" |
23183 | So I am to understand that you do not want me to reply to the Viscount''s letter, am I?" |
23183 | Suddenly turning to the Nubian, he said to him:"Ali, where does your master keep the drugs he has been for years accustomed to take?" |
23183 | The soldier obeyed; when he was seated, he said:"Eugénie, why did you tell me I could be your friend?" |
23183 | Then he said, with a shade of anxiety in his tone:"And your brother Espérance, is he disposed to look upon me with approval? |
23183 | To read his writings can one imagine a purer man? |
23183 | Was M. Dantès aware of the trouble between his son and the youthful Italian? |
23183 | Was it fear or guilt that Espérance exhibited? |
23183 | What care we who is Minister?" |
23183 | What crisis do they contemplate?" |
23183 | What did he say then?" |
23183 | What has he kept back?" |
23183 | What have been my sacrifices or sufferings, my dear Armand, compared to yours? |
23183 | What have we to hope for from the change?" |
23183 | What is it? |
23183 | What need have we to know more? |
23183 | What next I wonder? |
23183 | What reparation to our cause was it that our champion had died like a hero, and Châteaubriand, Arago, Cormenin and Béranger wept around his grave? |
23183 | What was the cause of the difference between you?" |
23183 | What was the result? |
23183 | When is to come the hour to strike?" |
23183 | When was the next, Louis-- that of Alibaud, I think?" |
23183 | Where are these things to stop? |
23183 | Where shall I begin? |
23183 | Where were they and what had happened to them? |
23183 | Which one of all shall it be to set the ball of revolution in motion? |
23183 | Who is that dark, splendid woman to whom young Joliette seems so devoted? |
23183 | Who knows of the weapon burnished, the cartridge filled and the sabre sharpened by that light for the morrow?" |
23183 | Who may predict the precise moment when the earthquake shall rock, the tornado sweep, the red lightning scathe, or the lava flood desolate? |
23183 | Who shall restrain the monster once lashed into madness?" |
23183 | Who''s here?" |
23183 | Who''s the author, Beauchamp?" |
23183 | Who, then, is this man, whose nature so differs from that of every one else? |
23183 | Why do you leave in this way? |
23183 | Why do you not go to Boulogne by the cars?" |
23183 | Why is he not here?" |
23183 | Why should I do that?" |
23183 | Why was this? |
23183 | Will you not tell me, Espérance?" |
23183 | Would not Vampa answer her questions if M. Dantès could be influenced to write him and ask them? |
23183 | You remember Albert and his strange conduct in the duel with the Count of Monte- Cristo?" |
23183 | and what said Odillon Barrot?" |
23183 | are you my son-- are you a son of Orléans, and can you talk thus of degradation? |
23183 | but will he obey such counsel?" |
23183 | cried Beauchamp, hurriedly;"at whom does she gaze so intently, and yet so sadly? |
23183 | cried the lady, as her husband was going,"do you see Joliette and Louise in the redowa yonder?" |
23183 | despondingly replied Marrast,"what is there in our present to promise a bright future more than was in our past to promise us a bright present? |
23183 | does she love me yet? |
23183 | exclaimed Lamartine, as they passed one of these flickering lights,"who knows what plotting head and ready hand may be beside that candle? |
23183 | have you received a letter from Giovanni?" |
23183 | he shouted,"whose blood is that upon your knife?" |
23183 | laughed Benedetto, mockingly,"that''s your game, is it? |
23183 | love, what of ambition?" |
23183 | my lord, did you meet that terrible man?" |
23183 | my lord, how could I do that?" |
23183 | my lord, my lord,"she murmured,"does Heaven disapprove of our plighted troth?" |
23183 | was the bland rejoinder;"and has a manifesto of this decision been issued to the people?" |
23183 | yes, I want you to reply to his letter, but-- but----""But what, darling?" |
34170 | ''Knowest thou not me?'' 34170 ''Speak yet again,''he cries,''is any nigh?'' |
34170 | And fainting cries,''What fury thee possest? 34170 Are all these notes in thee, wild wind? |
34170 | I heard of every suffering, That on this earth can be: How can they call a sleeping child, A likeness, love, of thee? 34170 I heard them hymn his name, his power, I heard them, and I smiled: How could they say the earth was ruled, By but a sleeping child? |
34170 | Know ye not when our dead From sleep to battle sprung? 34170 Now several ways his young companions gone, And for some time Narcissus left alone,''Where are you all?'' |
34170 | On a high rock that beetles o''er the flood, With daily care the pensive father stood; And when he saw impatient from afar? 34170 Or, do they tell, these mystic signs, The self destroyer''s madness? |
34170 | Perhaps thou mayest be right there,answered Don Quixote;"but tell me, what says Teresa?" |
34170 | They can not paint thee, let them dream A dark and nameless thing: Why give the likeness of the dove, Where is the serpent''s sting? 34170 What first inspired a bard of old to sing Narcissus pining o''er the mountain spring? |
34170 | What hid''st thou in thy treasure- caves and cells? 34170 What name, sweet bride, will best allure, Thy sacred ear, and give the honour due? |
34170 | While we to Jove select the holy victim, Whom after shall we sing than Jove himself? 34170 Why have ye left your bowers desolate, Your lutes and gentler nature? |
34170 | _ Clytemnestra._ What have I done?-- Where am I? 34170 ''And dost thou smile?'' 34170 ''Knowest thou not me? 34170 ''Then is it vain in Jove himself to trust? 34170 ''Twas Jove''s decree they should in silence rove, For who is able to contend with Jove? |
34170 | ''Who''ll buy my love- knots? |
34170 | (_ Aside_) The bath that bubbled with my blood, the blows That spilt it( O worse torture) must she know? |
34170 | ****** But the bright cup? |
34170 | ****** What hath night to do with sleep? |
34170 | --_City Chronicle._"Who would be without an illustrated Telemachus, when it can be had on such terms? |
34170 | Again the mournful Echo answers,''_ I_,''''Why come not you,''he said,''appear in view,''She hastily returns,''_ why come not you_?'' |
34170 | Am I wild And wandering in my fondness? |
34170 | And fair Parthenian woods resound my name? |
34170 | And is it thus the Gods assist the just? |
34170 | And shall you claim his merit? |
34170 | And shun so my embraces? |
34170 | And who the dragon- guarded apples won? |
34170 | And will that image ever quit thy sight? |
34170 | Are not our mighty toils in Elis told? |
34170 | Are these the thanks that you to Perseus give? |
34170 | Are they gone? |
34170 | Are you afraid to meet among the good Incestuous Helen here? |
34170 | Art thou that huntress of the silver bow Fabled of old?----------------****** What art thou like? |
34170 | By the fountain''s fall Dreamy silence keeping? |
34170 | Call''st thou me reckless, when I place my hand Upon the earliest buddings of the spring? |
34170 | Can Jove, supine, flagitious acts survey And brook the furies of the daring day? |
34170 | Can gratitude in Trojan souls have place? |
34170 | Can mortal man pollute the Gods? |
34170 | Can thus the warrior move, To scorn his meed of victory? |
34170 | Could the fair Centaur''s strength my force withstand? |
34170 | Did I not triple- formed Geryon fell? |
34170 | Did not Stymphalian lakes proclaim my fame? |
34170 | Did not these hands the bull''s armed forehead hold? |
34170 | Did not this neck the heavenly globe sustain? |
34170 | Did''st thou indeed sit there In languid lone despair? |
34170 | Did''st thou, with fond wild eyes Fix''d on the starry skies, Wait feverishly for each new day to waken? |
34170 | Didst thou roam the paths of danger, Hymenean joys to prove? |
34170 | Do I not ease the wretched of his woe? |
34170 | Fast descending as thou art, Say, hath mortal invocation Spells to touch thy stony heart? |
34170 | For what end? |
34170 | Frown not, but pardon me for tarrying Amid too idle words, nor asking how She praised us both( which most?) |
34170 | Had I allowed those sweet buds to expand, What would the skies of gloomy autumn bring? |
34170 | Hast thou, on the troubled ocean, Braved the tempest loud and strong, Where the waves, in wild commotion, Roar Cyanean rocks among? |
34170 | Himself I refuged and his train relieved,''Tis true, but am I sure to be received? |
34170 | His lance was aimed, when Cepheus ran and said;''Hold, brother, hold, what brutal rage has made Your frantic mind so black a crime conceive? |
34170 | Hope, with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure? |
34170 | Horrible forms, Whence and what are ye? |
34170 | Horror-- astonishment-- have kept me silent--_ The._ Darest thou add falsehood to thine infamy? |
34170 | How fares my royal friend? |
34170 | I am reduced to this unhappiness, At my loved Thebes I can not dwell, for here What temple, what assembly of my friends Can I approach? |
34170 | I come with all my train; Who calls me lonely? |
34170 | I could have answered that; why ask the Gods? |
34170 | In the centre of the world Where the sinful dead are hurled? |
34170 | In thine own children''s gore? |
34170 | Is he not glorious? |
34170 | Is the fair Cyane gone? |
34170 | Is this fountain left alone For a sad remembrance, where We may in after times repair, With heavy heart and weeping eye, To sing songs to her memory?" |
34170 | Its glory and its might-- Are they not written on my brow? |
34170 | Or the fell boar that spoiled the Arcadian land? |
34170 | Or, did I fear the triple dog of hell? |
34170 | Say, hast thou, with kind protection, Reared thy smiling race in vain; Fostering Nature''s fond affection, Tender cares, and pleasing pain? |
34170 | Shall I with this ungrateful Trojan go, Forsake an empire to attend a foe? |
34170 | Shall it not then be thought, A bride, so lovely, was too cheaply bought? |
34170 | Shall she be mine? |
34170 | Should I go to Argos? |
34170 | Smooth Suranimnaga? |
34170 | That tale of wasted youth, Of endless grief, and love forsaken, pining? |
34170 | Then shall I seek alone the flying crew, Or with my fleet their flying souls pursue? |
34170 | These many notes in thee? |
34170 | This the reward that to his worth you pay, Whose timely valour saved Andromeda? |
34170 | Those were immortal stories: are they gone? |
34170 | Through what dark tree Glimmers thy crescent? |
34170 | Thus, do you bear me to my native isle? |
34170 | Thy harp neglected by thee idly lying? |
34170 | Thy soft and earnest gaze, Watching the lingering rays, In the far west, where Summer- day was dying? |
34170 | To raise new plagues and call new vengeance down, Why did you tempt the gods, and dare to touch me? |
34170 | Treacherous in calm and terrible in storm, Who shall put forth on thee, Unfathomable sea?" |
34170 | Trisrota pure? |
34170 | Trusting some glorious morn Might witness his return,{ 262} Unwilling to believe thyself forsaken? |
34170 | Unnatural nymphs, why this unkind delay? |
34170 | Unworthy am I then to join in prayer? |
34170 | Vishnupedi? |
34170 | Was it for this Busiris was subdued, Whose barbarous temples reeked with stranger''s blood? |
34170 | What blessing were it To gain a useless and unhallowed life?" |
34170 | What does not my own poor self owe to thee? |
34170 | What fatal fury, what infernal charm,''Gainst a kind father does his daughter arm?'' |
34170 | What frenzy, Orpheus, seized upon thy breast? |
34170 | What if the Thracian horses, fat with gore, Who human bodies in their manger tore, I saw, and with their barbarous lord, o''erthrew? |
34170 | What if these hands Nemà ¦ a''s lion slew? |
34170 | What lions-- what dire forms Of Triple Typhons, or what giants, what Of monsters banded in the Centaur war, Did I not quell? |
34170 | What then can make you speak thus rapidly And briefly? |
34170 | What tho''I turn the banquet room to grief, The wedding garment to a garb of woe, Do I not bring to wounded hearts relief? |
34170 | What were thy feelings on the stormy strand, When thou saw''st Ceyx borne a corse to land? |
34170 | When my age advanced To youth''s fresh bloom, why should I say what toils I then sustained? |
34170 | Where am I, What have I done? |
34170 | Where are the blooms of Summer? |
34170 | Where are the merry birds? |
34170 | Where are the songs of summer? |
34170 | Where dost thou listen to the wide halloos Of thy departed nymphs? |
34170 | Where is the Dryad''s immortality? |
34170 | Whither doth thy rage transport thee? |
34170 | Who calls me silent? |
34170 | Who has another care when thou hast smiled? |
34170 | Who seized the golden belt of Thermodon? |
34170 | Who''ll buy my love knots?'' |
34170 | Who''ll buy my love- knots?'' |
34170 | Why gave she thee her child? |
34170 | Why have ye left your forest haunts, why left Your nuts in oak tree cleft? |
34170 | Why therefore should I live? |
34170 | Will such a multitude of men employ Their strength against a weak defenceless boy?''" |
34170 | Wretch that thou art, dost thou not answer me? |
34170 | [ Illustration] The oracle must be obeyed: but who would be the substitute? |
34170 | [ Illustration]"--------Who first told how Psyche went On the smooth wind to realms of wonderment? |
34170 | [ Illustration]_ The._"''Dost thou dare look upon me boy? |
34170 | _ Alvine._ But for the history of that pale girl Who stands so desolate on the sea- shore? |
34170 | _ Egisthus._ Hast thou slain the tyrant? |
34170 | _ Hercules._ Thou from misfortune free, canst counsel me;_ Theseus._ Doth the much suffering Hercules say this? |
34170 | _ Hercules._ Whom hast thou known involved in ills like these? |
34170 | _ Hercules._ Why hast thou then unveiled me to the Sun? |
34170 | _ Hip._ And dost thou doubt me father? |
34170 | _ Hip._ And you his wife? |
34170 | _ Hip._ Madam, I would not, could not wrong my father; And thou, how canst thou meet his face? |
34170 | _ Hip._ My father? |
34170 | _ Hip._ Theseus-- my father--{ 203}[ Illustration]_ Phà ¦._ Thy father and my husband, what of that? |
34170 | _ Hip._ What if I did proclaim to him thy guilt? |
34170 | _ Iphig._ What spake my father to the Gods above? |
34170 | _ Iphig._ Why thus turn away? |
34170 | _ Oed._ Did this old man take from your arms an infant? |
34170 | _ Oed._ O you gods-- break, break not yet my heart, Though my eyes burst, no matter, wilt thou tell me, Or must I ask for ever? |
34170 | _ Oed._ Thou shalt not die; speak then, who was it? |
34170 | _ Oed._ Who gave that infant to thee? |
34170 | _ Oedipus._"''Why speak you not according to my charge? |
34170 | _ Phà ¦._ To gain my love? |
34170 | _ Pro._ Can aught exult in its deformity? |
34170 | _ Second Fury._ Dost imagine We will but laugh into thy lidless eyes? |
34170 | _ The._ And dost thou think that thou canst thus deceive me? |
34170 | _ The._ Dost dread it? |
34170 | _ The._ Dost see this sword? |
34170 | _ Theseus._ And deemest thou the gods regard thy threats? |
34170 | _ Theseus._ What dost thou? |
34170 | _ Theseus._ Why not? |
34170 | art thou sleeping? |
34170 | at last she hears him call, And she straight answers him,''_ where are you all_?'' |
34170 | can''st stand before me thus? |
34170 | do human pangs Reach the pure soul thus far below? |
34170 | do tears Spring in these meadows? |
34170 | for a deed like this What vengeance shall be wreaked? |
34170 | for yours throbs yet, And did my blood Win Troy for Greece? |
34170 | greatest son of Saturn, wise disposer Of every good; thy praise what man yet born Has sung? |
34170 | in your step thus hesitate? |
34170 | is the blade Again to pierce a bosom now unfit For sacrifice? |
34170 | is their mirth from the mountains passed? |
34170 | mild Bhishmasu? |
34170 | once more answer me: Thou knowest not the period of Jove''s power? |
34170 | or who that may be born shall sing? |
34170 | queen, If destitute of thee?" |
34170 | this lamenting strain, Of lawless force, shall lawless Mars complain? |
34170 | thus we meet,''she cried My Pyramus, whence sprang thy cruel fate? |
34170 | to Athens dost thou guide Thy glowing chariot, steeped in kindred gore; Or seek to hide thy foul infanticide Where peace and mercy dwell for evermore? |
34170 | what have ye looked on since last we met? |
34170 | what is my offence? |
34170 | what succour can I find? |
34170 | what would you have me say? |
34170 | whence came ye, So many, and so many, and such glee? |
34170 | whence came ye, So many, and so many, and such glee? |
34170 | whose dark and gloomy sway Extends o''er all creation, what art thou? |
34170 | why has science grave Scattered afar your secret imaginings? |
34170 | why should you? |
34170 | wilt thou ne''er enable us to look Into the volume clasped at thy right hand? |
34170 | woodland Queen, What smoothest air, thy smoother forehead woos? |
34170 | { 178}_ Hercules._"Hast thou beheld the carnage of my sons? |
34170 | { 246}"What shall I do? |
36882 | (_ Issued by the Secular Society, Limited._) JESUS CHRIST: Man, God, or Myth? |
36882 | 182 XVI.--CHRISTIANITY AND MORALITY 193 XVII.--RELIGION AND PERSECUTION 204 XVIII.--WHAT IS TO FOLLOW RELIGION? |
36882 | A conspiracy may overthrow a tyrant, but what can it avail against a firmly established belief? |
36882 | ARE CHRISTIANS INFERIOR TO FREETHINKERS? |
36882 | After all, what reason is there for anyone assuming that the survival of man beyond the grave is even probably true? |
36882 | And here one might reasonably ask, why, if there is a directive mind at work, are there variations at all? |
36882 | And would he be of much use if he were otherwise?? |
36882 | And would he be of much use if he were otherwise?? |
36882 | And, on the other hand, how many people have given up the belief in miracles as a result of a careful study of the evidence against them? |
36882 | Are we in any better position if we turn from the individual to the race? |
36882 | But suppose a man''s inclinations do not run in the desired direction? |
36882 | But what amount or kind of evidence was required to establish the belief? |
36882 | But what kind of coercion can a purely naturalistic system of morals exert? |
36882 | But what part is there in the general education of the child in modern society that would lead to that end? |
36882 | But why? |
36882 | But would it prove any more than that? |
36882 | CHAPTER PAGE I.--OUTGROWING THE GODS 9 II.--LIFE AND MIND 18 III.--WHAT IS FREETHOUGHT? |
36882 | CONTENTS: PART I.--AN EXAMINATION OF THEISM.--Chapter I.--What is God? |
36882 | Chapter III.--Have we a Religious Sense? |
36882 | Chapter XI.--What is Atheism? |
36882 | DETERMINISM OR FREE- WILL? |
36882 | DOES MAN DESIRE GOD? |
36882 | DOES MAN SURVIVE DEATH? |
36882 | Does he bear the blow with greater fortitude? |
36882 | Does the religious parent grieve less? |
36882 | Had Spencer first of all set himself to answer the question,"What is it that the Freethinker sets himself to remove?" |
36882 | Has he made a due allowance for possible error, and for the possibility of others seeing the matter from another and a different point of view? |
36882 | Has he taken the trouble to acquaint himself with the facts upon which the expressed opinion is professedly based? |
36882 | He says-- I quote from Froude''s translation:-- What other conclusion could they arrive at when they saw the confusion around them? |
36882 | How many men and women in the past decade gladly offered and not infrequently lost their lives in the cause of freedom, or justice, or science? |
36882 | How, then, can it be that which determines which of the three possible( and actual) cases shall be realized?... |
36882 | How, then, can the credit of that result be ascribed to Natural Selection? |
36882 | IS SUICIDE A SIN? |
36882 | If I may be allowed to repeat what I have said elsewhere on this subject, one may well ask:-- What is it that the genuine educationalist aims at? |
36882 | Is his grief of shorter duration? |
36882 | Is the Belief Reasonable? |
36882 | Is the soldier of to- day a better soldier, or the sailor a better sailor than those who lived three thousand years ago? |
36882 | Or what evidence did our ancestors require to prove to them that old women flew through the air on broomsticks, or bewitched cows, or raised storms? |
36882 | Suppose all this to be proven or granted, what has been established? |
36882 | THEISM OR ATHEISM? |
36882 | Tell us, then, Zeus, have you ever really taken pains to distinguish between good men and bad? |
36882 | The curious thing is that when one enquires"what religion is it that has exerted this beneficent influence?" |
36882 | The essential question is not, What is to follow religion? |
36882 | The possibility of deriving the idea of God from scientific and philosophic thought being ruled out, what remains? |
36882 | The reply of the Freethinker to the question of"What is to follow religion?" |
36882 | To take an individual and ask,"Why should he act so as to promote the general welfare?" |
36882 | WHAT IS FREETHOUGHT? |
36882 | WHAT IS TO FOLLOW RELIGION? |
36882 | WHAT WILL YOU PUT IN ITS PLACE? |
36882 | WHO WAS THE FATHER OF JESUS? |
36882 | Was it evidence to which anyone to- day would pay the slightest regard? |
36882 | Well, but suppose we say that man is capable of indefinite growth, what do we mean? |
36882 | What amount or what kind of evidence did the early Christians require to prove the miracles of Christianity? |
36882 | What is a supernaturalist compelled to do in this case? |
36882 | What is to be done with him? |
36882 | What now is meant by there being no limit to human growth? |
36882 | What other is he expected to be? |
36882 | What sort of person would be the father who would announce divine punishment or reward in order to obtain the love and respect of his children? |
36882 | What then? |
36882 | What would be the effect of the transformation? |
36882 | What, after all, is there in the fact of natural death that should breed irresolution, rob us of courage, or fill us with fear? |
36882 | What, for example, does anyone mean by man as the goal towards which everything has tended since the beginning? |
36882 | What, then, is the explanation of the apparent paradox? |
36882 | What, then, of the process as a whole? |
36882 | Where, then, is the reason in asking that this miracle shall be re- performed in order to convince certain people that it has already occurred? |
36882 | Who does not feel the absurdity of the opinion that the lavish care for a sick child by a mother is given because of a belief in God and immortality? |
36882 | Why do people believe in God? |
36882 | Will anyone contend that the child has even a passing understanding of subjects over which all adults are more or less mystified? |
36882 | With a Chapter on"Was Jesus a Socialist?" |
36882 | Would it do any more than prove that they believed the food had been so expanded or multiplied that it was enough for them all? |
36882 | Would it prove that these five thousand were not the victims of some act of deception or of some delusion? |
36882 | Would that produce conviction? |
36882 | or even the question,"What is the actual control exerted by religion?" |
37844 | ''But can a few pounds make a fellow''s soul like a calm bowl of creamed milk? |
37844 | ''But, who steps forward, o''er the glowing green, With silent tread, these stately groves between? |
37844 | ''Do you remember my telling you-- or did I ever tell you-- about that wretched and most criminal Mr.----? |
37844 | ''Have patience, if too plain I speak, For time, my sons, is hastening by; Forgive me if my accents break: Shall_ I_ be saved and_ Nature_ die? |
37844 | ''Is the medallion cracked that Thorwaldsen executed of AUGUSTUS CÆSAR?'' |
37844 | ''Is there really such a thing as the_ Risus Sardonicus_--the sardonic laugh? |
37844 | ''Madame Beck''s commencement was-- as I have often heard her say-- from no higher starting- point, and where is she now?'' |
37844 | ''Shall six- score years of warnings dread Die like a whisper on the wind? |
37844 | ''Shall storms from heaven_ without_ the world, Find wilder storms from hell_ within_? |
37844 | ''Shall the pale corpse, whose hoary hairs Are just surrendered to decay, Dissolve the chain which bound our years To hundred ages passed away? |
37844 | ''Should life''s first feelings be forgot, As Time leaves years behind? |
37844 | ''Should space, that severs heart from heart, The heart''s best thoughts destroy? |
37844 | ''The visits of Sorrow Say, why should we mourn? |
37844 | ''Touch my hand, thou self- deceiver; Nay-- be calm, for I am so; Does it burn? |
37844 | ''What shall I_ do_? |
37844 | ''You remember Mr. and Mrs.----? |
37844 | ''You will ask me, why?'' |
37844 | Again we may ask: did Branwell Brontë write''Wuthering Heights,''or any part of it? |
37844 | And you, sir, are the great lady''s brother, I presume? |
37844 | Being in uncertainty as to how, or where, to begin, he exclaims,''Whativver mun I do?'' |
37844 | But has not every house its trial? |
37844 | But who is without their drawback, their scourge, their skeleton behind the curtain? |
37844 | Can I have one of steel, To endure-- inflict-- defend-- yet never feel? |
37844 | Can I love? |
37844 | Canst thou call a moment''s colour To my forehead-- to my cheek? |
37844 | Canst thou tinge their tranquil pallor With one flattering, feverish streak?'' |
37844 | Did a man ever laugh the morning he was to be hanged?'' |
37844 | Did a man ever laugh the morning he was to be hanged?'' |
37844 | Does my lip quiver? |
37844 | Had he ever heard of his dozen aunts and uncles, the Pruntys of Ahaderg? |
37844 | Has mine eye a troubled glow? |
37844 | He desires to know in what he has offended you? |
37844 | Heathcliff is speaking:''"You suppose she has nearly forgotten me?" |
37844 | How, then, could Anne''s letters home have contained expressions of''agonizing suspicion''? |
37844 | I do n''t much mind it now, but if it be always so what shall I do with the serious part of myself?'' |
37844 | I would ask when Branwell Brontë displayed this unseemly levity? |
37844 | Is not this childish?'' |
37844 | It said,''Did my ears deceive me, or did I hear aright?'' |
37844 | It said,''I wonder if that''s true?'' |
37844 | Or whether it is considered improper for a young lady to mention the gentlemen of a house? |
37844 | Shall I ever forget it? |
37844 | Shall long- stored, late- come wrath be hurled; Or,--will you, can you turn from sin? |
37844 | Shall the dark doom above your head, Its blinded victims darker find? |
37844 | Should man''s for ever changing lot Work changes in the mind? |
37844 | Should years, that bid our youth depart, Bid youthful memories die? |
37844 | Three glasses,--landlord-- do you hear? |
37844 | What can the so- called love of her wretched, sickly husband be to her compared with mine?" |
37844 | What had become of his novel in the interim? |
37844 | What, in short, is the harmonious and sympathetic spell that breathes through Nature? |
37844 | What, then, were Branwell''s mental resources? |
37844 | Why could they not give me some credit when I was trying to be good? |
37844 | Why, then, the change in his aims? |
37844 | You will ask,"Why does he complain, then?" |
13726 | A soul, therefore, since it is not more or less this very thing, a soul, than another, is not more or less harmonized? |
13726 | And do all men appear to you to be able to give a reason for the things of which we have just now been speaking? |
13726 | And do we know what it is itself? |
13726 | And does it not also happen that on seeing a picture of Simmias one is reminded of Simmias himself? |
13726 | And from stronger, weaker? 13726 And if it becomes smaller, will it not, from being previously greater, afterward become smaller?" |
13726 | And is the contrary to this the idea of the even? |
13726 | And that beauty and goodness are something? |
13726 | And that by magnitude great things become great, and greater things, greater; and by littleness less things become less? |
13726 | And that that which is neither more or less harmony is neither more nor less harmonized: is it so? |
13726 | And that they are produced from each other? |
13726 | And that which does not admit the just, nor the musical? |
13726 | And the invisible always continuing the same, but the visible never the same? |
13726 | Answer me, then,he said,"what that is which, when it is in the body, the body will be alive?" |
13726 | Are we affected in any such way with regard to logs and the equal things we have just now spoken of? 13726 Before, then?" |
13726 | But did the odd make it so? |
13726 | But did we not, as soon as we were born, see and hear, and possess our other senses? |
13726 | But does that which is neither more or less harmonized partake of more or less harmony, or an equal amount? |
13726 | But heat is something different from fire, and cold something different from snow? |
13726 | But how does it appear to Cebes? |
13726 | But how shall we bury you? |
13726 | But now,said Cebes,"what think you of these matters?" |
13726 | But we speak of things which are visible, or not so, to the nature of men; or to some other nature, think you? |
13726 | But what as to such things as these, Simmias? 13726 But what as to the body?" |
13726 | But what do you say these are, Socrates? |
13726 | But what is this evil, Socrates? |
13726 | But what of the soul? 13726 But what with respect to the acquisition of wisdom? |
13726 | But what, Simmias,said he,"if you consider it thus? |
13726 | But what, are not those among them who keep their passions in subjection affected in the same way? 13726 But what,"said he,"of all the things that are in man? |
13726 | But what? 13726 But what? |
13726 | But what? 13726 But what?" |
13726 | But whence, Socrates,he said,"can we procure a skillful charmer for such a case, now that you are about to leave us?" |
13726 | But, Cebes,said Simmias, interrupting him,"what proofs are there of these things? |
13726 | But, we have said, before we possessed these, we must have had a knowledge of abstract equality? |
13726 | Come, then,he asked,"is there anything else belonging to us than, on the one hand, body, and, on the other, soul?" |
13726 | Did you ever lay hold of them by any other bodily sense? 13726 Do not all men, then, Simmias,"he said,"seem to you to know these things?" |
13726 | Do they remember, then, what they once learned? |
13726 | Do we, then, admit this also, that when knowledge comes in a certain manner it is reminiscence? 13726 Do you know,"he said,"that all others consider death among the great evils?" |
13726 | Do you not think, then,he continued,"that if a contest in wickedness were proposed, even here very few would be found pre- eminent?" |
13726 | Do you wish, then,he said,"that, if we are able, we should define what these things are?" |
13726 | Do you with those that relate to your nurture when born, and the education with which you were instructed? 13726 Do you, then,"he said,"describe to me in the same manner with respect to life and death? |
13726 | Does it not happen, then, according to all this, that reminiscence arises partly from things like, and partly from things unlike? |
13726 | Does not the soul, then, when in this state, depart to that which resembles itself, the invisible, the divine, immortal and wise? 13726 Does not, then, the soul of the philosopher, in these cases, despise the body, and flee from it, and seek to retire within itself?" |
13726 | Does not, then,he said,"that which is called fortitude, Simmias, eminently belong to philosophers?" |
13726 | Does the case then stand thus with us, Simmias? |
13726 | Does the soul, then, always bring life to whatever it occupies? |
13726 | From this reasoning, then, all souls of all animals will be equally good, if, at least, they are by nature equally this very thing, souls? |
13726 | How can it, from what has been already said? |
13726 | How do you mean? |
13726 | How mean you? |
13726 | How not? |
13726 | How not? |
13726 | How not? |
13726 | How not? |
13726 | How say you? |
13726 | How say you? |
13726 | How should I not? |
13726 | How should it be otherwise? |
13726 | How should it not be? |
13726 | How should it not? |
13726 | How should it not? |
13726 | How should it not? |
13726 | How so, Socrates? |
13726 | How so? |
13726 | How, Socrates? |
13726 | In this state of affection, then, is not the soul especially shackled by the body? |
13726 | In what respect are these the most happy? |
13726 | Is it any thing else than the separation of the soul from the body? 13726 Is it not a shame?" |
13726 | Is it not, then, evident,he continued,"as to the rest, whither each will go, according to the resemblances of their several pursuits?" |
13726 | Is it not, therefore, from its being like or unlike them? |
13726 | Is it, then, invisible? |
13726 | Is not this, then, always the case? |
13726 | Is the soul, then, immortal? |
13726 | Is this, then, called death, this deliverance and separation of the soul from the body? |
13726 | It is, then, far from being the case that harmony is moved or sends forth sounds contrariwise, or is in any other respect opposed to its parts? |
13726 | It will be agreeable to me, for how should it not? |
13726 | Must it not, then, be by reasoning, if at all, that any of the things that really are become known to it? |
13726 | Must we not, then, of necessity,he continued,"speak thus of that which is immortal? |
13726 | Now, then, have you ever seen any thing of this kind with your eyes? |
13726 | Of those, then, who maintain that the soul is harmony, what will any one say that these things are in the soul, virtue and vice? 13726 Shall we say, then, that this has been now demonstrated? |
13726 | Since, then, that which is immortal is also incorruptible, can the soul, since it is immortal, be any thing else than imperishable? |
13726 | Such, then, being its condition, it can not partake of a greater degree of discord or harmony? |
13726 | The idea of the even, then, will never come to the three? |
13726 | The number three is uneven? |
13726 | The same as snow and fire? |
13726 | The soul, then, is more like the invisible than the body; and the body, the visible? |
13726 | The soul, then, will never admit the contrary of that which it brings with it, as has been already allowed? |
13726 | Then, do the brave among them endure death when they do endure it, through dread of greater evils? |
13726 | Therefore, does not the soul admit death? |
13726 | Therefore,he proceeded,"if there is such a thing as to revive, will not this reviving be a mode of production from the dead to the living?" |
13726 | These equal things, then,he said,"and abstract equality, are not the same?" |
13726 | Three, then, has no part in the even? |
13726 | To which species of the two, then, both from what was before and now said, does the soul appear to you to be more like and more nearly allied? |
13726 | To which species, then, shall we say the body is more like, and more nearly allied? |
13726 | We did allow it,he replied,"for how could we do otherwise?" |
13726 | We have then,he said,"sufficiently determined this, that all things are thus produced, contraries from contraries?" |
13726 | We may assume, then, if you please,he continued,"that there are two species of things; the one visible, the other invisible?" |
13726 | What is this? |
13726 | What next? 13726 What, then, Socrates,"said Simmias,"would you go away keeping this persuasion to yourself, or would you impart it to us? |
13726 | What, then, as to this? |
13726 | What, then, is produced from life? |
13726 | What, then, shall we do? |
13726 | What, then, shall we say of the soul-- that it is visible, or not visible? |
13726 | What, then,said he"is produced from death?" |
13726 | What, then,said he,"Cebes, if it were necessary for the uneven to be imperishable, would the number three be otherwise than imperishable?" |
13726 | What, then,said he,"is not Evenus a philosopher?" |
13726 | What, then? 13726 What, then? |
13726 | What, then? 13726 What, then? |
13726 | What, then? 13726 What, then? |
13726 | What, then? 13726 What, then? |
13726 | What, then? |
13726 | What? |
13726 | What? |
13726 | What? |
13726 | When did our souls receive this knowledge? 13726 When, then,"said he,"does the soul light on the truth? |
13726 | Whence have we derived the knowledge of it? 13726 Whether by yielding to the passions in the body, or by opposing them? |
13726 | Whether, then, is there any thing contrary to life or not? |
13726 | Whether, then,he continued"do you reject all our former arguments, or some of them only, and not others?" |
13726 | Which, then, do you choose, Simmias: that we are born with knowledge, or that we afterward remember what we had formerly known? |
13726 | Which, then, does the soul resemble? |
13726 | Who is he? |
13726 | Why so? |
13726 | Why, then, Socrates, do they say that it is not allowable to kill one''s self? 13726 With respect, then, to their mode of production, is not one of them very clear? |
13726 | You say truly, Cebes,said Socrates,"but what shall we do? |
13726 | ''Why, then,''reason might say,''do you still disbelieve? |
13726 | --do you think that he cared for death and danger? |
13726 | --what should we say, Crito, to these and similar remonstrances? |
13726 | And Socrates, on seeing the man, said,"Well, my good friend, as you are skilled in these matters, what must I do?" |
13726 | And do we abide by what we agreed on as being just, or do we not? |
13726 | And do you not think that this conduct of Socrates would be very indecorous? |
13726 | And how is not this the most reprehensible ignorance, to think that one knows what one does not know? |
13726 | And if I should ask,"For what reason?" |
13726 | And if this be so, do you think that there are equal rights between us? |
13726 | And if this is so, that the living are produced again from the dead, can there be any other consequence than that our souls are there? |
13726 | And if we do not obey him, shall we not corrupt and injure that part of ourselves which becomes better by justice, but is ruined by injustice? |
13726 | And in saying that this is to remember, should we not say rightly?" |
13726 | And is this affection of the soul called wisdom?" |
13726 | And should you do so, will it be worth your while to live? |
13726 | And this is the body we are speaking of, is it not? |
13726 | And what character can be more disgraceful than this-- to appear to value one''s riches more than one''s friends? |
13726 | And what will become of those discourses about justice and all other virtues? |
13726 | And why should I live in prison, a slave to the established magistracy, the Eleven? |
13726 | And, at the same time looking at Cebes,"Has anything that has been said, Cebes, disturbed you?" |
13726 | And, in this way, which of the two appears to you to be like the divine, and which the mortal? |
13726 | Are these able to instruct the youth, and make them better? |
13726 | Are we affected in some such way, or not, with respect to things equal and abstract equality itself?" |
13726 | Are you able to choose in this case, and what do you think about it? |
13726 | Are you willing that we should converse on these points, whether such is probably the case or not?" |
13726 | As, for instance, when any thing becomes greater, is it not necessary that, from being previously smaller, it afterward became greater?" |
13726 | At length Socrates, perceiving them, said,"What think you of what has been said? |
13726 | At what price would you not estimate a conference with Orpheus and Musæus, Hesiod and Homer? |
13726 | But answer me: does it appear to you to be the same, with respect to horses? |
13726 | But answer to this at least: is there any one who believes that there are things relating to demons, but does not believe that there are demons? |
13726 | But at what other time do we lose it? |
13726 | But do you wish to live for the sake of your children, that you may rear and educate them? |
13726 | But does it not appear to you to be disgraceful, and a sufficient proof of what I say, that you never took any concern about the matter? |
13726 | But he said,"What are you doing, my admirable friends? |
13726 | But how, Cebes, and by what arguments, shall we appease this Cadmus? |
13726 | But if the generality of men should meddle with and make use of horses, do they spoil them? |
13726 | But now will you not abide by your compacts? |
13726 | But now, since your sons are men, what master do you intend to choose for them? |
13726 | But tell me, friend, who makes them better? |
13726 | But these are chiefly visible objects, are they not?" |
13726 | But what do we call that which does not admit death?" |
13726 | But what further? |
13726 | But what was said after this? |
13726 | But what will you do in Thessaly besides feasting, as if you had gone to Thessaly to a banquet? |
13726 | But why did you come so early? |
13726 | But why do some delight to spend so long a time with me? |
13726 | But with respect to demons, do we not allow that they are gods, or the children of gods? |
13726 | But, then, what will a person who holds this doctrine, that the soul is harmony, say of virtue and vice in the soul? |
13726 | By departing hence without the leave of the city, are we not doing evil to some, and that to those to whom we ought least of all to do it, or not? |
13726 | Can a man who possesses knowledge give a reason for the things that he knows, or not?" |
13726 | Can these hearers make them better, or not? |
13726 | Can we do otherwise than assent? |
13726 | Can we say any thing against this, my dear Cebes, to show that it is not so?" |
13726 | Come, then, Melitus, tell me, do you not consider it of the greatest importance that the youth should be made as virtuous as possible? |
13726 | Consider, then, which of these two statements do you prefer-- that knowledge is reminiscence, or the soul harmony?" |
13726 | Crito, does not this appear to you to be well said? |
13726 | Did we not first give you being? |
13726 | Do I deserve to suffer, or to pay a fine? |
13726 | Do I not, then, like the rest of mankind, believe that the sun and moon are gods? |
13726 | Do all men make them better, and is there only some one that spoils them? |
13726 | Do not stones that are equal, and logs sometimes that are the same, appear at one time equal, and at another not?" |
13726 | Do not the bad work some evil to those that are continually near them, but the good some good? |
13726 | Do they not seem so to you?" |
13726 | Do we admit this, or not? |
13726 | Do we allow that there is such a thing as equality? |
13726 | Do we lose it, then, at the very time in which we receive it? |
13726 | Do we not?" |
13726 | Do we say that justice itself is something or nothing?" |
13726 | Do we think that death is any thing?" |
13726 | Do you admit such a cause?" |
13726 | Do you admit this or not? |
13726 | Do you call heat and cold any thing?" |
13726 | Do you design any thing else by this proceeding in which you are engaged than to destroy us, the laws, and the whole city, so far as you are able? |
13726 | Do you not perceive that of all such things the extremes are rare and few, but that the intermediate are abundant and numerous?" |
13726 | Do you not say that life is contrary to death?" |
13726 | Do you not say that, by teaching these things, I corrupt the youth? |
13726 | Do you not think so?" |
13726 | Do you say so? |
13726 | Do you see, Melitus, that you are silent, and have nothing to say? |
13726 | Do you think as they do?" |
13726 | Does abstract equality ever appear to you unequal? |
13726 | Does equality itself, the beautiful itself, and each several thing which is, ever undergo any change, however small? |
13726 | Does it appear to you correct?" |
13726 | Does it appear to you to be becoming in a philosopher to be anxious about pleasures, as they are called, such as meats and drinks?" |
13726 | Does it appear to you to have been proved sufficiently? |
13726 | Does it not also seem so to you?" |
13726 | Does it not appear to you to be natural that the divine should rule and command, but the mortal obey and be subservient?" |
13726 | Does it not seem so to you?" |
13726 | Does it not seem so to you?" |
13726 | Does such a man appear to you to think other bodily indulgences of value? |
13726 | For do you doubt how that which is called learning is reminiscence?" |
13726 | For if living beings are produced from other things, and living beings die, what could prevent their being all absorbed in death?" |
13726 | For when I heard this, I reasoned thus with myself, What does the god mean? |
13726 | For you know, surely, that whatever things the idea of three occupies must of necessity not only be three, but also odd?" |
13726 | For, come, what charge have you against us and the city, that you attempt to destroy us? |
13726 | Has the ship[6] arrived from Delos, on the arrival of which I must die? |
13726 | Have I sufficiently explained this to you or not?" |
13726 | Have you not perceived that this happens so?" |
13726 | How do we denominate that which does not admit the idea of the even?" |
13726 | How ever, some one may say, are not the multitude able to put us to death? |
13726 | How, then, can such a man be afraid of death? |
13726 | How, then, will this argument accord with that?" |
13726 | How, therefore, may we consider the matter most conveniently? |
13726 | However, tell us, Melitus, how you say I corrupt the youth? |
13726 | I ask then, by Jupiter, do I appear to you to believe that there is no god? |
13726 | If any thing becomes worse, must it not become so from better? |
13726 | If, then, any one of you is more prompt than I am, why does he not answer, for he seems to have handled my argument not badly? |
13726 | In the next place, do you not see how cheap these informers are, so that there would be no need of a large sum for them? |
13726 | Instead of this, shall I choose what I well know to be evil, and award that? |
13726 | Is death any thing else than this?" |
13726 | Is it not clear that it will be such as I deserve? |
13726 | Is it not so? |
13726 | Is it not so?" |
13726 | Is it not very early? |
13726 | Is it right to do evil, Crito, or not? |
13726 | Is it visible or invisible?" |
13726 | Is not every harmony naturally harmony, so far as it has been made to accord?" |
13726 | Is not he the person, Simmias, if any one can, who will arrive at the knowledge of that which is?" |
13726 | Is not this rightly resolved? |
13726 | Is not this the case, Melitus, both with respect to horses and all other animals? |
13726 | Is the body an impediment, or not, if any one takes it with him as a partner in the search? |
13726 | Is there any man, Melitus, who believes that there are human affairs, but does not believe that there are men? |
13726 | Is there any one who does not believe that there are horses, but that there are things pertaining to horses? |
13726 | Is there any one who wishes to be injured? |
13726 | Is there any one,"I said,"or not?" |
13726 | Is there any thing else that you say bears rule except the soul, especially if it be wise?" |
13726 | Is there some one person who can make them better, or very few; that is, the trainers? |
13726 | Must we affirm that it is so, Cebes, or otherwise?" |
13726 | Nor yet the opinions of all men, but of some we should, and of others not? |
13726 | Of what kind, then, is this wisdom? |
13726 | Or can you mention any other time?" |
13726 | Or did not the laws, ordained on this point, enjoin rightly, in requiring your father to instruct you in music and gymnastic exercises?" |
13726 | Or do you say outright that I do not myself believe that there are gods, and that I teach others the same? |
13726 | Or does the case, beyond all question, stand as we then determined? |
13726 | Or is it on no account either good or honorable to commit injustice, as we have often agreed on former occasions, and as we just now said? |
13726 | Or is this nothing? |
13726 | Or must we discover a contrary mode of production to dying?" |
13726 | Perhaps, however, some one may say,"Are you not ashamed, Socrates, to have pursued a study from which you are now in danger of dying?" |
13726 | Perhaps, however, some one will say, Can you not, Socrates, when you have gone from us, live a silent and quiet life? |
13726 | Perhaps, one of you may now object:"But, Socrates, what have you done, then? |
13726 | Say, then, do you find fault with those laws among us that relate to marriage as being bad?" |
13726 | Shall I choose a fine, and to be imprisoned until I have paid it? |
13726 | Shall I choose imprisonment? |
13726 | Shall I, then, award myself exile? |
13726 | Shall we say this, or what else? |
13726 | Shall we say to them that the city has done us an injustice, and not passed a right sentence? |
13726 | Should you not be afraid of this?" |
13726 | Simmias expresses his surprise at this message, on which Socrates asks,"Is not Evenus a philosopher?" |
13726 | Tell us further, Melitus, in the name of Jupiter, whether is it better to dwell with good or bad citizens? |
13726 | That the laws speak the truth, or not? |
13726 | Through fear of what? |
13726 | To do evil in return when one has been evil- entreated, is that right, or not? |
13726 | To this Simmias said,"What is this, Socrates, which you exhort Evenus to do? |
13726 | What I mean will perhaps be clearer in the following examples: the odd in number must always possess the name by which we now call it, must it not?" |
13726 | What else can one do in the interval before sunset?" |
13726 | What enigma is this? |
13726 | What say you? |
13726 | What shall we say to these things, Crito? |
13726 | What shall we say to this, Crito? |
13726 | What then? |
13726 | What treatment, then, do I deserve, seeing I am such a man? |
13726 | What was said and done? |
13726 | What was the reason of this, Phædo? |
13726 | What, then, do I suppose to be the cause of this? |
13726 | What, then, do they who charge me say in their charge? |
13726 | What, then, does he mean by saying that I am the wisest? |
13726 | What, then, is meant by being dispersed but being dissolved into its parts? |
13726 | What, then, is suitable to a poor man, a benefactor, and who has need of leisure in order to give you good advice? |
13726 | What, then, is that? |
13726 | Whence have these calumnies against you arisen? |
13726 | Where else can we say such souls go?" |
13726 | Whereupon Simmias said,"How mean you, Socrates? |
13726 | Whether will Socrates the wise know that I am jesting, and contradict myself, or shall I deceive him and all who hear me? |
13726 | Whether, if you go to Thessaly, will they take care of them, but if you go to Hades will they not take care of them? |
13726 | Whither does it tend, and on what part of him that disobeys will it fall? |
13726 | Who is there skilled in the qualities that become a man and a citizen? |
13726 | Why, then, shall I not do this? |
13726 | Will he call them another kind of harmony and discord? |
13726 | Will you take them to Thessaly, and there rear and educate them, making them aliens to their country, that they may owe you this obligation too? |
13726 | Will you, then, avoid these well- governed cities, and the best- ordered men? |
13726 | _ Cri._ But what was this dream? |
13726 | _ Cri._ How can it be otherwise? |
13726 | _ Cri._ How should he not? |
13726 | _ Cri._ Whence do you form this conjecture? |
13726 | _ Ech._ And what, Phædo, were the circumstances of his death? |
13726 | _ Ech._ But what is this ship? |
13726 | _ Ech._ But who were present, Phædo? |
13726 | _ Ech._ How should I not? |
13726 | _ Ech._ Was any one else there? |
13726 | _ Ech._ Well, now, what do you say was the subject of conversation? |
13726 | _ Ech._ Were any strangers present? |
13726 | _ Ech._ What, then, did he say before his death, and how did he die? |
13726 | _ Echec._ How was that? |
13726 | _ Phæd._ And did you not hear about the trial-- how it went off? |
13726 | _ Socr._ About what time? |
13726 | _ Socr._ And are not the good those of the wise, and the bad those of the foolish? |
13726 | _ Socr._ And does this hold good or not, that to live well and Honorable and justly are the same thing? |
13726 | _ Socr._ And what of the senators? |
13726 | _ Socr._ But can we enjoy life when that is impaired which injustice ruins but justice benefits? |
13726 | _ Socr._ But of more value? |
13726 | _ Socr._ But what is this evil? |
13726 | _ Socr._ But what? |
13726 | _ Socr._ But why, my dear Crito, should we care so much for the opinion of the many? |
13726 | _ Socr._ But, Melitus, do those who attend the public assemblies corrupt the younger men? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Can we, then, enjoy life with a diseased and impaired body? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Come, then, whether do you accuse me here, as one that corrupts the youth, and makes them more depraved, designedly or undesignedly? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Come, then: how, again, were the following points settled? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Have you just now come, or some time since? |
13726 | _ Socr._ How say you, Melitus? |
13726 | _ Socr._ I do not ask this, most excellent sir, but what man, who surely must first know this very thing, the laws? |
13726 | _ Socr._ I say next, then, or rather I ask; whether when a man has promised to do things that are just he ought to do them, or evade his promise? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Is there any one that wishes to be injured rather than benefited by his associates? |
13726 | _ Socr._ O wonderful Melitus, how come you to say this? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Therefore we should respect the good, but not the bad? |
13726 | _ Socr._ What tidings? |
13726 | _ Socr._ What, then? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Whether all, or some of them, and others not? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Why have you come at this hour, Crito? |
13726 | _ Socr._ Why, then, did you not wake me at once, instead of sitting down by me in silence? |
13726 | about the pleasures of love?" |
13726 | and are they not temperate through a kind of intemperance? |
13726 | and did not your father, through us, take your mother to wife and beget you? |
13726 | and from slower, swifter?" |
13726 | and if more just, from more unjust?" |
13726 | and is this said with truth?" |
13726 | and on what terms does he teach?" |
13726 | and that two cubits are greater than one cubit by half, and not by magnitude( for the fear is surely the same)?" |
13726 | and whatever we attempt to do to you, do you think you may justly do to us in turn? |
13726 | and who of his friends were with him? |
13726 | and, again, swift or slow, beautiful or ugly, white or black? |
13726 | award myself? |
13726 | for between a greater thing and a smaller there are increase and decrease, and do we not accordingly call the one to increase, the other to decrease?" |
13726 | for to die surely is clear, is it not?" |
13726 | have not you and Simmias, who have conversed familiarly with Philolaus[26] on this subject, heard?" |
13726 | he continued;"shall we not find a corresponding contrary mode of production, or will nature be defective in this? |
13726 | he said"And is it not evident that such a one attempts to deal with men without sufficient knowledge of human affairs? |
13726 | is one soul said to possess intelligence and virtue, and to be good, and another folly and vice, and to be bad? |
13726 | lest I should suffer that which Melitus awards me, of which I say I know not whether it he good or evil? |
13726 | or do they all make them better? |
13726 | or does quite the contrary of this take place? |
13726 | or equality inequality?" |
13726 | or how think you?" |
13726 | or who does not believe that there are pipers, but that there are things pertaining to pipes? |
13726 | or would not the magistrates allow them to be present, but did he die destitute of friends? |
13726 | said I,"and whence does he come? |
13726 | said Socrates,"has life any contrary, as waking has its contrary, sleeping?" |
13726 | were not Aristippus and Cleombrotus present? |
13726 | would not this be ridiculous?" |
19742 | ''Barrie''is what you call her? |
19742 | ''This man?'' |
19742 | All I mean is,Aline explained, uneasily feeling that she had lost her power,"will you send me as your representative to Barrie? |
19742 | And Somerled himself, and the others? |
19742 | And do n''t you think, too,Aline urged kindly,"that we ought to put Miss MacDonald''s poor grandmother out of her misery? |
19742 | And do you think, if he can perfect this serum, he will come back? |
19742 | And may we children talk to her? |
19742 | And what of Aline West? |
19742 | And you''ll tell everybody she''s my sister, wo n''t you? |
19742 | And you, Mr. Norman? 19742 And you-- will go on-- with the others?" |
19742 | Are Scottish dreams different from other dreams? |
19742 | Are n''t you chaperon enough-- a great big, grown- up man? |
19742 | Are there only three fortresses like this in all England? 19742 Are you afraid of me, then?" |
19742 | Are you going to throw me over, Barrie? |
19742 | Are you too much excited, and taken up with thoughts of your mother, to care about all this? |
19742 | Borders you like crossing? |
19742 | Bore me? 19742 Burns died soon after Carlyle was born, did n''t he? |
19742 | But did you_ really_ go near to the border? |
19742 | But how? |
19742 | But if I''m determined to keep on the safe side of romance? |
19742 | But now we''ll take it up just where it fell down, wo n''t we, finding that it is n''t broken after all? |
19742 | But what more can I do? 19742 But, as girl to man, tell me; do n''t you rather like being proposed to?" |
19742 | But,I broke in,"is n''t it glorious not to have chaperons at all?" |
19742 | Ca n''t Mrs. West help? |
19742 | Ca n''t you find pretty girls at home? |
19742 | Ca n''t you give a lot of them away, and do what I said-- go back to the time before you bargained for them? |
19742 | Ca n''t you see by my face how glad I am to get_ you_? |
19742 | Can it be somebody''s tomb? |
19742 | Can the MacDonalds sell? |
19742 | Did you come here to tell me this? |
19742 | Did you say the round wall the Britons built is under the keep? |
19742 | Do I look very horrid? |
19742 | Do n''t you like her? |
19742 | Do n''t you remember me? 19742 Do n''t you think the heather moon knows best?" |
19742 | Do n''t you_ really_ know? |
19742 | Do you guess my plan? |
19742 | Do you love me? |
19742 | Do you think he''s so infatuated with Barrie that he''ll offer to take the girl off her mother''s hands and marry her? |
19742 | Do you think my mother has kept her married name for the stage? |
19742 | Do you think that can be my mother arriving? |
19742 | Do you think that''s why I say no? |
19742 | Do you think they go barefoot because they''ve no shoes? |
19742 | Do? 19742 Does Barrie know?" |
19742 | Does n''t it frighten you? |
19742 | Eh? |
19742 | Except what? 19742 Excuse me the liberty, sir,"broke in the old man,"but I think this will be the young leddy who was done for the Cinema? |
19742 | Fail you? 19742 Good heavens, is that what she did? |
19742 | Has every single one of those chaps proposed to you? |
19742 | Have I said anything funny? |
19742 | Have n''t you any idea? |
19742 | Have n''t you forgotten him yet? |
19742 | Have n''t you got one yet? |
19742 | Have you begun to write? |
19742 | Have you put that down in your notebook? |
19742 | Have you remembered my advice? |
19742 | How are you, Somerled? |
19742 | How can I tell, if you ca n''t? |
19742 | How can I, if you_ wo n''t_? |
19742 | How do we dig them up? |
19742 | How do we know what he said to the girl going to the train? |
19742 | How do you know she knows? |
19742 | How do you know? |
19742 | How do you want me to prove it? |
19742 | How serious that sounds; like''Do you take this man for better, for worse?'' 19742 How should I know?" |
19742 | I must have spoken to you about Barrie? |
19742 | I suppose you never heard of the sutors of Selkirk, either? 19742 I suppose, if you do n''t know her very well, she never spoke to you about having a daughter?" |
19742 | I suspect most maidens think a good deal about love whether or no they talk of it, do n''t they, Norman? |
19742 | I think she admired her daughter,he said quietly,"but being what she is, and looking no more than twenty- five, what can one expect? |
19742 | I wonder if I''m going to like men better than women? |
19742 | I wonder if his princess thought so? |
19742 | I wonder if we understand Somerled? |
19742 | I wonder? |
19742 | If I did speak, would it prevent your doing what you''ve made up your mind to do? |
19742 | Indeed? |
19742 | Is anything the matter? |
19742 | Is he too a''victim?'' |
19742 | Is it Mr. Norman the novelist? |
19742 | Is it for charity or the cause of the Suffragettes? |
19742 | Is it your plan-- or hers? |
19742 | Is n''t mother-- I mean Barbara-- gloriously beautiful? 19742 Is n''t she your sister''s heroine, too?" |
19742 | Is there anything I can do? |
19742 | Is there the ghost of a heart floating here? |
19742 | Is your telegram from Sir George? |
19742 | It does seem a pity that these poor people should have come all this way and spent all this money for nothing, do n''t you think so? |
19742 | It is just like having a kind uncle, is n''t it, my dear? |
19742 | It_ is_ such a child, is n''t it? 19742 Job-- Job?" |
19742 | Miss Mrs. West? 19742 Mr. Somerled,"she said,"can I speak to you-- just you and me alone for a few minutes?" |
19742 | My own castle? |
19742 | No bad news from any one, I hope, dear? |
19742 | No? 19742 Nothing has happened to moth-- to Barbara?" |
19742 | Oh, I do hope I have n''t said anything horrid? |
19742 | Oh, Mrs. West, what is it? |
19742 | Oh, am I? |
19742 | Oh, did n''t you? 19742 Oh, is she?" |
19742 | Oh, is that all? |
19742 | Oh-- why? |
19742 | Or would you like to see your rooms first? 19742 Poor boy, does n''t he want me to say''yes?'' |
19742 | Shall I go away and-- and save you all the bother? |
19742 | Shall I take her a message? |
19742 | Shall_ I_ have a little talk with her? |
19742 | She ca n''t very well go alone with you to Edinburgh in your car, I suppose? |
19742 | So you have a name? |
19742 | So''s the great Somerled, is n''t he? 19742 Supposing she should n''t make the correct impression? |
19742 | Sure your motor''s all right again? |
19742 | The island of Dhrum? |
19742 | Then how, if you were writing a story( I''m thinking I may want to do one), would you make a girl sure whether she''d fallen in love with somebody? |
19742 | Then you do sing? |
19742 | Then you_ do_ feel the romance of everything in this sunshine? |
19742 | Then your name_ is_ MacDonald? |
19742 | Then_ you_ do n''t? 19742 There''s no danger in railway trains, is there? |
19742 | Think? |
19742 | This, ma''am? |
19742 | Was I named after my mother? |
19742 | Was it given to you in dreamland or the spirit- world? |
19742 | Was my mother young when she was married? |
19742 | Was your father a MacDonald of Dhrum? |
19742 | We''ve quarrelled, then, have we? |
19742 | Well, why do n''t you laugh at the rattle of the dry bones? |
19742 | Well? |
19742 | Well? |
19742 | What about your American victims? |
19742 | What about your book? |
19742 | What are we going to do? |
19742 | What are_ you_ going to do? |
19742 | What did Circe do? |
19742 | What did she say? 19742 What do you mean by a heather moon?" |
19742 | What do you want me to do? |
19742 | What do_ you_ think he means to do? |
19742 | What does that poor piece of blurred glass make you think of so intently? |
19742 | What good would that do? |
19742 | What have you got there? |
19742 | What if I_ am_ pretty, after all? |
19742 | What is it that you see with your great eyes gazing through the dusk? |
19742 | What is it? |
19742 | What is the chaperon age for a man? |
19742 | What is the favour? |
19742 | What is the meaning of this? |
19742 | What kin to Duncan, my dead husband''s half- brother? |
19742 | What makes you think so? |
19742 | What things? |
19742 | What victims? |
19742 | What way? |
19742 | What will you do when you get to Ballachulish? |
19742 | What_ is_ the matter? |
19742 | Where does Mrs. James live? |
19742 | Where have you lived? |
19742 | Where''s Somerled? |
19742 | Which books? 19742 Which thrilled you more, the Castle or the proposals?" |
19742 | Which, Dick or Claud? |
19742 | Which, shall it be? |
19742 | Who has said that to you? |
19742 | Who is that pretty blond lady and the handsome dark young man you just bowed to? |
19742 | Who was your father? |
19742 | Who would have thought of running against you? |
19742 | Who''d suppose that such things existed nowadays? |
19742 | Why Gretna Green? 19742 Why are you in such a hurry?" |
19742 | Why do n''t you, too, see Mrs. James off? |
19742 | Why do you ask me to buy what you have to sell? |
19742 | Why do you call her_ your_ heroine with an emphasis? |
19742 | Why do you call me''poor?'' 19742 Why do you laugh?" |
19742 | Why do you suppose she ca n''t have me the first of the week? |
19742 | Why in my eyes? 19742 Why not?" |
19742 | Why should you? 19742 Why, then, I expect it will be to me too,"said I politely,"so why not tell it me now, in Melrose Abbey, the place of all places?" |
19742 | Why, was Justice blind? 19742 Why, what is there to suspect?" |
19742 | Why, what was it she did? |
19742 | Why-- how, please? |
19742 | Why-- yes, I like talking to them well enough, but----"But what? |
19742 | Why? 19742 Why?" |
19742 | Will she? 19742 Will you please look at a thing I want very much to sell?" |
19742 | Will you please thank Mrs. Muir for me? |
19742 | Will you promise not to be angry? |
19742 | Will you sing to please us? |
19742 | Will you? |
19742 | Wo n''t the plot come right? |
19742 | Worrying about what? |
19742 | Would one of you care to sit beside me? |
19742 | Yet you''re going on with your trip? |
19742 | You call being a great artist a lesser kind of fame? |
19742 | You call it nonsense? 19742 You could buy motor- cars with money you earned by painting pictures, could n''t you?" |
19742 | You know about him, do you-- in spite of the retired life? |
19742 | You mean that I''m truthful? |
19742 | You thank me for what-- precisely? 19742 You think I''m afraid?" |
19742 | You think you really will decide to buy the castle? |
19742 | You think,he said reflectively,"that she ought to be consulted?" |
19742 | You wo n''t faint or anything, will you? |
19742 | You would sell this? |
19742 | You''ll go on with your trip-- your rest cure-- I suppose, as you meant to when we-- that is, before you were saddled with all this responsibility? |
19742 | You''ll let me help you all I can, wo n''t you, Miss MacDonald? |
19742 | You''re not going to fail me, are you? |
19742 | You-- you have n''t_ seen_ her? |
19742 | You_ will_? 19742 Your sister, too-- and her friends? |
19742 | _ Am_ I good, Mrs. James, or am I bad? |
19742 | ( Mrs. Bal laughs often in private life; what clever woman with dimples does not?) |
19742 | --and said,"Why, what could I mean except dear Basil and little Barrie? |
19742 | A new thing for you, is n''t it? |
19742 | Again and again she asked herself,"What shall I do if he has been to see that old woman and found out about the telegram?" |
19742 | Aline ached to snap,"If you''ve never seen anything as pretty as_ this_, where have you lived?" |
19742 | And a few years more or less on her age-- what do they matter to him? |
19742 | And am I not a MacDonald of Dhrum? |
19742 | And did he buy his own costume, too?" |
19742 | And how long ago was that? |
19742 | And just as I''d finished, he said,"Well? |
19742 | And maybe you would n''t so much mind my not marrying him, if I had a proper place to stay for ever so many weeks, while you looked round? |
19742 | And what was the programme for her, during this week of the new play in Edinburgh?" |
19742 | And what_ should_ I do-- I ask you all-- if a grown- up-- oh, but an extremely grown- up-- daughter suddenly loomed over my horizon? |
19742 | And yet, of whose face did hers piquantly remind him? |
19742 | And your sister who collaborates-- where is she?" |
19742 | And, by the way, now your little ward is-- more or less-- safe in other hands, have you settled your future plans?" |
19742 | Answer me now, as if we were alone together?" |
19742 | Anything said about Somerled?" |
19742 | Are n''t we, Somerled?" |
19742 | Are we playing at cross purposes?" |
19742 | Are you contented with me as a companion, or would you rather have Douglas, or Norman? |
19742 | Are you going to do what we all want? |
19742 | Are you my wife? |
19742 | Are you ready, Barrie?" |
19742 | As for Aline, I suppose it was but natural her only interest in Mrs. Bal should be,"How will her reception of the girl affect me, if at all?" |
19742 | As for the hands she has fallen into, what do I know of them? |
19742 | As soon as we were safely away from the gate I asked the question burning on my tongue:"You_ wo n''t_ take me to Grandma?" |
19742 | At other times I think,_ Qui bono?_ I say to myself that I shall never have a home, or an incentive for settling down. |
19742 | BOOK III BASIL''S PLOT AND"MRS. BAL"I Will the time come, I wonder, when I can calmly"work up"these things into a plot? |
19742 | Basil thought everything here quite foreign- looking: but there''s always that French spirit in Scotland, is n''t there? |
19742 | Bennett?" |
19742 | Brother and sister, are n''t we? |
19742 | But I suppose people in St. Andrews think even more about golf than about learning, do n''t they? |
19742 | But I thought Mrs. James was going home at once? |
19742 | But I told you, did n''t I, that if the book went on I''d have to put you into it? |
19742 | But I''m afraid you''re making fun of me?" |
19742 | But Somerled''s a sardonic sort of chap, do n''t you think? |
19742 | But all I got from him on the subject was:"Well, do you think the knights''notice''that you''re a princess?" |
19742 | But as Sir S. was not far off I called to him,"Do n''t you think we may come back here again after dinner?" |
19742 | But he did not answer, and only hummed under his breath, as we walked to the waiting car:"How far, how far to Gretna? |
19742 | But how can you tell that Mrs. West will be glad to have me?" |
19742 | But how shall I buy them? |
19742 | But if I find that out, and he does n''t think me the only Real Girl, what will become of me? |
19742 | But if you''ll stick to me----""Stick to you?" |
19742 | But perhaps my plans for your granddaughter do n''t interest you?" |
19742 | But perhaps you''ve never heard that story? |
19742 | But surely no heather can be as purple as Scottish heather? |
19742 | But what can I do? |
19742 | But what put the idea into your head? |
19742 | But when I said,"_ Are n''t_ we really and truly married, then?" |
19742 | But why should it be known? |
19742 | But why should n''t she try to keep young for the sake of her dream? |
19742 | But why should you? |
19742 | But why? |
19742 | But would n''t it have been fun if he could have come over, instead of her going to him? |
19742 | But----""What then?" |
19742 | Ca n''t you see the panorama?" |
19742 | Can Mrs. Ballantree MacDonald have been such a one when she was eighteen? |
19742 | Can it be that actresses do not often have children? |
19742 | Can you?" |
19742 | Could a red- haired woman have chosen to wear such a colour? |
19742 | Could even you blame her for wanting to run away from this awful house, and she an Irish girl?" |
19742 | Could you ever mistake a Scot for an un- Scot? |
19742 | Dear child, may I have a little talk with you in your own room, and give you your Barbara''s message?" |
19742 | Dear little Miss MacDonald, will you try and be very, very kind to me, for-- everybody''s sake?" |
19742 | Did I know it was in Grayfriars, or the Minories Church, that Bruce killed the Red Comyn, Devorgilla''s grandson? |
19742 | Did this mean that he not only made light of her arguments, but had found out the falsehood on which they were based? |
19742 | Did you ever come to Carlisle and see him before you sailed for America as a boy?" |
19742 | Do n''t they sound nice together?" |
19742 | Do n''t you always desperately want to find out what everything means? |
19742 | Do n''t you like talking to her brother, and all that drove of boys?" |
19742 | Do n''t you really mind? |
19742 | Do n''t you see that this would be a sensible arrangement, if the people were all right, instead of starting off on a wild- goose chase?" |
19742 | Do n''t you see, young as it is, how it has power to change the yellow of the sunlight, seeming to alloy it with silver?" |
19742 | Do n''t you think that is a charming impression? |
19742 | Do n''t you think, sir"( she often slips in a respectful"sir"),"that her voice would repay instruction?" |
19742 | Do tell me what makes this unique?" |
19742 | Do you expect any one to meet you in London, Miss MacDonald?" |
19742 | Do you happen to know whether Doctor James had a scar on the left temple?" |
19742 | Do you know her?" |
19742 | Do you love him?" |
19742 | Do you love me, Barrie? |
19742 | Do you remember how I used to say that_ my_ tour under the heather moon would soon be over, but you would be going on just as if we had never met? |
19742 | Do you think I sha n''t succeed? |
19742 | Do you think he''ll never care?" |
19742 | Do you, Heppie?" |
19742 | Do you?" |
19742 | Does n''t it frighten you?" |
19742 | Does n''t it to you?" |
19742 | Douglas?" |
19742 | For a moment Aline told herself that there was no hope, there could not possibly be any; and yet, if he cared for her, would he not forgive? |
19742 | For another----""For another?" |
19742 | For telling a fib because I wanted to keep my friend to myself-- if I could?" |
19742 | Give me your hand----Is anything the matter?" |
19742 | Has he come after you? |
19742 | Has your grandmother any friends?" |
19742 | Have you anything to say against the plan? |
19742 | Have you decided on what is appropriate?" |
19742 | Have you decided where the wedding is to be?" |
19742 | Have you known each other long?" |
19742 | He had it nicely buried near the high altar, as long ago as the twelfth century, was n''t it? |
19742 | He said there was_ no fish_, but would I try the herring? |
19742 | He said, would I have fresh herrings or eggs? |
19742 | How can I wait-- what shall I do till then?" |
19742 | How do you do?" |
19742 | How many days are you going to give us together in your motor- car?" |
19742 | How many people have you let into the ghastly secret?" |
19742 | How old was he when he disappeared? |
19742 | How was the man going to account for her? |
19742 | How would it be best to begin? |
19742 | I do hope you have dogs''heads and antlers, and tartan curtains and carpets and things at your castle at Dhrum? |
19742 | I do n''t look more, do I-- truly?" |
19742 | I do so wonder, by the way, what a Highlander would do if he happened to be born with legs so crooked that he could n''t wear the kilt? |
19742 | I heard one say in a low voice,"Did you ever see such hair?" |
19742 | I hope you''re going to invite me to sight- see with you?" |
19742 | I hope_ you_ are n''t hoping that I may fall in love with him? |
19742 | I learned a lovely Highland schottische, too; and after I had seen others dancing the reels( ought I to say foursomes or eightsomes?) |
19742 | I might write a note to-- Hillard House, I think she said?--explaining-- er-- what has happened, as well-- as well as I could? |
19742 | I suppose I must n''t go away in the Gray Dragon till I hear from you? |
19742 | I suppose her luggage has come in with yours?" |
19742 | I think of the map of Scotland being purple, like heather, do n''t you? |
19742 | I understood from Barrie that she said so last night?" |
19742 | I used to ask myself, when the heather moon vanished behind a mountain or into the sea, in what secret place she lurked while she hid from the world? |
19742 | I wish men could amuse themselves, though, do n''t you, without killing creatures more beautiful and happy than themselves? |
19742 | I wonder if I shall ever see it? |
19742 | I wonder if there ever was another girl who had to make up her own pet name, and then had nobody who would use it except herself? |
19742 | I wonder if you have been to St. Andrews? |
19742 | I wonder when? |
19742 | I wonder why every one is so surprised? |
19742 | I wonder why? |
19742 | I wonder?" |
19742 | I would have done a good deal for my part of it, but there''s a limit, is n''t there? |
19742 | I_ quite_ understand you would n''t go back to your grandmother at any price, would you?" |
19742 | If you do n''t suspect, why should he?" |
19742 | If you had, after all where would be the harm?" |
19742 | Is n''t it simply appalling? |
19742 | Is n''t she, then, to be considered-- after bringing up the girl?" |
19742 | Is n''t that an alluring name-- Glen Affric? |
19742 | Is n''t that it?" |
19742 | Is she any relation?" |
19742 | Is that fair to the lovely chestnut in the fire? |
19742 | Is there?" |
19742 | It did sound odd to hear this fine old English aristocrat bawl out in a common voice,"Ai n''t ye ready yet-- what?" |
19742 | It is a compliment when a man like that remembers anything a girl says, do n''t you think? |
19742 | It seems as if one could not help dancing to the music of the pipes; do n''t you find it so? |
19742 | James?" |
19742 | Let me see, what_ would_ be best? |
19742 | MacDonald?" |
19742 | May I take them off?" |
19742 | Maybe there were Flemish houses on the spot in those days-- who knows? |
19742 | Now-- will you trust me and come to Mrs. Keeling''s house, as your grandmother bows to her?" |
19742 | Now_ can_ I? |
19742 | Or do you leave all the love parts to your sister?" |
19742 | Or was it something quite different-- something which she and the heather moon alone knew? |
19742 | Or would only one of these two men count in her life? |
19742 | Perhaps he-- Somerled-- would have room in his box for those nice American boys, of whom Barrie seemed so fond? |
19742 | Perhaps you know of Mrs. Keeling and her house?" |
19742 | Perhaps you''ve heard of them? |
19742 | Please have it made ready as soon as possible, and----""Oh, is your name Muir?" |
19742 | Shall I ever know? |
19742 | She encouraged herself by saying,"Why not?" |
19742 | She may want to say things she would n''t wish Barrie to hear-- don''t you think so, Mr. Somerled? |
19742 | Sir S. returned the nod stiffly, with an"I- wonder- if- I- really-_do_ know- you,-or- if- this- is- a- trick- to- claim- acquaintance?" |
19742 | Somerled?" |
19742 | Somerled?" |
19742 | Somerled?" |
19742 | The burly sutors who''firmly stood''at Flodden when other''pow''rful clans gave way''? |
19742 | The only questions I ventured to ask the girl, and those in a casual way, were,"Had she heard from or seen Somerled since yesterday afternoon? |
19742 | The question was, what use did he intend to make of his time? |
19742 | The telegram you sent Mrs. West seemed----""The telegram I sent Mrs. West? |
19742 | There was no time to stop in Falkirk( when is there ever time to stop in motoring? |
19742 | Was I aware that Dumfries meant"fort in the thorn bushes?" |
19742 | Was ever any one so beautiful, so clever, so altogether marvellous as darling Barbara? |
19742 | Was it here, and if not, why did they put up the monument?" |
19742 | Was it the heart- breaking disappointment Mrs. Bal''s reception had given her? |
19742 | Was n''t it good of him to have us? |
19742 | Was she Scottish? |
19742 | Was there no way of saving the situation, and turning the inevitable change into gain instead of loss? |
19742 | Was there something, apart from his profession, and the unfinished volume of history, which had occupied the thoughts of Doctor James in old days? |
19742 | Was there still hope? |
19742 | Was this a coincidence, or had there been a special reason for huddling these things out of sight? |
19742 | We had to say,"How do you do?" |
19742 | We missed the chance, however; and who knows if it will ever come again? |
19742 | We took shelter in the room where the Douglas was murdered; and who could make love against such a background? |
19742 | Well, it has turned out quite differently, has n''t it, for both of us? |
19742 | West?" |
19742 | West?" |
19742 | West?" |
19742 | West?" |
19742 | What could it be, and mean? |
19742 | What did you wish?" |
19742 | What do you know of Carlyle?" |
19742 | What do you say, Barrie?" |
19742 | What do you say?" |
19742 | What do you_ want_ me to do that I have n''t done?" |
19742 | What door could it be? |
19742 | What is the electric attraction we ca n''t resist? |
19742 | What picture?" |
19742 | What shall it be? |
19742 | What shall we do?" |
19742 | What was his first name? |
19742 | What would Grandma say? |
19742 | What would n''t she have given for a motor- car? |
19742 | What_ could_ have taken you to call on Grandma again? |
19742 | When Queen Elizabeth asked him afterward how he had dared, he said,"What is there a brave man will not dare to do?" |
19742 | Where was she? |
19742 | Which do you love more-- your Scottish blood or your American fame and fortune?" |
19742 | Who could have owned them?" |
19742 | Who could tell? |
19742 | Who was Circe, please? |
19742 | Who would have thought of this? |
19742 | Why does n''t everybody treat spilt milk like that?" |
19742 | Why not Ian Somerled? |
19742 | Why not call Barns of Ayr Wallace Oven? |
19742 | Why not let things arrange themselves, and Barrie go to Dunelin Castle with the MacDonalds? |
19742 | Why not? |
19742 | Why not?" |
19742 | Why should I? |
19742 | Why should an all- good, all- wise God create a disagreeable, unkind person like Grandma? |
19742 | Why should n''t we take her with us in the car to Edinburgh? |
19742 | Why should you be afraid of me?" |
19742 | Why, do you know our tartan and crest?" |
19742 | Why? |
19742 | Will that bore you?" |
19742 | Will you call me Basil?" |
19742 | Will you go and see if they have come, and if they have, bring them here-- or plead my cause eloquently, or something?" |
19742 | Will you let me see you begin your supper?" |
19742 | Will you trust me to motor you to my friend Mrs. West, who''s stopping just now with her brother in a nice little house just outside Carlisle? |
19742 | Will you?" |
19742 | Wo n''t it be good to have the castle still belonging to a MacDonald? |
19742 | Wo n''t mother be delighted?" |
19742 | Wo n''t you be persuaded to help us, sir, with your advice about the most important articles?" |
19742 | Wo n''t you go too, Mrs. West, and let us forget all this nonsense?" |
19742 | Wo n''t_ that_ make you happy-- and a boy again?" |
19742 | Wonder why? |
19742 | Would her heart beat for the pipes? |
19742 | Would she come to him as soon as she could settle her affairs? |
19742 | Would she fall in love with man of B. N.''s type? |
19742 | Would she love one man, and marry the other? |
19742 | Would she prove her Highland blood? |
19742 | Would they have turned to the wall in this dark corner any picture save one? |
19742 | Yet how have I succeeded? |
19742 | You are too kind and sweet, and you do want me to be happy and find the key of the rainbow, do n''t you? |
19742 | You dear, pretty child"--this adorably to her daughter--"how much more mischief have you done already? |
19742 | You know, I suppose, your father was born at Dunelin Castle?'' |
19742 | You never guessed, then, that I''ve been doing it all? |
19742 | You remember, do n''t you, dear, I did n''t want to take this trip? |
19742 | You wo n''t blame him for my fault, will you?" |
19742 | You would n''t think now, though, that Ian Somerled had ever been a peasant would you? |
19742 | _ Will_ you lend me some money and keep the brooch till I pay?" |
19742 | not for deserting her loving husband and her helpless child?" |
33099 | ''_ Aimer est le grand point, qu''importe la maitresse? 33099 About her being in the châlet? |
33099 | Ah, who shall say? 33099 And he did n''t look at you?" |
33099 | And it was you,she stammered,"it was you?" |
33099 | And what if it is? |
33099 | And whatever became of Miss Tippity- fitchet? 33099 And where have you been?" |
33099 | And you say they have gone abroad? |
33099 | Are you not glad? |
33099 | As Aida? |
33099 | But do n''t you like to go? |
33099 | But may I not see her? 33099 But that you did care for me, I suppose?" |
33099 | But what am I doing here? |
33099 | But what has he done? 33099 Ca n''t you see her? |
33099 | Call what? |
33099 | Can you take me to the station? |
33099 | Can you tell me, please, when the next train goes? |
33099 | Certainly, if you wish it, but-- but----"Well, but what? |
33099 | Did n''t I hear Weldon mention Miss Raritan? |
33099 | Do n''t you agree with me? |
33099 | Do n''t you like this country? |
33099 | Do you know what became of your victim? 33099 Do you mean to tell me,"Miss Finch asked him across the table,"do you mean to say that you do n''t believe in platonic affection?" |
33099 | Do you remember,Tristrem went on,"the last time I saw you?" |
33099 | Do you think so still? |
33099 | Has the train gone? |
33099 | Have an Egyptian? |
33099 | He might cable it, might he not? |
33099 | I am so sorry,she began,"Viola has told me----""How is she? |
33099 | I am tired,that lady said, as the front door closed;"you wo n''t mind?" |
33099 | I caught a glimpse of you last night, did n''t I, Royal? |
33099 | I hate that sort of business-- don''t you? 33099 I say, Varick,"the novelist exclaimed--(during the winter they had seen much of each other),"do you know who was the originator of the cloak- room? |
33099 | If he did not wish me to have the money,he said,"how could I keep it? |
33099 | In Thirty- ninth Street? |
33099 | Is it possible that you only arrived this evening? |
33099 | Is it worth twenty- five dollars to you? |
33099 | Is n''t that odd now? |
33099 | Is what true? |
33099 | It is better so, is it not? |
33099 | It was odd,Tristrem answered;"who was she?" |
33099 | It''s the first time since your mother died,he said at last, but what he meant by that absurd remark, who shall say? |
33099 | Let me see, you were saying----? |
33099 | Madame Raritan? |
33099 | My darling,Mrs. Raritan sobbed,"are you hurt? |
33099 | My dear,he said,"Royal is not acting quite as he should, is he?" |
33099 | She was married, then? |
33099 | Take that to Miss Raritan, please, will you? |
33099 | Tell me,he asked, as he was about to leave,"what was it Weldon said?" |
33099 | Tell me,he said--"I will not praise your picture; in many respects it is above praise-- but tell me, is what you said true?" |
33099 | Thank you,Tristrem answered,"I----""Are you to be married at once?" |
33099 | Thank you-- yes-- but Mrs. Raritan has n''t gone away, has she? |
33099 | The Chimera answers:''Rest? 33099 There is nothing serious the matter, is there?" |
33099 | There, I am better now,he said at last;"I wonder, I----Would you mind ordering me a glass of brandy?" |
33099 | These letters----But how is it possible? 33099 Vexed at what? |
33099 | Was Mrs. Manhattan on board? |
33099 | Well, what of it? |
33099 | What did I say? 33099 What did he say?" |
33099 | What did you do it for? |
33099 | What did you say to me last night? |
33099 | What do you think of Miss Finch? |
33099 | What little friend? |
33099 | What sphinx? |
33099 | When did it happen? |
33099 | Would you like the details? |
33099 | Would you ree- ly like to catch that train? |
33099 | Yes, my lord; will your lordship dine at_ table d''hôte_? 33099 You are a poet, are you not?" |
33099 | You are very kind; I----"But what''s this I hear about you? 33099 You have notified my grandfather, have you not?" |
33099 | You will tell her, will you not? |
33099 | _ The Sphinx._ Whither goest thou in such haste? 33099 ''Where?'' 33099 A man ran up and says to me,''There''s a lady hurt herself, ca n''t you give her a lift?'' 33099 After all, what incident could be more trivial? 33099 After all, why should I not? 33099 And after the engagement, if she wished it broken, why had she allowed Viola to invite him to the Pier? 33099 And besides,he added, with the cogent egotism of an accepted lover,"what shall I do with myself in the meantime?" |
33099 | And even if it were otherwise, have I not now a lord, a master, whom I must obey?" |
33099 | And how is your grandfather?" |
33099 | And if no note had been left, then why should he not ask for her mother or wait till she returned? |
33099 | And if that murder had been really committed, then what was the motive? |
33099 | And that reminds me, Viola; tell me, you will give up all thought of the stage, will you not?" |
33099 | And what had her mother chosen? |
33099 | And what had the sea to do with him? |
33099 | And what was it, after all? |
33099 | And what would you work at, pray? |
33099 | And when was he to come if not that very evening? |
33099 | And why had he told it? |
33099 | And yet, what had he done to fate that it should impel him to this? |
33099 | Besides, was he in a mood to thrust himself among those whose chiefest ambition was to be ornate? |
33099 | Besides, what''s the use in arguing with a newspaper? |
33099 | Brown?" |
33099 | But as you love honor, tell me, is it true that she had a child in this place?" |
33099 | But can you tell me where Mrs. Raritan went to?" |
33099 | But even though its success were assured, might not the success be worse than failure, and viler to him than the most ignoble defeat? |
33099 | But had an opportunity been given him? |
33099 | But what has that to do with it? |
33099 | But what have you been doing yourself?" |
33099 | But what was the motive of the crime? |
33099 | But why should you have any other feeling for me than that which you have? |
33099 | But will it be done? |
33099 | But you will come back, will you not? |
33099 | But, after all, what business was it of his? |
33099 | By the way, where are you going to- night? |
33099 | Certainly----""I never said anything about it, I never said anything about marrying or not marrying----""Oh, did n''t you? |
33099 | Could not Mr. Meggs send it to him? |
33099 | Did n''t Mrs. Raritan leave her address?" |
33099 | Did she call?" |
33099 | Did the horse drag you?" |
33099 | Did you ever read Flaubert''s_ Tentation_? |
33099 | Did you ever see such hair? |
33099 | Do n''t you suppose that Guido was? |
33099 | Do n''t you suppose that Murillo was a poet? |
33099 | Do n''t you think so? |
33099 | Do n''t you think that anyone who is in love with beauty must be? |
33099 | Do you know? |
33099 | Give it up? |
33099 | Good enough for Theodore Hook, eh? |
33099 | Had he been in a nightmare, he wondered, or was it Viola? |
33099 | Had he not hungered for it himself? |
33099 | Had he not said it ten thousand times of times before? |
33099 | Had she not taken herself away before the contents of the will were reported? |
33099 | Had the horse stumbled, or had he bolted and thrown her? |
33099 | He knew you were here, yet he said----""Did you hear what he said to me?" |
33099 | He was sure of finding a cablegram from Mrs. Raritan''s attorney, and was it not possible that he might see Viola that very night? |
33099 | How could I?" |
33099 | How did it happen? |
33099 | How''s that? |
33099 | I am just in from a tramp to Mori; suppose we brush up a bit and have dinner together?" |
33099 | I beg pardon, sir,"he added,"would you wish some dinner? |
33099 | I have come here every day since in the hope of----; you see, I wanted to ask if I might not have the privilege of hearing you sing again?" |
33099 | I only came to ask----By the way, have you been here long?" |
33099 | I says,''Are you hurt, miss?'' |
33099 | I suppose-- I ought to-- good God, why should I attempt to feign a sorrow that I do not feel? |
33099 | I was mistaken, was I not?" |
33099 | I would have-- But there, what is the use?" |
33099 | I----""For next summer? |
33099 | If I get you to Kingston before the Newport passes, will you give me twenty- five?" |
33099 | If I remember rightly, the father of this young lady did not leave much of a fortune, did he?" |
33099 | In Stuttgart there was a conservatory of music, and at Vienna was not the Opera world- renowned? |
33099 | Is n''t that evidence enough?" |
33099 | Is society so alluring that I should sacrifice for it that which is to me infinitely preferable? |
33099 | It was added-- but then, are not ill- natured things said about everybody? |
33099 | It would be forethought indeed if she had selected Undine or even Iseult; but what mother was ever clairvoyant enough for that? |
33099 | It''s after seven, is n''t it? |
33099 | It''s almost Venice, is n''t it? |
33099 | It''s always the unexpected that occurs, is n''t it? |
33099 | It''s true he had n''t a penny-- but-- what''s that got to do with it? |
33099 | Let me see, which is the better fulfilled, the odor of the lily or the lily itself? |
33099 | Long ago, when I was comparing my nothingness to her beauty, did I not know that to win her I must show myself worthy of the prize? |
33099 | May I not see her?" |
33099 | Mrs. Raritan''s eyes filled with tears, but to what they were due, who shall say? |
33099 | No? |
33099 | Now, which was the more perfect, the voice or the girl? |
33099 | Of course you don''t-- I''ll tell you; who do you suppose now? |
33099 | Oh, God, what did she wish of him? |
33099 | One morning I said to myself, Why not take a run down to Italy? |
33099 | Or was there a secret, after all, and might he not have misunderstood? |
33099 | Other men do-- why should n''t I?" |
33099 | Qu''importe le flacon, pourvu qu''on ait l''ivresse_?''" |
33099 | Sane? |
33099 | Shall I give you details?" |
33099 | She may seem capricious; and what if she does? |
33099 | She thought it better, the maid explained, not to leave Miss Raritan just yet, and would Mr. Varick be good enough to excuse her for that evening? |
33099 | She was in his arms, her own about his neck, and were he a knight- errant and she some gracious princess, what sweeter guerdon could he claim? |
33099 | Tell me, are you married?" |
33099 | That imbecile of a father of yours must have found the letters, and thought----But how is such a thing possible? |
33099 | That man that brought back your hat----Good God, Viola, are you not glad?" |
33099 | There are, I know, people who like their claret in decanters, but so long as the wine is good, what does the bottle matter? |
33099 | There is nothing else, is there? |
33099 | There was that Victoria Cross fellow; whatever became of him? |
33099 | Though I lost everything else, what did it matter if I kept my self- respect?" |
33099 | Though she gave him nothing else, would not the thanks of her eyes be reward enough? |
33099 | To be worthy of her, even in the slightest measure, what was there that he would leave undone? |
33099 | Tristrem asked;"what were his exact words?" |
33099 | Truly she was not the rose, but did she not dwell at her side? |
33099 | Untenable, indeed, why was it untenable? |
33099 | Was it a dream, or was it the real? |
33099 | Was n''t it odd, after all, that I should have found her in that hap- hazard way?" |
33099 | Was she to be bought? |
33099 | Was there ever another girl in the world such as she? |
33099 | Were ever fields more green or sky more fair? |
33099 | What are you talking about?" |
33099 | What better evidence of insanity could there be than the giving away of seven millions? |
33099 | What did he say?" |
33099 | What did it matter to him where he was? |
33099 | What do you mean?" |
33099 | What had he done to Destiny that he should be to it the play- thing that he was? |
33099 | What had he to offer? |
33099 | What he? |
33099 | What is art, after all, if it be not an imitation of nature? |
33099 | What is there left to us of Linus and Musæus? |
33099 | What makes you say her name is n''t Finch? |
33099 | What man was there that commanded larger sources of social information than he? |
33099 | What wrong had he committed? |
33099 | When do you want the cottage for?" |
33099 | When, may I ask, was your grandson born?" |
33099 | Where are you hurt? |
33099 | Whether he came to Narragansett or journeyed to Paris, what matter did it make? |
33099 | Who ever heard of an inmate of the Tombs that did not want to be defended? |
33099 | Who is dead? |
33099 | Who was he, indeed, to pretend to such a girl? |
33099 | Why did n''t you send us word? |
33099 | Why did the nails of her ungloved hand look as though they had been stained with the juice of berries? |
33099 | Why do you ask?" |
33099 | Why had Mrs. Raritan treated him with such consideration? |
33099 | Why had he been used as he had? |
33099 | Why had he heard her calling"Coward"to the night? |
33099 | Why had he spoken of Viola? |
33099 | Why had she come to him as the one woman in the world, luring him on; yes, for she had lured him on? |
33099 | Why had she done so? |
33099 | Why had she made him love her as he could never love again, and just when she placed her hand in his,--a mist, a phantom, a reproach? |
33099 | Why not look in on my wife? |
33099 | Why should I give everything I own to the first beggar I meet? |
33099 | Why should she take his heart and torment it? |
33099 | Why should you, after all? |
33099 | Why was Viola''s whip broken, if it were not that she had broken it on his face? |
33099 | Why was the engagement untenable? |
33099 | Why, having given love, should she take it away? |
33099 | Why-- why-- why? |
33099 | Yet, after all, what matter did it make? |
33099 | Yorke spoke not as though he were paying a compliment, but in the matter- of- fact fashion in which one drummer will say"Dry goods?" |
33099 | You do n''t mean to say you did not see her again? |
33099 | You got my card, did n''t you? |
33099 | You never heard the duo which Flaubert gives, did you? |
33099 | You were up with her last night, were you not?" |
33099 | _ Apropos de bottes_, were n''t you rather smitten in that direction?" |
33099 | and did she not breathe it too? |
33099 | and what have you said yourself? |
33099 | why did I not think of them before?" |
32408 | Are you still,said he to Dumouriez,"in the same sentiments expressed in your letter last evening?" |
32408 | Mamma,said he,"why should any one harm papa? |
32408 | Moreover,he added,"would it not demonstrate their innocence if you dare not try them? |
32408 | What are you saying, Sir? |
32408 | What does the advice of the general of the army amount to,said Vergniaud,"if it is not law?" |
32408 | What has become of them? |
32408 | What has she done to them? |
32408 | What is going to become of all those who have stayed up stairs? |
32408 | What is the matter with her? |
32408 | What is the name of that guard who defended my father so bravely? |
32408 | Who knows,said he during the night to M. de Malesherbes, with a melancholy smile,"who knows if I shall see the sun set to- morrow?" |
32408 | Why,exclaimed he,"have the police refused cartridges to the National Guard when they have wasted them on the Marseillais? |
32408 | ''What harm are they doing you, then?'' |
32408 | --"And Madame de Tourzel, my children''s governess?" |
32408 | --"And why not?" |
32408 | --"But if they assassinate Your Majesty, do you think that the Queen and her children would be in less danger?" |
32408 | --"How old is Mademoiselle?" |
32408 | --"True,"replied the old man,"but who would not arm when the King''s life is in danger?" |
32408 | --"Were you acquainted with the conspiracies of the court on August 10?" |
32408 | --"What is your rank?" |
32408 | --"Who did that?" |
32408 | ... Do the enemies of the country imagine that the men of July 14 are sleeping? |
32408 | :"Would you believe it? |
32408 | A few minutes later, Danton said to Pétion:"Do you know what they have taken into their heads? |
32408 | After some disorderly and violent debate, it is resolved that the president shall put the question: Are the petitioners to be admitted to the bar? |
32408 | After the acceptance of the Constitution, Marie Antoinette wrote to him:"Can you understand my position and the part I am continually obliged to play? |
32408 | Afterwards, the following conversation took place:"Then you are going to join Luckner''s army?" |
32408 | And do not the nations pass their time in producing webs of Penelope, whose bloody threads they weave and unweave again with tears? |
32408 | And how will André Chénier end? |
32408 | And might not the daughter of the great Maria Theresa have cried, like the daughter of Philipon the engraver? |
32408 | And the women, what was their fate? |
32408 | And then what will happen? |
32408 | And to attain what end? |
32408 | And what is it that interrupts the speakers? |
32408 | And what occurs at the clubs? |
32408 | And where can it now be found? |
32408 | And why say to- morrow? |
32408 | And yet was it not she who had proposed to herself this ideal, so easily to have been realized? |
32408 | Are there any such? |
32408 | Are they dead? |
32408 | At her waking the Queen, on being informed of what had passed, began to weep, and said:"Why was I not called?" |
32408 | But do popular love and fidelity afford any support to a tottering throne? |
32408 | But how could devoted royalists and men accustomed to discipline be expected to approve the fête of the Swiss of Chateauvieux, for example? |
32408 | But how will he receive him? |
32408 | But in that case, what would have become of their popularity with the pikemen? |
32408 | But what shall we do when we get there?" |
32408 | Could one believe that a Queen of France would be reduced to keeping a little dog in her bedroom to warn her of the least noise in her apartment? |
32408 | Could so humiliating an obedience be expected from a great nation, proud of having conquered its liberty? |
32408 | Deputy Saladin exclaimed:"I ask M. Ramond if he is making M. Lafayette''s funeral oration?" |
32408 | Did he foresee that the King and himself would die at the same place, on the same scaffold, and only nine months apart? |
32408 | Do they forget that when the seditious Commune massacred M. Mandat, it rendered his projected defence of no avail?" |
32408 | Do they not belong to all Paris? |
32408 | Do you believe it? |
32408 | Do you desire the welfare of France? |
32408 | Do you fancy that Marie Antoinette is the only woman who will be insulted, calumniated, and betrayed? |
32408 | Do you know what was the chief distraction of this crowd in April, 1792? |
32408 | Do you mean to fire on them? |
32408 | Do you remember the pealing of the bells, the chords of the organ, the blare of trumpets, the clouds of incense, the birds flying in the nave? |
32408 | Do you think I am afraid of death?" |
32408 | Does any one believe that the Assembly will have the courage to condemn Pétion and the 20th of June? |
32408 | Does he fear to imperil the lives of his wife and children by an energetic deed? |
32408 | Does he fear, then, that the National Assembly is not strong enough to repress them? |
32408 | Does he think to prove his wisdom by his patience, and that success will crown delay? |
32408 | Does he wish to carry to extremes that pardon of injuries which is recommended by the Gospel? |
32408 | Does not that prove what deep root royalty had taken in France? |
32408 | Does not this most feminine passage in Madame Roland''s Memoirs recall the character of the mistress of the Little Trianon? |
32408 | Does the fate of Charles I. make him dread the beginning of civil war as the supreme danger? |
32408 | During all this time, what efforts had the Assembly made to put a stop to the murders? |
32408 | From which side did it come? |
32408 | Guadet thundered out:"Do you hear him? |
32408 | Had he not accepted the rank of lieutenant- general from the King, on June 30, 1791? |
32408 | Had not the Queen accorded him at that epoch the most flattering eulogies? |
32408 | Has the National Assembly two weights and measures, then? |
32408 | Have our enemies ceased their advance against our frontiers? |
32408 | Have you no cannon to sweep out this rabble?" |
32408 | Have you the right to deprive others of the pleasure of sharing your triumph? |
32408 | How came the Queen to be there? |
32408 | How could a woman so superior be expected to submit to the tyranny of polite usages? |
32408 | How could he sail against the stream? |
32408 | How did they respond to this conciliatory language? |
32408 | How has the army been able to deliberate?" |
32408 | How was it possible to remain faithful to a chief who was false to himself, who was more like a victim than a king? |
32408 | I ask if I am condemned to look on tranquilly while the assassins of my brother enter here?" |
32408 | In a week... how do I know what may happen? |
32408 | Is Lafayette the less a traitor?" |
32408 | Is he expecting foreign aid? |
32408 | Is he so benevolent, so gentle, that the least thought of repression is repugnant to him? |
32408 | Is it possible? |
32408 | Is the Queen afraid lest the Count d''Artois should arrogate an authority in the realm which would diminish her own? |
32408 | Is this an orgy, a masquerade? |
32408 | Is this the Queen of France and Navarre? |
32408 | Is this woman, confided to the care of an unknown servant, in this deserted old convent, really she? |
32408 | It is sought to change a day of rejoicing into a day of mourning.... What is it all about? |
32408 | It was in vain that Stanislas de Girardin cries,"Do the laws exist no longer, then?" |
32408 | Madame Elisabeth said:"Monsieur Roederer, do you answer for the King''s life?" |
32408 | Meantime what had become of Pétion, whose business it was, as mayor, to defend the palace? |
32408 | Monuments of weakness-- is not the expression worthy of the bombast of the time? |
32408 | On awaking, the Dauphin put this artless question to the Queen:"Mamma, is it yesterday still?" |
32408 | On his return from the United States, had he not been created major- general over the heads of a multitude of older officers? |
32408 | Once arrived at power, was this great enemy of nobility and prescription simple, and easy of approach? |
32408 | Optimists, how will your illusions terminate? |
32408 | Or, not content with their promenade to the Assembly, will they make another to the palace of the Tuileries? |
32408 | Ought he to take violent measures? |
32408 | Ought this divinity, so dear to Frenchmen, to find in its own temple those who rebel against its worship? |
32408 | Our internal troubles? |
32408 | People desiring to establish communication between those down stairs and those above, had been heard to cry:"Have they been struck down? |
32408 | Poor{ 72} woman, whose power will be so ephemeral, why do you make yourself a persecutor? |
32408 | Sometimes I do not understand myself, and am obliged to consider whether it is really I who am speaking; but what is to be done? |
32408 | The two municipal officers said to Hue and Chamilly:"Are you{ 344} the valets- de- chambre?" |
32408 | Then he asked:"Is the officer who commands the guard here?" |
32408 | They do not yet decide this other: Shall the armed citizens defile before the Assembly after they have been heard? |
32408 | They embrace, but are the court conspiracies coming to an end? |
32408 | They were not expected to lead themselves; that duty was imposed on others; have they fulfilled it?" |
32408 | This the daughter of the great Empress Maria Theresa? |
32408 | Thuriot exclaimed:"Are we expected to press an inquiry against forty thousand men?" |
32408 | Unable to comprehend the long- suffering of Louis XVI., he said in an indignant tone:"How could they have allowed this rabble to enter? |
32408 | Ungrateful nation, why dost thou not appreciate thy happiness? |
32408 | Was it not, moreover, a real satisfaction to the bourgeoisie to give power a lesson and humiliate a sovereign? |
32408 | Was it the Marseillais who provoked the combat? |
32408 | Was it the Swiss who sought to avenge their comrades, the sentries? |
32408 | Was not the first of all despotisms the very one to be shaken off? |
32408 | Was not this language like a prognostic of the 21st of January and the 16th of October? |
32408 | Was the dungeon of the Temple to be forced? |
32408 | Were not obscurity, repose, peace of heart, better for her than that fictitious glory which was to pass so quickly and end upon the scaffold? |
32408 | Were not three of them still in the Ministerial Council? |
32408 | What can they do if they are not united, encouraged, and led? |
32408 | What do all our mistrust and suspicions amount to? |
32408 | What figure could she have made at Versailles, or even at the Tuileries? |
32408 | What had become of those Swiss who, either in consequence of their wounds, or through some other motive, had been obliged to remain at the palace? |
32408 | What had happened on the day before Madame Elisabeth wrote this letter? |
32408 | What had happened? |
32408 | What had taken place at the Tuileries after the departure of the royal family for the Assembly? |
32408 | What had they to complain of, then? |
32408 | What has occurred since the day when Vergniaud, uttering such words as these, was frantically cheered? |
32408 | What have you come to do in the midst of these ferocious Jacobins, who flatter you to- day and will assassinate you to- morrow? |
32408 | What have you gained by your sentimental{ 247} jargon? |
32408 | What impression was made on her by this excursion to the royal palace? |
32408 | What influences formed this woman whose qualities were masculine? |
32408 | What interest have they in planning the murders? |
32408 | What is going to happen? |
32408 | What is going to happen? |
32408 | What is it he asks? |
32408 | What is necessary but good, honest common sense?" |
32408 | What is she afraid of, then? |
32408 | What is the use of discussing it?" |
32408 | What is to be done? |
32408 | What means of doing so could be found? |
32408 | What might not be feared from so many demoniacs, howling like cannibals? |
32408 | What must not these two keenly sensitive women have had to suffer at the epoch when France became a hell? |
32408 | What news will she yet learn? |
32408 | What powerful motives have brought him hither? |
32408 | What preparations have been made for its defence? |
32408 | What the devil are they doing down there? |
32408 | What was Madame Roland doing the next day, when the worst of the massacres were going on? |
32408 | What was lacking to the monarch to enable him to combine so many scattered elements into a solid group? |
32408 | What was to be done? |
32408 | What was to be the fate of the loyal and devoted servant, thus sacrificed to his master''s inexcusable weakness? |
32408 | What was to prevent this? |
32408 | What will become of my poor children?" |
32408 | What will the insurrectionary column do? |
32408 | What would be their fate if the measures you propose to me did not succeed?" |
32408 | When has there been more noise, more tumult, more movement, more unexpected or more varied scenes? |
32408 | When she recovered consciousness she was interrogated:"Who are you?" |
32408 | When will the men of the Commune render their accounts? |
32408 | Whence was drawn the inspiration of this siren, destined to be taken in her own snares and die the victim of her own incantations? |
32408 | Where are these honest men? |
32408 | Where find a point of vantage? |
32408 | While he still retained his sword, why did he leave it in the scabbard? |
32408 | Who are the accomplices of Danton and Marat in organizing the massacres? |
32408 | Who could say? |
32408 | Who dared, then, to pollute her joy? |
32408 | Who has fallen? |
32408 | Who has survived the carnage? |
32408 | Who knows? |
32408 | Who, at their dawning, could have predicted for them such an appalling night? |
32408 | Why did he not remember that it might launch thunderbolts? |
32408 | Why did that marplot, Danton, come with his untimely massacres to destroy such brilliant projects and banish such delightful dreams? |
32408 | Why had he garrisoned Paris insufficiently ever since the outbreak of the Revolution? |
32408 | Why had he not opposed the first persecutions aimed at the Church? |
32408 | Why had he not succeeded in being a king? |
32408 | Why had he pretended to approve acts and ideas which horrified him? |
32408 | Why had he suffered the Bastille to be taken, encouraged the emigration, and disbanded his bodyguards? |
32408 | Why have you quitted these honest people? |
32408 | Why is it so slow in bringing down the sword of the law upon the heads of the guilty? |
32408 | Why labor so relentlessly to shake the foundations of a throne that will bury you beneath its ruins? |
32408 | Why this long misunderstanding between him and his people? |
32408 | Why were these two women political adversaries? |
32408 | Why, if he was bent on this veto, so just, so honest, but so ill- timed, had he freely made so many concessions which thus became inexplicable? |
32408 | Why? |
32408 | Will the armed citizens return peaceably to their homes? |
32408 | Will the time never arrive when ministers shall cease to betray us? |
32408 | Will you cause the massacre of the King, your children, and your servants?" |
32408 | Will you disgrace your flags?" |
32408 | With such an Assembly, why should the insurrectionists have hesitated? |
32408 | Would not so perilous a mission intimidate even the most heroic? |
32408 | Would not this cry of Madame Roland in her captivity suit Marie Antoinette as well? |
32408 | Would resistance have been possible even at this moment; that is to say, between seven and eight in the morning? |
32408 | You will carry your head to the scaffold, and, optimist to the end, you will say:"What is the guillotine? |
32408 | added:"Is it what you call respecting{ 225} my person to enter my house in arms, break down my doors and use force to my guards?" |
32408 | and for whom? |
32408 | and the Queen, that"two illustrious heads"should be brought to trial? |
32408 | and undeceives them by naming her.--"Why did you not allow them to believe I am the Queen?" |
32408 | and what did you say?" |
32408 | anxiously.--"They are prisoners at the Force,"returned Manuel.--"What are they going to do with the only servant I have left?" |
32408 | asked Santerre;"what is she crying about?" |
32408 | be struck by a ball or by a poniard? |
32408 | call to mind that he was the commander- in- chief of the army? |
32408 | cried Bertrand de Molleville,"does Your Majesty believe that you will be assassinated?" |
32408 | elect to deprive himself of his minister''s aid? |
32408 | fully comprehend that for soldiers like these such an outrage was a hundred times worse than death? |
32408 | go amongst his soldiers? |
32408 | he spitefully exclaimed,"did they spare the Queen that impression? |
32408 | humanitarian abbé, rose- water revolutionist, of what avail is your democratic holy water? |
32408 | said to him:"It seems there is a great deal of commotion?" |
32408 | what are personal dangers to a King whom men are seeking to deprive of his people''s love? |
32408 | what do your dreams of evangelical philosophy and universal brotherhood amount to? |
32408 | what need is there of discussion when everybody is of the same mind? |
32408 | when shall I breathe pure air and those soft exhalations so agreeable to my heart?" |
32408 | when the invasion begins? |
32408 | { 393} Is not history, with its perpetual alternatives of license and despotism, like a vicious circle? |
14020 | Another man''s wife captivates you; a harlot, Davus: which of us sins more deservingly of the cross? 14020 Base Europa,"thy absent father urges,"why do you hesitate to die? |
14020 | Can he deny me? |
14020 | Have you a mother,[ or any] relations that are interested in your welfare? |
14020 | How stands it with Maecenas and you? |
14020 | In what respect to me, scoundrel? |
14020 | Is Gallina, the Thracian, a match for[ the gladiator] Syrus? |
14020 | Let Ulysses be heir to one fourth of my estate:"is then my companion Damas now no more? 14020 What is your will, madman, and what are you about, impudent fellow?" |
14020 | What occasion is there for it? |
14020 | What shall I not go to her now, when she invites me of her own accord? 14020 What therefore do you persuade me to? |
14020 | What; do you eat that plumage, which you extol? 14020 What? |
14020 | Whence come you? 14020 Where can I get a stone?" |
14020 | Where some darts? |
14020 | Who then is free? 14020 Will you not tell to- day, you varlet, whither such wretched stuff as this tends?" |
14020 | Wretch that I am, what have I done? 14020 ( for what greater impiety could they have committed?) 14020 A certain person, known to me by name only, runs up; and, having seized my hand,How do you do, my dearest fellow?" |
14020 | A large vase at first was designed: why, as the wheel revolves, turns out a little pitcher? |
14020 | A writer who died a hundred years ago, is he to be reckoned among the perfect and ancient, or among the mean and modern authors? |
14020 | After a long cessation, O Venus, again are you stirring up tumults? |
14020 | Albius, thou candid critic of my discourses, what shall I say you are now doing in the country about Pedum? |
14020 | Among the old poets, or among those whom both the present age and posterity will disdainfully reject? |
14020 | An ounce is added: what will that be? |
14020 | And how I was shocked at the voices and actions of these two furies, a spectator however by no means incapable of revenge? |
14020 | And how Jupiter glazes the settled snow with his bright influence? |
14020 | And is there none to whom you dare confess, that the more you get the more you crave? |
14020 | And is your heart pure, while it is swollen with the vice? |
14020 | And shall you,[ assuming the office] of Pontiff[ with regard to my] Esquilian incantations, fill the city with my name unpunished? |
14020 | And therefore do you esteem yourself a Paulus or a Messala? |
14020 | And what the hideous looks of all these[ hags, fixed] upon me alone? |
14020 | Are they all contemptible in comparison of the Campus Martius and the river Tiber? |
14020 | Are they greater or less than their fame? |
14020 | Are they in their senses? |
14020 | Are they to be marked With chalk, or with charcoal? |
14020 | Are unlearned constitutions the less robust? |
14020 | Are you forgiving to your friends? |
14020 | Are you ignorant of what value money has, what use it can afford? |
14020 | Are you ignorant, that you are the wife of the invincible Jove? |
14020 | Are you in your senses? |
14020 | Are you right in your head, when you willfully commit a crime for empty titles? |
14020 | At length the citizen addressing him,''Friend,''says he,''what delight have you to live laboriously on the ridge of a rugged thicket? |
14020 | Be it so; do you, who are a scholar, find no fault with any thing in mighty Homer, I pray? |
14020 | Beside other[ difficulties], do you think it practicable for me to write poems at Rome, amid so many solicitudes and so many fatigues? |
14020 | But by luck his adversary met him: and,"Whither are you going, you infamous fellow?" |
14020 | But by what means did you get so well acquainted with me? |
14020 | But oh, by all the gods in heaven, who rule the earth and human race, what means this tumult? |
14020 | But shall I on this account run riot and write licentiously? |
14020 | But unless that be the case, what beauty has an accumulated hoard? |
14020 | But what is the subject of this controversy? |
14020 | But why should the Romans grant to Plutus and Caecilius a privilege denied to Virgil and Varius? |
14020 | By what gift are you able to distinguish, whether this lupus, that now opens its jaws before us, was taken in the Tiber, or in the sea? |
14020 | Can we wonder that cattle feed upon the meadows and corn- fields of Democritus, while his active soul is abroad[ traveling] without his body? |
14020 | Can you laugh at dreams, magic terrors, wonders, witches, nocturnal goblins, and Thessalian prodigies? |
14020 | Can you, grown rank with lengthened age, ask what unnerves my vigor? |
14020 | Can you, out of these, recognize any thing applicable to yourself? |
14020 | Damasippus is mad for purchasing antique statues: but is Damasippus''creditor in his senses? |
14020 | Did I ever, when my ardor was at the highest, demand a woman descended from a great consul, and covered with robes of quality?" |
14020 | Do Thrace and Hebrus, bound with icy chains, or the narrow sea running between the neighboring towers, or Asia''s fertile plains and hills detain you? |
14020 | Do ye hear? |
14020 | Do you ask why? |
14020 | Do you grow milder and better as old age approaches? |
14020 | Do you hear with what a noise your gate, with what[ a noise] the grove, planted about your elegant buildings, rebellows to the winds? |
14020 | Do you hesitate? |
14020 | Do you hope that grief, and uneasiness, and bitter anxieties, will be expelled from your breast by such verses as these? |
14020 | Do you not perceive, O Pyrrhus, at what hazard yon are taking away the whelps from a Gutulian lioness? |
14020 | Do you number your birth- days with a grateful mind? |
14020 | Do you swell with the love of praise? |
14020 | Do you think it is of no consequence, whether your distresses arise from your own fault or from[ a real deficiency] of things? |
14020 | Do you think virtue mere words, as a grove is trees? |
14020 | Do you wonder that no one tenders you the affection which you do not merit, since you prefer your money to everything else? |
14020 | Does a man of probity live among us? |
14020 | Does any body hear?'' |
14020 | Does blind phrenzy, or your superior valor, or some crime, hurry you on at this rate? |
14020 | Does he employ himself to adapt Theban measures to the Latin lyre, under the direction of his muse? |
14020 | Does it already seem little to you, who are practiced in deceit, to be brought back to Ithaca, and to behold[ again] your family household gods? |
14020 | Does not he ridicule many of Ennius''verses, which are too light for the gravity[ of the subject]? |
14020 | Does one of Attalus''cities enter into your wish? |
14020 | Does the facetious Lucilius make no alterations in the tragedies of Accius? |
14020 | Does then perpetual sleep oppress Quinctilius? |
14020 | Does your heart burn with avarice, and a wretched desire of more? |
14020 | Dost thou delay the golden chariots and untouched heifers? |
14020 | Eupolis, Archilochus? |
14020 | For what end did you bring abroad such companions? |
14020 | For what is the difference, whether you fling whatever you have into a gulf, or make no use of your acquisitions? |
14020 | For what shall I follow, or whom? |
14020 | For what taste could an unlettered clown and one just dismissed from labors have, when in company with the polite; the base, with the man of honor? |
14020 | For what voices are able to overbear the din with which our theatres resound? |
14020 | For who would save[ an ass] against his will? |
14020 | For whom do you bind your golden hair, plain in your neatness? |
14020 | For whom were labored the fleeces of the richest Tyrian dye? |
14020 | For why do you hasten to remove things that hurt your eyes, but if any thing gnaws your mind, defer the time of curing it from year to year? |
14020 | For you? |
14020 | From what have our youth restrained their hands, out of reverence to the gods? |
14020 | From what principle is this, if not a suggestion from within? |
14020 | From what source do you throw this calumny upon me? |
14020 | Granted, if they are scandalous: but if a man composes good ones, and is praised by such a judge as Caesar? |
14020 | Has he in his hall the genial bed? |
14020 | Has he nothing servile about him, who in indulgence to his guts sells his estates? |
14020 | Has he said any thing yet? |
14020 | Has not the husband of the offending dame a just power over both; against the seducer even a juster? |
14020 | Has viper''s blood, infused in these herbs, deceived me? |
14020 | Have the rest of your vices fled from you, together with this? |
14020 | Have you any regard for reputation, which affects the human ear more agreeably than music? |
14020 | Have you escaped? |
14020 | Have you no faults?" |
14020 | He[ prudently] sat still who was afraid lest he should not succeed: be it so; what then? |
14020 | Here the fell Canidia, gnawing her unpaired thumb with her livid teeth, what said she? |
14020 | How do you come off with more impunity, since you hanker after such dainties as can not be had for a little expense? |
14020 | How mindful is he of me? |
14020 | How much did it cost? |
14020 | How much more savingly have either I lived, or how much less neatly have you gone, my children, since this new possessor came? |
14020 | How much more to the purpose he, who attempts nothing improperly? |
14020 | How much then? |
14020 | How so? |
14020 | I ask you, when Marius lately, after he had stabbed Hellas, threw himself down a precipice, was he raving mad? |
14020 | I shall still stick close to you; I shall follow you hence: Where are you at present bound for?" |
14020 | I will bear it? |
14020 | If I am allured by a smoking pasty, I am a good- for- nothing fellow: does your great virtue and soul resist delicate entertainments? |
14020 | If a man barks only at him who deserves his invectives, while he himself is unblamable? |
14020 | If any thing be a sufficiency, wherefore are you guilty of perjury[ wherefore] do you rob, and plunder from all quarters? |
14020 | If he be rich, who is wise, and a good shoemaker, and alone handsome, and a king, why do you wish for that which you are possessed of? |
14020 | If my oak and holm tree accommodate my cattle with plenty of acorns, and their master with a copious shade? |
14020 | If my[ very] briers produce in abundance the ruddy cornels and damsens? |
14020 | In this too I am anxious-- who takes upon himself to write the military achievements of Augustus? |
14020 | In trays, in mats, in sawdust,[ that are so] cheap, what great expense can there be? |
14020 | In what caverns, meditating the immortal honor of illustrious Caesar, shall I be heard enrolling him among the stars and the council of Jove? |
14020 | In what manner do you think they are to be looked upon, with what apprehensions and countenance? |
14020 | Into what groves, into what recesses am I driven, actuated with uncommon spirit? |
14020 | Is Ajax delirious, while he kills the harmless lambs? |
14020 | Is another impertinent, and apt to brag a little? |
14020 | Is any one then your voucher, with whom I have lived? |
14020 | Is he immoderately fond of being praised? |
14020 | Is he therefore well, and shall he get up? |
14020 | Is it free from the fear of death and from anger? |
14020 | Is not Naevius in people''s hands, and sticking almost fresh in their memory? |
14020 | Is that boy guilty, who by night pawns a stolen scraper for some grapes? |
14020 | Is the grass inferior in smell or beauty to the Libyan pebbles? |
14020 | Is the water, which strives to burst the lead in the streets, purer than that which trembles in murmurs down its sloping channel? |
14020 | Is there a place where envious care less disturbs our slumbers? |
14020 | Is there any spot where the winters are more temperate? |
14020 | Is there too little of Roman blood spilled upon land and sea? |
14020 | Is this agreeable? |
14020 | Is your breast free from vain ambition? |
14020 | It is my pleasure to rave; why cease the breathings of the Phrygian flute? |
14020 | Laugh[ at him too]: is he not forever changing his garrets, beds, baths, barbers? |
14020 | Less and less often do you now hear:"My Lydia, dost thou sleep the live- long night, while I your lover am dying?" |
14020 | Let fortune rage, and stir up new tumults what can she do more to impair my estate? |
14020 | Let the brother of Opuntian Megilla then declare, with what wound he is blessed, with what dart he is dying.--What, do you refuse? |
14020 | Let the son of Albinus tell me, if from five ounces one be subtracted, what remains? |
14020 | Lucullus, as they say, being asked if he could lend a hundred cloaks for the stage,"How can I so many?" |
14020 | Lydia, I conjure thee by all the powers above, to tell me why you are so intent to ruin Sybaris by inspiring him with love? |
14020 | Now if any one should ask,"To what does this matter tend?" |
14020 | Now some person may say to me,"What are you? |
14020 | O Agamemnon, why do you prohibit any one from burying Ajax? |
14020 | O Jupiter, father and sovereign, may my weapon laid aside wear away with rust, and may no one injure me, who am desirous of peace? |
14020 | O cur, thou coward against wolves, why dost thou persecute innocent strangers? |
14020 | O fortune, what god is more cruel to us than thou? |
14020 | O what are you doing? |
14020 | O when shall the bean related to Pythagoras, and at the same time herbs well larded with fat bacon, be set before me? |
14020 | On the other side, the merchant, when the south winds toss his ship[ cries],"Warfare is preferable;"for why? |
14020 | Or are their limbs less stout? |
14020 | Or can it vex me, that Demetrius carps at me behind my back? |
14020 | Or do you admire Lebedus, through a surfeit of the sea and of traveling? |
14020 | Or does he storm and swell in the pompous style of traffic art? |
14020 | Or has Canidia dressed this baleful food? |
14020 | Or shall I endure this toil with such a courage, as becomes effeminate men to bear? |
14020 | Or should not I rather suppose, that all the world are to see my faults; secure, and cautious[ never to err] but with hope of being pardoned? |
14020 | Or tell me, what is it to the purpose of that man, who lives within the compass of nature, whether he plow a hundred or a thousand acres? |
14020 | Or whether the ill- patched reconciliation in vain closes, and is rent asunder again? |
14020 | Or why are the swords drawn, that were[ so lately] sheathed? |
14020 | Or why do not my cheeks return, unimpaired, to these my present sentiments? |
14020 | Or would you choose to have a trick put upon you, and your money extorted, before the goods are shown you? |
14020 | Robbers rise by night, that they may cut men''s throats; and will not you awake to save yourself? |
14020 | Shall he be given to pleasure? |
14020 | Shall he, a dotard, scribble wretched verses? |
14020 | She began to ask, how big? |
14020 | She has excluded me; she recalls me: shall I return? |
14020 | Suppose this[ young man''s] mind had addressed him in the words of his appetite, perceiving such evil consequences:"What would you have? |
14020 | Tell me the name of this man; and at the same time whether he is a Roman, or a foreigner? |
14020 | Tell me, pray is the Roscian law best, or the boy''s song which offers the kingdom to them that do right, sung by the manly Curii and Camilli? |
14020 | That I should lead the life of Naevius, or in such a manner as a Nomentanus?" |
14020 | This too frequently drives away and deters even an adventurous poet? |
14020 | Though you be like highwaymen, Coelus and Byrrhus, I am not[ a common accuser], like Caprius and Sulcius; why should you be afraid of me? |
14020 | To the end, forsooth, that you may gain those applauses, which Agrippa gains, like a cunning fox imitating a generous lion? |
14020 | To what intent then do you contemn large lupuses? |
14020 | To what purpose are our woeful complaints, if sin is not cut off with punishment? |
14020 | To what purpose have I fortune, if I may not use it? |
14020 | To what purpose was it to stow Plato upon Menander? |
14020 | To whom shall Jupiter assign the task of expiating our wickedness? |
14020 | To whom when will modesty, and uncorrupt faith the sister of Justice, and undisguised truth, find any equal? |
14020 | Was it better to travel over the tedious waves, or to gather the fresh flowers? |
14020 | Was it not bravely done by him, who carried his point? |
14020 | Were any one to take pains to give him aid, and let down a rope;"How do you know, but he threw himself in hither on purpose?" |
14020 | What altars have they spared? |
14020 | What barbarian virgin shall be your slave, after you have killed her betrothed husband? |
14020 | What beast, when it has once escaped by breaking its toils, absurdly trusts itself to them again? |
14020 | What boy from the court shall be made your cup- bearer, with his perfumed locks, skilled to direct the Seric arrows with his father''s bow? |
14020 | What can I do better on the festal day of Neptune? |
14020 | What can one do to such a tribe as this? |
14020 | What could he answer? |
14020 | What dainty youth, bedewed with liquid perfumes, caresses you, Pyrrha, beneath the pleasant grot, amid a profusion of roses? |
14020 | What did I want?" |
14020 | What did it profit you, O Tullius, to resume the robe that you[ were forced] to lay aside, and become a tribune[ again]? |
14020 | What do you think of the gifts of the earth? |
14020 | What do you yourself undertake? |
14020 | What does Paris? |
14020 | What does he pray for, while he pours from the flagon the first libation? |
14020 | What does it signify, whether you live on what was paid for the other day, or a long while ago? |
14020 | What does not wasting time destroy? |
14020 | What does not wine freely drunken enterprise? |
14020 | What does the poet beg from Phoebus on the dedication of his temple? |
14020 | What does the poor man? |
14020 | What event, or what penalty awaits me? |
14020 | What follows, because the Stoic treatises sometimes love to be on silken pillows? |
14020 | What god? |
14020 | What have we, a hardened age, avoided? |
14020 | What have you[ remaining] of her, of her, who breathed loves, and ravished me from myself? |
14020 | What is it fitting for us to do, who are far, very far removed from the vulgar[ in our sentiments]? |
14020 | What is my Celsus doing? |
14020 | What is the covetous man? |
14020 | What is the difference[ then, with regard to yourself,] whether you sin with the person of a matron, a maiden, or a prostitute? |
14020 | What is the matter? |
14020 | What is there that pleases or is odious, which you may not think mutable? |
14020 | What lessens cares, what may endear you to yourself? |
14020 | What man, what hero, O Clio, do you undertake to celebrate on the harp, or the shrill pipe? |
14020 | What manner of living therefore shall the wise man put in practice, and which of these examples shall he copy? |
14020 | What need of many words? |
14020 | What of Sardis, the royal residence of Croesus? |
14020 | What of Smyrna, and Colophon? |
14020 | What of neat Samos? |
14020 | What of scenical shows, the applause and favors of the kind Roman? |
14020 | What of the sea, that enriches the remote Arabians and Indians? |
14020 | What perfectly renders the temper calm; honor or enticing lucre, or a secret passage and the path of an unnoticed life? |
14020 | What pleasure is it for you, trembling to deposit an immense weight of silver and gold in the earth dug up by stealth? |
14020 | What poison is this that rages in my entrails? |
14020 | What pool, what rivers, are unconscious of our deplorable war? |
14020 | What profits you only one thorn eradicated out of many? |
14020 | What sea have not the Daunian slaughters discolored? |
14020 | What shall I do? |
14020 | What shall I do? |
14020 | What shall I give? |
14020 | What shall I not give? |
14020 | What shall I, a provident augur, fear? |
14020 | What shame or bound can there be to our affectionate regret for so dear a person? |
14020 | What shore is unstained by our blood? |
14020 | What slave is here, instantly to cool some cups of ardent Falernian in the passing stream? |
14020 | What then did he moan, when he appointed by will that his heirs should engrave the sum of their patrimony upon his tomb- stone? |
14020 | What then did the mad Ajax do, when he slew the flock with his sword? |
14020 | What then have I profited, if you nevertheless arraign the conditions that make for me? |
14020 | What then pleases? |
14020 | What therefore[ is to be determined in this matter]? |
14020 | What thyme are you busy hovering about? |
14020 | What was the consequence? |
14020 | What will be the consequence? |
14020 | What will this boaster produce worthy of all this gaping? |
14020 | What witch, what magician, with his Thessalian incantations, what deity can free you? |
14020 | What wonder? |
14020 | What works is the studious train planning? |
14020 | What would the son of Mars and Ilia be, if invidious silence had stifled the merits of Romulus? |
14020 | What would you be at, you woman fitter for the swarthy monsters? |
14020 | What would you have me do? |
14020 | What would you have me do? |
14020 | What wouldst thou have more? |
14020 | What, Bullatius, do you think of Chios, and of celebrated Lesbos? |
14020 | What, Davus? |
14020 | What, art thou in a[ prophetic] raving; or dost thou play upon me designedly, by uttering obscurities? |
14020 | What, do you imagine that he ran? |
14020 | What, if a man devote his daughter instead of a dumb lambkin, is he right of mind? |
14020 | What, if any cur attack me with malignant tooth, shall I, without revenge, blubber like a boy? |
14020 | What, if you are found out to be a greater fool than me, who was purchased for five hundred drachmas? |
14020 | What, is it abundantly sufficient to avoid the person, and not the[ vice] which is universally noxious? |
14020 | What, shall I walk cheek by jole with a filthy Damas? |
14020 | What, shall that grubworm Pantilius have any effect upon me? |
14020 | What, shall you, without being made an example of, deride the Cotyttian mysteries, sacred to unrestrained love, which were divulged[ by you]? |
14020 | What, so big? |
14020 | What, while I am alive? |
14020 | What, will matters always go well with you alone? |
14020 | What, would you be such a fool as to be ambitious that your verses should be taught in petty schools? |
14020 | What-- if a man be not covetous, is he immediately[ to be deemed] sound? |
14020 | What-- is it fitting that, in every thing Maecenas does, you, who are so very much unlike him and so much his inferior, should vie with him? |
14020 | What-- when mad Agave carries the amputated head of her unhappy son, does she then seem mad to herself? |
14020 | What-- when you strike out faltering accents from your antiquated palate, how much wiser are you than[ a child] that builds little houses? |
14020 | What-- when, picking the pippins from the Picenian apples, you rejoice if haply you have hit the vaulted roof; are you yourself? |
14020 | What? |
14020 | What? |
14020 | What? |
14020 | What? |
14020 | What? |
14020 | What[ do you do], when my judgment contradicts itself? |
14020 | When Maenius railed at Novius in his absence:"Hark ye,"says a certain person,"are you ignorant of yourself? |
14020 | When he shall have[ at last] released you from your long servitude and anxiety; and being certainly awake, you shall hear[ this article in his will]? |
14020 | When he still followed me;"Would you any thing?" |
14020 | When you dispatch your wife with a rope, and your mother with poison, are you right in your head? |
14020 | When your passions are inflamed, and a common gratification is at hand, would you rather be consumed with desire than possess it? |
14020 | Whence do you think this happens? |
14020 | Whence should the virgin, stranger to a husband, with the chaste boys, learn the solemn prayer, had not the muse given a poet? |
14020 | Whence, and whither, Catius? |
14020 | Whence, whither am I come? |
14020 | Whereas if novelty had been detested by the Greeks as much as by us, what at this time would there have been ancient? |
14020 | Wherefore, when I have removed myself from the city to the mountains and my castle,( what can I polish, preferably to my satires and prosaic muse?) |
14020 | Whether it were so great? |
14020 | Whether shall I, at your command, pursue my ease, which can not be pleasing unless in your company? |
14020 | Which is the greater madman of these two? |
14020 | While you leave us to take as much out of a moderate store, why should you extol your granaries, more than our corn- baskets? |
14020 | Whither are you going? |
14020 | Whither is your beauty gone? |
14020 | Whither your graceful deportment? |
14020 | Whither, O Bacchus, art thou hurrying me, replete with your influence? |
14020 | Whither, whither, impious men are you rushing? |
14020 | Who can fear the Parthian? |
14020 | Who can move his limbs with softer grace[ in the dance]? |
14020 | Who cares for the war of fierce Spain? |
14020 | Who diffuses into distant ages his deeds in war and peace? |
14020 | Who does not rather[ celebrate] thee, Father Bacchus, and thee, comely Venus? |
14020 | Who is so foolish an admirer of Lucilius, that he would not own this? |
14020 | Who knows whether the gods above will add to this day''s reckoning the space of to- morrow? |
14020 | Who takes care to quickly weave the chaplets of fresh parsely or myrtle? |
14020 | Who then is a good man? |
14020 | Who then is sound? |
14020 | Who will tempt the vagrant wanton Lyde from her house? |
14020 | Who would not? |
14020 | Who, after wine, complains of the hardships of war or of poverty? |
14020 | Who, the frozen Scythian? |
14020 | Who, the progeny that rough Germany produces, while Caesar is in safety? |
14020 | Whoever, by becoming an exile from his country, escaped likewise from himself? |
14020 | Whom does false honor delight, or lying calumny terrify, except the vicious and sickly- minded? |
14020 | Whom have not plentiful cups made eloquent? |
14020 | Whom have they not[ made] free and easy under pinching poverty? |
14020 | Whom of the gods shall the people invoke to the affairs of the sinking empire? |
14020 | Whom shall the Venus pronounce to be master of the revel? |
14020 | Whose name shall the sportive echo resound, either in the shady borders of Helicon, or on the top of Pindus, or on cold Haemus? |
14020 | Whose son is he?" |
14020 | Why are these compositions less efficacious than those of the barbarian Medea? |
14020 | Why do not you, wretch that you are, bestow something on your dear country, out of so vast a hoard? |
14020 | Why do we change our own for climates heated by another sun? |
14020 | Why do we delay to go on ship- board under an auspicious omen? |
14020 | Why do we, brave for a short season, aim at many things? |
14020 | Why do you ask? |
14020 | Why do you go on? |
14020 | Why do you hesitate?" |
14020 | Why do you laugh? |
14020 | Why do you not, if you can, turn your empty yelpings hither, and attack me, who will bite again? |
14020 | Why do you pour forth your entreaties to ears that are closely shut[ against them]? |
14020 | Why do you send tokens, why billet- doux to me, and not to some vigorous youth, and of a taste not nice? |
14020 | Why does he neither, in military accouterments, appear mounted among his equals; nor manage the Gallic steed with bitted reins? |
14020 | Why does my fluent tongue falter between my words with an unseemly silence? |
14020 | Why dost thoti kill me with thy complaints? |
14020 | Why fears he to touch the yellow Tiber? |
14020 | Why hates he the sunny plain, though inured to bear the dust and heat? |
14020 | Why is a tenderness for my belly too destructive for me? |
14020 | Why is the pipe hung up with the silent lyre? |
14020 | Why many words? |
14020 | Why not? |
14020 | Why should I exchange my Sabine vale for wealth, which is attended with more trouble? |
14020 | Why should I mention every particular? |
14020 | Why should I multiply words? |
14020 | Why should this frenzy affect the obstreperous poets in a less degree? |
14020 | Why shuns he the oil of the ring more cautiously than viper''s blood? |
14020 | Why so, Stoic? |
14020 | Why so? |
14020 | Why who but Callimachus? |
14020 | Why, out of false modesty, do I prefer being ignorant to being learned? |
14020 | Will you not prefer men and the city to the savage woods? |
14020 | With what disorder of the mind is she stricken? |
14020 | With what noose can I hold this Proteus, varying thus his forms? |
14020 | With what prayer shall the sacred virgins importune Vesta, who is now inattentive to their hymns? |
14020 | Would you affront the circumcised Jews?" |
14020 | Would you have me also take my share of stout Falernian? |
14020 | Would you have me, amid so great noise both by night and day,[ attempt] to sing, and trace the difficult footsteps of the poets? |
14020 | Would you know why the ungrateful reader extols and is fond of many works at home, unjustly decries them without doors? |
14020 | Would you live happily? |
14020 | Wretched are those, to whom thou untried seemest fair? |
14020 | You are not covetous,[ you say]:--go to.--What then? |
14020 | You may ask how I, unwarlike and infirm, can assist your labors by mine? |
14020 | You must also write me word of this, whether Munatiua is of as much concern to you as he ought to be? |
14020 | [ Thus, does] this friend of yours live more sparingly than ordinarily? |
14020 | [ To what end all this?] |
14020 | _ A smart description of a miser ridiculously acting the extravagant._ How did the entertainment of that happy fellow Nasidienus please you? |
14020 | and how is it obtained? |
14020 | and how miserably Barrus? |
14020 | are you setting about appeasing envy by deserting virtue? |
14020 | cries he,"if the horn were not cut off your forehead, what would you not do; since, maimed as you are, you bully at such a rate?" |
14020 | do you think that arduous and admirable, which was done by Pitholeo the Rhodian? |
14020 | has any one a better scheme to advise? |
14020 | has any soldier of Crassus lived, a degraded husband with a barbarian wife? |
14020 | if an untimely blow hurry away thee, a part of my soul, why do I the other moiety remain, my value lost, nor any longer whole? |
14020 | if our former love returns, and unites by a brazen yoke us once parted? |
14020 | mad after he had murdered his parent; and that he was not driven mad by the wicked Furies, before he warmed his sharp steel in his mother''s throat? |
14020 | one that died a month or a year later, among whom is he to be ranked? |
14020 | or because the trifler Fannius, that hanger- on to Hermogenes Tigellius, attempts to hurt me? |
14020 | or do you think to impose yourself upon us a person we do not know?" |
14020 | or does a pleasing frenzy delude me? |
14020 | or has the bird the same beauty when dressed?" |
14020 | or shall I rather think of putting an end to my pains? |
14020 | or what did she not say? |
14020 | or whither your bloom? |
14020 | roars he with a loud voice: and,"Do you witness the arrest?" |
14020 | was the sea at that time less nutritive of turbots? |
14020 | what does it matter, whether I die of a disease, or by theft and rapine? |
14020 | when he has heard[ of such knavery]? |
14020 | when thirst parches your jaws, are you solicitous for golden cups to drink out of? |
14020 | when you are hungry, do you despise everything but peacock and turbot? |
14020 | where shall I find one so brave and so faithful?" |
14020 | whether it was tossed between the bridges or at the mouth of the Tuscan river? |
14020 | which of the two shall depend upon himself in exigences with most certainty? |
14020 | whither are you going?" |
14020 | why do you stand?" |
14020 | why was not my present inclination the same, when I was young? |
14020 | why, Ligurinus, does the tear every now and then trickle down my cheeks? |
14020 | will Caesar give the lands he promised the soldiers, in Sicily, or in Italy?" |
16129 | ''And what,''I heard Mr. Robinson observe, as I turned away,''is twelve miles in this here watery wilderness of leagues?'' 16129 A hundred thousand pounds? |
16129 | Afraid? 16129 After all,"he said,"how are they to find out? |
16129 | All your own-- eh? 16129 Always doing that-- eh? |
16129 | And am I to begin at once by asking for the money to be-- what do you call it, transferred? |
16129 | And because you thought you knew me from those letters, you suffer me to come here and be your disciple still? 16129 And his name was not Aglen, at all?" |
16129 | And if I do not find the money within three weeks? |
16129 | And if she refuses then? |
16129 | And now they have really come? 16129 And suppose they ask me questions?" |
16129 | And suppose, again,Arnold went on,"that the inheritance turns out a delusion, and that there is nothing at all?" |
16129 | And the coat- of- arms? |
16129 | And the name of your son- in- law''s old friend? |
16129 | And what do you think, sir? |
16129 | And what is this? |
16129 | And what sort of a man is this American? 16129 And why ca n''t he go on writing his letters without making any fuss?" |
16129 | And why do you come to see me to- day, Mr. Farrar-- and with Arnold? |
16129 | And you intend to ask her-- in the shop, I dare say, among the second- hand books-- to become your wife? |
16129 | And you want me to become that man? |
16129 | As for Iris being empty- handed,said Arnold,"how can that ever be? |
16129 | As for the ways and talk of society, what are these worth? 16129 But after all, what''s the good of this place to a sailor?" |
16129 | But as it is only a woman-- which of''em is it? |
16129 | But my position, my profession, my people-- are you not curious to know them? |
16129 | But never alone, Iris? |
16129 | But on whom have we conferred any benefits? |
16129 | But who would steal it, Arnold? 16129 But you are not going to start away for Liverpool at once? |
16129 | But you will think every day of little Iris? |
16129 | But, Iris, have you no friends at all, and no relations? 16129 But, you dear old man, what have you got in your head to- night? |
16129 | Ca n''t you get another client to find the money? |
16129 | Can gold,the moralist asked,"ever increase the virtue of man? |
16129 | Can he be going to give her all his money before he dies? 16129 Can we? |
16129 | Can we? |
16129 | Clara''s cousin,she said,"I have forgotten your name; but how do you do, again?" |
16129 | Did this American give you any other proof of what he asserts? |
16129 | Did you tell him? |
16129 | Did you? 16129 Disposed of? |
16129 | Do I? 16129 Do n''t they go to music- halls, please, and dancing cribs, and such?" |
16129 | Do n''t you know it, then? 16129 Do you know anything?" |
16129 | Do you know him, then? |
16129 | Do you know if any one has brought this girl to England? |
16129 | Do you know that he reproached himself? |
16129 | Do you think that I dreamed it all? 16129 Do you think you know him well enough, my dear?" |
16129 | Do you think-- you who know her so well-- that she suspects or knows it? |
16129 | Do you, Mr. Arbuthnot, always spend your evenings like this? |
16129 | Foxy,he said cheerfully,"have you found anything yet about the investments? |
16129 | Friend,said Lala,"was it well to hide this from me?" |
16129 | Furniture wears out; as for the stock-- who knows what that is worth? 16129 Has any one been?" |
16129 | Has he made a new will lately? |
16129 | Have you consented, Iris, my dear? |
16129 | Have you given any more money to the American gentleman who brought her home? |
16129 | Have you got enough money, Joe? |
16129 | Have you many pupils, like myself? |
16129 | He wants nothing for himself, then? 16129 How can I pay him back? |
16129 | How can I show curiosity about you, Arnold? 16129 How can a girl make money by teaching? |
16129 | How can that be, if it was not left to you? |
16129 | How do you know that? |
16129 | How do you know, Arnold? |
16129 | How like this? |
16129 | How long has she been married? |
16129 | How much do you know, Joe, and what is your business proposal worth? |
16129 | How much do you think we shall get out of it, Joe? |
16129 | How much? 16129 How shall you live, Arnold?" |
16129 | How''s business? |
16129 | How, indeed? |
16129 | I believe you are a friend of Mr. Emblem''s grandson? |
16129 | I ca n''t help it, can I? |
16129 | I can not complain, after twenty years, can I? 16129 I suppose,"said Arnold, shirking the question, because this is a civilized country, and in fact, why not? |
16129 | I was only thinking,he said,"that perhaps, you might be so much happier--""Happier? |
16129 | I wonder if she is pretty? |
16129 | I''ve got the real instincts of a lady, have n''t I? 16129 If anything dreadful should come of this? |
16129 | Ill, is he? 16129 Iris, will you change it for a life which will not be so quiet?" |
16129 | Iris? |
16129 | Is he your husband? 16129 Is it hereditary gout, Clara?" |
16129 | Is it likely? 16129 Is it trouble you mean for him?" |
16129 | Is it trouble? |
16129 | Is it? |
16129 | Is that gospel truth, Joe? 16129 Is that the way you got the papers?" |
16129 | Is there anything else you have to help us? |
16129 | Is this, Iris? |
16129 | It goes well,he asked,"with the buying and the selling?" |
16129 | It is hard, is it not, to lose a friend so slowly acquired, thus suddenly and unexpectedly? |
16129 | It''s a good step, is n''t it? 16129 James, do you think I would steal? |
16129 | Joe, what does he mean? 16129 Joe,"she said,"is it true that you know another girl who would do this for you?" |
16129 | Joe? 16129 Ladies in America, I suppose,"said Clara,"dine in the middle of the day?" |
16129 | Look here, Chalker,Joe laid a persuasive hand on the other''s arm,"ca n''t we two be friendly? |
16129 | May I go on? 16129 Mercy? |
16129 | Most American ladies,he said impertinently,"only drink water, do they not?" |
16129 | My dear,said Claude,"if it were not for you, what happiness could I have in the world? |
16129 | My help for him? 16129 My tutor? |
16129 | No abatement? 16129 Not any science at all? |
16129 | Nothing; is there now? |
16129 | Now, Joe,said the singer, with a freezing glance at the barmaid,"are you going to stand here all night?" |
16129 | Now,he murmured,"if the old man has really been such a dunder- headed pump as not to open the packet all these years, what the devil can he know? |
16129 | Oh, Mr. Joseph,he asked earnestly,"what will become of the shop? |
16129 | Oh, can such wickedness be? |
16129 | Oh,said Iris again,"how could you love me, Arnold-- how could you love any girl so? |
16129 | One of your models? |
16129 | Or you''d ha''known pretty sharp all there is to know-- eh, my lad? 16129 Papers, miss-- papers? |
16129 | Perhaps, Mr. Joseph,said Mr. James,"perhaps Miss Iris wo n''t have all bequeathed to her?" |
16129 | Physical science, perhaps? |
16129 | Pray, Arnold, what is meant by all this mystery? |
16129 | Pray, sir,said Lala Roy,"who told you that Mr. Emblem was so wealthy?" |
16129 | She is well educated, then? |
16129 | So, is that modest enough, Joe? 16129 Soon, Mr. Joseph? |
16129 | Splendid, is n''t she? |
16129 | Still, will you permit me to introduce Miss Aglen to you, if she should do me the honor of accepting me? 16129 Tell me, my friend, what ails the child? |
16129 | That fetches''em, do n''t it, sir? 16129 That''s her husband, is it? |
16129 | The gentle blood always shows itself, does n''t it? |
16129 | The good-- the good of this place? |
16129 | Then perhaps you prefer metaphysics? 16129 Then what am I to do?" |
16129 | Then why does he go on talking about thousands? |
16129 | Then why not go to a lawyer and make him take up the case for you, and honestly get your own? |
16129 | Then, have I been going under a false name all my life? |
16129 | Then, sir,said Arnold,"what was his real name?" |
16129 | Then,he continued,"if we can not write to each other any more, can we not talk?" |
16129 | To call upon me here? |
16129 | To- morrow? |
16129 | Was I sarcastic? |
16129 | We are getting on famously, are we not? 16129 Well, Joe,"said his wife,"and how is it going to finish? |
16129 | Well, Joe? |
16129 | Well, one afternoon Mr. Robinson comes aboard alone, and says to me,''Williams, at what hour will the tide serve to- morrow night?'' 16129 Well-- then-- what the devil do you mean-- you and your forgery?" |
16129 | What are you driving at? |
16129 | What are you going to do for me? |
16129 | What are you going to do with Joe? |
16129 | What are you thinking about, Arnold? |
16129 | What did he tell you? 16129 What did you tell him for, Iris, my dear? |
16129 | What do you mean by that? |
16129 | What do you mean, I say? 16129 What do you say, Lala Roy?" |
16129 | What do you think of this for a yarn? 16129 What do you want me to do? |
16129 | What does it matter, Joe, how much it is, if it is neither yours nor mine? |
16129 | What does that matter? |
16129 | What else did you learn? |
16129 | What is going to happen to me, grandfather, except that I shall be twenty- one? |
16129 | What is he like-- the young American physician? |
16129 | What is her name, Arnold? |
16129 | What is it, James? 16129 What is the name and address of this Shadwell woman?" |
16129 | What is to prevent a clever, quick- eyed fellow like you, mate, stepping in with a bit of wax-- eh? 16129 What might Mr. Joseph want?" |
16129 | What the deuce is this, I wonder? |
16129 | What the devil is the matter with him? |
16129 | What? 16129 When did the real girl die?" |
16129 | When did you ever tell me the truth, my dear? 16129 Where are the keys?" |
16129 | Where do you walk? |
16129 | Where does he live? |
16129 | Where is Mr. Arbuthnot this evening, my dear? |
16129 | Where is he? |
16129 | Where is the letter? |
16129 | Where was the grandfather? |
16129 | Where was the real girl? |
16129 | Where''s the admiral, Foxy? |
16129 | Which will you have first? |
16129 | Who brought her up? |
16129 | Who is Dr. Joseph Washington? |
16129 | Who is coming to- night, my dear? |
16129 | Who is coming to- night, my dear? |
16129 | Who is so wise as my Iris? |
16129 | Who is to prove that you are the girl''s guardian? |
16129 | Who is to prove that? |
16129 | Who is your Cousin Arnold? |
16129 | Who is your new singer? |
16129 | Who was that? 16129 Whose face is this?" |
16129 | Why did you go to see him? |
16129 | Why do you want me to encourage you? |
16129 | Why does n''t he come down and face his creditors? |
16129 | Why not? |
16129 | Why not? |
16129 | Why should I wait? 16129 Why should I? |
16129 | Why to- morrow? 16129 Why, Chalker, who''d have thought to meet you in this music- hall?" |
16129 | Why, my dear, what on earth do you know of the county ladies? |
16129 | Why, what do you call me, now? |
16129 | Why, you are not tired of it already? 16129 Why, you do n''t mean to tell me, Lotty, that you wish you had stuck to the moldy old place, and gone on selling music over the counter?" |
16129 | Why? 16129 Will the young man get copped?" |
16129 | Will you give me ten pounds for it, then? |
16129 | Will you have them back again? |
16129 | Without love, Arnold? 16129 Would it? |
16129 | Would you like,he said, another evening,"to see my studio, or do you consider my studio outside myself?" |
16129 | Yes, but what is two hundred out of a hundred and twenty thousand? 16129 Yes; and I''m to be quiet, and behave pretty, I suppose?" |
16129 | Yes; but how did I know whether he was going to do justice? 16129 Yes; will you go on?" |
16129 | Yet you have had experience, Lala Roy? |
16129 | You are in love with her, however? |
16129 | You are not really going away, Joe, are you? |
16129 | You have learned, I suppose,said Arnold,"something about the Deseret family by this time?" |
16129 | You here, Joe?? |
16129 | You here, Joe?? |
16129 | You here, Nig? 16129 You knew my son- in- law before his marriage?" |
16129 | You know him intimately? |
16129 | You really will let me come here? |
16129 | You think, then, that the Precepts of your Sage are only intended for men while they sit in the church? 16129 You will suffer him, then, even to be taken to the workhouse?" |
16129 | You wrote exactly in the form of words you promised me? |
16129 | You''re not afraid, Lotty? |
16129 | You, Arnold? 16129 You, Lala?" |
16129 | You, too, Mr. Arbuthnot? 16129 You?" |
16129 | Your stock sold? 16129 A handsome man, is he not? 16129 Afraid? 16129 Ah, and you''ve never got a chance of looking over his shoulder, I suppose? |
16129 | Ai n''t we every one engaged in getting round our neighbors? |
16129 | Always adding''em up? |
16129 | And I have been answering him, and he must think that I was drawing him on to tell me more about himself; and now-- oh, what will he think? |
16129 | And how-- oh, how in the world can she be, all at the same time, so young, so pretty, so learned, so quick, so sympathetic, and so wise?" |
16129 | And knowing so much, do you not desire to know more?" |
16129 | And now he has dropped upon us from the clouds?" |
16129 | And now yours, Mr. Farrar? |
16129 | And now, grandfather, that we have relieved our feelings, shall we have the story and the opening of the papers in the safe?" |
16129 | And now, sir"--she addressed Joe--"now that you have brought this dear girl all the way across the Atlantic, what are you going to do?" |
16129 | And now-- you do not mean to say that you are going to sell-- that you actually want to sell-- this precious book?" |
16129 | And oh, sir, who would have thought that Emblem''s would have come to ruin?" |
16129 | And then you shall tell me all about it when Arnold goes; and you will take a holiday, wo n''t you-- because I am twenty- one to- day?" |
16129 | And then-- how if your pupil begins to talk round the subject and to wander into other things? |
16129 | And what are her manners save those of the most perfect refinement and purity?" |
16129 | And what are you doing, Joe? |
16129 | And what is she, after all? |
16129 | And what line of action would be better or safer for himself? |
16129 | And who is to have it?" |
16129 | And who would help him, and give him access to the safe? |
16129 | And you do not want my congratulations, I suppose?" |
16129 | And you will be content to stay with me, my dear, wo n''t you? |
16129 | And you''ve got two hundred of it already, have n''t you?" |
16129 | And you, Clara? |
16129 | And, if you will, why should we not continue our correspondence as before?" |
16129 | And-- I say, Foxy, about that safe?" |
16129 | Anxiety and trouble? |
16129 | Anything else?" |
16129 | Are dove''s eyes, he asked himself, always steadfast? |
16129 | Are there no girls of your own age who come to see you?" |
16129 | Are you sure he is her husband?" |
16129 | Are you sure?" |
16129 | As for the papers, you have them all in your possession?" |
16129 | As for this trumpery bill of sale-- this trifle of three fifty, what is it to you? |
16129 | At seventy- five, and with all his money, why should he go on slaving any longer? |
16129 | Before his marriage? |
16129 | But is it business like, Mr. Emblem, to waste good money which you might have invested for your granddaughter?" |
16129 | But perhaps-- most likely, in fact-- you think that American girls all squint, perhaps, or have got humpbacks? |
16129 | But then, even if Joe were bad enough to rob the safe, how could he get at it? |
16129 | But what does it concern us to know what some men do?" |
16129 | But what if they should turn out to be rough and disagreeable people?" |
16129 | But when he said,"May I, your pupil, call sometimes upon you, my tutor?" |
16129 | But where is the letter? |
16129 | But who has paid the money?" |
16129 | But who shall console my grandfather in his old age for his bankruptcy?" |
16129 | But why not? |
16129 | But why was not the child brought over before?" |
16129 | Ca n''t you be satisfied with an officer and a gentleman?" |
16129 | Ca n''t you encourage yourself, Arnold?" |
16129 | Call that a way of doing business? |
16129 | Call that carrying on business? |
16129 | Can not yours wait also until to- morrow?" |
16129 | Can you not take me as I am, without thinking why I am different from other girls? |
16129 | Can you tell me any more about her?" |
16129 | Come now, what have you got to say to this? |
16129 | Could any sane and intelligent creature doubt those curves of cheek and chin? |
16129 | Could any woman,"she thought,"be worth the wealth of passion and devotion which her lover poured out for her?" |
16129 | Could we, for instance, endure to see the shop of a second- hand bookseller established in Cheapside? |
16129 | Dear me-- tut, tut!--bought no books? |
16129 | Did he ever have anything but a scowl for me?" |
16129 | Did he mean what he said? |
16129 | Did he tell you his real name?" |
16129 | Did you ever hear of a bookseller in his right mind throwing away his chances?" |
16129 | Did you really think that a man like me was going to sit in a back shop among these moldy volumes all day? |
16129 | Do most young Englishmen carry on in the same proper way?" |
16129 | Do n''t you think we had better back out of it while there is time?" |
16129 | Do we, therefore, jolly mariners afloat ever think of that? |
16129 | Do you dare to suspect that I would take money?" |
16129 | Do you hear? |
16129 | Do you know the key of the safe?" |
16129 | Do you know where I could find him, sir?" |
16129 | Do you know, sir, that you are addressing an officer and a gentleman?" |
16129 | Do you mean to insinuate that I am a thief, sir? |
16129 | Do you not recognize Mr. Frank Farrar, who used to stay at the Hall in the old days? |
16129 | Do you not sometimes think of that?" |
16129 | Do you really think me conceited?" |
16129 | Do you remember the letter?" |
16129 | Do you study mathematics?" |
16129 | Do you suppose no one can play the piano, except in England? |
16129 | Do you suppose that no woman has ever fallen in love with me before you? |
16129 | Do you think anybody in the world will be so green as to believe such a clumsy plan as that?" |
16129 | Do you think now, seriously, do you think, James that the old man is quite right-- eh? |
16129 | Do you think, now, that he is quite right in his chump?" |
16129 | Do you understand the position, Iris?" |
16129 | Does it belong to you? |
16129 | Does she not look, move, and speak like the most gracious lady in the land?" |
16129 | Emblem?" |
16129 | Farrar?" |
16129 | For who would be suspected if not-- oh, Lord!--if not me?" |
16129 | Has he borrowed your money?" |
16129 | Has she not been tenderly brought up by two old men who are full of honor, and truth, and all the simple virtues? |
16129 | Have I not lost all, except Iris? |
16129 | Have n''t people been sent to prison for less, Joe?" |
16129 | Have you ever studied, one asks with wonder, the Precepts of the great Sage who founded your religion?" |
16129 | Have you lost your voice, Iris?" |
16129 | Have you said anything to her yet about money matters, and a settlement of her claims?" |
16129 | Have you taken as yet any steps at all for the transference of your property to-- to the rightful heir?" |
16129 | He had the key made-- for himself; he certainly let me use it once, but only once, and who''s to prove it? |
16129 | Her husband, is he?" |
16129 | How am I to find out whether anything I tell you would be of use to you or not? |
16129 | How are they to prove anything? |
16129 | How beautiful you''ll look in the workhouse uniform, wo n''t you? |
16129 | How can any one live without some science?" |
16129 | How can money be made anyhow but in an honest shop? |
16129 | How can money be made by painting? |
16129 | How could it, when once we have met, and you have learned the truth?" |
16129 | How could there be any doubt?" |
16129 | How could they think of anything else? |
16129 | How did it get there?" |
16129 | How do I know that if you get what you want, you wo n''t swear it is of no use to you?" |
16129 | How do other people make money and get on? |
16129 | How have you shown your gratitude? |
16129 | How is the old man?" |
16129 | How many different worlds are there all round one in London? |
16129 | How many?" |
16129 | How much?" |
16129 | How the deuce can he be all right then? |
16129 | How the devil did you find out my address?" |
16129 | How then to ascertain whether anybody was expecting or looking for a girl to claim an inheritance? |
16129 | How was it that refinement, grave, self- possession, manners, and the culture of a lady, could be found in one who knew no ladies? |
16129 | How''s the old man?" |
16129 | I have promised that already, have I not?" |
16129 | I say, have you come to tell me that you did sneak those papers, after all? |
16129 | I told you about dear Stella, did I not? |
16129 | I wonder how many times I have read it in the last eighteen years, and how often I have wondered what the child''s fortune would be? |
16129 | IS THIS HIS PHOTOGRAPH? |
16129 | If he will not forgive me then, what more can I say? |
16129 | If you do n''t, what do you do?" |
16129 | If you know what he''s going to do with his money, why not tell a fellow? |
16129 | Iris had a good many pupils-- six, in fact, as she had boasted; why, then, was she so strangely disturbed on account of one? |
16129 | Is he a gentleman?" |
16129 | Is he going to make her inherit it at once?" |
16129 | Is it right to throw away so much upon a man who is worth so little?" |
16129 | Is it trouble? |
16129 | Is n''t the whole game, all the world over, lying and deceit? |
16129 | Is not that rather a vulgar expression?" |
16129 | Is she a common model?" |
16129 | Is she dead? |
16129 | Is she sick?" |
16129 | Is there anything else you want to say?" |
16129 | Is there nothing more?" |
16129 | Is this any use to you? |
16129 | It was a good dream that came to me this morning, was it not? |
16129 | Living on the old man again?" |
16129 | May I, being a young man, call upon you, a young woman?" |
16129 | Meanwhile, have you done what you promised?" |
16129 | Might? |
16129 | Mr. Farrar, who is this young lady? |
16129 | Must I take back these letters of mine?" |
16129 | Must it be?" |
16129 | My dear boy, tell me, are you mad? |
16129 | My dear boy, would you throw that all away?" |
16129 | Nevertheless,"his eyes did look anxious in spite of his philosophy,"this trouble of the child-- will it soon be over?" |
16129 | No mercy shown to an old man on the edge of the grave? |
16129 | Now about that key?" |
16129 | Now look here"--his voice became persuasive--"why not take me into your confidence? |
16129 | Now, Mr. Emblem, did n''t, you? |
16129 | Now, would a common girl, a girl of no descent, have shown so much delicacy and generosity?" |
16129 | Now-- don''t you know-- I do n''t intend to invite any but my own friends to visit me in my own house?" |
16129 | Odd, is n''t it? |
16129 | Oh, Iris, may I go on and tell you all?" |
16129 | Oh, how shall I tell him?" |
16129 | On account of our talk yesterday?" |
16129 | Or else--""How can I find out? |
16129 | Out of the safe?" |
16129 | Perhaps it was-- Where is the letter?" |
16129 | Perhaps there was no robbery after all-- who was to prove what had been inside the packet? |
16129 | Pray, have you proposed to this-- this young lady of the second- hand bookshop?" |
16129 | Really, yours? |
16129 | Ridiculous, was n''t it? |
16129 | Say, James, what does the commodore do all day?" |
16129 | Send it me in a letter, and then who is to know where the letter came from?" |
16129 | Settle and have done with it, even if it does take a little slice off your granddaughter''s fortune? |
16129 | Shall we build a castle in the air to suit our inheritance?" |
16129 | Shall we ever forget this night of sweet and tender talk?" |
16129 | Shall we go upstairs and have some breakfast?" |
16129 | Shall we show that you have done the same thing with many others? |
16129 | She was handsome, certainly, but how could Claude Deseret''s daughter have grown into so common a type of beauty? |
16129 | So long as his wife worked hard and brought in the coin for him to spend, what mattered for a few words now and then? |
16129 | So you gave him a check for two hundred pounds?" |
16129 | Sounds well, do n''t it? |
16129 | Splendid figure, and goes well in tights?" |
16129 | Suppose I know of something a precious sight better than his investments, and suppose-- just suppose-- that I wanted a lawyer to manage it for me?" |
16129 | Suppose it is all true, how are you going to make out where your heiress has been all this time, and what she has been doing?" |
16129 | Suppose that it is all true that you have told me--""Lotty, my dear, when did I ever tell you an untruth?" |
16129 | The husband of Miss Carlotta Claradine, is it? |
16129 | The old lady is a cake-- do you understand? |
16129 | The proofs were in the stolen papers, and though Clara had those papers, who was to show that these papers were actually those in the sealed packet? |
16129 | Then how can you act for him if he''s off his head?" |
16129 | There''s spending in it, is n''t there, Lotty? |
16129 | Want to make your set complete-- eh? |
16129 | Want to sneak one of our books to do it with, do n''t you? |
16129 | Was there any one who knew him before he was married?" |
16129 | Washington?" |
16129 | We may see an advertisement carefully worded, guarded, or perhaps-- Iris, who had access to the place, when your grandfather was out?" |
16129 | Well, dear, you are not going to desert me because you are engaged, are you, Arnold? |
16129 | Well, keep your eyes skinned and the wax ready, will you? |
16129 | Well, you''ll wake''em up a bit, wo n''t you?" |
16129 | Were they come, he asked himself, to arrest him on the spot? |
16129 | What am I to do with an inheritance?" |
16129 | What am I to understand? |
16129 | What are you driving at?" |
16129 | What better advice could he give? |
16129 | What could the savings be? |
16129 | What did he want to go and try and drown me and my mates for? |
16129 | What did you get for them?" |
16129 | What do they amount to? |
16129 | What do you mean by other business?" |
16129 | What do you mean by your forgery and prison? |
16129 | What does it matter to him if you have done the work for which he engaged your services?" |
16129 | What does it matter-- the loss of what was promised but five minutes since? |
16129 | What harm is done to him? |
16129 | What has that got to do with mercy?" |
16129 | What have I done to deserve this happy fate?" |
16129 | What if I see a life more delightful to me than that of which you dream?" |
16129 | What is a woman good for but to help her husband? |
16129 | What is it-- what is the kind of thing you want to know?" |
16129 | What is the address of this woman?" |
16129 | What is the man talking about? |
16129 | What is the stock worth?" |
16129 | What kind of thing do you want? |
16129 | What more can any girl want for any station? |
16129 | What of that?" |
16129 | What on earth does Clara mean by the gentle blood breaking out? |
16129 | What shall we do with it, when we get it?" |
16129 | What symptoms are these, so common that one is almost ashamed to write them down, but the infallible symptoms of love? |
16129 | What was he going to do? |
16129 | What was the real name of the girl?" |
16129 | What will Clara say? |
16129 | What will he think and say? |
16129 | What will you do for him?" |
16129 | What''s a pretty face to them compared with the handling of a big salary every week? |
16129 | What''s he done?" |
16129 | What''s the good of being a pal if you wo n''t help a fellow? |
16129 | Where can it be gone to?" |
16129 | Where could it be? |
16129 | Where did you get your wisdom? |
16129 | Where did you learn? |
16129 | Where did you pick up this girl, Arnold? |
16129 | Where do you think I could raise three hundred pounds? |
16129 | Where should I learn, but in America? |
16129 | Where was the delicacy of feature and manner which Clara had never ceased to commend in speaking of her lost cousin? |
16129 | Where, then, will be your kingdom? |
16129 | Who are her people?" |
16129 | Who could steal it?" |
16129 | Who else was there who would steal the papers? |
16129 | Who forged his name?" |
16129 | Who is this other?" |
16129 | Who should resemble the fox if not the second- hand bookseller? |
16129 | Who was your master?" |
16129 | Whom should suspicion affright except the guilty?" |
16129 | Why ca n''t ladies go, when gentlemen go? |
16129 | Why could n''t you let things go on? |
16129 | Why did he rush off to Joe''s lodgings? |
16129 | Why did he sit trembling? |
16129 | Why did n''t he?" |
16129 | Why do n''t you give a fellow a lift? |
16129 | Why else did he turn so pale? |
16129 | Why in the world should we talk about getting rich?" |
16129 | Why not ladies, then? |
16129 | Why not to- night, if you have a secret to tell us?" |
16129 | Why not you as well as anybody else?" |
16129 | Why not, I say? |
16129 | Why not?" |
16129 | Why should n''t he?" |
16129 | Why should she want to know me? |
16129 | Why should this one? |
16129 | Why, I suppose you''ll get somebody else to handle the paste- brush and the scissors, and tie up the parcels, and water the shop-- eh? |
16129 | Why, ca n''t he help himself?" |
16129 | Why, do n''t they applaud you till their hands drop off?" |
16129 | Why, if I were not quite certain, do you think I should have made this promise? |
16129 | Why, what matter if she sent away all her pupils? |
16129 | Why, what will it matter? |
16129 | Will any one save you a second time? |
16129 | Will that do for you?" |
16129 | Will that do, Arnold?" |
16129 | Will you give him some?" |
16129 | Will you have this story first, or shall we first open the safe and read the contents of the parcel?" |
16129 | Will you help him?" |
16129 | Will you listen for a moment? |
16129 | Will you not dine with us to- night? |
16129 | Will you now do something for your benefactor?" |
16129 | Will you stay and have lunch?" |
16129 | Will you take off your bonnet?" |
16129 | Will you take your fifty pounds, and leave us in peace?" |
16129 | Will you, please, take them back? |
16129 | Williams,''he sings out to me,''how fur off''s the horizon?'' |
16129 | Woman, how much?" |
16129 | Would any one suppose such vengefulness could exist in a white- haired man that had known his seventieth birthday? |
16129 | Would you step upstairs?" |
16129 | Yet what had his Iris in common with a girl who had been brought up in America? |
16129 | Yet you gave me back my letters?" |
16129 | You are not sorry that Iris has returned, are you?" |
16129 | You are to have it, then? |
16129 | You came to me about that business, perhaps? |
16129 | You gave mine back to me; did you think that I would ever part with yours? |
16129 | You have in your own possession,"he continued,"have you not, all the papers which establish her identity?" |
16129 | You thought to live upon my earnings, did you? |
16129 | You understand that?'' |
16129 | You went to see Mr. Emblem''s grandson, did you not?" |
16129 | You will, then, do nothing? |
16129 | You''re a lodger of old Emblem''s, ai n''t you?" |
16129 | You?" |
16129 | and can not they be acquired? |
16129 | and what are you doing then? |
16129 | he asked,"all your life? |
16129 | repeated Arnold;"what is her notion of anything? |
16129 | said Clara;"and in my house, too?" |
16129 | said Mr. Emblem,"do you think that I would take your little all?" |
16129 | what did that matter when you were safe? |
16129 | what is the amount, after all, to a substantial man like yourself? |
16129 | who is honest? |
16129 | who is that?" |
16129 | you''ve got to prove that first, have n''t you? |
35451 | How can Medea dream of asking that stainless land to shelter her crimes? 35451 O Zeus, O Earth, O Light:"The cry of a bride forlorn Heard ye, and wailing born Of lost delight? |
35451 | Thou will not meet Love''s coming with unkindness? 35451 1021 ff., Why does Medea kill her children?] 35451 333- 4, What would I with thy pains?] 35451 ? 35451 ? 35451 Ah God, art childless? |
35451 | Alas, the Love that falleth like a flood, Strong- winged and transitory: Why praise ye him? |
35451 | Am I blind? |
35451 | And Jason suffers him? |
35451 | And hath My hope to give thee joy so cheated me? |
35451 | And love to women a slight thing should be? |
35451 | And they being dead-- what place shall hold me then? |
35451 | And thou made miserable, most miserable? |
35451 | And what hath chanced, to cause such flights as these? |
35451 | And what man on earth is different? |
35451 | And what of Jason? |
35451 | And what should bring thee here, by Creon''s shore? |
35451 | And where in all Greece could he find one stronger or more famous than the chief of the Argonauts? |
35451 | And with Hellas laughing o''er thy fall While this thief''s daughter weds, and weds withal Jason? |
35451 | And yet I rage alone, and can not quit my rage-- What aileth me?--when God sends harbourage So simple? |
35451 | And yet, What is it with me? |
35451 | Are the old gods dead? |
35451 | Are the old laws forgot, And new laws made? |
35451 | Are the tears yet running in her eyes? |
35451 | Art childless to this day? |
35451 | Back to my father? |
35451 | But all the darkness and the wrong, Quick deaths and dim heart- aching things, Would no man ease them with a song Or music of a thousand strings? |
35451 | But take thine ease, good friend, and tell, How died they? |
35451 | By seducing and forsaking thee? |
35451 | Children? |
35451 | Courage? |
35451 | Did ye hear her cry To them that guard man''s faith forsworn, Themis and Zeus? |
35451 | Did ye hear? |
35451 | Do I tread so proud a path-- Fear me not thou!--that I should brave the wrath Of princes? |
35451 | Dost dream I would have grovelled to this man, Save that I won mine end, and shaped my plan For merry deeds? |
35451 | Dost not accept Gladly and of good will my benisons? |
35451 | Dost thou see the red gash growing, Thine own burden dost thou see? |
35451 | Dost trust me not? |
35451 | Doth King Creon''s castle stand In stint of raiment, or in stint of gold? |
35451 | Doth it call No tears? |
35451 | Fond woman, why wilt empty thus thine hand Of treasure? |
35451 | For whom hast thou in thy direst wrong For comfort? |
35451 | Had thy days run by unseen On that last edge of the world, where then had been The story of great Medea? |
35451 | Hast thou lived all these years, and learned but now That every man more loveth his own head Than other men''s? |
35451 | Hath it been a very foul Death, prithee? |
35451 | Have I counselled ill? |
35451 | Have I not my children? |
35451 | Have I not suffered? |
35451 | He hath not dared to do, Jason, a thing so shameful? |
35451 | He knelt, and groaning low, Folded her in his arms, and kissed her:"Oh, Unhappy child, what thing unnatural hath So hideously undone thee? |
35451 | Heard ye the children''s cry? |
35451 | Home? |
35451 | How can any man, whose eyes Are wholesome, seek to rear his children wise Beyond men''s wo nt? |
35451 | How said he? |
35451 | How, who gives the bride? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | How? |
35451 | I heard a voice and a moan, A voice of the eastern seas: Hath she found not yet her ease? |
35451 | I must face the harsher task? |
35451 | In that old room? |
35451 | Insult? |
35451 | Is some word of wrath Here hidden that I knew not of? |
35451 | Is sworn faith so low And weak a thing? |
35451 | It is but just, Thou smite him.--And that weeping in the dust And stormy tears, how should I blame them? |
35451 | Know I not we are but exiles, and must go Beggared and friendless else?" |
35451 | Mine own hand is so The stronger, if I have this plea to show Thy persecutors: and for thee withal The bond more sure.--On what God shall I call? |
35451 | My babes, my own, Why gaze ye so?--What is it that ye see?-- And laugh with that last laughter? |
35451 | Names have I Among your folk? |
35451 | O Love of Woman, charged with sorrow sore, What hast thou wrought upon us? |
35451 | O Zeus, O Earth, O Light, Will the fire not stab my brain? |
35451 | O woman, woman of sorrow, Where wilt thou turn and flee? |
35451 | Oh, Shall I not lift the slow Yoke, and let Life go, As a beast out in the night, To lie, and be rid of pain? |
35451 | Oh, joy on thee, too, Aegeus, gentle king Of Athens!--But whence com''st thou journeying? |
35451 | Oh, merry mocking when the lamps are red:"Where go the bridegroom''s babes to beg their bread In exile, and the woman who gave all To save him?" |
35451 | Oh, say, how call ye this, To face, and smile, the comrade whom his kiss Betrayed? |
35451 | One Pittheus know''st thou, high lord of Trozên? |
35451 | One light? |
35451 | One weak of hand? |
35451 | Or is it thou He turns from? |
35451 | Or shall man spill The life divine? |
35451 | Or slay the bridegroom and the king, And win herself God knows what direr thing? |
35451 | Or stealing past unseen To Jason''s bed-- I have a blade made keen For that-- stab, breast to breast, that wedded pair? |
35451 | Or what thing troubleth thee? |
35451 | Or what wrath Of gods, to make this old grey sepulchre Childless of thee? |
35451 | P. 13, l. 190, Alas, the brave blithe bards,& c.]--Who is the speaker? |
35451 | P. 31, l. 565, What more need hast thou of children?] |
35451 | P. 8, l. 111, Have I not suffered?] |
35451 | Say clearly what thus makes thy visage dim? |
35451 | Say: now whither shall I go? |
35451 | Scorn? |
35451 | Shall I burn Their house with fire? |
35451 | Shall it be A long time more, my children, that ye live To reach to me those dear, dear arms? |
35451 | Shall the deep yawn to shield her? |
35451 | Shall the height Send wings, and hide her in the vaulted sky To work red murder on her lords, and fly Unrecompensed? |
35451 | Shall the land that succours all, succour thee, Who art foul among thy kind, With the tears of children blind? |
35451 | Shall they trample thee again? |
35451 | Since life began, Hath there in God''s eye stood one happy man? |
35451 | Some passion sweepeth him? |
35451 | Sons, did ye perish for your father''s shame? |
35451 | Spurn me when I kneel to thee? |
35451 | That cheek of royal mien, Where was it-- or the place where eyes had been? |
35451 | That will I: though what words of mine Or love shall move her? |
35451 | The woman would kill me? |
35451 | Thou ancient treasure of my lady''s room, What mak''st thou here before the gates alone, And alway turning on thy lips some moan Of old mischances? |
35451 | Thou art found in sin Most bloody wrought against the king''s high head, And laughest at the tale, and hast no dread? |
35451 | Thou comest to befriend me? |
35451 | Thou wilt not? |
35451 | Thou: what has thou ever done To wrong me? |
35451 | To do what thing or not do? |
35451 | To those poor Peliad maids? |
35451 | Until? |
35451 | What beareth he of good To man, or glory? |
35451 | What beside Resteth to tremble for? |
35451 | What cause, old man? |
35451 | What crime? |
35451 | What dire deed? |
35451 | What fearest thou? |
35451 | What friend shall rise, with land inviolate And trusty doors, to shelter from their hate This flesh? |
35451 | What hath he done? |
35451 | What have they to do, Babes, with their father''s sin? |
35451 | What hopeth she of flight? |
35451 | What is it? |
35451 | What mad''st thou there? |
35451 | What make ye at my gates? |
35451 | What more need hast thou Of children? |
35451 | What profit, o''er the banquet''s swell That lingering cry that none may heed? |
35451 | What profiteth living? |
35451 | What profits life to me? |
35451 | What say''st thou? |
35451 | What think ye of your father''s love? |
35451 | What town shall be thine to- morrow, What land of all lands that be, What door of a strange man''s home? |
35451 | What word did Phoebus speak, to change thy fate? |
35451 | What word is this? |
35451 | What would I with thy pains? |
35451 | When the hand knows what it dares, When thine eyes look into theirs, Shalt thou keep by tears unblinded Thy dividing of the slain? |
35451 | Where Earth''s heart speaks in song? |
35451 | Where did she murder them? |
35451 | Which I may hear? |
35451 | Who looks for more in women? |
35451 | Who? |
35451 | Why batter ye With brazen bars, seeking the dead and me Who slew them? |
35451 | Why call Thy curse on these? |
35451 | Why clinging to mine hand? |
35451 | Why hast thou taken on thee, To make us desolate, This anger of misery And guilt of hate? |
35451 | Why longer tarry we to win Our crown of dire inevitable sin? |
35451 | Why must thou to- day Turn strange, and make thee like some evil thing, Childish, to meet my childish passioning? |
35451 | Why should I seek a war So blind: by these babes''wounds to sting again Their father''s heart, and win myself a pain Twice deeper? |
35451 | Why then so wild? |
35451 | Why weariest thou this day, Wild heart, for the bed abhorrèd, The cold bed in the clay? |
35451 | Will our mistress be Content, this long time to be left by thee? |
35451 | Will she creep alone to die Bleeding in that old room, where still is laid Lord Jason''s bed? |
35451 | Wilt change that prayer, and choose a wiser part? |
35451 | Wilt hunt me? |
35451 | Wilt verily Spill with thine hand that life, the vintage stored Of thine own agony? |
35451 | Woe is me, What shall I do? |
35451 | Woman, is thy mind within Clear, and not raving? |
35451 | Woman, what mak''st thou here, Thou from beyond the Gate Where dim Symplêgades Clash in the dark blue seas, The shores where death doth wait? |
35451 | Would I be a thing Mocked at, and leave mine enemies to sting Unsmitten? |
35451 | Would she but come to seek Our faces, that love her well, And take to her heart the spell Of words that speak? |
35451 | Wouldst hear me then no more? |
35451 | Wouldst love them and entreat? |
35451 | Ye women by this doorway clustering Speak, is the doer of the ghastly thing Yet here, or fled? |
35451 | Yet her eye-- Know ye the eyes of the wild kine, The lion flash that guards their brood? |
35451 | Yet, though stricken sore, I still will ask thee, for what crime, what thing Unlawful, wilt thou cast me out, O King? |
35451 | _ A Child within._ What shall I do? |
35451 | _ Others._ Hast thou ice that thou shalt bind it To thy breast, and make thee dead To thy children, to thine own spirit''s pain? |
35451 | _ Others._ O Mother, Mother, what hast thou to reap, When the harvest cometh, between wake and sleep? |
35451 | _ Some Women._ But Cephîsus the fair- flowing, Will he bear thee on his shore? |
38011 | Seest thou them now? |
38011 | ''Couldst not thou Trust me, who never loved as I love thee? |
38011 | And art thou too damned as I? |
38011 | And me a widow? |
38011 | And should the cold proud Lord I never loved, the murderer of my girl, Come''twixt my love and me? |
38011 | And this low voice, long silent, keeps it still The music of old time? |
38011 | As I named Her name in haste, she looked with half surprise, And thus she seemed to speak:"What? |
38011 | Break they then still, Those azure circles, on a golden shore? |
38011 | But I:"Oh, soul, What holdeth Life more precious than to know The Giver and to die?" |
38011 | But what cared I? |
38011 | Comest thou from earthly air, or whence? |
38011 | Didst hear him groan? |
38011 | Does my cheek Retain the round of youth and still defy The wear of immemorial centuries? |
38011 | Dost thou know Thou too, the fatal glances which beguiled Those strong rude chiefs of old? |
38011 | For I had found My love at last: what matter if it were A guilty love? |
38011 | For all the tales of the indignant gods, What were they but the priests''? |
38011 | For what is Sin itself, But Error when we miss the road which leads Up to the gate of heaven? |
38011 | Has Passion still no prisoners? |
38011 | Has not the gloom Of this dim land withdrawn from out mine eyes The glamour which once filled them? |
38011 | Have not strong Will And high Ambition rotted into Greed And Wrong, for any, as of old, and whelmed The struggling soul in ruin? |
38011 | Her sweet voice rang Clear as a bird''s:"Mortal, what fate hath brought Thee hither, uncleansed by death? |
38011 | How canst thou breathe Immortal air, being mortal? |
38011 | How should a virgin know Deceit, who never at the joyous shrine Of Cypris knelt, but ever lived apart, And so grew guilty? |
38011 | How should the gods Bear rule if I were happy? |
38011 | How to reach with halting words That infinite Perfection? |
38011 | I had not shrunk From blood, but this, the strong son of my youth-- How should I dare this thing? |
38011 | If all my life Of wedlock was but half a life, what fiend Came''twixt my love and me, but that fair face? |
38011 | Is there, then, any who holds my worship cold And lifeless? |
38011 | Or only phantoms, creatures of the brain, Born of the fears of men, the greed of priests, Useful to govern women? |
38011 | Or seek to engrave upon the treacherous thought The fair and fugitive fancies of a dream, Which vanish ere we fix them? |
38011 | Pine there now No lives which fierce Love, sinking into Lust, Has drowned at last in tears and blood-- plunged down To the lowest depths of Hell? |
38011 | Said I then young? |
38011 | Seeing me, he said:"What? |
38011 | Seest thou them, or am I shut From hope for ever, hungering, thirsting still, A madman and in Hell?" |
38011 | Shall I fear To tell of that great trial, when I strove And Phoebus conquered? |
38011 | Shall my soul Forget the agonized message which he sent, Bidding me come? |
38011 | She was we d; And was not I her mother? |
38011 | Sirs, have you seen the god?'' |
38011 | That poor wretch who thought I injured her, stealing the foolish heart Which she prized but I could not, what knew she Of that I suffered? |
38011 | They shall live again On earth, as thou shalt, as thou livest now The Life of Death-- for what is Death but Life Suspended as in sleep? |
38011 | Was it a sigh, A blush, a momentary glance, which brought Assurance of my triumph? |
38011 | Was it just In her, my mistress, who had had my youth, To wreak such vengeance on me? |
38011 | Was it love That drew me then to Paris? |
38011 | Was it not better thus to cease and die Together in one blest moment, mid the flush And ecstasy of worship, and to know Ourselves the victims? |
38011 | Were there any gods? |
38011 | What Love is left for such? |
38011 | What fatal charm is this which Até gives To one poor foolish face? |
38011 | What if they knew No childish loving hands, or worse than all, Had borne them sullen to a sire unloved, And left them without pain? |
38011 | What if we be the cause of ignorance? |
38011 | What is it To have borne the weight of offspring''neath the zone, If Love be not their sire; or live long years Of commerce, not of love? |
38011 | What left his children orphans, but that face? |
38011 | What need Of words to tell of things unreached by words? |
38011 | What need to tell the tale? |
38011 | What need to tell them? |
38011 | What need was there of magical arts to draw The love that never wavered? |
38011 | What power Has brought thee hither? |
38011 | What then in the near future? |
38011 | What, living still? |
38011 | Whence art thou? |
38011 | Why should I seek to clothe myself, and hide The treasure of my Beauty? |
38011 | Why should I stain my soul For such as those-- dogs that would fawn and lick The hand that fed them, but, if food should fail, Would turn and rend me? |
38011 | that art so fair, Were it not haply better to deface Thy fatal loveliness, and leave thee bare Of all thy baleful power? |
34105 | ''Have I so done?'' 34105 ''Peter,''he says,''hast seen my brother Botolph?'' |
34105 | ''Whither shall we go?'' 34105 Ah-- conditions?" |
34105 | And how goes it with that fat lump of dough you were to set the yeast of your wit to work in? |
34105 | And how standeth it with your fasting, Master Poet? |
34105 | And shall we be released then? |
34105 | And then, whence will you escape, you rats? |
34105 | And what of the Queen''s Grace herself? |
34105 | And what purposeth he in this house? |
34105 | And where might he be found, prythee? |
34105 | And wherefore not upon her brow? |
34105 | And wherefore not? |
34105 | And wherefore? |
34105 | And whither is he gone? |
34105 | And your father, he lives here with you? |
34105 | Are there no cracks in the wainscote even? |
34105 | Are you threatened with any danger? |
34105 | Are you two acquainted, then? |
34105 | Ay, Captain Spurrier, say you so? |
34105 | Ay, but the other? |
34105 | Ay, did I, Jack? |
34105 | Ay, is it thou? |
34105 | Ay, you know that? |
34105 | Be thou the host of this tavern? |
34105 | But am I not to enter, then? |
34105 | But do you represent your persons still as prophets and peasants as they used to appear? |
34105 | But how does my good brother the magistrate? |
34105 | But how shall I prevail with Mr. Osborne to take me into his service,said I,"who know not an invoice from a State paper?" |
34105 | But if you be about to die, Master Skegs,I put in,"as you say you are, of what advantage is this same Deluge to you?" |
34105 | But tell me how came yourself to be so proficient in that study of cyphering? |
34105 | But what trouble was in this,I asked, in the pause he made,"that it were necessary I should have known my mother to comprehend it?" |
34105 | But wherefore doth he so? 34105 But your father?" |
34105 | But, sir, can you employ so much money in this affair? |
34105 | But, sir,I cried,"why should you concern yourself for a man that hath wronged you so basely as my uncle did? |
34105 | Can we not speak thus? |
34105 | Come, there be books of account,said she,"can you not make shift to cast moneys in figure?" |
34105 | Do you deny you are this Courcy, and a devilish Papist? |
34105 | Do you desire he should be present, then? |
34105 | Do you know where his dungeon is situate? |
34105 | Do you propose to return home by ship? |
34105 | Do you regret the issue so much? |
34105 | Do you still persist in denying that you are Jacques de Courcy? |
34105 | Do you use to write your ballads, full? |
34105 | Doth he often trouble you thus? |
34105 | Enough of that,I said curtly;"how be we to get forth?" |
34105 | Hast ever heard of thine uncle Botolph? |
34105 | Hast heard of any robbers by the way, Doctor? |
34105 | Hast so soon forgot Cayphas his mitre, and the ark of Noah? |
34105 | Hast thou forgot my sword so soon? |
34105 | Hath any come hither this morning,I demanded,"besides myself?" |
34105 | Have I leave to enter? |
34105 | Have you any English? |
34105 | Have you any business with him, young master? |
34105 | Have you any goods left at his house? |
34105 | He loves you? |
34105 | He will follow,said he; and then to Plat--"Do they compass the whole house, or is there a way of escape beyond?" |
34105 | How came I to this house? |
34105 | How do your wounds? |
34105 | How doth my father? |
34105 | How so? |
34105 | How then came you to repair your fortune, Ptolemy? |
34105 | How will this pageant help you any whit the more to study? |
34105 | How, great? |
34105 | How? 34105 If I tell you where my uncle is at this moment concealed,"said I,"will you let me go free?" |
34105 | If the gods rule the event out of this business,I thought,"how will it go with thee, my uncle?" |
34105 | In this nest of thieves what man is so absolute a master as another may not possess himself of his goods? |
34105 | Is Mr. Malpas of the number? |
34105 | Is Mr. Malpas within? |
34105 | Is Mr. Skene within? |
34105 | Is he escaped away then? |
34105 | Is it not yonder then? |
34105 | Is it poisoned? |
34105 | Is it so, indeed, Master Jocelin? |
34105 | Is it supper? |
34105 | Is it the Queen''s birthday, or some proclaimed holiday? 34105 Is it you they seek?" |
34105 | Is my uncle kindly dealt with there? |
34105 | Is there any attendance upon these old interludes? |
34105 | Is there anything by which you can make a rope? |
34105 | Is yon house Baynards Castle? |
34105 | Is''t come to that? |
34105 | Know you aught of the Captain of that barque? |
34105 | Mr. Denis, will''t please you come below? |
34105 | My bird,said I-- for so she seemed as a dainty bird caught in an iron trap--"my bird, who hath brought you into this infamous place?" |
34105 | My uncle is not a prisoner there? |
34105 | Nay, if you know not,said Malpas,"how should I?" |
34105 | No? 34105 Nor you know not their trades either, I suppose?" |
34105 | Not to be seen to talk with me? 34105 Of what quality be these men you speak of?" |
34105 | Oh, why knew I not of this sooner? 34105 Poisoned? |
34105 | Said I aught of the ark when I named that price? |
34105 | Say you he hath resigned his lease of our house at Combe? |
34105 | So then, Cutts,''hold to that you have,''is your advice, trow? |
34105 | Spake I overloud? |
34105 | The door is open,I said, in a low voice, and putting my hand on my sword;"wherefore do you not enter?" |
34105 | Then where is he? |
34105 | Then you have her yet? |
34105 | To Amalfi? |
34105 | Until what time? |
34105 | Upon what place hath he fixed as likely? |
34105 | Was it not enough that you should creep into a Christian household and steal all peace therefrom? 34105 Was there then no food to be had in Scotland?" |
34105 | What a meal is that to set before starving men? |
34105 | What be those formalities you speak of? |
34105 | What can you do? |
34105 | What danger is there? |
34105 | What do you mean? |
34105 | What hath troubled him, Peter? |
34105 | What is it goes on in that great still house? |
34105 | What is the cause? |
34105 | What is this you have dared to do? |
34105 | What is your will, masters? |
34105 | What know you of such a place? |
34105 | What madness is this? |
34105 | What mean you? |
34105 | What told I you? |
34105 | What word is that? |
34105 | What would I? |
34105 | What, but to learn me in the keeping of accompts? |
34105 | When does his worship think it will be concluded? |
34105 | When you shall have found him, or however it fall out, you will return to me, dear heart? |
34105 | Where is Malpas? |
34105 | Where is she now? |
34105 | Whither are we bound? |
34105 | Whither are we come? |
34105 | Whither go they? |
34105 | Whither, Denis? 34105 Who hath done this, Master?" |
34105 | Who hath set upon you? 34105 Who inhabits here, then, besides yourself?" |
34105 | Who is he, now? |
34105 | Who is it speaks? |
34105 | Who is that? |
34105 | Who is the tall man of the narrowed eyes and black complexion? |
34105 | Who is this fellow? |
34105 | Who then uses these rooms? |
34105 | Who would hurt you? |
34105 | Why do you look so stern and sad? 34105 Why infamous?" |
34105 | Why, what ails you, master sergeant? |
34105 | Why, what ails you? |
34105 | Why, where is he? |
34105 | Why, who but the Queen''s yeomen? |
34105 | Will you lead me to his chamber? |
34105 | Wilt thou sell me the Deluge outright? |
34105 | Would you spoil me of my heritage? |
34105 | Wouldst thou haggle with a dying man, Ptolemy Philpot? |
34105 | You have read my packet, then? |
34105 | You have the main of this affair? |
34105 | You were a child then? |
34105 | You will give them chase? |
34105 | You will not surrender yourself? |
34105 | Your name, mistress? |
34105 | Your next reason? |
34105 | Your trouble, Madam? |
34105 | All I require at your hands, is that you say frankly whether Skene is on the Queen''s part, or upon ours?" |
34105 | Am I a man to be scorned, then?" |
34105 | Am I not in the right, Master Cleeve?" |
34105 | Are we to send him to the block for that? |
34105 | Are you greedy of so much praise? |
34105 | Art not ashamed, Ptolemy Philpot, thou a Christian man, to purchase so divine a tragedy for so mean a sum?" |
34105 | Art thou not he, my son?" |
34105 | Ay, is it so? |
34105 | But all the while I was thinking:"Is her reason gone?" |
34105 | But is the matter so disposed of? |
34105 | But now tell me( for I think it necessary I should know it) how came you wounded?" |
34105 | But now tell me-- and it is necessary you should deal with me openly-- do you truly love your ledger?" |
34105 | But rather had I not all to lose? |
34105 | But tell me what it was led you to Dunster, lad?" |
34105 | But, why? |
34105 | Chapter XIX]"You acknowledge your part to be contrary to Her Majesty''s, then?" |
34105 | Denis?" |
34105 | Denis?" |
34105 | Do you know the fellow?" |
34105 | Do you lack a leader? |
34105 | Eh, you jolthead hucksters, was it to be so? |
34105 | Else indeed wherefore have you come?" |
34105 | For had not Idonia said:"I fear him"? |
34105 | For turn me to the accompt of goods purchased during this year of our Redemption, and what have you? |
34105 | Had I aught to gain from you? |
34105 | Have I not given you thanks enough, that you are come hither for more? |
34105 | Have you ever read Horace now?" |
34105 | Have you none to protect you?" |
34105 | Have you shaved any man this day?" |
34105 | He-- the attorney? |
34105 | Heard you ever such? |
34105 | I ask of you in my turn, where is Malpas? |
34105 | I asked, starting to my feet as though I would go( and meant to) at once to the Lord Constable,"or if not you, then who doth know it?" |
34105 | I asked,"any sheet from your bed, or clothing?" |
34105 | I forget how I got away, but that does not matter now, does it? |
34105 | I said to that,"is it thus you use me?" |
34105 | If I have not been a traitor all this while, how have I been employed? |
34105 | If they should know you have come...""Who should know?" |
34105 | Is it Malpas his failure? |
34105 | Is it my reward and wages for stout service? |
34105 | Is it not strange that upon such a night he should not be here to bear his part, as I do, and Lucas Spurrier and Jocelin, and the rest? |
34105 | Jordan?" |
34105 | Judging from such things as you have seen doing, upon whose part do you suppose Mr. Skene to stand in these negotiations with Spain? |
34105 | Master Cleeve, had I formed my sevens that gait in Genoa I had been sent to the galleys for a felon.... Of Cartagena, say you? |
34105 | Money, honours or what? |
34105 | Not having abetted their designs, why did I entertain these strangers? |
34105 | Or is it not? |
34105 | Robbers quotha? |
34105 | Secretary?" |
34105 | Shall I sound the tabor and speak the prologue now?" |
34105 | Should I denounce him to the Lord Treasurer and the Council? |
34105 | Skene?" |
34105 | Suddenly recalled by my protest, the poet clapped his hand to his forehead and cried out:"O, whither hath my Muse rapt me? |
34105 | The next?" |
34105 | The watch... and yet he used to laugh at it; but lately he has come to fear arrest: why is it? |
34105 | Then how comes it that one born flesh of my flesh should do me this shame? |
34105 | Then why should I not deal with another so, allowing the honour due to a like steadfastness with my own? |
34105 | To the Inn? |
34105 | Was ever any excuse so ill- considered? |
34105 | Well, do you walk in your sleep now, little Denis, and dream upon treasons? |
34105 | Were it I, who stood in this jeopardy, Denis, and not he, would you deny me your offices?" |
34105 | What be your armies and your invasions and your marchings to and fro? |
34105 | What hath gone untowardly? |
34105 | What lacks of our engagement? |
34105 | What name shall I call you by?" |
34105 | What will you get of the Spaniards, prythee? |
34105 | What, I prythee, is the meaning of that little word_ Quemadmodum_?" |
34105 | When he sighed we looked at each other, and I said--"Who is he?" |
34105 | Wherefore then do you say I speak too late?" |
34105 | Why then do you afterwards bring me in as a magistrate, when you have so potently addressed my prejudice as a man? |
34105 | Why, how much doth your worship earn by the week?" |
34105 | Why, what hast thou done, little Ajax, that thou hast wantonly forfeited the protection of the laws? |
34105 | Will those creeping Jesuits bestead you? |
34105 | Will you return by Lady Day, think you?" |
34105 | You are not of the brotherhood?" |
34105 | You suppose him to be my uncle?" |
34105 | and whither has he fled?" |
34105 | and who shall be Idonia''s guardian then, when you lie stark? |
34105 | be you here still?" |
34105 | but you handle your weapons awkwardly; I should be ashamed, were I still your leader.... How-- what is that?" |
34105 | cried I, very big;"and what care I who knows? |
34105 | cried my lord,''you make your apology in Latin?'' |
34105 | cried the pallid man in an extremity of rage,"and strip me naked before I be come to the grave? |
34105 | cried the woman, starting up from the table;"what words be these, master sergeant?" |
34105 | for who may sleep on such a night of hell? |
34105 | or a"Tell me, Denis, how do the ladies of Barbary wear their hair?" |
34105 | or have you your waking sense yet? |
34105 | said I,"or your brothers? |
34105 | what gallows''-food is here?" |
35099 | Are you gaining in weight? |
35099 | Did no other races develop a culture of equal value? |
35099 | In interpreting these facts, we must ask, Does the increase in the size of the brain prove an increase in faculty? 35099 Mental contents rather than mental capacities"? |
35099 | What then is the difference between the civilization of the Old World and that of the New World? 35099 ( 5) What conclusions are recommended byall these facts and factors"? |
35099 | And have twenty centuries of race prejudice and outrageous persecution availed to repress or depress the all- victorious sons of Israel? |
35099 | And how was this possible, if the latter was not inferior? |
35099 | And what opportunity has failed him? |
35099 | And whence came the"experience and training"of Hammurabi and Sin- mubalit and their ancestors? |
35099 | And where are the Peruvian or Aztec Homer and Thales, Apelles and Euclid, Cicero, Vergil, and Trajan? |
35099 | And why might it not have been? |
35099 | And, if so, is it likely to continue to be a fact? |
35099 | Are these formidable three at work against the American Negroid? |
35099 | Are things what they seem? |
35099 | At the same period the ancestors of the races, who are now among the most highly civilized, were in no[?] |
35099 | But does this anatomical difference prove that their mental capacity is lower than that of the white? |
35099 | But how can this be? |
35099 | But if you meet with some unfamiliar affirmation, then comes the question, why? |
35099 | But is the Black rate really so high? |
35099 | But is there any one that does not know the reason? |
35099 | But may we not check or arrest them? |
35099 | But the question still remains: Why does the South, if she be right in this matter, find the virtue and intelligence of the world arrayed against her? |
35099 | But to all in equal measure? |
35099 | But was the ability to understand algebra and geometry given by the actual study of the same, given step by step? |
35099 | But what is the meaning of the quicker respiration? |
35099 | But what, pray, if they deign to flutter through this volume, what will they do with this utterance of the Puritan_ pur sang_, the Chief Statistician? |
35099 | But where, we ask again, have real"mental gaps"been filled up by culture? |
35099 | But who ever held that such evidence was"conclusive"? |
35099 | But who knows that it rose earlier in the Old World? |
35099 | But why multiply illustrations? |
35099 | But why"objected"? |
35099 | But will they stand still? |
35099 | CHAPTER THREE 75 NURTURE? |
35099 | CHAPTER THREE NURTURE? |
35099 | CHAPTER TWO 29 IS THE NEGRO INFERIOR? |
35099 | CHAPTER TWO IS THE NEGRO INFERIOR? |
35099 | CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER ONE 3 THE INDIVIDUAL? |
35099 | Can they afford to wait? |
35099 | Can we imagine a more wanton folly? |
35099 | Can we say less, must we not say more, of the varieties of men? |
35099 | Certainly; but do not such objectors know in their hearts that their reply is no answer, but is utterly irrelevant? |
35099 | Did any amount of opportunity serve to raise any other member of the Bonaparte family quite to the level of the first Napoleon? |
35099 | Did it close up the"mental gap"? |
35099 | Did the former enjoy, like the latter, a contact for centuries with American missionaries and European civilization? |
35099 | Did they fall out of the sky into the empty skulls of Nineveh? |
35099 | Do I dream? |
35099 | Do I wonder and doubt? |
35099 | Does any one believe that Greek or Roman civilization would have gone down without a blow at the mere breath of Pizarro or Cortà © s? |
35099 | Does not every one see that any such test would be wholly impracticable and nugatory? |
35099 | Does not the tree of life bud and bloom and put forth new boughs at the top? |
35099 | Does some one reply that some Negroes are better than some Whites, physically, mentally, morally? |
35099 | Does some one say that physical beauty is a poor, inferior thing at best-- that beauty of soul is alone sufficient and only desirable? |
35099 | Especially, why did these invaders not yield to the new local or climatic distempers to which the invaded had long since become measurably immune? |
35099 | Even the highest success might seem humble enough, but is it sure that even such a lowly victory awaits him? |
35099 | For him the problem of race pathology exists as a purely practical one: At what rates can the Negro be insured? |
35099 | For over against all these transcendent achievements, what has the West African to set? |
35099 | For"who can so forecast the years?" |
35099 | Has any reason been opposed against which one could"object"? |
35099 | Have equal opportunities raised the 150,000 Negroes in Pennsylvania to the white level? |
35099 | Have they not called out of the nation''s heart all that was best to throttle and subdue all that was worst? |
35099 | Have we not already said that such is the end of the matter? |
35099 | How came it yours? |
35099 | How then shall such a product be imposed upon an alien and inferior race? |
35099 | If indeed"it is a question of mental contents rather than of mental capacities,"whence, we insist, came those"mental contents"? |
35099 | If not,"why, then, did the white race alone develop a civilization which is sweeping the whole world, etc.?" |
35099 | If so, pray tell us how many more years had the Sumerians lived seventy centuries ago than the citizens of Dahomey up to now? |
35099 | If then the Afro- American race stands even now at the entrance of the Valley of the Shadow of Death, what shall we say, what shall we do? |
35099 | If, then, such inherent disparities in individuals be undeniable, is parity among tribes or races to be expected? |
35099 | In Michigan there is no prejudice against the Negro, but rather for him, and how stands the court record? |
35099 | In what respect, pray then, are they distinguishable? |
35099 | Is it mainly, at least, an( average) uniform difference of faculty? |
35099 | Is it not, in fact, antecedently incredible? |
35099 | Is not such the obvious teaching of history? |
35099 | Is not this a proof of a higher organization of the inhabitants of Europe?" |
35099 | Is our civilization a failure? |
35099 | Is there any doubt whatever as to the alternative? |
35099 | Is there not every reason to hope that they will forge steadily ahead and widen still more and more the interval between? |
35099 | Is this rate a fact? |
35099 | Is, then, emancipation but an apple of Sodom, turning to ashes on his lips? |
35099 | It should have been said,"Was Greek civilization such as to indicate that the Athenian was superior to the Senegambian or the Hottentot?" |
35099 | Maybe these records are not worth the paper they were written on; but can the same be said of the New England records? |
35099 | Must he not, then, ultimately make them completely his own? |
35099 | Now can all this be accidental? |
35099 | OR NATURE? |
35099 | OR NATURE? |
35099 | OR THE RACE? |
35099 | OR THE RACE? |
35099 | Or in Chatham, Ontario? |
35099 | Or in Paris? |
35099 | Or is visions about? |
35099 | Or the 100,000 in New York? |
35099 | Or those in New England? |
35099 | Or to some in far higher measure? |
35099 | Or who cares? |
35099 | Ought Babylonian empire to have lifted up its lion wings over Western Asia? |
35099 | Perfect his type as you will, even as you perfect the type of a flower or a bird, does not the Sudanese remain at immense remove from the European? |
35099 | Shall we cry out to Heaven and to Congress against the crime of the centuries? |
35099 | Shall we lift up the trump of indignation against such red- handed iniquity? |
35099 | Shall we weep and wail and gnash our teeth? |
35099 | Should Roman legions have conquered Greece and girdled the Mediterranean with her civilization? |
35099 | Some one may ask, however, is there not some grain of correctness in this contention that capacity can not always be measured by achievement? |
35099 | That he has excelled all other sons of men in certain respects? |
35099 | That he has fallen markedly below the Jew and the German in others? |
35099 | The question is, Are they, in their own anatomical and historical connection, any proof? |
35099 | They ask( in effect): Does the civilization of the Greek indicate that he was superior to the West African? |
35099 | This question is: What has the future in store for the Negro? |
35099 | Though her blood might still flow pure in myriad veins, yet who could prove it? |
35099 | To the Black, or to the White? |
35099 | To whom was it due? |
35099 | True, but most inadequate; for why did not the contact with the new peoples affect the invaders as well as the invaded with new diseases? |
35099 | True, perhaps; but what of it? |
35099 | Turn back to it; perhaps the proof involves some still more fundamental property, and again you ask, why? |
35099 | Very true; but why stop here? |
35099 | W. B. S._ Tulane University, 25th October, 1904._ THE COLOR LINE CHAPTER ONE THE INDIVIDUAL? |
35099 | We appeal to the whole tribe of teachers, from Dan to Beersheba-- what one has ever supplied"mental contents"in the absence of"mental capacities"? |
35099 | We should really like to know, if the Greeks were neither superior nor inferior to the Bushmen, what was the real distinction between them? |
35099 | What art? |
35099 | What even one single aspect of civilization or culture or higher humanity? |
35099 | What fields of employment, then, remain open to the Negroid? |
35099 | What has been done in the last four hundred years, under the stimulus of Spanish contact? |
35099 | What history? |
35099 | What interest has any one in contesting such statements? |
35099 | What is the prison record? |
35099 | What means this expressive silence? |
35099 | What morality? |
35099 | What more do we ask? |
35099 | What more do we need? |
35099 | What niceties of demonstration, may they still insist, have passed unobserved? |
35099 | What philosophy? |
35099 | What religion? |
35099 | What science? |
35099 | What the cause? |
35099 | What then is to become of the Black Man? |
35099 | What, then, are the scruples of these critics? |
35099 | What, then, must we say? |
35099 | What, then, shall we say? |
35099 | When Greek culture led captive the Roman captor, did it arm him with Greek genius? |
35099 | When the bow of Hellenic science fell into the hands of the Arab, was he quite able to bend it? |
35099 | When we first meet with such denials, we are almost dumbfounded; we rub our eyes and exclaim with Truthful James:_ Do I sleep? |
35099 | Where are the blessings of freedom? |
35099 | Where have racial characteristics been transformed or abolished? |
35099 | Who argues therefrom? |
35099 | Who knows when the scion of a millionaire may turn into a motorman, or the son of a peasant hew his way to the Capitol? |
35099 | Who trained their trainers? |
35099 | Who, then, can compute its import for the history of the race? |
35099 | Why has century- long contact with other civilizations never enkindled the feeblest flame? |
35099 | Why not boldly urge that Plato might have traced back his lineage to an amoeba,--yea, to star- dust and curdling ether? |
35099 | Why not social separation and the race standard in the South, but social equality and the standard of personal merit in the North? |
35099 | Why should the spectacle of a racial diminuendo so arouse or revolt us? |
35099 | Why, if education could lift the Negro to the Caucasian level, to what, pray, in the meantime would it lift the Caucasian himself? |
35099 | Why, then, did this meteoric shower powder Mesopotamia so densely and sprinkle a dust so impalpable over the Sudan? |
35099 | Why, then, imagine that they may close up the far wider gap between individuals of different races-- between the races themselves? |
35099 | Will any one deny that the Greek was measurably superior to the Mede in a host of important particulars? |
35099 | Will any one deny that the degrees of faculty are often inexpressibly apart in members of the same family? |
35099 | Will any one hesitate for an answer? |
35099 | Would any such discrimination keep down the Anglo- Saxon? |
35099 | Would he not"make by force his merit known"? |
35099 | Would such an experiment beseem any other place so well as the madhouse? |
35099 | and can there be any doubt of the answer? |
39664 | Jürgen, what do you want? |
39664 | ("What more will you desire than the old Lübeck honour?") |
39664 | Could they remove the obstruction of the Zivin, ordered by the emperor, which, by a canal had connected Bruges with the sea? |
39664 | Could they, reduced as they were in strength and influence, restore to the city of Bruges its character of general depôt for the West? |
39664 | Had they not had enough return for helping Frederick I. to power by holding the island fifty years? |
39664 | How could a single city stand against a strong military empire? |
39664 | Might he not become a thorn in his side and a clog upon his movements? |
39664 | No wonder Lübeck''s merchants loved to quote the proud couplet:"Was willst begehren mehr, Als die alte Lübsche Ehr?" |
39664 | Shall I then be altogether deceived in the confidence I have placed in them? |
39664 | The very natural question arises now that our League is mature, How many cities did it count in its federation? |
39664 | Their audacious motto was"Who can stand against God and the Great Novgorod?" |
39664 | To the question put at various times to the Hansa''s ambassadors"which are the Hansa''s cities?" |
39664 | Under these changed circumstances what could be done? |
39664 | Was this rich, important colony to be lost to the mother- land and to the Hansa that had created it? |
39664 | What cared they for the changed condition of the world''s affairs? |
39664 | What could it mean, that of a sudden these jealous Spaniards were willing to share the monopoly of their whole colonial trade with the Hansa towns? |
39664 | Why should not the Hansa, he pleaded, once more play the_ rôle_ of king- maker? |
39664 | Will you steal forth and taste of a Dutch brew and a keg of sturgeon?" |
39664 | he cried to his colleagues,"shall his royal highness ride alone? |
39664 | or can breach of faith be reasonably objected to me by one who never himself kept faith or promise? |
39664 | what are we waiting for here?" |
38892 | Why ask me to come and see this? 38892 ''Does a farmer plough the sea?'' 38892 ''Does he eat the ground?'' 38892 ''Does the ground plough the farmer?'' 38892 ''What does a farmer do?'' 38892 ''What does he plough?'' 38892 ''Who ploughs the ground?'' 38892 ),( 1468-? 38892 ),( 1469- 1529? 38892 ),( 1470-? 38892 --Is the rainbow very hot on the roof of that house?" |
38892 | --"The dog talks, does he not?" |
38892 | 2- 17 stand on the tables of stone? |
38892 | Among other works of importance he wrote_ Wo lag das Paradies?_( 1881), and_ Babel und Bibel_( 1902, 1903, Eng. |
38892 | And can we regard the prohibition of polytheism and the prohibition of idolatry as one commandment? |
38892 | Can we take the preface as a separate"word"? |
38892 | DAY, JOHN( 1574- 1640? |
38892 | For a spoken word to be"natural"in this sense it must be onomatopoetic, and what infinitesimal percentage of English words are such? |
38892 | GIOVANNI DELLA ROBBIA( 1460- 1529?) |
38892 | He had already during his father''s lifetime distinguished himself by defeating Alexander of Epirus at Derdia and so saving Macedonia( about 260?). |
38892 | How were the ten words disposed on the two tables? |
38892 | In 1608 Day published two comedies,_ Law Trickes, or Who Would have Thought it?_ and_ Humour out of Breath_. |
38892 | Is it not I the Lord?" |
38892 | It remains to ask, What is the history and significance of the deluge- myth? |
38892 | Shamash, who can cross it?'' |
38892 | The name[ Greek: Ioulô](? |
38892 | This suggests that Noah(?) |
38892 | We were often asked by our deaf playmates in our childhood such questions( in signs) as"What does the cat say?" |
38892 | What are we to say of Africa, where only 100 pupils are being taught; of South America, with its paltry 200, and Australia''s 300? |
38892 | _ Education.__ History._[2]--"Who hath made man''s mouth? |
38892 | or who maketh a man dumb, or deaf, or seeing, or blind? |
38892 | the sun- god) has crossed the sea; besides(?) |
38892 | |+------+-------+------------+-------------+------------+||||| Girolamo Luca Paolo Giovanni Marco( 1488- 1566),( 1475- 1550? |
15202 | Am I? |
15202 | And did n''t you know the meaning of this, father? 15202 And did you happen to see anything of the gods,"asked Frigga,"as you came?" |
15202 | And how does that happen: have I not faithfully kept my promise; have you not everything that your heart desired? |
15202 | And nothing hurt him? |
15202 | And now may I ask what you can do yourself? |
15202 | And pray, in what may this youth be specially skilled? |
15202 | And what do you want of me? |
15202 | And what good would it be to you, Jason, if you were heir of that fair land? |
15202 | And why are you standing here all alone, my brave friend? |
15202 | And why is Baldur to be so honored,said he"that even steel and stone shall not hurt him?" |
15202 | And will you kill the Minotaur? 15202 And you will be careful, wo n''t you?" |
15202 | And, by the bye,said Mercury, with a look of fun and mischief in his eyes,"where is this village you talk about? |
15202 | Apples in winter, sister? 15202 Are not two stout sticks as good as two horses for helping one along on the road? |
15202 | Are you afraid? |
15202 | Are you indisposed? |
15202 | Are you quite sure, Midas, that you would never be sorry if your wish were granted? |
15202 | Art thou sure that thou didst see the Jomsvikings? |
15202 | As high as the sun? |
15202 | Athene, was my dream true? 15202 Aunty,"said the Rajah''s son,"why do n''t you light a lamp?" |
15202 | Ay, ay, my girl; and so thou wouldst be queen and lady over me? 15202 Be welcome, Siegfried,"she cried,"yet wherefore hast thou come again to Isenland?" |
15202 | But how am I to get the monkey here? 15202 But is there not something you dread here? |
15202 | But what cow,cried Cadmus,"and where shall I follow?" |
15202 | But what will you do? |
15202 | But who ever heard of strawberries ripening in the snow? |
15202 | But who gave it you? |
15202 | But, Noko,he continued,"what do you intend doing with all that cedar cord on your back?" |
15202 | But, my dear sister, who ever heard of violets blooming in the snow? |
15202 | By- the- bye,said the jellyfish,"have you ever seen the palace of the Dragon King of the Sea where I live?" |
15202 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
15202 | Can it be that the apples have charmed her from her home? |
15202 | Can you save the boat and bring us to land? |
15202 | Comrade, what dost thou? |
15202 | Could the stranger have made a mistake,he wondered,"or had it been a dream?" |
15202 | Did I not forbid it to be green until my child should be sent back to me? |
15202 | Did you ever hear anything so wonderful? |
15202 | Do I? |
15202 | Do n''t you think it would be pleasanter if you and I sometimes gave each other a lift? |
15202 | Do you call it fair to stand with your bow and arrow ready to shoot at me when I have only a stick to defend myself with? 15202 Do you happen to have picked up my glove?" |
15202 | Do you know what the child''s name is? |
15202 | Do you mean to tell me that you ca n''t get the medicine here? |
15202 | Do you really, dear child? |
15202 | Do you see that beautiful white sandy beach? |
15202 | Do you see these big gates? 15202 Do you think he has stolen the meat?" |
15202 | Does the Earth dare to disobey me? |
15202 | Dost wish to be avenged upon Roland? 15202 Eh, what?" |
15202 | Esa,he replied,"what will I do with a dirty dogskin?" |
15202 | Fair Sir Ganelon,said King Marsil boldly, knowing his hatred,"tell me, how shall I slay Roland?" |
15202 | Friend,she said to the countryman,"tell me where is he who gave thee this ring?" |
15202 | Hallo, where are you? |
15202 | Hast thou any horned beasts, the Sheriff then said, Good fellow, to sell to me? 15202 Have I been dreaming?" |
15202 | Have I not? |
15202 | Have you left your liver behind you? |
15202 | Have you not? |
15202 | Have you other children? |
15202 | How am I to escape her eyes? |
15202 | How are we to get over this? |
15202 | How can I crush the oil out of all this mustard seed in one day? |
15202 | How can I fight with these two demons? |
15202 | How can I play a trick on a monkey? 15202 How can I tell you, Pandora?" |
15202 | How can any of my people capture a monkey? |
15202 | How far can you shoot, father? |
15202 | How now, little lady,he said,"pray what is the matter with you this morning?" |
15202 | I am not obliged to tell you, old graybeard; what business is it of yours? |
15202 | I beseech thee, noble knight,said the King,"tell me why thou hast journeyed to this our royal city?" |
15202 | I should love to go,said the monkey,"but how am I to cross the water? |
15202 | I want to know,replied Odin,"for whom Hela is making ready that gilded couch in Helheim?" |
15202 | I wonder if it will be the same at dinner,he thought,"and if so, how am I going to live if all my food is to be turned into gold?" |
15202 | I wonder what he will do next? 15202 I wonder,"said he,"how I must do it? |
15202 | If only you could capture one of those monkeys? |
15202 | Is it a he or a she? |
15202 | Is it much further,she asked,"and will you carry me back when I have seen your palace?" |
15202 | Is it now the time to fight with staves? 15202 Is it so beautiful as all that?" |
15202 | Is that your boy? |
15202 | Is there something alive in the box? 15202 Is this eaten or not?" |
15202 | Law, law? |
15202 | Men of God, may I warm myself at your fire? 15202 Men of God, may I warm myself at your fire? |
15202 | Mother, what do you want? |
15202 | Mr. Monkey, tell me, have you such a thing as a liver with you? |
15202 | Must I leave my home and my people? |
15202 | Must you really go? 15202 My child,"she said,"did you taste any food while you were in King Pluto''s palace?" |
15202 | My father? |
15202 | My friend, my Roland, who shall now lead my army? 15202 My lord,"said Tell, turning pale,"you do not mean that? |
15202 | No, no,he said,"why should I want to look at you?" |
15202 | No,said Tom,"my mother did not teach me that wit: who would be fool then?" |
15202 | No,was the reply, with his usual deceit;"how do you think_ he_ could get to this place? |
15202 | Noko,said he,"what is the matter?" |
15202 | Nothing,Hiawatha replied;"but can you tell me whether any one lives in this lake, and what brings you here yourself?" |
15202 | Now mother, why will you not let me sleep? |
15202 | Now tell me honestly,said he to Thor,"what do you think of your success?" |
15202 | Now, young man, when can I see these horned beasts of yours? |
15202 | O Frithiof why hast thou come hither to steal an old man''s bride? |
15202 | O father, where are you going? |
15202 | O master dear, what has happened? |
15202 | O my sweet purple violets, shall I ever see you again? |
15202 | Oh, may I? 15202 Oh, where is my dear child?" |
15202 | Poor little orphan,he said sadly,"what will become of thee without a mother''s care?" |
15202 | Pray who are you, kind fairy? |
15202 | Pray, my young friend, what is your name? |
15202 | Proserpina, Proserpina did you call her? |
15202 | Seest thou the fairest of the band,cried the King,"she who is clad in a white garment? |
15202 | Shall the pawn save the king? |
15202 | Sir Siegfried,he said,"wilt thou help me to win the matchless maiden Brunhild for my queen?" |
15202 | Sir,said the monster,"who gave you permission to come this way? |
15202 | Sire,he said,"hast thou forgotten thy promise, that when Brunhild entered the royal city thy lady sister should be my bride?" |
15202 | Son of Satan,said the keeper,"why do you let your horse stray in the cornfields?" |
15202 | Star of day,she replied,"whom could I have here that you would not see sooner than I? |
15202 | Strangers, who are ye? |
15202 | Tell me what it is you want for the Queen? |
15202 | Tell me, Sire,he said,"what grief oppresseth thee?" |
15202 | Tell me, do you really wish to get rid of your fatal gift? |
15202 | Tell me, have you seen him pass? |
15202 | Tell,he said at last,"that was a fine shot, but for what was the other arrow?" |
15202 | Tell? |
15202 | That is the most important thing of all,said the stupid jellyfish,"so as soon as I recollected it, I asked you if you had yours with you?" |
15202 | The archbishop, where is he? 15202 The way is long,"said Rustem;"how shall I go?" |
15202 | Then why did you not bring more? |
15202 | Then you are not satisfied? |
15202 | There is Ogier the Dane,said Ganelon quickly,"who better?" |
15202 | This is not the season for violets; dost thou not see the snow everywhere? |
15202 | This is the river Lethe,said King Pluto;"do you not think it a very pleasant stream?" |
15202 | This is the strangest thing I have ever known,said Pandora, rather frightened,"What will Epimetheus say? |
15202 | To the house of Dède- Vsévède? 15202 Very miserable, are you?" |
15202 | Well, friend Midas,he said,"pray how are you enjoying your new power?" |
15202 | Well, how high? 15202 Well,"said Loki to himself,"if this is the sport of Asgard, what must that of Jötunheim be? |
15202 | Well,said the wolf,"whom do you think is the fastest of the boys? |
15202 | What adventure has brought you here? |
15202 | What ails thee, Polyphemus? |
15202 | What can I do? |
15202 | What can it be? |
15202 | What can that be? |
15202 | What causes these cries? |
15202 | What delightful milk, Mother Baucis,said Mercury,"may I have some more? |
15202 | What did you see? |
15202 | What did you see? |
15202 | What do you want, mother? |
15202 | What does the man mean,thought the old farmer,"calling this largely populated city a cemetery?" |
15202 | What does this mean? |
15202 | What dost thou demand of my master? |
15202 | What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? 15202 What has brought thee here? |
15202 | What has she got to love? 15202 What have you in that box, Epimetheus?" |
15202 | What have you there, my man? |
15202 | What is Theseus to you? |
15202 | What is that the Valkyries are saying? |
15202 | What is the matter with you? |
15202 | What is the matter, dear Baldur? |
15202 | What is the matter, father? |
15202 | What kind of a staff had he? |
15202 | What man hurt you that you roared so loud? |
15202 | What man is this,she asked,"who dares disturb my sleep?" |
15202 | What orders have you for to- day? |
15202 | What rage possesseth thee? 15202 What says the man?" |
15202 | What shall I do now? |
15202 | What shall I do, then? |
15202 | What towers are these? |
15202 | What was it, mother? |
15202 | What was the old woman like? |
15202 | What were they doing? |
15202 | What will you call your castle? |
15202 | What would satisfy you? |
15202 | When our lord and King gave us swords and armor,he cried,"did we not promise to follow him in battle whenever he had need? |
15202 | Whence sail ye over the watery ways? 15202 Where are my wife and my children?" |
15202 | Where are you? |
15202 | Where art thou, Roland? |
15202 | Where did you find them? |
15202 | Where did you gather them? |
15202 | Where did you get all that betel- leaf? |
15202 | Where do you come from? 15202 Where do you come from?" |
15202 | Where has master gotten that Maypole? |
15202 | Where have you seen any Apples like them? |
15202 | Where is Heraud, who never yet forsook man in need? |
15202 | Where is Proserpina, you naughty sea- children? |
15202 | Where is he? 15202 Where shall I go?" |
15202 | Where, then, is Heraud? |
15202 | Where,said he to himself,"is the reservoir from which this creature drinks?" |
15202 | Wherever did you find them? |
15202 | Which of them do you love best? |
15202 | Who are the strangers who come thus unheralded to my land? |
15202 | Who are ye, wonder- working strangers? |
15202 | Who are you, bold youth? |
15202 | Who are you, lady? 15202 Who are you?" |
15202 | Who are you? |
15202 | Who are you? |
15202 | Who art thou, fair fly, who hast walked into the spider''s web? |
15202 | Who art thou, thou brave youth? |
15202 | Who dares to disobey my orders? |
15202 | Who has done this foul murder? |
15202 | Who is that? |
15202 | Who makes the law, you or I? |
15202 | Who would have thought it? 15202 Who''s there?" |
15202 | Whose can these ships be? |
15202 | Whose house is this? |
15202 | Why are you so frightened, my little girl? |
15202 | Why com''st thou here? 15202 Why did you take hold of my hook? |
15202 | Why do n''t you go to work, my lad? |
15202 | Why do n''t_ you_ throw something at Baldur? 15202 Why do you look so grave, my lord?" |
15202 | Why do you look so sad? |
15202 | Why do you roar like that? |
15202 | Why dost thou cry aloud in the night and awake us from our sleep? 15202 Why hast thou done this?" |
15202 | Why is my liver so important to you? |
15202 | Why is there always snow on the mountains, father? |
15202 | Why should I bow to a cap? |
15202 | Why should I leave my bow behind? 15202 Why,"said he,"do you strike me so?" |
15202 | Why? |
15202 | Will he never come back to Asgard again? |
15202 | Will the dog bite me? |
15202 | Will you come with me into the fields,she asked,"and I will gather flowers and make you each a wreath?" |
15202 | Will you kindly show me the way to the highroad? 15202 Wo n''t he be very heavy?" |
15202 | You are new to the business? |
15202 | You are very fond of your children, Tell? |
15202 | You have not been here before? |
15202 | You kill me by saying so,cried Mother Ceres, almost ready to faint;"where was the sound, and which way did it seem to go?" |
15202 | You''re not going yet, are you? |
15202 | Yours is a kind welcome, very different from the one we got in the village; pray why do you live in such a bad place? |
15202 | After a while his heart began to fail him, and he sighed and said within himself,"What if my father have other sons around him, whom he loves? |
15202 | After a while, as he was thus musing, there appeared before him one in white garments, who said unto him,"Sleepest thou or wakest thou, Rodrigo?" |
15202 | Alas, my little child, what will become of thee when I am gone?" |
15202 | All at once he cried out, with a loud and terrified voice,"What is that behind you?" |
15202 | Am I one to whom you can say,''Come down from your throne, and present yourself before me?'' |
15202 | And Medeia said slowly,"Why should you die? |
15202 | And besides, who would dare to attack Roland? |
15202 | And he asked him,"Will you leave your mountains, Orpheus, my playfellow in old times, and sail with the heroes to bring home the Golden Fleece? |
15202 | And how do you know my name?" |
15202 | And how shall I slay her, if her scales be iron and brass?" |
15202 | And if I give command of the rear to Roland, who, then, shall lead the van?" |
15202 | And if it be the will of Heaven that you should fall by the hand of the White Genius, who can change the ordering of destiny? |
15202 | And now must I go out again, to the ends of all the earth, far away into the misty darkness? |
15202 | And she asked,"Do you see the land beyond?" |
15202 | And she whispered to Medeia, her sister,"Why should all these brave men die? |
15202 | And the herald asked in wonder,"Fair youth, do you know whither you are going?" |
15202 | And then, what do you think happened? |
15202 | And they asked,"How shall we set your spirit free?" |
15202 | And to what end? |
15202 | And what do you think he saw? |
15202 | And what was the Golden Fleece? |
15202 | And who will show me the way? |
15202 | And will you charm for us all men and all monsters with your magic harp and song?" |
15202 | And will you stay with us,"asked Epimetheus,"for ever and ever?" |
15202 | Are they not a beautiful color? |
15202 | Are they not fine and fat? |
15202 | Are ye merchants? |
15202 | Are you careless of your life? |
15202 | Are you not dreadfully hungry, is there nothing I can get you to eat?" |
15202 | Are you stronger than your uncle Pelias the Terrible?" |
15202 | As high as the snow- mountains?" |
15202 | As soon as the pole was set up a herald stepped out, blew his trumpet and cried,"Se ye this cap here set up? |
15202 | As these butchers had nothing to do, they began to talk among themselves and say,"Who is this man? |
15202 | As you have never seen the palace of the Dragon King, wo n''t you avail yourself of this splendid opportunity by coming with me? |
15202 | At first Marouckla was afraid, but after a while her courage returned and drawing near she said:"Men of God, may I warm myself at your fire? |
15202 | At last he said,"Now, Will, do n''t you think that is enough?" |
15202 | At last, however, he found voice to ask,"What is your name?" |
15202 | At length his grandmother asked him,"Hiawatha, what is the matter with you?" |
15202 | At the head? |
15202 | At this she grew very angry and said,"How couldst_ thou_ see in darkness? |
15202 | Aulad said to him,"Who are you? |
15202 | But Aietes thought,"Who is this, who is proof against all magic? |
15202 | But Odin asked very gravely,"Is the shadow gone out of our son''s heart, or is it still there?" |
15202 | But Theseus wept,"Shall I leave you, O my mother?" |
15202 | But after a moment Pelias spoke gently,"Why so rash, my son? |
15202 | But am I not superior to them in courage, in power and wealth? |
15202 | But are you not Hiawatha himself?" |
15202 | But each man''s neighbor whispered in return,"His shoulders are broad; will you rise and put him out?" |
15202 | But he said hastily,"Do you not know who this Theseus is? |
15202 | But how shall I cross the seas without a ship? |
15202 | But how was it to be done? |
15202 | But in whom does he trust for help?" |
15202 | But now what can I do? |
15202 | But perhaps, as you are a tiger, when I have made you well, you will eat me?" |
15202 | But soon he looked at Pelias, and when he saw that he still wept, he said,"Why do you look so sad, my uncle?" |
15202 | But still she sighed and said,"Why will you die, young as you are? |
15202 | But tell me where thou didst leave thy good ship? |
15202 | But tell me, do the serpents ever appear? |
15202 | But when spring had come, a herald stood in the market- place and cried,"O people and King of Athens, where is your yearly tribute?" |
15202 | But where are we most likely to find a monkey?" |
15202 | But where is my brother? |
15202 | But who can tell us where among them is hid the Golden Fleece?" |
15202 | But why cometh he within our borders? |
15202 | Cadmus thought,"or did I really hear a voice?" |
15202 | Can not you get me a wife?" |
15202 | Can you give me a plan, Jason, by which I can rid myself of that man?" |
15202 | Can you guess who I am? |
15202 | Can you tell by the jumps they take?" |
15202 | Can you tell me what has become of my little daughter Proserpina?" |
15202 | Cheiron sighed and said,"Will you go to Iolcos by the sea? |
15202 | Could this be his long lost sister Europa coming to make him happy after all these weary years of searching and wandering? |
15202 | Could you, good mother, put me on the right road?" |
15202 | Dare you brave Medusa the Gorgon?" |
15202 | Did Guy, I wonder, or some other, in days of loneliness and despair, carve these words? |
15202 | Do not you care what you do? |
15202 | Do you dare to disobey me?" |
15202 | Do you mock at poor old souls like me?" |
15202 | Do you not know how I make all stand in fear of me? |
15202 | Do you not think that these diamonds which I have had dug out of the mine for you are far prettier than violets?" |
15202 | Do you see this lovely crown on my head? |
15202 | Do you want to buy some?" |
15202 | Dost thou not see how many thousand heads hang upon yonder tree-- heads of those who have offended against my laws? |
15202 | Dost thou take him for an enemy? |
15202 | Europa was very frightened, and she started up from among the tulips and lilies and cried out,"Cadmus, brother Cadmus, where are you? |
15202 | For how much longer must this poor old man continue to row?" |
15202 | For what man might tell which from that fight should come forth victorious? |
15202 | From whence didst thou get it?" |
15202 | Good Phoebus, will you come with me to demand my daughter from this wicked Pluto?" |
15202 | Had Eurydice really followed his steps, or had she turned back, and was all his toil in vain? |
15202 | Had they such warriors as you, and Rustem your son? |
15202 | Has an adventure come to me already?" |
15202 | Has everything sworn then?" |
15202 | Has he been vanquished by the warrior- queen? |
15202 | Has not the old world perished, and all that was in it?" |
15202 | Hath she picked up a shipwrecked stranger, or is this one of the gods who has come to make her his wife?'' |
15202 | He checked his horse and, gazing angrily round the crowd,"What is this rioting?" |
15202 | He cried out,"Tyau, why do you strike me, you old dog?" |
15202 | He robs people, he-- do you think we will meet him?" |
15202 | He said:"Oh, tongue, what is this that you have done through your greediness? |
15202 | He stopped for a moment, but then said to himself,"What have I to lose? |
15202 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
15202 | His wife, seeing him, exclaimed in great surprise,"What has happened to you?" |
15202 | How can I cut that thick tree- trunk in two with a wax hatchet?" |
15202 | How can I do this?" |
15202 | How can I ever do that?" |
15202 | How can I possibly tie it up again?" |
15202 | How can I trust thee?" |
15202 | How much do you want for it? |
15202 | How say you? |
15202 | How then will you do it?" |
15202 | I am very poor, no one cares for me, I have not even a fire in my cottage; will you let me warm myself at yours?" |
15202 | I looked at that spot only a moment ago; why did I not see the flowers?" |
15202 | I pray you, good shepherds, tell me where they may be found?" |
15202 | I see you have been gathering flowers? |
15202 | I wonder what Father Odin and Mother Frigga would say if they were here?" |
15202 | III HOW THEY BUILT THE SHIP ARGO So the heralds went out and cried to all the heroes,"Who dare come to the adventures of the Golden Fleece?" |
15202 | If he die, where shall I find such another?" |
15202 | If you had fallen under his claws, how should I have carried to Mazanderan this cuirass and helmet, this lasso, my bow and my sword?" |
15202 | In the midst of his trouble he met an old woman who said,"Where are you going, Plavacek? |
15202 | Is Baldur going to Helheim?" |
15202 | Is n''t it a lovely day?" |
15202 | Is there any knight among you who will fight this giant? |
15202 | Is there no more corn, that men can not make bread and give us? |
15202 | It is a bargain, is n''t it?" |
15202 | Luckless wretch, what brings you to this mountain?" |
15202 | May I, mother?" |
15202 | Meanwhile the Blind Man called out to his friend:"Where am I? |
15202 | Medeia''s heart pitied the heroes, and Jason most of all, and she answered,"Our father is stern and terrible, and who can win the Golden Fleece?" |
15202 | Oh my Emperor, my friend, alas, why wert thou not here? |
15202 | Oliver, my brother, how shall we speed him now our mournful news?" |
15202 | Oliver, where art thou?" |
15202 | One observed,"Why do n''t you attend the sick, and not sit there making such a noise?" |
15202 | Pandora sobbed:"No, no, I am afraid; there are so many troubles with stings flying about that we do not want any more?" |
15202 | Rustem said to Aulad,"What mean these fires that are blazing up to right and left of us?" |
15202 | Shall I slay the Gorgon?" |
15202 | Skrymner half opened the eye nearest to Thor, and said in a very sleepy voice,"Why will the leaves drop off the trees?" |
15202 | So she called out,"Father Cobra, father Cobra, my husband has come to fetch me; will you let me go?" |
15202 | So the mighty army passed onward through the vale of Roncesvalles without doubt or dread, for did not Roland the brave guard the rear? |
15202 | Sternly Aietes looked at the heroes, and sternly he spoke and loud,"Who are you, and what want you here that you come to our shore? |
15202 | Still Theseus came steadily on, and he asked,"And what is your name, bold spider, and where are your spider''s fangs?" |
15202 | Surely no one stealeth thy flocks? |
15202 | Swiftly then the Prince drew his sword, well tempered as he knew, for had not he himself wrought it in the forge of Mimer the blacksmith? |
15202 | THE SUN; OR, THE THREE GOLDEN HAIRS OF THE OLD MAN VSÉVÈDE ADAPTED BY ALEXANDER CHODSKO Can this be a true story? |
15202 | Tell me, for pity''s sake, have you seen my poor child Proserpina pass by the mouth of your cave?" |
15202 | Tell me, how did it happen?" |
15202 | Tell me, then, why you come?" |
15202 | The King looked at him attentively, then turning to the fisherman, said,"That is a good- looking lad; is he your son?" |
15202 | The King saw the crown, set with precious stones, and said,"To what end bring ye hither this crown?" |
15202 | The Prince showed him the mustard seed, and said to him,"How can I crush the oil out of all this mustard seed in one day? |
15202 | The Rajah''s son asked some men he saw,"Whose country is this?" |
15202 | The Sheriff''s house was close to the town hall, so as dinner was not quite ready all the butchers went to say"How do you do?" |
15202 | The bird inquired,"What are you doing here?" |
15202 | The devils in great surprise jumped up, saying,"Who is this?" |
15202 | The great Setchène raised his head and answered:"What brings thee here, my daughter? |
15202 | The great Setchène raised his head and asked:"Why comest thou here? |
15202 | The people crowded round and asked them,"Who are you, that you sit weeping here?" |
15202 | The young wolves were in the act of running off, when Hiawatha cried out,"My grandchildren, where are you going? |
15202 | Then Circe cried to Medeia,"Ah, wretched girl, have you forgotten your sins that you come hither, where the flowers bloom all the year round? |
15202 | Then Earl Eric, Hakon''s son, who loved brave men, said,"Vagn, wilt thou accept life?" |
15202 | Then Orpheus sighed,"Have I not had enough of toil and of weary wandering far and wide, since I lived in Cheiron''s cave, above Iolcos by the sea? |
15202 | Then Theseus laughed and said,"Am I not safe enough now?" |
15202 | Then Theseus shouted to him,"Holla, thou valiant Pine- bender, hast thou two fir- trees left for me?" |
15202 | Then he asked them,"By what road shall I go homeward again?" |
15202 | Then he clasped her in his arms, and cried,"Where are these sea- gods, cruel and unjust, who doom fair maids to death? |
15202 | Then he cried to Athene,"Shall I never see my mother more, and the blue ripple of the sea and the sunny hills of Hellas?" |
15202 | Then he looked down through the cloud and said,"Are you all weeping?" |
15202 | Then he said to him again,"Good bangle- seller, I would see these strange people of whom you speak; can not you take me there?" |
15202 | Then he said to the parrots,"Who is the Princess Labam? |
15202 | Then he said,"And will you now come home with me?" |
15202 | Then he sighed and asked,"Is it true what the heroes tell me-- that I am heir of that fair land?" |
15202 | Then he thought of his tiger: and the tiger and his wife came to him and said,"Why are you so sad?" |
15202 | Then if it is not so, when will he cease his wars?" |
15202 | Then recovering himself he got down from his horse and said:"I want a trusty messenger to take a message to the palace, could you send him with it?" |
15202 | Then said Cincinnatus, being not a little astonished,"Is all well?" |
15202 | Then said Odysseus:"How can I be at peace with thee, Circe? |
15202 | Then she loved him all the more and said,"But when you have killed him, how will you find your way out of the labyrinth?" |
15202 | Then the king died, and there was great dismay in the city, for where would they find a good ruler to sit on the throne? |
15202 | These he put on the tigers to make them beautiful, and he took them to the King, and said to him,"May these tigers fight your demons for me?" |
15202 | Theseus walked on steadily, and made no answer, but he thought,"Is this some robber? |
15202 | They saw Theseus and called to him,"Holla, tall stranger at the door, what is your will to- day?" |
15202 | They went outside the sacred wall and looked down over the bright blue sea, and Aithra said,"Do you see the land at our feet?" |
15202 | This Cobra was a very wise animal, and seeing the maiden, he put his head out of his hole, and said to her:"Little girl, why do you cry?" |
15202 | This time the brother was in a better temper, so he lent what was asked of him, but said mockingly,"What can such beggars as you have to measure?" |
15202 | This time they gathered with less fear and less secrecy, for was not the dreaded governor dead? |
15202 | Three days he kept Ferbad as his guest, and then sent back by him this answer:"Shall the water of the sea be equal to wine? |
15202 | To her maidens then she called:"Why do ye run away at the sight of a man? |
15202 | To what have my English come that I may not find one knight among them bold enough to do battle for his King and country? |
15202 | To whom therefore shall I trust the rear- guard that we may march in surety?" |
15202 | V WEEPING"Well, Hermod, what did she say?" |
15202 | Was it a saint who kneeled, or was it the Lord Himself? |
15202 | Was it near here, or at the far end of the island?" |
15202 | Was it not splendid?" |
15202 | Was the King''s wonderful palace falling to pieces? |
15202 | Were ever any so divinely beautiful? |
15202 | Were not these sandals to lead me in the right road?" |
15202 | Were peasants ever more unruly and discontented? |
15202 | Were you made of iron, could you venture to deal alone with these sons of Satan?" |
15202 | What ails you that you tarry here, doing no thing?" |
15202 | What are all these splendors if she has no one to care for? |
15202 | What are you doing here? |
15202 | What can be done to make it fruitful?" |
15202 | What can be the matter?" |
15202 | What can this one do?" |
15202 | What can we do?" |
15202 | What cruel men have bound you? |
15202 | What did he care for danger? |
15202 | What do you think of my horned beasts?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What has happened? |
15202 | What have you in your saddle- bags, then?" |
15202 | What if he will not receive me? |
15202 | What if there be another noble deed to be done before I see the sunny hills of Hellas?" |
15202 | What is all this crying about?" |
15202 | What is it for?" |
15202 | What is the matter with them? |
15202 | What is the present to be?" |
15202 | What must be done to restore the flow of water?" |
15202 | What need have these peasants for great houses?" |
15202 | What nonsense is this? |
15202 | What people?" |
15202 | What think ye?" |
15202 | What would you do, Theseus, if you were king of such a land?" |
15202 | When King Kaoüs came up with his warriors, he said to Rustem,"What is it? |
15202 | When Rustem awoke and saw the dead lion, which indeed was of a monstrous size, he said to Raksh,"Wise beast, who bade you fight with a lion? |
15202 | When he got to the pine- tree he raised his voice and said:"How do you do, Mr. Monkey? |
15202 | When she saw Jason, she spoke, whining,"Who will carry me across the flood?" |
15202 | When they saw him they trembled and said,"Are you come to rob our garden and carry off our golden fruit?" |
15202 | When? |
15202 | Whence art thou?" |
15202 | Where am I? |
15202 | Where am I?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where can I find the monster?" |
15202 | Where could he have come from? |
15202 | Where does she live?" |
15202 | Where have you come from and what is your name?" |
15202 | Where is thy sword called Hauteclere with its crystal pommel and golden guard?" |
15202 | Where is your aged father, and the brother whom you killed? |
15202 | Where? |
15202 | Who are you, and whence? |
15202 | Who are you? |
15202 | Who knows if we shall see Pelion again? |
15202 | Who so bold? |
15202 | Who was it?" |
15202 | Who would be the victor, who the vanquished? |
15202 | Who would guard the treasure now, and who would warn his master that a strong man had found his way to Nibelheim? |
15202 | Why did I not think of him sooner? |
15202 | Why did you pluck off my keeper''s ears and let your horse feed in the cornfields?" |
15202 | Why do you come to my room?" |
15202 | Why does not my father give up the fleece, that my husband''s spirit may have rest?" |
15202 | Why halt? |
15202 | Why left he us not in peace?" |
15202 | Why should I fear? |
15202 | Why should he welcome me now?" |
15202 | Why, then, do you ride on the way to Helheim?" |
15202 | Will it please you to listen to me? |
15202 | Will you ask Dède- Vsévède the cause of it?" |
15202 | Will you pass the night under our roof? |
15202 | Will you shake hands and be friends with me?" |
15202 | Without these Apples of Idun, Asgard itself would have lost its charm; for what would heaven be without youth and beauty forever shining through it? |
15202 | Would he see the light that was brighter than any sunbeam again? |
15202 | Would his adventures bring him at last to the Holy Grail? |
15202 | Would they not have found the Sacred Cup one day if they had stayed with their King and helped to clear the country of its enemies? |
15202 | Would you like to come?" |
15202 | Yet what could they do? |
15202 | You naughty Pandora, why did you open this wicked box?" |
15202 | You remember that Mercury''s staff was leaning against the cottage wall? |
15202 | and he answered and said,"I do not sleep: but who art thou that bringest with thee such brightness and so sweet an odor?" |
15202 | and not buy any horned cattle? |
15202 | asked Pandora,"and where did it come from?" |
15202 | called King Marsil to his treasurer,"are my gifts for the Emperor ready?" |
15202 | cried he to himself,"some men have got in here, have they? |
15202 | exclaimed Loki, eagerly;"what is that you say? |
15202 | have you found it more easy to promise than to fulfil?" |
15202 | have you found me again?" |
15202 | he cried out;"why do you come here?" |
15202 | he said;"what will become of us in the cottage? |
15202 | how can that be? |
15202 | how can you think so?" |
15202 | is that all?" |
15202 | is that it?" |
15202 | is this thy mercy to strangers and widows? |
15202 | or are ye sea- robbers who rove over the sea, risking your own lives and bringing evil to other men?" |
15202 | or why are ye thus come at the bidding of your master, King Porsenna, to rob others of the freedom that ye care not to have for yourselves?" |
15202 | said Perseus;"will she not freeze me too?" |
15202 | said Philemon;"and your friend, what is he called?" |
15202 | said Tom,"have you drunk of my strong beer already?" |
15202 | said he, placidly, after he had got by,"how do you like my exploit?" |
15202 | said the poor Queen, weeping,"Europa is lost, and if I should lose my three sons as well, what would become of me? |
15202 | she asked;"tell me, have you taken her to your home under the sea?" |
15202 | they all cried, together;"can he tell us about Earl Hakon?" |
15202 | what had he done? |
15202 | what has become of our poor neighbors?" |
15202 | why did you dirty my hook by taking it in your mouth? |
15202 | why do you laugh at me? |
15202 | would you not like to ride a little way with me in my beautiful chariot?" |
15202 | Ægeus cried,"What have you done?" |
10851 | Could this good- natured and humorous old gentleman be prevailed upon to give me an Epigram? |
10851 | Eencome again? |
10851 | How shall we tell them in a stranger''s ear? |
10851 | How shall we tell them in a stranger''s ear? |
10851 | I struggle to town rarely, and then to see London, with little other motive-- for what is left there hardly? 10851 O ma''am, who do you think Miss Ouldcroft( they pronounce it Holcroft) has been working a cap for?" |
10851 | Stern and_ sear_? |
10851 | To my Brother,a sonnet on the birthday of his brother Tom, dated Nov. 18(? |
10851 | What is an Album? |
10851 | What''s he saying? 10851 Would Wilberforce give us our Tuesdays?" |
10851 | ''A sweet sadness''capable of inspiring''a more_ grave joy_''--than what?--than demonstrations of_ mirth_? |
10851 | ( What is M. to me?) |
10851 | * Is it the Western? |
10851 | -- Early-- March 19,--? |
10851 | -- End of July-- Dyer, George, to Dec. 5, 1808? |
10851 | -- March 30,-- Oct. 21,-- July, 1823 Sept. 6,-- Sept. 9,-- Sept. 10,-- Sept.--? |
10851 | --( from Mary Lamb)? |
10851 | --Yet-- yet,--(for when was pleasure made Sunshine all without a shade?) |
10851 | 1806 March 11, 1808? |
10851 | 1811? |
10851 | 1821? |
10851 | 1826? |
10851 | 1829 Sept. 22,-- May 12, 1830 Nov. 12,--? |
10851 | 1833 Rickman, John, to? |
10851 | 300 Mary Lamb to Mrs. James Kenney? Early Dec. Mr. Hazlitt''s text(_ The Lambs_). |
10851 | 317 Charles Lamb to Miss Hutchinson(?) |
10851 | 332 Charles Lamb to Thomas Allsop? Oct. |
10851 | 350 Charles Lamb to Thomas Hood(?_ fragment_) Aug. 10 From the original. |
10851 | 357 Charles Lamb to Leigh Hunt? Nov. |
10851 | 364 Charles Lamb to Thomas Manning? Feb. |
10851 | 373 Charles Lamb to Charles Chambers? May Mr. Hazlitt''s text(_ The Lambs_). |
10851 | 375 Charles Lamb to Henry Colburn(?) |
10851 | 385 Charles Lamb to Charles Oilier? Dec. |
10851 | 403 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? Sept. |
10851 | 432 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? Sept. |
10851 | 436 Charles Lamb to William Hone? Oct. |
10851 | 441 Charles Lamb to William Hone Dec. 15 442 Charles Lamb to Thomas Allsop? Dec. |
10851 | 447 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? Jan. |
10851 | 458 Charles Lamb to Mrs. Morgan June 17 459 Mary Lamb to the Thomas Hoods? Summer Mr. Hazlitt''s text(_ The Lambs_). |
10851 | 470 Charles Lamb to George Dyer? Jan. |
10851 | 481 Charles Lamb to Miss Sarah James? April Text from Mr. Samuel Davey. |
10851 | 482 Charles Lamb to Crabb Robinson? April From the original( Dr. Williams''Library). |
10851 | 485 Charles Lamb to Thomas Hood? May Mr. Hazlitt''s text(_ The Lambs_). |
10851 | 495 Charles Lamb to James Gillman? Nov. |
10851 | 510 Charles Lamb to James Gillman? Spring Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn). |
10851 | 511 Charles Lamb to Jacob Vale Asbury? April From_ The Athenaewn_. |
10851 | 528 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? Christmas From the original( South Kensington). |
10851 | 543 Charles Lamb to James Sheridan Knowles? April From the original( South Kensington). |
10851 | 544 Charles Lamb to John Forster? Late April From the original( South Kensington). |
10851 | 545 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? |
10851 | 548 Charles Lamb to Crabb Robinson? Early Oct. From the original( South Kensington). |
10851 | 569 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? Spring From the original( South Kensington). |
10851 | 572 Charles Lamb to John Forster? March From the original( South Kensington). |
10851 | 573 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? April 10 From the original at Rowfant. |
10851 | 587 Charles and Mary Lamb to Edward and Emma Moxon? July 31 From the original at Rowfant. |
10851 | 612 Charles Lamb to Mr. Childs? Dec. |
10851 | 9526 Charles Lamb to Edward Moxon? Dec. |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? |
10851 | ? 1821.] |
10851 | ? Early December, 1822.] |
10851 | ? Oct., 1823.] |
10851 | ? Sept. |
10851 | ? Summer, 1821.] |
10851 | ?-- Late Autumn, 1828? |
10851 | ?-- Late Autumn, 1828? |
10851 | A Serjeant? |
10851 | A father''s"sneer"? |
10851 | A tree is a Magnolia,& c.--Can I but like the truly Catholic spirit? |
10851 | Again, would such a painter and forger have expected £40 for a thing, if authentic, worth £4000? |
10851 | Am I in the dateive case now? |
10851 | Amelia, Caroline, Julia, Augusta, or"Scots who have"? |
10851 | An''t you glad about Burke''s case? |
10851 | And art thou mingled then among Those famous sons of ancient song? |
10851 | And do they gather round, and praise Thy relish Of their nobler lays? |
10851 | And if on my passage home, I thought it made five, what matter? |
10851 | And is it a year since we parted from you at the steps of Edmonton Stage? |
10851 | And is not CLARE for love excuse enough? |
10851 | And what dost thou at the Priory? |
10851 | And what if Maggiore itself be but a coinage of adaptation? |
10851 | And what is reason? |
10851 | And what is the"Brussels Gazette"now? |
10851 | And why( the reader may ask) not have noticed his_ Satan in Search of a Wife_? |
10851 | Angelica or Millamant? |
10851 | April 10,-- April 25,-- April 27,-- July 14,-- July 24,-- and Emma( from Mary and Charles Lamb)? |
10851 | April 16 or 17,--? |
10851 | April, 1829 Kelly, Fanny, to July 20, 1819 July 20,-- Kenny, James and Louisa, to Oct., 1817 Mrs. James, to( from Mary Lamb)? |
10851 | April,-- April 17,--? |
10851 | April,-- Aug.,-- Aug. 31,--? |
10851 | Are his intellects sound, or does he wander a little in_ his_ conversation? |
10851 | Are not you proud and thankful, Emma? |
10851 | Are there more Last words of him? |
10851 | Are there no French Pieces with a Child in them? |
10851 | Are we unstrangulable? |
10851 | Are you not glad the Cold is gone? |
10851 | Asbury, Jacob Vale, to? |
10851 | Autumn,-- Dec. 10,-- Dec. 14,-- June 29, 1801 Sept. 9,-- Sept. 17,-- Nov. 8, 1803 Nov. 10,--? |
10851 | Autumn,-- May 1, 1821 March 9, 1822? |
10851 | Bring the Sonnets-- Why not publish''em?--or let another Bookseller? |
10851 | Burney gone!--what fun has whist now? |
10851 | But can You BARBARA resist, or MARIAN? |
10851 | But did you read the"Memoir of Liston"? |
10851 | But how did I deserve to have the Book? |
10851 | But is it not small? |
10851 | But my spirits have been in a deprest way for a long long time, and they are things which must be to you of faith, for who can explain depression? |
10851 | But tell me, and tell me truly, gentle Swain, is that Isola Bella a true spot in geographical denomination, or a floating Delos in thy brain? |
10851 | But the dogs-- T. and H. I mean-- will not affront me, and what can I do? |
10851 | But what as a Society can they do for you? |
10851 | But what have you done with the first I sent you?--have you swapt it with some lazzaroni for macaroni? |
10851 | But would not a Poem be more consecutive than a string of Sonnets? |
10851 | By the by, is the widow likely to marry again? |
10851 | By the way is magnesia good on these occasions? |
10851 | By whom was I divested? |
10851 | COLERIDGE[? |
10851 | Ca n''t he and Henry Crabbe concert it? |
10851 | Ca n''t you contrive it? |
10851 | Ca n''t you drop in some afternoon, and take a bed? |
10851 | Can I cram loves enough to you all in this little O? |
10851 | Can I go to her aunt, or do anything? |
10851 | Can I thwart her wish exprest, Ev''n unseemly though the laugh Jesting with an Epitaph? |
10851 | Can he be the same Hesiod who did the Titans? |
10851 | Can not we think of Burns, or Thompson, without sullying the thought with a reflection out of place upon Lord Rochester? |
10851 | Can not your Sister come and take a half bed-- or a whole one? |
10851 | Can we ring the bells backward? |
10851 | Can we unlearn the arts that pretend to civilize, and then burn the world? |
10851 | Can you come and eat grouse? |
10851 | Can you have a quiet evening here to night or tomorrow night? |
10851 | Can you name an evening_ next week_? |
10851 | Can you not send your manuscript by the Coach? |
10851 | Can you put me in a way of sending it in safety? |
10851 | Can you slip down here some day and go a Green- dragoning? |
10851 | Can you tell me a likely place where I could pick up, cheap, Fox''s Journal? |
10851 | Canon Ainger''s text here has:"May we venture to bring Emma with us?" |
10851 | Canst thou copy and send, or bring with thee, a vanity in verse which in my younger days I wrote on friend Aders''pictures? |
10851 | Coleridge? June Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn). |
10851 | Could Moses have seen the speck in vision? |
10851 | Could not you do it? |
10851 | Could you do nothing for little Clara Fisher? |
10851 | Could you not write something on Quakerism-- for Quakers to read-- but nominally addrest to Non Quakers? |
10851 | D''r A.--I expect Proctor and Wainwright( Janus W.) this evening; will you come? |
10851 | D''r F. Can you oblige me by sending 4 Box orders undated for the Olympic Theatre? |
10851 | DEAR B.B.--Could you dream of my publishing without sending a copy to you? |
10851 | Dabam-- what is it? |
10851 | Dare I pick out what most pleases me? |
10851 | Dear B.B.--What will you say to my not writing? |
10851 | Dear FUGUE- IST, or hear''st thou rather CONTRAPUNTIST--? |
10851 | Dear N., will these lines do? |
10851 | Dear Patmore-- Excuse my anxiety-- but how is Dash? |
10851 | Dear Raffaele Haydon,--Did the maid tell you I came to see your picture, not on Sunday but the day before? |
10851 | Dear Sir,--If convenient, will you give us house room on Saturday next? |
10851 | Dec. 21, 1833 Russell, J. Fuller, to Summer, 1834 Sargus, Mr., to Feb. 23, 1815 Scott, John, to? |
10851 | Dec.,--? |
10851 | Did G.D. send his penny tract to me to convert me to Unitarianism? |
10851 | Did I not, in your person, make the handsomest apology for absent- of- mind people that was ever made? |
10851 | Did I tell you of a pleasant sketch Hood has done, which he calls_ Very Deaf Indeed_? |
10851 | Did not the Blue Girl remind you of some of Congreve''s women? |
10851 | Did the eyes come away kindly with no Oedipean avulsion? |
10851 | Did you ever read my"Adventures of Ulysses,"founded on Chapman''s old translation of it? |
10851 | Did you ever taste frogs? |
10851 | Did you flesh maiden teeth in it? |
10851 | Did you get one in which I sent you an extract from the poems of Lord Sterling? |
10851 | Did you see a sonnet of mine in Blackwood''s last? |
10851 | Do children die so often, and so good, in your parts? |
10851 | Do n''t you see there''s_ He, myself_, and_ him_; why not both_ him_? |
10851 | Do we come into the world with different necks? |
10851 | Do you get paunch for him? |
10851 | Do you go on with your Quaker Sonnets--[to] have''em ready with Southey''s Book of the Church? |
10851 | Do you know any poor solitary human that wants that cordial to life a-- true friend? |
10851 | Do you know anybody that wants charades, or such things, for Albums? |
10851 | Do you mean I must pay the postage? |
10851 | Do you never Londonize again? |
10851 | Do you never leave early? |
10851 | Do you observe my direction? |
10851 | Do you see Mitford? |
10851 | Do you see it? |
10851 | Do you see the Author of May you Like it? |
10851 | Do you see the"New Monthly"? |
10851 | Do you trouble yourself about Libel cases? |
10851 | Do you understand? |
10851 | Do you write to him? |
10851 | Do your Drummonds allow no holydays? |
10851 | Do"Friends"allow puns? |
10851 | Does Mary Hazlitt go on with her novel, or has she begun another? |
10851 | Does he talk of moving this quarter? |
10851 | Does his tail wag horizontally or perpendicularly? |
10851 | Dost thou love picking meat? |
10851 | Doth Lucy go to Balls? |
10851 | Early 1834?] |
10851 | Early Dec., 1822 Knowles, James Sheridan, to? |
10851 | Early Oct., 1832 Thomas, to Nov. 11, 1822 Rogers, Samuel, to March 22, 1829 Oct. 5, 1830? |
10851 | Else, why does not wine choke us? |
10851 | Elton borrowed the"Aids"from Hessey( by the way what is your Enigma about Cupid? |
10851 | En Passant, J''aime entendre da mon bon hommè sur surveillance de croix, ma pas l''homme figuratif-- do you understand me? |
10851 | Faint who have visited Hastings? |
10851 | Feb. 15, 1802? |
10851 | Feb. 20, 21 and 22, 1806 March,-- June 2,--? |
10851 | For literary news, in my poor way, I have a one- act farce going to be acted at the Haymarket; but when? |
10851 | Free from care and toil indeed? |
10851 | Free to wander amongst men When and howsoe''er thou wilt? |
10851 | Gillman, James, to May 2, 1821 Oct. 26, 1829? |
10851 | Goes he muzzled, or_ aperto ore_? |
10851 | H.F., to Oct. 14, 1823 April 3, 1826 May 6, 1831 Sept. 9, 1833( from Charles and Mary Lamb) Sept. 12, 1834 Oct.-- Oct. 18,-- Chambers, Charles, to? |
10851 | HERE HE IS what follows? |
10851 | Had you no complement of boiled neck of mutton before it, to blunt the edge of delicate desire? |
10851 | Has Moxon sent you"Elia,"second volume? |
10851 | Has Mrs. He- mans( double masculine) done anything pretty lately? |
10851 | Has he bit any of the children yet? |
10851 | Has it more significance than"bright"? |
10851 | Has it not reach''d you, that you are silent about it? |
10851 | Has the irriverent ark- toucher been struck blind I wonder--? |
10851 | Has your pa[1] any scrap? |
10851 | Have I seen him at Montacute''s? |
10851 | Have you done any sonnets, can you send me any to overlook? |
10851 | Have you heard it? |
10851 | Have you heard_ the Creature_ at the Opera House-- Signor Non- vir sed VELUTI Vir? |
10851 | Have you seen Fearn''s_ Anti- Tooke_? |
10851 | Have you seen it? |
10851 | Have you seen my friend White? |
10851 | Have you thought of inquiring Miss Wilson''s change of abode? |
10851 | He acts Ignoramus in the play so thoroughly, that you w''d swear that in the inmost marrow of his head( is not this the proper anatomical term?) |
10851 | He adds,"How some parsons would have goggled and what would Hannah More say? |
10851 | Here I am, able to compose a sensible rational apology, and what signifies how I got here? |
10851 | Here am I, quit of worldly affairs of every kind; for if superannuation does not mean that, what does it mean? |
10851 | Honour where honour is due; but should he ever visit us,( do you think he ever will, Mary?) |
10851 | Hood to our new mansion, lest she envy it,& rote[? |
10851 | Hoods, the Thomas, to( from Mary Lamb)? |
10851 | How are all the Wordsworths and all the Southeys? |
10851 | How can I account for having not visited Highgate this long time? |
10851 | How can I confute them by opening it, when a note of yours might slip out,& we get in a hobble? |
10851 | How did you like Hartley''s sonnets? |
10851 | How do you make your pigs so little? |
10851 | How do, Jane?" |
10851 | How is Kenney? |
10851 | How is Talma, and his( my) dear Shakspeare? |
10851 | How now? |
10851 | How, especially, is Victoria? |
10851 | Humphreys, Miss, to Jan. 27 1821 Hunt, Leigh, to April 18,--? |
10851 | I admire the petty- toes shrouded in a veil of something, not_ mud_, but that warm soft consistency with[? |
10851 | I come, my dear-- Where is the Indigo Sale Book? |
10851 | I do not know who they have got in that young line, besides Miss C.F., at Drury, nor how you would like Elliston to have it-- has he not had it? |
10851 | I do sadly want those 2 last Hogarths-- and an''t I to have the Play? |
10851 | I feel queer at returning it( who does not?). |
10851 | I get nothing by any of''em, not even a Copy-- Thank you for your warm interest about my little volume, for the critics on which I care[? |
10851 | I have imagined a chorus of ill- used authors singing on the occasion: What should we when Booksellers break? |
10851 | I have lost Mr. Aitken''s Town address-- do you know it? |
10851 | I want to be going, to the Jardin des Plantes( is that right, Louisa?) |
10851 | I want to hear about Hone, does he stand above water, how is his son? |
10851 | I wish all the ink in the ocean dried up, and would listen to the quills shivering[? |
10851 | I would not go four miles to visit Sebastian Bach- or Batch- which is it? |
10851 | If I knew your bookseller, I''d order it for you at a venture:''tis two octavos, Longman and Co. Or do you read now? |
10851 | If a thing is good, why invidiously bring it into light with something better? |
10851 | If we are to go 3 times a day to church, why has Sunday slipped into the notion of a_ Holli_day? |
10851 | In the mean time will you dine with me at 1/2 past four to- morrow? |
10851 | In the mean while, could you not run down some week day( afternoon, say) and sleep at the Horse Shoe? |
10851 | Intelligisne? |
10851 | Is S.''s Christian name Thomas? |
10851 | Is Sir Walter to be applied to, and by what channel? |
10851 | Is Sunday, not divinely speaking, but humanly and holydaysically, a blessing? |
10851 | Is Taylor or Hessey dead? |
10851 | Is he not a noble boy? |
10851 | Is he there? |
10851 | Is his general deportment cheerful? |
10851 | Is it Gallic?--Classical? |
10851 | Is it a fatality in me, that every thing I touch turns into a Lye? |
10851 | Is it in good forwardness? |
10851 | Is it possible a letter has miscarried? |
10851 | Is it possible they can be any relations? |
10851 | Is it to be made to match a drawing? |
10851 | Is it worth Forster''s while to enquire after them? |
10851 | Is it worth postage? |
10851 | Is she of the heav''nborn Three, Meek Hope, strong Faith, sweet Charity? |
10851 | Is there any distinctive mark under our left ears? |
10851 | Is there no Blackwood this month? |
10851 | Is there no middle way of adjusting this fine embarrassment? |
10851 | It is not George 3 trying the 100th psalm? |
10851 | It runs thus:"It had been proposed by L. that W.W. should be the Possessor of[? |
10851 | Jan. 23, 1800? |
10851 | June 29,-- Late July-- Aug. 24,-- About Sept. 20,-- Jan. 28, 1798 Early Summer,--? |
10851 | June 7, 1809 Oct. 30,-- Aug. 13, 1814 Aug. 26,-- Dec. 24, 1818? |
10851 | Know you any one that has it, and would exchange it? |
10851 | Know you of it? |
10851 | LETTER 375 CHARLES LAMB TO HENRY COLBURN(?) |
10851 | LETTER 447 CHARLES LAMB TO EDWARD MOXON[ P.M.(? |
10851 | LETTER 482 CHARLES LAMB TO H. CRABB ROBINSON[ P.M. April? |
10851 | LETTER 495(_? |
10851 | LETTER 510 CHARLES LAMB TO JAMES GILLMAN[? |
10851 | LETTER 511 CHARLES LAMB TO JACOB VALE ASBURY[? |
10851 | LETTER 544 CHARLES LAMB TO JOHN FORSTER[? |
10851 | LETTER 545 CHARLES LAMB TO EDWARD MOXON(?) |
10851 | Lamb says:"Will you re- give, or_ lend_ me, by the bearer, the one Volume of juvenile Poetry? |
10851 | Lastly, I much like the Heron,''tis exquisite: know you Lord Thurlow''s Sonnet to a Bird of that sort on Lacken water? |
10851 | Late-- April 25, 1823(?) |
10851 | Late--? |
10851 | Lurks that fair island in verity in the bosom of Lake Maggiore, or some other with less poetic name, which thou hast Cornwallized for the occasion? |
10851 | March, 1804 Late July,-- Late July,--( from Mary Lamb)? |
10851 | Mary''s love? |
10851 | Mary, Mary, quite contrary, how does your garden grow? |
10851 | May 26, 1820 Dibdin, John Bates, to? |
10851 | May, 1825 Childs, Mr., to? |
10851 | May, 1829? |
10851 | Mr.------, whose name you have left illegible( is it_ Sea- gull_?) |
10851 | My advice is, to borrow it rather than read[? |
10851 | My dear Friend,--Day after day has passed away, and my brother has said,"I will write to Mrs.[? |
10851 | My dear Friend,--How do you like Harwood? |
10851 | My dear T.,--Now can not I call him_ Serjeant_; what is there in a coif? |
10851 | N.B.--What is good for a desperate head- ache? |
10851 | Need he add loves to Wife, Sister, and all? |
10851 | Nov. 10, 1829 May 14, 1830 Nov. 8,-- Mrs. Vincent, to( from Mary Lamb) Spring, 1820 Ollier, Charles, to? |
10851 | Nov. 2, 1824 John Payne, to Dec 10, 1817 May 16, 1821 Cottle, Joseph, to Nov. 5, 1819? |
10851 | Nov. 25, 1824 Jan. 20, 1825 March 1,-- April 18,-- James, Miss Sarah, to? |
10851 | Nov. 29,-- Nov. 30-- March 8, 1830? |
10851 | Nov., 1824 Dec., 1827 Hutchinson, Sarah, to( from Mary Lamb) Aug. 29 1815 Aug. 20,-- Oct. 19,--( from Mary Lamb) Middle of Nov., 1816? |
10851 | O MARIA, MARIA, valdè CONTRARIA, quomodo crescit hortulus tuus? |
10851 | Oct.-- Jan. 17, 1825 Sept. 9,-- Sept. 24,-- Dec. 5,--? |
10851 | Of this pray resolve me immediately, for my albumess will be catechised on this subject; and how can I prompt her? |
10851 | Oh B.C., my whole heart is faint, and my whole head is sick( how is it?) |
10851 | Old Tycho Brahe and modern Herschel Had something in them; but who''s Purcel? |
10851 | Once in the flight of ages past, There lived a man:--and WHO was HE? |
10851 | Or did he think his cheap publication would bring over the Methodists over the way here? |
10851 | Or did sweet sounds from seraphs''strings Waft thee from earth to heaven? |
10851 | Or else be drowned in thy contemplation? |
10851 | Or some Cherub? |
10851 | Or wouldst thou in a moment laugh and weep? |
10851 | Or wouldst thou lose thyself, and catch no harm, And find thyself again without a charm? |
10851 | PROCTER[? |
10851 | Poor Relations is tolerable-- but where shall I get another subject-- or who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
10851 | Pray, how may I venture to return it to Mr. Shewell at Ipswich? |
10851 | Pray, is there anything new from the admired pen of the author of the_ Pleasures of Hope_? |
10851 | Procter? Summer From facsimile in Mrs. Field''s_ A Shelf of Old Authors_. |
10851 | Proctor has acted a friendly part-- when did he otherwise? |
10851 | Put me down seven shillings( was n''t it?) |
10851 | Quâ ratione assimulandus sit equus TREMULO? |
10851 | Rogers approving, who can demur? |
10851 | See you? |
10851 | Sept. 26,-- Dec. 22,--? |
10851 | Sept.,-- July 17, 1827? |
10851 | Sept.18, 1805 Early Nov.,-- Nov. 9 and 14,--? |
10851 | Shall I go on with the Table talk? |
10851 | Shall I order a copy for you, and will you accept it? |
10851 | Shall I say two? |
10851 | Shall not I, think you, be covered with a red suffusion? |
10851 | Should not"Last Essays& c."head them? |
10851 | Sit down, good B.B., in the Banking Office; what, is there not from six to Eleven P.M. 6 days in the week, and is there not all Sunday? |
10851 | So you still want a motto? |
10851 | So"perish the roses and the flowers"--how is it? |
10851 | Spring,-- March 30,-- Spring,--? |
10851 | Spring,-- May 12,-- Coleridge, S.T., to? |
10851 | Steele, giving an account of Selkirk? |
10851 | Summer, 1819 Jan 10, 1820? |
10851 | Summer, 1821 April 13, 1823 Nov. 11, 1824 Jan. 19, 1829 Jan. 22,--? |
10851 | THE ASS Call you this friendship? |
10851 | Tell me how you like"Barbara S."--will it be received in atonement for the foolish Vision, I mean by the Lady? |
10851 | Ten years ago I literally did not know the point from the broad end of the Vane, which it was the[? that] indicated the Quarter. |
10851 | Tenuistine? |
10851 | That Lee Priory must be a dainty bower, is it built of flints, and does it stand at Kingsgate? |
10851 | That it may be a long one, can not you secure places now for Mrs. Novello yourself and the Clarkes? |
10851 | The bellows might be trumped up, but where did the painter spring from? |
10851 | The costume( will he agnize it?) |
10851 | The fable? |
10851 | The lines are at the end of a little poem of his, called Milestones--(Do you remember it or shall I write it all out?) |
10851 | The moral? |
10851 | The passage runs, answering the question,"What is an Album?" |
10851 | The subject? |
10851 | Then why"to minstrel''s glance"? |
10851 | There are no Quaker Circulating Libraries? |
10851 | There is a march of Science; but who shall beat the drums for its retreat? |
10851 | There is no doubt of its being the work of some ill- disposed rustic; but how is he to be discovered? |
10851 | To get out of home themes, have you seen Southey''s Dialogues? |
10851 | To the young Vesper- singer, Great Bealing''s, Playford, and what not? |
10851 | To this dry drudgery of the desk''s dead wood? |
10851 | Was the crackling the colour of the ripe pomegranate? |
10851 | Was the dark secret to be explored to end in the seducing of a weak girl, which might have been accomplished by earthly agency? |
10851 | We have a sure hot joint on a Sunday, and when had we better? |
10851 | Were angels, with expanded wings, As guides and guardians given? |
10851 | What are T. and H. about? |
10851 | What are we better than they? |
10851 | What are you laughing at?" |
10851 | What can a mortal desire more for his bi- parted nature? |
10851 | What can twenty votes do for one hundred and two widows? |
10851 | What did he do? |
10851 | What do you advise me? |
10851 | What does Elia( or Peter) care for dates? |
10851 | What does me? |
10851 | What has fate Not given to thee in thy well- chosen mate? |
10851 | What have I gained by health? |
10851 | What have I with Time to do?} |
10851 | What is Henry about? |
10851 | What is Poole about,& c.? |
10851 | What is a maiden''s"een,"south of the Tweed? |
10851 | What is all this to your Letter? |
10851 | What is the Enigma? |
10851 | What is the news? |
10851 | What is the reason we do not sympathise with pain, short of some terrible Surgical operation? |
10851 | What is"sheen"? |
10851 | What then w''d be my reply to the above question? |
10851 | What will he do in Paradise? |
10851 | What''s her address? |
10851 | What, old friend, and art thou freed From the bondage of the pen? |
10851 | What_ one_ point is there of interest? |
10851 | When a lady loses her good_ name_, what is to become of her? |
10851 | When shall I ever see them again? |
10851 | When shall we eat another Goosepye together? |
10851 | Where are they? |
10851 | Where shall I get such full flavor''d Geneva again? |
10851 | Where will these things end? |
10851 | Whether it is that the Magazine paying me so much a page, I am loath to throw away composition-- how much a sheet do you give your correspondents? |
10851 | Whither can I take wing from the oppression of human faces? |
10851 | Who is Badman, or Bed''em? |
10851 | Who played the oboe? |
10851 | Who shall call this man a Quack hereafter? |
10851 | Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
10851 | Who shall persuade the boor that phosphor will not ignite? |
10851 | Who that standeth, knoweth but he may yet fall? |
10851 | Who the deuce painted it? |
10851 | Who was it? |
10851 | Why am I restive? |
10851 | Why any week? |
10851 | Why did you give it me? |
10851 | Why did you not stay, or come again, yesterday? |
10851 | Why does not A come and see me? |
10851 | Why does not his guardian angel look to him? |
10851 | Why is a horse like a Quaker? |
10851 | Why not come down by the Green Lanes on Sunday? |
10851 | Why set the word against the word? |
10851 | Why sleeps the lyre of Hervey, and of Alaric Watts? |
10851 | Why tarry the wheels of my Hogarth? |
10851 | Why the next? |
10851 | Why"ee"--barbarous Scoticism!--when"eye"is much better and chimes to"cavalry"? |
10851 | Why"glinting,"Scotch, when"glancing"is English? |
10851 | Will it do? |
10851 | Will you address him on the subject, or shall I-- that is, Mary? |
10851 | Will you come to us then? |
10851 | Will you convey the inclosed by hand? |
10851 | Will you do me the favor to forward the other volume to Southey? |
10851 | Will you let me know the day before? |
10851 | Will you oblige us by securing us beds at some house from which a stage goes to the Bank in the morning? |
10851 | Will you pardon my neglect? |
10851 | Will you set your wits to a dog? |
10851 | Will you write to him about it? |
10851 | Will your occasions or inclination bring_ you_ to London? |
10851 | Would Saturdy serve? |
10851 | Would Wilberforce give us our Tuesdays? |
10851 | Would a high- born man in those days_ sneer_ at a daughter''s disgrace-- would he_ only_ sneer? |
10851 | Would clod be any thing but a clod, if he could resist it? |
10851 | Would his Schoolmistress, the prettiest of poems, have been better, if he had used quite the Goody''s own language? |
10851 | Would you call an omnibus to take you to Shene? |
10851 | Wouldst read_ thyself_, and read thou knowst not what, And yet know whether thou art blest or not By reading the same lines? |
10851 | Wouldst thou be in a dream, and yet not sleep? |
10851 | Wouldst thou be pleasant, yet be far from folly? |
10851 | Wouldst thou read riddles and their explanation? |
10851 | You are worst of nights, a''nt you? |
10851 | You can scarcely scrue a smile out of your face-- can you? |
10851 | You do not know the Watfords? |
10851 | You feel awkward at re- taking it( who ought not?) |
10851 | You had all some of the crackling--and brain sauce-- did you remember to rub it with butter, and gently dredge it a little, just before the crisis? |
10851 | You have received £30 from Harwood, I hope? |
10851 | You never was rack''d, was you? |
10851 | You remember Emma, that you were so kind as to invite to your ball? |
10851 | You stop the arm of a murderer, or arrest the finger of a pickpurse, but is not the guilt incurred as much by the intent as if never so much acted? |
10851 | You understand music?... |
10851 | [ August 17, 1821(?).] |
10851 | [ Dated at end: June 14(? |
10851 | [? |
10851 | [? |
10851 | [_ Added on cover_:--] What separation will there be between the friend''s preface, and THE ESSAYS? |
10851 | _ I?_ It is time to have done my incoherences. |
10851 | _ Louisa_--_Clare_--by which name shall I call thee? |
10851 | _ N''import_--havn''t I Miss Many Things coming? |
10851 | _ N.B._ I am not_ therefore_ going to die.--Would it be unpleasant for you to be named for one? |
10851 | _ One_ why should I forget? |
10851 | _ Sir_( as I say to Southey) will you come and see us at our poor cottage of Colebrook to tea tomorrow evening, as early as six? |
10851 | an me Anglicè et barbarice ad te hominem perdoctum scribere oportet? |
10851 | and did you guess whose it was? |
10851 | and how often in a day do we do without it, just as well? |
10851 | and was this a fourteener to be rejected by a trumpery annual? |
10851 | and what is the loss of it? |
10851 | and what should one wish for him? |
10851 | could Nature have made that sloping lane, not to facilitate the down- going? |
10851 | diem perdidi?_ There is no Titus play among the Garrick Extracts.] |
10851 | explaining your dogmas-- waiting on the Spirit-- by the analogy of human calmness and patient waiting on the judgment? |
10851 | good friend, what profit can you see In hating such an hateless thing as me? |
10851 | in? |
10851 | must I go on to drivelling? |
10851 | not by the fair hands of nymphs, the Buffam Graces? |
10851 | or do you grow rich and indolent now? |
10851 | or must I write in barbarous English to a scholar like you? |
10851 | or pledged it with a gondolierer for a passage? |
10851 | or wouldst thou see A man i''th''clouds, and hear him speak to thee? |
10851 | return it) for a month or two? |
10851 | says one of our waywardens or parish overseers,--What business is this of_ yours_? |
10851 | silent? |
10851 | what am I now? |
10851 | what is a Leadenhall clerk or India pensioner to a deputy Grecian? |
10851 | what matters it what you lead, if you can no longer fancy him looking over you? |
10851 | why stands my sun upon Gibeah? |
23639 | And are not mischances misfortunes in those matters wherein we mischance? |
23639 | And are not slips mischances in those matters wherein we slip? |
23639 | Are we,said he,"to leave the question unanswered, or are we to reply to his argument in his absence as if he were present?" |
23639 | Certainly,said Daphnæus,"what else could they mean?" |
23639 | Did n''t you hear the news? |
23639 | Malignant wretch, why art so keen to mark Thy neighbour''s fault, and seest not thine own? 23639 See you the boundless reach of sky above, And how it holds the earth in its soft arms?" |
23639 | What grace or pleasure in life is there without golden Aphrodite? 23639 What news?" |
23639 | What then? |
23639 | Why then did you not tell me of it at once? |
23639 | Why then has he not come? |
23639 | You are always extolling people of no merit: for who is this fellow, or what has he said or done out of the common? |
23639 | [ 207] Why should not you also say,If men are not better for learning, the money paid to tutors is also lost?" |
23639 | [ 250] who on earth could be ignorant of so great a change happening to himself, of virtue blazing forth so completely all at once? 23639 [ 480] And,"Where is thy bow, where thy wing''d arrows, Pandarus, Where thy great fame, which no one here can match? |
23639 | [ 481] Such language again plainly cheers very much those that are down as,Where now is Oedipus, and his famous riddles? |
23639 | [ 482] and,Does much- enduring Hercules say this? |
23639 | [ 516] And Domitius said to Crassus,Did you not weep for the lamprey that was bred in your fishpond, and died?" |
23639 | [ 56] What hope of gain or advantage had they in those days? 23639 [ 727] What prevents our imitating such men as these? |
23639 | [ 729] Or has any bad luck or contumely fallen on you in consequence of some calumny or from envy? 23639 [ 783] And,"What think you these wretches would have said, if the states had departed, when I was curiously discussing these points? |
23639 | [ 7] But why pursue the line of argument further? 23639 [ 946] And does not justice, and fairness, and sobriety, and decorum rule the affairs of mortals? |
23639 | [ 949] For what can be found out or learnt by men, if everything is due to fortune? 23639 _ G._ Is''t in your ears or in your mind you''re grieved? |
23639 | ''Have they not,''he replied,''been long bearing false witness against me, crying out that I had killed my father?'' |
23639 | ''How in the name of Heaven?'' |
23639 | ''See you how great a goddess Aphrodite is? |
23639 | ''[ 87] And what difference is there between calling in question the received opinion about Zeus or Athene, and that about Love? |
23639 | ''[ 97] And shall no god or good genius assist and prosper the man who hunts in the best chase of all, the chase of friendship? |
23639 | 10- 12? |
23639 | 1? |
23639 | 5, 19:"Quid fraudare juvat vitem crescentibus uvis?" |
23639 | 90:"Quo teneam vultus mutantem Protea nodo?" |
23639 | 97? |
23639 | And Agesilaus said of the great king,"How is he better than me, if he is not more upright?" |
23639 | And Aristippus, when there was anger between him and Æschines, and somebody said,"O Aristippus, where is now your friendship?" |
23639 | And King Antigonus asked Cleanthes, when he saw him at Athens after a long interval,"Do you still grind, Cleanthes?" |
23639 | And among you Thebans, Pemptides, is it not usual for the lover to give his boy- love a complete suit of armour when he is enrolled among the men? |
23639 | And are not those who express their meaning by signs without words wonderfully praised and admired? |
23639 | And are these the only things that teach the power of diligence? |
23639 | And dare not you stand up boldly against him for what is right?" |
23639 | And did not Hannibal the Carthaginian use freedom of speech to Antiochus, though he was an exile, and Antiochus a king? |
23639 | And did not Hegesias by his speeches make, many of his hearers to commit suicide? |
23639 | And he replied,"If not all, but only some, of it is true, do you not think that the subject presents the same difficulty?" |
23639 | And he wondering and saying,"Why all these legal forms, Persæus?" |
23639 | And if anyone would also constantly put to himself that question of Plato,"Am I myself all I should be?" |
23639 | And if their union is seasonable, who knows but that she may be a better partner for him than any young woman? |
23639 | And is not the god himself short and concise in his oracles? |
23639 | And on her trying to deny it, and saying,"Were there not three hundred Senators that heard of it as well as you? |
23639 | And on his inquiring,"What, nothing more?" |
23639 | And so Diogenes, when Plato was being praised, said,"What has he to vaunt of, who has been a philosopher so long, and yet never gave pain to anyone?" |
23639 | And so that was a wise answer of Philippides the Comic Poet, when King Lysimachus asked him on one occasion,"What would you like to have of mine?" |
23639 | And someone asks Hercules,''Did you obtain the girl''s favour by force or by persuasion?'' |
23639 | And that Lasthenes and Euthycrates lost Olynthus, measuring happiness by their belly and lusts? |
23639 | And that Scipio after taking Carthage neither saw nor received any of the spoil? |
23639 | And that she has gone to a place where she is out of pain ought not to pain us, for what evil can we mourn for on her account if her pains are over? |
23639 | And the general Iphicrates well answered Callias, the son of Chabrias, who asked him,"What are you? |
23639 | And to another such fellow, who said after a long rigmarole,"Did I weary you, philosopher, by my chatter?" |
23639 | And were not the murderers of Ibycus similarly captured? |
23639 | And what constitution so good but it is marred and impaired by sloth, luxury, and too full habit? |
23639 | And what deliberative assembly of a state is not annulled, what council of a king is not abrogated, if all things are subject to fortune? |
23639 | And what horses broken in young are not docile to their riders? |
23639 | And what if she plumes herself somewhat on the lustre of her race? |
23639 | And what trees do not by neglect become gnarled and unfruitful, whereas by pruning they become fruitful and productive? |
23639 | And what weak constitution has not derived benefit from exercise and athletics? |
23639 | And when Daphnæus had repeated the lines, my father resumed,"In the name of Zeus, is not this plainly a divine seizure? |
23639 | And when Metrocles answered,"Her fault, but your misfortune,"he rejoined,"How say you? |
23639 | And when Metrocles reproached him with her life, he said,"Is it my fault or hers?" |
23639 | And when he admitted that it was so, he went on to say,"Ought I not then to condole with you rather than you with me?" |
23639 | And when the company said, as it was likely they would,''Whatever makes you act in such a strange manner?'' |
23639 | And who was the father of Codrus that reigned at Athens? |
23639 | And who would say that the anger of Magas against Philemon was equal to that of Nicocreon against Anaxarchus? |
23639 | And why not, to get well? |
23639 | And why should we be surprised at similar cases, seeing that we find many of the savagest animals docile and tame by training? |
23639 | And yet it is perhaps ridiculous to be indignant about law and justice, when nature itself is trampled upon by being thus subjected to women? |
23639 | And you know of course how it was that Cleomachus the Pharsalian fell in battle?" |
23639 | And you too, Sir, I would say to a curious person, why do you pry into what is hidden? |
23639 | Are not faults also slips?" |
23639 | Are we to say that man does not love himself by nature, because many cut their throats or throw themselves down precipices? |
23639 | Are you afraid? |
23639 | Are you angry? |
23639 | Are you by nature fond of gazing at little or great things? |
23639 | Are you distressed at the pinch of poverty? |
23639 | Are you going to read it more than once to the jury?" |
23639 | Are you in love? |
23639 | Are you of a jealous turn? |
23639 | As if any dropsical person, whose body was greatly swollen and who was very weak, should say to his doctor,"Am I then to become lean and empty?" |
23639 | But Pisias jumped up and cried out,"Ye gods, what will be the end of license like this which will overthrow our town? |
23639 | But Socrates said to him,"Did not a hen at your house the other day fly in and act in the very same way? |
23639 | But curious people shun the country as stale and dull and too quiet, and push into warehouses and markets and harbours, asking,"Any news? |
23639 | But how then will you find fault with your friend if he makes mistakes in business? |
23639 | But if words are neither useful to the speaker, nor necessary for the hearer, nor contain any pleasure or charm, why are they spoken? |
23639 | But now each of us, when angry and punishing, quote the words of Aristides and Cato,"Do not steal, Do not tell lies,"and"Why are you lazy?" |
23639 | But what are the next lines of Euripides? |
23639 | But why dwell on this? |
23639 | But why need I mention these? |
23639 | But why need I speak of our various passions? |
23639 | But, generally speaking, who has the right to blame the person who has not kept his secret? |
23639 | But, of all the multitude of lovers, did you ever hear of one that prostituted his boy- love even for the honours of Zeus? |
23639 | Can any other word lurk under it? |
23639 | Can it be connected with[ Greek: arma]? |
23639 | Can you not be a schoolmaster or tutor, or porter, or sailor, or make coasting voyages? |
23639 | Can[ Greek: phthonou]--[Greek: heteron] be an account of[ Greek: epichairekakia]? |
23639 | Compare also the following lines,"How should I boast? |
23639 | Consider also that very philosophical and witty answer of Diogenes to the man who asked,"How shall I avenge myself on my enemy?" |
23639 | Did he take a yoke of oxen from the field, did he come home smelling of yesterday''s debauch? |
23639 | Did not Oedipus put out his eyes? |
23639 | Did you court the friendship of some great man, and meet with a rebuff? |
23639 | Did you exchange no words with those that have just arrived from Italy?" |
23639 | Did you not pass by the officers''quarters? |
23639 | Didst not thou offer such a one to Socrates? |
23639 | Diogenes despises thee, who cried out, as he was being sold by some robbers,"Who will buy a master?" |
23639 | Disorders, of mind or body, which worse? |
23639 | Do they not sometimes get called waspish and shrewish by virtue of their very chastity? |
23639 | Do we not see that all men adore the temple of Theseus as well as the Parthenon and Eleusinium? |
23639 | Do you ask this, having two hands, two legs, and a tongue, in short, being a man, to love and be loved, to give and receive benefits? |
23639 | Do you desire anything? |
23639 | Do you not see how many opportunities there are both on land and sea? |
23639 | Do you see what fruits virtue yields? |
23639 | Do you see yon great and promiscuous crowd jostling against one another and surging round the rostrum and forum? |
23639 | Do you suspect? |
23639 | Do you think things in the town change every three hours?" |
23639 | Does an orator ask a favour of you when you are acting as juryman, or a demagogue when you are sitting in council? |
23639 | Dost thou bring slavery, and bondage, and sale? |
23639 | Dost thou mix a cup of poison? |
23639 | For an opportunity will offer itself to say,"Are those actions worthy to be compared with these? |
23639 | For example, does childlessness trouble you? |
23639 | For example, why are the children of those that have died of consumption or dropsy bidden to sit with their feet in water till the dead body is burnt? |
23639 | For he being bothered with a talkative fellow, and wearied out with his absurd tales, and his frequent question,"Is not this wonderful, Aristotle?" |
23639 | For he that anticipates by his own answer the person that was asked the question seems to say,"What is the good of asking him? |
23639 | For how did the Messenians who were killed long before derive any benefit from the punishment of Aristocrates? |
23639 | For how does plenty of room bring about an easy life? |
23639 | For instance, if anyone asked,"Is Socrates at home?" |
23639 | For they are slaves to all money- lenders,[888] and not to them only, what would there be so monstrous in that? |
23639 | For they say,"''Our life''s but a span;''[37] we can only live once; why should you heed your father''s threats? |
23639 | For what island has not a house, a promenade, a bath, and fish and hares for those who love fishing and field- sports? |
23639 | For who ever bestowed such encomium upon his country as Euripides did in the following lines? |
23639 | Fortune, dost thou threaten poverty? |
23639 | Good also is it for the matron, when she has the mirror in her hands, if not handsome to say to herself,"What should I be, if I were not virtuous?" |
23639 | Granted she loves sway and is rich? |
23639 | Has Homer come to life again?" |
23639 | Has your son deceived you by the help of a slave? |
23639 | Has your wife been seduced? |
23639 | Have not chaste women often something of the morose and peevish in their character almost past bearing? |
23639 | Have you again had matters to deal with that required labour and thought? |
23639 | Have you anything? |
23639 | Have you been rather near? |
23639 | Have you been vexed? |
23639 | Have you failed to get some office? |
23639 | Have you not been in the market? |
23639 | Have you nothing? |
23639 | Have you observed the ape? |
23639 | He will say,"How can they open their mouths against you, or what can they urge, if you give up and abandon what you get this bad name about?" |
23639 | Hiero was twitted by one of his enemies for his foul breath, so he went home and said to his wife,"How is this? |
23639 | How come you to know all this?" |
23639 | How did Solon benefit the Athenians by ordaining that debtors should no longer have to pay in person? |
23639 | How do we do when it rains, or when the North Wind doth blow? |
23639 | How else indeed could the flatterer insinuate himself by the pleasure he gives, unless he knew that friendship admitted the pleasurable element? |
23639 | How is this? |
23639 | How then is the flatterer convicted, and by what differences is he detected, of being only a counterfeit, and not really like his victim? |
23639 | How then, will you say, am I to maintain myself? |
23639 | How will you be able to correct him, if he acts improperly in reference to some office, or marriage, or the state? |
23639 | I now turn my attention to those who are rich and luxurious, and use language like the following,"Am I then to go without slaves and hearth and home?" |
23639 | I would reply, What have we not? |
23639 | If a young ass kicked me would you have me kick it back?" |
23639 | If however the person who meets him says he has no news, he will say somewhat peevishly,"No news, Sir? |
23639 | In such a case as this which of us would not have broken the walls with vociferation? |
23639 | In the first place then it seems to me that what is most injurious in enmity may become most useful to those that pay attention to it? |
23639 | In what cases then ought a friend to be vehement, and when ought he to use emphatic freedom of language? |
23639 | Indeed, how can it be otherwise, seeing that we repudiate wisdom, which is like plucking out our eyes, and take a blind guide of our lives? |
23639 | Is he not afraid or ashamed to press you to what is not right? |
23639 | Is he not called Loxias,[597] because he prefers ambiguity to longwindedness? |
23639 | Is he scented like a perfume shop? |
23639 | Is it grievous? |
23639 | Is it grievous?" |
23639 | Is it not easy then to put to the test many friends, and to associate with many friends at the same time, or is this impossible? |
23639 | Is it that he should instruct nobody, inspire in nobody an emulation for virtue, and be to nobody a pattern in good? |
23639 | Is it that vice is universal? |
23639 | Is not this a wonderful commotion of soul? |
23639 | Is not this an advantage to us? |
23639 | Is there not more extravagance in the love of boys? |
23639 | Is your life so disgraceful that we must all be ignorant of it? |
23639 | Listen to a story about two vultures; one was vomiting and saying it would bring its inside up, and the other who was by said,"What harm if you do? |
23639 | Might not one of them have divulged it?" |
23639 | Nay, there are many such, and shall they not move and provoke love? |
23639 | O sirs, by asserting that virtue is not a thing to be taught, why are we making it unreal? |
23639 | Or wilt thou nail a man on a cross, or impale him on a stake? |
23639 | Saw even Lemnos ever the like of this? |
23639 | So the crowd surrounded this man, and asked him one after the other,"Who are you? |
23639 | So the famous king Antigonus, when his son asked him,"When are we going to shift our quarters?" |
23639 | Suppose someone should say, What blessings have we? |
23639 | Supposing anyone objects:"How so? |
23639 | Then Lysias laughed, and said,"What then? |
23639 | Then said Daphnæus,"In the name of the gods, who thinks differently?" |
23639 | Then said I,"Which of his words has moved you most? |
23639 | Then said I,"Why should we bring up the third wave[814] and drown the argument, if he is not able to refute or evade the charges already brought? |
23639 | Then said Patrocleas,"What oracle do you refer to? |
23639 | To what do I refer? |
23639 | To what is this tongue marching? |
23639 | To which Crassus replied,"Did you weep, when you buried your three wives?" |
23639 | Unable to bear poverty, are you going to put on your back a money- lender, a weight hard to carry even for a rich man? |
23639 | Was Camillus without glory when banished from Rome, of which he is now accounted the second founder? |
23639 | Was he afraid then to entrust a secret to him, to whom he intended one day to leave his kingdom? |
23639 | Was it not Melanthus, an exile from Messene? |
23639 | Was it not the praise of flatterers? |
23639 | Was it of fortune or owing to fortune that Aristides persevered in his poverty, when he might have been lord of much wealth? |
23639 | Was it of fortune or owing to fortune that Philocrates spent on harlots and fish the money he had received from Philip? |
23639 | Was it of fortune that Alexander the son of Philip not only himself abstained from the captive women, but punished others that outraged them? |
23639 | We tolerate the faults of our friends; why should we not that of our sons? |
23639 | Were you not in the market in the forenoon?" |
23639 | What can be made of[ Greek: pollous] here? |
23639 | What cares Theodorus whether he rots above ground or below? |
23639 | What does he know about it? |
23639 | What else brought Nero[398] on the tragic stage, and invested him with the mask and buskins? |
23639 | What else invested Ptolemy[397] with his pipe and fiddle? |
23639 | What fevers, what agues, do not these things cause? |
23639 | What good will come of speaking now, or what harm of silence?" |
23639 | What have I done? |
23639 | What is all this but seeking out excuses for being unthankful to fortune, only to torment and punish oneself? |
23639 | What is hard for exiles? |
23639 | What is huger or more formidable in appearance than the elephant? |
23639 | What is it then? |
23639 | What is the meaning of those common tables of yours? |
23639 | What kind of flatterer then must we be on our guard against? |
23639 | What need was there to bring in Zeus Soter? |
23639 | What obstructions, what irruptions of blood into the air- vessels, what distemperature of heat, what overflow of humours, do not result? |
23639 | What say you? |
23639 | What that I ought to have done left undone?" |
23639 | What then is the difference between these? |
23639 | What then is the purchase- money of friendship? |
23639 | What then, if she is young and handsome? |
23639 | What then? |
23639 | What then? |
23639 | What was his reply? |
23639 | What will become of us?" |
23639 | When Aristippus was asked by someone,"Are you everywhere then?" |
23639 | When Polynices was asked"What is''t to be an exile? |
23639 | When did ever any breath of suspicion sully her house? |
23639 | When did ever any ugly rumour attach itself to her? |
23639 | Where indeed? |
23639 | Where is the reason or justice in all this? |
23639 | Where then is the pleasure of vice, if there is nowhere in it freedom from anxiety and pain, or independence, or tranquillity, or rest? |
23639 | Whereupon Daphnæus,"Do you call the marriage and union of man and woman most disgraceful, than which no holier tie exists nor ever did?" |
23639 | Whereupon Socrates replied,"And you too, sir, would it not have become you to make this remark also privately?" |
23639 | Who exiled these men? |
23639 | Who knows you? |
23639 | Who lives a more quiet life in our town than Ismenodora? |
23639 | Who of the Boeotians would you rather prefer to be than Epaminondas, or of the Romans than Fabricius? |
23639 | Who of those inspired by Cybele are made beside themselves to this extent by the flute and the kettledrum? |
23639 | Who then are made unhappy by these things? |
23639 | Who was this Corax? |
23639 | Why is this the case? |
23639 | Why need I mention the story of Euxynthetus and Leucomantis, the latter of whom is called The Peeping Girl to this day in Cyprus? |
23639 | Why pay court to the banker or trader? |
23639 | Why should it then good and worthy men? |
23639 | Yet what better advice could we give our sons than to follow this? |
23639 | You remember the husband in the play saying to his wife,''Do you hate me? |
23639 | [ 627] Plutarch rather reminds one, in his evident contempt for_ Epitaphs_, of the cynic who asked,"Where are all the bad people buried?" |
23639 | [ 897] Has not that"live unknown"a villainous ring, as though one had broken open graves? |
23639 | [ 939]_ Jocasta._ But did your father''s friends do nothing for you? |
23639 | _ C._ Why do you thus define the seat of grief? |
23639 | _ Flavianus._--Do you know what all of us who have come to this audience intend to ask of you? |
23639 | _ Jocasta._ Did not your good birth better your condition? |
23639 | _ Jocasta._ What is its aspect? |
23639 | _ Jocasta._ What is''t to be an exile? |
23639 | a targeteer? |
23639 | an archer? |
23639 | and in telling the Sybarites that the only end of their troubles would be propitiating by their ruin on three occasions the wrath of Leucadian Hera? |
23639 | and on the king turning angrily to him and saying,"What are you talking about?" |
23639 | and sometimes receiving for answer,"What then? |
23639 | and why alas? |
23639 | answered,"Are you afraid that you only will not hear the trumpet?" |
23639 | answered,"How many do you make me equal to then?" |
23639 | are you not content to die with Phocion?" |
23639 | can anyone bearing the sacred name of father put obliging a petitioner before obtaining the best education for his sons? |
23639 | can you not go rather farther off to run me down?" |
23639 | cavalry, or infantry?" |
23639 | have not poor debtors storms, when the money- lender stands over them and says,_ Pay_? |
23639 | let her answer,"How would he act then, if I were to begin to hate him and injure him?" |
23639 | nay, or even now? |
23639 | or to what could we better exhort them to accustom themselves? |
23639 | poor me, wherever were my brains in my body at the time when I chose that line of conduct, and not this?" |
23639 | said my father,"do you consider Ares a god, or only a human passion?" |
23639 | thou son of brave horse- taming Tydeus, Why dost thou crouch for fear, and watch far off The lines of battle? |
23639 | what that crowd of friends and handsome youths? |
23639 | who credits it?" |
23639 | whom shall we trust?" |
23639 | wishing and teaching her maid to say,"Whatever''s up?" |
23639 | § V. Does then Vice need Fortune to bring about infelicity? |
23639 | § V. How shall you flee from it? |
23639 | § V. What if this natural affection, like many other virtues, is obscured by badness, as a wilderness chokes a garden? |
23639 | § V. Whenever Plato was in company with people who behaved in an unseemly manner, he used to say to himself,"Am I such a person as this? |
40746 | A little ragged urchin of about ten years old rather annoyed me, by jumping up and grinning repeatedly in my face:"Allez, allez, que faites vous là?" |
40746 | Can we then( with any pretence to candour and justice) affect to wonder at the deep- felt disgust and dislike of the French towards us? |
40746 | Combien durerâ t''elle? |
40746 | Did this nation come into the world under the influence of a dancing star? |
40746 | Elle me donnera un sous, n''est ce pas?" |
40746 | He then asked, with some appearance of reproach,"Why the English kept him so barbarously immured in a dreadful prison?" |
40746 | How shall I describe the wonderful manner in which we climbed these frightful eschelles? |
40746 | How was it possible to thread these mazes without thinking of_ Henri quatre_, and his famous hunting adventure in the miller''s hut? |
40746 | How would John Bull have writhed and raged with shame and grief, if the scene had been exhibited_ vice versa_ in our own country? |
40746 | I asked if the latter was the_ cadette_ of the family? |
40746 | I felt( and what Englishwoman ought not to feel?) |
40746 | The host( seeing that we were English) asked if we would not choose our_ pain_ to be_ grillé_? |
40746 | The master of the house, who seemed to think all this very fine, wanted to know if_ Madame_ would not join in the merry dance? |
40746 | We asked him, amongst other questions,"what was the chief manufacture of the place?" |
40746 | Wherefore is it that the imagination feels a charm and a repose so delightful amid scenes of this nature? |
40746 | Why should I attempt to describe Paris? |
40746 | dost think that because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?" |
37998 | A disrespectful Irish member of Parliament, urged by perverse curiosity, asked the Speaker one day:"What would happen if you called me by my name?" |
37998 | Above all, is it beneficial? |
37998 | And these men are to be liberated from the discipline of the moral law? |
37998 | And, above all, ought not Descartes to have given us an explanation of what thought and consciousness are? |
37998 | Are not many beasts physically stronger, more nimble and agile than man? |
37998 | Are the two really different? |
37998 | Brandy undoubtedly produces a sensation of pleasure in the drinker; is brandy, then, good in a moral sense? |
37998 | But at a certain stage of evolution-- how? |
37998 | But by means of what psychic mechanism does this law enforce obedience in the consciousness of man? |
37998 | But can the progress, which can not reasonably be denied in civilization, also be traced in Morality? |
37998 | But how do we come by this law? |
37998 | But what about the effect of the doctrines which they advocated gently or passionately, adducing proofs or uttering threats? |
37998 | But what is conscience found to be if we penetrate the fog of mystic words with which it has come to be surrounded? |
37998 | But what is the good of this self- satisfaction? |
37998 | But what is"the maxim"on which you act? |
37998 | But whence does Reason obtain the standard it applies to the actions of men and their results? |
37998 | But who is the state? |
37998 | But why cudgel one''s brains? |
37998 | But why does He allow it? |
37998 | Does he decide for the good, because after due investigation and consideration he recognized it as preferable, though he might have rejected it? |
37998 | Does he do evil because he willed to do so and not otherwise, although it was in his power to avoid it? |
37998 | Does he only try him in order mercifully to rescue him at the moment when he is about to succumb? |
37998 | Does it stop at that or will it continue? |
37998 | Does the divinity allow man to fall a victim to evil without turning it aside from him? |
37998 | Does this prove the freedom, the absolute independence of these occurrences? |
37998 | Further: must we in the consciousness distinguish between the frame and its contents, the conceptual mechanism and the concept? |
37998 | Has it an aim, and, if so, what? |
37998 | Has it the right to deny life to an entity that does not conceive itself? |
37998 | Has not the carrier pigeon an infinitely better sense of locality than we have? |
37998 | Have we the right to set up a scale of values and place the complicated above the simple? |
37998 | He does not condescend to ask,''What will the world say to this?'' |
37998 | He thereby relinquishes the power to ask any further question except:"Did he act in accordance with his own conscience? |
37998 | How could that possibly be? |
37998 | How did the world come into existence? |
37998 | How does Nature work? |
37998 | How does it acquire the fundamental concepts Good and Bad, and what is their significance? |
37998 | How is such an endeavour possible for a man who does not believe in God and for whom consequently no divine Will exists? |
37998 | How, of what material, and why do we fashion this standard? |
37998 | If he obeys, all is well; but if he takes no notice of it, pays no heed to it, the question arises:"What now? |
37998 | Is he fettered by the chain of causes which have existed eternally and continue to act immutably to all eternity? |
37998 | Is it to be the masses? |
37998 | Is man who perceives, judges, has volition and acts, a free being inwardly? |
37998 | Is not all our knowledge of the world, is not our whole view of Nature an illusion? |
37998 | Is not the mouse''s hearing sharper than ours? |
37998 | Is the consciousness of the man standing upon the highest plane of intellectuality the greatest consciousness possible? |
37998 | Is the decision as to what is right and what is wrong to be left to the subjective judgment of the individual? |
37998 | Is the matter which is absorbed as nourishment ultimately anything different? |
37998 | Is the sheep who trots bleating along with the herd to be taken as the type of a moral being? |
37998 | Is the state bound by a treaty? |
37998 | Is there no consciousness without a conceptual content? |
37998 | It has the power right enough; police, judge, prison and gallows bear witness to that; but has it the right? |
37998 | It is a comedy played to win applause and a call before the curtain? |
37998 | It is supposed to be nothing more than a sort of obsequiousness towards the multitude? |
37998 | Its laws are observed for the sake of pleasing others? |
37998 | Must it honour its signature? |
37998 | Must it perform what it has undertaken to do? |
37998 | Or do the two coincide? |
37998 | Or is man always subject to coercion from which at no time and no place he can escape? |
37998 | Or shall all mankind, or at least the majority, and not the individual, decide what is right? |
37998 | The dog''s scent incomparably more delicate? |
37998 | The eagle''s sight keener? |
37998 | The question, what is life? |
37998 | They are to be superior to the moral law? |
37998 | Was that because the heavenly bodies act freely and are eclipsed only at their own spontaneous desire, when and how they please? |
37998 | We come to the question, What is Good, what is Bad? |
37998 | What are the distinguishing marks of Right? |
37998 | What do we find? |
37998 | What guarantee has he that his judgment is right? |
37998 | What is Morality? |
37998 | What is consciousness? |
37998 | What is gained by these discoveries? |
37998 | What is infinity, what eternity? |
37998 | What is life? |
37998 | What is their relation, one to the other? |
37998 | What prevents him from yielding to his impulses? |
37998 | What qualities do the former and the latter possess, or what qualities do we ascribe to them? |
37998 | Why can the latter proceed with his evil work with God''s consent? |
37998 | Why do not all living creatures participate equally in the evolution to which this superiority is due? |
37998 | Why do we approve of one thing as good and condemn another as bad? |
37998 | Why does He tolerate the devil? |
37998 | Will it not mind speaking to deaf ears? |
37998 | Will the refractory individual not suffer for disregarding it, or has it means to enforce obedience, and what are these means?" |
37998 | Will the voice rest content with crying in the wilderness? |
37998 | why? |
38700 | ( L.), are there such violent passions in celestial minds? |
38700 | ( L.), by what right? |
38700 | ( L.), could you keep from laughing, friends? |
38700 | ( L.), for whose benefit is it? |
38700 | ( L.), full cups, whom have they not made eloquent? |
38700 | ( L.), to what length, then, O Catiline,[ are you resolved to go]? |
38700 | ( L.), what does this mean? |
38700 | ( L.), who shall separate[ us]? |
38700 | ( L.), who will watch the watchers? |
38700 | ( L.), why do you laugh? |
38700 | ( L.), why should there be shame or stint in regret for the loss of one so dear? |
38700 | ), how do I know? |
38700 | ), is it not true? |
38700 | ), the state? |
38700 | ), what the devil was he doing in that galley? |
38700 | ), what would you have? |
38700 | ), what''s the good of it? |
38700 | ), who goes there? |
38700 | ), who is like the Lord? |
38700 | COELEBS QUID AGAM( L.), being a bachelor, what am I to do? |
38700 | CUI BONO? |
38700 | FECUNDI CALICES, QUEM NON FECERE DISERTUM? |
38700 | NICHT WAHR? |
38700 | QUE DIABLE ALLAIT- IL FAIRE DANS CETTE GALÈRE? |
38700 | QUE SAIS- JE? |
38700 | QUE VOULEZ- VOUS? |
38700 | QUI VA LÀ? |
38700 | QUID DESIDERIO SIT PUDOR AUT MODUS? |
38700 | QUID RIDES? |
38700 | QUIS CUSTODIET IPSOS CUSTODES? |
38700 | QUIS SEPARABIT? |
38700 | QUO JURE? |
38700 | QUOD HOC SIBI VULT? |
38700 | QUOUSQUE TANDEM, O CATILINA? |
38700 | RISUM TENEATIS, AMICI? |
38700 | TANTÆNE ANIMIS COELESTIBUS IRÆ? |
38700 | WHAT NOT, elliptical for''what may I not say?'' |
38700 | WHEN, hwen,_ adv._ and_ conj._ at what time? |
38700 | WHERE, hw[=a]r,_ adv._ and_ conj._ at which place, at what place? |
38700 | WHEREBY'', by which; WHERE''FORE, for which reason: for what reason? |
38700 | WHEREINSOEV''ER, in whatever place or respect; WHEREINTO( hw[=a]r- in''t[=oo],-in- t[=oo]''), into what? |
38700 | WHEREON'', on which: on what? |
38700 | WHEREUN''DER, under which; WHEREUNTIL''(_ Shak._), whereunto; WHEREUNTO'', WHEREUN''TO, whereto: for what purpose? |
38700 | WHEREUPON'', upon or in consequence of which; WHERE''ER'', WHEREV''ER, at whatever place; WHEREWITH'', WHEREWITHAL'', with which? |
38700 | WHITHER, hwith''[.e]r,_ adv._ to what place? |
38700 | WHO, h[=oo],_ pron._( both_ rel._ and_ interrog._) what person? |
38700 | WHY, hw[=i],_ adv._ and_ conj._ for what cause or reason? |
38700 | [ A reduplication of''_ Shall I?_''] SHILPIT, shil''pit,_ adj._(_ Scot._) weak, washy: feeble- looking. |
38700 | a loud summons; WHAT IF, what would happen if? |
38700 | for Is it so? |
38700 | implying the presence or existence of many other things; WHAT OF, what comes of? |
38700 | into which.--_n._ WHERE''NESS, state of having place or position.--_advs._ and_ conjs._ WHEREOF'', of which: of what? |
38700 | is n''t that so? |
38700 | pron._ something:(_ Spens._) a portion, bit.--_adv._(_ obs._) why? |
38700 | to what place, to which place? |
38700 | what do you think of? |
38700 | which is the one, which is the other? |
38700 | which person.--_pron._ WHOEV''ER, every one who: whatever person.--WHO BUT HE, who else? |
38700 | who is the gainer? |
38700 | why?--_n._ the cause.--_advs._ and_ conjs._ WHEREFROM'', whence; WHEREIN'', in which respect: in what? |
38700 | with what.--WHERE AWAY? |
38700 | À QUOI BON? |
23139 | A black woman? |
23139 | All your father''s debts as well as your own? |
23139 | Am I right? 23139 And from whom?" |
23139 | And how does the beautiful Maria find herself this morning? |
23139 | And love me? |
23139 | And the paper and packet? |
23139 | And the taxes? |
23139 | And when you go, when will you come again? |
23139 | And who gave you this? |
23139 | And you are, I presume, equally ignorant of the party who gave it to you? |
23139 | And your father and your brother? |
23139 | Any ground- rent? |
23139 | At the old place, Signor? |
23139 | But can not you evade this law? |
23139 | But do you never put your money in the foreign funds? |
23139 | But have you no employment for them in the winter? |
23139 | But may not you marry at any age, and when you please? |
23139 | But suppose you married in a foreign country? |
23139 | But what must we do with the tubs, Cockle? |
23139 | But why a sky- blue domino? |
23139 | But you must have been sweet upon her, Cockle? |
23139 | But,said I,"if so, it is noble by both descents?" |
23139 | Capital wine, an''t it? |
23139 | Consideration, my dear? |
23139 | Curse me, Andrew? 23139 Did I not tell you that I would be here in an hour? |
23139 | Do n''t you recollect that the winter months are coming on? |
23139 | Do n''t you recollect? |
23139 | Do you know him? |
23139 | Do you know him? |
23139 | Do you love me as you say, and as I love you? |
23139 | Do you recollect the little doctor and his wife at Bangalore? |
23139 | Do you see that fellow? |
23139 | Do you think she has been very wicked? 23139 Eskey, is it? |
23139 | Good God,cried he,"is it possible?" |
23139 | Have you given it? |
23139 | Have you let it, papa? |
23139 | Have you many of those in Switzerland? 23139 How is that, Cockle?" |
23139 | How is the wind now? |
23139 | How many can we dine in this room? |
23139 | How me shine, Massa Cockle, when you neber gib me_ shiner_? |
23139 | How mean you? 23139 How''s the wind, Mr Growler?" |
23139 | I really beg your pardon, but-- I''m afraid I have been very remiss-- will you allow me to introduce myself? 23139 I say, what wine do you call it?" |
23139 | I was told by a Frenchman at Basle, that there was a great deal of bullion lying idle in Switzerland? |
23139 | I''ll tell you-- in the first place, what have you for dinner? |
23139 | Indeed!--and to this, also, you plead total ignorance? |
23139 | Is all right, Felippo? |
23139 | Is it? |
23139 | Is not the entrance handsome? |
23139 | It has, though,thought Jack,"for it gets a man in the wind; but I wo n''t tell her so; and,"continued he,"you do n''t mind a raw nip, do you?" |
23139 | It stares me in the face, Bob; what must be done? |
23139 | It was the wind you love, and who has long loved you,replied the same voice;"do you wish to see me?" |
23139 | Let me see, sar? 23139 Let me see,"said I,"where was it we parted?" |
23139 | Me tell you all de tory, sar-- first I see Missy O''Bottom, and I say,` How you do, how you find himsel dis marning? 23139 Moonshine, what have we got for dinner?" |
23139 | Moonshine, where are you going, you thief?--when did you ever see me drink cold water, or offer it to my friend? |
23139 | My dear fellow,said the Admiral,"how''s your head now?" |
23139 | No, you would n''t, would you? |
23139 | Now, Bob,said Cockle,"what d''ye say to a_ seven bell- er_? |
23139 | Pray, Mr Smithers, what term of lease do you let at? |
23139 | Quel souvenir puis- je chanter encore, Apres celui ne dans la volupte? 23139 Refused you? |
23139 | Shall I knock him down,thought I;"he insists upon laying his hands upon me, why should I not lay my hands upon him?" |
23139 | Sir, you speak English? |
23139 | So I will.--Now, sir, as you have got me into this scrape, you must get me out of it.--D''ye hear? |
23139 | So you''re going abroad-- where? |
23139 | That will not do for me; will you love only me? |
23139 | That you never will, Mr Moonshine; what''s o''clock now? 23139 That''s all, is it? |
23139 | The fellow''s_ ironing_ me, Bob, ar''n''t he? |
23139 | The long and the short of it is, Bob, that we have nothing but a piece of pickled pork; can you dine off that? |
23139 | There''s that fellow, Bob; what is he about? |
23139 | They step out well, do n''t they? 23139 Vous sonvient- il? |
23139 | Vous souvient- il? 23139 Vous souvient- il? |
23139 | Vous souvient- il? 23139 Voyez- vous cet Anglais?" |
23139 | Well, Cockle, my boy, how are you? |
23139 | Well, I think I may promise that,replied Jack,"I''m very clever at forgetting; and then you''ll come to my hammock, wo n''t you, and sleep with me? |
23139 | Well, and what did Mrs Rowbottom say to that? |
23139 | Well, done, Moonshine, now I forgive you; but how did you manage it? |
23139 | Well, my dear, what do you think now? 23139 Well, then, what is your point?" |
23139 | Well, then,replied Littlebrain,"you''ve no objection to_ half- and- half_?" |
23139 | What can all this mean? 23139 What can he want with me? |
23139 | What child is that? |
23139 | What did he say, South West and by North three- quarters East? |
23139 | What did you say the rent was, Mr Smithers? |
23139 | What do you come for, Signor? |
23139 | What have we got in the house, Moonshine? |
23139 | What have you to fear between this and Pisa? 23139 What is the meaning of this rudeness, Signors?" |
23139 | What must be done? |
23139 | What nonsense it is your talking that way,would his opponent say;"why do n''t you come to the point?" |
23139 | What the deuce is all this? |
23139 | What the devil is the house built of then? |
23139 | What''s the matter!--do you think I do n''t know? 23139 What''s the use of calling you, you black rascal?" |
23139 | What, have you got the first watch, as well as me? |
23139 | What, is there more, sir? |
23139 | What_ is_ the matter? |
23139 | When you do make money, what do you do with it? |
23139 | When, you scoundrel? |
23139 | Where are you going, Albert? |
23139 | Where did you get it? |
23139 | Where is he? |
23139 | Where the devil did all this come from? |
23139 | Who gave it you? |
23139 | Who gave you the basket? |
23139 | Who told you so? |
23139 | Why not, my soft one? |
23139 | Why the deuce did I come here in a sky- blue domino, or any domino at all? |
23139 | Why, Mr Littlebrain,said one of the captains-- for Jack had actually laid the paper down on the table--"what''s in the wind now?" |
23139 | Why, what the devil''s this? |
23139 | Why, what''s that? |
23139 | Why, who was it that spoke? |
23139 | Why, you an''t jealous of a Nor- wester, are you? |
23139 | Will you ever find your way back to our lawful owner? |
23139 | Will you take your oath, Moonshine, that you did not drink any last night? |
23139 | Yes, that is right; but could you not have said it instead of writing it, Mr Littlebrain? |
23139 | You call me, sar? |
23139 | You do n''t say so? |
23139 | You do n''t say so? |
23139 | You no ab money-- you no ab tick-- how I get grog, Massa Cockle? 23139 ` Est il possible qu''on soit si barbare chez vous?''" |
23139 | ` How is the bath perfumed?'' 23139 ''Twas jealousy then, Edward, which made you so unkind? 23139 --Then pray where does he?" |
23139 | --A strange question, thought I, quite forgetting the procession of the day before.--"Why do you ask, my dear?" |
23139 | After all, thought I, I have been only playing at"What are my thoughts like?" |
23139 | Again:--"Si un Genevois se jette par la fenetre, suivez le? |
23139 | Ai n''t that capital? |
23139 | All gone, dear Edward? |
23139 | Already? |
23139 | Amis de ma jeunesse, Des beaux momens de nos fougueux exploits? |
23139 | And do n''t feel stronger? |
23139 | And how far have you got? |
23139 | And in the winter, sir, are we better off? |
23139 | And sea- sick, of course? |
23139 | And so they want something bad, eh? |
23139 | And what may be the result? |
23139 | And where are the real owners of the properties? |
23139 | And why so? |
23139 | And why so? |
23139 | And why so? |
23139 | And yet how are we to improve without experiment? |
23139 | Answer me seriously: do you think it possible for a man to describe what he never saw? |
23139 | Anything else which may proceed from your prolific brain, Barnstaple? |
23139 | Are not authors as reserved and shy as other people-- even more so? |
23139 | Are not melons rank poison, and cucumbers sudden death? |
23139 | Are not the laws made for all? |
23139 | Are not those inside the church setting him the example of mixing up religion with quackery? |
23139 | Are not, then, the Belgians right in thinking that it will deprive them of their bread? |
23139 | Are we not rapidly advancing to this state in England? |
23139 | Are you armed?" |
23139 | Are you better now, my dear sir? |
23139 | Are you content, and is it a bargain?" |
23139 | Are you not permitted to walk through the club at any hour of the day? |
23139 | Are you sure that he has had his draught with his pill? |
23139 | Are you sure they have ottomans there? |
23139 | As for Mr Cockerell, it may be very well to cry out about patriotism, but the question is, would not every other man have done the same? |
23139 | As, however, we had said,"How d''ye do?" |
23139 | Barnstaple? |
23139 | But as the man said in the packet--"Is that all?" |
23139 | But in what is to consist his sagacity? |
23139 | But is n''t that rather sacrilegious? |
23139 | But is not all this naturally and physically impossible? |
23139 | But is that all, sir? |
23139 | But is this all, sir? |
23139 | But should there not have been a marriage previously to this happy awful climax? |
23139 | But suppose the parties who read it have never seen the thing described? |
23139 | But tell me, Ansard, what is your plot? |
23139 | But to proceed:--they are seated at table; can you describe a grand dinner? |
23139 | But what can I do? |
23139 | But what can be done? |
23139 | But what is not charming in the month of May? |
23139 | But when all idle people shall have visited all the bubbling fountains of Germany, where are they to go next? |
23139 | But who would remain ten days in London in the month of November, when he can go away, without he had serious thoughts of suicide? |
23139 | But why ca n''t I say at once a silk nightcap? |
23139 | But, Barnstaple, what shall I give for him? |
23139 | But, sir, is that all? |
23139 | By the bye, have you brought in Madame de Stael? |
23139 | Can I possibly do you any favour for all this kindness? |
23139 | Come, Mrs Jellybags, no disguise,--tell the truth;--no soup-- warm jelly-- heh? |
23139 | Could n''t we have some built?" |
23139 | Den I hold de bottel up and say to you,` Massa, shall I help you?'' |
23139 | Den dey say,` Where you massa?'' |
23139 | Den dey say,` You sure of dat?'' |
23139 | Describe views, etcetera, of which you are ignorant-- so are most of your readers; but have we not the art of engraving to assist you? |
23139 | Did I not tell you, Miss, that if you did not change your mind, others might? |
23139 | Did not I tell you last week that I was tired of that villainous compound? |
23139 | Did you find any of your other friends, at first meeting, play the fiddle to a whole company of strangers? |
23139 | Did you not say that for richer or for poorer, for better or for worse, you would be mine, till death did us part? |
23139 | Do n''t you perceive? |
23139 | Do n''t you think I might eat something, my dear Mrs Jellybags? |
23139 | Do n''t you think it would act well? |
23139 | Do n''t you think so, ma''am?" |
23139 | Do not regular practitioners kill also? |
23139 | Do the faults of this people arise from the peculiarity of their constitutions, or from the nature of their Government? |
23139 | Do they die in consequence? |
23139 | Do they not have the tables exposed to the view of every one? |
23139 | Do they? |
23139 | Do you know, Ansard, that by getting up this work, you really injure the popularity of a man of great talent? |
23139 | Do you think that you can proceed now for a week, without my assistance? |
23139 | Do you understand me?" |
23139 | Do you understand? |
23139 | Do your disembodied spirits now float around me, and, shrouded in this horrible veil of nature, glare unseen upon vitality? |
23139 | Does America show no ambition? |
23139 | Does France show no ambition? |
23139 | Does not the cholera come in as regularly as green peas-- terrifying us to death, whether we die of it or not? |
23139 | Does she, then, ask too much? |
23139 | Does this not prove to a certain extent the power of calculating numbers in animals? |
23139 | Eat, my dear Mr Cadaverous!--how can you ask me, when you know that Doctor Gumarabic says that it would be the death of you? |
23139 | Felt how? |
23139 | Float ye upon this intolerable mist, in yourselves still more misty and intolerable? |
23139 | Had he not a right to bring his talents to the best market? |
23139 | Has any magistrate ventured to interfere with Crockford''s, where it is well known that the highest gaming is carried on every night? |
23139 | Has he explained to you what has occurred?" |
23139 | Has he not dashed my cup of bliss to the ground? |
23139 | Has not a man a right to do as he pleases with his own money? |
23139 | Have we no ambition ourselves? |
23139 | Have you had a serious illness? |
23139 | Have you had no affront? |
23139 | Have you no relations or friends in whose opinion you wish to stand well? |
23139 | Have you nothing supernatural? |
23139 | Have you profited by my instructions? |
23139 | Have you talked about cooks? |
23139 | Have you ten thousand guilders?" |
23139 | He has eaten nothing? |
23139 | Here goes-- heads or tails? |
23139 | Here? |
23139 | Hold ye high jubilee to- night? |
23139 | How can that be? |
23139 | How do you do, Sir? |
23139 | How is that possible, my dear Barnstaple? |
23139 | How long will these flowers, now blossoming so fairly, be permitted to remain with us? |
23139 | How should I ever look at his injured face? |
23139 | How the devil are you to get your fellow out of that state of asphyxia? |
23139 | How the devil shall I be assisted by a poodle? |
23139 | How then? |
23139 | How was it possible not to be attracted by such a distinguishing appellation? |
23139 | How was it possible that a man could navigate a ship, with only one quarter point of the compass in his head? |
23139 | How was it possible without her destruction? |
23139 | How will they combat? |
23139 | However, we can always command a bottle of port and a beef- steak, and_ what more_ in this world can you have? |
23139 | Humph?--and yet feels no stronger? |
23139 | I asked the female who brought up the soup, from whence they had obtained them? |
23139 | I beg your pardon, sir, but is there no other codicil? |
23139 | I have retired from business altogether; in fact, as my daughters are both married, and we have enough to live upon, what can we wish for more? |
23139 | I heard the negro expostulating as follows:--"You very foolish boy, what you mean? |
23139 | I met another Englishman here, to whom the question might so properly be put,"What the deuce are you doing here?" |
23139 | I never meant to quarrel with the old woman; what d''ye think, Bob-- is it all right?" |
23139 | I say, Bill, how are you off for a suit of mourning? |
23139 | I say, Tom, how are you off for nineteen pounds nineteen and six? |
23139 | I say,` Miss O''Bottom,''pose you no tell?'' |
23139 | I say,` What all dis for, massa?'' |
23139 | I see more grog on the table: so I take up de bottel and I say,` Massa Cockle, you go up stairs?'' |
23139 | I trust you are not offended? |
23139 | I was seated on the box of the carriage, with the Swiss_ voiturier_--and asked him,"If it were not a lucrative profession?" |
23139 | If you admit a young traveller into your carriage-- what then? |
23139 | In the first place, am I always to continue in this style? |
23139 | Is a great empire like Russia to be blocked up, her commerce and navy crippled, for the want of an outlet? |
23139 | Is a little money, then, to sway my affections? |
23139 | Is he quite correct? |
23139 | Is it possible? |
23139 | Is it therefore to be wondered at our being so deficient in our diplomatic corps? |
23139 | Is not the merchant a gambler? |
23139 | Is such your opinion of my constancy? |
23139 | Is that an offence in the eyes of government in a poor man which is not one in the rich? |
23139 | Is the sum gained by farmers by employing fewer men on large farms more than their proportion of the poor''s rates paid for unproductive industry? |
23139 | Is this fair or just to him? |
23139 | Is this the pond which appeared so immense to my eyes, and this the house in my memory so vast? |
23139 | Is your watch out?" |
23139 | It had been placed on the rock to save the lives of his brother seamen; and were he to remove it, would he not be responsible for all the lives lost? |
23139 | It is, perhaps, more apparent in domestic animals, but is not that because they are more brought together and more under our immediate eye? |
23139 | It may be asked, why we do not remonstrate? |
23139 | It shall be done, Barnstaple; but have you not another idea or two to help me with? |
23139 | It was now his turn to expostulate; but how could he"hope for mercy, rendering none?" |
23139 | It was proposed to send for a menuisier to pick the lock; but how was one to be found at three o''clock in the morning? |
23139 | Land of history-- I presume you mean Italy; but am I to go there? |
23139 | May not the monster of former worlds have dwindled down to the alligator of this-- the leviathan to the whale? |
23139 | May we not then consider the following propositions as correct? |
23139 | Mercy on me, when shall I be at peace? |
23139 | Mrs Jellybags, have you adhered punctually to my prescriptions? |
23139 | My dear uncle, why have you, for so many days, refused me admittance? |
23139 | No I never-- never liked one before, though--""Is that true?" |
23139 | No-- how the devil am I to bring her in? |
23139 | Not better, my dear sir?--don''t you feel stronger? |
23139 | Now for Miss Clementina, and-- revenge? |
23139 | Now, Barnstaple, what''s to be done? |
23139 | Now, have you thought of nothing new, for we must not plagiarise even from fashionable novels? |
23139 | Now, tell me, how do you get on? |
23139 | Now, what''s to be done, Bob?" |
23139 | Of course I followed: who could resist such a challenge? |
23139 | Of what advantage are the fruits of the earth so bountifully bestowed-- have they not all been converted into poisons? |
23139 | On shore? |
23139 | One of my children is singing a nursery song, now I''ll write a commentary on it in the shape of notes:-- Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been? |
23139 | Philosophy in a fashionable novel? |
23139 | Politics again, thought I; what the devil has sea- sickness to do with the Reform Bill? |
23139 | Pray, has he had any thing in the way of drink? |
23139 | Pray, may I ask, my dear Mrs Jellybags, were you present at the making of the will? |
23139 | Pray, my dear Ansard, to whom did you apply that last epithet? |
23139 | Pussy cat, pussy cat, what did you there? |
23139 | Quite as well as it reads; pray is it all like this? |
23139 | Seven had been satisfactorily got through; then came the eighth, a very simple one:--"What is your course and distance from Ushant to the Start?" |
23139 | Shall I finish the first chapter with that_ fact_? |
23139 | She say,` What he fraid for?'' |
23139 | She says--"What does Henry Bulwer mean by the assertion that literary men are more eagerly welcomed in society here than in England? |
23139 | Tell me what sum do you think that I should possess to warrant my demanding the hand of your daughter?" |
23139 | Tell me, will it soon be over?" |
23139 | Ten to one if you are not both in the wrong; but what matter will that be? |
23139 | That may be; but did it never occur to you, Miss, that the gentleman''s feelings might alter? |
23139 | The conversation between the adults run as follows:--"You recollect how polite Lord C-- was to us at--?" |
23139 | The fact is, Arthur, he is in love-- don''t you perceive? |
23139 | The next day one of the youngest came up to me and said,"Oh, papa, when will you die?" |
23139 | The question which naturally will be put is,"how do you know this? |
23139 | Then they would never have been born till then, and how could I marry them? |
23139 | Then you do n''t know how things are settled? |
23139 | Then, as to time; as the hero is still in bed, suppose we say four o''clock in the afternoon? |
23139 | This is a curious stock in trade, methinks; how in the name of all the saints do you gain your livelihood? |
23139 | This is legitimate gambling; but do people in business stop there? |
23139 | This was considered an honour-- for were they not nursing a_ God_? |
23139 | Those germs of virtue now appearing, those tares now growing up with the corn-- will the fruit bring forth good seed? |
23139 | To be sure; you exclaim mentally, why should you not in a whisper? |
23139 | To him who hath seen much, there is little left but comparison, and are not comparisons universally odious? |
23139 | To see me, Edward: surely there needs no excuse for coming? |
23139 | We are instinctive as well as reasonable beings; and what is inventive instinct but a species of reason, if not reason itself? |
23139 | We had also to contend with letters and notes in the same way, brought to us at haphazard:"Does Mr So- and- so live here?" |
23139 | We should all stop to say_ Cui bono_? |
23139 | Well, before you state your case, tell me, how did the novel go off? |
23139 | Well, how''s our patient?-- better?--heh? |
23139 | Well, that''s odd!--Has he taken the pill every half- hour? |
23139 | What can I do, Barnstaple? |
23139 | What can have put him to sleep? |
23139 | What could a man wish more? |
23139 | What d''ye think of that? |
23139 | What did I tell you before this will was read?--that nothing could alter my feelings towards you, did I not? |
23139 | What did we care for the tomb of Charles the Great, and his extensive dominions, his splendour and power? |
23139 | What do the others do?" |
23139 | What do you mean to imply by a fashionable novel? |
23139 | What does your tailor say? |
23139 | What for, may I ask? |
23139 | What had she done? |
23139 | What has been the consequence since the lotteries have been abolished? |
23139 | What have you been doing over since I was away, comforting yourself during my absence with_ Nor- westers_?" |
23139 | What is summer but a season of alarm and dread? |
23139 | What is the pass- word?" |
23139 | What language do you call that? |
23139 | What medical men would have thought of prescribing fat bacon for delicate stomachs twenty years ago? |
23139 | What must n''t be? |
23139 | What now, Ansard, do you really think that you are travelling? |
23139 | What part of his body, if separated from the rest, can he renew? |
23139 | What then is there cheaper? |
23139 | What was he about to attempt? |
23139 | What was to be done with him? |
23139 | What would an English farmer say, if he was told that he could not commence his harvest without the permission of Government? |
23139 | What you like to eat, sar?" |
23139 | What''s that? |
23139 | What''s the matter?" |
23139 | What''s to be done now?" |
23139 | What, here, my dear sir? |
23139 | What, here? |
23139 | What, here? |
23139 | What, on literature? |
23139 | What-- hang myself? |
23139 | When I come back wid de two bottle I meet plenty men wid de tubs: dey say,` Hollo there, who be you?'' |
23139 | When shall we learn to call things by their right names?" |
23139 | Where are our country gentlemen who used to keep open house at their estates, disseminating their wealth and producing happiness? |
23139 | Where are the elite of our aristocracy? |
23139 | Where could you find such conversationists as Coleridge, Charles Lamb, Sir John Malcolm, and many others, who are now gone? |
23139 | Where is Barnstaple? |
23139 | Where, Signor? |
23139 | Where? |
23139 | Who could reply to this? |
23139 | Who dares to drink a light summer wine now? |
23139 | Who is that? |
23139 | Who would speculate with the anticipation of large returns upon some future day, if he did not calculate upon living to receive them? |
23139 | Why a sky- blue domino? |
23139 | Why should the heroine and the Honourable Augustus Bouverie not be submitted to the laws of nature? |
23139 | Why should we, then, ever commit the folly to be happy?''" |
23139 | Why then annoy yourself, my dear Edward? |
23139 | Why was I not informed, Mrs Jellybags? |
23139 | Why will you leave me-- why wo''n''t you stay on deck with me?" |
23139 | Why, then, this outcry against the ambition of Russia? |
23139 | Why, therefore, should all these have been supplied with it, if not for a cause? |
23139 | Why, what is all this? |
23139 | Will he forgive her?" |
23139 | Will it please Heaven to allow them to be not too much tempted, not overcome by sickness, or that they shall be severely chastised? |
23139 | Will not all that be considered frivolous? |
23139 | Will they be mowed down before another birth- day, or will they be permitted to live to pass through the ordeal of this life of temptation? |
23139 | Will they fall and disgrace their parents, or will they be a pride and blessing? |
23139 | Will you allow me the honour of presenting my card, and of saying how proud I shall be to make your acquaintance?" |
23139 | Will you allow me to introduce myself? |
23139 | Will you be pleased to read that part over again? |
23139 | Will you permit me to present my card, and to say how happy I shall be to make your acquaintance?" |
23139 | Without being reprinted? |
23139 | Would Fowell Buxton, surrounded by a host of mosquitoes, have done as much for a fellow- creature, white or black? |
23139 | Would not the wail of the widow, and the tears of the orphan, be crying out to Heaven against him? |
23139 | Would not the_ Iron_ order of the Belgian patriots have been more appropriate as a_ Chemin de Fer_ decoration? |
23139 | Would the relations like me to read the provisions? |
23139 | Yes, it''s very well to say write it; but how the devil am I to write it? |
23139 | Yes, sir; but what''s the good of things being cheap when nobody has any money to purchase with? |
23139 | Yet this is the case: and why so? |
23139 | Yet who has interfered, although you find that the smaller hells are constantly broken in upon, and the parties had up to the police- office? |
23139 | You acknowledge the difficulty?" |
23139 | You wo n''t have me? |
23139 | ` But,''say Missy O''Bottom,` why he no send for some?'' |
23139 | and before he is accused of having had no regard for his country, it may first be fairly asked, what regard had his country shown for him? |
23139 | and you nod you head on you bosom, and say noting-- so I not quite sure, and I say again,` Massa Cockle, shall I finish this lilly drop?'' |
23139 | another draught? |
23139 | are you not the party who put a packet into my hands about a quarter of an hour since?" |
23139 | are you not tired of these things?" |
23139 | at the old place?" |
23139 | but, sir, is that all? |
23139 | do you mean to say that balls are not to be given?" |
23139 | do you mean to say that there are no balls to be given in London?" |
23139 | exclaimed my wife;"what do you mean?" |
23139 | exclaims the hero,"where are ye? |
23139 | how did you manage that? |
23139 | in fact, is not every venture an act of gambling? |
23139 | is n''t it a charming house?" |
23139 | is not reason borne down by faction, sir? |
23139 | no, they live and do well; but could a man live under such circumstances? |
23139 | now that you have gone over it?" |
23139 | oh, Mr Cadaverous, how can you fatigue and annoy yourself with such things as wills? |
23139 | or do ye crouch behind these monitorial stones, gibbering and chattering at one who dares thus to invade your precincts? |
23139 | or rather, do not their prescriptions fail? |
23139 | que vais- j''en faire? |
23139 | replied I;"how do you mean?" |
23139 | said I,` and pray what is the next thing which you wish?'' |
23139 | the women''s and all? |
23139 | was that Albert in the rose- coloured domino?" |
23139 | what''s become of all the grog?" |
23139 | which is a childish game; and how can I possibly find out what my brain is like, when my brain do n''t choose to tell? |
23139 | whispered a gentle voice in his ear;"do you love` South West and by West three- quarters West,''and will you, as you say, never forget her?" |
23139 | who ever heard of putting new cloth cap into water to catch fish?" |
23139 | will the latter be effectually rooted up by precept and example? |
23139 | you here, and so angry too? |
23139 | you may talk about the"preventive check,"but where is it? |
23139 | your Majesty, how can you imagine that I can fill this big belly of mine with only my half- pay?" |
35198 | An''how_ do_ they deal with them, the poor little ducks? |
35198 | And how,pursued the enquirer, a solid young blacksmith,"will the teachers know what that may be?" |
35198 | And now what are we to do with him, with this man who wo n''t submit to the laws he forces on other people? 35198 Are they thick?" |
35198 | Are you? 35198 But there it is.... And you''re A, are n''t you? |
35198 | Can I give him a message? |
35198 | Did I? 35198 Did you have to swim right across the bay, darling?" |
35198 | Dine with you? 35198 Do you mind?" |
35198 | Have you all noted that, boys? 35198 Have you had a hard day, darling?" |
35198 | How long,enquired Amherst, in his best Oxford manner,"do you give yourselves? |
35198 | Hullo,said a voice in answer to hers,"Mr. Prideaux there? |
35198 | I expect you know I''ve fallen in love with you? |
35198 | I suppose you''d rather I''d used my sleeve at the Whites''tennis this morning, would n''t you? |
35198 | Is it possible that, knowing this, there are still those who doubt God? 35198 Is n''t it fun,"said Kitty,"that you are you and I am I? |
35198 | Mind?... |
35198 | My word, he jolly well_ would_ despise me if he knew, would n''t he? |
35198 | Now I ask you, Miss Grammont, what would_ you_ do? 35198 Shall not wisdom cry, and understanding put forth her word? |
35198 | She surely should n''t know they have any,he had said to his wife, who was weeding, and replied absently,"Any what, dear? |
35198 | We thought better of them too-- till we did it.... Have I spoilt his life, Vernon? 35198 We''re fairly hoist with our own petard, are n''t we?" |
35198 | What good do you think you''re going to do yourselves by this? |
35198 | What''s the afternoon news? |
35198 | What,she enquired,"do you think about the state of things between Bavaria and Prussia? |
35198 | Where were they left this time? |
35198 | Who''ll buy babies-- Babies better dead? 35198 Why not?" |
35198 | Why not? |
35198 | Will they condole with you? |
35198 | Would it be interesting? |
35198 | Would it bind me to a point of view? |
35198 | Would you like to see him sometime? 35198 You know about me, then? |
35198 | You truly do n''t? 35198 _ Is_ it of less importance?" |
35198 | ( After all, how can one ring off in any other way?) |
35198 | ( Question,"Is it not the case that the Ministry of Brains has become absolutely soulless in this matter of harrying the Imbecile?" |
35198 | 3 a good turn, though I would n''t do it for everyone.... Well, I''m off, I''m beastly busy.... Heard the latest Chester, by the way? |
35198 | After all, what''s the odds? |
35198 | After all, why should she? |
35198 | And had Prideaux recognised her or not? |
35198 | And if we can be clever like that, why not be a little cleverer still? |
35198 | And then what? |
35198 | And what does it matter to me what sort of a wife you''d make? |
35198 | And why do doctors fail so hopelessly to diagnose anything a little outside their ordinary beat? |
35198 | And why do houses built and fitted like some of those still exist? |
35198 | And why is n''t there a cure for every disease? |
35198 | And yet a third saying,''Can the blind lead the blind? |
35198 | And, after all, should one turn one''s back on life, in whatever curious guise it might offer itself? |
35198 | As I said to Tony, what_ is_ the good of making laws if you ca n''t break them yourself? |
35198 | Besides, what had love to do with this Minister, who was uncertificated for matrimony? |
35198 | But a little later he said abruptly,"I''ve never told you much about my people, Kitty, have I, or what are called my early years?" |
35198 | But first, always, try to collar their imaginations.... You''ve done some public speaking, have n''t you?" |
35198 | But it''s for us to ask you, as a member of the public, how long you intend to give us? |
35198 | But there may be one day, argued the pamphleteers, and might it not be well to prepare our minds for it? |
35198 | But, after all, love and happiness are so much more important than office, are they not?..." |
35198 | But... well, what in heaven or earth or the other place possessed you both to do it, Kitty?" |
35198 | Ca n''t you?... |
35198 | Cogoleto in there, I suppose? |
35198 | Did brains matter so greatly after all? |
35198 | Did n''t we meet at Prideaux''s one night in the spring? |
35198 | Do n''t I, Tony? |
35198 | Do n''t you know that you''re heading for serious trouble-- that you''ll find yourselves in prison for this? |
35198 | Do n''t you?" |
35198 | Do you suppose he believed a word we said?" |
35198 | Drop him down into the street?" |
35198 | For what, after all, was marriage? |
35198 | For, after all, if it was to be it was, and where was the use of talking? |
35198 | Has any government ever succeeded in keeping its own dark doings secret for long? |
35198 | He looked at her in annoyance and dismay, and said,"Good lord, why?" |
35198 | How do, Mr. Prideaux? |
35198 | How much difference to the business did the discovery about me make? |
35198 | How much do you suppose he knows about curing people, or about the science of bodies? |
35198 | How shall wisdom be found, and where is the place of understanding? |
35198 | How soon would it be, wondered Kitty, before the officials of the Ministry of Brains wore that same look? |
35198 | How, said the doctor, were children to win any of life''s prizes without brains? |
35198 | I admire our Chester more every day he lives, do n''t you? |
35198 | I ask you to consider earnestly, could any force but God have conceived and executed such great distances? |
35198 | I ca n''t quite hear... who are you, please?... |
35198 | I guess I''ll have the Cheeper christened first opportunity, just to please him, what, old dear?" |
35198 | I ought to be somewhere about B3; I surprise all who know me.... What I came in to say was, do any of you in here want a sure tip for the Oaks? |
35198 | I say, I do waste your time in here, do n''t I? |
35198 | I suppose this is what a moral and law- abiding citizen feels when he falls in love with someone else''s wife.... What are you laughing at now?" |
35198 | I think it must be( do n''t you?) |
35198 | I thought I''d show you I could dive.... What brings you here? |
35198 | If it''s journalism you want, why do n''t you apply for a job on_ Intelligence_?" |
35198 | If we''re clever enough to have invented and built houses at all, why not go one better and do it properly? |
35198 | Indeed, the answer to the enquiry"Stop what?" |
35198 | Is it honest? |
35198 | Is it_ convenable_? |
35198 | Is n''t she, Vernon?" |
35198 | Is that all?" |
35198 | It was perilously hot; the heat soaked all one''s will away and left one limp.... Did he too feel like that? |
35198 | It''s a splendid coast, is n''t it? |
35198 | It''s too late now to do much.... Do they know we are here, by the way? |
35198 | Jane said, kicking stones along the road as she walked,"Shall I be top of my form when I''ve taken the Course, mother? |
35198 | Kitty said,"Shall we go and see your people?" |
35198 | Kitty was reminded of a story someone had told her of a pert little office flapper at one end of a telephone, chirping,"Hullo, who is it?" |
35198 | Little by little, precept upon precept, line upon line, these things grow, till we''re a serf state without realising it.... After all, why not? |
35198 | Many people thought that compulsion should in any case be resorted to; what was the good of a government if not to compel? |
35198 | May I call for you to- night and we''ll drive back together?" |
35198 | Mind you, I think you''re awfully right, only it takes so much livin''up to, does n''t it? |
35198 | More time for what, was the further question? |
35198 | Mr. Prideaux, is n''t it? |
35198 | Nothing ever is exactly like anything else, luckily.... By the way, when did you begin to take notice of me? |
35198 | Number one:_ Are you certificated for marriage, Mr. Chester, or have you got mental deficiency in your family?_"There was an instant''s pause. |
35198 | Oh, I see....""What is it, Miss Pomfrey?" |
35198 | Or anyone else in his room I can speak to? |
35198 | Or does he think that, as he''s uncertificated and no hopes of an outcome can be roused in me, he may look as he likes?" |
35198 | Or is it that women are different from men? |
35198 | Possibly by Christmas she might be reading"Which way shall I Vote and Why?" |
35198 | Put it that I''m a prig... anyhow, there it is.... Will you apologise for me to your brother?" |
35198 | Rather a sweet word, do n''t you think? |
35198 | Shall I, mother? |
35198 | Shall they not both fall into the ditch?'' |
35198 | Shall we try that way, and see if it works?" |
35198 | So do I-- don''t I? |
35198 | So was I, was n''t I, old thing?" |
35198 | Some of them looked quite capable and pleased with themselves, as if they were saying,"What have I got out of it, sir? |
35198 | Sorry you''re down on your luck, old man, but why do n''t you do as I''ve done?") |
35198 | That I''m uncertificated? |
35198 | That counts, does it? |
35198 | The advances it''s made fill one with amaze and admiration; but why is there still disease? |
35198 | The question that rather suggested itself to its readers was, if_ Stop It_ had its way, what, if anything, would be left? |
35198 | The vicar says he can square that up all right-- he called on purpose to tell me-- but somehow we''ve never had the time to fix it, have we, darlin''? |
35198 | Then, quickly, followed the thought, to tickle her further,"Is it right? |
35198 | There are n''t many good books written, do you think?" |
35198 | This family could n''t really properly afford another scandal; it might lose its good name, then what would Cyril say? |
35198 | This man who dares to tell other people to bear what he wo n''t bear himself? |
35198 | We think so too, do n''t we, old man?" |
35198 | Well, then?" |
35198 | Were the clever happier than the fools? |
35198 | What are the reasons why not? |
35198 | What did you think, Miss Grammont?" |
35198 | What do you imagine?" |
35198 | What have the police been about? |
35198 | What is the clever godless man but a fool from the point of view of eternity? |
35198 | What is the godly fool but a heavenly success?" |
35198 | What is wisdom apart from that? |
35198 | What shall we do with him? |
35198 | What would ever get done in such a world? |
35198 | What would happen to nations and societies and governments, if people in general became much more intelligent? |
35198 | What would he say? |
35198 | What''s the good of living if you ca n''t have what you want?" |
35198 | What''s the good of meeting, just to repeat this sort of scene again and again, and hurt each other? |
35198 | What''s the sense of it? |
35198 | When the doctor says you can?" |
35198 | Where and when?" |
35198 | Which made him say,"No one will find out, and if they do, let them and be damned to them"?... |
35198 | Who is n''t?" |
35198 | Who on earth do you think is going to do your job? |
35198 | Who wants brains?" |
35198 | Who''d have thought he''d take on like that? |
35198 | Who, alas, did? |
35198 | Who?" |
35198 | Why be so abysmally stupid about many things? |
35198 | Why do n''t you apply? |
35198 | Why have n''t we thought of some way out of that beastly, clumsy squalor and muddle yet? |
35198 | Why not?" |
35198 | Why should it be? |
35198 | Why should it not happen to You? |
35198 | Why should n''t we? |
35198 | Why should you mess up your career? |
35198 | Will John? |
35198 | Will you come in and have something? |
35198 | Will you kindly go on with your business?" |
35198 | Will you tell me, if you do n''t mind?" |
35198 | Wo n''t you introduce me?" |
35198 | Would he speak of her, or wrap her in discreet silence? |
35198 | Would they ever get it? |
35198 | Would they have gone to those lengths without it?" |
35198 | Would_ you_, Miss Grammont?" |
35198 | Yes,_ dictating_...._ Who_ did you say wanted him, please?... |
35198 | Yet might she? |
35198 | You do n''t suppose all the dark secrets of the war ever came out? |
35198 | You know Mr. Amherst, do n''t you? |
35198 | You too, probably?" |
35198 | You will, wo n''t you, when you do?" |
35198 | You''re Starred A, are n''t you?" |
35198 | You''re doing this reporting work for the Bulletin now, are n''t you? |
35198 | You''ve got lots, have n''t you? |
35198 | _ Am I correct in stating that you-- got-- married-- last-- August?_""You are quite correct, Mr. |
35198 | _ Liking''s_ another thing, of course.... By the way, do you know what his category is? |
35198 | _ Shall_ we, mother?" |
35198 | _ Should_ ministers look like that at their lady clerks? |
35198 | ca n''t you?..." |
35198 | with things tangled up as they are.... Sure you do n''t mind stayin''with us, I suppose?" |
33218 | ''When he wakes up he''ll howl, wo n''t he?'' 33218 Already sold, is it?" |
33218 | An artist? |
33218 | And how do you manage to spend the time? |
33218 | And how is Baby Paul enjoying himself? |
33218 | And now, what shall I say to Frances? |
33218 | And what do you think of it, Dave? |
33218 | And-- and will I be able to sing again? |
33218 | Angels, eh? 33218 Anything wrong?" |
33218 | Are you in a hurry to go anywhere, Mr. Cole, because I''ll be glad to take you wherever you want to go? |
33218 | But how do you know that it was your letter, then? |
33218 | But then why did n''t you take a dollar''s worth of flowers? |
33218 | But what is the use of my paying board to Mrs. Milliken and then having you spend money for dinners at restaurants? |
33218 | Can I go into the studio? |
33218 | Can you afford it, Dave? |
33218 | Contemplating suicide? |
33218 | D''ye see that big guy look at ye? 33218 David dear, have you been up all night with him?" |
33218 | Do n''t you think he is ever so good and well- behaved? |
33218 | Do n''t you think it is a good idea? |
33218 | Do n''t you want to sit down for a moment? |
33218 | Do you really think that Gordon has the slightest idea that he can improve on that first picture? |
33218 | Do you really think, David, that I would squander your poor little savings? 33218 Does n''t much care for literature, does she?" |
33218 | Does-- doesn''t the idea of standing up there and singing to all those people make you nervous? |
33218 | Ever see anything much more alive than this? |
33218 | Has Monsieur looked upon his bed? |
33218 | Have one? |
33218 | Have you? 33218 How are you?" |
33218 | How be ye? |
33218 | How could you? |
33218 | How is that baby? |
33218 | How much do you think we paid for it? |
33218 | I do n''t suppose I would do for the nymph? |
33218 | I hope so, and now what do you say to celebrating that new hat by going over to Camus for dinner? |
33218 | I wonder what''s wrong? |
33218 | I''m the clever chap who warned you against that woman, am I not? 33218 Is Mr. McGrath engaged?" |
33218 | Is it another baby that you take a vicarious interest in? |
33218 | Is n''t he a dear old donkey? |
33218 | Is n''t it hot? |
33218 | Is n''t she a stunner? 33218 Is there no woman in the place?" |
33218 | Is this the dear baby of the picture? |
33218 | Is this true, or is it another dream? 33218 Is you folks going ashore?" |
33218 | Is-- is it all over? |
33218 | It''s good, is n''t it? |
33218 | Keeps a Beauty Shop? |
33218 | Let me see, he was gone four months, was n''t he? |
33218 | Madame Paul Dupont? |
33218 | May I come in? 33218 No, I came to find out whether it is safe to give Mrs. Dupont a cup of tea?" |
33218 | Not half bad, is it? |
33218 | Say, what''s the matter with goin''on the pier and sittin''down for a while? 33218 Something to do with aviation, is n''t it? |
33218 | Then, tell me the names of your books, wo n''t you? |
33218 | Very rich people, are they not? |
33218 | Want a ride? |
33218 | Well, Dave, how''ve you been and how''s everybody? |
33218 | Well, Dave,she asked,"are you pleased?" |
33218 | Well, what do you think of millionaires now that you have met one in the flesh? |
33218 | Well, you old stick- in- the- mud,said my companion,"what are you looking so disgruntled about? |
33218 | What about Frances? |
33218 | What about that sarcophagus you''ve lately selected for yourself? |
33218 | What about yourself? 33218 What are these books on the floor? |
33218 | What did he talk about? |
33218 | What did you suppose I''d do? |
33218 | What do you know about it? |
33218 | What have I done? 33218 What have you written?" |
33218 | What is it? |
33218 | What kind of a case? |
33218 | What of Miss Van Rossum? |
33218 | What right have they to disturb the harmonies in a man''s mind when he''s creating melodies in color? 33218 What right or title have you to the belief that the millennium has come? |
33218 | What the deuce do you mean? |
33218 | Where-- what is it? |
33218 | Wherefore a piano? |
33218 | Who is it? |
33218 | Who''s that playing your piano? |
33218 | Why do n''t you speak? |
33218 | Why does n''t Frieda employ her? |
33218 | Why next Sunday? |
33218 | Will you have some of the_ sole au vin blanc_? |
33218 | Will you kindly explain your object? |
33218 | Will you kindly give me your full name? |
33218 | Wo n''t you please look at it, Mr. Cole? 33218 Wonder who''s the infernal idiot calling up now?" |
33218 | Would Monsieur be so very kind as to remain here for a few moments and watch? |
33218 | Yes, Kate, of course, and do you really think she was happy ever after with that extraordinary man Jonas? |
33218 | You do n''t expect me to go in there, do you? |
33218 | You see, Mr. Cole, it does n''t say much, does it? 33218 You think I''ve treated her pretty badly, do n''t you?" |
33218 | And how are the other animals in the menagerie you live in now?" |
33218 | And now what do you think of my having that old blue dress of mine dyed black?" |
33218 | And so you like it, do you?" |
33218 | And what do you think, David? |
33218 | And yet, what if I should be mistaken? |
33218 | And-- and is it true, David, that he is engaged to another woman?" |
33218 | And-- and you''ll write to me when you want me, wo n''t you?" |
33218 | Any other news?" |
33218 | Are you going all the way up to the studio with me?" |
33218 | But what could I do at that front where they want men of youthful vigor and bravery, in whom the generous sap of life at its finest runs swiftly? |
33218 | But what''s a hand more or less after all that I''ve seen? |
33218 | But why do I keep on thinking about him? |
33218 | But why was I thinking of such monsters? |
33218 | By the way, what''s become of-- of the Murillo young woman?" |
33218 | CHAPTER IV THE BOLT"And by the way,"asked Gordon, a few days later,"how''s Frieda getting along?" |
33218 | Can there be any hitch in his plans? |
33218 | Cole?" |
33218 | Cole?" |
33218 | Cole?" |
33218 | Cole?" |
33218 | Come in again soon, wo n''t you?" |
33218 | Could he possibly succeed? |
33218 | Cunning little mite, is n''t it?" |
33218 | Did her wonderful features suggest to him a new and greater picture? |
33218 | Did n''t make much out of the book, did you?" |
33218 | Did n''t you say the tenth floor?" |
33218 | Did you do that, Gordon?" |
33218 | Did you ever really know a counterpart of Jennie Frisbie?" |
33218 | Did you ever see such a nose and mouth? |
33218 | Did you see Richetti''s look of pride? |
33218 | Do n''t you think we were awfully good to come in town on such a warm day? |
33218 | Do n''t you want to come in the office and meet some fellows? |
33218 | Do you hear me?" |
33218 | Do you indeed feel that you can forgive me? |
33218 | Do you know anything about how to keep books?" |
33218 | Do you mean that you would like me to put it on again?" |
33218 | Do you never feel the need of confiding in a friend, nowadays?" |
33218 | Do you think I am one to speculate on friendship and try to coin money out of kindness?" |
33218 | Do you think he is looking pale?" |
33218 | Do-- do you mean that I may tell you of my heart''s desire?" |
33218 | Dupont?" |
33218 | Dupont?" |
33218 | Eulalie, will you be so kind as to put these flowers in water?" |
33218 | Fine buxom creature, is n''t she? |
33218 | Frieda dear, will you mind little Paul for me while I am gone? |
33218 | Frieda, my dear, wo n''t you be so obliging as to open the piano and play something for us? |
33218 | Gordon would scoff at the idea and declare it an accidental meeting, but what does he know of the forces that may direct our footsteps? |
33218 | Had she made me wait too long? |
33218 | Have we ever fully realized how patient she was, how resigned? |
33218 | Have you any further news of him?" |
33218 | Have you ever seen a letter from there? |
33218 | Have you seen the_ Nation_, and the_ Times_, and the_ Springfield Republican_ and the_ Boston Observer_? |
33218 | Have you spoken to her about it?" |
33218 | How about your views on the Great American Novel?" |
33218 | How are things wagging?" |
33218 | How are you getting on with the new manuscript?" |
33218 | How are you going to face it, if it frightens you? |
33218 | How can this be? |
33218 | How could Frances obtain the full rest she needed, unless some of the details of existence were attended to for her? |
33218 | How could I have listened to such things? |
33218 | How could I speak of my love to you? |
33218 | How could I stand it day after day? |
33218 | How could I venture on the responsibility of giving Frances tea without knowing whether it would be good for her? |
33218 | How could love be left in her heart? |
33218 | How could old Dave cry out to the beautiful star that was so high up in the wonderful sky? |
33218 | How could there have been any love left in my heart to give away? |
33218 | How dared he ask charity that should have gone to the widow and orphan, wherewith to feed a useless quadruped? |
33218 | How did I ever do it?" |
33218 | How did it ever happen?" |
33218 | How did she know I was coming?" |
33218 | How do blind men really feel, and through what gift from on high does that peculiar smile come, which their faces always show? |
33218 | How do you like that Spanish omelette?" |
33218 | How in the world could I have been bothering my head about a trumpery and impossible dog? |
33218 | How much do you want for it?" |
33218 | How the deuce could a fellow expect to paint with a parcel of chattering women around him?" |
33218 | How''s Frieda?" |
33218 | How''s the angel lamb?" |
33218 | How''s the new picture, Frieda?" |
33218 | How''s things in the city?" |
33218 | How-- how could it be otherwise?" |
33218 | I cried,"what-- what have you----?" |
33218 | I do n''t suppose it will awaken the baby, will it?" |
33218 | I was wondering how Gordon had behaved towards her and whether she had found the task a hard and ungrateful one? |
33218 | I wonder whether it would not be well for me to give him a word of warning? |
33218 | I wonder whether it would not be wise for me to go to Fiji or Yokohama or the Aleutian Islands? |
33218 | I''ve heard about your book, Dave, it made a big stir, did n''t it? |
33218 | Is Frances destined to become a great singer again? |
33218 | Is it possible that Gordon suffers from similar limitations and needs to muse and toil and delve before he can bring out the art that is in him? |
33218 | Is it true that in your heart there is such charity?" |
33218 | Is n''t it hot?" |
33218 | Is n''t it lovely?" |
33218 | Is n''t it queer? |
33218 | Is n''t it splendid?" |
33218 | Is n''t she looking splendidly?" |
33218 | Is your suitcase packed?" |
33218 | It ca n''t spoil his pictures, I''m sure, but it may-- what was the expression Kid Sullivan was fond of using? |
33218 | It is getting quite warm again, is n''t it?" |
33218 | It was called''Cynthia''s Mule''; I wonder what possessed me to write about a mule? |
33218 | Made ye mad, did n''t he? |
33218 | May I ask who does Monsieur''s washing?" |
33218 | McGrath?" |
33218 | My young friend, may I offer you a cigar?" |
33218 | Never could take things quietly, could you? |
33218 | Nothing much----Well, I''ve lost my hand, the one I painted with----Yes, I shall be glad to have you do so----Right away? |
33218 | Now what the devil do you want? |
33218 | Or can it be a part of the pose inseparable from him, of which he certainly is sometimes unconscious? |
33218 | Please, Mr. Cole, have you any news of him?" |
33218 | Policemen are the only leisure class in this country, are n''t they? |
33218 | Shall I be less civil than a sand- washed Bedouin or the monk of a Benares shrine? |
33218 | She wanted to know what she could prepare for my supper? |
33218 | She''s just heard of her husband''s death, has she? |
33218 | So I took my departure and returned to Mrs. Milliken''s where I found a message waiting for me:"Why the devil do n''t you have a telephone? |
33218 | Some things a woman tells another must be pretty sacred, do n''t you think?" |
33218 | Splendid young lady, is n''t she? |
33218 | Stunning girl, Miss Van Rossum, is n''t she? |
33218 | Tell me, why are you so kind to me?" |
33218 | The bird was finding its song; would it now also use its wings? |
33218 | There may be concerts and even operatic engagements, who knows? |
33218 | Was he ruminating over the plan of some masterpiece and seeking inspiration from her? |
33218 | Was it her own baby or did she borrow it? |
33218 | Was she already thinking wearily about having to return there on the morrow? |
33218 | Was that infant destined to deprive me of a living, to snatch the bread from my mouth? |
33218 | Was the great wish of her heart coming to her now? |
33218 | We can lick the world when it comes to fetid commercial architecture, ca n''t we? |
33218 | Well, I''m getting it, am I not? |
33218 | Well, how does it strike you?" |
33218 | What are you wasting time for, fooling in that drawer?" |
33218 | What business had he to seek affection, to require the faithfulness of a rust- colored mongrel? |
33218 | What had this picture to do with still- life in a fishmonger''s shop? |
33218 | What is it, appendicitis?" |
33218 | What more could a man require for happiness? |
33218 | What shall I do?" |
33218 | What shall I do?" |
33218 | What shall I do?" |
33218 | What would be the effect of that letter on Frances? |
33218 | What''s new?" |
33218 | What''s the matter?" |
33218 | What''s the use? |
33218 | When will some profound writer give us an essay on the Indispensability of the Superfluous? |
33218 | Where is the gown?" |
33218 | Where on earth does the woman find the ability to play as she does? |
33218 | Where shall I go? |
33218 | Where''s that devilish boy with those drinks?" |
33218 | Who are you to rebel against the most ancient and respectable medical authority, pray?" |
33218 | Who is that coming up the stairs? |
33218 | Why are you no longer receiving at the side of your intended bride? |
33218 | Why could n''t he drive? |
33218 | Why did n''t he tell me what was the matter? |
33218 | Why do n''t you live somewhere else?" |
33218 | Why do n''t you suggest something to me? |
33218 | Why keep on rehearsing them over and over again and sitting down in the wee small hours to make confidants of heartless sheets of paper? |
33218 | Why not wait at least until our return from Camus, or even until the morning? |
33218 | Why refuse a bit of sweetness to a tiny infant, perhaps destined to taste little of it in afterlife? |
33218 | Why should I? |
33218 | Why should that abominable woman give up the letter to you?" |
33218 | Why the deuce are you looking at me like that?" |
33218 | Why the deuce should I?" |
33218 | Why this sudden obsession of a desire to have that picture of the young woman where I could look at it, daily, and delight in its perfection? |
33218 | Why was I ever impelled to leave aside some of the conventions of my trade, to abandon the path I have hitherto trodden in safety? |
33218 | Why will you use such dreadful language?" |
33218 | Wo n''t it do you a bit of good to talk it over? |
33218 | Would it make her feel so badly, that she would be unable to go to Gordon''s on the next day? |
33218 | Would n''t it be funny?" |
33218 | Would the proceeding be tranquil and dignified, or accompanied by roars? |
33218 | Would you force her dear eyes to shed tears of sorrow for you, and hear her soft voice breaking with the pain it would give her to refuse? |
33218 | Would you forfeit these things because you must come forth and beg for more, ay, for more than she can give you? |
33218 | Yes-- it''s a big thing he''s done-- but why did he write me such a letter?" |
33218 | Yet, who knows? |
33218 | You did n''t suppose for a moment that I''d wear such beastly things, did you?" |
33218 | You do n''t object to that, I''m sure, you-- you like to have me love him, do n''t you?" |
33218 | You promise, do n''t you?" |
33218 | You want to know, eh? |
33218 | You wrote that, did you? |
33218 | You''ll take a hand, wo n''t you?" |
33218 | You''ll tell me if I do, wo n''t you?" |
33218 | he finally grumbled,"why do n''t you speak? |
39747 | A proper estimation of the services rendered by the Museum is yet wanting: what academy in modern Europe, however, has done so much? |
39747 | But can Philip be blamed for his endeavours to disarm the military servants of the Romans? |
39747 | Can the performance of these exploits be deemed improbable, in an age when western Asia did not contain a single great empire? |
39747 | Can the raising of difficulties deserve the name of criticism? |
39747 | Could it be supposed that the conqueror of Gaul would return to a private life, and leave his rival at the head of the republic? |
39747 | Could the idea, therefore, of a perfect equality between the states of Greece be other than chimerical? |
39747 | Descent of Cyrus from the family of Achæmenes,( Jamshid?). |
39747 | Hanno, however, was at the head of a powerful party at home, who were clamorous for peace, and who can say they were wrong? |
39747 | How those books were composed, and whether their authors may be considered as contemporary with the events they relate? |
39747 | Of all Germans the writings of Wieland, whether original or translations( and to which can we give the preference?) |
39747 | Of modern writers we dare only mention one:--and who is worthy to be ranked beside him? |
39747 | Of what use is the study of history if it do not make us wiser and better? |
39747 | Otherwise, why should he have given his daughter to a second pretender to the throne? |
39747 | The administration was in the hands of the opulent,([ Greek: gamoroi?]) |
39747 | Thus a succession of distinguished generals came to the throne: what authority, indeed, would an emperor at that time have had who was not a general? |
39747 | Was it not the same with Peter the Great? |
39747 | Was the account that Cato at his return gave of the resuscitated power of Carthage consonant to truth? |
39747 | What writer has so truly seized its spirit, and placed it so faithfully and elegantly before his readers? |
39747 | When indeed have not the plans of conquerors been dependent on the course of events? |
39747 | Where in those days of destruction and revolution could the sciences have found a shelter, if not under the protection of a prince? |
39747 | Where is to be found a time so full of terror as this, when even tears were forbidden? |
39747 | Where was it that Rome did not at this crisis send her ambassadors? |
39747 | Who can read it without admiring the royal statesman? |
39747 | Who could better cajole men and nations, while they were erecting altars to him, than T. Quintius? |
39747 | Who in these days, so terrible to Italy, was sure of his life or property? |
39747 | Why was so great a character disfigured by an ambition of conquest? |
39747 | unless the knowledge of the past teach us to judge more correctly of the present? |
1852 | Accept? 1852 Ah, still to the past Must the present be vassal?" |
1852 | And have I not, lady,he answer''d,..."respected HIS rights as a friend, till himself he neglected YOUR rights as a wife? |
1852 | And is it too late? |
1852 | And love?... 1852 And say you, and deem you, that I wreck''d your life? |
1852 | And will wander no more? |
1852 | At last, then,--at last, and alone,--I and thou, Lucile de Nevers, have we met? 1852 Ay, so? |
1852 | Ay,he moodily murmur''d,"and who cares to scan The heart''s perish''d world, if the world gains a man? |
1852 | But the world? 1852 Can there be In this world one thought common to you and to me? |
1852 | Dear Alfred is right: The black shawl looks best: WILL I change it? 1852 Do you think,"he resumed,..."what I feel while I speak Is no more than a transient emotion, as weak As these weak tears would seem to betoken it?" |
1852 | Does milord mean to go to the ball? |
1852 | Eugene, What is happier than to have hoped not in vain? |
1852 | For pity?... |
1852 | How so? |
1852 | How?--what mean you? |
1852 | I bear it,he said,"But Matilda? |
1852 | I seek at a ball, For instance,--the beauty admired by all? 1852 I?" |
1852 | Lives solitude only for one? 1852 Lucile, You shudder to look in my face: do you feel No reproach when you look in your own heart?" |
1852 | Lucile, dost thou dare to look into my face? 1852 Lucile?" |
1852 | Matilda? 1852 Medicine? |
1852 | My life? |
1852 | Never? 1852 Nunc dimittis?" |
1852 | Of sorrow? |
1852 | Oh, can it be? 1852 Rest, my heart, and my brain, and my right hand, for you; And with these, my Matilda, what may I not do? |
1852 | Souls of men are on board; wealth of man in the hold; And the storm- wind Euroclydon sweeps to his prey; And who heeds the bird? 1852 The cause? |
1852 | The name do you know? |
1852 | Then, I ask, What inspires, and consoles, such a self- imposed task As the life of this man,--but the sense of its duty? 1852 This poor flower,"she said,"seems it not out of place In this hot, lamplit air, with its fresh, fragile grace?" |
1852 | To blame? 1852 To read in your thoughts?" |
1852 | To your lord? 1852 To your lord?" |
1852 | Well, her name, then? |
1852 | Well? |
1852 | What gave you,she cried, with a terrified start,"Such strange power?" |
1852 | What gives you such power over me, that I feel Thus drawn to obey you? 1852 What has caused you to stay?" |
1852 | What have you to tell me? |
1852 | What is truth? 1852 What man? |
1852 | What? 1852 Where is she?" |
1852 | Whither? 1852 Why dispute, Why palter with me? |
1852 | Why not? |
1852 | Will you suffer me, lady, your thoughts to invade By disclosing my own? 1852 Yes, Alfred; you start? |
1852 | Yes?... 1852 You are ill?" |
1852 | You do not repent? |
1852 | You know all, Duke? |
1852 | You relent? 1852 Your note, Madam, reach''d me to- day, at Bigorre, And commands( need I add?) |
1852 | if the boy should die thus? |
1852 | with her sweet Serene voice, she replied to him....Yes? |
1852 | ''Twere a vengeance, no doubt-- A triumph;--but why must YOU bring it about? |
1852 | ( What''s like A boy''s love for some famous man?)... |
1852 | ( whose happiness did he not swear To cherish through life?) |
1852 | A new horoscope I would cast: will you read it? |
1852 | A relation?" |
1852 | A storm seem''d to threaten the weather; If his young friend agreed, why not travel together? |
1852 | A vision which fever hath fashion''d to sight? |
1852 | About Parliament, was it? |
1852 | Accept HIM?" |
1852 | Accomplish''d my mission? |
1852 | Across the green table, That face, with its features so fatally known-- Those eyes, whose deep gaze answer''d strangely his own What was it? |
1852 | Advice?--let me see? |
1852 | Ah, can not two share it? |
1852 | Ah, not so, Lady Alfred? |
1852 | Ah, wise friend, what avails all experience can give? |
1852 | All that heart gain''d from heart? |
1852 | All that soul said to soul in that chamber, who knows? |
1852 | All the mischief she could not but mark? |
1852 | Already? |
1852 | Ambition? |
1852 | And I knew you not? |
1852 | And Matilda? |
1852 | And all the wide distance fate fixes, no doubt,''Twixt the life that''s within, and the life that''s without? |
1852 | And beyond them, what region of refuge? |
1852 | And for whose-- for his sake? |
1852 | And have I not hoarded, to ponder upon, A hundred great acts from your life? |
1852 | And hinder the glances which are not for you? |
1852 | And later, when Power to Beauty was we d, Did some delicate fairy embroider thy bed With the fragile valerian and wild columbine? |
1852 | And now-- now, that his love For another hath left your own heart free to rove, What is it,--even now,--that I kneel to implore you? |
1852 | And shall nations be nobler than men? |
1852 | And she? |
1852 | And so You have met with that hot- headed Frenchman? |
1852 | And that In the heart of Matilda, what was it? |
1852 | And the Duke? |
1852 | And then-- soul of mine, whither? |
1852 | And what best proves there''s life in a heart?--that it bleeds? |
1852 | And what name hath that half- reveal''d hope in the skies? |
1852 | And what rests there for me In the silence of age save the voice of that child? |
1852 | And why, since you have but to stretch forth your hand, The love which you need and deserve to command, Why shrink? |
1852 | And you?" |
1852 | And your plans have been changed by the letter I sent?" |
1852 | And, laboring onwards, at last through a break In the walls of the world, burst at once on the lake? |
1852 | Answer, soul of Lucile, to this dark soul of mine, Does not soul owe to soul, what to heart heart denies, Hope, when hope is salvation? |
1852 | Are not great Men the models of nations? |
1852 | Are the large Indian moons as serene as of old, When, as children, we gather''d the moonbeams for gold? |
1852 | Are the three intense stars, that we watch''d night by night Burning broad on the band of Orion, as bright? |
1852 | Are you really in love with Matilda? |
1852 | At Twenty( who does not at Twenty?) |
1852 | At her side Shall he stand on my hearth? |
1852 | At that minute What pass''d through his mind, who shall say? |
1852 | At the play, are you now? |
1852 | At what, my dear Alfred? |
1852 | Ay, but how?... |
1852 | Books, then? |
1852 | But I? |
1852 | But can you with accents as firm promise me That you will not accept him?" |
1852 | But his own niece?... |
1852 | But in three days who knows What may happen? |
1852 | But may there not be A friendship yet hallow''d between you and me? |
1852 | But she-- is she so? |
1852 | But this sadness-- this shade Which you speak of?... |
1852 | But what if this knowledge were known At a moment in life when I felt most alone, And least able to be so? |
1852 | But what is it, in truth, you fly at? |
1852 | But what then? |
1852 | But where is the man that can live without dining? |
1852 | But who stands at her side, mute and dark in the door? |
1852 | But why, Why cherish the cause of your own misery? |
1852 | But-- What is the state of that soul at the last?" |
1852 | But...''What is the last Bill of Health you can show?'' |
1852 | Ca n''t you guess it? |
1852 | Can I claim in the wife Of that man''s son the child of my age? |
1852 | Can flattery purchase content? |
1852 | Can her home be my home? |
1852 | Can you not stretch your genius to fit a friend''s use? |
1852 | Can you see No reason for this, save unkindness in me? |
1852 | Consider,"he said,"That genius craves power-- what scope for it here? |
1852 | Coquette? |
1852 | Could I live In the light of those young eyes, suppressing a lie? |
1852 | Could he dare To forget he was loved? |
1852 | Dare I think like a sympathy too? |
1852 | Deaf to the sound Of her voice, to some startled inquiry of hers He replied not, but murmur''d,"Lucile de Nevers Once again then? |
1852 | Did Lucile then reject The proffer you made of your hand and your name? |
1852 | Did he regret her? |
1852 | Did she not then, herself, the Comtesse de Nevers, Solve your riddle to- night with those soft lips of hers? |
1852 | Do I linger? |
1852 | Do we stand in our own light, wherever we go, And fight our own shadows forever? |
1852 | Do we trust one whit less in his justice or love? |
1852 | Do you blame The hope of that moment? |
1852 | Do you doubt her fidelity?" |
1852 | Do you go to Luchon? |
1852 | Do you know her? |
1852 | Do you still Blame me, Duke, that I did not then bid you refrain From hope? |
1852 | Do you think none have known but yourself all the pain Of hopes that retreat, and regrets that remain? |
1852 | Do you think''tis alone For three days I have loved you? |
1852 | Do you yet recollect me, my friend? |
1852 | Does he hear in a dream, through the buzz of the crowd, The Duke''s blithe associates, babbling aloud Some comment upon his gay humor that day? |
1852 | Does it move as of old? |
1852 | Duc de Luvois, I loved your niece-- loved? |
1852 | Eh, where? |
1852 | Eh?... |
1852 | Ere the mammoth was born hath some monster unnamed The base of thy mountainous pedestal framed? |
1852 | Fame? |
1852 | For a fairer than she? |
1852 | For all those-- the young, and the fair, and the strong, Who have loved thee, and lived with thee gayly and long, And who now on thy bosom lie dead? |
1852 | For in lives such as ours are, the Dream- tree would grow On the borders of Hades: beyond it, what lies? |
1852 | For what is a state But the many''s confused imitation of one? |
1852 | For who To the heart of the floweret can follow the dew? |
1852 | For whom? |
1852 | Free to offer?" |
1852 | Fulfill''d is my part? |
1852 | HE care for A peerage? |
1852 | Hast thou loved, O my heart? |
1852 | Hath the darkness a dwelling,--save there, in those eyes? |
1852 | Have I done all I can? |
1852 | Have the wild rains of heaven a father? |
1852 | Have you done? |
1852 | He bled for his pupil: what more could he do? |
1852 | He brokenly, timidly said,"Do they know I am thus?" |
1852 | He exclaim''d,"Am I right? |
1852 | He may live without books,--what is knowledge but grieving? |
1852 | He may live without hope,--what is hope but deceiving? |
1852 | He may live without love,--what is passion but pining? |
1852 | He might make himself free? |
1852 | He never was gayer: what makes him so gay? |
1852 | He repeated,"And you?" |
1852 | Heard what? |
1852 | Henceforth shall the tread of a Vargrave alone Rouse your echoes?" |
1852 | Her course? |
1852 | Her tread Aroused him; and, turning towards her, he said:"O Soeur Seraphine, are you happy?" |
1852 | How then, after that Can you and she meet as acquaintances? |
1852 | How was it? |
1852 | How, for hearts rent in twain, shall the curse be destroy''d? |
1852 | How? |
1852 | How?... |
1852 | However severe, Were they unjust, these sudden upbraidings, to her? |
1852 | I may hope not, you tell me: but tell me, may he? |
1852 | I may see you alone As to- night I have seen you? |
1852 | I saw, And, seeing, how could I but love her? |
1852 | I see you have finished, at last, your cigar; Can I offer another? |
1852 | I tried for the tragedy... que voulez- vous? |
1852 | I wish that you knew, sir, how salt is the bread Of another--(what is it that Dante has said?) |
1852 | I, perchance, am accepted already; who knows? |
1852 | I, to cringe to an upstart? |
1852 | I, to draw From its sheath the old sword of the Dukes of Luvois To defend usurpation? |
1852 | I-- have I so wrong''d you, Lucile? |
1852 | I? |
1852 | If not, What then? |
1852 | If quite Freed in faith from this troth, might he hope then?" |
1852 | If she sleeps, you''ll not wake her? |
1852 | If the dead could return or the corpses awake? |
1852 | In the distant Savannahs a talisman grows That makes all men brothers that use it... who knows? |
1852 | In the name of my niece, Whom for my life in yours as a hostage I give, Are you great enough, boy, to forgive me,--and live? |
1852 | Indeed? |
1852 | Indeed? |
1852 | Into what Pandemonium is Pentecost come? |
1852 | Is he anxiously missing your presence, forsooth? |
1852 | Is he free? |
1852 | Is it not so, Lucile? |
1852 | Is it not so? |
1852 | Is it so? |
1852 | Is not Alfred your friend? |
1852 | Is our mission, then, done, When we leave the bruised hearts, if we bind the bruised bone? |
1852 | Is that all? |
1852 | Is the sight so repugnant? |
1852 | Is there, sir, no dishonor In the smile of a woman, when men, gazing on her, Can shudder, and say,"In that smile is a grave"? |
1852 | It is plain That to settle this contest there can but remain One way-- need I say what it is?" |
1852 | It may be that the world pardons...( how should I know?) |
1852 | Lies my heart, then, so bare?" |
1852 | Life''s wilderness round him was spread, What clew there to cling by? |
1852 | Lived there yet fairy- lands in the face at his side? |
1852 | Love, eh? |
1852 | Lucile de Nevers With the Duke''s coupled gayly, in some laughing, light, Free allusion? |
1852 | Matilda is fair, Matilda is young-- see her now, sitting there!-- How tenderly fashion''d--(oh, is she not? |
1852 | Matilda? |
1852 | Matilda?--my wife?--do you know?" |
1852 | May I do so?" |
1852 | May I hope? |
1852 | May we not be yet friends-- friends the dearest?" |
1852 | Must I? |
1852 | Must its charm by my presence so soon be undone? |
1852 | My compatriot, what was his crime? |
1852 | Nay, all these, Were they so many lying and false witnesses, Does there rest not ONE voice which was never untrue? |
1852 | Nay, is not the mission of mercy twofold? |
1852 | Not see? |
1852 | Not too late, however, for me To entreat: is it too late for you to forgive? |
1852 | Not-- How fared the soul through the trials she pass''d? |
1852 | Now prove we, and see: What shade from the leaf? |
1852 | Now then, your mission?" |
1852 | Now? |
1852 | O Nature, say where, thou gray mother of earth, Is the strength of thy youth? |
1852 | O sage, Dost thou satirize Nature? |
1852 | Of old--"What is this? |
1852 | Of the body alone? |
1852 | Of whom? |
1852 | Oh yet Have we weather''d no storm through those twelve cloudless hours? |
1852 | Oh, what if I show''d her that I, too, can be Loved by one-- her own rival-- more fair and more young?" |
1852 | Oh, what is the name of the god at whose fane Every nation is mix''d in so motley a train? |
1852 | On what? |
1852 | Or by you alone am I deem''d The mere frivolous fool I so often have seem''d To my own self?" |
1852 | Or did you on her love then relinquish a claim Urged before? |
1852 | Or gets what he wants when he wants it? |
1852 | Or give to the dead leaves their greenness again? |
1852 | Or quenches his thirst At one draught? |
1852 | Or strikes Without missing the thing that he strikes at the first? |
1852 | Or walks without stumbling? |
1852 | Or what altars of his in the desert may rise? |
1852 | Orion, Arcturus, who pilots them both? |
1852 | Pray who is the Belle Of the Baths at this moment? |
1852 | Pray would you have had her dress always in black, And shut herself up in a convent, dear Jack? |
1852 | Save the man in the boy? |
1852 | Save the soul to the soul? |
1852 | Say, then, Do you blame that one hope? |
1852 | Science, Art? |
1852 | Shall I be the less welcome, wherever I go, For one passion survived? |
1852 | Shall I find the child''s heart that I left there? |
1852 | Shall we blame it because we survive it? |
1852 | Shall we save a whole forest in sparing one seed? |
1852 | She answer''d,--"And you?" |
1852 | She started..."Calamity, Alfred, to you?" |
1852 | She''s pretty? |
1852 | Sir Ridley? |
1852 | So young? |
1852 | Some cheat of a feverish, fanciful brain? |
1852 | Some compatriot of mine, do I then understand, With a cold Northern heart, and a rude English hand, Has injured your Rosebud of France? |
1852 | Some ghost from its grave come again? |
1852 | Some instinct of earnestness, truth, or desire For truth? |
1852 | Some one fact to trust And to hope in? |
1852 | Some one spark of the soul''s native fire Moving under the ashes, and cinders, and dust Which life hath heap''d o''er it? |
1852 | Something wakens within me, and warms to the beam: Is it hope that awakens? |
1852 | Soul to soul, did he say? |
1852 | Spreads the leaf broad and fair? |
1852 | Such gifts you despise? |
1852 | The Camp? |
1852 | The Captain of Port will he ask Any one of such questions? |
1852 | The Countess de Nevers? |
1852 | The State? |
1852 | The clew to unravel this old mystery? |
1852 | The difference in each case is this: The river is lost, if the ocean it miss; If the sea miss the river, what matter? |
1852 | The last, madam, NOT? |
1852 | Then Beau has the mumps, or St. Hubert knows what; WILL I see the dog- doctor?" |
1852 | There As he lay, Nature''s deep voice was teaching him prayer; But what had he to pray to? |
1852 | Three days, do you say? |
1852 | Through many a heart runs the rent in the fable; But who to discover a Curtius is able? |
1852 | Thus we meet then?... |
1852 | Till the hour In which he revea''d it himself, did I,--say!-- By a word, or a look, such a secret betray? |
1852 | To a voice who shall render an image? |
1852 | To some unfrequented lone inn, And so late( for the night was about to begin)-- She, companionless there!--had she bidden that man? |
1852 | To what oracle turns with attention each head? |
1852 | To what use, When you countenance, calmly, such monstrous abuse Of one mere human creature''s legitimate space In this world? |
1852 | To- morrow? |
1852 | Unkind? |
1852 | V."What''s the matter?" |
1852 | WERE you really in love With Madame de Nevers? |
1852 | Was I blind To have dream''d that these clever Frenchwomen of mind Could satisfy simply a plain English heart, Or sympathize with it?" |
1852 | Was he, too, a prey to a mortal disease? |
1852 | Was his love, then, the love of the river? |
1852 | Was it dream? |
1852 | Was it fable? |
1852 | Was it fact? |
1852 | Was it waking? |
1852 | Was it your hair You promised a lock of? |
1852 | Was that look he had cast When they met in the forest, that look which remain''d On his mind with its terrible smile, thus explain''d? |
1852 | Well, Regret or Remorse, Which is best? |
1852 | Well, What is it you wish me to do? |
1852 | Well, madam, in those words what words do you see That threatens the honor of woman? |
1852 | Well? |
1852 | Were those elements in him, which once roused to strife Overthrow a whole nature, and change a whole life? |
1852 | What Bank? |
1852 | What answer? |
1852 | What are you, Lucile?" |
1852 | What art thou To the man of to- day, O Leviathan, now? |
1852 | What could Government give him would be half so dear To his heart as a walk with a dog and a gun Through his own pheasant woods, or a capital run? |
1852 | What excuse will you make, tho''? |
1852 | What hand hath, in heaven, upheld thine expanse? |
1852 | What holds these pale worshippers each so devout, And what are those hierophants busied about? |
1852 | What is it they murmur, and mutter, and hum? |
1852 | What leads forth in his season the bright Mazaroth? |
1852 | What next? |
1852 | What one of us finds the world just as he likes? |
1852 | What remain''d to be done? |
1852 | What remains But to stick to your choice? |
1852 | What was it chill''d you both now? |
1852 | What was left me to do? |
1852 | What was love, then?... |
1852 | What weighed down her head? |
1852 | What weird Kabala lies on those tables outspread? |
1852 | What wert thou to him that from ocean First beheld thee appear? |
1852 | What will you do? |
1852 | What''s the matter? |
1852 | What; Lucile? |
1852 | What? |
1852 | When life leaps in the veins, when it beats in the heart, When it thrills as it fills every animate part, Where lurks it? |
1852 | When she broke off with you Her engagement, her heart did not break with it? |
1852 | Whence came That long look of solicitous fondness?... |
1852 | Whence came To her cheek on a sudden that tremulous flame? |
1852 | Where was I? |
1852 | Wherefore lingers the flame? |
1852 | Wherefore strive where the gods must themselves yield at last? |
1852 | While you deign to reply to one question from me? |
1852 | Whither now should he turn? |
1852 | Who can sit down, and say..."What I will be, I will"? |
1852 | Who can tell? |
1852 | Who denies it? |
1852 | Who is that must not, if question''d, say......"What I would have remain''d or become, I am not"? |
1852 | Who knows What earth needs from earth''s lowest creature? |
1852 | Who knows what may hap? |
1852 | Who knows, Or who heeds, where the exile from Paradise flies? |
1852 | Who knows? |
1852 | Who knows? |
1852 | Who names me but she With titles of love? |
1852 | Who shall bring forth the winds that within them are pent? |
1852 | Who shall seal up the caverns the earthquake hath rent? |
1852 | Who stand up, and affirm..."What I was, I am still"? |
1852 | Who will miss the old stump, so we save the young shoot? |
1852 | Who, Matilda? |
1852 | Who? |
1852 | Why be bound by a chain which himself he breaks through? |
1852 | Why explain Whence or how? |
1852 | Why go to Luchon? |
1852 | Why hast thou conceal''d, Young soldier, that yet open wound in the heart? |
1852 | Why is it that Genius perplexes and troubles And offends the effete life it comes to renew? |
1852 | Why must you itch To be running away, on the eve of all this, To a woman whom never for once did you miss All these years since you left her? |
1852 | Why repel it?" |
1852 | Why think of one, lady, who thinks not of you? |
1852 | Will YOU stand apart? |
1852 | Will she feel( feeling this), when calamities come, That they brighten the heart, though they darken the home?" |
1852 | Will the General speak with her?" |
1852 | Will you save it?" |
1852 | Wilt thou trust NO hand near it?" |
1852 | With a voice faint and marr''d by emotion, she said,"And your pledge to another?" |
1852 | With emotion? |
1852 | Woman''s honor, you ask? |
1852 | Woman, Woman, what hast thou done with my youth? |
1852 | Woo''d and wooer have play''d with the riddle of life,-- Have they solved it? |
1852 | Would the living divine Where they slumber? |
1852 | Would you know A thought which came to me a few days ago, Whilst watching those ships?... |
1852 | Wouldst thou be as they are? |
1852 | X. Oh is it a phantom? |
1852 | Yes, at the sight Of such callous indifference, who could be calm? |
1852 | Yes; and you? |
1852 | Yet what else can I bless for this vision of you? |
1852 | You are really resolved to go back? |
1852 | You are risking the substance of all that you schemed To obtain; and for what? |
1852 | You ask me? |
1852 | You conceive it was awkward? |
1852 | You could never have loved me?" |
1852 | You do not reject? |
1852 | You have acted upon it? |
1852 | You have drawn those deposits at least? |
1852 | You have shown My pathway to me: but say, what is your own?" |
1852 | You know the place well? |
1852 | You know the road well? |
1852 | You mean Ah, how do they call her?... |
1852 | You read Malthus and Sadler? |
1852 | You received my last letter? |
1852 | You remember Lot''s wife? |
1852 | You say, in this letter..."I know Why now you refuse me:''tis( is it not so?) |
1852 | You stay at Luchon? |
1852 | You suffer, young man?" |
1852 | You wish then to break off my marriage? |
1852 | Young, lovely, and loving, no doubt, as you are, Are you loved?"... |
1852 | Yours, Alfred? |
1852 | a dream of the night? |
1852 | a young Duke, not thirty, my dear, With at least half a million( what is it?) |
1852 | ah, is it so? |
1852 | ah, no;''Twas the youth of our youth, my lord, is it not so?" |
1852 | and am I not his wife?" |
1852 | and she, Had she taken that love for the love of the sea? |
1852 | and the young Fairy Bride? |
1852 | and what Is the pity you owe him? |
1852 | and what has become of them? |
1852 | and what read you within it? |
1852 | and who Hath in pity begotten the drops of the dew? |
1852 | and why? |
1852 | and, ah, what would it say? |
1852 | and, oh, For this did I doubt her?... |
1852 | are you blind? |
1852 | at last Was he startled and awed by the change which had pass''d O''er the once radiant face of his young wife? |
1852 | but that question, milord, can it stir Such an interest in you, if your passion be o''er? |
1852 | can you Recall it with coolness and quietude now? |
1852 | can you ask?" |
1852 | canst thou trace One word of thy writing in this wicked scroll, With thine own name scrawl''d through it, defacing a soul?" |
1852 | do we live? |
1852 | do you think he awaits you in truth? |
1852 | does it stir? |
1852 | eaves- dropping, madam?"... |
1852 | else, how bear This intense and intolerable solitude, With its eye on my heart and its hand on my blood? |
1852 | for this I forsook-- For this? |
1852 | for what greater to man may belong Than the right to repair in the future the wrong To the past? |
1852 | for yours I revere; Duc de Luvois, what say you?--my place is not here?" |
1852 | free yet he was not: but could he not be Free erelong, free as air to revoke that farewell, And to sanction his own hopes? |
1852 | has the moment no sadness?" |
1852 | have you not heard? |
1852 | he exclaim''d,"What in truth do you mean by these words, vaguely framed To alarm me? |
1852 | he neglects her-- for whom? |
1852 | hears he a name which, thus syllabled, stirs All his heart into tumult?... |
1852 | his own life of strenuous truth Accomplish''d in act, had it taught him no care For the life of another?... |
1852 | his restraint to renew? |
1852 | holds the bough strong and staunch? |
1852 | how couldst thou ask"What''s in a name?" |
1852 | how works it?... |
1852 | in her innocent blindness, The sport of transparent illusion? |
1852 | in my chains have you rested till now? |
1852 | in the thought save the deed? |
1852 | is it so? |
1852 | lady?" |
1852 | must it ever be so? |
1852 | must we part-- Part thus, then-- forever, Lucile? |
1852 | my husband?" |
1852 | not calm, not secure-- scarcely kind, But in one, all intensest emotions combined: Life and death: pain and rapture?" |
1852 | oh, what devil bewitch''d you to wait? |
1852 | one man''s wit All men''s selfishness how should it fathom? |
1852 | or do I but dream? |
1852 | or find The lost youth I recall with its pure peace of mind? |
1852 | or to action? |
1852 | or to thought? |
1852 | or when we may meet As to- night we have met? |
1852 | or who From the heats of the noontide shall gather the dew? |
1852 | say first Are you free to have offer''d?" |
1852 | shall the world gain a man, And yet Heaven lose a soul? |
1852 | she smiled, as she drew From her bosom two letters: and-- can it be true? |
1852 | silent? |
1852 | sobb''d Matilda,"but saved to what fate? |
1852 | that he grieved not alone? |
1852 | that youth overthrown And retrieved, had it left him no pity for youth In another? |
1852 | the Duke cried..."And so You were listening?" |
1852 | the Duke, then, the night in that lone inn had pass''d? |
1852 | the Soeur-- Seraphine( Is it not so?). |
1852 | thus?" |
1852 | to this Heaven''s question is come: What to Rome is most precious? |
1852 | unless It be, of a truth, a profound weariness, And some sadness?" |
1852 | was her love for him aught Save the first joyous fancy succeeding the thought She last gave to her doll? |
1852 | was she able to feel Such a love as the love he divined in Lucile? |
1852 | was this well? |
1852 | what boots it, a stone at his head And a brass on his breast,--when a man is once dead? |
1852 | what else is this parting? |
1852 | what field For employment, this civilized age, did it yield, In that civilized land? |
1852 | what had he To add to that deep- toned sublime symphony Of thanksgiving?... |
1852 | what rests? |
1852 | what support from the branch? |
1852 | what, What word, do you ask? |
1852 | what, with that heart- broken look, Didst thou read then in nature''s weird heart- breaking book? |
1852 | when, entranced at your feet, As in this blessed hour, I may ever avow The thoughts which are pining for utterance now?" |
1852 | where?... |
1852 | whither?" |
1852 | whither?"... |
1852 | who but she could contrive so to keep One''s eyes, and one''s feet too, from falling asleep For even one half- hour of the long twenty- four? |
1852 | who may tell The dark thoughts of man''s heart, which the red glare of hell Can illumine alone? |
1852 | who shall number the drops of the rain? |
1852 | why Are you here then, dear Jack? |
1852 | why is Genius forever at strife With the world, which, despite the world''s self, it ennobles? |
1852 | with twelve thousand a year? |
1852 | would he deceive her again by this kindness? |
1852 | would he fleece At a pinch, the old hypocrite, even his own niece? |
1852 | would she yield as a wife Independence, long claimed as a woman? |
1852 | would that suit me? |
1852 | would you have me, then, break A promise my honor is pledged to? |
1852 | you Surely ca n''t mean we are ruin''d? |
1852 | you knew,''You know them?" |
1852 | you mean, then, to go? |
1852 | you seek Aid or medicine, or what?" |
41017 | Any chance of the rain stopping? |
41017 | Any signs of Brabant or Gatacre? |
41017 | I wonder if any of us will be left to receive them? |
41017 | Surrender? |
41017 | ''Ever been in such a warm corner?'' |
41017 | ''Which direction?'' |
41017 | ''Why?'' |
41017 | A sample of the scene was given by the correspondent of the_ Standard_:--"''Would you like a swim?'' |
41017 | And again in the matter of food-- how about that? |
41017 | At 6 P.M. Eloff came into the room-- about six feet square-- and leant against the door, and said,''Where is Colonel Hore?'' |
41017 | But what did Lieutenant Janisch do? |
41017 | Cheers or tears? |
41017 | Everybody was yelling,''When do we form up?'' |
41017 | He was in bed, so just sat up and said,''How do you do? |
41017 | Long, long the days and nights; Bitter the tales that came, What of the distant fights? |
41017 | Nine(?) |
41017 | On the early morning of the 25th(?) |
41017 | Rumours of shame? |
41017 | Shouts or sobs? |
41017 | Some one addressed them and said,"What are you fighting for?" |
41017 | The artillery? |
41017 | The captain say to me,''You take that mountain,''and I ask,''Vare shall I take it?''" |
41017 | This was Colonel the Earl of Airlie, in command of the 17th( 12th?) |
41017 | What was happening? |
41017 | When asked why he fought, he said,"Vat could I do? |
41017 | what the deuce is this?'' |
13731 | Adôn,cried Jarvo, shaking Amory''s shoulders,"did you taste the liquor-- tell me-- the liquor-- did you taste?" |
13731 | Ah well, now,said Amory reasonably,"why, Jarvo? |
13731 | Ah, well now, at all events,begged St. George at length,"will you remember something while you are away?" |
13731 | Ah, well now, what news had he? |
13731 | Ah,she cried,"if only it were n''t for the prince and if we had news of father, what a heavenly, heavenly place this would be, would it not?" |
13731 | Ah,she said,"how do you do?" |
13731 | Am I happy? |
13731 | Amory? |
13731 | And his daughter? |
13731 | And how is it,St. George could not resist asking,"that you know and speak the English?" |
13731 | And my father-- where did you find him? |
13731 | And the king''s palace? |
13731 | And the king-- is he returned? |
13731 | And this brother-- is he your niece, Miss Holland''s father? |
13731 | And what of that,propounded St. George gloomily,"if I ca n''t help you just when the danger begins? |
13731 | And you,he said,"you to whom I owe an expiation which I can never make,--do you know it is my servant who would have taken your life?" |
13731 | Are n''t the rest going to have some? |
13731 | Are n''t you-- aren''t you Miss Holland? |
13731 | Are they cookies or are they manna? |
13731 | Are we all to keep house in the tower? |
13731 | Are you an American? |
13731 | Are you ready, adôn? |
13731 | As head of the House of the Litany, you will execute it, Prince Tabnit? |
13731 | Believe-- what? |
13731 | But ah, sir, and ah, madame,was the answer-- it is not recorded whether the poster spoke or whether some one spoke for it--"wouldn''t you like to?" |
13731 | But give up ten minutes on_ The Aloha_,Amory skeptically put it, adjusting his pince- nez,"for anything less than ten minutes on_ The Aloha_?" |
13731 | But how does one ascend? |
13731 | But how, your Highness,he said simply,"did your people ever consent to have an American for your king?" |
13731 | But is it not simple? |
13731 | But suppose,said Olivia merrily,"that when I have eaten a pomegranate or a potato or something in Yaque I forget all about America? |
13731 | But these men, what of them? 13731 But what does he mean?" |
13731 | But what have you done? |
13731 | But where is your island, Prince Tabnit? |
13731 | But-- has anything happened to my father? |
13731 | By Jove-- do you suppose-- what if Little Cawthorne hit the other end of the nail, as usual? 13731 By the way,"St. George submitted,"since your wireless system is perfected, why can not we have news of your island from here?" |
13731 | Can I make my words mean nothing to you? 13731 Can you handle it alone, do you think?" |
13731 | Can you not tell me where you live? |
13731 | Could I stroll about a bit, sir? |
13731 | Did Prince Tabnit send you? |
13731 | Did not the adôn wish to ascend the mountain? |
13731 | Did the big glasses come for the liqueur-- and the little ones will set inside without tipping? 13731 Did we frighten you?" |
13731 | Did you make that up? |
13731 | Did you rub the lamp? |
13731 | Did you see the heiress? |
13731 | Did you think it was I? |
13731 | Did you,he said,"ah-- did you wonder? |
13731 | Do n''t you see-- dear, do n''t you see that by loving me you are giving up a world that you can never, never get back? |
13731 | Do n''t you see? |
13731 | Do you know anything of my father? |
13731 | Do you know what it means? |
13731 | Do you mean the gem? |
13731 | Do you mean to say,asked St. George,"that we too would better look out the prince at once?" |
13731 | Do you mean,asked St. George,"that we need not learn-- as we understand''learn''?" |
13731 | Do you mind telling me what that is? |
13731 | Do you not know? |
13731 | Do you think of any one else? |
13731 | Do you think this person, whoever it is, can do something? 13731 Does n''t every one want a cup of tea?" |
13731 | Everything is ready, Rollo? |
13731 | Forgive me-- what are you going to do all alone there in that strange land, and such a land? |
13731 | Fwhat if she lays here on that gin''ral theory till she''s rotted up, sorr? |
13731 | Fwhat matther? |
13731 | Good God, what are we to do? 13731 Good Heavens,"he groaned,"are you sure-- but are you sure?" |
13731 | Good morning,said St. George;"has the Readers''Guild arrived yet?" |
13731 | Happy, Cawthorne? |
13731 | Has Miss Holland lived abroad? |
13731 | Have you had search made? 13731 Have you,"he asked her gravely,"eaten of the potatoes of Yaque? |
13731 | He was then alive and well? |
13731 | Hello,he said,"Rollo, where did this come from?" |
13731 | How could he possibly know that? |
13731 | How could one possibly do that? |
13731 | How did it happen? |
13731 | How did you know? |
13731 | How do you know but your own weight will flatten you out the minute you step ashore? |
13731 | How do you wish to spend the day, Rollo? |
13731 | How else, your Highness? |
13731 | How is that possible? |
13731 | How on earth did they come to take you to New York? |
13731 | How should they? |
13731 | I beg your pardon, madame,he said,"is this the Readers''Guild?" |
13731 | I beg your pardon, that is literal? |
13731 | I beg your pardon, your Highness? |
13731 | I dare say it is,he told him, as one would say,"Now what the deuce of it?" |
13731 | I feel as if I weighed about ninety pounds,said St. George;"am I fading away or anything?" |
13731 | I want to know to what place it is impossible for me to go? |
13731 | I wonder,he asked with engaging hesitation when he was seated,"whether I may have a-- cigarette? |
13731 | I''m sure, Olivia,she said,"I think it is frightfully unwomanly in you--""To take so much interest in my own murder?" |
13731 | I''m very busy now, and--"See here, Mr. Jeffrey,said St. George,"is no one allowed there but relatives of the guests?" |
13731 | I''ve been remembering a verse,said Amory when he had been presented to Olivia,"may I say it? |
13731 | If you are quite sure,she said,"that you will not disappear in the dark?" |
13731 | In New York? |
13731 | In Yaque? |
13731 | Indeed, we appreciate it,she murmured,"do we not, Miss Utter?" |
13731 | Is Miss Holland engaged? |
13731 | Is Yaque the only example of this kind of thing,he asked,"that the Fourth Dimension would reveal?" |
13731 | Is it not? |
13731 | Is it possible,he murmured, half to himself,"that your race has already developed intuition? |
13731 | Is she engaged to be married? |
13731 | Is the claret warmed? |
13731 | Is the stuff poison? |
13731 | Is there a penalty? 13731 Is there no way,"she said,"that I, the daughter of your king, can save them? |
13731 | Is this woman''s story and mine an idle claim, and one not within your power to answer? 13731 It looks like a great big thing,"said the city editor;"do n''t you think it looks like a great big thing?" |
13731 | It was you? 13731 It''s I that am to lay hereabouts and wait for you, sorr? |
13731 | It''s up at the Boris, in West Fifty- ninth Street-- you know the apartment house? 13731 Jove, wo n''t it be good to get back?" |
13731 | Jupiter,he said,"is she the American girl?" |
13731 | Last night,she said,"when that terrible thing happened, who was it in the other motor? |
13731 | Malakh,he said,"what have you done with the king?" |
13731 | Maniac, no,said St. George shortly,"what do we want to go up the mountain for if Miss Holland is somewhere else? |
13731 | May Cawthorne have his day off to- morrow and go with me? |
13731 | May I come in, Aunt Dora? |
13731 | May I have the honour,suggested the prince,"of waiting upon you at noon to conduct you? |
13731 | May I tell you? |
13731 | May we not know, adôn,asked the man respectfully,"whether the prince has given her his news? |
13731 | Must you not have known, up there in the palace,he besought her,"the night that I got there? |
13731 | My father? |
13731 | New York? 13731 New York?" |
13731 | No municipal line of airships? |
13731 | No one has telephoned to beg off? |
13731 | No-- Bennietod? |
13731 | None of this happened really,triumphantly explained St. George,"I met you at the Boris, did I not? |
13731 | Now, Bennietod? |
13731 | Oh, is that what you call being ahead of the time,she demanded shrilly,"getting behind science to behave like Nero? |
13731 | Oh-- what is that? |
13731 | Olivia, where,she inquired, patting the bobbing, ticking jet on her gown,"where do you think that frightful, mad, old man is?" |
13731 | Olivia-- dear heart,he said,"we do n''t know what they may do-- what will happen-- oh, may I tell you_ now_?" |
13731 | One moment, your Highness,said St. George quickly;"in the absence of the king, who presides over the High Council?" |
13731 | Perhaps you will tell us, Prince Tabnit,he said coolly,"what it is that the people who use this device find against Miss Holland''s father?" |
13731 | Prince Tabnit, will you take me to him? |
13731 | Prince Tabnit,said Mrs. Medora Hastings without ceremony,"what have they done with that poor young man? |
13731 | Rather,said Amory,"but how, good heavens?" |
13731 | Really, Prince,he said,"is it so? |
13731 | Rollo,he said,"did you go to the door of their apartment?" |
13731 | See,he cried,"in a boat on the open sea, would you two be at all able to direct a course to Yaque?" |
13731 | Shall I go up? |
13731 | Shall I look about for a''ansom, sir? |
13731 | So that I could put it in the paper? |
13731 | Speaking of trouble,he said,"what would you say, Rollo, to getting back to the yacht to- night, instead of going up the mountain with us?" |
13731 | St. George,Amory said soberly,"is this the way you''ve been feeling all the way here? |
13731 | Sweetheart,said St. George presently,"do you remember that you are a princess, and I''m merely a kind of man?" |
13731 | Tell me what? |
13731 | Tell me where you can have been,she said only;"did n''t you know how distressed we would be? |
13731 | Tell me,he said impulsively,"what made you let him stay last night, there in the banquet hall?" |
13731 | Tell me,she said trembling,"when have you seen him? |
13731 | The adôn will wait until sunrise to go ashore? |
13731 | The potatoes of Yaque,he reminded her,"and my head?" |
13731 | The prince is most kind,said St. George, and added eagerly:"He is returned, then?" |
13731 | The sentence? |
13731 | Then why did you come to Yaque? |
13731 | Then-- am I royalty? |
13731 | This is breakfast,she told him;"wo n''t you have a cup of tea and a muffin? |
13731 | To seek me? |
13731 | Two lumps? |
13731 | Up the mountain to- morrow night,he concluded fervently,"what do you think of that? |
13731 | Was I of more account in Yaque? |
13731 | We have much to do, Prince Tabnit,said Olivia;"when may we leave?" |
13731 | We shall be obliged to land upon the east coast then, Jarvo? |
13731 | What a poetic game chess is, Mr. Frothingham, do n''t you think? 13731 What about the meeting of the High Council?" |
13731 | What are you doing here? |
13731 | What are you going to do when you catch them? |
13731 | What are you going to do? |
13731 | What are you talking about? 13731 What are you talking about?" |
13731 | What can I have done with that list of numbers? 13731 What date did I understand you to say, sir?" |
13731 | What do you mean by that? |
13731 | What do you mean, your Highness? |
13731 | What do you mean? |
13731 | What do you mean? |
13731 | What do you mean? |
13731 | What do you think of that? |
13731 | What do you think of the idea? |
13731 | What if it''s as Barnay says? |
13731 | What if they should bag us all-- who''ll take back the glad news to the harbour? 13731 What is it,"St. George asked as they rolled away,"what is it that you have come to tell Miss Holland?" |
13731 | What is it? |
13731 | What is that man doing here? |
13731 | What is the Boris story? |
13731 | What other girl? |
13731 | What was it-- some charm? |
13731 | What would you suggest? |
13731 | What,inquired the little man indignantly,"are you trying to do? |
13731 | What? |
13731 | What? |
13731 | What_ is_ the matter with his feet? |
13731 | When afterward? |
13731 | When before? |
13731 | When''ll I ever be in another island, in front of another vacated throne? 13731 When-- alone?" |
13731 | Where are they? |
13731 | Where do I come in? |
13731 | Where does the prince appoint? |
13731 | Where is that island, anyway? |
13731 | Where were you? |
13731 | Who did it? 13731 Who did it? |
13731 | Who did it? |
13731 | Who has? |
13731 | Who knows,she said,"what may be true of us--_nous autres_ in the Fourth Dimension? |
13731 | Who, remembering the first kind glance of her whom he loves, can fail to believe in magic? |
13731 | Whom did you see? 13731 Whom do you say, Matten?" |
13731 | Whose yacht is it? |
13731 | Why have you not sent for me? |
13731 | Why have you not waited? |
13731 | Why have you not waited? |
13731 | Why you went to see her? |
13731 | Why, what is it you think? |
13731 | Will it surprise you, Miss Holland,he said,"to learn that I made my voyage to this country expressly to seek you out?" |
13731 | Will you go? |
13731 | Will you not understand what I mean? |
13731 | Will you please tell us,he said,"what there is in this tube, and how you came by this ring?" |
13731 | Will you prefer to stay aboard? |
13731 | Will you tell me where his room is? |
13731 | Will you tell us more, your Highness? 13731 Will you tell us what your interest is in this woman?" |
13731 | Would n''t Chillingworth dote to idolatry upon this sight? |
13731 | Would you mind waiting a minute? |
13731 | Would you mind,he said,"now-- just for a little, while we wait here-- not asking me that? |
13731 | Yes? |
13731 | You are really leaving to- day, Miss Holland? |
13731 | You came up the side of the mountain, carried by four of those frightful natives? |
13731 | You could not show me how it is managed, your Highness? |
13731 | You do n''t see Jezebel down there in the trees,he pressed him,"or Elissa setting off to found Carthage? |
13731 | You do not know,he said simply,"where the island of Yaque lies?" |
13731 | You have knowledge of both these things? |
13731 | You love me-- you love me,he said,"no matter what happens or what they say-- no matter what?" |
13731 | You mean that you do not love me? |
13731 | You mean,St. George asked,"children who can play on a musical instrument without knowing how they do it, and so on?" |
13731 | You will permit this sentence? |
13731 | You''ll never be sorry-- never? |
13731 | You''ll want me back by tea- time, sir? |
13731 | Your betrothal, your Highness? |
13731 | Your name-- name-- name? |
13731 | Your own coming to Yaque,he said abruptly,"was the result of a sudden decision?" |
13731 | Your servant believed, then, your Highness,he said clearly,"that in taking Miss Holland''s life she was serving you?" |
13731 | _ Is_ it wonderful to you? |
13731 | A submarine was ordered to the spot--""Do you mean,"interrupted St. George,"that you were able to see the wreck at that distance?" |
13731 | Ah-- do they not so? |
13731 | Ah-- what if she did not guess anything of the meaning of what she was hearing? |
13731 | Amory has told me all he knows about it-- by the way, where is the mulatto woman now?" |
13731 | And I always think that what one must avoid is heedlessness, do n''t you think? |
13731 | And I need hardly say that we undertake the journey under oath of secrecy?" |
13731 | And St. George said only:"Now we''re coming up a little-- don''t you think we''re coming up a little? |
13731 | And a little hoarse voice said in St. George''s ear:"Mr. St. George, sir-- we ai n''t late, are we? |
13731 | And are you going to say,''Off with his head''? |
13731 | And can you tell me what is the population of the island?" |
13731 | And do I not triumph?" |
13731 | And do you realize that it''s sheer madness for the five of us to land on that island together?" |
13731 | And how about visiting cards? |
13731 | And how in this world am I ever to mention her name?" |
13731 | And if the prince is still in your land?" |
13731 | And is it a letter?" |
13731 | And is not the ancient citadel of Love- upon- the- Heights that common wonderland? |
13731 | And is that glyptodon salad?" |
13731 | And is there a better way than his way? |
13731 | And now-- what shall I say?" |
13731 | And that is n''t all,"went on the lady, wrong kindling wrong,"what do you do for paper and envelopes? |
13731 | And to Olivia and the missing adventurer over by the parapet came Amory''s soft query:"St George, may I express a friendly concern?" |
13731 | And true lovers always do have trouble, do they not? |
13731 | And was this strange guide going on at random, or did he know-- something? |
13731 | And what answer have you given them?" |
13731 | And what kind of American am I, anyway, with this undeveloped taste for acquiring islands? |
13731 | And what would your poor dear uncle have done? |
13731 | And whatever can he do? |
13731 | And where is McDougle Street?" |
13731 | And why?" |
13731 | And will you remember that, though I may not be successful, I shall at least be doing something to try to help you?" |
13731 | And yesterday, all day yesterday, you must have known-- didn''t you know? |
13731 | And yet what was all this amazing talk about danger in the palace, and being warned, and remembering the tower? |
13731 | And yet what, he thought crazily, if his guess at her part in this betrothal were far wrong? |
13731 | Are n''t we, Aunt Dora?" |
13731 | Are you indeed so near to the Unknown?" |
13731 | But could it have been I who did that?" |
13731 | But had not the simplicity of Rollo taken the leap in experience, and likewise without changing? |
13731 | But how could he have known? |
13731 | But how could he tell to others the monstrous story of last night, and hope to be believed? |
13731 | But how is it possible?" |
13731 | But how, if he were unable to help her? |
13731 | But it was as if the spirit of adventure in St. George had suddenly turned and questioned him, saying:"What of Olivia?" |
13731 | But of course I ca n''t do that, can I? |
13731 | But was she there-- was she there? |
13731 | But what afterward?" |
13731 | But what if this were all some trick and if, in this strange land, Olivia had simply been flashed before his eyes by the aid of mirrors? |
13731 | But what kind of man must you be to have such a servant, in the first place? |
13731 | But what use is that when it only makes trouble for us?" |
13731 | But what was the meaning of that news of the prince''s treachery which Jarvo and Akko had come bearing? |
13731 | But what, my dear Mrs. Hastings, is Bannockburn beside the Midianites and the Moabites and the Hittites and the Ammonites and the Levites?" |
13731 | But-- do you usually do your waiting at this altitude?" |
13731 | But-- is the sensation of_ his_ contriving, Prince?" |
13731 | By the way, where did you say this prince man is?" |
13731 | Can you fix it for me?" |
13731 | Can you get back to the yacht alone?" |
13731 | Can you go?" |
13731 | Can you see?" |
13731 | Chaldea and Egypt all calm?" |
13731 | Chillingworth?" |
13731 | Chillingworth?" |
13731 | Could he be, St. George now wondered vaguely, a citizen of the fifteenth or twentieth dimension, and, there, did they live to his incredible age? |
13731 | Could old Malakh possibly know something of the king? |
13731 | Did I?" |
13731 | Did he live where there are people like your frightful servant? |
13731 | Did n''t you know that she was dangerous and blood- thirsty, and very likely a maniac- born?" |
13731 | Did n''t you say he is on the second floor?" |
13731 | Did she know of his presence? |
13731 | Did they have her in a cage or in a cell? |
13731 | Did you really think it was I?" |
13731 | Did you see the woman?" |
13731 | Do desert island princesses get to New York occasionally, then? |
13731 | Do n''t you think,"he said,"that I might give you a lamp to rub if you need help? |
13731 | Do there chance to be, for example, any children in America who are regarded as prodigies of certain understanding?" |
13731 | Do you get that? |
13731 | Do you live in New York?" |
13731 | Do you mean to assure me,"cried the prince suddenly,"that the vegetables which I ate in America were raised by what is known as''tilling the soil''?" |
13731 | Do you not see that, in the event of your father''s failure to return to his people, you will eventually be Queen of Yaque?" |
13731 | Do you not see? |
13731 | Do you not understand my condition?" |
13731 | Do you remember,"he asked raptly,"those brief and savoury banquets around one o''clock, at Tony''s? |
13731 | Do you see us?" |
13731 | Do you suppose when people die_ they_ do n''t notice any difference, either?" |
13731 | Do you think that even the most open- minded among them would believe that there is such a place as Yaque?" |
13731 | Do you think this_ is_ the necessary thing-- with all the frightful smells?" |
13731 | Do you understand what it is that I offer you?" |
13731 | Do you want to know something?" |
13731 | Does n''t Amory realize that we''ve been more than twelve hours on this island, and that nothing has been done?" |
13731 | Else why had it been omitted in that morning''s search? |
13731 | Faster, Jarvo, ca n''t you?" |
13731 | From where Little Cawthorne once went away wearing two omelettes instead of his overshoes? |
13731 | Frothingham?" |
13731 | Frothingham?" |
13731 | George?" |
13731 | George?" |
13731 | George?" |
13731 | George?" |
13731 | George?" |
13731 | George?" |
13731 | Get in the bath- room or somewhere, will you?" |
13731 | Had a warship arrived? |
13731 | Had he been the king''s friend, St. George was asking-- but why did no one know anything of him? |
13731 | Has the time seemed long? |
13731 | Hastings?" |
13731 | Have I not done so? |
13731 | Have I your permission?" |
13731 | Have not their people, weeping, besought news of them in vain? |
13731 | Have you nothing to say to me? |
13731 | He had dreamed of stairs in the darkness which men mounted and found to have no summits, and suppose this were such a stair? |
13731 | He hesitated for a moment and then, regardless of another soft explosion from Mr. Frothingham''s lips, he added:"Do you not see? |
13731 | He tried to say so, and then:"But do you know what you are doing?" |
13731 | He was certain of her exquisite, playful fancy, but had she imagination? |
13731 | How can it be-- forgive me-- that your people, who seem remote from poetry, should be the devisers and popularizers of this so poetic pastime? |
13731 | How did he know, indeed? |
13731 | How did you come?" |
13731 | How do you know they will take us?" |
13731 | How is it possible? |
13731 | How much did he know? |
13731 | How much ought she to tell? |
13731 | How shall I know it is you when the jar is opened?" |
13731 | How was he, Amory, to be accountable for what he told if he were left here alone in these extraordinary circumstances? |
13731 | How you are able to speak it here in Yaque?" |
13731 | How-- oh, how did he get here? |
13731 | How_ did_ you get here? |
13731 | I could have worn a crown as a matter of taste-- what''s the use of a democracy if you are n''t free to wear a crown? |
13731 | I own her-- do you see? |
13731 | If I were in New York I would n''t be sleepy now, and I''m no different here, am I? |
13731 | If the island was so historic, little Olivia may have said, where was the interfering goddess? |
13731 | If the man could change like this, might he not take on some shape too hideous to bear in the silence? |
13731 | If the stuff is poison ca n''t you say so?" |
13731 | Is he well?" |
13731 | Is it a weary while since I left you to do your will and murder the woman whom you were now about to make your wife?" |
13731 | Is it the necessary thing to do? |
13731 | Is it then so easy to persist, he wondered? |
13731 | Is love''s uttermost gift so little? |
13731 | Is n''t it about time for the prince? |
13731 | Is there not some wonderland in every life? |
13731 | Is this good?" |
13731 | Is this what you came for? |
13731 | It was she who sent you our request, was it not? |
13731 | It''s a wonder they did n''t murder you first and throw you over afterward, is n''t it, Olivia? |
13731 | Jeffrey?" |
13731 | Jeffrey?" |
13731 | John?" |
13731 | John?" |
13731 | Lord be good to me, an''fwhat if she lays here tin year'', and you somewheres fillin''the eyes av the aygles with your brains blowed out, neat?" |
13731 | Motors? |
13731 | None of us is mentioned in Deuteronomy, but what is the will of the princess?" |
13731 | Not asking me anything? |
13731 | Now what can I have done with that list?" |
13731 | Now, have we hymn books enough?" |
13731 | Now, what do you make of it?" |
13731 | Oh, did you bring news of my father?" |
13731 | Oh,"she cried to the prince,"can it be possible that you know him-- that you know anything of my father?" |
13731 | Olivia always sees to my shopping and flowers and everything executive, but I ca n''t let her go into these frightful places, can I?" |
13731 | Or had he been an enemy who had done the king violence-- but how was that possible, in his age and feebleness? |
13731 | Or was it the blind who could see in the dark? |
13731 | Or would she live it with that feminine, unhumourous seriousness which is woman''s weakness? |
13731 | Pick a fight?" |
13731 | Provin?" |
13731 | Put ahead, ca n''t you?" |
13731 | See the little Swiss kid skipping from peak to peak and from crag to crag--""Do we scale the wall?" |
13731 | Shall the prince not answer to this charge before the High Council now-- here-- before you all?" |
13731 | Shall we ask his Highness to do that?" |
13731 | Shall you?" |
13731 | She threw out her hands with a little cry-- was it gladness, or relief, or beseeching? |
13731 | Should n''t you?" |
13731 | Some trick, I suppose?" |
13731 | Sometimes in the world of commonplace there comes an extreme hour which one afterward remembers with"Could that have been I? |
13731 | Somewhere in that dim valley-- was she there, was she there? |
13731 | Suppose he had built a castle in the clouds and tenanted it with Olivia, and were now foolhardily attempting to scale the air? |
13731 | Surely the inscriptions did not suffer, and what then was Amory that he should object? |
13731 | Tell me,"he asked eagerly,"the car you were in-- what became of that?" |
13731 | That is the name? |
13731 | That''s why civilization is bad for morals, do n''t you think? |
13731 | The McDougle Street part had vanished; what if the Boris too were a myth? |
13731 | The king-- might he be down here after all, and might this weird old man know where? |
13731 | The limit of our punishment would be aerial exposure--""You mean?" |
13731 | There is something in that, do n''t you think? |
13731 | This was all very well, but how was it to help her in the face of what was to happen in three days''time? |
13731 | To be normal is the cry of all the hobgoblins... And what does the princess say?" |
13731 | Was Yaque taken? |
13731 | Was it not curious, he thought, that his lips did not speak a new language of their own accord? |
13731 | Was it possible that in the vanishing of the pursued car this had been demonstrated before him? |
13731 | Was it the guard? |
13731 | Was it, he wondered, new to Olivia, and to Jarvo? |
13731 | Was it?" |
13731 | Was she in trouble, did she need him, did she think of him? |
13731 | Was she not princess here in Yaque? |
13731 | Was there, then, a wishing- stone in that window embrasure where she had been sitting, and had the knight come because she had willed it? |
13731 | Was this olive prince, he wondered, going to prove himself worth only a half- column on a back page, after all? |
13731 | Well, and so she talked with you?" |
13731 | Well, and so this frightful mulatto creature: you know her, I understand?" |
13731 | Were they civil to you?" |
13731 | What about the song, the June, the letter that touched the world to gold before your eyes and caught you up in a place of clouds? |
13731 | What could she do now-- what could even Olivia do now but assent? |
13731 | What did he care how long St. George stayed away? |
13731 | What did it all mean? |
13731 | What did it matter-- oh, what did it matter whether or not the reality were grotesque? |
13731 | What did it mean-- what did it mean? |
13731 | What did it mean? |
13731 | What did they do it for?" |
13731 | What do you make of it?" |
13731 | What do you think of it?" |
13731 | What does one do?" |
13731 | What had become of the other car? |
13731 | What if St. George''s romantic apostasy were not, after all, to spoil the flavour of the kind of adventure for which he, Amory, had been hoping? |
13731 | What if he were speaking the truth? |
13731 | What if her father''s safety were not the only consideration? |
13731 | What if this man were speaking the truth? |
13731 | What is a submarine like,"she wanted to know;"were you ever on one?" |
13731 | What is it you think? |
13731 | What is it you think?" |
13731 | What is it your people think?" |
13731 | What is that, Prince Tabnit?" |
13731 | What should he care about time? |
13731 | What time is it? |
13731 | What was it-- why should they blame Cæsar for the condition of the public statues?" |
13731 | What was she to bring him from Yaque-- a pet ibis? |
13731 | What was the creature about?" |
13731 | What would_ she_ say? |
13731 | What, St. George thought as the way seemed to lengthen before them, what if there were no end? |
13731 | What?" |
13731 | Where are Gerya and Ibera, Cabulla and Taura? |
13731 | Where shall we meet?" |
13731 | Where''s some snap? |
13731 | Which reminds me: what is the sentence?" |
13731 | Who is Miss Holland?" |
13731 | Who was he-- but who was he? |
13731 | Who was it, there in the road when I-- was it you? |
13731 | Who would believe me? |
13731 | Whose hand would be upon that lever, whose daring would be directing its flight, whose but one in all Yaque-- and that Olivia''s? |
13731 | Why did n''t I move into the palace, and set up a natty, up- to- date little republic? |
13731 | Why not I? |
13731 | Why not here? |
13731 | Why not? |
13731 | Why should St. George have an idea that he controlled the hour? |
13731 | Why should he fear that, because Olivia was in Yaque, the mere mention of a betrothal referred to Olivia? |
13731 | Will it?" |
13731 | Will that do?" |
13731 | Will you come with me to my apartment where we may be alone?" |
13731 | Will you let me help you? |
13731 | Will you mind getting Amory on the wire when he calls up, and tell him to show up without fail at my place at noon to- day? |
13731 | Will you not understand? |
13731 | Will you sit down?" |
13731 | Will you tell me quickly your name?" |
13731 | Will you tell me when you last heard from him and where he was?" |
13731 | Will you tell us why the death of his daughter should be considered a service to the prince of a country which he had visited?" |
13731 | With the first words there came to St. George the thrill of something that had possessed him-- when? |
13731 | Wo n''t it?" |
13731 | Wo n''t it?" |
13731 | Wo n''t you breakfast with me now?" |
13731 | Wo n''t you let me come back here at twelve o''clock and go down with you to the boat?" |
13731 | Wot''s he t''ink? |
13731 | Would St. George never come? |
13731 | Would he see Olivia and would he be able to speak with her, and did she know he was there, and would she be angry? |
13731 | Would n''t Chillingworth turn in his grave at his desk?" |
13731 | Would n''t his mere understanding of news teach him what was happening? |
13731 | Would n''t it-- wouldn''t it, after all, be so very different? |
13731 | Would she see him, and might he just possibly speak with her, and what would the evening hold for her? |
13731 | Would she see the value of the moment and watch herself moving through it? |
13731 | Yet if this were so, would they not have taken Olivia with them? |
13731 | You do not understand my words? |
13731 | You found him, did you not?" |
13731 | You see that, do you not-- that I must go?" |
13731 | You were saying that we should send some one to McDougle Street?" |
13731 | [ Illustration] CHAPTER XXI OPEN SECRETS"Will you have tea?" |
13731 | _ Did_ they, St. George wondered vaguely; and, when he went back, how would they look to him? |
13731 | asked St. George eagerly;"did n''t anything come of that?" |
13731 | cried Olivia,"I thought--""That you saw me?" |
13731 | cried the little man, nodding, and momentarily hesitated;"but yet his news-- what news, adôn, has he told her?" |
13731 | he called,"where are you-- where are you?" |
13731 | he put it, beneath his breath,"what_ do_ you think of that?" |
13731 | he said wonderingly to him;"what in the world are you doing here?" |
13731 | his hostess demanded,"and whatever does it say?" |
13731 | inquired St. George,"or is there a passage in the rock?" |
13731 | observed St. George;"but how long will it take us to sail round the island?" |
13731 | said Bennietod, intent upon a Roman candle,"wha''do you care, Mr. Cawt''orne? |
13731 | said St. George quickly,"you have a brother-- in the Orient?" |
13731 | she cried appealingly,"do n''t you remember-- don''t you know?" |
13731 | she cried in that perfect English which is not only a rare experience but a pleasant adventure,"what new horror is this?" |
13731 | she cried,"Olivia-- don''t you know? |
13731 | shrilled Mrs. Hastings,"it''s in the very heart of the Bowery-- isn''t it, Mr. St. John? |
34541 | All alo- an? 34541 Alone?" |
34541 | And Belinda, mother dear? |
34541 | And before then? |
34541 | And how about the other luggage, sir,--the portmanteaus and hat- boxes? |
34541 | And where''s-- your patient? |
34541 | And you will forgive Olivia, dear? |
34541 | Are you all alone here? |
34541 | Are you mad, or drunk? 34541 Are you mad?" |
34541 | But afterwards, darling, when you were better, stronger,--did you make no effort then to escape from your persecutors? |
34541 | But is there nothing else I can do, sir? |
34541 | But what will you do, Paul? |
34541 | But when shall we see you again, Paul? 34541 But wo n''t to- morrow mornin''do? |
34541 | But you remember, Edward,--you remember what I said about never seeing the Sycamores? 34541 Can you find no words that are vile enough to express your hatred of me? |
34541 | Did George Weston tell me the truth just now? |
34541 | Did I? |
34541 | Do you imagine that_ I_ will let this marriage take place? |
34541 | Do you know if anybody has lived here lately? |
34541 | Do you remember that poor foolish German woman who believed that the spirit of a dead king came to her in the shape of a blackbird? 34541 Do you think that fellow would go to Australia, Lavinia?" |
34541 | Do you think, Miss Lawford, that it is necessary to sit at a man''s dinner- table before you know what he is? 34541 Edward Arundel!--what about Edward Arundel?" |
34541 | Even yet I am a mystery to you? |
34541 | For only bringing you the news, Paul? |
34541 | Has she said''yes''? |
34541 | Have I any clothes that I can hunt in, Morrison? |
34541 | Have you been here long? |
34541 | Have you nothing more to tell me? |
34541 | How do you mean? |
34541 | How soon will it come? |
34541 | I suppose you are not aware that my future brother- in- law is a major? |
34541 | I suppose you are not aware that you have been talking to Major Arundel, who has done all manner of splendid things in the Punjaub? 34541 I''m to go to Australia, am I? |
34541 | Immediately? |
34541 | Is it true? |
34541 | Is n''t he like you, Edward? |
34541 | Is this true that George Weston tells me? |
34541 | Is this true? |
34541 | Is your clock right? |
34541 | My dear Mrs. John, what is it you want of me? |
34541 | My dressing- case? |
34541 | Need you ask me the question, Paul? 34541 Not yet?" |
34541 | O yes, dear; but had n''t you better take any thing of value yourself? |
34541 | Of course it must n''t,answered Mr. Weston;"did n''t I say so just now? |
34541 | Shall I ever have courage to stop till it comes? |
34541 | Shall you go to London? |
34541 | Since when has my wife been at Kemberling? |
34541 | The door in the lobby? |
34541 | To clean up what? |
34541 | To her-- to Mary-- my wife? |
34541 | To let what be? |
34541 | Well, Lavinia? |
34541 | What can I do to him? |
34541 | What else should we do? 34541 What is it, darling?" |
34541 | What is it? |
34541 | What is the matter, darling? |
34541 | What money have you, Lavinia? |
34541 | What was there for me beyond that place? 34541 What, darling? |
34541 | What, dear? |
34541 | What, mother? |
34541 | Where are all the rest of the servants? |
34541 | Where are my mother and Clarissa? |
34541 | Where is my wife? |
34541 | Where was she before then? |
34541 | Where, in Heaven''s name, have you been hiding yourself, woman? |
34541 | Where? |
34541 | Who are you, girl? |
34541 | Who are you, girl? |
34541 | Who does not know him? |
34541 | Why did n''t you go away with the rest? |
34541 | Why did the other servants leave the place? |
34541 | Why do n''t you speak to me? |
34541 | Why should I try to escape from them? |
34541 | Why should they say my darling committed suicide? |
34541 | Why should you prevent it? |
34541 | Why, my pet? |
34541 | Will God ever forgive my sin? 34541 Will she go there and knock them up, I wonder? |
34541 | You did not see Olivia, then, all this time? |
34541 | You did, did n''t you? 34541 You know my father?" |
34541 | You know what we said to- day, Edward? |
34541 | You mean to let this be, then? |
34541 | You mean to say you found out what had driven your cousin''s widow mad? |
34541 | You think it worth something, then, mother? |
34541 | You think our money is worth something to us? 34541 You wo n''t go to the Towers, papa dear?" |
34541 | You would have stood by Arundel''s poor little wife, my dear? |
34541 | You would stand by her_ now_, if she were alive, and needed your friendship? |
34541 | _ Am_ I happier? |
34541 | _ What_ can I do to him? 34541 ''He has despised your love,''you said:''will you consent to see him happy with another woman?'' 34541 All my plots, my difficulties, my struggles and victories, my long sleepless nights, my bad dreams,--has it all come to this? 34541 Am I to wait for an answer? |
34541 | And now may I ask the reason----?" |
34541 | And, oh sir, bein''a poor lone woman, what was I to do?" |
34541 | Are you turned to stone, Edward Arundel? |
34541 | Are_ you_ going away?" |
34541 | Because I have profited by the death of John Marchmont''s daughter, this impetuous young husband imagines-- what? |
34541 | Besides, what_ should_ come? |
34541 | But Hester was not alone; close behind her came a lady in a rustling silk gown, a tall matronly lady, who cried out,--"Where is she, Edward? |
34541 | But how-- but how? |
34541 | But how? |
34541 | But now ruin had come to him, what was he to do? |
34541 | But still the great question was unanswered-- How was he to kill himself? |
34541 | But tell me what you are going to do yourself, and where you are going?" |
34541 | But was there any chance? |
34541 | But what am I to do? |
34541 | But what are we to do, Paul? |
34541 | But what can a man expect when he''s obliged to put his trust in a fool?" |
34541 | But what of that? |
34541 | But you wo n''t love her quite the same way that you loved me, will you, dear? |
34541 | But you''ll take something-- wine, tea, brandy- and- water-- eh?" |
34541 | But, my darling, why did you make no effort to escape?" |
34541 | Ca n''t you speak, woman? |
34541 | Can God ever forgive these people for their cruelty to you? |
34541 | Can He pity, can He forgive, such guilt as mine? |
34541 | Do you remember how you played upon my misery, and traded on the tortures of my jealous heart? |
34541 | Do you remember that which I must restore to her when I give her back this house and the income that goes along with it? |
34541 | Do you remember what her highest right is? |
34541 | Do you remember what you said to me? |
34541 | Do you remember_ how_ you tempted me? |
34541 | Do you think I can go back to the old life? |
34541 | Does she know that Edward''s there? |
34541 | Edward, is it real? |
34541 | Edward?" |
34541 | From long ago, when you were little more than a boy-- you remember, do n''t you, the long days at the Rectory? |
34541 | Had he not done his duty to the dead; and was he not free now to begin a fresh life? |
34541 | Has the person I left in your care, whom you were paid, and paid well, to take care of,--have you let her go? |
34541 | Have n''t I heard it demonstrated by cleverer men than I am? |
34541 | Have n''t I looked at it in every light, and weighed it in every scale-- always with the same result? |
34541 | He looked forward with a shudder to see-- what? |
34541 | Her thoughts wandered away to that awful question which had been so lately revived in her mind-- Could she be forgiven? |
34541 | How could he tell which of these ways Olivia might have chosen? |
34541 | How should he die? |
34541 | How was he to kill himself? |
34541 | How will you endure Edward Arundel''s contempt for you? |
34541 | How will you tolerate his love for Mary, multiplied twentyfold by all this romantic business of separation and persecution? |
34541 | I wonder whether Marchmont Towers is insured? |
34541 | I''d rather you spoke to him, though,"added the surgeon thoughtfully,"because, you see, it would come better from you, would n''t it now?" |
34541 | If I separated her from her husband-- bah!--was that such a cruelty? |
34541 | If such and such a course of diet is fatal to the body''s health, may not some thoughts be equally fatal to the health of the brain? |
34541 | Is it all real?" |
34541 | Is it for this I have shared your guilty secrets? |
34541 | Is it for this that I have sold my soul to you, Paul Marchmont? |
34541 | Is it true that Edward Arundel is going to be married to- morrow?" |
34541 | Is it-- is it? |
34541 | Is she still with the stepdaughter she loves so dearly?" |
34541 | Is that why you are silent?" |
34541 | Is there anything due to you?" |
34541 | Is your love worth no more than this? |
34541 | It''s all brotherly kindness, of course, and friendly interest in my welfare-- that''s what it''s_ called_, Mrs. J. Shall I tell you what it_ is_? |
34541 | John?" |
34541 | Might not these things even yet come to pass? |
34541 | Mr. Arundel is here, is he not?" |
34541 | Now what, in Heaven''s name, could that miserable little Mary have done with eleven thousand a year, if-- if she had lived to enjoy it?" |
34541 | Or a gentleman who could enter with any warmth of sympathy into his friend''s feelings respecting the auburn tresses or the Grecian nose of"a sister"? |
34541 | Or am I only dreaming? |
34541 | Or, escaping all this, what was there for him? |
34541 | Paul, Paul, what are we to do? |
34541 | Shall I tell you what it is to love? |
34541 | Shall I wake presently and feel the cold air blowing in at the window, and see the moonlight on the wainscot at Stony Stringford? |
34541 | Shall we postpone the wedding?" |
34541 | Should he go upstairs and cut his throat? |
34541 | Something may happen, perhaps, to prevent----""What should happen?" |
34541 | There was no possibility that Olivia should waver in her purpose; for had she not brought with her two witnesses-- Hester Jobson and her husband? |
34541 | There''s a nice opening in the medical line, is there? |
34541 | Was ever bridegroom more indulgent, more devoted, than Edward Arundel? |
34541 | Was it such a great advantage, after all, this annihilation, the sovereign good of the atheist''s barren creed? |
34541 | Was it true that Edward Arundel had never really loved his young bride? |
34541 | Was it within the compass of heavenly mercy to forgive such a sin as hers? |
34541 | Was there any truth in that which Paul Marchmont had said to her? |
34541 | Was there anything in her mind; or was she only a human automaton, slowly decaying into dust? |
34541 | What are you going to do?" |
34541 | What can I do to him? |
34541 | What course would this desperate woman take in her jealous rage? |
34541 | What did it matter to me whether I was there or at Marchmont Towers? |
34541 | What did it matter? |
34541 | What did it matter? |
34541 | What did my mother say?" |
34541 | What do you advise? |
34541 | What else should she say, after refusing all manner of people, and giving herself the airs of an old- maid? |
34541 | What has not been done by unhappy creatures in this woman''s state of mind? |
34541 | What have we to live for? |
34541 | What have you done to show yourself worthy of my faith in you?" |
34541 | What have you done with your savings?" |
34541 | What more likely than that she lost the track, and wandered into the river? |
34541 | What should he do? |
34541 | What vengeance could he wreak upon the head of that wretch who, for nearly two years, had condemned an innocent girl to cruel suffering and shame? |
34541 | What was he to do with that man? |
34541 | What was he to do? |
34541 | What was it worth, this fine house, with the broad flat before it? |
34541 | What was it? |
34541 | What was the dreadful secret which had transformed this woman? |
34541 | What was the nature of his crime, and what penalty had he incurred? |
34541 | What was there for this man even then? |
34541 | What was to be gained by any show of respect to her, whose brain was too weak to hold the memory of their conduct for five minutes together? |
34541 | What would she do? |
34541 | What''s the good of your coming if you bring me no help?" |
34541 | When would art earn him eleven thousand a year? |
34541 | Where are they-- my mother and Letitia?" |
34541 | Where is Olivia, by- the- bye? |
34541 | Where is she? |
34541 | Where''s Peterson?" |
34541 | Where?" |
34541 | Who gave you leave to let that woman go? |
34541 | Who was it who drove Mary Marchmont from this house,--not once only, but twice, by her cruelty? |
34541 | Who was it who first sinned? |
34541 | Who----?" |
34541 | Why do you come here with your idiotic fancies? |
34541 | Why should I be afraid? |
34541 | Why should I prevent it?" |
34541 | Why should he slave at his easel, and toil to become a great painter? |
34541 | Will he ever forgive you, do you think, when he knows that his young wife has been the victim of a senseless, vicious love? |
34541 | Will you come upstairs with me? |
34541 | With George Weston and Olivia, Betsy Murrel the servant- girl, and Hester Jobson to bear witness against him, what could he hope? |
34541 | Would she go straight to Edward Arundel and tell him----? |
34541 | Yes, it is a conspiracy, if you like; if you are not afraid to call it by a hard name, why should I fear to do so? |
34541 | Yes, this was most likely; for how else could she hope to prevent the marriage? |
34541 | You are happier here than you were in Charlotte Street, eh, mother?" |
34541 | You can get your things together; there''s a boy about the place who will carry them for you, I suppose?" |
34541 | You can let me in at the little door in the lobby, ca n''t you, Mrs. John? |
34541 | You do n''t know what that word''love''means, do you? |
34541 | You have heard of my relative, Mrs. John Marchmont,--my cousin''s widow?" |
34541 | You have managed him for fifteen years: surely you can go on managing him now without annoying_ me_ about him? |
34541 | You have no doubt heard that she is-- mad?" |
34541 | You have ruined me; do you hear? |
34541 | You must want money, Paul?" |
34541 | You remember the way he went on that day down in the boat- house when Edward Arundel came in upon us unexpectedly? |
34541 | You want the dressing- case carried to Mrs. Weston''s house, and I''m to wait for you there?" |
34541 | You will let it take place?" |
34541 | You will see them together-- you will hear of their happiness; and do you think that_ he_ will ever forgive you for your part of the conspiracy? |
34541 | You''ll accept the shelter of our spare room until to- morrow morning?" |
34541 | You''ll stop here for the rest of the night? |
34541 | cried Mrs. Arundel;"but surely you----?" |
34541 | exclaimed Mr. Marchmont, decisively;"who is Mr. Gormby, that he should give orders as to who comes in or stops out? |
34541 | he asked;"and what brings you to this place?" |
34541 | may not a monotonous recurrence of the same ideas be above all injurious? |
34541 | or how shall we hear of you?" |
34541 | said Edward Arundel;"Mary, my poor sorrowful darling-- alive?" |
34541 | she cried,"what is it?" |
34541 | she said;"_ is_ it? |
34541 | what are we to do?" |
34541 | what of her? |
34541 | why didst Thou so abandon me, when I turned away from Thee, and made Edward Arundel the idol of my wicked heart?" |
34541 | why do I waste my breath in talking to such a creature as this? |
34541 | will God ever have pity upon me? |
34541 | you know,--you must know, dearest,--that I shall never see that place?" |
34698 | And what doth the Lord require of thee, but to{ 96} do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? |
34698 | Understood? |
34698 | What made the Mahommedan world? 34698 )[ 102] There is also a good deal said about a very questionable blind man-- one Albricus( Alberich?) 34698 23)--is not this Deity conceived as manlike in form? 34698 27 David says to Zadok the priest,Art thou not a seer?" |
34698 | ARE THE EFFECTS OF USE AND DISUSE INHERITED? |
34698 | And Samuel said to Saul, Why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up? |
34698 | And Samuel said, Wherefore then dost thou ask of me, seeing that Jahveh is departed from thee and is become thine adversary? |
34698 | And having made his election, what reasons has he to give for his choice? |
34698 | And if he is not, in what sense has this part of the uniformitarian doctrine, as he defines it, lowered its pretensions to represent scientific truth? |
34698 | And if so, how can agnosticism be the"mere negation of the physicist"? |
34698 | And now, what is to be said to Mr. Harrison''s remarkable deliverance"On the future of agnosticism"? |
34698 | And what is historical truth but that of which the evidence bears strict scientific investigation? |
34698 | And what is the state of things we find disclosed? |
34698 | And what made the Christian world? |
34698 | And what was the exact nature of the advice given? |
34698 | And, finally, how is this account to be reconciled with those in the first and third gospels-- which, as we have seen, disagree with one another? |
34698 | And, in matter of fact, can the record, with due regard to legitimate historical criticism, be pronounced true? |
34698 | Are the authors of the versions in the second and the third gospels really independent witnesses? |
34698 | Are there then any Christians who say that they know nothing about the unseen world and the future? |
34698 | Are there, then, any"conclusions"that are not"purely mental"? |
34698 | Are they, as the healthy common sense of the ancient Greeks appears to have led them to assume without hesitation, the remains of animals and plants? |
34698 | Are we going back to the days of the Judges, when wealthy Micah set up his private ephod, teraphim, and Levite? |
34698 | Are we to accept the Jesus of the second, or the Jesus of the fourth Gospel, as the true Jesus? |
34698 | But I ask in this case also, how is it conceivable that any man, in possession of all his natural faculties, should hold such an opinion? |
34698 | But have we a right to do so? |
34698 | But if the primitive Nazarenes of whom the Acts speaks were orthodox Jews, what sort of probability can there be that Jesus was anything else? |
34698 | But is it true? |
34698 | But to Saul nothing is visible, for he asks,"What seest thou?" |
34698 | But to how much does this so- called claim amount? |
34698 | But what conceivable motive could"Mark"have for omitting it? |
34698 | But what is the good of it all in the face of Leviticus on the one hand and of palæontology on the other? |
34698 | But what is the meaning of this expression? |
34698 | But when one tried to think it out, what in the world became of force considered as an objective entity? |
34698 | But why should a man be expected to call himself a"miscreant"or an"infidel"? |
34698 | But will any one tell me that death is"necessary"? |
34698 | By whom? |
34698 | By whose authority is the signification of that term defined? |
34698 | Can any other conclusion be drawn from the history of Abraham and Isaac? |
34698 | Can such a statement as this be seriously made in respect of any human being? |
34698 | Cosmas and Damianus? |
34698 | Did he think it,{ 426} at any subsequent time, worth while"to confer with flesh and blood,"or, in modern phrase, to re- examine the facts for himself? |
34698 | Does Abraham exhibit any indication of surprise when he receives the astounding order to sacrifice his son? |
34698 | Does Mr. Lilly suppose that I put aside"as unverifiable"all the truths of mathematics, of philology, of history? |
34698 | Does he hold by the one evangelist''s story, or by that of the two evangelists? |
34698 | Does he really mean to suggest that agnostics have a logic peculiar to themselves? |
34698 | Does not the action of Saul, on a famous occasion, involve exactly the same theological presuppositions? |
34698 | Does this mean that Seth resembled Adam only in a spiritual and figurative sense? |
34698 | For what is the adverse case? |
34698 | Has Nominalism, in any of its modifications, so completely won the day that Realism may be regarded as dead and buried without hope of resurrection? |
34698 | Has any one ever disputed the contention, thus solemnly enunciated, that the doctrine of evolution was not invented the day before yesterday? |
34698 | Has any one ever dreamed of claiming it as a modern innovation? |
34698 | Has any one then yet seen the production of negroes from a white stock, or_ vice versa_? |
34698 | Has it now a merely antiquarian interest? |
34698 | He next asked him how he knew it was the spirit of Toogoo Ahoo? |
34698 | How can I tell you_ how_ I knew it? |
34698 | How can he have founded the universal religion which was not heard of till twenty years after his death? |
34698 | How could its subsidence, by any possibility, be an affair of weeks and months? |
34698 | I am really grieved to be obliged to say that this third( or is it fourth?) |
34698 | I am sorry to trouble him further, but what does he mean by"it"? |
34698 | I rejoice to think now of the( then) Bishop''s cordial hail the first time we met after our little skirmish,"Well, is it to be peace or war?" |
34698 | If God did not walk in the Garden of Eden, how can we be assured that he spoke from Sinai? |
34698 | If Jonah''s three days''residence in the whale is not an"admitted reality,"how could it"warrant belief"in the"coming resurrection?" |
34698 | If divine authority is not here claimed for the twenty- fourth verse of the second chapter of Genesis, what is the value of language? |
34698 | If early views of religion and morality had not been imperfect, where had been the development? |
34698 | If it is not historically true that such and such things happened in Palestine eighteen centuries ago, what becomes of Christianity? |
34698 | If no Flood swept the careless people away, how is the warning of more worth than the cry of"Wolf"when there is no wolf? |
34698 | If symbolical visions and mythical creations had found no place in the early Oriental expression of Divine truth, where had been the development? |
34698 | If the latter is{ 9} to be accepted, or rejected, by private judgment, why not the former? |
34698 | If the story of the Fall is not the true record of an historical occurrence, what becomes of Pauline theology? |
34698 | If, he says, there are texts which seem to show that Jesus contemplated the evangelisation of the heathen:... Did not the Apostles hear our Lord? |
34698 | In what other way than by such an appeal to their experience could he so surely awaken in his audience the tragic pity and terror? |
34698 | Is he the kindly, peaceful Christ depicted in the Catacombs? |
34698 | Is it contained in the so- called Apostles''Creed? |
34698 | Is it not certain that the Apostles did not gather this truth from His teaching? |
34698 | Is it that contained in the Nicene and the Athanasian Creeds? |
34698 | Is such a thing even conceivable? |
34698 | Is there any known historical work which is throughout exactly true, or is there not? |
34698 | Is there"no relation to things social"in"mental conclusions"which affect men''s whole conception of life? |
34698 | It may be so, or it may not be so; but where is the evidence which would justify any one in making a positive assertion on the subject? |
34698 | Laban indignantly demands of his son- in- law,"Wherefore hast thou stolen my Elohim?" |
34698 | Melanchthon, Ulrich von Hutten, Beza, were they not all humanists? |
34698 | Middle Palæozoic Vertebrate_ land_-population( Amphibia, Reptilia[?]). |
34698 | Might not there, however, be a suspension of a lower law by the intervention of a higher? |
34698 | Much astonished at this remark from a person who was supposed not to have seen the relics, Eginhard asked him how he knew that? |
34698 | Now what is a Christian? |
34698 | On what grounds can a reasonable man be asked to believe any more? |
34698 | Or can he be rightly represented by the bleeding ascetic, broken down by physical pain, of too many mediæval pictures? |
34698 | Or of Micah''s inquiry,"Will Jahveh be pleased with thousands of rams or with ten thousands of rivers of oil?" |
34698 | Really? |
34698 | Saul goes to this woman, who, after being assured of immunity, asks,"Whom shall I bring up to thee?" |
34698 | So if I am asked to call myself an"infidel,"I reply: To what doctrine do you ask me to be faithful? |
34698 | Still more, on the first day, when it is nothing but a flat cellular disk? |
34698 | Still the spectre remains invisible to Saul, for he asks,"What form is he of?" |
34698 | The plain answer to this question is, Why should anybody be called upon to say how he knows that which he does not know? |
34698 | The preacher asks,"Might not there be a suspension of a lower law by the intervention of a higher?" |
34698 | Then said Saul to his servant, But behold if we go, what shall we bring the man? |
34698 | To this the priest,"Whence art thou, then, if these are not thy parents?" |
34698 | Was Augustine heretical when he denied the actual historical truth of the record of the Creation? |
34698 | Was not the arch- humanist, Erasmus, fautor- in- chief of the Reformation, until he got frightened and basely deserted it? |
34698 | Was not the name of"Christian"first used to denote the converts to the doctrine promulgated by Paul and Barnabas at Antioch? |
34698 | Was not their chief,"James, the brother of the Lord,"reverenced alike by Sadducee, Pharisee, and Nazarene? |
34698 | Was that prince of agnostics, David Hume, particularly imbued with physical science? |
34698 | Were Gentile converts bound to obey the Law or not? |
34698 | What do we find when the accounts of the events in question, contained in the three Synoptic gospels, are compared together? |
34698 | What have we? |
34698 | What is the"entire question"which"arises"in a"narrowed form"upon"secular testimony"? |
34698 | What is to hinder our supposing that the organic creation is also a result of natural laws which are in like manner an expression of his will? |
34698 | What line of my writing can the Duke of Argyll produce which confounds the organic with the inorganic? |
34698 | What more intrinsic claim has the story of the Exodus than that of the Deluge, to belief? |
34698 | What, then, could be more natural than that a Chaldæan poet should seek for the incidents of a great catastrophe among such phenomena? |
34698 | What, then, was that labour of unsurpassed magnitude and excellence and immortal influence which Newton did perform? |
34698 | When Jesus spoke, as of a matter of fact, that"the Flood came and destroyed them all,"did he believe that the Deluge really took place, or not? |
34698 | Where are the secret conspirators against this tyranny, whom I am supposed to favour, and yet not have the courage to join openly? |
34698 | Who is to gainsay our ecclesiastical authority{ 475} here? |
34698 | Who shall or can forbid him? |
34698 | Who was it? |
34698 | Why are we to retain a corresponding fiction for the nervous organs? |
34698 | Why forget the angel who wrestled with Jacob, and, as the account suggests, somewhat overstepped the bounds of fair play, at the end of the struggle? |
34698 | Why not? |
34698 | Why should not your friend"levitate"? |
34698 | Will their brethren follow their just and prudent guidance? |
34698 | Wilt not thou possess that which Chemosh, thy Elohim, giveth thee to possess?" |
34698 | Would not an English court of justice speedily teach him better? |
34698 | [ 104] Must we suppose, therefore, that the Apostle to the Gentiles has stated that which is false? |
34698 | [ 47] Compare:"And Samuel said unto Saul, Why hast thou disquieted me?" |
34698 | and what was_ their_ impression from what they heard? |
34698 | or was he ready to accept anything that fitted in with his preconceived ideas? |
37613 | And if it could be done, how should we be better off? 37613 And now,"said I, when I had finished,"pray tell what is your ideal? |
37613 | And what is it you advise doing? |
37613 | And who may Peter Lynch be? |
37613 | And who, pray, is Mrs. J. Webb Johnston? |
37613 | Do you realize that you are tumbling my hair? |
37613 | For which of the two are you sorry? |
37613 | How did he find out about it? |
37613 | I wonder what has happened? |
37613 | Is n''t it rather late to ring my door- bell? |
37613 | My dear, do you realize what you are saying? |
37613 | Of course it is conventional; yet, pray, how is she to avoid conventions? 37613 Pumped him?" |
37613 | The stuff? 37613 Then anything we-- er-- contributed could properly be charged to attorney''s fees?" |
37613 | What I meant to ask was-- er-- what is it that this Peter Lynch wishes? |
37613 | What are their names? |
37613 | What do I know about the Czar of Russia? 37613 What does he wish for?" |
37613 | What sort of a man is Peter? |
37613 | What''s the matter with Lynch, anyway? |
37613 | ''What would you have me do, Madam? |
37613 | ''Who is Miss Madeline Pollard?'' |
37613 | A bold and pessimistic beginning, is it not, my optimistic friend? |
37613 | A ceaseless round of every variety of money- consuming, vapid amusement occupies their days and nights from January to January, and for what purpose? |
37613 | After all is over they ask''how much?'' |
37613 | An illustrious- sounding name, is n''t it? |
37613 | An interview for a newspaper? |
37613 | And if the poor thing had lived, what hope was there for anything but a vapid old age, haunted by visions of her decreasing notoriety? |
37613 | And the photograph? |
37613 | And what are the signs which give us hope that the people of the United States are capable of accomplishing this result? |
37613 | And why? |
37613 | And why? |
37613 | And-- er-- what does he know?" |
37613 | But have n''t you a word of extenuation to offer on behalf of the low comedians? |
37613 | But, Mr. Philosopher, what has been the philosophy of beauty and art and intellect and elegance through all the centuries until lately? |
37613 | By the shades of George Washington, what are you thinking of? |
37613 | By the way, how much ought I to give the man if he passes everything nicely? |
37613 | Ca n''t you give me three thousand words on the death of the Czar of Russia?" |
37613 | Did you happen to notice, though, the longing look he cast at the first- class coaches as he went by? |
37613 | Did you notice that stout, fashionably dressed man who stopped and looked at me with a grin? |
37613 | Did you observe how pleased they looked when I said that? |
37613 | Dishonest? |
37613 | Do n''t you know Peter? |
37613 | Do n''t you suppose I understand how the sensitive soul must suffer when it has to deal with some of us? |
37613 | Do you expect me to break this cruel piece of news to the optimistic patriot to whom this letter is addressed?" |
37613 | Do you mean that you really think this will never come to pass?" |
37613 | Do you see that man? |
37613 | Do you suppose I enjoy rousing a man at this hour of the night? |
37613 | Er-- would you like it now? |
37613 | For stationery, postage stamps, and campaign documents? |
37613 | For torch- light processions, rallies, and buttons? |
37613 | Hard? |
37613 | Have I written"thieves?" |
37613 | Have you ever considered the matter from the moderate- drinker and smoker''s point of view? |
37613 | How are the vast sums of money levied on rich men to secure the success of a political party in a Presidential campaign expended? |
37613 | How are we to explain it? |
37613 | How long would he remain in office? |
37613 | I almost said:"Speaking of democracy and culture, my dear sir, I should like to inquire if you have any authority for your use of the word''lunch''? |
37613 | If one meets a highwayman on the road, is one to be turned back if a purse will secure a passage? |
37613 | If so, what has become of that heritage of his forefathers, the stern Puritan conscience? |
37613 | If the public wish to know and progressive people refuse to tell them, what becomes of the reporter who is obliged to furnish copy and to obey orders? |
37613 | In other words, when the world has learned not to drink and smoke too much, will it cease to drink and smoke altogether? |
37613 | In the piteous language of a defender of Thomas Barnstable( not Josephine), what can one do but submit? |
37613 | Is n''t it a curious circumstance? |
37613 | Is not that a tear- compelling statement?" |
37613 | Is there a smoking- car on the first- class train? |
37613 | Is this the best Americanism? |
37613 | Jeremiah is at peace with all the world and is ready to sit with slicked hair for his photograph, from which a steel( or is it steal?) |
37613 | May I sit down? |
37613 | May I, dear lady? |
37613 | Might you not, dear( Josephine was now addressing me, not the reporter), say that the key- note of the ideal life is refined sympathy?" |
37613 | Mistake? |
37613 | Must I? |
37613 | Must n''t I, philosopher?" |
37613 | Nevertheless, I opened the door merely a crack and inquired, gruffly:"What do you wish?" |
37613 | Not honest? |
37613 | Not strictly honest? |
37613 | Now, is this Americanism, the very best Americanism? |
37613 | Perhaps you saw it? |
37613 | Seeing that she had read Madame Bovary and Anna Karénina, was she not amply qualified to detect immorality at first blush? |
37613 | Shall I go on?" |
37613 | Sherman( faintly)._ Photographs? |
37613 | Sherman( resignedly)._ What shall I write? |
37613 | Sherman( with a manifestation of alarm)._ You are a reporter? |
37613 | Sherman._ And did they all consent to talk to you? |
37613 | Sherman._ Have you-- er-- been to see any one else? |
37613 | Supposing he does, what follows? |
37613 | That is a pitiful story, is n''t it? |
37613 | That you do not use your knife to carry food to your mouth; say"How?" |
37613 | Then realizing that the manager was still silent, as though expecting a question, he said,"Why did he come?" |
37613 | There, now, why should n''t I sign the paper? |
37613 | They pay the lawyer and the doctor; why not the Alderman? |
37613 | To breed scandal by pursuing intimacies with other men than their husbands? |
37613 | To marry their daughters to foreign noblemen? |
37613 | Were you ordered to-- er-- write about me? |
37613 | What are we to say? |
37613 | What can one do to realize this?" |
37613 | What is that you ask, madam? |
37613 | What is the matter, Mr. Philosopher? |
37613 | What is your view of the matter?" |
37613 | What shall it be?" |
37613 | What would you have her do?" |
37613 | What''s the use of stirring things up? |
37613 | What, too, are the signs which induce our censors and critics to shake their heads and refuse to acknowledge the probability of it? |
37613 | When we open the grip- sack, what do we find? |
37613 | Who doubts it? |
37613 | Who then is the true American? |
37613 | Why do n''t you go to the historians or politicians? |
37613 | Why should he call my supper a lunch?] |
37613 | Will a refined and gifted instructress of youth, whose mission in life it is to lead the young in the paths of virtue, evade the law by a subterfuge? |
37613 | Within a week carking, though praiseworthy, care would return, and you would be asking yourself,"What shall it be next?" |
37613 | You do n''t like the passengers? |
37613 | You do n''t mean that you wish a photograph? |
37613 | You intend to write a letter about it to the Boston_ Evening_----? |
37613 | You prefer, then, to cheat the Government rather than disappoint persons who made use of you in order to accomplish that very thing? |
37613 | You see the situation, do n''t you, dear?" |
37613 | You would n''t have been pleased, would you now, to see interviews with other progressive women, and your face and personality excluded? |
37613 | _ Clergyman._ Is this the first- class section? |
37613 | _ The Philosopher._ And may I add, gentlemen, that each of you has a kind and generous heart? |
37613 | _ Visitor._ Mrs. Alexander Sherman, I believe? |
37613 | for"What?" |
37613 | he exclaimed, every one will be in bed, and what will become of my telegram on the Czar of Russia? |
43012 | Oh, shame, where is thy blush? |
43012 | Suffers from? |
43012 | What then? 43012 What was their operation? |
43012 | --to the palsied,"Run you this errand,"--to the sick in bed,"Arise, and write a book?" |
43012 | And how? |
43012 | But in his essay on the works of Walter Savage Landor, is he not a little too inflated, and does he not run his ironical style into the ground? |
43012 | But what eater of opium, after taking much of the drug the day previous, ever arose in the morning without feeling unutterably miserable? |
43012 | Did any one ever before hear such an insane compound of contradictions? |
43012 | How can he write in this condition? |
43012 | I fear the reader would fain cry out,"What, in the name of Judas Iscariot, is the man after, and when is he going to catch up to it? |
43012 | In sober practice, would you say to the blind,"Copy this writing?" |
43012 | The outward effects and injurious properties of the drug soon made themselves manifest: what was I to do? |
43012 | Try what repentance can: what can it not? |
43012 | We quote as follows:"You know the Paradise Lost? |
43012 | What madman would not have known he was injuring his friend by hauling into notice and retailing such stuff as this? |
43012 | What rests? |
43012 | What three things does opium especially provoke? |
43012 | What would you call this, unless reaction? |
43012 | Will alcohol become unpopular, then be abhorred, and then opium be substituted in its stead? |
43012 | Will it? |
43012 | Would you compare the fettered African with the roving Arabian?--the bond to the free? |
43012 | Would you do this? |
43012 | Would you expect grapes from a hyperborean iceberg?--figs from the Sahara?--palms from Siberia? |
43012 | Yes, and who blamed him for lacking energy? |
43012 | Yet what can it, when one can not repent? |
43012 | Yet why traverse again step by step this sad pilgrimage; the reader has read similar experiences; then why trouble him with mine? |
43012 | who or what is equal to it? |
39380 | ''As fine as Van Dyke?'' 39380 ''Do you mean living or dead?'' |
39380 | ''How fine?'' 39380 How shall we speak of him? |
39380 | It is now thirty years,cried Paul III.,"that I have had this desire; and, now that I am pope, shall I not be able to effect it? |
39380 | Was there ever,says Hamerton,"a more exquisitely beautiful instance of self- sacrifice?" |
39380 | ''And the others?'' |
39380 | ''Let us see what thou art carrying away?'' |
39380 | ''What dost thou here, my Elizabeth?'' |
39380 | ''What have you been doing?'' |
39380 | Am I dispensing a curse, or a blessing?" |
39380 | And they were exceeding sorrowful, and began every one of them to say unto him, Lord, is it I?" |
39380 | And what could be better practice?" |
39380 | And what does the raised right hand denote? |
39380 | But Louis would not listen to them; he cut them short, repeating,''How is my dear wife? |
39380 | But how? |
39380 | But of these, who are to be models-- the guides?" |
39380 | By what light? |
39380 | Can we mention a violent act of Raphael''s, Goethe''s, or Shakespeare''s? |
39380 | Could it possibly have been Cecilia, the lady whom Titian married about this time? |
39380 | Did he intend thus to immortalize her, while he immortalized himself? |
39380 | Even had this misfortune not been preceded by a long affection, ought I to show so much hatred as not to be able to pardon a fault against me?... |
39380 | Fuseli, the keeper of the Academy, was much pleased with him, and, looking around the room upon the students, would say,"Where is my little dog boy?" |
39380 | Had she been married to another, all these years? |
39380 | He helped everybody, and what more is there in life than this? |
39380 | He is said to have replied in the words of the Syrian messenger to the prophet Elisha:"Is thy servant a_ dog_, that he should do this great thing?" |
39380 | He seemed at the zenith of his powers when death came; but who shall estimate the value of a life by its length? |
39380 | He would start off alone, or with John( Thomas?) |
39380 | How could Michael Angelo have carved this work at twenty- four? |
39380 | How otherwise shall we name that son of a miller? |
39380 | I wonder what they think the sea''s like? |
39380 | If there is no more pity in this world, to whom shall I apply? |
39380 | In 1726 an artist named Belotti restored(?) |
39380 | Is it possible that Murillo, that servile imitator of my uncle, can be the author of all this grace and beauty of coloring?" |
39380 | Is it the light of the sun? |
39380 | Is this a form fitted to such base mechanical uses? |
39380 | Mightily pleased thereat, it began to reason with itself after this fashion:''Shall I now go back to the shop which I have just quitted? |
39380 | Miss Mackey says, in_ Cornhill_, concerning his last long illness:"Was ever any one more tenderly nursed and cared for? |
39380 | O thou spirit of grace, Where art thou now? |
39380 | One day the artist said to him,"When I die, what wilt thou do?" |
39380 | The artist is said to have once remarked to his friend Chantrey, the sculptor:"Will you promise to see me rolled up in the''Carthage''at my burial?" |
39380 | The canon of the cathedral said to Van Egmont,"Why did your master not come himself?" |
39380 | The husband did not purchase the picture of the artist-- did he not value the beauty? |
39380 | The pope was now fully angry, and exclaimed,"Do you venture to say things to this man which I would not have said to him myself? |
39380 | These are human faces, it is true, but can you imagine any purer, more innocent, more gentle faces?... |
39380 | To whom should he go? |
39380 | What cared he for the bared backs or the spiteful mewlings of her miserable offspring, little cats as they were? |
39380 | What has become of my once brilliant surface? |
39380 | What helps had any of them which we have not?" |
39380 | What prospect was there that this boy, without father or mother, without riches or distinguished family, would work his way to renown? |
39380 | What were they which we are not or may not be? |
39380 | When a school of art arose which aimed at uniting the characteristics of both, what was the result? |
39380 | Where is the contract, that I may tear it?" |
39380 | Who can estimate such influence over a youth? |
39380 | Who can measure the good that Lorenzo de''Medici was doing for the world unwittingly? |
39380 | Who was Saskia? |
39380 | Who was this new model? |
39380 | Why thank a man for performing a simple duty?'' |
39380 | Why, then, should I thank them? |
39380 | Will you follow us and pray for his sinful soul?'' |
39380 | are they well? |
39380 | how are my children? |
39380 | or of the moon? |
39380 | or of the torches? |
39380 | or was the old affection renewed in these latter days? |
39380 | said the courtier,"does his Most Catholic Majesty''s representative amuse himself with painting?" |
39380 | what would they have? |
3422 | ''And pecaire?'' |
3422 | ''And the reason?'' |
3422 | ''Have n''t I the necessary attainment?'' |
3422 | ''Then what do you propose to do?'' |
3422 | ''What are they doing up there, those desolate trees? |
3422 | ''What are you doing with all those rows of figures amounting to zero?'' |
3422 | ''What did she say?'' |
3422 | ''What do you want for your laboratory?'' |
3422 | ''What is that?'' |
3422 | ''What will remain of my researches on the subject of instinct? |
3422 | ''Why do n''t you show those gentlemen your hands?'' |
3422 | ''Will you help me?'' |
3422 | ''Wo n''t you visit our museums, our collections? |
3422 | ANOTHER PROBER( PERFORATOR) What can he be called, this creature whose style and title I dare not inscribe at the head of the chapter? |
3422 | After all, may there not be some justification for the belief? |
3422 | After an attempt at an explanation in which I made the most of the few gleams that reached me I asked him:''Do you understand?'' |
3422 | An aquarium? |
3422 | And I left it at that for a moment or two, thinking hard, drawn now this way, now that with indecision:''Shall I accept? |
3422 | And arithmetic? |
3422 | And grammar? |
3422 | And history, geography? |
3422 | And how? |
3422 | And the oxygen? |
3422 | And these noisily buzzing with a sudden flight? |
3422 | And these others, so eager for plunder? |
3422 | And these, clad in black velvet? |
3422 | And what for, pray? |
3422 | And what was I to do now, to overcome the difficulty mentioned by my inspector and confirmed by my personal experience? |
3422 | And what will the reader himself say, if I invite him to that sight? |
3422 | And who knows? |
3422 | And, to begin with, how much does it owe to heredity? |
3422 | Are they drawn by this beacon? |
3422 | Are they exasperated by other radiations, known or unknown? |
3422 | Are they physically hurt by the chemical radiations? |
3422 | Are we to look upon the bundle of sticks as a sort of raft whose density is less than that of the water? |
3422 | Are we to look upon these as mandibles? |
3422 | Besides, if murder formed part of its plans, why descend to the bottom of the cell, instead of attacking the defenseless recluse straight way? |
3422 | Besides, what would it eat? |
3422 | But is there really any pain? |
3422 | But stones, which ruin your pockets; poisonous animals, which''ll sting your hand: what good are they to you, silly? |
3422 | But, as it was, what could I expect? |
3422 | But, if the beak were entirely closed, where would the eggs be laid then? |
3422 | Can I have succeeded without any trouble at the first attempt? |
3422 | Can it be my gas? |
3422 | Can it be the grub that makes its own way into the storeroom, that same grub which we have seen draining the Chalicodoma with its leech- like kisses? |
3422 | Can she be apprised of the depth of the chasm by the comparative faintness of the offensive odors that arise from it? |
3422 | Can the big joists, which break in so ugly a fashion the none too great regularity of the work, serve to buoy up the over- heavy raft? |
3422 | Can the mothers, in fact, dispense with their assistance, without being deprived of offspring on that account? |
3422 | Can the nature of the floor make any difference to her? |
3422 | Can the sense of smell measure the distance and judge whether it be acceptable or not? |
3422 | Can the shells, which are always empty and able to contain a few bubbles of air in their spiral, he floats? |
3422 | Can the worm, constantly floundering in the sanies of a carcass, be itself in danger of inoculation by that whereon it grows fat? |
3422 | Can there be special compounds in mushrooms, alkaloids, apparently, which vary according to the botanical genus? |
3422 | Can we be in the presence of the diffusive life of the plant, a life which persists in a fragment? |
3422 | Could it perhaps be lack of relish, a deficiency of seasoning for stimulating the appetite? |
3422 | Could they, in fact, contain soluble, colorless indigo? |
3422 | Do both cases come within the same category? |
3422 | Do these substances yield certain soluble elements to water? |
3422 | Do they attack the healthy? |
3422 | Do they come from the same workshop? |
3422 | Do they eat, in the strict sense of the word? |
3422 | Does she fear lest her worms should be bruised by an excessive drop? |
3422 | Does the coprinus digest itself by virtue of a pepsin similar to the maggots''? |
3422 | Does the stench of the meat not spread, coming from that depth? |
3422 | Does this family proceed from one mother? |
3422 | Does this liquefaction imply an easy change? |
3422 | Eager to arrive, do they drop from the top of the wall? |
3422 | For that matter, is it ever taught in the schools? |
3422 | For what reason does the hernia, once the keg is staved, continue swollen and projecting? |
3422 | From what height will the flesh fly dare to let her children drop? |
3422 | Have you any capital?'' |
3422 | He sees me coming solemnly along, like a relic bearer; he catches sight of my hand hiding something behind my back:''What have you there, my boy?'' |
3422 | His request gave me a shock of surprise, which was forthwith repressed on reflection:''I give algebra lessons?'' |
3422 | How are the worms protected in their horrible work yard? |
3422 | How are we to find those picturesque words, those striking features which arrest the attention? |
3422 | How are we to group them into a language heedful of syntax and not displeasing to the ear? |
3422 | How did it learn that, to safeguard the pupa, it must desert the carcass and that, to safeguard the fly, it must not bury itself too far down? |
3422 | How do things like that find their way into the stone? |
3422 | How do you set about it? |
3422 | How does it separate when returning to inertia? |
3422 | How does matter unite in order to assume life? |
3422 | How does she lay her eggs, the origin of the loathsome maggot that battens poisonously on our provisions, whether of game or butcher''s meat? |
3422 | How does she manage to get out? |
3422 | How does the gray fly find the time to settle a family of such dimensions, especially in small packets, as she has just done on my window sill? |
3422 | How does the vagabond, passing at a distance, know that, up there, invisible, high on the gibbet, there is something worth going for? |
3422 | How does this singular consumer, who feeds without eating, set about it? |
3422 | How is it that they find delicious what we find poisonous and why is it that what seems exquisite to our taste is loathsome to theirs? |
3422 | How is that? |
3422 | How is the parasite''s inroad into the flesh fly''s pupae effected? |
3422 | How shall a man earn his living in my poor native village, with its inclement weather and its niggardly soil? |
3422 | How to get out? |
3422 | How to set about it? |
3422 | How was this characteristic propensity, at once the torment and delight of my life, developed? |
3422 | How will you manage tomorrow? |
3422 | How, with such careless picking, are accidents avoided? |
3422 | I went to the beggar woman and whispered in her ear:''Do you know who gave you that? |
3422 | If I replace the flesh of the insect by that of another animal, the ox, for instance, shall I obtain the same results? |
3422 | In breaking stones, can I have found, but on a much richer scale, the thing that shines quite small in my mother''s ring? |
3422 | In what way does it go to work? |
3422 | Is a condiment of this kind necessary to the grubs? |
3422 | Is dryness necessary to them at this stage? |
3422 | Is it a little bird chirping in his nest? |
3422 | Is it not wonderful thus to formulate the orbit of the worlds? |
3422 | Is it really an instance of endosmosis? |
3422 | Is it really the famous metal of which twenty- franc pieces, so rare with us at home, are made? |
3422 | Is it through indifference? |
3422 | Is it worth while to sit up late at night and wear one''s self out in toil for the mere pleasure of learning? |
3422 | Is that enough, O my busy insects, to enable me to add yet a few seemly pages to your history? |
3422 | Is the game lost? |
3422 | Is the work of deliverance arranged in the general interest? |
3422 | Is this a defensive bite? |
3422 | Is this poetic exaggeration? |
3422 | Man catches sight of her:''Ah, would you?'' |
3422 | Might not these autumnal Bees be themselves exploited by the Anthrax, the same that selected the Osmia as her victim a couple of months earlier? |
3422 | Must I cry off? |
3422 | Now does the entrance of the Volucella into the presence of a few wasps entail such very great risks? |
3422 | Now to what do we owe this distinctive character? |
3422 | Now what do the fugitives feel? |
3422 | Now what do the vermin do? |
3422 | Now what do they do in this abode where there are no corpses? |
3422 | Now what has happened? |
3422 | Now what would happen if the pupae were there? |
3422 | Now, in a soft diffused light, what can be the radiations capable of acting upon this lover of darkness? |
3422 | Of what avail is the torment of learning to the derelicts of life? |
3422 | Or are they simply reduced to a fine dust in the crushing? |
3422 | Or is individual selfishness the only rule? |
3422 | Seeing that identity of shape and costume does not save the Polistes, how will the Volucella fare, with her clumsy imitation? |
3422 | Shall I go and spend them out of doors, in all the gaiety of my eighteen summers? |
3422 | Shall I refuse?'' |
3422 | Shall physical or chemical forces explain why the animalcule digs into the hard clay? |
3422 | Shall we manage it, among us all? |
3422 | Short of botanical studies that are not within everybody''s reach, how are we to distinguish the harmless from the venomous? |
3422 | Should I ever know? |
3422 | Should I succeed? |
3422 | Strength? |
3422 | Suppose it should be what I am looking for? |
3422 | Surely, to busy one''s self with those squalid sextons means soiling one''s eyes and mind? |
3422 | THE CADDIS WORM Whom shall I lodge in my glass trough, kept permanently wholesome by the action of the water weeds? |
3422 | The first question that presents itself is this: how do the greenbottle grubs feed? |
3422 | Then how comes it that the cylinder of bits of root is so confused, so clumsily fashioned? |
3422 | Then how does the fly set about it? |
3422 | Then to what masters shall we have recourse to quicken and develop the humble germ that is latent within us? |
3422 | Then what are we to do? |
3422 | Then what explanation shall I give of the facts which I have just set forth? |
3422 | Then what is there behind the wasp grub? |
3422 | Then what is there in that terrible liquid? |
3422 | Then what need is there for the Volucella to disguise herself as a wasp? |
3422 | Then where are we to look for a reply? |
3422 | Then why does the flesh fly, who but now was dropping her grubs from a goodly height, refuse to let them fall from the top of a column twice as high? |
3422 | Then, bluntly:''Have you any money?'' |
3422 | To what do they owe this privilege? |
3422 | Walk with me to the station, will you? |
3422 | Was I, on my side, very wrong? |
3422 | Was it a bit of diaphanous down stirred by my breath? |
3422 | Was it an illusion born of my hopes? |
3422 | Was it really the original larva of the Anthrax? |
3422 | Well, what should I do to make the school earn its title of''upper primary''? |
3422 | Well, what should I find beyond the grandparents where my facts come to a stop? |
3422 | Well, what will become of this great pile of drawings, the object of so much work? |
3422 | Were there loftier flights? |
3422 | What are all my different acquaintances in the woods and meadows called? |
3422 | What are her stratagems and how can we foil them? |
3422 | What are the others doing, those who got splashed through standing too near the chemical bomb? |
3422 | What are their names? |
3422 | What are they all doing there? |
3422 | What are you doing just now?'' |
3422 | What becomes of it when it leaves the egg? |
3422 | What can a binomial theorem be, especially one whose author is Newton, the great English mathematician who weighed the worlds? |
3422 | What can one do to a thing so very small? |
3422 | What can those cherries be? |
3422 | What could we do? |
3422 | What did he perceive? |
3422 | What did the best results of my studies of instinct cost me? |
3422 | What did they want for their putrefaction? |
3422 | What do these people gather? |
3422 | What does Saxicola mean?'' |
3422 | What does he care for the rest? |
3422 | What does it know of those depths, of what lies therein or where? |
3422 | What does the root know of the earth''s fruitfulness? |
3422 | What effect will pure white produce? |
3422 | What else do you want?'' |
3422 | What else is there in the mixture in my watch glasses? |
3422 | What has become of them? |
3422 | What has happened? |
3422 | What has happened? |
3422 | What has it to make itself thus respected? |
3422 | What has the future in store for it? |
3422 | What has the mechanism of the sky to do with this? |
3422 | What infernal mixtures did he compound? |
3422 | What inspiration urges it towards its food at the bottom of the clod, what compass guides it? |
3422 | What is the reason? |
3422 | What is their number to one mother? |
3422 | What is this at my feet? |
3422 | What is this? |
3422 | What is to be done? |
3422 | What is wanted to keep the maggots out? |
3422 | What reasons have made the recluse become a congregation? |
3422 | What risk does she run? |
3422 | What shall I call the room in which I was to become acquainted with the alphabet? |
3422 | What shall we call it? |
3422 | What shall we learn from the sharper- flavored mushrooms? |
3422 | What should I set myself to produce? |
3422 | What should we say to a method of being suckled by the mere application of the mouth to a teatless breast? |
3422 | What to do next? |
3422 | What was I to do before the disheartening wall that every now and then rose up and barred my road? |
3422 | What was I to take in hand to raise me above the primary school, whose staff could barely earn their bread in those days? |
3422 | What was needed thus to upset the procession of friars? |
3422 | What was read at my school? |
3422 | What was there upstairs? |
3422 | What were they flying from? |
3422 | What will be the result? |
3422 | What will become of that infinitesimal spark of childish fancy? |
3422 | What will become of you when your master is gone? |
3422 | What will you show me? |
3422 | What would be needed to supply the illuminating ray? |
3422 | What would happen if, by an artifice, the sideward layer were nowhere thick enough to satisfy the grub? |
3422 | When it is hard enough to earn one''s bit of bread, does not improving one''s mind but render one more meet for suffering? |
3422 | When my comrade returns to his room, does he sleep, careless for the moment of the shifting scene which we have conjured up? |
3422 | Whence do these favored ones derive a gift that borders on morality? |
3422 | Whence do they come? |
3422 | Whence does it derive this capacity? |
3422 | Where are they? |
3422 | Where did you get it?'' |
3422 | Where does it come from? |
3422 | Where is the cheerful face of former days, bright with enthusiasm and hope? |
3422 | Where lies its power? |
3422 | Where shall I keep it, to make the best use of it? |
3422 | Where shall we find that subject? |
3422 | Where should I keep the precious picture? |
3422 | Where the line auger of the Leucospis can enter, is there not room enough for the even slimmer Anthrax grub? |
3422 | Where would they fix their first layer? |
3422 | Who are the guests summoned to the banquet? |
3422 | Who can these laggards be but animalcules that have roamed too long in the walls of the nest? |
3422 | Who cares? |
3422 | Who in the world, in her day, among the small folk, dreamt of knowing how to read and write? |
3422 | Who is making that noise? |
3422 | Who is this one? |
3422 | Who knows what vistas the natural philosophy of the maggot might open out to us? |
3422 | Who knows whether medical science could not employ them in relieving our ailments, even as it employs quinine, morphia and other alkaloids? |
3422 | Who knows? |
3422 | Who knows? |
3422 | Who named them? |
3422 | Who would not enter the pleasure gardens, with such a bait? |
3422 | Why and how? |
3422 | Why do the maggots eat the Satanic bolete and scorn the imperial mushroom? |
3422 | Why do the two boletes with the red tubes, the purple bolete and the satanic bolete, change into a dark gruel? |
3422 | Why does it go and take up its abode in the ground? |
3422 | Why does the Lunary Copris know what his near kinsman, the Spanish Copris, does not? |
3422 | Why does the worm quit the carcass, that capital shelter? |
3422 | Why is the Sisyphus a hard working paterfamilias and the sacred beetle an idle vagabond? |
3422 | Why must there be a jar to the even tenor of such joys? |
3422 | Why not just one? |
3422 | Why not make the most of it? |
3422 | Why should I not describe my first discoveries? |
3422 | Why should not its skin, which is one of the most delicate, be capable of absorbing? |
3422 | Why should we not regard it as the cause of the black tint when the maggots have liquefied the boletes which turn blue? |
3422 | Why such a thing as sex, when the tuber of the Jerusalem artichoke can do without it? |
3422 | Why two sexes? |
3422 | Why, indeed, did I forsake you so long? |
3422 | Why? |
3422 | Why? |
3422 | Will his example find imitators? |
3422 | Will it be the same if the food supplied be of a lower organism and consist of fish, for instance, of frog, mollusk, insect, centipede? |
3422 | Will my strength not cheat my good intentions? |
3422 | Will she find them? |
3422 | Will the worms accept these viands and, above all, can they manage to liquefy them, which is the first and foremost condition? |
3422 | Will you be knocked down for a franc, when the family come to apportion my poor spoils? |
3422 | Will you be the plank on which the cabbages are shredded? |
3422 | Will you be turned into a stand for the pitcher beside the kitchen sink? |
3422 | With such a school and such a master and such examples, what will become of my embryo tastes, as yet so imperceptible? |
3422 | With these arrangements, are we sure of warding off the fly and her vermin? |
3422 | With what am I enjoying the glorious radiance: with my mouth or my eyes? |
3422 | Would it be possible to isolate them and study their properties fully? |
3422 | Would it not be the same with the chrysalis of the great peacock, dissected cell by cell by hundreds of infinitesimal anatomists? |
3422 | Would it not be the same with the pupa of the flesh fly? |
3422 | Would they protect themselves against the cold and rain? |
3422 | Would you succeed in the things of the mind? |
3422 | Would you? |
37351 | Does not that come to the same thing? |
37351 | For,said Liebknecht,"who could say what the_ Zukunft Staat_--the socialist State of the future-- is to be? |
37351 | What is the State? |
37351 | What is the reason,he asked himself,"that the paradise before my eyes conceals so much misery? |
37351 | ''Supposing you were a young man now,''said I,''could you walk into Manchester and do that again?'' |
37351 | And how do the Russian peasants settle the periodical repartition of the communal lands? |
37351 | And if it fail anywhere, how can he argue that it must succeed everywhere? |
37351 | And what, after all, was the latest dream of philosophical socialism but a world of communities like these? |
37351 | And why are not all dexterous, or, at least, why are they not much more dexterous than they now are? |
37351 | And why is the labour not socially useful? |
37351 | And why? |
37351 | And without such liberal management how is he to promote the spread of cultivation better than the present owners? |
37351 | And would it be greater or less than would remain after a like process applied, say, to a sovereign or to a nugget of gold? |
37351 | Are poverty and the various symptoms of poverty more acute in England than in more backward countries? |
37351 | Are the poor really getting poorer? |
37351 | Baboeuf saw no difficulty in working the scheme; was it not practised every day in the army, with 1,200,000 men? |
37351 | But do socializing bishops believe it to be just? |
37351 | But if Mr. George''s principle is true, could such a result have taken place at all? |
37351 | But if density of population is such a sure improver of production as Mr. George represents it to be elsewhere, why should it fail here? |
37351 | But the question is, does it imply any increase in the productive power of the soil? |
37351 | But what is equality? |
37351 | But what is of man''s creation? |
37351 | But will any one work such land for less than he can make in other industries? |
37351 | Can it be believed that the democracy which has overthrown the feudal system and vanquished kings will retreat before tradesmen and capitalists? |
37351 | Deduct from the rent of these reclaimed acres the value contributed by human labour, and how much would remain to represent the gift of God? |
37351 | Does he mean, because more things are now reckoned among the necessaries of life? |
37351 | Does he not promise us a new heaven and a new earth? |
37351 | Does it first raise wages at the expense of profits, and then raise profits at the expense of wages? |
37351 | Does it then at the same time strengthen the employer in his battle with the labourer? |
37351 | Does socialism offer a better guarantee for the realization of that ideal than the existing economy? |
37351 | Economists would solve his problem,"why in spite of increased productive power wages tend to a minimum that will give but a bare living?" |
37351 | For is not the soil of a small island or an inconsiderable country as eternal as the soil of a continent? |
37351 | For what, after all, is value? |
37351 | He refuses to take it, and why? |
37351 | He says of the fourth estate what Sieyès said of the third, What is the fourth estate? |
37351 | He was intensely disappointed, and asked,"When will this foolish people cast aside their lethargy?" |
37351 | He was not a citizen, and why should he have the feelings of one? |
37351 | How do you define socialism? |
37351 | How is it to be ascertained? |
37351 | Idolatry is a mistaken view of Divine things-- a distortion of the religious sentiment; but who would on that account call it Christian? |
37351 | If a rise of rent depends on a rise in the price of bread, what does a rise in the price of bread depend on? |
37351 | If crowding on the superior soils can make those soils indefinitely productive, why go farther and fare worse? |
37351 | In other words, by what is value and difference in value determined? |
37351 | In the matter of protection, for instance, how many policemen are we required to detail to a district? |
37351 | Is English pauperism greater now than it was before the"new productive forces"entered the country? |
37351 | Is Marx''s definition of it in the least correct? |
37351 | Is free education to go beyond the primary branches? |
37351 | Is it because he exerts more labour, more socially necessary time of labour? |
37351 | Is it because more time of labour has been expended in the preparation and apprenticeship of the higher paid functionaries? |
37351 | Is it equality when each man gets a coat of the same size, or is it not rather when each man gets a coat that fits him? |
37351 | Is nature the source of all this suffering, or is it man that is to blame for it? |
37351 | Is socialism, as Stahl and others represent, an inevitable corollary of democracy? |
37351 | Is that so? |
37351 | Is the average duration of life less? |
37351 | Is the general standard of living among the labouring classes lower? |
37351 | It advances money on easy terms to railway schemes; why should it not offer working men cheap loans for sound co- operative enterprises? |
37351 | It is a plain question of fact-- is poverty really increasing? |
37351 | It is a pure utopia, and why? |
37351 | Nothing? |
37351 | Now to all this there is one simple answer: why then resort to inferior soils at all? |
37351 | Now, have we such a power in electricity? |
37351 | Now, on what does this social estimate of the relative importance of commodities turn? |
37351 | Now, what is the least productive land in use? |
37351 | Or how great an army and navy are we to maintain? |
37351 | Or why has the judge a better salary than the policeman? |
37351 | The effect of the previous argument was to raise the question, What is the labourer entitled to get? |
37351 | The next question is, What, then, does the labourer actually get? |
37351 | Up to a certain point they may yield the same return at the same cost year after year in_ sæcula sæculorum_, but will they yield more? |
37351 | Value, then, is quantity of abstract labour, and now what is quantity of labour? |
37351 | We gather the quantity from the duration of exertion, but how is average productive power to be ascertained? |
37351 | What are the wounds a knife inflicts compared with the slow murder dispensed with refined cruelty throughout a being''s whole existence? |
37351 | What do we find? |
37351 | What is law, what is right, but a protection of the weak? |
37351 | What is the ideal of the working class? |
37351 | What is the sharp death- agony of an hour compared with the pangs of death protracted over twenty years? |
37351 | What length are you to go? |
37351 | What ought the fourth estate to be? |
37351 | What sensations must it cause in those poor men who, with all they hold dear, are day after day at the mercy of the accidents of market price? |
37351 | What would be the effect upon wages in England?'' |
37351 | What, then, he asked, was the Social Democracy to do? |
37351 | What, then, is to be the business of this formidable Social Democratic party? |
37351 | What, then, is value in exchange? |
37351 | What, then, is value? |
37351 | When San Francisco reaches the point where New York now is, who can doubt that there will also be ragged and barefooted children in her streets?" |
37351 | Where does this lent money come from? |
37351 | Who advances them? |
37351 | Who could foresee so much as the development of the existing German State for a single year?" |
37351 | Who is there among you that would not have gone to the death to defend her? |
37351 | Why are we now free from the old scourges of famine and famine prices? |
37351 | Why is an organizer of manual labour better paid than the manual labourer himself? |
37351 | Why is one kind of labour paid dearer than another? |
37351 | Why is the railway chairman better paid than the railway porter? |
37351 | Why should not the law stand at the labourer''s back, as it does at the capitalist''s, in enforcing what is right and just? |
37351 | Why? |
37351 | Will it stop now that it has grown so strong, and its adversaries so weak?" |
37351 | Will the social system, which will result from the process, be socialism? |
37351 | Would it be wise to imagine that a social movement, the causes of which lie so far back, can be checked by the efforts of one generation? |
37351 | Would then the word now be revolution? |
37351 | _ State Socialism and State Management._ What are the conditions of efficient State administration? |
37351 | and what need for any mission to the States to preach the socialist message to the Americans for the first time in their own tongue? |
37351 | but Shall we be any the worse for it? |
37351 | by the use of force? |
37351 | or do they believe it wrong for a man to live on interest, or rents, or profits? |
37351 | then where is the man who is not a pure and unadulterated socialist? |
44460 | One of the riddles proposed was-- What animal walked on four legs in the morning, two at noon, and three in the evening? |
44460 | S. Roe''s Select Stories.= True to the Last$ 1 50 The Star and the Cloud 1 50 How Could He Help it? |
44460 | The enigma proposed by the Sphinx to OEdipus was:--What animal in the morning walks upon four feet, at noon upon two, and in the evening upon three? |
34827 | ''And is he gone?'' 34827 ''Is he an Englishman-- does he look like an Englishman?'' |
34827 | ''Who is this Burden?'' 34827 Are there many Yankee ships passing the Rock now?" |
34827 | But what have Congressmen done in their individual capacity? 34827 But what''s the news from Rio?" |
34827 | But, Captain, ca n''t we arrange the matter in some way? 34827 Can you make out the nationality of the ships in tow?" |
34827 | Have any of them struck us? |
34827 | How is that? |
34827 | How so? |
34827 | I suppose you''ll charge something for bringing these gentlemen on board? |
34827 | It would not pay me, then, to cruise in these seas? |
34827 | Now, in view of the above statement of facts, what has Congress done? 34827 That may do very well for the murder,"I now rejoined,"but what about the desertion?" |
34827 | The d----l she is,said I;"how many shots has she fired at us?" |
34827 | What does she look like? |
34827 | What does this mean? |
34827 | What is that? |
34827 | What is the news? |
34827 | What ship is that? |
34827 | What ship is that? |
34827 | What ship is that? |
34827 | What,said I,"do they come on deck?" |
34827 | Whence cometh the wind, and whither goeth it? |
34827 | Why should I not, sir? |
34827 | You are rather hard upon us, my friend,now rejoined the boarding- officer;"why should you take such an interest in the Confederate cause?" |
34827 | You surprise me,rejoined the Captain;"how is that?" |
34827 | ''Have you ever seen him?'' |
34827 | Adjudication presupposes something to adjudicate; but if there was no contraband of war, on board the_ Trent_, what was there to adjudicate? |
34827 | And if not, why not? |
34827 | And if so, in what does the difference consist? |
34827 | And if so, what business had his pennant, any more than his ensign, to be flying? |
34827 | And in what does the supposed proceeding differ from the one in hand? |
34827 | And is there any difference between escaping to the shore, and to a neutral flag? |
34827 | And that steamship, what flag did she bear? |
34827 | And then, as I stated to you, in my first letter, is not the honor of the French flag involved? |
34827 | And then, where was the Congress, and the Massachusetts legislature, and Mr. Secretary Welles, and all the"plate,"and all the"resolutions"? |
34827 | And what did Mr. Secretary Welles do? |
34827 | And what is the consequence? |
34827 | And what think you, reader, was the excuse? |
34827 | And when the Constitution was formed, to whom was it submitted for ratification? |
34827 | And why this transference from American ships to British ships? |
34827 | And why would she not have complained? |
34827 | And yet, how could I very well run away, in the face of the promises I had given my crew? |
34827 | And, then, what about the necessity for_ protecting the machinery at all_? |
34827 | As a mere general, he would have abandoned the hopeless task long ago, extricating his army, and throwing it into the field, but_ cui bono_? |
34827 | Be frank; was, or was not, the transfer of your ship a_ bona fide_ transaction?" |
34827 | Besides, who shall judge them? |
34827 | But does not that officer forget that treason is made up of acts of war; and is it not apparent that you can not try me for an act of war? |
34827 | But has a captor the right to destroy before adjudication? |
34827 | But how does he affect the currents? |
34827 | But how is it now? |
34827 | But if the prizes can not be sent either into the ports of the Confederate States, or into neutral ports, how can this verification be made? |
34827 | But in what direction is the atmosphere now moving? |
34827 | But supposing the States to have been equally represented in those schools, what would have been the result? |
34827 | But the cloud-- how came it there, why does it remain so faithfully at its post, and what are its functions? |
34827 | But what becomes of this lighter globule of water, which has arisen to the surface, because it has been deprived of its solid matter? |
34827 | But what was I to do with it? |
34827 | But what was I to do with the prize? |
34827 | But, does it follow that I may be tried for treason? |
34827 | But,"what smoke is that we perceive, coming down the river?" |
34827 | By the way, has the reader ever remarked that land is scarcely ever antipodal with land? |
34827 | By what process was any portion of this allegiance transferred to the Federal Government, and to what extent was it transferred? |
34827 | Can this be the ultimate design of the Yankee? |
34827 | Come when it will-- we snatch the life of life; When lost-- what recks it-- by disease or strife? |
34827 | Could they have parted with it, without consenting to a merger of their sovereignty? |
34827 | Could this be the_ Alabama_? |
34827 | Did Dupont send her back to Ingraham? |
34827 | Did he not surrender his ship to me? |
34827 | Did it result from their forms of government, and must democrats necessarily be vulgarians? |
34827 | Did not each State, on the contrary, call its own convention? |
34827 | Did the North follow this example set her by the South? |
34827 | Did the captain mean to drown them? |
34827 | Did these States send three fourths of the students to those schools? |
34827 | Did they part, with the right of secession? |
34827 | Did this time correspond with the known rate of travel of the circles? |
34827 | Did we need other incitement on board the_ Alabama_, to apply a well- lighted torch to the enemy''s ships? |
34827 | Disturbed for what? |
34827 | Does any one wonder that the_ Alabama_ burned New England ships? |
34827 | Does he see rebellion and treason lurking in the conduct of these States? |
34827 | Does the fact of my prize being in British waters, in violation of the Queen''s proclamation, give it this right? |
34827 | Had Mr. Seward forgotten, when he wrote the above, the case of Dr. Franklin''s ship, the_ Surprise_? |
34827 | Had he forgotten the"Naval Bureau"which was conducted in France, by Dr. Franklin and Silas Deane, who were"stationed agents"of the Colonies? |
34827 | Had, then, the Southern States the peaceful right to dissolve the compact of government under which they had lived with the North? |
34827 | Has Congress agitated the subject at any time, in any manner, looking to a trial of the cases referred to? |
34827 | Has Congress passed any law directing how the rebels shall be tried? |
34827 | Has Congress passed any resolution requesting the President to order a military court for the trial of Davis& Co.? |
34827 | He guarded them as he would the apple of his eye, for had he not a prize which might make him Consul for life at Tangier? |
34827 | Here is the article:--"WHY DON''T CONGRESS ACT? |
34827 | His name? |
34827 | How are we to account for this? |
34827 | How could we respect it, in such a connection? |
34827 | How did it cease to exist? |
34827 | How did the Convention vote on this proposition? |
34827 | How is it possible to reconcile this short, explicit, and unambiguous provision with the theory I am combating? |
34827 | How we should be astonished? |
34827 | I asked if I was to be put in irons? |
34827 | I came within easy speaking range-- about seventy- five yards-- and upon asking,"What steamer is that?" |
34827 | I said to him,"Captain, your boats appear to me, to be rather deeply laden; are you not afraid to trust them?" |
34827 | If A strikes B, is it lawful to interfere to preserve the peace, and if B strikes A, is it unlawful to interfere for the same purpose? |
34827 | If a ship might be violated, why not territory? |
34827 | If the_ Sumter_ were only in Bahia, where the_ Florida_ afterward was, how easily and securely the kicking might be done? |
34827 | If these were straight winds, blowing contrary to the trades, why should they not blow steadily like the trades? |
34827 | If they can not send them into neutral ports, where are they to send them? |
34827 | If we are beaten in this war, what will be our fate in the Southern States? |
34827 | If we could not defend ourselves before Richmond, could we defend ourselves anywhere? |
34827 | In the meantime, the inquiry naturally presents itself, Where is the Yankee? |
34827 | In what proportion did the States contribute it? |
34827 | Is he too busy with his internal dissensions and politics? |
34827 | Is it a bargain?" |
34827 | Is it because the two particles, as they have gyrated around their respective poles, have received a repulsive polarity? |
34827 | Is it not a fact, on the contrary, that the vote of eleven States did_ not_ bind the other two? |
34827 | Is our Government a mere rope of sand, that may be destroyed at the will of the States?" |
34827 | Is the miserable faction which has ruled the country for the last seven years determined to destroy all its prosperity, foreign as well as domestic? |
34827 | Is this consistent with the supposed wisdom of the political Fathers, those practical, common sense men, who formed the Federal Constitution? |
34827 | May it not be the same law which rides on the whirlwind, and directs the storm? |
34827 | May not this arrangement have something to do with the currents, and the water- carriers, the winds? |
34827 | Might it not be, that, after all our trials and sacrifices, the cause for which we were struggling would be lost? |
34827 | My first lieutenant now approached me, and touching my elbow, said,"Captain, had we not better throw this howitzer overboard? |
34827 | No wonder that Mr. Lincoln when asked,"why not let the South go?" |
34827 | Now what is the result? |
34827 | Oh, who can tell? |
34827 | On what ground can you undertake to make this decision? |
34827 | Or was it that the whole North had been wearing a mask, and that the mask was now no longer available, or desirable, to hide their treachery? |
34827 | Our question, then, will be reduced to this, Was she commissioned by a sovereign power? |
34827 | Sentinel:--"Who comes there?" |
34827 | Shall that name be tarnished by defeat? |
34827 | Shall we, too, become mongrelized, and disappear from the face of the earth? |
34827 | Should, now, a French traveller, landing in Morocco,_ in itinere_, only, from a French ship, be subject to a different rule? |
34827 | Such an export would indicate unparalleled wealth, but what is the fact? |
34827 | The Government may not supply me with powder-- why? |
34827 | The act still remaining to be atoned for, what was there to be gained, by sending the vessel in? |
34827 | The next question which presents itself for our consideration is, Was the_ Alabama_ properly commissioned by a sovereign power? |
34827 | The prisoners-- what did we do with them? |
34827 | The question now is, who formed the Constitution, not what was formed by it? |
34827 | The question now was, in what direction should we steer? |
34827 | The ships would be hundreds of miles away from the land, and where could this dust come from? |
34827 | The true, and the only just and fair criterion, is, was the act for which the arrest was made an act of war? |
34827 | The"Where- away?" |
34827 | The_ Alabama_, said he, was burning everything, right and left, even_ British_ property; would the Lion stand it? |
34827 | This is a very questionable assertion; for why did Captain Winslow confide in that Englishman? |
34827 | Under such circumstances, what think you, reader, was the subject of Mr. Gibson''s discourse? |
34827 | WAS SECESSION TREASON? |
34827 | Was I, under these circumstances, to plunge into the water with my sword in my hand and endeavor to swim to the_ Kearsarge_? |
34827 | Was Secession Treason? |
34827 | Was it not more natural, that I should hurl it into the depths of the ocean in defiance, and in hatred of the Yankee and his accursed flag? |
34827 | Was the_ Kearsarge_ an exception? |
34827 | Was there any convention of the people of the United States in the aggregate, as one nation, called for the purpose of considering it? |
34827 | Was this one of the results which our ancestors designed, when they framed the federal compact? |
34827 | Was this the sort of experiment in government, that our forefathers supposed they were making? |
34827 | Was this the way he designed to punish them for mutiny, instead of hanging them at the yard- arm? |
34827 | We captured the_ Tonawanda_, and the question immediately presented itself what should we do with her? |
34827 | We repeat the question with which we commenced, and which is echoed by the people everywhere,''Why do n''t Congress act?''" |
34827 | What a descent have we here, from the Plantagenets to Mr. Milner Gibson? |
34827 | What can be the uses in the animal economy to which this immense quantity of oil in the head of the fish is applied? |
34827 | What could have become of Banks, and his great expedition, and what was this squadron of steam ships- of- war doing here? |
34827 | What could the fellow mean? |
34827 | What could the_ Sumter_ effect against such odds? |
34827 | What could this mean? |
34827 | What is a diplomat fit for, unless he can be a little cunning, upon occasion? |
34827 | What is the subtle influence which produces this wonderful result? |
34827 | What is to prevent it? |
34827 | What monstrous sophists we are, when interest prompts us? |
34827 | What more could a monarch do? |
34827 | What says the reader? |
34827 | What scenes does not the very sight of this refectory present to the imagination? |
34827 | What was best to be done in this changed condition of affairs? |
34827 | What was expected of me under these circumstances? |
34827 | What was to be done? |
34827 | What wonder that I felt a lover''s resentment? |
34827 | When they would talk to me about private property, I would ask to whom their ships belonged-- whether to a private person, or the Government? |
34827 | When_ will_ naughty England pay that little bill? |
34827 | Whence came the fund for the establishment of these schools? |
34827 | Whence can such a conclusion be drawn? |
34827 | Whence comes it? |
34827 | Whence this difference? |
34827 | Where was Mr. Welles''officer, that he did not come to demand it? |
34827 | Where was that great constituency, composed of the people of the United States in the aggregate, as one nation, all this time? |
34827 | Who could look into the horoscope of this ship-- who anticipate her career? |
34827 | Who could tell which these nine States would be? |
34827 | Who shall pronounce on which side the right or wrong lies? |
34827 | Who shall say that the civilized man is a greater philosopher, than the savage of the China seas? |
34827 | Why did he implore his interference, calling out,''For God''s sake, do what you can to save them?'' |
34827 | Why do n''t Congress act? |
34827 | Why might she not have been taken into some other neutral port, for this purpose? |
34827 | Why not? |
34827 | Why was this disruption of the old government regarded as a matter of course? |
34827 | Why, then, may not the Government supply me? |
34827 | With a Yankee Mandarin on board, and a good supply of opium, and tracts, what a smashing business this little cruiser might have done? |
34827 | Yes; here were my"forces,"but where, the d----l, was General Lee, and how was I to join him? |
34827 | _ They never returned_, and I submit to the decision of the Department, whether they are not our prisoners?" |
34827 | _ where then shall we get our revenue?_"This system of spoliation was commenced in 1816. |
34827 | and did not some of the States accept it, and some of them refuse to accept it? |
34827 | and if so, on what principle? |
34827 | and secondly, Was there sufficient ground for this dissolution? |
34827 | and, secondly, Was there sufficient reason for such dissolution? |
34827 | have we no government capable of preserving itself? |
34827 | or was it the_ Hydaspes_, from India, or the_ Lady Jocelyn_ from England? |
34827 | that thou shouldst be mindful of him?" |
34827 | what was done with the"old flag"? |
34827 | what was to be done? |
34827 | what was to become of her, and her vow? |
40860 | Are we at Cordova? |
40860 | But where is Argos? |
40860 | Do you know the nature of the enemy you have to deal with? 40860 Dost thou doubt it? |
40860 | ''Seest thou these great buildings? |
40860 | All, therefore, is mystery; and the Greeks may truly say,--"Where stood the walls of our fathers? |
40860 | Can all this be real? |
40860 | Can any thing be more just than to repel the injury they would bring upon us? |
40860 | Chateaubriand,"will inquire, perhaps, what my feelings were on entering this holy place? |
40860 | Do you not observe, that he has behind him immense solitudes and infinite deserts in which it is impossible for us to come up with or pursue him? |
40860 | Do you think, when he has him in his palaces, as a suppliant, that he will abandon himself, and not make war against us? |
40860 | Has she been seen by Praxiteles?''" |
40860 | His mournful exclamation was heard--"Cannot there be found a Christian to cut off my head?" |
40860 | If such was the poverty of Laodicea, what must have been the wealth of those cities whose pretensions were admitted?" |
40860 | In spite of its beauty, what says Monsieur La Martine? |
40860 | In what condition is that suburb now? |
40860 | In what condition is this celebrated city at present? |
40860 | Is it because words have neither space, horizon, nor colours, and that painting is only the language of the eye? |
40860 | Is there any thing more honourable, than to fly to the assistance of our friends? |
40860 | O Grave, where is thy sting?'' |
40860 | One of the company proposed this question;--Which is the most perfect popular government? |
40860 | Read Horace or Pindar after a Psalm? |
40860 | Shall I say it? |
40860 | The result? |
40860 | To Him( belongeth) whatever is in the heavens, and whatever is in the earth; who is there who shall intercede with him except by His permission? |
40860 | VIrORuM QVAE·SERIEs ANTIQVA fVIT ·? |
40860 | Was this firmness, or was it imprudence? |
40860 | What can have become of the materials which adorned its public edifices? |
40860 | What can we say to the disappointed traveller, who is now deprived of the rich satisfaction that would have compensated his travel and his toil? |
40860 | Where shall we find such a people, or such a period? |
40860 | Who can say that the discoveries of the learned were not preserved in this asylum, equally impenetrable to the natives and foreigners? |
40860 | Why has no one described it? |
40860 | [ 249] On this passage Mr. Revett has left the following observation in a MS. note:"Upon what authority? |
40860 | or in what distant country and obscure retreat may we look for their mutilated fragments?" |
40860 | or is it merely an affectation? |
40860 | what meaneth the heat of this great anger[309]?''" |
36788 | Can you not see it, Antonello? |
36788 | Is it Loupat? |
36788 | The last? 36788 ''Are you not the finest singer of San Vito?" |
36788 | ''"Dead?" |
36788 | ''"Did you see the poor old man?" |
36788 | ''"Doubt that we shall be victorious?" |
36788 | ''"Grandfather, who is that?" |
36788 | ''"Grandpapa, grandpapa, did you hear that?" |
36788 | ''"Is my aunt better?" |
36788 | ''"Loupat is absent?" |
36788 | ''"No one is missing?" |
36788 | ''"Shall I come with you, grandpapa?" |
36788 | ''"That man? |
36788 | ''"Well, how is your aunt?" |
36788 | ''"What do you reply?" |
36788 | ''"What is the matter, Monsieur Jean? |
36788 | ''"You love life?" |
36788 | ''"Your aunt? |
36788 | ''And shall they look on you with eyes As tender true as mine, And love each changing gleam that flies Across that face of thine?'' |
36788 | ''Hast Thou not heard their chanting? |
36788 | ''He asked humbly,"Why so much honour?" |
36788 | ''Hearing a rattle of plates, he asked,"Are you hungry?" |
36788 | ''Henry the Fifth''or''Romeo and Juliet''? |
36788 | ''How many dead''uns did you knock off last night?'' |
36788 | ''Richard the Third''or''Hamlet''? |
36788 | ''That loving heart, that patient soul, Had they indeed no longer span To run their course, and reach their goal, And read their homily to man?'' |
36788 | ''What is discipline except fear? |
36788 | ''When others come your love to claim, You still, you pale blue sea, Oh, shall you mean for them the same, That once you meant for me? |
36788 | ''Why will you show?'' |
36788 | ''You can not like it?'' |
36788 | A French spy, perhaps? |
36788 | A writer wrote the other day,''People speak of the law of nature; but who feels it? |
36788 | Against libel, even of the grossest character, what can one do, as the law stands, which is not more disagreeable than silently to''grin and bear''it? |
36788 | And hares unwitting close to me did pass And still the birds sang....''[ Footnote 8: Surely_ wild_ is a misprint for_ white_? |
36788 | And what can he possibly mean by no poets, which he says in another place? |
36788 | And what is the human child of the iron beast, what is the typical, notable, most conspicuous creation of the iron beast''s epoch? |
36788 | And what wilderness is there so barren as the desert of human indifference and of human egotism? |
36788 | But does this now exist anywhere? |
36788 | But how long will she be able, or be allowed, to be free from enforced service? |
36788 | But how many see the sun at all, even when they live where it is most radiant? |
36788 | But who can think that''cab''is better than''fiacre,''or''window''than''fenêtre''? |
36788 | But why should distinction be weighted by a penalty, like the successful racer? |
36788 | Can written words do anything to touch the hearts of those who read? |
36788 | Does it disappoint you, eh?" |
36788 | Does this appear exaggerated and libellous? |
36788 | Giorgio asked,--''"Which of you is Favetta?" |
36788 | Has he never heard the ringing stanzas of Cavallotti which sound like a clarion through the land? |
36788 | Has he never read a line of Carducci? |
36788 | Has he never studied the exquisite if too erotic odes of D''Annunzio, or the touching verse of Stecchetti? |
36788 | He murmured:''"Why to me so much honour?" |
36788 | How can such a populace, always haunted by the fear of death, possibly enjoy? |
36788 | How could he have stooped to drink at other cups when he had once tasted of this? |
36788 | How did it find its way into the market, that familiar and intimate thing? |
36788 | How many millions has it not cost in the last score of years, that fatal weakness of Italians for imitating others? |
36788 | How many think of the sun during the long day it illumines? |
36788 | How will it end?--why does not the family help?" |
36788 | I know not where he places Shelley, but does Milton ever touch the heart except perhaps in the Lycidas? |
36788 | I made haste, eh?" |
36788 | If it be not thus illegal, why does not general indignation render it impossible? |
36788 | If it be, as I understand, illegal, why is it permitted publicly? |
36788 | If she do merit it, why does she do so? |
36788 | If the first price be correct, why alter it to the second in a year''s time? |
36788 | If there be revolution in the air, who can wonder? |
36788 | If these mines be worth the working, why does not Italy work them herself, and take all the profits? |
36788 | If they stay to see, why may not I? |
36788 | If this be admitted, what are we to think of the Tory Party which can find no other guide and saviour than this consistent Radical? |
36788 | In either result, is the game worth its very costly candle? |
36788 | Is he an officer of franc- tireurs? |
36788 | Is he not, as I hope, planning to surprise the Prussians? |
36788 | Is it towards this already popular communism that Professor Sergi would direct the Italian nation? |
36788 | Is my grandfather giving or receiving information? |
36788 | Is not the city of Luca Signorelli set before you with those few lines? |
36788 | Is not the most eloquent voice doomed to cry without echo in the wilderness? |
36788 | Is not this delicate in expression as the sprays of the almond blossoms themselves? |
36788 | Is that an ideal or a safe position? |
36788 | Is the combat not in every sense most unjust and unequal, being less a combat indeed than an assassination by a bravo? |
36788 | Is the end worth the means? |
36788 | Is the injury made less an injury? |
36788 | Is this the result of early education, of hereditary inclinations, of female or ecclesiastical influence? |
36788 | No one else missing?" |
36788 | Of what use is it to attempt to educate the nations when such things as these are set up in their midst? |
36788 | On how many do written words, even dipped in the heart''s blood and burning with the soul''s fire, produce any lasting effect? |
36788 | Perhaps he sees more clearly than we do? |
36788 | Perhaps? |
36788 | Poor creatures, why not?'' |
36788 | Surely such ideas as these in people wholly uneducated indicate imagination in the speakers? |
36788 | The army incarnates the nation, you say? |
36788 | The beauty of the Campidoglio is already ruined in order to place that statue there: might not that suffice? |
36788 | The fault of whom, or the fault of what, lies at the root of this successful usurpation? |
36788 | The officer might have broken his legs, eh?" |
36788 | The true remedy would lie in a finer, juster, higher kind of public feeling; but where is there any likelihood of this arising in the world as it is? |
36788 | They say to themselves, and not without reason:"Where is this certainty that science promised us?" |
36788 | Through treachery, through death, through accident, through greed? |
36788 | Thy antelopes in troops, the zebras of Thy plain? |
36788 | Thy elephants, Lord, where? |
36788 | To my citation, in reply, of the words of the Emperor Julian,''If it be sufficient to deny, who will ever be found guilty?'' |
36788 | To public opinion? |
36788 | To what can we ever look for any remedy of this except from the unwritten law of opinion? |
36788 | To whom or what can we look for the pressure of an influence which would enforce honesty in literature? |
36788 | We hear_ ad nauseam_ of the gains of modern life, of what is called civilisation: does no one count its losses? |
36788 | Were you dreaming?" |
36788 | What are we to look for from nations which lie down to be stamped on thus? |
36788 | What can Italy learn from such a model? |
36788 | What can a people who flit like this, continually, know of the real meaning of a home? |
36788 | What can be more graphic, more simple, more radiant, than this picture painted in words so few? |
36788 | What can be more true or more beautiful than this? |
36788 | What can this mean? |
36788 | What could human affection offer superior in fidelity and feeling? |
36788 | What else but greed has been the motive of that shameless desecration of Rome against which Geoffroy has raised his voice from the tomb to protest? |
36788 | What else matters? |
36788 | What has either length or brevity to do with either excellence or beauty? |
36788 | What is there in all this to admire or to imitate? |
36788 | What is to be done? |
36788 | What language can strongly enough denounce such wicked and insensate acts? |
36788 | What redress, moreover, is there for the innumerable thefts from which a writer suffers during his career? |
36788 | What servant stole it? |
36788 | What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
36788 | What should we think of the painter who repainted his picture after sale, or of a sculptor who sawed off an arm from his statue, and affixed another? |
36788 | What strength is here? |
36788 | What traitor sold it? |
36788 | What, then, are we to say of the constant appearance in catalogues of sales of letters of living, and of lately dead, persons? |
36788 | What, then, is to be done in such circumstances? |
36788 | Where are they now, Lord God? |
36788 | Where are they taking this fettered man? |
36788 | Where could it be discussed in public without''authority''intervening and silencing the speakers? |
36788 | Where is the water thou broughtest me? |
36788 | Where is this to end? |
36788 | Where, then, can any fresh field be found in which to plant any flowers of thought with any hope to see them root and blossom in action? |
36788 | Which is the greater play of Shakespeare--''King John''or''The Tempest''? |
36788 | Who before him struck the splendid chords of his Juan? |
36788 | Who buys them? |
36788 | Who can care for the exiles of Eden? |
36788 | Who can walk out into the country when barriers block up the end of every street? |
36788 | Who crowded into a few years of life such accomplishment, such eloquence such romance of existence? |
36788 | Who did he follow? |
36788 | Who reads them? |
36788 | Who resembled Byron before Byron lived? |
36788 | Who showed him his matchless double rhymes? |
36788 | Who was his precursor? |
36788 | Who would care if this were her fate? |
36788 | Who? |
36788 | Why are these volumes, usually worthless, ever produced? |
36788 | Why did he not carry out his intention? |
36788 | Why do the circulating libraries accept them? |
36788 | Why does he cut his own throat thus? |
36788 | Why force me to lie hidden under a hedge? |
36788 | Why is the author not bound by the same canon of art? |
36788 | Why not? |
36788 | Why not? |
36788 | Why should he lie? |
36788 | Why? |
36788 | Why? |
36788 | Will you tell me where I should find anything equal to it at its price in London? |
36788 | With whom does the fault of it lie? |
36788 | Would he have succeeded if he had been born half a century earlier? |
36788 | Yet, surely to them, as to the drapers, the apparently insensate system must be lucrative, or it would not be pursued? |
36788 | Yet, what fairer spectacle could this rude and stony country offer to us? |
36788 | [ 3] How could he have bent to taste of other joys, once having known this ecstasy? |
36788 | from the depths of an aching heart, looking on the dead features of one to whom, in the eyes of the world, we had no fault? |
36788 | which lick the spurred boots of those who outrage them? |
36788 | who? |
42002 | _--Does any one know a book called_ Behemoth, an Epitome of the Civil Wars from 1640 to 1660_? 42002 _--From what author is the phrase"Deus ex machinâ"taken? |
42002 | ( 1.)? |
42002 | ( iii.)? |
42002 | ).--In answer to your correspondent MR. PEACOCK, as to whether a monument was usually erected over the burial- place of the heart,& c.? |
42002 | ***** WAS SHAKSPEARE DESCENDED FROM A LANDED PROPRIETOR? |
42002 | A reference to any reports or papers of them would oblige D. L._ Cui Bono._--What is the true rendering of the Latin phrase_ Cui Bono_? |
42002 | Also, whether collodion portraits come within his patent, as it was understood it could only apply to the_ paper process_? |
42002 | Are there many copies of this edition, or may I congratulate myself upon possessing_ the_ one ordered by Junius? |
42002 | B. would also be glad to know_ where_ Towgood of St. Neot''s_ positive_ paper can be procured, and the price? |
42002 | Being asked''Who should be the next emperor?'' |
42002 | But can nothing be done to rescue from destruction the precious analytical treasures of Euler, now entombed in the archives of St. Petersburgh? |
42002 | Can any of your correspondents give other early quotations from the_ De Imitatione_? |
42002 | Can any of your correspondents refer me to a description of Alva? |
42002 | He also inquires what is meant, in a deed of grant of the time of Queen Elizabeth, by a grant of"decimas calchanti,"& c.? |
42002 | In what year did he die? |
42002 | Is not this a fresh invention? |
42002 | Is not this the action alluded to by Shakspeare and other writers, as"biting the thumb?" |
42002 | It is to be remarked that the copy I have met with is styled_ privileged_? |
42002 | Most text- books say it means"For what good?" |
42002 | Oxford? |
42002 | Perhaps the word_ subarration_ may suggest to R. C. a clue, by which he can mend his extract? |
42002 | T. P. L._ Reverend Robert Hall._--Who was Robert Hall, a preacher of some celebrity in the time of James II.? |
42002 | What age was he when his picture, now in Hampton Court, was painted by Gainsborough? |
42002 | What is the origin of this erroneous mode of expression? |
42002 | _ Lords''Descents._--Is a MS. collection of Lords''Descents, by Thomas Maisterson, Esq., made about the year 1705, now extant? |
42002 | _ Personal Descriptions._--Is Sir Walter Scott''s description of Saladin taken from any ancient writer, or is it a fancy sketch? |
42002 | _ Statne nominis umbra?_ An answer is not needed to this Query. |
42002 | _ The Scotch Grievance._--Can the demand of Scotchmen, with respect to the usage of the royal arms, be justified by the laws of Heraldry? |
42002 | _ The Stock Horn._--Can any of your readers or friends tell me where I can see a specimen of the musical instrument called the"Stock Horn?" |
42002 | _ Wheelbarrows._--Who invented the wheelbarrow? |
42002 | and if so, where may engravings of them be found? |
42002 | and what was its original application? |
42002 | inquires the origin of the sign- boards of the"Blue Bell"and the"Blue Anchor?" |
42002 | or,"What use was it?" |
42002 | to the English throne, on which the royal arms are found with Scotland in the first quarter and England in the second? |
42002 | when Prince of Wales? |
3688 | ''But where shall I find the necessary arguments?'' 3688 ''But your Majesty''s Christian principles?'' |
3688 | ''Ca n''t we do something?'' 3688 ''Do you mean Monte Carlo?'' |
3688 | ''How can you let that ravening beast trot by your side?'' 3688 ''There they go,''cried Constance, and then added in a gasp,''In Heaven''s name, what are they hunting?'' |
3688 | ''What are we to do?'' 3688 ''What does one generally do with hyaenas?'' |
3688 | ''What is the meaning of this fiasco?'' 3688 ''What on earth are we to do with the hyaena?'' |
3688 | ''Your Majesty means--?'' 3688 An Unrest- cure? |
3688 | And be surrounded by Americans trying to talk French? 3688 And the Canetons à la mode d''Amblève? |
3688 | And was the gentleman responsive? |
3688 | And what sort of end do I have? 3688 Are you sure it''s one of her sayings?" |
3688 | Beth? 3688 But what is all this mystery about? |
3688 | But where am I to go? |
3688 | But where would one go for such a thing? |
3688 | But where? 3688 But why was n''t I told? |
3688 | Could I come in out of the rain? |
3688 | Could you tell me, sir, if them white birds is storks or halbatrosses? 3688 Dealt with,"said the Prime Minister;"exactly, just so; but how?" |
3688 | Did I ever tell you,asked Clovis of his friend,"the tragedy of music at mealtimes? |
3688 | Did they seem much wrapped up in each other? |
3688 | Did you go as far as to select the gentleman, or did you merely throw out a general idea, and trust to the force of suggestion? |
3688 | Did you hear what she said? |
3688 | Did you meddle with it in any way? |
3688 | Do what? |
3688 | Do you mean that it''s dead, or stampeded, or that you staked it at cards and lost it that way? |
3688 | Do you mean to say my brother is ill? |
3688 | Do you mean to say you get money out of-- Florrie? |
3688 | Do you mean to tell me there''s a general rising against them? |
3688 | Do you refer to hypnotic suggestion? |
3688 | Does he write for any other papers? |
3688 | Does it? |
3688 | Had n''t we better have the cat in and judge for ourselves? |
3688 | Has my brother arrived? |
3688 | Have I ever told you the story of Saint Vespaluus? |
3688 | Have you heard about the parrot? |
3688 | How about poor little me? |
3688 | How about your carryings- on with the tortoiseshell puss up at the stables, eh? |
3688 | How could you sell a transept? |
3688 | How did you find out? 3688 How do you mean, no good to me?" |
3688 | How much do you know? |
3688 | How the young folk shoot up, do n''t they? |
3688 | I got your telegram,he said,"what''s up?" |
3688 | I suppose we are in some danger? |
3688 | If that is Erik you have in your arms, who is-- that? |
3688 | If you have faith,she sobbed, struck by a happy inspiration,"wo n''t you find our little Erik for us? |
3688 | Is he anywhere to be heard? |
3688 | Is he glad to get back to Daddy and Mummy again? |
3688 | Is it all going to be in blank verse? |
3688 | Is it something infectious? |
3688 | Is your maid called Florence? |
3688 | It sounds rather reminiscent of an election result, does n''t it? |
3688 | It''s rather late in the day for a Coronation Ode, is n''t it? |
3688 | May one hear extracts from the immortal work? |
3688 | Might I suggest something for the Reception Fest? |
3688 | Might I suggest something to the Gnädige Frau? |
3688 | Must I keep him always? |
3688 | My dear girl,protested Clovis,"have you reflected that Cassandra specialized in foretelling calamities?" |
3688 | My parrot dead? |
3688 | Naturally, I should not talk about it very much,said Eleanor,"but why should n''t I mention it to anyone?" |
3688 | Of whose intelligence in particular? |
3688 | Quite a spring day, is n''t it? |
3688 | Tea is ready,said the sour- faced maid;"where is the mistress?" |
3688 | Tell me, what on earth have you turned Cocksley Coxon into? |
3688 | The Bishop is examining a confirmation class in the neighbourhood, is n''t he? |
3688 | The ipe? |
3688 | Then it has a happy ending, in spite of it being a tragedy? |
3688 | Then who was he? |
3688 | They did it to save their immortal souls, did n''t they? 3688 Was he much hurt?" |
3688 | Were they looking very happy? |
3688 | What are we to do? |
3688 | What are you keeping in that locked hutch? |
3688 | What caused its death? |
3688 | What could you learn from a meringue? |
3688 | What do the folk around here say about me? |
3688 | What do you mean? |
3688 | What do you think of human intelligence? |
3688 | What does he do? |
3688 | What does it say? |
3688 | What is a lorry? |
3688 | What lute? |
3688 | What sort of story? |
3688 | What was on the paper? |
3688 | What was there for lunch? |
3688 | What''s written up there? |
3688 | Whatever''s that? |
3688 | Which is Veronique? |
3688 | Who are his people? |
3688 | Who are those depressed- looking young women who have just gone by? |
3688 | Who was that good- looking boy who was dining with you last night? |
3688 | Whoever will break it to the poor child? 3688 Why did I ever come down here?" |
3688 | Why not give free play to your emotions, and be brutally abusive? 3688 Will you have cold pork for your supper,"asked the hard- faced maid, as she cleared the table,"or will you have it hotted up?" |
3688 | Will you have some milk, Tobermory? |
3688 | Would you like to go and see if cook has got your dinner ready? |
3688 | Would you marry Leonore if she were a poor man''s daughter? |
3688 | You are the Bishop''s secretary? |
3688 | You do n''t really believe in Pan? |
3688 | You do n''t suppose I''ve enjoyed the last quarter of an hour, do you? |
3688 | You ought to have an atlas on hand when you do this sort of thing; and why stale and pale? |
3688 | You surely would n''t give me away? |
3688 | You''ll go for a ride, Master Tom? |
3688 | ''Do you think the poor little thing suffered much?'' |
3688 | ''I feel a presentiment that something dreadful is going to happen,''she said to me;''am I looking pale?'' |
3688 | After all, every one exposes their insides to the public gaze and sympathy nowadays, so why not one''s outside?" |
3688 | And how?" |
3688 | And is n''t the Bishop going to have tea?" |
3688 | And my aunt wo n''t LET me forget it; she will always be asking''Have the Tarringtons had their mice?'' |
3688 | And then on the top of it, Thistlebery--""What has he been saying?" |
3688 | And what was the sum total of his conversation with chance- encountered neighbours? |
3688 | And who is Alberti? |
3688 | And why let her wear saffron colour?" |
3688 | Are you interested in birds? |
3688 | As the butler went round with the murmured question,"Sherry?" |
3688 | Brope?" |
3688 | But what for? |
3688 | But what of it? |
3688 | But with what?" |
3688 | Could Tobermory impart his dangerous gift to other cats? |
3688 | Do you like my new waistcoat? |
3688 | Do you understand what I mean by the verb to koepenick? |
3688 | Do you want me to take the part of Charlotte Corday?" |
3688 | Have I ever told it you?" |
3688 | Have n''t you noticed that women with a really perfect profile like mine are seldom even moderately agreeable?" |
3688 | Have you realized that half the papers of Europe and the United States will publish pictures of it? |
3688 | How on earth did he get there?" |
3688 | I do n''t want to doubt your word, of course, but we must n''t be too ready to condemn him unheard, must we?" |
3688 | I knowed him at once; showing hisself here agen, is he?" |
3688 | I mean how did you know I was trying to get a rhyme to Florrie?" |
3688 | I mean, what curtain do I get?" |
3688 | I suppose you want to be Aga-- whatever his name is?" |
3688 | I suppose you''ve introduced some tigers into the scenery? |
3688 | Is Windsor Castle safe?" |
3688 | Is she mixed up with Consular people?" |
3688 | It is nothing to be ashamed of, but it would n''t do for the editor of the CATHEDRAL MONTHLY to go in openly for that sort of thing, would it?" |
3688 | It was sent"reply prepaid,"and consisted of a single sentence:"In Heaven''s name, where is Beth?" |
3688 | It''s time he married somebody, and why not Elsa?" |
3688 | She''s a dear good thing, and will do anything she''s told, or try to; but can you imagine her doing a flying leap under any circumstances?" |
3688 | Telegram? |
3688 | Tell me something: has it ever occurred to you that Elsa would do very well for Wratislav? |
3688 | The question is: What are you going to do with him?" |
3688 | This was one of the earlier posters, and was followed by one of even more sinister purport:"Will the Test- match have to be postponed?" |
3688 | What are we to do?'' |
3688 | What did he say?" |
3688 | What is Saki''s manner, what his magic talisman? |
3688 | What is it?" |
3688 | What kind of character is she?" |
3688 | Where is it? |
3688 | Where?" |
3688 | Why Mexico?" |
3688 | You ca n''t do all that on two hundred a year, can you?" |
3688 | You do n''t find him TOO dull, do you?" |
3688 | You wo n''t give me away, will you? |
3688 | said Mrs. Cornett,"do you mean to encourage that cat to go out and gossip about us in the servants''hall?" |
3688 | screamed Constance,''what on earth shall we do? |
38566 | ''Why is it,''he asks,''that the bolts pass over the guilty and often strike the innocent? |
38566 | 208:-- Somnia, terrores magicos, miracula, sagas, Nocturnos lemures portentaque Thessala rides?] |
38566 | 30:''Quid noster hic Caesar nonne novam quandam rationem attulit orationis et dicendi genus induxit prope singulare? |
38566 | 4) in support of the Oppian law:''An blandiores in publico quam in privato, et alienis quam vestris estis?''] |
38566 | 52- 3-- Quid contraxistis frontem, quia tragoediam Dixi futuram hanc?] |
38566 | 67:-- Aut laeso doluere Metello Famosisque Lupo cooperto versibus? |
38566 | 7:-- Qui? |
38566 | ; and some expressions in some of his later poems, as, for instance,-- Malest Cornifici tuo Catullo,-- and-- Quid est Catulle? |
38566 | An blandiores in publico quam in privato, et alienis quam vestris estis[58]?'' |
38566 | An i d voltis ut me hinc jacentem aliqui tollat? |
38566 | An ruri censes te esse? |
38566 | And this leads us to the last question concerning him-- What is his value as a poetic artist? |
38566 | And why? |
38566 | But if all has hitherto been to thee vanity and vexation of spirit, why seek to add to thy trouble? |
38566 | Cur? |
38566 | Does he descend into the clouds in order that his aim may be surer? |
38566 | Echoing the stern irony of Achilles--[ Greek: alla, philos, thane kai su; tiê olophyreai houtôs? |
38566 | Egone ut quod ad me adlatum esse alienum sciam Celem? |
38566 | Even the''Aufilena poems,''which are based on an intrigue carried on at Verona, are shown, by the lines in c:-- Cui faveam potius? |
38566 | Flourishing era of Roman Comedy 153 How far any claim to originality? |
38566 | He adds the further comment,''Do we suppose that Pacuvius, in writing this passage, was in a calm and passionless mood?'' |
38566 | How can he add to or detract from their eternal happiness? |
38566 | How far are we able to fill up this meagre outline by personal indications of the poet left on his works? |
38566 | How much better thing is the slavery_ here_''(_ i.e._ represented in this play),''than the liberty we actually enjoy?''] |
38566 | If there is no life after death, what is the origin of the universal belief in the existence of the souls of the departed? |
38566 | In what relation do the plays of Plautus stand to the more serious interests of life? |
38566 | Is knowledge obtained originally through the exercise of the reason or the senses, or through their combined and inseparable action? |
38566 | Is there any gloom or horror there? |
38566 | Is there in him any vein of ironical comment or satirical rebuke? |
38566 | Is there not a deeper rest than any sleep?'' |
38566 | Is this done by the Gods merely in the way of practice and exercise for their arms? |
38566 | Is this work a mere maze of ingeniously woven error, enriched with a few brilliant colours which have not yet faded with the lapse of time? |
38566 | Non ridet versus Enni gravitate minores, Cum de se loquitur non ut maiore reprensis? |
38566 | Num quid vis? |
38566 | Quanto libertatem hanc hic superat servitus[20]? |
38566 | Qui potis est? |
38566 | Quid tu per barbaricas urbes iuras? |
38566 | Quid undas Arguit et liquidam molem camposque natantis[6]? |
38566 | Quis potis ingentis oras evolvere belli? |
38566 | The fact that this Clodia was the sister of P. Clodius Pulcher is also indicated in the 79th poem of Catullus, Lesbius est pulcher: quidni? |
38566 | The prominent words of the passage were,-- Men''servasse ut essent qui me perderent? |
38566 | The testimony of Horace on this point,-- Nil comis tragici mutat Lucilius Acci? |
38566 | To what cause, then, can we attribute their origin? |
38566 | Was the Greek writer partly parodying, in accordance with the tradition of the old comedy, partly reproducing a tragedy of Euripides? |
38566 | What cause can be assigned for the cessation of this favour with the fall of the Republic? |
38566 | What charge has he against the waves and the waste of waters? |
38566 | What is this wretched love of life, which makes us tremble at every danger? |
38566 | What then is involved in this conception-- the dominant conception of the poem in its philosophical as well as its imaginative aspects? |
38566 | What then is the favour for which Catullus writes these ironically complimentary thanks? |
38566 | What then was this philosophy which supplied to Lucretius an answer to the perplexities of existence? |
38566 | What was its bearing on the actual circumstances of Roman life, and what were the grounds of the favour with which it was received? |
38566 | Whence could they have obtained the idea of creation, whence gathered the secret powers of matter-- Si non ipsa dedit specimen natura creandi? |
38566 | Why are they idly spent on desert places? |
38566 | Why does he cast his bolts into the sea? |
38566 | Why is it that Jupiter never hurls his bolts in a clear sky? |
38566 | Why is it that he often destroys and disfigures his own temples and images?'' |
38566 | Why should they have done anything for the benefit of man? |
38566 | [ Footnote 15: Secuit Lucilius urbem-- Primores populi arripuit populumque tributim-- Non ridet versus Enni gravitate minores--?] |
38566 | [ Footnote 17: Quid? |
38566 | [ Footnote 20: Quid tibi, malum, hic ante aedis clamitatiost? |
38566 | [ Footnote 40:''Dost thou not know, that whatever rank fortune has assigned to a man, no meanness of station ever weakens a fine nature?''] |
38566 | [ Footnote 45:''Whither have your minds, which heretofore were wo nt to stand firm, madly swerved from the straight course?''] |
38566 | [ Footnote 59:''Do you see that the enemy is close upon you, and that your back will soon be invested? |
38566 | [ Footnote 63:''Who can order the infinite mass? |
38566 | a gurgite lato Discernens ponti truculentum ubi dividit aequor? |
38566 | and was the representation first accepted as a recognised burlesque of a familiar piece? |
38566 | any latent sympathy with any of the objects which move the serious passions of moral and social reformers? |
38566 | non est homo bellus? |
38566 | pedes, statin an non? |
38566 | quid moraris emori? |
38566 | sicine hoc fit? |
38566 | the remark of the parasite in the Persa, 75, 76:-- Set sumne ego stultus, qui rem curo publicam, Ubi sint magistratus, quos curare oporteat? |
4239 | And may he not be reduced to the grating necessity of forfeiting his independence, and of being obliged to the sparing hand of charity for support? |
4239 | And that the superior power of population it repressed, and the actual population kept equal to the means of subsistence, by misery and vice? |
4239 | But is this practicable? |
4239 | Can a man consent to place the object of his affection in a situation so discordant, probably, to her tastes and inclinations? |
4239 | Can we judge of the Creator but from his creation? |
4239 | During the next period of doubling, where will the food be found to satisfy the importunate demands of the increasing numbers? |
4239 | He then adds, There is no person who does not see how very distant such a period is from us, but shall we ever arrive at it? |
4239 | How are they to be prevented from making this exchange? |
4239 | How common is the remark that those accidents which are to the indolent a source of disease are forgotten and extirpated in the busy and active? |
4239 | If the energy of my mind had really counteracted the fatigue of my body, why should I feel tired the next morning? |
4239 | In societies arrived at this term, will not this oscillation be a constantly subsisting cause of periodical misery? |
4239 | Is it some mysterious interference of heaven which, at a certain period, strikes the men with impotence, and the women with barrenness? |
4239 | May he not see his offspring in rags and misery, and clamouring for bread that he can not give them? |
4239 | Must not there arrive a period then, when these laws, equally necessary, shall counteract each other? |
4239 | Ought we not then to correct our crude and puerile ideas of infinite Power from the contemplation of what we actually see existing? |
4239 | The sole question is, what is this principle? |
4239 | Thus comfortably situated at present, what are their prospects in marrying? |
4239 | To prove the power of the mind over the body, Mr Godwin observes,"How often do we find a piece of good news dissipating a distemper? |
4239 | What consequences then are we to expect from looking to such a point as our guide and polar star in the great sea of political discovery? |
4239 | What would then be the consequence? |
4239 | Where is the dressing necessary to improve that which is already in cultivation? |
4239 | Where is the fresh land to turn up? |
4239 | Who can imagine that these wonderful faculties are contained in these little bits of matter? |
4239 | Why does he allow this? |
4239 | Why then do not its effects appear in a rapid increase of the human species? |
4239 | Will he not be obliged to labour harder? |
4239 | Will he not lower his rank in life? |
4239 | Will he not subject himself to greater difficulties than he at present feels? |
4239 | and if he has a large family, will his utmost exertions enable him to support them? |
4239 | is it some obscure and occult cause? |
43097 | );_ or an error for_ gate(? |
43097 | 14; L. 198, 201; F 355; Rest(_ once only?_), 5. |
43097 | 1766, 1768; obligation( compelling the service of spirits), F 131; Bonde( Bond? |
43097 | 267; T. v. 810, 999; A 555, 1388, 2134, 2883, 3870;& c.; Here(_ error for_ Heer? |
43097 | 335; A 820, B 1818; Echone,_ pl._(? |
43097 | 559; Presse(_ for_ Press,_ before a vowel?_), press, i.e. |
43097 | 612, 616;_ dat._(?) |
43097 | A.S._ p[=i]n?_. |
43097 | Alter? |
43097 | Alter? |
43097 | DEVYS,_ s._ disposal, 1974; will, 3621;_ by devys_, to judge from her appearance(? |
43097 | FOREYNE,_ s._ outer chamber(_ or_ courtyard? |
43097 | FORTHER,_ v._ further, advance, help(? |
43097 | GRATE,_ s._ grating(? |
43097 | HAST, hast thou( so)? |
43097 | HOWNE, savage(? |
43097 | KIRKED,_ adj._ crooked(? |
43097 | KNOPPED,_ pp._ fastened(? |
43097 | LYMOTE, Elymas(? |
43097 | MAGIK,_ s._ magic, A 416, F 1202; M. naturel, natural magic, F 1125; Magyk, F 218; Magyke(_ read_ magyk? |
43097 | SAYNT,_ adj._ girded, girdled(? |
43097 | SLYK(_ for_ Slyke? |
43097 | See further_ To- ga_( better_ to ga_?) |
43097 | THOUGHT,_ s._ the object of thought personified(? |
43097 | VOUNDE,_ pp._(?) |
43097 | WALKYNG,_ s._ walking(? |
43097 | WHERTO? |
43097 | [ 54]''Why will ye suffre than that I thus spille, And for no maner gilt but my good wille?'' |
43097 | _ Perhaps read_--And she to laughe,& c.''Is it not better to consider_ and she to laughe_ as a case of_ Infinitivus historicus_? |
43097 | _ Qui la_, who''s there? |
43097 | _ ow_(? |
43097 | dat._(?) |
43097 | hoe zuldi hu ghelaten?" |
43097 | pl._ paramours(? |
43097 | s. subj._(?) |
43097 | s._ hast thou so? |
43097 | s._ languish for(? |
43097 | s._(_ better_ Chees? |
43097 | to what end? |
43097 | to? |
31087 | Are you_ Union_ soldiers? |
31087 | Echo answers where? |
31087 | Stonewall Jackson? 31087 Under which King, Benzonian?" |
31087 | What authority had he for this? |
31087 | What is Randolph? |
31087 | Where is McClellan, general? |
31087 | Will not the Confederate soldiers now in Pennsylvania remember such acts of cruelty and barbarism? 31087 Will they come, when he does call for them?" |
31087 | A few more weeks, at that rate, will consume his army, and then-- peace? |
31087 | A moment after, Gen. Walker, of Georgia, came in, and addressed the colonel thus:"Is the Secretary in?" |
31087 | A safe prediction-- but what is his belief? |
31087 | A. Seddon, Secretary of War: Will you please send me, through the post- office, a passport to leave the city? |
31087 | AUGUST 24TH.--We have nothing further from Charleston, except that Beauregard threatened retaliation( how?) |
31087 | And Mr. Hotze( who is he?) |
31087 | And are they not? |
31087 | And do they not take gold and other property to the North, and thereby defeat the object of the sequestration act? |
31087 | And he supposes Bragg''s splendid victory( what did he suppose the next day?) |
31087 | And how could any of its members escape? |
31087 | And is it nothing to have her soil polluted by the martial tramp of the Yankees at Alexandria and Arlington Heights? |
31087 | And what are we doing? |
31087 | And what are we doing? |
31087 | And what are we fighting for? |
31087 | And what would become of the slaves, especially in Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Missouri? |
31087 | And will not that gallant boy in the 16th Regiment remember his mother''s fate, and take vengeance on the enemy? |
31087 | At this rate, how are we to replenish the ranks as they become thinned in battle? |
31087 | Bragg will_ probably_ be sustained by the President-- but then what will become of------, who is so inimical to Bragg? |
31087 | But can he control the State governments? |
31087 | But can he, a modest man and a Christian, aspire to such a position? |
31087 | But how can Lee achieve anything when the enemy is ever kept informed not only of his movements in progress, but of his probable intentions? |
31087 | But how can it be possible for the people of the North to submit to martial law? |
31087 | But how can they be fed? |
31087 | But how does this speak for the government, or rather the efficiency of the men who by"many indirect ways"came into power? |
31087 | But how fares it with the invader? |
31087 | But how long could he advance in that direction without being overwhelmed? |
31087 | But how long will we be allowed to remain? |
31087 | But if a forced reconstruction of the Union were consummated, does the North suppose any advantage would result to that section? |
31087 | But if he could not hold his mountain position, what can he do in the plain? |
31087 | But might they not, if this were adopted, be liable to be caught sometimes without enough ammunition? |
31087 | But suppose it should_ not_ be relieved, and a force should be sent suddenly up the James and York Rivers? |
31087 | But suppose that should be too late? |
31087 | But the gunpowder will be used to destroy the destroyer, man, and why should not the birds sing? |
31087 | But was Beauregard aware of the fact, before the opportunity ceased to exist? |
31087 | But we can not fail without more great battles; and who knows what results may be evolved by them? |
31087 | But what do they mean by the"_ nation_?" |
31087 | But what good will the crops do, if we be subjugated in the mean time? |
31087 | But what is in a name? |
31087 | But what is this"agent"to procure in the United States which could not be had by our steamers plying regularly between Wilmington and Europe? |
31087 | But what may not its ending be? |
31087 | But what were they sent to Lee for, unless he meant to give battle? |
31087 | But where are State Rights now? |
31087 | But where will this end? |
31087 | But who can foresee the future through the smoke of war, and amid the clash of bayonets? |
31087 | But why does the government issue such an order in North Carolina, when the government itself is selling, not destroying, the cotton of Mississippi? |
31087 | But will he? |
31087 | But will the President dismiss his cabinet in time to save Richmond, Virginia, and the cause? |
31087 | But will the government make itself popular with the people? |
31087 | But will the potency of his cabinet feed Lee''s army? |
31087 | But will the_ arms_ be distributed among them? |
31087 | But with flour at$ 200 per barrel; meal,$ 20 per bushel, and meat from$ 2 to$ 5 per pound, what income would suffice? |
31087 | But, then, what is the cotton business? |
31087 | Ca n''t the troops be paid? |
31087 | Can Savannah, and Charleston, and Wilmington be successfully defended? |
31087 | Can he believe the silly tale about our troops being sent from Virginia to the Carolinas? |
31087 | Can he have them? |
31087 | Can it be Gen. Cooper( Northern) who procures the appointment of so many Northern generals in our army? |
31087 | Can it be possible that the United States are ignorant of popular sentiment here? |
31087 | Can it be possible that_ he_ has influenced the President''s mind on this subject? |
31087 | Can it be possible that_ we_ have men in power who are capable of taking bribes from the enemy? |
31087 | Can it be that his hesitation is caused by the advice of the President, in his great solicitude to make the best appointments? |
31087 | Can it be that the President knows nothing of this? |
31087 | Can such a people be subjugated? |
31087 | Can such soldiers be vanquished? |
31087 | Can that be the reason his smile has faded almost away? |
31087 | Can the agents paid by the Signal Bureau be relied on? |
31087 | Can there be war brewing between the United States and England or France? |
31087 | Can they have intelligence from the West, not yet communicated to the public? |
31087 | Can they mean to cross? |
31087 | Can this be so? |
31087 | Can this be the influence of Gen. Cooper? |
31087 | Could Lee make such a blunder? |
31087 | Could a Yankee have been the inventor of the Secretary''s plaything? |
31087 | Could the Union men in the Convention, after being forced to pass the ordinance, have dealt a more fatal blow to their country? |
31087 | Could the operations beneath have produced this phenomenon? |
31087 | Could this communication be his resignation? |
31087 | Could you not ascertain for me? |
31087 | Did Pitt ever practice such things during his contest with Napoleon? |
31087 | Did he have any conception of the surprise the enemy was executing at the moment? |
31087 | Did he influence the mind of his father- in- law, G. W. Park Custis, to emancipate his hundreds of slaves? |
31087 | Did he try them? |
31087 | Did such a people ever exist before? |
31087 | Did the Continental Government ever resort to such equivocal expedients? |
31087 | Did the President know it yesterday? |
31087 | Did they really suffer pain from their wounds? |
31087 | Do they object to my acquaintance with the members? |
31087 | Does he understand that they are to fight before being exchanged? |
31087 | Does the general mean to alarm the authorities here? |
31087 | Does this mean trading cotton with the enemy? |
31087 | Does this really mean war? |
31087 | Early''s army was scattered to the winds; that the enemy had the Central Railroad( where?) |
31087 | Else why a prolongation of the war? |
31087 | Elzey and Winder are doing-- and echo answers, WHAT? |
31087 | Fort Caswell, below Wilmington, has been casemated with iron; but can it withstand elongated balls weighing 480 pounds? |
31087 | Gen. Lee writes that a scout( from Washington?) |
31087 | Gen. Maury writes from Mobile that he has seized, in the hands of Steever( who is he? |
31087 | Gen. P. telegraphs that the French steam frigate was coming up the river( what for? |
31087 | Gold was$ 70 for$ 1 on Saturday: what will it be to- day or to- morrow? |
31087 | Grant has_ used up_ nearly a hundred thousand men-- to what purpose? |
31087 | Has Hill marched his corps away to North Carolina? |
31087 | Has Hooker the genius to conceive such a plan? |
31087 | Has he been instructed on that point in reference to Gen. Price? |
31087 | Has it not been clearly stated that independence alone will content us? |
31087 | Have they not sworn to support it, etc.? |
31087 | Have we not Southern men of sufficient genius to make generals of, for the defense of the South, without sending to New York for military commanders? |
31087 | He said he had information that when Charleston_ fell_, South Carolina would conclude a treaty of peace( submission?) |
31087 | He says he had an order from the Surgeon- General; but what right had he to give such orders? |
31087 | He says the Federals asked his servants where the master and mistress had gone? |
31087 | How can he obey the orders of one who was so recently under his command? |
31087 | How can success be possible? |
31087 | How can they detect political offenders, when they are too ignorant to comprehend what constitutes a political offense? |
31087 | How can we live here, unless our salaries are increased? |
31087 | How can we live here? |
31087 | How could he refuse, since his own family( at least a portion of it) have enjoyed the benefits of sojourning in the North since the war began? |
31087 | How could it be otherwise? |
31087 | How did that get out-- if, indeed, such is the determination? |
31087 | How in the mischief can such non- committalists ever arrive at a conclusion? |
31087 | How is he, Gen. J., to get from Tennessee to Grenada with reinforcements, preceded by one army of the enemy, and followed by another? |
31087 | How long can this war last? |
31087 | How long shall we have even this variety and amount? |
31087 | How long will it be after peace before the sectional hatred intensified by this war can abate? |
31087 | How long will the people suffer thus? |
31087 | How long will this continue? |
31087 | How many Yankees will bleed and die in consequence of this order? |
31087 | How many butchers would be required to accomplish the beneficent feat? |
31087 | How many can you accommodate in hospitals at Baton Rouge? |
31087 | How many do they expect to come forward, voluntarily, candidates for gunpowder and exposure in the trenches? |
31087 | How many will rush forward a year hence to volunteer their services on the plains of the South? |
31087 | How many would then follow the fortunes of this government? |
31087 | How shall we feed them? |
31087 | How shall we live? |
31087 | How shall we subsist this winter? |
31087 | How soon will he revoke it again? |
31087 | How would it be possible for those with families on their hands to get transportation? |
31087 | How_ can_ it be possible to avoid this liability, if the cotton be shipped from the Mississippi River? |
31087 | How_ could_ the President"approve"such a law? |
31087 | I have seven children; what shall I do?" |
31087 | I wonder if the President will send them to Charleston? |
31087 | If Donelson falls, what becomes of the ten or twelve thousand men at Bowling Green? |
31087 | If Pemberton had acted differently, if the movement northward had been followed by disaster, then what would Mr. Lincoln have written to Grant? |
31087 | If he were to die, what would be the consequences? |
31087 | If it be determined to abandon the city, what will houses rent for then? |
31087 | If it remains where it is, how can they subsist on it without selling it to the enemy? |
31087 | If it should occur, will it give us peace? |
31087 | If so, what may be the consequences when the falsehood is exposed? |
31087 | If so, why can we not bear privation as well as our forefathers did? |
31087 | If the enemy be defeated, and the Democrats of the North should call for a National Convention-- but why anticipate? |
31087 | If they refuse to pay, then what will they deserve? |
31087 | If this be so, who is responsible, after his alleged misconduct at the battle of the Seven Pines? |
31087 | If we deserve it, we shall triumph; if not, why should we? |
31087 | In future times, I wonder if it will be said that we had great men in this Congress? |
31087 | In my young days I saw much of these sensational excitements, and partook of them; for how can the young resist them? |
31087 | Is Hooker really there? |
31087 | Is Providence frowning upon us for our sins, or upon our cause? |
31087 | Is Stuart there? |
31087 | Is he in the Adjutant- General''s office? |
31087 | Is he in this fight? |
31087 | Is it famine they dread, or a desire to keep out of the war? |
31087 | Is it his intention to assume an independent attitude, and call the North Carolina troops to the rescue? |
31087 | Is it not a condemnation of the President and the administration that displaced Gen. J., etc.? |
31087 | Is it not_ certain_ that"Butler, the Beast,"is a party to the speculation? |
31087 | Is it supposed that six or eight million of free people can be exterminated? |
31087 | Is it the imminency of war with England? |
31087 | Is it the policy of their own government to starve them? |
31087 | Is not Pemberton and Blanchard responsible? |
31087 | Is not the Constitution the law? |
31087 | Is not this a fair specimen of Yankee cupidity and character? |
31087 | Is not this an evidence of a mutual desire for peace? |
31087 | Is the Federal_ Government_ a party to this arrangement? |
31087 | Is there no turning point in this long lane of downward progress? |
31087 | Is there really no Secretary of War? |
31087 | Is there some grand political egg to be hatched? |
31087 | Is this because they do not participate in the hardships and dangers of the field? |
31087 | Is this the"sunny South"the North is fighting to possess? |
31087 | It appears that Major H. has contracted for 50,000 muskets at$ 4 above the current price, leaving$ 200,000 commission for whom? |
31087 | It is also stated that Grant''s losses have been 40,000, and ours 5000. Who could have computed them? |
31087 | It is probable Charleston, Wilmington, and Richmond will fall without a battle; for how can they be held when the enemy stops supplies? |
31087 | It is said Kirby Smith has defeated the enemy at Port Hudson; but how could his army get over the river? |
31087 | It is true, some$ 300,000,000 might be collected in taxes, if due vigilance were observed,--but_ will_ it be observed? |
31087 | It would cost, perhaps, a thousand lives; but is it not the business of war to consume human life? |
31087 | JANUARY 31ST.--What if these men( they have passports) should be going to Washington to report the result of their reconnoissances in Tennessee? |
31087 | JULY 13TH.--The_ Enquirer_ says the President has got a letter from Gen. Lee( why not give it to the people?) |
31087 | Letcher to be ready to fight in a few days? |
31087 | Mc------?) |
31087 | Mr. Garnett asked( and obtained) permission for a Mr. Hurst( Jew?) |
31087 | Mr. Hunter indorses:"My dear sir, will you read the inclosed? |
31087 | Mr. James Lyons thought he had made H. a Southern man; what does he think now? |
31087 | North Carolina, one would think, is soon to be the scene of carnage; and it is asked what can 16,000 men do against 60,000? |
31087 | Now what will Mr. Secretary do? |
31087 | Now what will the_ Tribune_ say? |
31087 | Now will the Secretary order an investigation? |
31087 | Oh, patriotism, where are thy votaries? |
31087 | Or did the Secretary keep it back till the new government( permanent) was launched into existence? |
31087 | Or have propositions been made_ on our part_ for reconstruction? |
31087 | Or if Lincoln should succeed in getting into the field the 500,000 men now called for? |
31087 | Or is it a demonstration of the enemy to prevent him from sending reinforcements to North Carolina? |
31087 | Or will Lee beat them up in their quarters? |
31087 | Ought I to go? |
31087 | Ought not Taylor''s forces to cross the Mississippi? |
31087 | Shall we have_ another_ great battle on the Rappahannock? |
31087 | Shall we starve? |
31087 | So it is his determination to cross the Rappahannock? |
31087 | Statesmen are the physicians of the public weal; and what doctor hesitates to vary his remedies with the new phases of disease? |
31087 | Stewart who was sent here to the Provost Marshal-- a prisoner._ How did he get out? |
31087 | That the enemy will come over and get it if we do not take it away? |
31087 | The Commissary- General approves, and the late Secretary approved; but what will the new one do? |
31087 | The President has the reins now, and Congress will be more obedient; but can they save this city? |
31087 | The question is on every tongue-- have our generals relaxed in vigilance? |
31087 | The question now is, who is right? |
31087 | Then what else but independence, on some terms, could be the basis for_ further_ conference? |
31087 | Then what will the Secretary do? |
31087 | Then why not strive for the possible and the good in the paths of peace? |
31087 | Then, if Lee must evacuate Richmond, where can he go? |
31087 | These troops were called( by whom?) |
31087 | This is his opportunity, if he be ambitious,--and who can see his heart? |
31087 | Trunks were packed in readiness-- for what? |
31087 | Was ever such management known before? |
31087 | Was it merely to deceive_ me_, knowing that I had some influence with certain leading journals? |
31087 | Was it not thus in the trying times of the Revolution? |
31087 | Was it really Jackson making mince- meat of our right? |
31087 | Was she reluctant to break the peace? |
31087 | Was that"allowed"to reach the Secretary and the President? |
31087 | We have great generals, but what were they without great men to obey them? |
31087 | We hope for relief when Congress meets, a month hence; but what can Congress do? |
31087 | Were they not sent into eternity? |
31087 | What Mitchel will do finally, who knows? |
31087 | What a war, and for what? |
31087 | What are we coming to? |
31087 | What can it mean? |
31087 | What can this mean but reconstruction on the old Democratic basis? |
31087 | What can this mean? |
31087 | What can this mean? |
31087 | What could they do with four millions of negroes arrogating equality with the whites? |
31087 | What does Grant mean? |
31087 | What does that mean? |
31087 | What does the Northern Government propose to accomplish by the invasion? |
31087 | What does this mean? |
31087 | What does this mean? |
31087 | What for? |
31087 | What for? |
31087 | What for? |
31087 | What harm have the poor trees done the enemy? |
31087 | What has Blair been running backward and forward so often for between the two Presidents? |
31087 | What has become of the marksmen and deer hunters of Missouri? |
31087 | What has he done? |
31087 | What has the Secretary of State to do with_ martial law_? |
31087 | What has the Secretary sent him_ there_ for? |
31087 | What if Grant now had the 140,000 more-- lost in this campaign? |
31087 | What if Meade retreated to entice Lee away from Richmond, having in preparation an expedition against this city? |
31087 | What if they should be compelled to abandon our property there? |
31087 | What interest or department of industry in the United States can promise such results? |
31087 | What is North Carolina to the Empire? |
31087 | What is all this? |
31087 | What is it worth in the eyes of European powers? |
31087 | What is this for? |
31087 | What man ever neglected such an opportunity? |
31087 | What possible good could he, a Virginian, and formerly an aid of Gen. Scott, effect in that quarter? |
31087 | What right has a military commander to grant such passports? |
31087 | What shall be done with the parties( spies, of course) when we are ready to act? |
31087 | What shall we do for sugar, now selling at$ 2 per pound? |
31087 | What shall we do? |
31087 | What significance is in this? |
31087 | What sort of financiering is this? |
31087 | What terms may be expected? |
31087 | What then? |
31087 | What will Mr. Seddon do now? |
31087 | What will be the consequence? |
31087 | What will be the price of gold then? |
31087 | What will be the price of such commodities a year hence if the blockade continues? |
31087 | What will he do next? |
31087 | What will his own country say of him? |
31087 | What will it end in? |
31087 | What will remain of the Confederacy? |
31087 | What will result from this? |
31087 | What will the President_ do_, after_ saying_ he should never have another command? |
31087 | What would Shakspeare think of that? |
31087 | What would the money the farmers now possess be worth? |
31087 | What, then, constitutes the"nation''s agony"? |
31087 | What_ shall_ we do to subsist until the next harvest? |
31087 | When hailed,"What steamer is that?" |
31087 | When will the enemy come? |
31087 | When will these things cease? |
31087 | When will this year''s calamities end? |
31087 | When, when will prices come down? |
31087 | When_ will_ the government put"none but Southerners on guard?" |
31087 | Where a people will not have mercy on one another, how can they expect mercy? |
31087 | Where are the patriots of the decade between 1850 and 1860? |
31087 | Where are they now? |
31087 | Where are we drifting? |
31087 | Where did Gen. Cooper find him? |
31087 | Where is his mighty army now? |
31087 | Where is the braggart Pope now? |
31087 | Where is the surplus food to come from to feed 4,000,000 idle non- producers? |
31087 | Wherefore? |
31087 | Wherefore? |
31087 | Who commands there?" |
31087 | Who does not remember the scene in Shakspeare, where Richard appears on the balcony, with prayer book in hand and a priest on either side? |
31087 | Who furnished this for publication? |
31087 | Who gave up Norfolk? |
31087 | Who is responsible for it? |
31087 | Who is responsible for their absence? |
31087 | Who is responsible? |
31087 | Who is the traitor? |
31087 | Who is to blame but the Secretaries themselves? |
31087 | Who knows but that one or more members of Mr. Lincoln''s cabinet, or his generals, might be purchased with gold? |
31087 | Who then? |
31087 | Who will Gen. Winder report to now? |
31087 | Who will resign? |
31087 | Whose fault is this? |
31087 | Why declare such a purpose at this day? |
31087 | Why did Mr. Benjamin send the order for every man to be arrested who applied for permission to leave the country? |
31087 | Why did they not bring their families away before the storm burst upon them? |
31087 | Why do the Northern men_ here_ hate Wise? |
31087 | Why does not the President recommend it? |
31087 | Why is this? |
31087 | Why not arrange with Lamar? |
31087 | Why not get meat from the enemy''s country for nothing? |
31087 | Why not let the war cease now? |
31087 | Why not throw aside the instruments of death, and exchange commodities with each other? |
31087 | Why stay, with no prospect of success? |
31087 | Why wait to see what they meant to do? |
31087 | Why was it not burnt? |
31087 | Why were they appointed contrary to law? |
31087 | Why were they not paroled and sent into the enemy''s lines? |
31087 | Will Meade be here in a few weeks? |
31087 | Will Mr. Secretary Seddon permit this? |
31087 | Will Mr. Seddon have the nerve to act? |
31087 | Will Mr. Seddon let it be saved? |
31087 | Will Virginia escape the scourge? |
31087 | Will he convert the money into European funds? |
31087 | Will he float on a sea of blood another four years? |
31087 | Will he intimate that his own services are so indispensable that he had better remain out of the field? |
31087 | Will he resign? |
31087 | Will he simply refer it to the Secretary? |
31087 | Will he, too, escape merited punishment? |
31087 | Will his official life be a long one? |
31087 | Will it do any good? |
31087 | Will not such a cruel race of people eventually reap the fruit of their doings? |
31087 | Will not the Nansemond companies remember it? |
31087 | Will our authorities think of this? |
31087 | Will such vacillating policy conciliate the troops, and incite them to heroic deeds? |
31087 | Will the government act in time to save them? |
31087 | Will the poor and friendless fight their battles, and win their independence for them? |
31087 | Will they go into winter quarters? |
31087 | Will they not be conscripted in the North? |
31087 | Will this generation, with their eyes open, and their memories fresh, ever, ever go to war again? |
31087 | Will we thus blunder on to the end? |
31087 | Will_ they_ compel the evacuation of the city? |
31087 | Would not Mr. Benjamin throw his influence against such a suggestion? |
31087 | Yet why are they so late in coming? |
31087 | _ Can_ it be from the Government at Washington? |
31087 | _ Miss._--But how shall the army be fed? |
31087 | _ Why_ does he procrastinate? |
31087 | _ Will these last until_----? |
31087 | and how could the garrisons escape when once cut off from the interior? |
31087 | exclaimed she,"how can I pay such prices? |
31087 | how are our brave men faring in the hands of the demon fanatics in the United States? |
31087 | or Gen. Winder''s corps of rogues and cut- throats?) |
31087 | or a portent of the future? |
31087 | to starve honest men into the Union? |
31087 | to urge their own people on to certain destruction? |
31087 | was it accidental? |
31087 | what is behind? |
31087 | would abandon it? |
31087 | would it not be too expensive--"too much for the whistle?" |
38376 | And when he was come into Jerusalem all the city was moved, saying,_ Who is this?_( Chap. |
38376 | And while they yet believed not for joy, and wondered, he said unto them, Have ye here any meat? |
38376 | Is any sick among you? 38376 Where is the wise and where is the disputer? |
38376 | Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? 38376 _ The Word was made flesh?_"and"was not born of blood, nor the will of the flesh, nor the will of man, but of God." |
38376 | ** See Appendix C Were Peter and Paul together in Rome at all? |
38376 | After reading the Gospel of Mark, who would suppose that he had been the companion of Paul and the interpreter of Peter? |
38376 | And Polycarp himself replied to Marcion, who met him on one occasion, and said,"Dost thou know me?" |
38376 | And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son? |
38376 | And he said, Hear ye now, O house of David; Is it a small thing for you to weary men, but will ye weary my God also? |
38376 | And none of the disciples durst ask him, Who art thou? |
38376 | And now, what has become of the Therapeutæ?--of their sacred writings? |
38376 | And when he looked on him he was afraid, and said, What is it, Lord? |
38376 | Are both false? |
38376 | At what time was Linus, said to be the successor of Peter, made Bishop of Rome? |
38376 | Besides, who knows anything of the great earthquake? |
38376 | But if the story is true, what has it to do with the troubles of Rachel? |
38376 | But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe my words?" |
38376 | But what proof is there that Mark and Peter were on such intimate terms as is claimed by Irenæus? |
38376 | But what was gained in fabricating this passage? |
38376 | But why did Irenaeus select the name of John? |
38376 | Can any reason be given why the church at Corinth, during the first century, should appeal to Rome for advice on any subject? |
38376 | Can anyone give a reason why? |
38376 | Can we imagine with what feelings he approached Peter, or why he approached him at all? |
38376 | Considering Christ had told the disciples he would rise, why did they doubt at all? |
38376 | Did John, while he was in Asia, and the other Apostles, no matter where, give rise to such absurd and false traditions? |
38376 | Did Paul institute a government for the churches established by him, different from that of Peter and James? |
38376 | Did he do his Heavenly Father''s business all this time? |
38376 | Did he, after his quarrel with Paul, shake off his Jewish prejudice and bigotry and rise to a higher plane? |
38376 | Did that number require the presence of a Bishop and elders? |
38376 | Does this order of banishment refer to the Christians? |
38376 | For unto which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? |
38376 | For who hath known the mind of the Lord, that he may instruct him? |
38376 | Had Peter''s character for courage so much improved that he went there when all the Christians had gone, to defy Nero, and invite his destruction? |
38376 | He speaks of Paul in his letter to the Philippians, and why not mention John, who was one of the twelve Apostles? |
38376 | He speaks of his cruel death; why not mention the still more important fact, that he rose superior to the grave, and put death under his feet? |
38376 | He was to give to the Roman officer"an account of his substance:"and did this require the presence of Mary? |
38376 | Here were churches in these countries in his day, and who had authority to establish them? |
38376 | How are we to regard his silence? |
38376 | How can we account for the silence of Paul at such a time on a subject of such vital importance? |
38376 | How can we account for the silence of the fathers of the church on this subject? |
38376 | How could they? |
38376 | How many members composed the church at Philippi to require the services of a Bishop and deacons? |
38376 | How much is the Christianity of the Gospels indebted to the prophecies which foretold the fall of the Jewish capital? |
38376 | If Christian churches are not indebted to the Therapeutæ for their form of church government, from what source do they derive it? |
38376 | If Josephus makes no mention of Christ and his miracles, where must we look? |
38376 | If the Logos was the Son of God, and came down from heaven, by what instrumentalities did he reach the earth? |
38376 | If there was a Bishop in the church at Philippi, why not mention his name? |
38376 | If true, why did Matthew and Mark fail to mention it? |
38376 | If what is stated be true, why does not Polycarp himself say something about the sources from which he derived his doctrines? |
38376 | Ignatius first declares the belief of the Church on this subject, and proceeds to ask this question:"How was he made manifest to the world?" |
38376 | In the first place, did the great Apostle of the Gentiles perform the miracles that are ascribed to him in the Acts? |
38376 | In the first place, was Paul the author? |
38376 | In what business was this creator of worlds engaged for thirty years of this time? |
38376 | In what quarter of the globe were the Synoptics written, and by whom? |
38376 | Is it possible that Telesphorus was put to death in Rome under the mild and gentle reign of such a man? |
38376 | It is said that the woman believed; if so, did she understand him? |
38376 | It was written by a Jew, for he says:"Was not Abraham our father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar?" |
38376 | Now what has this beautiful and sublime poem to do with the miracle of the cloven tongues? |
38376 | Now who dare doubt? |
38376 | The question may well be asked, what necessity was there for a Bishop and deacons at Philippi, and how were they to be supported? |
38376 | Was John the son of Zebedee ever in Asia? |
38376 | Was it necessary to give such advice to"Titus, mine own son after the common faith?" |
38376 | We now ask, from whom did Mark learn the story of John the Baptist? |
38376 | What did Peter, or anybody else, expect to gain by giving false impressions? |
38376 | What did he write? |
38376 | What did the Therapeutæ do with their sacred writings, which, Eusebius claims, were nothing more than our present Gospels? |
38376 | What has this to do with the cruelty of Herod? |
38376 | What historical proof is there that is worthy of credit, that John was ever in Asia Minor? |
38376 | What intelligence did Lazarus bring us from the spirit land? |
38376 | What should take Peter to Rome or keep him there when burning and torturing Christians was one of the amusements of Nero? |
38376 | What was the objection to raising a dead man to life? |
38376 | What was there for a Bishop to do in such a crowd, or what was there to keep him from starvation? |
38376 | What, all at once, has become of circumcision? |
38376 | What, then, was the trouble? |
38376 | When did Christ rule over Israel? |
38376 | Where are their Elders, their Deacons and the Presidency of the Episcopate, or Bishops? |
38376 | Where do we see Peter in the Gospel of Mark? |
38376 | Where is the boasting of those who are called men of understanding? |
38376 | Where was Clement, the third Bishop? |
38376 | Who can mistake the reason of this silence? |
38376 | Who could use such language but a malignant partisan? |
38376 | Who had a better opportunity than he to know everything which related to him, if he had been the person described by Mark? |
38376 | Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? |
38376 | Who is meant by God? |
38376 | Who so well as Paul could define the_ status_ of Christ under the new covenant? |
38376 | Who was it that wrote the letter to the Corinthians ascribed to Clement? |
38376 | Why call him a High Priest, and admit his Jewish descent, from the father of the Hebrew nation? |
38376 | Why did James withhold from the twelve tribes the great fact that Christ had risen from the dead? |
38376 | Why import a Christian Bishop from Antioch for the wild beasts of the Amphitheatre, if there was one to be found in the mean time in Rome? |
38376 | Why is this? |
38376 | Why put to death Paul, and not his fellow- laborers? |
38376 | Why speak of Paul, and what he taught, and not of Jesus and his disciples, and what they taught? |
38376 | Why traditional? |
38376 | Why was Paul the subject of so much abuse? |
38376 | Why would Ignatius write an epistle of this character to the Romans while he was on the way to Rome himself? |
38376 | Why would Mark make a visit to Peter involving a journey of four thousand miles, br half that distance? |
38376 | Will any one believe this story to be true? |
38376 | Would he, who was with God in the beginning, whose word was sufficient to create worlds, submit to a fate like this? |
38376 | Would that question have been asked if he had been there the year before? |
38376 | _ When_ was Peter in Rome? |
38376 | and if so, when? |
38376 | and what other doctrines was the former teaching than those of the Alexandrian school? |
38376 | or why send Timothy to them at all to supply their spiritual wants? |
38376 | v.) When did the Jews, after the conquest of Pompey, shake off the yoke of the Romans? |
20161 | As in a time of war, supremacy is attained by superiority in arms, can, in a time of peace, supremacy be secured by superiority in labor? |
20161 | At the end of a year, will you find an additional crown in a bag of one hundred shillings? 20161 Do you tell us, that if we gain by this protection, France will not gain, because the consumer must pay the price of it? |
20161 | Friend,you will say,"I would be glad to protect you and your colleagues; but how can I confer such favors upon the labor of carpenters? |
20161 | How can you think of such a thing? |
20161 | Is England doing anything more than pursuing the same end by different means? 20161 Unhappy people,"they say to the colored men,"who will feed you? |
20161 | We come now to offer you an admirable opportunity for the application of your----what shall we say? 20161 What will we do,"it is asked,"in case of war, if we are at the mercy of England for our iron and coal?" |
20161 | What, then, ought to be the course of an agricultural and manufacturing country? 20161 Will a work of industry or of skill produce another, at the end of fourteen years? |
20161 | --Ah, yes; does not the same thing happen in the Black Forest? |
20161 | --And if you found they did not agree? |
20161 | --And that gave him an abundance of work? |
20161 | --And then? |
20161 | --And what would happen were he to vote for a reduction of the army and your military establishment? |
20161 | --And where do these twenty francs go? |
20161 | --But are you sure that will be an equivalent? |
20161 | --But suppose you see that_ justice_ and_ utility_ are one? |
20161 | --But what connection is there between D----''s bad speculations and my hogshead? |
20161 | --But what do you propose to do with this poor hogshead, the flower of my flock? |
20161 | --But what other thing? |
20161 | --Did not Robinson see that he could use the time saved in doing_ something else_? |
20161 | --Do you believe that two would be too much for your share of the army and navy expenses? |
20161 | --Do you not know that D---- has started a magnificent establishment very useful to the country, but which loses much money every year? |
20161 | --Do you now understand that yourself? |
20161 | --Do you recollect how Robinson Crusoe, having no saw, set to work to make a plank? |
20161 | --Even_ raw materials_? |
20161 | --Exactly, and with what? |
20161 | --How can it be true? |
20161 | --How can our manufactories compete with foreign ones which have these_ raw materials_ free? |
20161 | --How do you harmonize this mass of contradictions? |
20161 | --How much did you pay for this wine? |
20161 | --How much does this suit of clothes cost you? |
20161 | --How much would it have cost you if you had gotten the cloth from Belgium? |
20161 | --How much would you have paid outside the city gates? |
20161 | --How? |
20161 | --How? |
20161 | --I? |
20161 | --If they say to you: What, then, is to be done? |
20161 | --If they say to you: With what shall we pay? |
20161 | --In two folio volumes? |
20161 | --Is it not that which,_ for a fixed amount of labor, gives the greatest quantity of cloth_? |
20161 | --Is it worth while to relieve a portion from service in order to call out everybody? |
20161 | --Just imagine that you are so, and that consequently the majority is not opposed to you, what would you do? |
20161 | --On what does this excellent General live? |
20161 | --Prudence? |
20161 | --So that really it is the consumer who pays the tax? |
20161 | --So that what is said of one is true of the other? |
20161 | --The whole army? |
20161 | --Then a certain quantity of its labor will become inert? |
20161 | --Then it is in reality your labor that you exchange for cloth, and French labor that is exchanged for coffee? |
20161 | --Then it is not absolutely necessary to make what one consumes? |
20161 | --Then why did you not get it there? |
20161 | --This denial, then, costs you twenty francs? |
20161 | --Thus, according to you, these arguments, which in Robinson''s mouth are so false, are no less so in the mouths of our protectionists? |
20161 | --Well, what would you do? |
20161 | --What can they do there which will be of service to me? |
20161 | --What did he live on during this time? |
20161 | --What good do I get from it now? |
20161 | --What happened to the ax? |
20161 | --What is prohibition? |
20161 | --What is restriction? |
20161 | --What is that? |
20161 | --What is the common name for restriction and prohibition? |
20161 | --What is the definite effect of protection? |
20161 | --What is the use of these hard words? |
20161 | --What next? |
20161 | --What''_ something else_''? |
20161 | --What, pray? |
20161 | --What? |
20161 | --When? |
20161 | --Where did the principal go? |
20161 | --Where do they go? |
20161 | --Which is best for a nation, to have the choice of these two ways, or to have the law forbid its using one of them at the risk of rejecting the best? |
20161 | --Who established the_ octroi_? |
20161 | --Whom did you support for Deputy? |
20161 | --Why are men so attached to the protective system? |
20161 | --Why do you say_ apparent_? |
20161 | --Why not? |
20161 | --Why this difference? |
20161 | --Why? |
20161 | --Why? |
20161 | --With what? |
20161 | --You are jesting, my dear Mr. Collector; have I a vote in the legislative halls? |
20161 | --You mean to say to D----? |
20161 | And I now ask, of what benefit, under these circumstances, is the railroad? |
20161 | And all this for what? |
20161 | And do not they use the English words_ drawback_ and_ budget_? |
20161 | And for those who are not deceived, what can be more_ forced_, since, at the first refusal to pay, the officer is at our doors? |
20161 | And the remedy? |
20161 | And then, if it is so, who would lend these instruments, these materials, these provisions? |
20161 | And to what does all this tend? |
20161 | And upon what have these pretensions been based? |
20161 | And what direct benefit do the people derive from it? |
20161 | And what has been the result? |
20161 | And what more calculated to mislead opinion than writings, which, while they proclaim free trade, support the doctrines of monopoly? |
20161 | And why do they sell cheaper than you do? |
20161 | And why does not the fertility of one department paralyze the agriculture of a neighboring and less favored one? |
20161 | And why? |
20161 | And why? |
20161 | And yet what analogy can exist between an exchange and an invasion? |
20161 | And yet what has been witnessed during eighteen centuries? |
20161 | And, as for ourselves, what would become of us? |
20161 | Anyhow, who says that the balance of trade is not in their favor, and that we are not compelled to pay them a tribute in money? |
20161 | Are there not in Paris thirty thousand Germans who make clothes and shoes? |
20161 | Are there relations only between iron and those who make it? |
20161 | Are they better dressed because there are_ fewer_ goods? |
20161 | Are we agriculturists? |
20161 | Are we iron- workers? |
20161 | Are we manufacturers of cotton goods? |
20161 | Are we physicians? |
20161 | Are we vine- growers? |
20161 | Are you sick? |
20161 | As might be expected, James at this proposal did not fail to cry out,"How can you think of such a thing, William? |
20161 | At the end of a year, says M. Thoré, will you find an additional crown in a bag of a hundred pounds? |
20161 | At the end of fourteen years, will your shillings have doubled in your bag? |
20161 | Better warmed because there is_ less_ coal? |
20161 | But Kouang persisted and said:"My Lord, what is your object?" |
20161 | But are you certain, in laying down your principles, so antagonistic to ours, that you too are not building up theories? |
20161 | But by what do we measure our well- being? |
20161 | But can it be thus with errors which affect the moral world? |
20161 | But do they protect you, workmen? |
20161 | But do you not think it is a little strong? |
20161 | But have they ever thought of saying that fire was no longer a scourge, since there were insurance companies? |
20161 | But how is this? |
20161 | But how will you manage it? |
20161 | But if not, of what use is it? |
20161 | But if the neighboring country districts had established this_ octroi_ for their profit, what would happen? |
20161 | But in trade, do two_ equal_ values cease to be equal, because one comes from the plough, and the other from the workshop?" |
20161 | But in what is this manifested? |
20161 | But is it not your system which has perverted everything, both institutions and ideas? |
20161 | But is there no simpler variety of robbery? |
20161 | But is this a complete view of the subject? |
20161 | But it may be said, are then the benefits of free trade so hidden as to be perceptible only to economists by profession? |
20161 | But must we conclude from this that Athens and Rome were inhabited only by dishonest persons? |
20161 | But what are these humors, or are there any humors at all? |
20161 | But what becomes of the poor cloth manufacturer? |
20161 | But what can I do to help him? |
20161 | But which? |
20161 | But who has ever made such an exorbitant pretension in its name? |
20161 | But who reaps the advantage of this liberality of Nature? |
20161 | But why does he dispute the utility of that which belongs to us? |
20161 | But why? |
20161 | But with what, it may be asked, will they be remunerated? |
20161 | But, gentlemen, do you believe that merchants''books are good in practice? |
20161 | But, then, you will say,"What is the use of this treatise? |
20161 | But, you will say, where is the advantage? |
20161 | Butter? |
20161 | By the_ result_ of our effort, or by the_ effort itself_? |
20161 | By what law is the rate of these remunerative services established? |
20161 | Can Paris compete with Normandy in raising cows? |
20161 | Can Paris produce wood as cheaply as the forest of Bondy, or meat at as low price as Poitou, or butter as easily as Normandy? |
20161 | Can any one imagine that all these objects of consumption can be thus left untouched by the masses, without lowering prices? |
20161 | Can he so direct the affairs of mortals, that they can only renounce war and injustice by, at the same time, renouncing their own welfare? |
20161 | Can it be explained how such a system could be connected with the constantly increasing prosperity of these nations? |
20161 | Can we be astonished at this when the public pay no attention to it? |
20161 | Can you claim that an export duty is not onerous? |
20161 | Can you conceive of one product being_ worth_ another, if, in the barter, one of the parties is not_ free_? |
20161 | Can you possibly conceive of political economy without society? |
20161 | Can you possibly conceive that one of the contracting parties is deprived of his liberty unless he is oppressed by the other? |
20161 | Can you possibly conceive the idea of_ value_, except as the result of the_ free_ consent of the exchangers? |
20161 | Certainly; do you not see that France would be a loser, if you were to receive twenty bundles instead of fifteen? |
20161 | Could a more mournful picture of the world be imagined than this?" |
20161 | Could we not have attained the same end by lowering the tariff to five francs? |
20161 | DOES PROTECTION RAISE THE RATE OF WAGES? |
20161 | Did you never think of this when seeing nine- tenths of your countrymen deprived during the winter of that superior cloth that you make? |
20161 | Do n''t you know fraternity has been proclaimed? |
20161 | Do n''t you know that a loan ought to be gratuitous? |
20161 | Do n''t you know that capital is naturally unproductive? |
20161 | Do not they borrow from her the sophisms of protection? |
20161 | Do not they favor the views of the Custom House officers, who gain more than anybody else by this protective_ regime_? |
20161 | Do not they form a part of his sad destiny? |
20161 | Do not they parody Bentinck and the British aristocracy? |
20161 | Do not they serve the greed of Lille, and the manufacturing North? |
20161 | Do not you compete with one another? |
20161 | Do not you see that we create you labor?" |
20161 | Do not you see what a great service you render to the country? |
20161 | Do they have equal opportunities for mental and moral improvement? |
20161 | Do two houses which are precisely alike necessarily rent for the same sum? |
20161 | Do we attack their principles? |
20161 | Do we not hear it said every day,"Foreign nations are inundating us with their productions"? |
20161 | Do we not see workmen destroying and breaking machinery? |
20161 | Do we prove our doctrine? |
20161 | Do you ask who will furnish you work? |
20161 | Do you know why the principle of right of inheritance is thus called in question? |
20161 | Do you lay down your pen to take up the blacking- brush in order to avoid paying tribute to the shoe- black? |
20161 | Do you not see that 48,000 hectares of land, with capital and labor in proportion, will suffice to furnish sugar to all France? |
20161 | Do you not still love equality? |
20161 | Do you propose to compare modern commerce to mere exchanges? |
20161 | Do you raise your hand against it? |
20161 | Do you say, it is not possible that an entire nation could see an_ increase of riches_ where the inhabitants plundered one another? |
20161 | Do you see the consequences? |
20161 | Do you think that I shall amuse myself by selling my wood at the price of other wood? |
20161 | Do you want I should leave you without an answer? |
20161 | Do you wish the proof of this? |
20161 | Do you wish to know whether you are rich? |
20161 | Does he not require of me more than his due? |
20161 | Does he not take it furtively, or by force? |
20161 | Does it follow that our labor, as a whole, is thereby diminished? |
20161 | Does it not appear plainly enough, in fact, that Peter asks of Paul a new and an additional service; one of a different kind? |
20161 | Does it not exist independently of this circumstance? |
20161 | Does not common sense say that the conditions must be equalized by a protecting duty? |
20161 | Does not even the weakest writer devote himself to the well- being of the laboring classes? |
20161 | Does not the manufacturer also call upon nature to assist him? |
20161 | Does not your housekeeper cease to make her bread at home, as soon as she finds it more economical to buy it from the baker? |
20161 | Does progress consist in the relative increase of the second or of the first term of this proportion? |
20161 | Does she not constantly aspire to universal supremacy? |
20161 | Does the agriculturist make his own clothes? |
20161 | Does the tailor produce the grain which he consumes? |
20161 | Does this make your hair stand? |
20161 | Does this mean that they are no longer robbed? |
20161 | Dupin? |
20161 | Everybody, do you understand? |
20161 | Exactly such a degree of wisdom do we exhibit, when at the expense of millions, we strive to preserve our country.... From what? |
20161 | Firstly, this is impossible; and, again, were it possible, how could such a system give relief? |
20161 | For the good of whom? |
20161 | For what tariff protects the poor? |
20161 | From their point of view, what could you do with them? |
20161 | Has it been so? |
20161 | Has it ever been pretended, is it possible to maintain, that scarcity can be the basis of a man''s happiness? |
20161 | Has it fallen from the moon? |
20161 | Has it none with those who use it? |
20161 | Has not Mr. Bugeaud said,"Let bread be dear and the agriculturist will be rich"? |
20161 | Has not Mr. d''Argout produced the fruitfulness of the sugar culture as an argument against it? |
20161 | Has not Mr. de Saint Cricq said,"Production is superabundant"? |
20161 | Has there ever been a religion more favorable to peace or more universally received than Christianity? |
20161 | Have I not a right to look upon your argument as a mere pretext? |
20161 | Have you never thought that you practice on your brothers the most iniquitous spoliation?" |
20161 | He casts it into the_ national_ circulation, and receives in exchange-- what? |
20161 | He ran to pick it up? |
20161 | How can agriculture flourish there? |
20161 | How can each day bring just what is necessary, nothing less, nothing more, to this gigantic market? |
20161 | How can that be true which is so very simple? |
20161 | How can they restrain these acts of spoliation when these very acts are raised by public opinion to the level of the highest virtues? |
20161 | How does this come about? |
20161 | How has this delusive figure of speech introduced itself into the rhetoric of monopolists? |
20161 | How in such an hypothesis could laborious production be regretted? |
20161 | How many are there at this time, when our domestic sugar supplies one- third of the consumption of the country? |
20161 | How many hectares were planted in beets in the year 1828? |
20161 | How then has it happened, that in the eyes at once of laborers, editors and statesmen, abundance should appear alarming, and scarcity advantageous? |
20161 | How, but by metaphors? |
20161 | How, for instance, can they expect us to make milk and butter in Paris as against Brittany and Normandy? |
20161 | How, it may be exclaimed, can such a question be asked? |
20161 | How, then, are they kept in darkness? |
20161 | I ask you then why this bag of wool is worth a hundred francs? |
20161 | I ask you to do me a service; what service do you ask of me in return? |
20161 | I had this question to determine:"Why does any article made, for instance, at Brussels, bear an increased price on its arrival at Paris?" |
20161 | I re- elect the General to give away my wine to Africans and manufacturers? |
20161 | I say to them as Harpagon did to Elise, Is it the_ word_ or the_ thing_ that alarms you? |
20161 | If foreign nations are not allowed to render services to us, how shall we render them the service of bread? |
20161 | If religion has been impotent, if philosophy is powerless, how is war to cease? |
20161 | If this goes on, we shall all be ruined in three years, and what will become of the poor people? |
20161 | If this tax was remitted, would you not get work yourselves, and on your own account too? |
20161 | If you only do me a service for the sake of receiving one from me in return, what merit would you have? |
20161 | If you open the doors to these rival products, what will become of the wood cutters, pork dealers, and cattle drivers? |
20161 | If you please, what do you propose to do with them? |
20161 | If, then, there be a general diminution of comforts, how, workmen, can it be possible that_ your_ portion should be increased? |
20161 | In the inquiry, the operatives themselves explained this phenomenon thus:"What is the use of pinching? |
20161 | In this case, shall I not be living at the expense of others? |
20161 | In this social arrangement, is there not a monstrous evil to be reformed? |
20161 | In what does it consist? |
20161 | Is all ended there? |
20161 | Is each one as well provided with it as he might and should be? |
20161 | Is it certain that we will do this rather than that? |
20161 | Is it consistent with the nature of things, and with justice, that capital should produce interest? |
20161 | Is it consistent with the nature of things, and with justice, that the interest of capital should be perpetual? |
20161 | Is it necessary then seriously to criticise such abuses of language? |
20161 | Is it not an incontestable maxim in political economy, that taxes must, in the end, fall upon the consumer? |
20161 | Is it not because this is its price of production? |
20161 | Is it not natural that each should keep what he has made with his own hands, as well as his hands themselves? |
20161 | Is it not nature which_ creates_ them? |
20161 | Is it not plain that if this Poitevin industry were planted in Paris, it would open new fields to Parisian labor? |
20161 | Is it not that which has caused stoppages; and do not stoppages, in their turn, lower wages? |
20161 | Is it not the borrower first, and finally, the consumers of the things which the capitals contribute to produce? |
20161 | Is it not to cause justice to rule among all? |
20161 | Is it not to hold the balance even between all rights, all liberties, and all property? |
20161 | Is it not to prevent and to repress oppression and robbery wherever they are found? |
20161 | Is it not true that if we admit butter, wood, and meat, we shall be inundated with them, and die of a plethora? |
20161 | Is it not true that this pretended reform would overthrow all existences? |
20161 | Is it not true, Sire, that if Utopians were to suddenly demand the freedom of the right hand, they would spread alarm throughout the country? |
20161 | Is it not very convenient to apply to him?" |
20161 | Is it possible for you to conceive of the free consent of two parties without liberty? |
20161 | Is it the cloth- manufacturer who has created the laws of gravitation, transmission of forces and of affinities? |
20161 | Is it the essential thing_ to make it, or to have it_? |
20161 | Is it true that protection, which avowedly raises prices, and thus injures you, raises proportionably the rate of wages? |
20161 | Is its definite and only destination to be produced? |
20161 | Is not leisure an essential spring in the social machine? |
20161 | Is not this pure and unadulterated_ Sisyphism_? |
20161 | Is rest nothing? |
20161 | Is that called selling? |
20161 | Is that just? |
20161 | Is that the road to_ supremacy_, for foreigners? |
20161 | Is the consumption of cloth a fixed and invariable quantity? |
20161 | Is there a more potent moral influence than religion? |
20161 | Is there any other rule for international exchanges? |
20161 | Is there any safety but in the bounty? |
20161 | Is there, then, no means of repealing this unjust measure that Pierre and his colleagues adopted twenty years ago? |
20161 | Is this credible? |
20161 | Is this possible? |
20161 | Is this saying that it will ever reach zero? |
20161 | Is this too bold a request on my part? |
20161 | It is, then, with Mr. Lestiboudois that we will argue, for how is it possible to do so with Mr. Gauthier? |
20161 | It may be asked,"Why this ugly word-- spoliation? |
20161 | It seems to me that I was unwise in making him my agent; for what is there in common between the General of an army and the poor owner of a vineyard? |
20161 | L. You have secured twenty hogsheads of wine? |
20161 | Let them learn this lesson, then; doubtless, capitals are good for those who possess them: who denies it? |
20161 | Let us then suppose a producer of whatever kind; what is his immediate interest? |
20161 | Meat? |
20161 | Men are not as well provided for, of course, but shall we blame freedom or the bad harvest? |
20161 | Milk? |
20161 | Moreover, gentlemen, is it not very likely, as Mr. Lestiboudois said, that we buy these Poitevin salted meats, not with our income, but our capital? |
20161 | Mr. Simiot puts this question: Ought the railroad from Paris into Spain to present a break or terminus at Bordeaux? |
20161 | Mr. de Saint Cricq has asked:"Are we sure that our foreign customers will buy from us as much as they sell us?" |
20161 | Naturally I should seek to solve this problem:"How shall I best procure the iron necessary for my business with the least possible amount of labor?" |
20161 | Now I ask, are the people under the action of these laws better fed because there is_ less_ bread,_ less_ meat, and_ less_ sugar in the country? |
20161 | Now what conclusion does Mr. Lestiboudois draw from the sums entered into the custom- house, in this operation? |
20161 | Now, what does this prove? |
20161 | Now, who is it that profits by the reduction of interest? |
20161 | Of these two processes, which is the more efficient aid to social progress? |
20161 | Of these two ways, which is the best? |
20161 | Of what avail is the freedom of purchasing, if you have not the means? |
20161 | Of what direct benefit to the people are your porcelains and tapestries, and your expositions? |
20161 | On what depends the_ demand_ for labor? |
20161 | On what does the rate of wages depend? |
20161 | Or do they prosper better in their labor because iron, copper, tools and machinery are scarce? |
20161 | Or of exchange without a relative value between the two articles, or the two services, exchanged? |
20161 | Or of society without exchange? |
20161 | Otherwise, why should he have made it? |
20161 | Perhaps you have never read the_ Moniteur Industriel_? |
20161 | Public opinion alone can overturn such a structure of iniquity; but where can it begin, if each stone is_ tabooed_? |
20161 | Reader, can you honestly say that you understand the reason of this? |
20161 | Said the Emperor to Kouang:"What do you think of this?" |
20161 | Shall I prohibit the importation of houses by land and by sea?" |
20161 | Shall it be done by closing the manufactories of tapestry and stopping the exhibitions? |
20161 | Some say to us: You are, then, partisans of the_ let alone_ policy? |
20161 | Tell me, is that probable? |
20161 | That accounts for one hogshead, but the five others? |
20161 | That the soil be fertile, and the sun beneficent: and what is the result? |
20161 | That which a man has produced, he may consume, exchange, or give; what can be more natural than that he should give it to his children? |
20161 | The exchange can not be effected in kind; so what does Paul do? |
20161 | The general prosperity has gained by this, doubtless, but have the shoemakers and tailors, individually, lost anything by it? |
20161 | Then what is left to your female subjects except tobacco? |
20161 | There are the landowners; what is their interest? |
20161 | There are the manufacturers; what is their constant thought? |
20161 | These have been closed by a pitiless philanthropy; and under what pretext? |
20161 | They can not negotiate; the transaction favorable to both can not take place, and then what happens? |
20161 | They talk to you a great deal upon the_ artificial_ organization of labor;--do you know why they do so? |
20161 | This is an important difficulty, and how is it put aside? |
20161 | To milk and steadily milk, a cow gives more milk; for who can tell the moment when not a drop more can be obtained? |
20161 | To use without recompense the hands of another, I call slavery; to use without recompense the plane of another, can this be called fraternity? |
20161 | To what purpose would be our great standing armies, and our powerful navies, if commerce were free? |
20161 | To which of these last two circumstances is the first to be attributed? |
20161 | Until when will we persist in shutting our eyes upon the following simple truth? |
20161 | Upon what principle of justice can it be devoted to the realization of_ your_ enterprise instead of_ mine_?" |
20161 | Very well, but are not these prices raised by the increase of the demand? |
20161 | Was he the richer for this course? |
20161 | Was it necessary to insinuate that we are the agents of England? |
20161 | Well, and in this respect is not the revolution of February a hard lesson? |
20161 | Well, and what matters that? |
20161 | Well, because you are workmen, are you not intelligent and moral? |
20161 | Well, do you see? |
20161 | Well, if I do you this service, what will you do for me in return?" |
20161 | Well, then, is slavery invulnerable? |
20161 | What better guarantee of its perpetuity than to make even doubt sacrilege? |
20161 | What can they make the earth produce, with the expectation of profit? |
20161 | What did I say? |
20161 | What difference, then, can we possibly discover to exist between the Bordalese petitioners and the Corypheus of restriction? |
20161 | What do these words mean? |
20161 | What do they do? |
20161 | What do they protect in France? |
20161 | What do you find? |
20161 | What do you mean? |
20161 | What do you really want? |
20161 | What do_ we_ maintain? |
20161 | What goes on there, and what is decided upon? |
20161 | What has become of the cultivation of indigo by the blacks? |
20161 | What has that to do with your butter? |
20161 | What have you to say?". |
20161 | What if I could get them to perform the odious act on the frontier which I was about to do myself?" |
20161 | What if I should make the interest of the law, of the magistrate, of the public authorities, my interests? |
20161 | What is capital, then? |
20161 | What is its rational and moral mission? |
20161 | What is law, or at least what ought it to be? |
20161 | What is our course under these circumstances? |
20161 | What is that? |
20161 | What is the destiny of women in France? |
20161 | What is the objection they adduce against free trade? |
20161 | What is the question? |
20161 | What is there astonishing in this? |
20161 | What is your second section? |
20161 | What is, in fact, the prohibitive system? |
20161 | What is_ interest_? |
20161 | What matters it? |
20161 | What more do you want? |
20161 | What more is effected by the miller who converts it into flour, or by the baker who makes it into bread? |
20161 | What must be done to accomplish this? |
20161 | What on the other side is the immediate interest of the consumer? |
20161 | What reason is there that I should make the plane, and you should gain the profit? |
20161 | What services will they give me in exchange for this ambrosia, which has cost me so much labor? |
20161 | What sophisms have been invoked? |
20161 | What tax, if you please, do I pay, which does not go to the Treasury? |
20161 | What then prevents you, if self- denial has so many charms, from exercising it as much as you desire in your private actions? |
20161 | What then shall we do? |
20161 | What was I thinking of? |
20161 | What will the people gain, if foreign competition, which may interfere with them in their sales, does not favor them in their purchases?" |
20161 | What will we do with these three hours? |
20161 | What will you do? |
20161 | What would become of labor itself? |
20161 | What would you have? |
20161 | What, for instance, can we expect from the beet? |
20161 | When did you sit at the Palais Bourbon? |
20161 | When the convents of Spain were reformed, they said to the beggars,"Where will you find broth and clothing? |
20161 | When will we have done with such puerile declamations? |
20161 | Whence came this idea of establishing the protective system? |
20161 | Where is your place in the Chamber of Peers? |
20161 | Where was the_ value_ of coal during the millions of years when it lay unknown and buried a hundred feet below the surface of the earth? |
20161 | Where will this land us? |
20161 | Which is the best for man or for society, abundance or scarcity? |
20161 | Which then, if either, should legislation favor as contributing most to the good of the community? |
20161 | While we point with pride to some prosperous manufacture, can we answer, from whence comes the capital with which it is founded and maintained? |
20161 | Who can not see the sophistry of this? |
20161 | Who can pretend that the nation is not more interested in securing the ten thousand francs, than the fifteen francs worth of labor? |
20161 | Who could harbor such a thought? |
20161 | Who has consulted you? |
20161 | Who knows that interest will not be abolished? |
20161 | Who knows what will happen to us? |
20161 | Who then would be the loser? |
20161 | Why are they allowed to establish themselves at your side when cloth is driven away? |
20161 | Why do I give myself up to that dry science, political economy? |
20161 | Why do you drive away the Belgians? |
20161 | Why explain what everybody knows?" |
20161 | Why is it that the breath of false doctrine has made it needful to examine into the intimate nature of interest? |
20161 | Why not? |
20161 | Why shall not the foreigner who is to consume this product, bear the charges its production necessitates? |
20161 | Why should nations impose upon themselves so troublesome a restraint? |
20161 | Why this difference? |
20161 | Why, what does this mean, but that there are no facts? |
20161 | Why? |
20161 | Why? |
20161 | Why? |
20161 | Why? |
20161 | Why? |
20161 | Will it, therefore, be a cause for surprise, if, when they awake, they find themselves mangled and bleeding? |
20161 | Will not every Free- Trader put a copy of the book into the hands of his Protectionist friends? |
20161 | Will you not read my defense? |
20161 | Wool? |
20161 | Would it be an advance in social order, if the law decided thus, and citizens should pay officials for causing such a law to be executed by force? |
20161 | Would you rob the workingman of his labor, his wages and his bread?" |
20161 | You admit that France will make this_ something else_, which is to be exchanged for cloth, with less labor than if it had made the cloth itself? |
20161 | You believe that it is a tax machine, like a duty or a toll at the end of a bridge? |
20161 | You desire, then, that it shall not be free? |
20161 | You desire, then, that trade shall be carried on under the influence of oppression? |
20161 | You do not desire the_ organization of labor_? |
20161 | You see, then, workmen, that there is not a more important question than this:"Is the interest of capital lawful or not?" |
20161 | Your false friends say to you: If there was no monopoly, who would furnish you work? |
20161 | _ Friday._ Is that certain? |
20161 | _ Friday._ What difference does that make, if we have the game? |
20161 | _ Humanity_ is concerned, and must not the warming of the people be secured? |
20161 | _ J._ What service? |
20161 | _ Jean._ Well, what is it? |
20161 | _ Jean._ What shall I gain by making you pay an extra price for my sausages, if you overcharge me for pastry and fagots? |
20161 | _ Paul._ Do you call it_ beating_ any one to furnish him things at a low price? |
20161 | _ Paul._ How do you find this Normandy butter? |
20161 | _ Pierre._ Do you not see that we are getting into a quarrel? |
20161 | _ Pierre._ Simpleton!--Suppose I prevent the bringing of any wood to Paris? |
20161 | _ Robinson._ Then what shall we make? |
20161 | _ Son._ How can that be, since he got rid of competition? |
20161 | _ Son._ How was that possible? |
20161 | _ Son._ When will this stop? |
20161 | and how can you have the means, if labor is wanting? |
20161 | and what do_ you_ maintain? |
20161 | as a charity? |
20161 | economists of the superannuated school of the Smiths and the Says? |
20161 | exclaimed the countryman, you wish me to take fifteen bundles of Brussels thread, when I can have twenty from Manchester? |
20161 | gratis? |
20161 | has a poor man ever obtained from a piece of money enjoyments as sweet and innocent as those which the mysterious urn of fortune contained for him? |
20161 | is D---- to cover his losses by taking my wine? |
20161 | no, nothing is more deceiving than theory;--your doctrine? |
20161 | or rather is it not drawn either from agriculture, or navigation, or other industry? |
20161 | or, again, Does it suit you to barter your Newcastle coal for this Champagne wine? |
20161 | said the physician;"do not you consider his two broken arms? |
20161 | say the two_ Sophists_; is it not better to expose ourselves to a possible_ invasion_, than to meet a certain one? |
20161 | that Socrates and Plato, Cato and Cincinnatus were despicable characters? |
20161 | we are not to be allowed to borrow, in order to work in the prime of life, nor to lend, that we may enjoy repose in its decline? |
20161 | who even would create them? |
20161 | who would take care of them? |
20161 | you diminish the receipts, without lessening expenses, and you avoid a deficit? |
20161 | your principle? |
20161 | your system? |
20161 | your theory? |
35330 | -- Holp he to murder mine Horatio? |
35330 | -- How can you brook our play''s catastrophe? |
35330 | -- What means this unexpected miracle? |
35330 | A comedy? |
35330 | A heartless man, and live? |
35330 | Alas, my lord, whence springs this troubled speech? |
35330 | Ambassador, What news hath urg''d this sudden enterance? |
35330 | And I? |
35330 | And I? |
35330 | And actors in th''accursed tragedy Wast thou, Lorenzo? |
35330 | And griev''d I, think you, at this spectacle? |
35330 | And how for that? |
35330 | And know''st thou why this meeting is? |
35330 | And tribute payment gone along with him? |
35330 | And what shall I? |
35330 | And where''s the duke? |
35330 | And wherein was mine honour touch''d in that? |
35330 | And you are witness That this is true which he entreateth of? |
35330 | And you, my lord, were made his instrument? |
35330 | And, Balthazar,--bane to thy soul and me!-- What this the ransom he reserv''d for thee? |
35330 | As how? |
35330 | Awake? |
35330 | Ay, where? |
35330 | Balthazar and thou, Of whom my son, my son deserv''d so well? |
35330 | Bel- imperia? |
35330 | Bel- imperia? |
35330 | Betray''d, Lorenzo? |
35330 | Brother of Castille, to the prince''s love What says your daughter Bel- imperia? |
35330 | Brother, how like you this our viceroy''s love? |
35330 | Brought''st thou me hither to increase my pain? |
35330 | But how can love find harbour in my breast, Till I revenge the death of my belov''d? |
35330 | But how shall Serberine be there, my lord? |
35330 | But how? |
35330 | But in extremes what patience shall I use? |
35330 | But may it be that Bel- imperia Vows such revenge as she hath deign''d to say? |
35330 | But now what follows for Hieronimo? |
35330 | But now, Hieronimo, what were the last? |
35330 | But now, Villuppo, say: Where then became the carcass of my son? |
35330 | But say, Hieronimo: What then became of him that was the bashaw? |
35330 | But say, Hieronimo: what was the next? |
35330 | But say, Revenge,--for thou must help or none,-- Against the rest how shall my hate be shown? |
35330 | But say, where shall I find the men, the murderers, That slew Horatio? |
35330 | But shall I never live to see the day That I may come by justice to the Heav''ns To know the cause that may my cares allay? |
35330 | But tell me now: hast thou confirm''d a peace? |
35330 | But tell me,--for their holding makes me doubt: To which of these twain art thou prisoner? |
35330 | But then was Don Andrea''s carcass lost? |
35330 | But what portends thy cheerful countenance And posting to our presence thus in haste? |
35330 | But what was he that on the other side Held him by th''arm as partner of the prize? |
35330 | But what''s the cause that you conceal''d me since? |
35330 | But where is old Hieronimo, our marshall? |
35330 | But where''s Prince Balthazar, to take his leave? |
35330 | But wherefore blot I Bel- imperia''s name? |
35330 | But wherefore sit I in a regal throne? |
35330 | But wherefore stands yon silly man so mute, With mournful eyes and hands to heav''n uprear''d? |
35330 | But wherefore waste I mine unfruitful words, When naught but blood will satisfy my woes? |
35330 | But whereon dost thou chiefly meditate? |
35330 | But which of us is to perform that part? |
35330 | But who were thy confederates in this? |
35330 | But why I had no notice of his ire? |
35330 | But, sir, then you think this shall be the place Where we shall satisfy you for this gear? |
35330 | Come hither, Pedringano; see''st thou this? |
35330 | Come we for this from depth of under ground,-- To see him feast that gave me my death''s wound? |
35330 | Come, are you ready? |
35330 | Content you, sirs; are you determined That I should plead your several actions? |
35330 | Don Horatio, our knight- marshall''s son? |
35330 | Dost thou mock me, hangman? |
35330 | Dost thou think to live till his old doublet will make thee a new truss? |
35330 | Ergo tuos oculos nunquam, mea vita videbo, Et tua perpetuus sepelivit lumina somnus? |
35330 | Ev''n so, my lord? |
35330 | Fear yourself? |
35330 | For why? |
35330 | Friends, quoth he? |
35330 | From whence? |
35330 | Had Proserpine no pity on thy youth, But suffer''d thy fair crimson- colour''d spring With wither''d winter to be blasted thus? |
35330 | Hath Pedringano murder''d Serberine? |
35330 | Hath not my father then enquir''d for me? |
35330 | Hath your lordship any service to command me? |
35330 | Have you hope of life? |
35330 | Hieronimo, are these thy passions, Thy protestations and thy deep laments, That thou wert wo nt to weary men withal? |
35330 | Hieronimo, why writ I of thy wrongs, Or why art thou so slack in thy revenge? |
35330 | Hieronimo? |
35330 | Hieronimo? |
35330 | Hieronimo? |
35330 | Horatio? |
35330 | How is it possible I should slay it then? |
35330 | How like you this? |
35330 | How likes Don Balthazar of this device? |
35330 | How likes Prince Balthazar this stratagem? |
35330 | How now, Hieronimo? |
35330 | How now, Hieronimo? |
35330 | How now, girl? |
35330 | How now, my lord? |
35330 | How now, who''s this? |
35330 | How now? |
35330 | How now? |
35330 | How then? |
35330 | How? |
35330 | How? |
35330 | I know him not; but what of him? |
35330 | In Paris? |
35330 | Indeed? |
35330 | Is Serberine slain, that lov''d his lord so well? |
35330 | Is our ambassador dispatch''d for Spain? |
35330 | Is this all? |
35330 | Is this the honour that thou didst my son? |
35330 | Is this the kindness that thou counterfeit''st, Are these the fruits of thine incessant tears? |
35330 | Is this the love thou bear''st Horatio? |
35330 | Is your roguery become an office, with a knave''s name? |
35330 | Is''t I will be reveng''d? |
35330 | Is''t not a scurvy jest that a man should jest himself to death? |
35330 | It shall not from me till I take revenge; See''st thou those wounds that yet are bleeding fresh? |
35330 | Lorenzo, know''st thou not the common love And kindness that Hieronimo hath won By his deserts within the court of Spain? |
35330 | Mine honour? |
35330 | Murder? |
35330 | My gracious father, believe me, so he doth; But what''s a silly man, distract in mind, To think upon the murder of his son? |
35330 | My help? |
35330 | My lord, you love her? |
35330 | My son slain by Lorenzo and the prince? |
35330 | My soul hath silver wings, That mounts me up unto the highest heav''ns-- To heav''n? |
35330 | My soul? |
35330 | No notice? |
35330 | Now say, lord general: how fares our camp? |
35330 | Now show, ambassador, what our viceroy saith: Hath he receiv''d the articles we sent? |
35330 | Now, my good lord, could you entreat, Your sister, Bel- imperia, to make one,-- For what''s a play without a woman in it? |
35330 | O earth, why didst thou not in time devour The vile profaner of this sacred bower? |
35330 | O heav''ns, why made you night, to cover sin? |
35330 | O poor Horatio, what hadst thou misdone To leese thy life ere life was new begun? |
35330 | O where''s the author of this endless woe? |
35330 | O wicked butcher, whatsoe''er thou wert, How could thou strangle virtue and desert? |
35330 | O, was it thou that call''dst me from my bed? |
35330 | O, where''s Horatio? |
35330 | O, wherefore went I not to war myself? |
35330 | Of battery? |
35330 | One only thing is uneffected yet, And that''s to see the executioner,-- But to what end? |
35330 | Or see''st thou not the king my brother''s care In his behalf and to procure his health? |
35330 | Or what might move thee, Bel- imperia, To accuse thy brother, had he been the mean? |
35330 | Or wherein hath Alexandro us''d thee ill? |
35330 | Or wherein is''t that I offended thee? |
35330 | Our Portugals will pay us tribute then? |
35330 | Pedringano? |
35330 | Pray you, which is the next way to my lord the duke''s? |
35330 | Say, false Villuppo, wherefore didst thou thus Falsely betray Lord Alexandro''s life? |
35330 | Say, worthy prince: to whether didst thou yield? |
35330 | See''st thou this entertainment of these kings? |
35330 | See''st thou this handkerchief besmear''d with blood? |
35330 | Serberine, my man? |
35330 | Should I suspect Lorenzo would prevent Or cross my suit, that lov''d my son so well? |
35330 | Sirrah, dost see yonder boy with the box in his hand? |
35330 | Sister, what means this melancholy walk? |
35330 | Sister? |
35330 | So he is in prison then? |
35330 | So that you say this herb will purge the eyes, And this the head? |
35330 | So then I must up? |
35330 | Speak, man, and gain both friendship and reward: I mean, whom loves she in Andrea''s place? |
35330 | Speak, man: hath fortune given us victory? |
35330 | Speak, men of Portingal, shall it be so? |
35330 | Speak, page: who murder''d him? |
35330 | Stand you on that? |
35330 | Suppose that she could pity me, what then? |
35330 | Tell me,--and look thou tell me truly too,-- Whence grows the ground of this report in court? |
35330 | That I should plead their several actions? |
35330 | That I, my lord? |
35330 | The hope of Spain? |
35330 | Then is he gone? |
35330 | Then, Pedringano, this is my demand; Whom loves my sister Bel- imperia? |
35330 | This way, or that way? |
35330 | Thou art assur''d that thou sawest him dead? |
35330 | Thou wouldst be loath that any fault of thine Should intercept her in her happiness? |
35330 | To do what, my fine officious knave? |
35330 | To tell thy father thou art unreveng''d? |
35330 | To wring more tears from Isabella''s eyes, Whose lights are dimm''d with over- long laments? |
35330 | Viceroy, I will not trust thee with my life, Which I this day have offer''d to my son: Accursed wretch, why stayst thou him that was resolv''d to die? |
35330 | Was that the warlike prince of Portingal That by our nephew was in triumph led? |
35330 | Was''t Spanish gold that bleared so thine eyes That thou couldst see no part of our deserts? |
35330 | Well, what of him? |
35330 | What accident hath happ''d to Hieronimo? |
35330 | What age hath ever heard such monstrous deeds? |
35330 | What boots complaint, when there''s no remedy? |
35330 | What cause had they Horatio to malign? |
35330 | What dangers and what pleasures dost thou mean? |
35330 | What else? |
35330 | What hath he in his box, as thou thinkst? |
35330 | What have I heard? |
35330 | What help can be expected at her hands Whose foot is standing on a rolling stone And mind more mutable then fickle winds? |
35330 | What if conceit have laid my heart to gage? |
35330 | What if my sister love some other knight? |
35330 | What lesser liberty can kings afford Than harmless silence? |
35330 | What madding fury did possess thy wits? |
35330 | What means my love? |
35330 | What means this outrage that is offer''d me? |
35330 | What means this outrage? |
35330 | What means this warning of this trumpet''s sound? |
35330 | What mischief is it that we not mistrust? |
35330 | What outcries pluck me from my naked bed, And chill my throbbing heart with trembling fear, Which never danger yet could daunt before? |
35330 | What say''st thou? |
35330 | What to do, Hieronimo? |
35330 | What would he with us? |
35330 | What''s he? |
35330 | What''s here? |
35330 | What''s here? |
35330 | What''s that, Hieronimo? |
35330 | What''s that? |
35330 | What, are you ready, Balthazar? |
35330 | What, courting Bel- imperia? |
35330 | What, do you hang by the hour? |
35330 | What, he that points to it with his finger? |
35330 | What, is your beard on? |
35330 | What, will you murder me? |
35330 | What, would you have us play a tragedy? |
35330 | What? |
35330 | Where''s thy lady? |
35330 | Wherein had Balthazar offended thee, That thou should betray him to our foes? |
35330 | Who calls Hieronimo? |
35330 | Who hath slain my son? |
35330 | Who is he that interrupts our business? |
35330 | Who is that? |
35330 | Who''s there? |
35330 | Who? |
35330 | Who? |
35330 | Who? |
35330 | Who? |
35330 | Who? |
35330 | Whom? |
35330 | Whom? |
35330 | Why am I thus sequester''d from the court? |
35330 | Why bend''st thou thus thy mind to martyr me? |
35330 | Why com''st thou sadly to salute us thus? |
35330 | Why did I not give you gowns and goodly things, Bought you a whistle and a whipstalk too, To be revenged on their villainies? |
35330 | Why hast thou butcher''d both my children thus? |
35330 | Why hast thou done this undeserving deed? |
35330 | Why hast thou murdered my Balthazar? |
35330 | Why hast thou thus unkindly kill''d the man? |
35330 | Why linger ye? |
35330 | Why sit we not? |
35330 | Why speak''st thou not? |
35330 | Why stands Horatio speechless all this while? |
35330 | Why wail I, then, where''s hope of no redress? |
35330 | Why, Lorenzo, wherein is''t That I neglect my reputation so As you, or any, need to rescue it? |
35330 | Why, is not this a miserable thing, my lord? |
35330 | Why, make you doubt of Pedringano''s faith? |
35330 | Why, wherefore stay you? |
35330 | Will both abide the censure of my doom? |
35330 | Will none of you restrain his fury? |
35330 | Wilt please your Grace command me ought beside? |
35330 | With me, sir? |
35330 | You could not tell us if his son were there? |
35330 | You will stand between the gallows and me? |
35330 | You''ll ply this gear? |
35330 | You, gentle brother, forg''d this for my sake? |
35330 | Your son Lorenzo? |
35330 | [ aside] What new device have they devised, trow? |
35330 | a letter? |
35330 | and is my son gone too? |
35330 | are these thy flattering looks? |
35330 | are you ready? |
35330 | are you so long? |
35330 | be turn''d off? |
35330 | ifs and ands? |
35330 | is he so? |
35330 | liveth Balthazar, our son? |
35330 | mine honourable friend? |
35330 | my lord Lorenzo? |
35330 | my purse? |
35330 | not my son? |
35330 | see''st thou not the king is busy? |
35330 | shall I not know the cause Of these my secret and suspicious ills? |
35330 | so short? |
35330 | what have mine eyes beheld? |
35330 | what makes you rise so soon? |
35330 | what murderous spectacle is this? |
35330 | what news with thee? |
35330 | what noise, what coil is that you keep? |
35330 | what? |
35330 | when shall we to this gear? |
35330 | when? |
35330 | where''s your fellows, That you take all this pain? |
35330 | whether shall I run To find them out, that murdered my son? |
35330 | who calls Horatio? |
35330 | whom, my noble lord? |
16402 | fearful, weak, bloody, perfidious, hypocritical, and fawning, in the play? |
16402 | ''Swounds, what do you make of a man? |
16402 | ***** Coreb, is''t thou? |
16402 | --I would see him strip; has he no diseases about him? |
16402 | A lady, say''st thou, young and beautiful, Brought in a chair? |
16402 | Ah, why were we not born both of a sex? |
16402 | Alas, I was ignorant of my own talent!--Say then, believers, will you have a captain for your Mufti, or a Mufti for your captain? |
16402 | All these require your timeous assistance;--shall I say, they beg it? |
16402 | Am I tied in poetry to the strict rules of history? |
16402 | And I may say of him, as was said of a celebrated poet,_ Cui unquam poetarum magis proprium fuit subito astro incalescere? |
16402 | And do you think I''ll be the receiver of your theft? |
16402 | And how many subjects would be left? |
16402 | And now you''re grown up to a booby''s greatness, What, would you wrest the sceptre from his hand? |
16402 | And to what end this ill- concerted lie, Which palpable and gross, yet granted true, It bars not my inviolable vows? |
16402 | And why this prosecution of love for the king''s sake? |
16402 | And would his creature, nay, his friend, betray him? |
16402 | And, further, to instruct you how to cry, will you have_ A mufti_, or_ No mufti_? |
16402 | And, on my honour, ladies, I avow, This play was writ in charity to you; For such a dearth of wit who ever knew? |
16402 | Are not you unfortunate quoters? |
16402 | Are not your holy stipends paid for this? |
16402 | Are you leaguers, or covenanters, or associators? |
16402 | Art thou some ghost, some demon, or some god, That I should stand astonished at thy sight? |
16402 | Avete voi preveduti i mali, che sono per succedere? |
16402 | But how comes Pompey the Great to be a whig? |
16402 | But how have I put him under an unfortunate character? |
16402 | But how to right them? |
16402 | But is there heaven? |
16402 | But knock at your own breast, and ask your soul, If those fair fatal eyes edged not your sword More than your father''s charge, and all your vows? |
16402 | But now comes the main objection,--why was it stopt then? |
16402 | But pray, who denies the unparalleled villainy of the papists in that bloody massacre? |
16402 | But thou hast charged me with ingratitude; Hast thou not charged me? |
16402 | But what could I, unthinking city, do? |
16402 | But what had this to do with protestants? |
16402 | But what makes that woman with him, and a friend, a sword drawn, and hasting hence? |
16402 | But what rabble was it to provoke? |
16402 | But where the shoals of merchants meeting? |
16402 | But why in intervals of parliament? |
16402 | But why these prayers for me? |
16402 | But, why was such a host of swearers pressed? |
16402 | Can earthy substance endless flames endure? |
16402 | Can you forgive the man you justly hate, That hazards both your life and crown to spare him? |
16402 | Can you pretend to love, And have no pity? |
16402 | Conduct her in.--[_ Exit Servant.__ Card._ You would be left alone? |
16402 | Confess, proud spirit,( For I will have it from thy very mouth) That better he deserved my love than thou? |
16402 | Could the robbed passenger expect a bounty From those rapacious hands, who stripped him first? |
16402 | Could the same trick, twice played, our nation gull? |
16402 | Damme, says Underhill, I''m out of two hundred, Hoping that rainbows and peacocks would do; Who thought infallible Tom[a] could have blundered? |
16402 | Dar''st thou be false to thy assignation? |
16402 | Did not I see you with him: did not he present me to you? |
16402 | Didst thou not say-- Affronts so great, so public, I never could forgive? |
16402 | Do I discourage rebellion, mutiny, rapine, and plundering? |
16402 | Do my eyes dazzle? |
16402 | Do you love me? |
16402 | Do you love, And can you thus forbear? |
16402 | Does she not want two of the four elements? |
16402 | Dost thou not know the captive king has dared To we d Almeyda? |
16402 | Down, rising mischief, down, or I will kill thee, Even in thy cause, and strangle new- born pity!-- Yet if he were not married!--ha, what then? |
16402 | For how can incest suit with holiness, Or priestly orders with a princely state? |
16402 | For shame, good Christians, can you suffer such a man to starve, when you see his design is upon your purses? |
16402 | For want of petticoat, I''ve put on buff, To try what may be got by lying rough: How think you, sirs? |
16402 | For what could be more uniform, than to draw from out of the members of a captive court, the subject of a comical entertainment? |
16402 | For what should hinder me to sell my skin,} Dear as I could, if once my hand were in?} |
16402 | For what''s Mahomet to me, but that I get by him? |
16402 | For why should I fear my representatives? |
16402 | From Mustapha what message? |
16402 | GUISE_ solus.__ Gui._ Glory, where art thou? |
16402 | Grillon, the Guise is doomed to sudden death: The sword must end him:--has not thine an edge? |
16402 | Ha, what sayest thou, Johayma? |
16402 | Halt-- to your judgment.--[MALICORN_ makes signs of Assassination._] Let him, if he dare.-- But more, more, more;--why, Malicorn!--again? |
16402 | Has he ordered more love to be shewn to one son, than to another? |
16402 | Has he performed my dread command, Returning Albion to his longing land, Or dare the nymph refuse? |
16402 | Has honour''s fountain then sucked back the stream? |
16402 | Has honour''s fountain then sucked back the stream? |
16402 | Hast thou ne''er killed a man? |
16402 | Have I so little honour? |
16402 | Have not all rebels always sung the same song? |
16402 | Have you not heard your father in his youth, When newly married, travelled into Spain, And made a long abode in Philip''s court? |
16402 | Have you, O Guise, since your last solemn oath, Stood firm to what you swore? |
16402 | How are they more obliged to honour the king''s son out of parliament, than in it? |
16402 | How can a soul be worth so much to devils? |
16402 | How has this poison lost its wonted way? |
16402 | How long, ye gods, how long Can royal patience bear The insults and wrong Of madmen''s jealousies, and causeless fear? |
16402 | Hunt) to the business? |
16402 | I am resolved I''ll put forward for myself; for why should I be my lord Benducar''s fool and slave, when I may be my own fool and his master? |
16402 | I ask them, what it does concern protestants to do in this case, and whether they mean anything by that expression? |
16402 | I curse thee not; For, who can better curse the plague, or devil, Than to be what they are? |
16402 | I do not beg, I challenge justice now.-- O Powers, if kings be your peculiar care, Why plays this wretch with your prerogative? |
16402 | I shall, and set him full before thy sight, When I shall front thee, like some staring ghost, With all my wrongs about me.--What, so soon Returned? |
16402 | I took him in the king''s company; he''s of a great family, and rich; what other virtues wouldst thou have in a nobleman? |
16402 | I trust not him; For, now his ends are served, and he grown absolute, How am I sure to stand, who served those ends? |
16402 | I would know of him, on what persons he would fix the sting of this sharp satire? |
16402 | I''ve heard you say, You''d arm against the League; why do you not? |
16402 | If I see the lamb lie bleeding, and the butcher by her with his knife drawn, and bloody, is not that evidence sufficient of the murder? |
16402 | If love produced not some, and pride the rest? |
16402 | If such_ præmunire_ be, pray, answer me, who has most incurred it? |
16402 | In conscience, what can you urge against me, which I can not return an hundred times heavier on you? |
16402 | In that procession, he''s more fit for heaven: What hinders us to seize the royal penitent, And close him in a cloister? |
16402 | In the mean time, pray, where lies the relation betwixt the"Tragedy of the Duke of Guise,"and the charter of London? |
16402 | Infernal fiend, Is this a subject''s part? |
16402 | Is he no more? |
16402 | Is it not so, Polin? |
16402 | Is it so sacred, that a parliament only is suffered to debate it, and dare you run it down both in your discourses, and pamphlets out of parliament? |
16402 | Is load so pleasant? |
16402 | Is my lord chamberlain, and the scrutineers that succeed him, to tell us, when the king and the duke of York are abused?" |
16402 | Is not the bread thou eat''st, the robe thou wear''st, Thy wealth, and honours, all the pure indulgence Of him thou would''st destroy? |
16402 | Is nothing to be left to noble hazard? |
16402 | Is this the love renewed? |
16402 | Is this your oracle? |
16402 | It is a devilish one indeed; but who can help it? |
16402 | It is true there was no rebellion; but who ever told him that I intended this parallel so far? |
16402 | Lost virtue, whither fled? |
16402 | M._ A little mended, sir.--What have you done? |
16402 | M._ Sir? |
16402 | M._ What will you say? |
16402 | M._ Why did not you, who gave me part of life, Infuse my father stronger in my veins? |
16402 | M._[_ Stopping the king._] What mean you, sir? |
16402 | Mol._ But are these all? |
16402 | Mol._ What shall I do to conquer thee? |
16402 | Mol._ Where are those slaves? |
16402 | Mol._ Wouldst thou revenge thee, trait''ress, hadst thou power? |
16402 | Must I teach thee thy trade? |
16402 | No venture made, but all dull certainty? |
16402 | No, if I tamely bear such insolence, What act of treason will the villains stop at? |
16402 | Now, in the devil''s name, what make you here, Daubing the inside of the court, like snails, Sliming our walls, and pricking out your horns? |
16402 | On carrion- tits those sparks denounce their rage, In boot of wisp and Leinster frise engage; What would you do in such an equipage[3]? |
16402 | Or is it cast betwixt the king and her To sound me? |
16402 | Or must I lose, To please my foes, My sole remaining joy? |
16402 | Or, when one body wears and flits away, Do souls thrust forth another crust of clay, To fence and guard their tender forms from fire? |
16402 | Ours is to be a popish play; why? |
16402 | Poor droning truants of unpractised cells, Bred in the fellowship of bearded boys, What wonder is it if you know not men? |
16402 | Quis ubi incaluit, fortius et fæclicius debacchatur_? |
16402 | Shadwell) to it?" |
16402 | Shall I go on? |
16402 | Shall I trust an oath, when I see your eyes languishing, your cheeks flushing, and can hear your heart throbbing? |
16402 | Shall I trust heaven, that heaven which I renounced, With my revenge? |
16402 | Should I not come to vindicate my fame From wrong constructions? |
16402 | Snatched from the sweating labourer his food? |
16402 | Speak, hast thou ever seen my father''s hand? |
16402 | Tell me the truth, how happened this disorder? |
16402 | That''s another lie: How far have you travelled, friend? |
16402 | The abbot enquiring of him that brought him the ring, how he came by it? |
16402 | The conjurer there is asking his devil,"what fortune attended his master, the Guise, and what the king?" |
16402 | The government or you? |
16402 | The uncertainty of his fate is alluded to by Fletcher:_ Wittypate._ In what service have ye been, sir? |
16402 | Then, where''s my satisfaction? |
16402 | Think''st thou I come to argue right and wrong?-- Why lingers Dorax thus? |
16402 | This is no time for silence:--Who''s within? |
16402 | This moonshine grows offensive to my eyes; come, shall we walk into the arbour? |
16402 | This way, you awkward rascal; here lies the arbour; must I be shewing you eternally? |
16402 | Those ruffled hands, red looks, and port of fury? |
16402 | Thou meant''st to kill a tyrant, not a king: Speak, didst thou not, Alonzo? |
16402 | To fight thee after this, what were it else Than owning that ingratitude thou urgest? |
16402 | To hear, I warrant, what the king''s a doing, And what the cabinet- council; then to the city, To spread your monstrous lies, and sow sedition? |
16402 | To lengthen out a black voluptuous slumber, And dream you had your sister in your arms? |
16402 | Tongue confused of every nation? |
16402 | Was ever thief or murderer fool enough to plead guilty? |
16402 | We, who are most in favour, can not call This hour our own.--You know the younger brother, Mild Muley- Zeydan? |
16402 | Welcome to their friends repeating, Busy bargains''deafer sound? |
16402 | Well, Hamet, are our friends, the rabble, raised? |
16402 | Well, who is it then? |
16402 | Were his rebels your friends or your relations? |
16402 | Were kings e''er known, in this degenerate age, So passionately fond of noble acts, Where interest shared not more than half with honour? |
16402 | Were you not bred apart from worldly noise, To study souls, their cures and their diseases? |
16402 | Were your Norman ancestors of any of those families, which were conspirators in the play? |
16402 | What has the poor dead man done to nettle you? |
16402 | What hast thou learnt of Dorax? |
16402 | What have you seen to provoke you to this cruelty? |
16402 | What honours, interest, were the world to buy him, Shall make a brave man smile, and do a murder? |
16402 | What madness were it for the weak and few, To fight against the many and the strong? |
16402 | What means the trolling of this fatal chime? |
16402 | What news from the lieutenant? |
16402 | What safety could their public acts afford? |
16402 | What say you, masters, will you stand by me? |
16402 | What says Og the king of Basan to it? |
16402 | What says my lord chief baron of Ireland to the business? |
16402 | What says the livery- man Templar? |
16402 | What says the livery- man templer? |
16402 | What two they are, whom, to use his own words, he"so maliciously and mischievously would represent?" |
16402 | What''s all thy time? |
16402 | What''s our reward? |
16402 | What''s royalty, but power to please myself? |
16402 | What''s thy whole life To my one hour of ease? |
16402 | What''s thy wishing to my will? |
16402 | What, burn the tapers dim, When glorious Guise, the Moses, Gideon, David, The saviour of the nation, makes approach? |
16402 | What, louder yet? |
16402 | What, shall the people know their god- like prince Skulked in a nightly skirmish? |
16402 | What, when I feel his council on my neck, Shall I not cast them backward if I can, And at his feet make known their villainy? |
16402 | When did you see your prisoner, great Sebastian? |
16402 | When fortune favours, none but fools will dally;} Would any of you sparks, if Nan, or Mally,} Tip you the inviting wink, stand, shall I, shall I?} |
16402 | Where shall he fill a room divine? |
16402 | Where then are the other two, and what am I? |
16402 | Whether I need to name a second Atticus? |
16402 | Which of the two Sosias is it that now speaks? |
16402 | Who is the old serpent and Satan now? |
16402 | Who leads the first attack? |
16402 | Who shall be judges, whether you are friends or not? |
16402 | Who''s to live and reign; tell me that, the wisest of you? |
16402 | Why came that sigh uncalled? |
16402 | Why came ye not before? |
16402 | Why did we know so soon, or why at all, That sin could be concealed in such a bliss? |
16402 | Why do you wave your hand, and warn me hence? |
16402 | Why dost thou fly me, Grillon, and retire? |
16402 | Why dost thou turn thy beauties into frowns? |
16402 | Why heaves my heart, and overflow my eyes? |
16402 | Why is all this pains taken to expose the person of king Henry III.? |
16402 | Why must I still suspect you? |
16402 | Why stood I stupid else, and missed a blow, Which heaven and daring folly made so fair? |
16402 | Why this alarm? |
16402 | Why this posture? |
16402 | Why was not I your brother? |
16402 | Why, are not you Morayma, the Mufti''s daughter? |
16402 | Why, thou little dun, is thy debt so pressing? |
16402 | Will the king of Portugal Go to his death like a dumb sacrifice? |
16402 | Will they at length awake the sleeping sword, And force revenge from their offended lord? |
16402 | Woman, woman, What can I call thee more? |
16402 | Wouldst thou be touched By the presuming hands of saucy grooms? |
16402 | Wouldst thou give comfort, who hast given despair? |
16402 | Yet can pains last, when bodies can not last? |
16402 | You are not Marmoutiere? |
16402 | You know me not? |
16402 | You shall see me manage them, that you may judge what ignorant beasts they are.--For whom do you shout now? |
16402 | Your Mufti? |
16402 | Your talents lie how to express your spite; But, where is he who knows to praise aright? |
16402 | Zey._ The gallant renegade you mean? |
16402 | Zeyd._ You see me come, impatient of my hopes, And eager as the courser for the race: Is all in readiness? |
16402 | [ MERCURY_ ascends.__ Alb._ Shall I, to assuage Their brutal rage, The regal stem destroy? |
16402 | [_ A great shout._]--Hear''st thou that, slave Antonio? |
16402 | [_ Aside.__ Alv._ Is there not yet an heir of this vast empire, Who still survives, of Muley- Moluch''s branch? |
16402 | [_ Aside.__ Emp._ But clear my doubts:--thinkst thou they may rebel? |
16402 | [_ Aside.__ Emp._[_ Coming up to them._] Have you performed Your embassy, and treated with success? |
16402 | [_ Aside.__ Emp_ Why speaks not Dorax? |
16402 | [_ Exeunt Arch- Bishop and Cardinal._ What can she mean?--repent? |
16402 | [_ Exit from the Grate.__ Ant._ O thou pretty little heart, art thou flown hither? |
16402 | [_ Exit.__ Gui._ Ha, said she true? |
16402 | [_ Gives him the bond._ There, fool; behold who lies, the devil, or thou? |
16402 | [_ Making a leg.__ Alm._ Why should I fear to speak, who am your queen? |
16402 | [_ They whisper again.__ Dor._ What, will the favourite prop my falling fortunes? |
16402 | _ 1 Cit._ How, every where? |
16402 | _ 1 Cit._ Is this a time to make sermons? |
16402 | _ 1 Cit._ That''s the first true syllable he has uttered: but as how, and whereby, and when, may they depose him? |
16402 | _ 1 Rabble._ Ay, we know that without your telling: But why are we met together, doctor? |
16402 | _ 1 Rabble._ What, will he come with his balderdash, after the Mufti''s eloquent oration? |
16402 | _ 1 Sher._ For what, pray, colonel, if we may be so bold? |
16402 | _ 1 Sher._ Why, sir, may n''t citizens be saved? |
16402 | _ 1st Mer._ What virtues has he to deserve that price? |
16402 | _ 2 Cit._ How the devil does he know this? |
16402 | _ 2d Mer._''Tis but a washy jade, I see: what do you ask for this bauble? |
16402 | _ A Devil rises.__ Mal._ What counsel does the fate of Guise require? |
16402 | _ Ab._ But wherefore seems the king so unresolved? |
16402 | _ Ab._ Marked you his hollow accents at the parting? |
16402 | _ Ab._ Was ever age like this? |
16402 | _ Ab._ When is this council to be held again? |
16402 | _ Ab._ Why sends not then the king sufficient guards, To seize the fiends, and hew them into pieces? |
16402 | _ Aim._ I would have asked you, if I durst for shame, If still you loved? |
16402 | _ Alb._ But is not yonder Proteus''cave, Below that steep, Which rising billows brave? |
16402 | _ Alb._ Since then the gods and thou will have it so, Go;( Can I live once more to bid thee?) |
16402 | _ Alb._ To whom shall I my preservation owe? |
16402 | _ Alb._ What then must helpless Albion do? |
16402 | _ Alm._ And can you find No mystery couched in this excess of kindness? |
16402 | _ Alm._ Do you then live? |
16402 | _ Alm._ For what? |
16402 | _ Alm._ How can we better die than close embraced, Sucking each other''s souls while we expire? |
16402 | _ Alm._ Old venerable Alvarez--[_ Sighing.__ Seb._ But why that sigh in naming that good man? |
16402 | _ Alm._ Thou wilt not dare to break what heaven has joined? |
16402 | _ Alm._ What joys can you possess, or can I give, Where groans of death succeed the sighs of love? |
16402 | _ Alm._ What shall I do? |
16402 | _ Alm._''Tis a false courage, when thou threaten''st me; Thou canst not stir a hand to touch my life: Do not I see thee tremble, while thou speak''st? |
16402 | _ Alph._ But why should the king assemble the States, to satisfy the Guise, after so many affronts? |
16402 | _ Alph._ But why this parliament at Blois, and not at Paris? |
16402 | _ Alph._ Is there any seeming kindness between the king and the duke of Guise? |
16402 | _ Alph._ Who looked for an assembly of the States? |
16402 | _ Alv._ And what becomes of me? |
16402 | _ Alv._ Have you forgot? |
16402 | _ Alv._ What interest can I have, or what delight, To blaze their shame, or to divulge my own? |
16402 | _ Alv._ What, to destroy himself? |
16402 | _ Ant._ And good reason; for when kings and queens are to be discarded, what should knaves do any longer in the pack? |
16402 | _ Ant._ And what will become of thee, then, poor kind soul? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Can you suspect I would leave you for Johayma? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Dog, what wouldst thou have? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Pray think in reason, sir; is a man to be put to death for a similitude? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Thou wilt not make a horse of me? |
16402 | _ Ant._ What do you mean, madam? |
16402 | _ Ant._ What manner of woman is she? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Where lodges your husband? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Where the devil hast thou been? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Why, are you not, madam? |
16402 | _ Ant._ Why, truly, conscience is something to blame for interposing in our matters: but how can I help it, if I have a scruple to betray my master? |
16402 | _ Ant._[_ Running to her, and embracing her._] Look, if she be not here already!--What, no denial it seems will serve your turn? |
16402 | _ Arch._ Have you not heard the king, preventing day, Received the guards into the city gates, The jolly Swisses marching to their fifes? |
16402 | _ Arch._ Where have you learnt to spare inveterate foes? |
16402 | _ Archon._ What then remains for me? |
16402 | _ Ben._[_ Aside to Dor._] The emperor would learn these prisoners''names; You know them? |
16402 | _ Bend._ Brave renegade!--Could''st thou not meet Sebastian? |
16402 | _ Bend._ Can you call me friend, And think I could neglect to speak, at full, The affronts you had from your ungrateful master? |
16402 | _ Bend._ I could not find it, till you lent a clue To that close labyrinth; how then should they? |
16402 | _ Bend._ Still you run off from bias:--Say, what moves Your present spleen? |
16402 | _ Bend._ Then you resolve To implore her pity, and to beg relief? |
16402 | _ Bend._ To love? |
16402 | _ Bend._ To whom? |
16402 | _ Bend._ What can be counselled, while Sebastian lives? |
16402 | _ Bend._ What then controuls you? |
16402 | _ Bend._ Why ask you, sir? |
16402 | _ Bend._ You could not meet him then? |
16402 | _ Bend._ You would not put a nation to the rack? |
16402 | _ Buss._ But did the primitive Christians e''er rebel, When under heathen lords? |
16402 | _ Buss._ I hope you set them right? |
16402 | _ Buss._ The curate of St Eustace comes at last: But, father, why so late? |
16402 | _ Buss._ What is''t? |
16402 | _ Card._ Have you no temper? |
16402 | _ Card._ What mean you, brother, by this godly talk, Of sparing Christian blood? |
16402 | _ Cur._ Are you a member of the League, and ask that question? |
16402 | _ Dor._ Have I been cursing heaven, while heaven blest me? |
16402 | _ Dor._ Is it so strange to find me, where my wrongs, And your inhuman tyranny, have sent me? |
16402 | _ Dor._ Mean you to turn an anchorite? |
16402 | _ Dor._ My master!--By what title? |
16402 | _ Dor._ O, whither would you drive me? |
16402 | _ Dor._ What means this riddle? |
16402 | _ Dor._ What, my Alonzo, said you? |
16402 | _ Dor._ Where justice wanted, could reward be hoped? |
16402 | _ Dor._ Why, is that news? |
16402 | _ Dor._ Why, then, these foreign thoughts of state- employments, Abhorrent to your function and your breedings? |
16402 | _ Emp._ All may be foes; or how to be distinguished, If some be friends? |
16402 | _ Emp._ And own''st the usurpation of my love? |
16402 | _ Emp._ And thinkst thou not, it was discovered? |
16402 | _ Emp._ Art thou a statesman, And canst not be a hypocrite? |
16402 | _ Emp._ By heaven thou didst; deny it not, thou didst: For what was all that prodigality Of praise, but to inflame me? |
16402 | _ Emp._ Did not my conscious eye flash out a flame, To lighten those brown horrors, and disclose The secret path I trod? |
16402 | _ Emp._ Dispatch; what saw he? |
16402 | _ Emp._ Explain yours first.--What meant you, hand in hand? |
16402 | _ Emp._ The people, are they raised? |
16402 | _ Emp._ Then thou doubtst they would? |
16402 | _ Emp._ Thou art not married to Almeyda? |
16402 | _ Emp._ What mean''st thou? |
16402 | _ Emp._[_ Seeing him._] You druggerman[4] of heaven, must I attend Your droning prayers? |
16402 | _ Enter Emperor, and Guards attending him.__ Emp._ What news of our affairs, and what of Dorax? |
16402 | _ Enter King and Council._[_ Shouts without.__ King._ What mean these shouts? |
16402 | _ Enter Queen- Mother followed by the Counsellors._ O, madam, you are welcome; how goes your health? |
16402 | _ Enter_ GRILLON_ and_ POLIN.__ Gril._ Have then this pious Council of Sixteen Scented your late discovery of the plot? |
16402 | _ Enter_ ORCHAN,_ the third Servant._ O, Orchan, did I think thy diligence Would lag behind the rest!--What from the Mufti? |
16402 | _ Et tu, Brute,_ whom I saved? |
16402 | _ Gril._ A plague confound you, Why should I not? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Angel, or devil, I will.--Nay, at this rate, She''ll make me shortly bring him to her bed.-- Bawd for him? |
16402 | _ Gril._ For what? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Hast thou compacted for a lease of years With hell, that thus thou ventured to provoke me? |
16402 | _ Gril._ I will, by heaven, to the purpose; And, if he force a beating, who can help it? |
16402 | _ Gril._ If he provokes me, strike him; You''ll grant me that? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Rather let me demand your majesty, Why fly you from yourself? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Shall I fight him? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Then, in the name of all thy brother- devils, What wouldst thou have with me? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Why do you, sir? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Why droops the royal majesty? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Why, are you not a villain? |
16402 | _ Gril._ Yes; but how have I Deserved to do a murder? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Because the king disdains my services, Must I not let him know I dare be gone? |
16402 | _ Gui._ By heaven, I took thee for my soul''s physician, And dost thou vomit me with this loathed peace? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Can I help this? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Do you not fear, your visit will be known? |
16402 | _ Gui._ How, madam? |
16402 | _ Gui._ I have none but you: Must I ne''er see you more? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Sir, will you please with patience but to hear me? |
16402 | _ Gui._ The king''s at Blois, and you have reason for it; Therefore, what am I to expect from pity,-- From yours, I mean,--when you behold me slain? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Then was''t not Henry''s fear preserved my life? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Well, colonel, are we friends? |
16402 | _ Gui._ What devil has sent thee here to plague my soul? |
16402 | _ Gui._ What say you, curate? |
16402 | _ Gui._ What, at court? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Why said you, so it were? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Why, any thing but she: What should the mistress of a king do here? |
16402 | _ Gui._ Why, madam, why? |
16402 | _ Joh._ And are those faults to lovers? |
16402 | _ Joh._ Ay, but the sight of that loathsome creature has almost cured me; and how can I tell that he is a christian? |
16402 | _ Joh._ How''s that, villain, dar''st thou accuse me? |
16402 | _ Joh._ Once again, how came you to name Morayma? |
16402 | _ Joh._ What have you been bred up to, sirrah? |
16402 | _ Joh._ What nonsense do you talk? |
16402 | _ Joh._ What, for an intended trespass? |
16402 | _ Joh._ Why not, my lord? |
16402 | _ Joh._[_ At the Balcony._] A bird in a cage may peep, at least, though she must not fly.--What bustle''s there beneath my window? |
16402 | _ Juno._ Why stay we then on earth, When mortals laugh and love? |
16402 | _ King._ And canst thou suffer it? |
16402 | _ King._ And you desire their meaning? |
16402 | _ King._ Can you doubt it? |
16402 | _ King._ Dismissed with such contempt? |
16402 | _ King._ Dost thou not hate him? |
16402 | _ King._ Ha, colonel, is this your friendly visit? |
16402 | _ King._ Has he been called to make his just defence? |
16402 | _ King._ Hast thou not plundered from the helpless poor? |
16402 | _ King._ Hast thou not said, That he deserves it? |
16402 | _ King._ Is my revenge unjust, or tyrannous? |
16402 | _ King._ Is''t possible? |
16402 | _ King._ No more?--and with that stern resolved behaviour? |
16402 | _ King._ Secure in that, I''ll trust thee;--shall I trust thee? |
16402 | _ King._ See, I am hushed; Speak then; how far, madam, would you command? |
16402 | _ King._ So then, my lord, we''re a day off from death: What shall to- morrow do? |
16402 | _ King._ To whom? |
16402 | _ King._ Well, what then? |
16402 | _ King._ What can I do? |
16402 | _ King._ What can be left in danger, but to dare? |
16402 | _ King._ What is''t those gods, the Commons, do not know? |
16402 | _ King._ What said you, Marmoutiere? |
16402 | _ King._ What then? |
16402 | _ King._ What then? |
16402 | _ King._ What was''t? |
16402 | _ King._ What''s to be done? |
16402 | _ King._ What, all turned cowards? |
16402 | _ King._ Who should be loved, but you? |
16402 | _ King._ Why not? |
16402 | _ King._ Wilt thou go too? |
16402 | _ Mal._ At court, and near the king;''tis true, by heaven: I never play''d you foul, why should you doubt me? |
16402 | _ Mal._ But why in this fanatic habit, devil? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Laughest thou, malicious fiend? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Not when deposed? |
16402 | _ Mal._ O why was I not warned before? |
16402 | _ Mal._ So pitiless? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Thou hast deserved me, And I am thine, dear devil: what do we next? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Thou talk''st of stars: Can''st thou not see more deep into events, And by a surer way? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Well, and what of that? |
16402 | _ Mal._ What makes the curate of St. Eustace here? |
16402 | _ Mal._ What, Marmoutiere? |
16402 | _ Mal._ What, resty, fiend? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Where am I now? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Who waits? |
16402 | _ Mal._ Why Beelzebub? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Alas, my Guise!--O heaven, what did I say? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Can I unknow it? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Did I not tell you, sir? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Do these o''erboiling answers suit the Guise? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Do you not wonder at this visit, sir? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Have I said I loved you? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Love me, my lord? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Nay, what mean you? |
16402 | _ Mar._ This hour? |
16402 | _ Mar._ What am I then? |
16402 | _ Mar._ Why do you leave the court? |
16402 | _ May._ Have you not told her what we have in hand? |
16402 | _ May._ Suppose the city should not rise? |
16402 | _ Mel._ Seest thou these ebbing sands? |
16402 | _ Mel._ Then, wilt thou stand to that without appeal? |
16402 | _ Merc._ Suppose me sent Thy Albion to restore,-- Can''st thou repent? |
16402 | _ Merc._ What brought thee, wretch, to this despair? |
16402 | _ Mor._ And what was poor little I among them all? |
16402 | _ Mor._ What do you mean? |
16402 | _ Muf._ Art thou mad, Morayma? |
16402 | _ Muf._ But did he mean no mischief? |
16402 | _ Muf._ But thou wilt not teach me, at this age, the nature of a close embrace? |
16402 | _ Muf._ He is now upon the point of marrying himself, without your sovereign consent: And what are the effects of marriage? |
16402 | _ Muf._ How''s that, Johayma? |
16402 | _ Muf._ I am indeed thy father; but how the devil didst thou know me in this disguise? |
16402 | _ Muf._ I have heard the outcries of my wife; the bleatings of the poor innocent lamb.--Seen nothing, sayst thou? |
16402 | _ Muf._ It''s impossible:--then what meant all those outcries? |
16402 | _ Muf._ No; the natural effects of marriage are children: Now, on whom would he beget these children? |
16402 | _ Muf._ So you may cast a sheep''s eye behind you? |
16402 | _ Muf._ Speak thou, has he not violated my bed, and thy honour? |
16402 | _ Muf._ Why honey bird, I bought him on purpose for thee: didst thou not say, thou longedst for a Christian slave? |
16402 | _ Muf._ Why not, when sacrilegious power would seize My property? |
16402 | _ Muf._ Why, what have I done to thee? |
16402 | _ Mufti._ And selling him again? |
16402 | _ Mufti._ And what''s become of my other slave? |
16402 | _ Mufti._ No, sirrah, so you may repent and escape punishment: Did not you sell this very slave amongst the rest to me, and take money for him? |
16402 | _ Mufti._ What is that you are asking, sirrah? |
16402 | _ Must._ Bauble, do you call him? |
16402 | _ Must._ Do you remember the glorious rapines and robberies you have committed? |
16402 | _ Must._ That I laid in for them, slave Antonio-- Do I then spit upon your faces? |
16402 | _ Must._ Then make much of your retentive faculties.--And who led you to those honey- combs? |
16402 | _ Must._ Think''st thou so, slave Antonio? |
16402 | _ Must._ What, am I forsaken of my subjects? |
16402 | _ Must._ Why should I lie to your honour? |
16402 | _ Must._ You see, slave Antonio, what I might have been? |
16402 | _ Plu._ Dear pledges of a flame not yet forgot, Say, what on earth has been your lot? |
16402 | _ Plu._ Speak what you are, And whence you fell? |
16402 | _ Pol._ But how can he rebel? |
16402 | _ Pol._ Since we are proved to be above the king, I would gladly understand whom we are to obey, or, whether we are to be all kings together? |
16402 | _ Pol._ What could they find to object? |
16402 | _ Re- enter_ DORAX,_ having taken off his Turban, and put on a Peruke, Hat, and Cravat.__ Dor._ Now, do you know me? |
16402 | _ Seb._ And is''t not strange, that heaven should bless my arms In common causes, and desert the best? |
16402 | _ Seb._ Art thou so generous, too, to pity him? |
16402 | _ Seb._ Did I expect from Dorax this return? |
16402 | _ Seb._ How fares our royal prisoner, Muley- Zeydan? |
16402 | _ Seb._ How, damned? |
16402 | _ Seb._ How, tyrant? |
16402 | _ Seb._ I prophesied thy proud soul could not bear it.-- Now, judge thyself, who best deserved my love? |
16402 | _ Seb._ I see to what thou tend''st: but, tell me first, If those great acts were done alone for me? |
16402 | _ Seb._ Speak''st thou of love, of fortune, or of death, Or double death? |
16402 | _ Seb._ To expiate this, can I do more than die? |
16402 | _ Seb._ Was ever man so ruined by himself? |
16402 | _ Seb._ Was''t not enough to brand my father''s fame, But thou must load a lady''s memory? |
16402 | _ Seb._ What else? |
16402 | _ Seb._ What if I make her mine? |
16402 | _ Seb._ What mak''st thou of thyself, and what of me? |
16402 | _ Seb._ What say''st thou of Henriquez? |
16402 | _ Seb._ What, more than death? |
16402 | _ Seb._ Why so remote a question, which thyself Can answer to thyself? |
16402 | _ Seb._ Wilt thou thyself become the greater tyrant, And give not love, while thou hast love to give? |
16402 | _ Sebast._ What sayst thou? |
16402 | _ Tyr._ But who shall then command? |
16402 | _ Tyr._ Say then, what must be done? |
16402 | _ Venus._ What stars above shall we displace? |
16402 | _ Wittypate._ Are you sure Sebastian died there? |
16402 | _ Zel._ And''tis by us that Albion must be slain; Say, whom shall we employ The tyrant to destroy? |
16402 | _ Zel._ What help, when jarring elements conspire, To punish our audacious crimes? |
16402 | _& c.__ Re- enter Servant with_ MARMOUTIERE,_ and exit.__ Starting back._] Is''t possible? |
16402 | am not I the mistress of the family? |
16402 | and do you protect him? |
16402 | and how the devil didst thou find me here? |
16402 | and is it not my place to see good order kept in it? |
16402 | and what can you perform, to recommend you to my service? |
16402 | and what pearls and jewels dost thou mean? |
16402 | and why not just three drops, As well as four or five, or five and twenty? |
16402 | and why, what then? |
16402 | ay, and to tread upon my foot, and squeeze my hand too, if I may be so bold to remember you of past favours? |
16402 | but did you not know him to be my slave, sirrah? |
16402 | but the presence opens; who comes here? |
16402 | call there, where are the servants? |
16402 | darest thou justify Those villains? |
16402 | did ever virgin yet attempt An enterprise like mine? |
16402 | didst not thou Forsake thy faith, and break thy nuptial vow? |
16402 | didst not thou thyself, in fathoming The depth of my designs, drop there the plummet? |
16402 | do you take me for the Mufti''s daughter? |
16402 | do you think legs and arms are strung upon a wire, like a jointed baby? |
16402 | fame, revenge, ambition, Where are you fled? |
16402 | ha, Grillon, said''st thou, come? |
16402 | ha, never see thee more? |
16402 | has she any thing about her but air and fire? |
16402 | hast thou not often said, That Lucifer''s your king? |
16402 | help, I say; do you not know your master''s daughter? |
16402 | imagining it was he, and yet you went? |
16402 | is he dead? |
16402 | is it not well enough? |
16402 | is''t possible? |
16402 | judge for them, And champion against me? |
16402 | me, did you mention? |
16402 | must I be left, As age and time had worn me out of use? |
16402 | must I beg the pity of my slave? |
16402 | must I stumble too? |
16402 | my good lords, what if the murdering council Were in our power, should they escape our justice? |
16402 | not a man in France Dares set his foot by mine, and perish by me? |
16402 | not yet? |
16402 | on a slave disarmed, Defenceless, and submitted to my rage? |
16402 | one estate decree? |
16402 | or where''s thy dwelling Who can reveal? |
16402 | or whether the world has not already prevented me, and fixed it there, without my naming? |
16402 | perhaps revolt? |
16402 | take money twice for the same commodity? |
16402 | that stubborn arrogant rebel, That laughs at proffered mercy, slights his pardon, Mocks royal grace, and plots upon my life? |
16402 | then is my hated rival dead? |
16402 | then the world Is sworn to Henry''s death: Does beauty too, And innocence itself conspire against me? |
16402 | thou bleed''st:-- Three, and no more!--what then? |
16402 | to people Africa with monsters, Which that unnatural mixture must produce? |
16402 | was he endeavouring nothing? |
16402 | was that like a cavalier of honour? |
16402 | we shall be pursued immediately; which way shall we take? |
16402 | were you not so charitable as to give me money? |
16402 | what canst thou avail, Against rebellion armed with zeal, And faced with public good? |
16402 | what if it thundered now, Or if a raven crossed me in my way? |
16402 | what is there dreadful in you? |
16402 | what is there in such rascals, Should make me hide my thought, or hold my tongue? |
16402 | what mean you, Marmoutiere? |
16402 | what saucy slave is this? |
16402 | what was''t I said? |
16402 | what''s that grizly fellow, that attends thee? |
16402 | why dost thou call me on To fight, yet rob my limbs of all their use? |
16402 | why jolt my spirits In this unequal circling of my blood? |
16402 | why were you a rebel? |
16402 | why, what has conscience to do with two young lovers that have opportunity? |
16402 | will nobody come to my assistance? |
16402 | wrong the head of my religion? |
16402 | you are confounded, and stand mute? |
16402 | you will not throttle him? |
41386 | And how can anything be deeply ourselves which developed accidentally, without set intention? |
41386 | And is there, again, any intelligent way of modifying the future except to attend to the full possibilities of the present? |
41386 | But does he? |
41386 | But how does the case stand with language? |
41386 | But where are Helen, Hector and Achilles in modern warfare? |
41386 | But why not harden himself so that others''sufferings wo n''t count? |
41386 | But why, he may protest, go to an opposite extreme and make the future but a means to the significance of the present? |
41386 | But_ why_ act for the wise, or good, or better? |
41386 | Does it liberate or suppress, ossify or render flexible, divide or unify interest? |
41386 | For is not its lesson that we should concentrate attention, each upon the consciousness accompanying his action so as to refine and develop it? |
41386 | He will ask: Can its motive be made universal for all cases? |
41386 | How is the tremendous diversity of institutions( including moral codes) to be accounted for? |
41386 | How much would be lost if it were dropped out, and we were left face to face with actual facts? |
41386 | How shall impulse exercise that re- adjusting office which has been claimed for it? |
41386 | How shall thought which is personal arrive at standards which hold good for all, which, in modern phrase, are objective? |
41386 | How then can we get leverage for changing institutions? |
41386 | How then does it come about that current economic psychology has so tremendously oversimplified the situation? |
41386 | How then shall we choose among them? |
41386 | How would one like it if by one''s act one''s motive in that act were to be erected into a universal law of actual nature? |
41386 | If a man lived alone in the world there might be some sense in the question"Why be moral?" |
41386 | If one''s own present experience is to be depreciated in its meaning because it centers in a self, why act for the welfare of others? |
41386 | Is imagination diverted to fantasy and compensatory dreams, or does it add fertility to life? |
41386 | Is it desired in any sense for itself, or only because it is the means of effective adjustment of a whole set of underlying habits? |
41386 | Is memory made apt and extensive or narrow and diffusely irrelevant? |
41386 | Is not such thought of necessity shut out from effective power, from ability to control objects and command events? |
41386 | Is not the effect of such a doctrine to weaken putting forth of endeavor in order to make the future better than the present? |
41386 | Is perception quickened or dulled? |
41386 | Is the value of_ that_ present also to be postponed to a future date, and so on indefinitely? |
41386 | Is there any way out of the vicious circle? |
41386 | Is thought creative or pushed one side into pedantic specialisms? |
41386 | Just what is the significance of an alleged recognition of a supremacy which is continually denied in fact? |
41386 | Or is the garage simply a means by which a divided body of activities is redintegrated or coordinated? |
41386 | Or when the tickled vanity of social admiration is masked as pure love of learning? |
41386 | SECTION III: WHAT IS FREEDOM? |
41386 | Still the question recurs: What authority have standards and ideas which have originated in this way? |
41386 | The answer to the question"Why not put your hand in the fire?" |
41386 | To ask these questions is equivalent to asking: Why live? |
41386 | What claim have they upon us? |
41386 | What do they do that is distinctive? |
41386 | What does the statement amount to? |
41386 | What is its office, its function, its_ possibility_, or use? |
41386 | What is to be done with these facts of disharmony and conflict? |
41386 | What of that? |
41386 | What sense is there in increased external control except to increase the intrinsic significance of living? |
41386 | What then is choice? |
41386 | What then is meant by individual mind, by mind as individual? |
41386 | What, then, really happens when the actual outcome of satisfied revenge figures in thought as virtuous eagerness for justice? |
41386 | Where does thought exist and operate when it is excluded from habitual activities? |
41386 | Who knows when it will end, or what fortune the morrow will bring? |
41386 | Why attend to metaphysical and transcendental ideal realities even if we concede they are the authors of moral standards? |
41386 | Why did morality set up rules so foreign to human nature? |
41386 | Why did we not set out with an examination of those instinctive activities upon which the acquisition of habits is conditioned? |
41386 | Why do this act if I feel like doing something else? |
41386 | Why does moral authority exist at all? |
41386 | Why employ language, cultivate literature, acquire and develop science, sustain industry, and submit to the refinements of art? |
41386 | Why have men become so attached to fixed, external ends? |
41386 | Why is the claim of the Right recognized in conscience even by those who violate it in deed? |
41386 | Why not follow our own immediate devices if we are so inclined? |
41386 | Why not rather condemn impulse and exalt habits of reverencing order and fixed truth? |
41386 | Why should the power of foresight and effort to shape the future, to regulate what is to happen, be slighted? |
41386 | Why should what is derived and therefore in some sense artificial in conduct be discussed before what is primitive, natural and inevitable? |
41386 | Why then should not the satisfactory plum shed its halo retrospectively upon what precedes and be taken as a sign of virtue? |
41386 | Why then was human nature so averse to them? |
41386 | Why, indeed, acknowledge the authority of Right? |
41386 | Would one then be willing to make the same choice? |
46235 | Are you a Christian? |
46235 | Would His Excellency give me that gracious permission in writing? 46235 Again, there were Christians fighting, in the ranks only, side by side with Moslems-- how could this be? 46235 Are matters very different now? 46235 Are those who live on the flanks of the impending movement prepared to hold their own? 46235 Are we efficient? 46235 Does the spirit of obedience still form one of the many good qualities of the Turkish soldier? 46235 Has the thirst for riches seduced you from the blessings of peace? 46235 How many of those overseas possessions now owe allegiance to the Porte? 46235 How many of those who read their daily paper realize the work done by the Servian Army? 46235 If not, who are our friends and what their worth should heavy troubles come upon us by our own fault? 46235 Is not war a religious commandment, a sacred matter in which infidels can have no part? 46235 Is there not some analogy between our rule in India and that of the Osmanli in Europe? 46235 Some were even lax in matters of religious observance, and how could a war prove victorious when all due glory was not given to the God of battles? 46235 Victory? 46235 Victory? 46235 What is Great Britain, the vast Empire encircling the moving forces from west to east, doing towards her own safety? 46235 What matter that there are numbers of Christians in the ranks of the Ottoman Army? 46235 What of those mangled and maimed by shrapnel and splinters of shell, mortally wounded by bullet and bayonet? 46235 What of those who have been stricken down by cholera on the road? 46235 What traveller along the lower reaches of the Danube has not listened to those bands of wandering Tsigani? 46235 When asked, Who are the Greeks? 46235 When they meet, what then? 46235 Where are those who were dangerously wounded? 46235 With no adequate preparations for the sick and wounded here at the base of operations, is it likely that the field hospitals were adequately supplied? 46235 Would it not be as well for us Britons to look at home? 43894 Are you fond of music, colonel?" |
43894 | CE QUI ME MANQUE À MOI? 43894 Cependant, s''il t''offrait de t''epouser?" |
43894 | Dear M. Robert,said the fashionable guests who visited his studio by the dozen,"could you paint a little brigand, if it is not asking too much?" |
43894 | Have these good people not been born anywhere in particular? |
43894 | Have you seen my last stem? |
43894 | Well, Friend, where a''you going, hay?--what''s your name, hay?--where d''ye live, hay?--hay?] |
43894 | What do you say of our Raphael? 43894 What does it matter?" |
43894 | And which of the old masters has so eloquently rendered the sacred silence of night as Millet has done in his"Shepherd at the Pen"? |
43894 | And who thinks of anything else when Meissonier paints a charge? |
43894 | Are we not satisfied with the Government?" |
43894 | But after all what does it matter whether pictures of the East are true to nature or not? |
43894 | But has he left good pictures behind him or not? |
43894 | CHAPTER XXVI JEAN FRANÇOIS MILLET Whence has_ Millet_ come? |
43894 | Could anything be imagined more romantic? |
43894 | Did the Dutch ever run from one place to another? |
43894 | Do you not think him best of all, now that you have seen everything that is fair and beautiful in Italy?" |
43894 | Do you still recall the little tree in Rothschild''s garden, which we caught sight of between two roofs? |
43894 | Does he outweigh them as a painter?" |
43894 | Et où puiserait- on, sinon à la source? |
43894 | For what can the old masters offer us? |
43894 | For-- and here we come to the limitations of his talent-- has Millet as a painter really achieved what he aimed at? |
43894 | He said that his painting recalled no one, and was neither polished nor pretty, and asked:"How can I hope to be popular? |
43894 | How is it that a man of his age can be so influenced by works which are radically opposed to his own? |
43894 | How much longer must we go about, unpicturesque beings, like ugly black bats, in swallow- tail coats and wide trousers? |
43894 | If in the moment when the profound philosopher is pondering over sublime ideas people were to say to him,"Will you teach us the A, B, C? |
43894 | In 1848, during the fighting on the barricades, he asked with childish astonishment:"What is the matter? |
43894 | In a cavalry charge, with the whirling dust and the snorting horses, who thinks of costume? |
43894 | Is not the expression apportioned to every figure, like parts to a theatrical company, and does not the result seem to be strained beyond all measure? |
43894 | Is that merry, enlivening work, as some people would like to persuade us? |
43894 | It is said that our costume is not picturesque, and therefore why should we choose it? |
43894 | Moreover, can a true style be brought into harmony with hoop- petticoats and swallow- tail coats and such vagaries? |
43894 | Portrait of Gavarni 43 Thomas Vireloque 44 Fourberies de Femmes 45 Phèdre at the Théâtre Français 48"Ce qui me manque à moi? |
43894 | Shortly before his death he said to a friend:"What am I to live upon, and how am I to pay for the column? |
43894 | What do they teach us? |
43894 | What is meant by Beauty? |
43894 | When Constable showed him a study he asked:"Where do you mean to place your brown tree?" |
43894 | Yet is not this characterisation in the highest degree exaggerated? |
35862 | An''are you sorry for our agreement? |
35862 | An''what are you doing with that box and dice I see in your hand? |
35862 | An''where would I get em''but in the heads of your own sheep? 35862 And do you blame me, master?" |
35862 | And do you say no more nor that? |
35862 | And how did you know there were six, you poor innocent? |
35862 | And how did you like the sport? |
35862 | And where will I look for''em? |
35862 | And who else should I mean? 35862 And who wo n''t you have, may I be so bold as to ask?" |
35862 | And will you direct me to where she dwells? 35862 Are you doing any soothsaying?" |
35862 | Are you making game of me, man; what else have I to stake? |
35862 | Are you strong? |
35862 | Are you wishful to hang me a third time? |
35862 | Art thou shaved man? |
35862 | Blood and fury,he shouted;"how is this? |
35862 | Blur- an- agers, how came ye to know about my goose? |
35862 | But will you gi''e me all the ground the goose flew over? |
35862 | Call that a trick? |
35862 | Dear me,said Tom,"but is n''t it surprising to hear the stone- chatters singing so late in the season?" |
35862 | Devil a one of me knows,said Tom;"but of malt, I suppose, what else?" |
35862 | Did you ever see Fin? |
35862 | Do n''t you see her there away from you? |
35862 | Do you see that black thing at the end of the field? |
35862 | Have n''t you chariot and horses and hounds? |
35862 | Have you any more to stake? |
35862 | He''ll do well enough,said one;"but who''s to mind him whilst we''re away, who''ll turn the fire, who''ll see that he does n''t burn?" |
35862 | Heardst thou ever the like? |
35862 | How could I go? |
35862 | How could I kill you,asked the king''s son,"after what you have done for me?" |
35862 | How did you forget? |
35862 | How do you know that? |
35862 | I am King O''Toole,says he,"prince and plennypennytinchery of these parts,"says he;"but how came ye to know that?" |
35862 | I know that you are a great rascal; and where did you get the eyes? |
35862 | I suppose,said the Lepracaun, very civilly,"you have no further occasion for me?" |
35862 | I''ll give you whatever you ask,says the king"is n''t that fair?" |
35862 | I''m much obleeged to you: where is the baste and yourself going? |
35862 | I''m sure I beg your pardon,said my grandfather,"but might I ask you a question?" |
35862 | If thy father had that rod,says the giant,"what would he do with it?" |
35862 | Indeed it is, honest man,replied Oonagh;"God save you kindly-- won''t you be sitting?" |
35862 | Is it a story you want? |
35862 | Is it a tinker you are? |
35862 | Is it fearing I wo n''t pay you, you are? |
35862 | Is it fighting you''ve been? 35862 Is it me myself, you mean?" |
35862 | Is it you, Donald? |
35862 | Is it you,said she,"that were there?" |
35862 | Is that the way you''re leaving me? |
35862 | Is there any other young woman in the house? |
35862 | Is this the way you are mending the path, Jack? |
35862 | Is thy daughter mine now? |
35862 | It''s daybreak that''s the matter; do n''t you see light yonder? |
35862 | Jack, you anointed scoundrel, what do you mean? |
35862 | Jack, you vagabone, do you see what the cows are at? |
35862 | Jewels, do you say? 35862 May your hand turn into a pig''s foot with you when you think of tying the rope; why should you speak of hanging me?" |
35862 | Never welcome you in,cried the captain of the guard,"did n''t we hang you this minute, and what brings you here?" |
35862 | Now, O Conall,said the king,"were you ever in a harder place than to be seeing your lot of sons hanged to- morrow? |
35862 | Now,said he to the story- teller,"what kind of animal would you rather be, a deer, a fox, or a hare? |
35862 | Now,said the lank, grey beggarman,"has any one a mind to run after the dog and on the course?" |
35862 | Now,said the raven,"see you that house yonder? |
35862 | Now,says he,"she''ll be without talk any more; now, Guleesh, what good will she be to you when she''ll be dumb? |
35862 | O Guleesh, is n''t that a nice turn you did us, and we so kind to you? 35862 O musha, mother,"says Jack,"why do you ax me that question? |
35862 | Oonagh,said he,"can you do nothing for me? |
35862 | So the sea- maiden put up his head(_ Who do you mean? 35862 So,"says Tom to the king,"will you let me have the other half of the princess if I bring you the flail?" |
35862 | Sure, I''m looking for the heifers, poor things? |
35862 | Thank you ma''am,says he, sitting down;"you''re Mrs. M''Coul, I suppose?" |
35862 | The host,they cried;"what do you want with the host? |
35862 | There is gloom on your face, girl,said the youth;"what do you here?" |
35862 | This is the third time, and who knows what luck you may have? 35862 To be sure, you lazy sluggard, I do?" |
35862 | To whom art thou talking, my son? |
35862 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
35862 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
35862 | Was n''t that a fine haul we made at the Lord of Dunlavin''s? |
35862 | Well, honest man,says the king,"and how is it you make your money so aisy?" |
35862 | Well, maybe you''d be civil enough to tell_ us_ what you''ve got in the pitcher there? |
35862 | Well, well,cried them all, when he came within hearing,"any chance of our property?" |
35862 | Well, what about_ them_? |
35862 | Well, what of them? |
35862 | What are you doing there, you rascal? |
35862 | What are you doing, you contrary thief? |
35862 | What canst thou do? |
35862 | What colour do you want the mare to be? |
35862 | What could I do with the twelve iron ones for myself or my master? 35862 What gift,"said his wife,"would you give me that I could make you laugh?" |
35862 | What is the good of that? 35862 What is the reason of your journey?" |
35862 | What like are these men when seen, if we were to see them? |
35862 | What men are these you refer to? |
35862 | What news have you to- day? |
35862 | What news the day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What news to- day? |
35862 | What piercing, shrill cry is that-- the most melodious my ear ever heard, and the shrillest that ever struck my heart of all the cries I ever heard? |
35862 | What purse is that you are talking about? |
35862 | What reason had you to strike the man who won my daughter? |
35862 | What reward would you give me for sending plenty of fish to you? |
35862 | What robe will you wear? |
35862 | What scoundrel struck that blow? |
35862 | What suitor is that? |
35862 | What work can ye do? |
35862 | What would bring them there? |
35862 | What''ll you take for that hide? |
35862 | What''s the matter, friends? |
35862 | What''s the matter? 35862 What''s the matter?" |
35862 | What''s the reward for putting it back in the bundle as it was before? |
35862 | What''s the reward you would ask? |
35862 | When he felt the birds calling in the morning, and knew that the day was, he said--''Art thou sleeping? 35862 When will he be here?" |
35862 | Whence come you, and what is your craft? |
35862 | Whence comest thou, maiden? |
35862 | Where did I get it, is it? 35862 Where is the water, wife?" |
35862 | Where will I look for them? |
35862 | Where? 35862 Who are you, my good man?" |
35862 | Who deluded you? 35862 Who else took the head off the beast but you?" |
35862 | Who else? |
35862 | Who has dared to interfere with my fighting pet? |
35862 | Who is there? |
35862 | Who is this beauty, and where is she to be seen, when she was not seen before till you saw her, if you did see her? |
35862 | Who knows,they replied,"who committed the crime?" |
35862 | Who should take the heads off the knot but the man that put the heads on? |
35862 | Who then? |
35862 | Who then? |
35862 | Who then? |
35862 | Why do n''t you come to breakfast, my dear? |
35862 | Why should n''t I be satisfied? |
35862 | Why,said Conall,"should not I do the pleasure of the king, though there should be no souls of my sons in dread at all? |
35862 | Will you give a body a taste of your beer? |
35862 | Will you give me the first son you have? |
35862 | Will you not put out,said Silver- tree,"your little finger through the key- hole, so that your own mother may give a kiss to it?" |
35862 | Will you play again? |
35862 | Will you play again? |
35862 | Will you take a gold piece? |
35862 | Will you take me? |
35862 | Would you tell a body,says the cock that was perched on the ass''s head,"who was it that opened the door for the robbers the other night?" |
35862 | You home- spun shoe carle, do you think I am fit to be your thrall? |
35862 | You wo n''t go back o''your word? |
35862 | You would not cheat the poor man, would you? |
35862 | You, you poor creature what good would you do? |
35862 | ''Hast thou boiled that youngster for me?'' |
35862 | ''Play up with you, why should you be silent? |
35862 | ''Strike up with you,''said the head bard,''why should we be still? |
35862 | A Legend of Knockmany What Irish man, woman, or child has not heard of our renowned Hibernian Hercules, the great and glorious Fin M''Coul? |
35862 | A while after this he called again:"Are you asleep?" |
35862 | After some more talk the king says,"What are you?" |
35862 | After they had gone and were out of sight, the henwife came to the kitchen and said:"Well, my dear, are you for church to- day?" |
35862 | After they had gone, the henwife came in and asked:"Will you go to church to- day?" |
35862 | Ah, now, could n''t you take me with you?" |
35862 | Ah, will any of you pull a bed of dry grass for me? |
35862 | And again the mighty voice thundered:"Do you see this great chest of mine?" |
35862 | And if she asks you,''Were you at the battle of the birds?'' |
35862 | And now tell me what dress will you have?" |
35862 | And she said to me''What brought you here?'' |
35862 | And the giant asked him,"Where is thy father when he has that brave rod?" |
35862 | And the voice said:"Do you see this great head of mine?" |
35862 | And what do you think I made it of?" |
35862 | And when its neck was shown, the thundering voice came again and said:"Do you see this great neck of mine?" |
35862 | Are you in need of soothsaying?" |
35862 | Are you satisfied, Guleesh, and will you do what we''re telling you?" |
35862 | Are you sorry for hiring me, master?" |
35862 | Are you sorry for it?" |
35862 | Are you sorry for our agreement?" |
35862 | At last they stood still, and a man of them said to Guleesh:"Guleesh, do you know where you are now?" |
35862 | But about the time when he should drive the cattle homewards, who should he see coming but a great giant with a sword in his hand? |
35862 | But does that hare come here still?" |
35862 | But have you seen her, and are Deirdre''s hue and complexion as before?" |
35862 | Connachar came out in haste and cried with wrath;"Who is there on the floor of fight, slaughtering my men?" |
35862 | Deirdre heard the voice, and said to her foster- mother,"O foster- mother, what cry is that?" |
35862 | Did I not hear you speaking to the king''s son in the palace to- night? |
35862 | Did n''t you see the gold with your own two eyes?" |
35862 | Did you never hear tell of the Danes?" |
35862 | Do you blame me for what I have done?" |
35862 | Do you blame me, sir?" |
35862 | Do you think for all the money in Ireland I''d run the risk of seeing my lady tramp home on foot?" |
35862 | Fin, who was dressed for the occasion as much like a boy as possible, got up, and bringing Cuhullin out,"Are you strong?" |
35862 | For the comic relief of this volume I have therefore had to turn mainly to the Irish peasant of the Pale; and what richer source could I draw from? |
35862 | Guleesh, my boy, are you here with us again? |
35862 | Has n''t it kept me and mine for years?" |
35862 | He called to speak to the master in the haggard and said he,"What are servants asked to do in this country after aten their supper?" |
35862 | He came to the deer"What news to- day?" |
35862 | He gave a cross look to the visitors, and says he to Jack,"What do you want here, my fine fellow? |
35862 | He shouted,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
35862 | He sputtered it out, and cried,"Man o''the house, is n''t it a great shame for you to have any one in the room that would do such a nasty thing?" |
35862 | Her husband forgot, and touched her rather roughly on the shoulder, saying,"Is this a time for laughter?" |
35862 | Her husband tapped her on the shoulder, and asked her,"Why do you weep?" |
35862 | Here I am, and what do you want with me?" |
35862 | How are you getting on with your woman? |
35862 | I thought to myself that I was near my foe and far from my friends, and I called to the woman,''What are you doing here?'' |
35862 | I went in, and I said to her,''What was the matter that you were putting the knife on the neck of the child?'' |
35862 | In comes the giant, and he said:"Hast thou cleaned the byre, king''s son?" |
35862 | Is he at home?" |
35862 | Just then we could be hearing the footsteps of the giant,''What shall I do? |
35862 | Keep your toe in your pump, will you? |
35862 | May I be so bold as to ask where yez are all going?" |
35862 | May I make bold to ask how is your goose, King O''Toole?" |
35862 | Maybe I wo n''t remember your kindness if ever I find you in hardship; and where in the world are you all going?" |
35862 | Maybe you''re sorry for your bargain?" |
35862 | My wings, are they not withered stumps? |
35862 | Now, when they told Arthur how they had sped, Arthur said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek first?" |
35862 | On a day of days, while he was fishing, there rose a sea- maiden at the side of his boat, and she asked him,"Are you getting much fish?" |
35862 | Or has that devil made you really dumb, when he struck his nasty hand on your jaw?" |
35862 | Out came the cobbler:"How much for your hides, my men?" |
35862 | Out came the tanner:"How much for your hides, my good men?" |
35862 | Said Gwrhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
35862 | Said Silver- tree,"Troutie, bonny little fellow, am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
35862 | Said Yspathaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
35862 | Said a man of them to him:"Are you coming with us to- night, Guleesh?" |
35862 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon?" |
35862 | Seeing her so vexed and so changed in the face, the old woman asked:"What''s the trouble that''s on you now?" |
35862 | She asked the boy:"Did you tell the master what I told you to tell him?" |
35862 | She cried:"Naois, son of Uisnech, will you leave me?" |
35862 | She rose up before him, and said:"Did n''t I tell you not to leave a bone of my body without stepping on it? |
35862 | So Conn of the Hundred Fights said to him,"Is it to thy mind what the woman says, my son?" |
35862 | Suddenly she paused, and said aloud:"Where are the women? |
35862 | Thackeray?) |
35862 | That vagabond, bad luck to him----""You mean Donald O''Neary?" |
35862 | The eldest sister came home alone, and the husband asked,"Where is your sister?" |
35862 | The giant asked him--"If thy father had that rod what would he do with it?" |
35862 | The giant awoke and called,"Are you asleep?" |
35862 | The son asked his father one day,"Is any one troubling you?" |
35862 | The very letters that have spread through all Europe except Russia, are to be traced to the script of these Irish monks; why not certain folk- tales? |
35862 | The woman said:"Whose else should they be?" |
35862 | The wren threshed( what did he thresh with? |
35862 | Then he said,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
35862 | There was once a farmer who was seeking a servant, and the wren met him and said:"What are you seeking?" |
35862 | Well, the long and the short of it was that Donald let the hide go, and, that very evening, who but he should walk up to Hudden''s door? |
35862 | What dress would you like?" |
35862 | What good have we now out of our journey to France? |
35862 | What has happened to you, Gelban? |
35862 | What kind of soothsaying do you want?" |
35862 | What''s the matter?" |
35862 | What''s the matter?" |
35862 | When he said to me then,''Is the ring fitting thee?'' |
35862 | When she perceived that he was asleep, she set her mouth quietly to the hole that was in the lid, and she said to me''was I alive?'' |
35862 | When the giant came home, he said:"Hast thou thatched the byre, king''s son?" |
35862 | When the sisters came home, the henwife asked:"Have you any news from the church?" |
35862 | When the two sisters came home the henwife asked:"Have you any news to- day from the church?" |
35862 | Where are you going?" |
35862 | Where have you been so long?" |
35862 | Where''s all your invention? |
35862 | Which of the keys should I keep?" |
35862 | Who is she, or how did you get her?" |
35862 | Why did you play that trick on us?" |
35862 | Why say so when you were at home every Sunday?" |
35862 | Why should n''t I have them all to myself?" |
35862 | Why what has a poor old man like you to play for?" |
35862 | Will you begin, if you please, and put in the thatch again, just as if you were doing it for your mother''s cabin?" |
35862 | Will you lend me your best pair of scales?" |
35862 | Would n''t it be a fine thing for a farmer to be marrying a princess, all dressed in gold and jewels?" |
35862 | Would you have me meddle with the bastes of any neighbour, who might put me in the Stone Jug for it?" |
35862 | Would you not sooner stay with me than with them?" |
35862 | You would n''t wish to keep the luck all to yourself?" |
35862 | [ Illustration:]"''Why will you be silent? |
35862 | [ Illustration:]"And what do you say to me,"says Saint Kavin,"for making her the like?" |
35862 | an''who is it, avick? |
35862 | and what would you be taking their feet off for?" |
35862 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
35862 | or mayhap you met the police, ill luck to them?" |
35862 | said Fin again;"are you able to squeeze water out of that white stone?" |
35862 | said Tom, bursting out laughing;"sure you do n''t think me to be such a fool as to believe that?" |
35862 | said he, suddenly, as he looked again at the young girl,"in the name of God, who have you here? |
35862 | said he,''hast thou done this to me? |
35862 | said he;"is this where the great Fin M''Coul lives?" |
35862 | said the giant;"but were n''t you impudent to come to my land and trouble me in this way? |
35862 | says Ould Nick;"is that the way? |
35862 | then,"says the king,"who are you?" |
35862 | to take a woman with him that never said as much to him as,''How do you do?'' |
35862 | what for?" |
35862 | what made your sons go to spring on my sons till my big son was killed by your children? |
35862 | what shall I do?'' |
35862 | where did you get it?" |
35862 | where?" |
35862 | who was calling him, and not a soul in sight? |
12453 | ''Does you feel willin''to swar to de trufe of your insertion, ole dame?'' 12453 ''How shall I woo her? |
12453 | ''How shall I woo her? 12453 ''Old dame,''says the ossifer( for so dey calls him), as pleasant as a mornin''in May;''has you a young gal locked up here as you knows ob? |
12453 | ''Paradise Lost?'' 12453 A fortune and a husband?" |
12453 | About an hour, I believe; but what makes you so particular, all at once, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | After all, what can that invalid and her child be to you in any case? 12453 Am I not permitted to breathe the external air-- to exercise? |
12453 | An eccentric taste for so young a girl; and Byron? 12453 And a little good wine, too, occasionally-- eh, madame?" |
12453 | And cook, what was she about? |
12453 | And do you believe me, Dinah, now that I have promised so solemnly to pay these rewards? |
12453 | And do you really love this child? |
12453 | And how long is this close immurement to continue? |
12453 | And in your state- room, captain? |
12453 | And paintings; do you love them? |
12453 | And suppose, in return, I publish yours to the world,she suggested, coolly;"brand you with baseness? |
12453 | And the other-- where is he? |
12453 | And this is your resolution? |
12453 | And vat can your motif be? 12453 And what is your idea of the way to read Shakespeare, Bertie dear?" |
12453 | And when do you assume your office in Georgia? |
12453 | And whence did he derive his authority? |
12453 | And where is she now? |
12453 | And who gave you the flowers, Ernie? |
12453 | And who would let you in, in the morning, Franklin, if I did this? 12453 And who, let me ask, is this Paladin of chivalry?" |
12453 | And you are a very foolish, dear old nurse, and you_ will_ love our baby, too, wo n''t you now? |
12453 | And your son-- do you count his welfare as nothing? 12453 Answer me truthfully, honorably, as you are a gentleman, has he propagated this vile slander, for as such I feel it, and as such shall resent it?" |
12453 | Are we in the mansion of a decayed queen, or the log- hut of a wayside innkeeper? |
12453 | Are you a fairy, madame? |
12453 | Are you ill, George? |
12453 | At what hour? 12453 Besides, are you not an earl''s granddaughter; why not boast of that instead, which would be the truth?" |
12453 | But Mrs. Raymond-- where is she? 12453 But give me something of Praed''s in return,"he said, rallying suddenly;"is there not a pretty little thing called''How shall I woo her?''" |
12453 | But his earthly hope-- it was that I alluded to; what chance for him? 12453 But how did she get out, Miss Harz?" |
12453 | But how shall we know where to find your friends when we get to port? |
12453 | But that was only a measure of safety for yourself; you surely do not mean to take sides with my persecutors? |
12453 | But what has all this to do with the name of the little girl next door? 12453 But what has startled you, poor thing, since we left the Repository? |
12453 | But what in the world ails you-- has Dunmore, the disconsolate, been making love again? 12453 But why did you not meet me at Milledgeville?" |
12453 | But why not receive bank stocks instead? |
12453 | But, Captain Ambrose-- he did not tell you so? |
12453 | By- the- way, talking of magnetism, do you know, Miss Harz, I think you are the most universally magnetic woman I ever saw? 12453 Called for by whom?" |
12453 | Captain Van Dome, do you mean to say there is no such passenger in your ship''s list as Basil Bainrothe? |
12453 | Certainly, Dinah-- the Bible tells us so; but what is the name of the pretty little girl of whom you speak? 12453 Could have loved? |
12453 | Could you not take him a message from me, Dinah? 12453 Danton, how can you so grieve your mistress?" |
12453 | Did Ady give you these? |
12453 | Did Dr. Physick ever pronounce my disease epilepsy? 12453 Did he love you?" |
12453 | Did he tell you what his thoughts were, Evelyn, or do you merely interpret them after your own fashion? |
12453 | Did he think he was driving a curricle? 12453 Did my dear mother send you to me?" |
12453 | Did n''t you hear Clayton say so? |
12453 | Did the bad man hurt Mirry? |
12453 | Did the fire occur in that way? |
12453 | Did you leave the other passengers at table? |
12453 | Did you speak with him, Dinah? |
12453 | Did you, or did you not, meet this person at Colonel La Vigne''s? 12453 Do n''t ask me-- just go on, low, very low; how did you hear all this?" |
12453 | Do n''t you know you have lost your father from this hour? 12453 Do n''t you know, Bainrothe, I am a fatal upas- tree to the wives of my bosom? |
12453 | Do you call those tufts your curls? |
12453 | Do you hear that, Claude? 12453 Do you know that gentleman, Marion?" |
12453 | Do you mean to deny it, then, Evelyn Erle? |
12453 | Do you mean to say you confided the secret of the mirror to Morton, and kept it from me? 12453 Do you miss any thing-- what have you lost, Miss Miriam?" |
12453 | Do you never see a newspaper, Mrs. Clayton, and, if so, can you not indulge me with a glimpse of one? 12453 Do you pretend that Bryant is not a poet in the grain, and that the wondrous boy, Willis, was not also''to the manner born?'' |
12453 | Do you pretend to deny it, Evelyn? 12453 Do you pretend to doubt it?" |
12453 | Do you promise this? |
12453 | Do you see that dark object lying beyond( our eyes mechanically followed his),"so still on the water?" |
12453 | Do you still claim forgiveness? 12453 Do you still see an iceberg, Mr. Garth? |
12453 | Do you suppose he is less near to God than you or I-- to Christ the all- merciful? |
12453 | Do you think his bed was soft under the war- horses? |
12453 | Do you think you could get through with a few business details to- morrow? |
12453 | Does he love music-- poetry? |
12453 | Does n''t that describe me as I am, Miriam? |
12453 | Does your own heart acquit you? |
12453 | Evelyn, one word-- let it be sincere: do you hate and scorn me? 12453 Evelyn, with all her arts, is a little faded already; do n''t you see it, Miriam? |
12453 | Evelyn? 12453 Forgive you?" |
12453 | Had we not better wait? 12453 Have I been deceived in believing that you were attached to my son, Miriam Monfort, and that you meant to keep faith with him?" |
12453 | Have we any thing left? |
12453 | Have we not proof to the contrary, Major Favraud? |
12453 | Have you completed your catalogue of insult? 12453 Have you done, Evelyn Erie?" |
12453 | Have you ever known me to play fast and loose, Dr. Pemberton? 12453 Have you ever seen us together, that you pronounce him very much in love?" |
12453 | Have you traitors in your own household, Miriam? |
12453 | Hope? 12453 How could I know, my dear sir, that this erasure had been made?" |
12453 | How did you become possessed of the knowledge that I kept gold there? |
12453 | How long before this ultimatum is proposed to me, which Mr. Gregory seemed to anticipate, and with which you, no doubt, are acquainted? |
12453 | How long did Morton remain absent? |
12453 | How long have I slept? 12453 How much longer will it endure, Evelyn?" |
12453 | How often must I remind you, Caleb Fink,said the owner of the emporium,"that your sphere is circumscribed to your duties? |
12453 | How old did he seem to be, Evelyn? |
12453 | How should I know, my dear? 12453 I am in earnest,"I rejoined, quietly;"what then?" |
12453 | I am sent from home, then, to make acquaintances it seems, and to prepare for my_ dà © but_ into society? 12453 I am sorry to have startled you so,"she said, hurriedly,"but where is Dinah, Miss Monfort, and how did she get out?" |
12453 | I had not suspected you of so much diplomacy,she observed, dryly;"but, after all, Miriam, how does this change the posture of affairs to me? |
12453 | I hope you are not hurt in my service? |
12453 | I think my birthday approaches; can you tell me the day of the month? 12453 I!--why, what on earth can I have to do with Miss Erle and her energies? |
12453 | If I give you this, will you promise to deliver my message to McDermot faithfully? |
12453 | If not, what then, Miriam? 12453 If not, what, Miriam?" |
12453 | Is His Son a little boy, and will he be fond of my mother? |
12453 | Is dat ring of yours good guinea gole, honey? |
12453 | Is it possible,I thought,"that this can be one of Evelyn''s subtle schemes, reacting on Mr. Bainrothe? |
12453 | Is it true vat I hear,he asked, pausing at some distance,"dat you vant to have dat leetle hompback chilt for a companion, Miss Monfort?" |
12453 | Is she not magnificent? |
12453 | Is that the style Major Favraud? |
12453 | Is there a ship in the distance, that you gaze so earnestly? |
12453 | Is your little boy ill, madam? |
12453 | It may be some time, miss; would you like a cup of hot coffee, you and this gentleman? 12453 Lady got cake in pocket, give Ernie some?" |
12453 | Make tea? |
12453 | Might not the term in some way be shortened? 12453 Miriam, what does all this mean?" |
12453 | Miss Harz? |
12453 | Most certainly, and very tenderly too; is he not my sweetest consolation in this dreary life? |
12453 | Mr. Burress,I said( I had retained his name with its remarkable prefix),"will you not lock the gate outside? |
12453 | My poor father is falling into that sear and yellow leaf, his dotage,he said,"that is evident; what could possess him to maunder so? |
12453 | Not even to see her baby? |
12453 | Not if he is a Jackson Democrat? |
12453 | Not taking on about that silly cup, I hope-- no; what can it be then, a megrim? 12453 Now run and tell Mrs. Stanbury every word I have spoken, just as soon as you can, Miriam, do you hear? |
12453 | Now, tell me about McDermot, Dinah, what sort of a look has he? 12453 O Evelyn, Evelyn, did you, do that?" |
12453 | O little sister,I groaned,"was I right, after all, in forsaking you for a season? |
12453 | O sister, can you conceive of no higher happiness than this? |
12453 | Of whom are you afraid, poor young lady? 12453 Old Gerald at the head of them, I suppose?" |
12453 | Pause there, Lieutenant Raymond; of what are you speaking? |
12453 | People trot out horses and negroes when they wish to purchase; why not governesses? |
12453 | Poor child, why should you rejoice so? |
12453 | Sabra,I whispered,"what became of the young girl, Ada Lee, and the deformed child? |
12453 | She has told you so, I suppose? |
12453 | She ought to have been an Irish child and born, in a hovel, do n''t you think so, papa? |
12453 | Since when have you grown so independent, Miriam? |
12453 | Sister, what can this be? 12453 So she assured you we were both prisoners by night, did she? |
12453 | So you will not give me''How shall I woo her?'' 12453 State definitely what you exact from me in return for your forbearance-- your_ honorable_ secrecy?" |
12453 | Still, it_ is_ epilepsy? 12453 Studied poetry? |
12453 | Suppose we dress as sea- nymphs,said Honoria Pyne;"enact a masque for old Neptune''s benefit? |
12453 | Tell me about Angy, Ernie-- had she wings? |
12453 | The baby-- where is he? 12453 Then they are strictly nervous?" |
12453 | Then what does she think of me? |
12453 | Then you are not wholly indifferent to me, Evelyn? |
12453 | There, did you see her smile? |
12453 | To grow old in servitude,he would say,"what sadder fate can befall any being, or more entitle him or her to forbearance and respect? |
12453 | Unable, or unwilling? 12453 Vat ansair shall I bear to Mr. Bainrothe from his vard?" |
12453 | Was it sent from beyond the seas? |
12453 | Was it the lightning? |
12453 | Was not that enough, Evelyn? 12453 Were you rude enough to tell him so, Miriam?" |
12453 | Were you sure that he was not perfidious? |
12453 | What Mirry cry for-- is God mad with Mirry? |
12453 | What ails you, Miss Miriam? 12453 What ails you, Miss Miriam?" |
12453 | What are these people crawling about the deck for? 12453 What are you thinking about, child?" |
12453 | What are you two talking about? |
12453 | What are you waiting for, Captain Van Dorne? |
12453 | What are you whispering about, Miriam? |
12453 | What has Miriam done to deserve such a taunt? 12453 What if they remove him?" |
12453 | What is it you object to, Miriam? |
12453 | What is it you want me to do? |
12453 | What is that, Miriam? |
12453 | What is the use of bewailing the inevitable? |
12453 | What is the use of this mystery with me,I thought,"when I alone am concerned? |
12453 | What is this Claude is talking of, Miriam? |
12453 | What letter, Mabel? |
12453 | What makes you mock Mr. Bainrothe then, and show how he minces at table, and uses his rattan? |
12453 | What makes you suppose Miss Monfort wants to hear your chattering, old magpie that you are? |
12453 | What man, Miss Monfort? 12453 What name shall I give? |
12453 | What poem do you allude to? |
12453 | What proof? 12453 What put it into your head, Evelyn, and what made you so close- mouthed about it? |
12453 | What tribe did her mother belong to, papa? |
12453 | What would you have me say, dear? 12453 What, being natural?" |
12453 | What, indeed? |
12453 | What, that little affair of a philopoena? |
12453 | When shall he come to you, and speak for himself? 12453 Where am I, then?" |
12453 | Where do you leave Mr. Webster, John Quincy Adams, General Jackson himself, in such a category, madame? |
12453 | Who has accused me of these? |
12453 | Who has done this? |
12453 | Who have called, Mrs. Clayton? 12453 Who is it that you call such hard names--''wicked and old''forsooth? |
12453 | Who was it that alleged these things? 12453 Who was that speaking?" |
12453 | Why a necessity, dear Evelyn, why go at all? 12453 Why have you not asked me before, Evelyn?" |
12453 | Why not say a third? |
12453 | Why not? 12453 Why should I suffer him to fill my mind with suspicions that embitter it against all approaches? |
12453 | Why, what possesses you to- day, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | Will Ernie let the wicked man kill Mirry? |
12453 | Will not Bridget Maloney do as well? |
12453 | Will she love him too? 12453 Will you be so good as to apprise him in person of my earnest wish? |
12453 | Wo n''t it do after dinner, sister Evelyn? |
12453 | Wo n''t we be too happy, Mrs. Austin, when our own dear little brother or sister comes? |
12453 | Would she never stop-- never give one loop- hole for doubt to enter? |
12453 | Would you marry for money, Evelyn? |
12453 | Would you not help me to break a loathed chain? |
12453 | Yes, but--with a shrug of his shoulders, worthy of a Frenchman--"_que voulez vous_? |
12453 | Yes, you have a good voice, an impassioned face and manner-- all very suitable, no doubt; but what will it amount to, after all? 12453 Yes-- what is it? |
12453 | Yet that voice-- how could I be mistaken? |
12453 | Yet you will go, Evelyn? |
12453 | You are bettair, then? |
12453 | You are sure he was not here, this morning-- while-- while Morton was absent? |
12453 | You are sure of the truth of what you utter, Miriam? |
12453 | You are very considerate,he said, dryly, after we had gone a few yards in profound silence,"but had I not better return for a lantern?" |
12453 | You do not-- you cannot-- meditate personal violence, self- murder? |
12453 | You has n''t anoder ob dem gole- pieces anywhar, like dat you gib me befo'', has you? 12453 You have European ideas, you tell me,"she said, bitterly;"is this one of them?" |
12453 | You know them, then? |
12453 | You need no more leetle pill? 12453 You remember the French song which I was always fond of humming,''Où est on si bien qu''au sein de sa famille?'' |
12453 | You reside here, then? |
12453 | You would not deceive me? |
12453 | *****"Despair shall give me strength-- where is the door? |
12453 | --"for by this tender title I am permitted to address you at last"( by whom?) |
12453 | --Eh, Clayton?" |
12453 | --Say, how do you like her looks?" |
12453 | --a good deal of waggery about you, I perceive, or had you forgotten my name?" |
12453 | A little alum sprinkled over its red- gold ground would do wonders in the way of effect-- would be gorgeous-- wouldn''t it, now, Miss Harz?" |
12453 | Afraid of an encounter? |
12453 | After all, does Bainrothe mistrust her honesty or mine? |
12453 | After all, is there any despot equal to the stomach and its requisitions? |
12453 | After all, might he not be honest, even if a tool of Bainrothe''s? |
12453 | Alas I who but our Creator can judge of our deserts, or measure our power to bear? |
12453 | All this is shockingly egotistical; but the question is, who that has a spark of individuality is otherwise? |
12453 | Am I deceived in the expression of that beaming eye? |
12453 | And did he lie in wait for me on the way?" |
12453 | And if we discern them, shall we not adore God''s angels? |
12453 | And what are men at such a season? |
12453 | And where is Evelyn?" |
12453 | And, later, had I not pondered over the wisdom of his preservation? |
12453 | Are the women pretty or plain, as a general thing-- and had Hamlet light or dark hair, think you, from present indications in the royal family? |
12453 | Are there not beings who seem, indeed, to lack the great essential for salvation-- a soul to be saved? |
12453 | Are you engaged to any other and more fortunate man than Mr. Bainrothe and myself? |
12453 | Are you implacable then, Miriam?" |
12453 | Are you quite sure of dat?" |
12453 | Are you sincere in such a course? |
12453 | As to that bank, did not my father believe it to be as indestructible as the United States, the government itself? |
12453 | At such an hour as this, what matters the quality of food?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Austin?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Bainrothe?" |
12453 | Beauseincourt, and all its shadows, had I not put behind me? |
12453 | Because she was disappointed once, is that a reason? |
12453 | Besides, why have not the newspapers told us of this?" |
12453 | But am I soundly constituted? |
12453 | But is this just? |
12453 | But shall I tell her I have heard, Though sweet her song may be, A voice where every whispered word_ Was more than song to me_? |
12453 | But shall I tell her eyes more bright, Though bright her own may beam, Will fling a deeper spell to- night_ Upon me in my dream_?''" |
12453 | But what takes the Stanburys abroad? |
12453 | But what, after all, is beauty? |
12453 | But would this be? |
12453 | But, perhaps you had an escort to the corner?" |
12453 | But, perhaps"--lingering a moment--"you would be so good as to suffer Mr. Caleb to show me the short way you spoke of? |
12453 | By- the- by, what name shall we give our''treasure- trove?''" |
12453 | By- the- by, where are they, Miriam? |
12453 | Ca n''t you let her know this? |
12453 | Can I rely on you to support me then?" |
12453 | Can you read''Faust''in the original? |
12453 | Clayton?" |
12453 | Could I doubt for one moment to whom he applied that celestial title? |
12453 | Could I not compel them to concentration? |
12453 | Could I resist this state of things? |
12453 | Could I sustain it and retain my reason? |
12453 | Could I trust Mrs. Austin-- Mabel? |
12453 | Delay, I scarce could hope for, and, even if granted, how could it avail me in the end? |
12453 | Did any one ever see the like before? |
12453 | Did he know of my immurement? |
12453 | Did he never return, and where is he now?" |
12453 | Did he resemble mamma, Evelyn? |
12453 | Did my mother send you here?" |
12453 | Did you ever go to Frankfort? |
12453 | Did you ever hear of the Jews?" |
12453 | Did you ever see it, Miss Lamarque, you who see every thing? |
12453 | Did you never suspect anything of that sort?" |
12453 | Did you see the statue of Goethe there? |
12453 | Do I look like death? |
12453 | Do n''t you hear Mrs. Clayton groaning? |
12453 | Do n''t you mark the flag flying at the mast- head? |
12453 | Do n''t you see the advantage to the ship?" |
12453 | Do n''t you think so, Miriam?" |
12453 | Do we not right, then, to confine and enslave devils while they abide with us, or, if we can, to destroy them utterly? |
12453 | Do you feel better for my laying on of hands? |
12453 | Do you feel light- headed at all after your turn-- maybe you have fever?" |
12453 | Do you hear me, Mamma Constance?" |
12453 | Do you really apprehend danger for us now?" |
12453 | Do you see that unfortunate person there?" |
12453 | Do you suppose he will ever love you as well again-- you or Evelyn? |
12453 | Do you understand me?" |
12453 | Do you understand this, Dinah? |
12453 | Does n''t I know you loss all your trunks on de''Scusco, an''was n''t you a pore gal, teachin''white folks''s chilluns fur a livin''before? |
12453 | Does she never come here? |
12453 | Does the quality called presence of mind find root in the same source that impels us to apt quotation?--"What if the lion in his rage I meet? |
12453 | Does you hear de cherubs squallin''Wat''s settin''on de gate? |
12453 | Does you hear de chickens crowin''? |
12453 | Does you hear de prophets callin''? |
12453 | Does you hear de rain a- fallin''? |
12453 | Does you hear de win''a blowin''? |
12453 | Does you see de niggars hoein''? |
12453 | Does you see it, honey?" |
12453 | Does you think dar is such tings, sure enough, Mirry?" |
12453 | Englehart?" |
12453 | Englehart?" |
12453 | Evelyn Erie is rich, Miriam Monfort is poor; why need I add another word? |
12453 | Garth?" |
12453 | Garth?" |
12453 | Gregory?" |
12453 | Had I not suffered sufficiently? |
12453 | Had Wentworth spoken, then? |
12453 | Had he been there, indeed, in spiritual presence? |
12453 | Had he heard me? |
12453 | Had he her lovely eyes? |
12453 | Had the ship''s doctor no name, then, that they never mentioned it, and that he spoke in a demon''s voice? |
12453 | Had you not better retire now?" |
12453 | Has Captain Falconer declared himself too soon? |
12453 | Has any thing occurred since that time to mar your good understanding?" |
12453 | Has he a false key I wonder, and are we above- stairs, with unlocked doors, subject to his visitations, should it occur to him to make them?" |
12453 | Has he been lecturing you, too? |
12453 | Has he not said the seed of the just man should never know want or beg bread? |
12453 | Have they not told you of me? |
12453 | Have you ever crossed the waters, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | Have you had one of your spells?" |
12453 | Have you no memory of having revived before?" |
12453 | Have you not noticed the irregularity of our Washington papers?" |
12453 | Have you studied him, Miss Monfort?" |
12453 | Have you sufficient light?" |
12453 | He is in love, I believe, but with whom I ca n''t conjecture,"and he glanced askance at Evelyn and me.--"Can you assist me, ladies?" |
12453 | He is sick with a chill, we hear, and his wife is again ill.""Who did the marketing?" |
12453 | Heh? |
12453 | How did you know her first intentions-- have there been other letters?" |
12453 | How far are such responsible? |
12453 | How much would dat watch and chain be worth, honey?" |
12453 | How often must I warn you?" |
12453 | How would you like this, Miriam,"patting my shoulder,"just for a change?" |
12453 | I asked at last, in a voice feeble as an infant''s,"and what are those steps below? |
12453 | I asked, after studying his countenance for a moment;"or, are you again desirous to try the nerves of your female passengers? |
12453 | I asked;"the captain, was he there?" |
12453 | I had thought from your face you were stronger; besides, the pumps are doing good work in the hold: who knows what may come of it, who knows?" |
12453 | I have done nothing so very wicked, I hope, as to exclude me from my Father''s face forever-- have you? |
12453 | I promise you faithfully.--But what is this?" |
12453 | I questioned;"you are at home in this house, whosesoever it may be?" |
12453 | I reiterated louder; and I smiled at the idea that suggested itself--"have reptiles souls?" |
12453 | I saw no more-- I would not witness more-- for had I not learned already all that I asked or ought to know? |
12453 | I should need clothing; and_ how_ secure and convey away my trunk unseen by Evelyn? |
12453 | I tells you all; his bref mos knocked me down, but I did n''t see no pipe?" |
12453 | I think you, too, studied a little Latin, Miriam?" |
12453 | I wonder wat my ole man''ll say ef he ebber sees me comin''back agin wid a bag full ob money? |
12453 | I would have said in the strange, calm bitterness that possessed my soul:"What value has life to you and your deformed one? |
12453 | If He do n''t care, who need care?--An''t I right, old mammy?" |
12453 | If he were sublime, do you suppose all the world would read him or go to see his plays? |
12453 | If not of him, what is it, Evelyn, that makes your face like a stone mask of late-- once all life and joy?" |
12453 | If you prefer courtesy to comfort, you shall be gratified; but what''s the use of ceremony with Gregory? |
12453 | In order to do this, I might have to wait, and in the mean time how should I deport myself, how conceal my change of feeling from his observant eyes? |
12453 | In power of thought, beauty of expression, what comparison is there? |
12453 | In the mean while tell me, has Mr. Bainrothe been here to- day?" |
12453 | Is all hope over, or was it only a dream?" |
12453 | Is he large or small, light or dark, and does he smoke a pipe''?" |
12453 | Is it about my father? |
12453 | Is it for another''s sake you have felt so very indignant? |
12453 | Is it not splendid, Marion?" |
12453 | Is my health to be unconsidered?" |
12453 | Is n''t it bad enough to feel so?" |
12453 | Is n''t it strange, the influence those little cottony women get over their husbands? |
12453 | Is n''t that a great difference?" |
12453 | Is n''t this a strange, quaint volume, to set before a king? |
12453 | Is not that appropriate-- our little link of sisterhood? |
12453 | Is not that right, Miriam?" |
12453 | Is not that word a very comprehensive one? |
12453 | Is she ill or only nervous?" |
12453 | Is that my characteristic? |
12453 | Is that the idea, Evelyn?" |
12453 | It was as if a snake should weep, and what in Nature could be more affecting than such a spectacle? |
12453 | Just from college, and very young; what can he know of life? |
12453 | Love''s toil, I know, is little cost; Love''s perjury is light sin; But souls that lose what I have lost, What have they left to win?''" |
12453 | Mine was in store, but how could he dream of this? |
12453 | Miss Harz?" |
12453 | Miss Miriam, what''s the use of promising for one afternoon, when I have taken the best of care of her all her life? |
12453 | Miss Monfort,"he said;"will you not bid me a kind, a pardoning farewell?" |
12453 | Moreover, what merit would there be in faith or fortitude? |
12453 | Mrs. Austin will be here in a moment now; what will she think of you? |
12453 | My diamonds must be secreted or disposed of-- how should this be done? |
12453 | My trunk-- will you be so kind as to unlock it and give me out the tray-- that picture? |
12453 | Nay, did not Bainrothe himself do all he could to convince him of it, and induce him to invest in its stocks? |
12453 | Nay, what manhood would there have been in consigning you to such a fate as awaited penniless wife of mine? |
12453 | Nice fellows, are they not?" |
12453 | No? |
12453 | Not going to get up, Miss Miriam? |
12453 | Now, how do you like my son?" |
12453 | Now, is not that being literal, Miriam?" |
12453 | Now, tell me candidly-- much depends on the truth-- has any one been unkind?" |
12453 | Now, wo n''t it be a lovely idea? |
12453 | O friends, have you forgotten me?" |
12453 | Of course, I must adopt another name-- what should it be? |
12453 | Or is it the same blood? |
12453 | Or, rather, what_ out_ of Nature? |
12453 | Pemberton?" |
12453 | Pemberton?" |
12453 | Poor, widowed, sickly, and despised, why should you wish to live? |
12453 | Raise those feline eyes to mine, if you dare, and answer me truthfully: What means this mockery? |
12453 | Read''Thanatopsis,''or are you acquainted with it already? |
12453 | Remember Byron and Miss Chaworth-- how was it with them? |
12453 | Say, are you better?" |
12453 | See how skillfully I avoided that fallen branch-- suppose I were to be spiteful, and upset you against this stump?" |
12453 | See, I have brought you von lettair; now vat will you do to reward me?" |
12453 | Shall I keep on with Bertie, now that the theme has possession of me, and go back to the others when she is finally dismissed? |
12453 | She has what they used to call in England''blue blood in her veins;''do you understand, Miriam? |
12453 | She is coming to herself fast, and what will she think of such expressions? |
12453 | She is well, I hope?" |
12453 | Should I not have dared every thing, rather than have so openly yielded my authority?" |
12453 | Since, how heart moves brain, and how both move hand, What mortal ever in entirety saw? |
12453 | So this is where he keeps my gold,"I thought;"but how did he find ingress into our castle, supposed at least to be inaccessible by night? |
12453 | Suppose Miriam Monfort neither comes in person nor sends her order for its restoration-- what, then, is to become of this treasure- chest of hers?" |
12453 | Suppose he were to die suddenly, how does he know that I would ever be the wiser or the better of these deposits? |
12453 | Tell me the truth, Miriam-- who has done this devil''s mischief?" |
12453 | That is n''t exactly Scripture, but near enough, do n''t you think so?" |
12453 | That watch was very little compared to what I possess outside of these prison- walls, and these possessions--""Whar is dey, honey? |
12453 | That''s the idea, is it?" |
12453 | The lady above- stairs is indeed magnificent; but, Miriam, where is Bertie?" |
12453 | The lady of his choice( or heart?) |
12453 | The question is, might they not jar occasionally?" |
12453 | Then, how would it fare with me, beggared indeed? |
12453 | There is such a thing as training one''s features, is n''t there, as well as one''s setters? |
12453 | Three hours-- were they not enough? |
12453 | Unless I could prove that he had removed the treasure for unworthy uses-- why speak of it at all? |
12453 | Very well, I shall not forget that; but pray, what particular advantage in this respect does a country- school present?" |
12453 | Was I betrayed? |
12453 | Was I not on my way to him in whose presence alone I lived my true life? |
12453 | Was he tall or short, fair or dark? |
12453 | Was it his beloved presence, his dear hand, that were to be made the prize of my silence and submission? |
12453 | Was it his hand that had left that band about my brow-- that surging in my brain-- that weight upon my heart? |
12453 | Was it not strange that up to this very moment no suspicion had clouded my horizon since I woke in that sumptuous room? |
12453 | Was the bitter pill of humiliation I was now swallowing to be gilded thus? |
12453 | Was there ever waste like that since Cleopatra dissolved her pearl in vinegar?" |
12453 | Wat does dat mean, honey?" |
12453 | Well, what do you say to Shelley?" |
12453 | Well, whose business was that but God''s? |
12453 | Were such musical bells duplicated in adjacent cities? |
12453 | Were they not, in the fullness of their power, to crush and baffle me? |
12453 | What am I to think of such caprice?" |
12453 | What becomes of his promises? |
12453 | What can have occurred to impress you thus? |
12453 | What children did she leave?" |
12453 | What could I do? |
12453 | What court poet of his day, Major Favraud, compared with Robert Burns for feeling, fire, and pathos? |
12453 | What did that little vigilant creature ever fail to remark? |
12453 | What do you suppose American girls would care for that? |
12453 | What does He make them so sweet for if He does not expect us to love them dearly-- His little angels on earth? |
12453 | What does this tariff promise? |
12453 | What full orchestra surpassed Coleridge for harmony and brilliancy of effect? |
12453 | What has occurred to change you? |
12453 | What has poor Claude been guilty of?" |
12453 | What higher eulogium could I bestow, or"--dropping his voice--"what higher compliment pay you, Miriam?" |
12453 | What house is this in which I find myself a prisoner? |
12453 | What if I were to assure that this plan had been agitated?" |
12453 | What is it? |
12453 | What keeps you there so long?" |
12453 | What life- long hardships does this condition not impose? |
12453 | What mischief are you two hatching?" |
12453 | What more can he do for or against us now? |
12453 | What more has occurred? |
12453 | What more remained? |
12453 | What mortal voice like to Shelley''s? |
12453 | What of the climate-- what of the people-- what of the court? |
12453 | What power had I to execute it, even if uttered? |
12453 | What put that into your head?" |
12453 | What queen, bethink you, whose likeness you have seen? |
12453 | What then, Basil Bainrothe-- what then?" |
12453 | What time is it now?" |
12453 | What was there to be done? |
12453 | What were these circumstances to which she so haughtily referred? |
12453 | What_ was_ the matter, Miriam? |
12453 | When did you see her last? |
12453 | When we reach New York, you shall know every thing: or is it, indeed, to that place this ship is bound?" |
12453 | Where is Captain Van Dorne? |
12453 | Where was Franklin?" |
12453 | Where will the loss fall crushingly? |
12453 | Where will the profit rest? |
12453 | Where, now, is your boasted consistency?" |
12453 | Where, then, was the place of my captivity situated? |
12453 | Which shall it be, a chally or barege?" |
12453 | Which will you have, Bainrothe? |
12453 | Whither? |
12453 | Who and what was she? |
12453 | Who are you, to prevent me? |
12453 | Who carried her note?" |
12453 | Who charms like Wordsworth? |
12453 | Who could prove otherwise?" |
12453 | Who ever sung such siren strains as Moore, a simple Irishman of low degree? |
12453 | Who has dared to delegate to you what has no existence as far as I am concerned?" |
12453 | Who has inspired you with such opinions of me?" |
12453 | Who is she, I wonder, Evelyn; did you ever hear her speak of her kinfolks? |
12453 | Who is this young lady?" |
12453 | Who knows more than I on this subtle subject? |
12453 | Who knows what becomes of the soul when the body is wrapped in stupor or sleep, any more than when it is dead? |
12453 | Who paints panoramas like Southey? |
12453 | Who sent these flowers, by- the- by, Mrs. Clayton? |
12453 | Who shall gainsay me? |
12453 | Who was with you?" |
12453 | Who, then, shall penetrate the mysteries of divine intention? |
12453 | Who_ was_ that man?" |
12453 | Whom does she resemble, Wardour? |
12453 | Why am I so weak, and what are you doing here? |
12453 | Why did I triumph in the strength of guile that desperation gave me, rather than sink abashed and penitent beneath it? |
12453 | Why did he not mention this to me? |
12453 | Why encumber me?" |
12453 | Why have you been forced on me at all? |
12453 | Why is it that, in times like these, such conceits beset us, such comparisons arise? |
12453 | Why not reveal to me at once the secret of the spring and the lock, as I only am to be the beneficiary of all this gold? |
12453 | Why resent this, and scorn me for my humility? |
12453 | Why seek to shake my confidence in the man I love? |
12453 | Why should I hate you, Mrs. Clayton? |
12453 | Why should I seal my soul away in endless gloom, because one man, out of all Adam''s race, was faithless and falsehearted?" |
12453 | Why was not the fate of Ananias or Sapphira mine after that false utterance? |
12453 | Why?" |
12453 | Will he not share with me? |
12453 | Will the raven never come back? |
12453 | Will you have some food now? |
12453 | Would Caleb send them on our track, or would the better part of valor come to his aid and save me from their clutches? |
12453 | Would He forsake us now? |
12453 | Would he come? |
12453 | Would n''t you like one for a pet, Miss Harz?" |
12453 | Yet helping us to all we seem to hear, For, how else know we save by worth of word?" |
12453 | You could not have procured a better watchman, surely; but why have you watched at all?" |
12453 | You dare to hope this?" |
12453 | You do n''t keer nothing about seeing of it, do you, now?" |
12453 | You do n''t think it amounts to that, do you? |
12453 | You have heard of Hercules Prang?" |
12453 | You remember the knights of fable?" |
12453 | You remember the stress I laid on this?" |
12453 | You will sit down again, Miriam, will you not?" |
12453 | a small volcanic island? |
12453 | a whale? |
12453 | a wreck? |
12453 | and Barry Cornwall?" |
12453 | and Leigh Hunt? |
12453 | and Mabel-- do you know my little sister?" |
12453 | and Moore? |
12453 | and Mrs. Hemans? |
12453 | and do you hesitate, on account of Miss Moore? |
12453 | and how do you like my lecture delivered_ extempore?_". |
12453 | and what feeling of his morbid fancy was there that my hand could not smooth away, when once entwined in his? |
12453 | as John Gilpin said, or some one of him-- which was it?" |
12453 | darest thou kill Caius Marius?" |
12453 | did they mean to turn the tables, then, and destroy me by anticipating my evidence? |
12453 | did you think I charged you to watch every one who came, so earnestly, to stay here so constantly, without a good and sufficient reason? |
12453 | had I indeed become the sport of fiends? |
12453 | has it come to this?" |
12453 | have you nothing to say to this strange lady?" |
12453 | he said, in eager tones,"you care for me still-- a little?" |
12453 | how can you treat me with such heartless levity?" |
12453 | king of a neighborhood;--what great difference is there, after all? |
12453 | or do they belong to the magnificence of this idealized hotel?" |
12453 | or do you prefer Rhine wines?" |
12453 | suppose my terrible foe sees fit to interfere,''Epilepsy,''as Evelyn called it, and perhaps with reason-- God alone knows!--what then? |
12453 | there was not even a familiar dog to bark and determine the vexed question,"Is this I?" |
12453 | were you that lady?" |
12453 | what am I talking about? |
12453 | what are you muttering about-- don''t you hear Mrs. Raymond knocking? |
12453 | what can the wretch mean?) |
12453 | what did I tell you, Mrs. Austin? |
12453 | what put such a strange fancy into your head? |
12453 | what will Ernie do for Mirry?" |
12453 | why do you return to a theme so bitter and profitless to both? |
12453 | why was I ever placed in hands like these? |
12453 | you make calembourgs, my good doctor.--What do you call them, Favraud? |
44707 | Oh, mother, what''s that meant for? 44707 WHERE''S MY''CELLO?" |
44707 | What are you seeking for so late? |
44707 | What''s the matter with Humanity? |
44707 | _''Pris quelque chose?'' 44707 ''Bonne pêche?'' 44707 ''Pas mordu du tout?'' 44707 ''Pris quelque chose?'' 44707 A Spanish dancer? 44707 A church in Venice? 44707 And_ will_ you guarantee us from subjection to the plumber? 44707 Are they meant to be pretty? 44707 But we can not all haveleads,"Nicely suited to our needs, To excel in words and deeds, Do n''t you see? |
44707 | But what in the world to JOHN BULL can''ave come If he ca n''t_ wash his own dirty linen at''ome_? |
44707 | Do all Spanish dancers have knobbly faces like you might make out of a potato? |
44707 | Have you been having anything indigestible for supper?" |
44707 | Is it an advertisement of a furniture shop? |
44707 | Is it another lady? |
44707 | Is it cotton wool? |
44707 | Is it sheets they''ve got on? |
44707 | Is that why they look so funny? |
44707 | Meant to be painted on the wall of a room? |
44707 | Need I say more to ensure for him that respectful admiration which the public is ever ready to lavish upon anything they fail to understand? |
44707 | Or is it meant for what father calls a slight wash in his water- colour drawings? |
44707 | Rather early for sea- bathing, eh? |
44707 | Shall we to Mynheer and his frowsy Frow truckle, While one English woman has arm, wrist, and knuckle? |
44707 | Then it goes on"_ Have you ordered your Good Friday''s Dinner?_ If not, do so at once." |
44707 | There is an old proverb, and what do it say? |
44707 | Though I have planned it all, suppose I ought to murmur,"Where am I?" |
44707 | We''ve missed old comrades one by one; Our friendship moults no feather;_ Can_ forty years and more have run Since we were"boys"together? |
44707 | What Olympia where you took me two years ago? |
44707 | What are those ladies dancing in sheets for? |
44707 | What are those people skating on? |
44707 | What do you say it is? |
44707 | What is she? |
44707 | What malignant hocus- pocus has kept back the plucky crocus, Whose gold is scarce yet bursting from the beds the winds still parch? |
44707 | What''s all that other red there? |
44707 | What, travel to Holland to get rub and scrub, While soap and strong arms may in Britain be found? |
44707 | Where on earth have you been hiding? |
44707 | Who are the two ladies? |
44707 | Who_ wants_ to run? |
44707 | Why are their clothes slipping down? |
44707 | Why are their faces all crooked, and their eyes sideways? |
44707 | Why''s she put all that red on her cheeks? |
44707 | Will no casual icy splinter from the serried spears of Winter Put a chill upon your smile, and spoil the promise of the Summer? |
44707 | Yet why? |
44707 | _ Are_ the biting blizzards past, dear? |
44707 | _ First Boy._"WHAT FOR?" |
44707 | _ Miss Mary._"MAY MEETINGS? |
44707 | _ Somebody''s Song._] What on earth is the good of fish caught in Easter Week to the persons who have ordered it for the previous Friday? |
44707 | _ The New Governess._"WHAT ARE THE COMPARATIVE AND SUPERLATIVE OF_ BAD_, BERTY?" |
26847 | Ah, indeed? 26847 Am I not gracious enough now, pet? |
26847 | Am I the first? 26847 Amiable-- who said she was amiable? |
26847 | And Clarice: will she do her part? |
26847 | And did he believe all that? 26847 And do n''t you get bored, out here? |
26847 | And now the prohibition is removed? |
26847 | And then you mean to take him in and do for him? 26847 And you have stood by me, knowing all this-- you are still my friend?" |
26847 | As the Baroness used to say in_ The Danicheffs_, in our days of vanity,''Do you think that is much of a compliment?'' 26847 As the Scotchwoman said when they asked her if she understood the sermon, Wad I hae the presumption? |
26847 | Bob, do you know why I come to you, instead of to Jane or Mabel? |
26847 | But Clarice, sister? 26847 But how did he come to overhear your conversation?" |
26847 | But-- the others know? |
26847 | Clarice, you do n''t think me capable of playing the spy on you? |
26847 | Confound you, Hartman, what do you go bringing them up for? 26847 Could n''t you explain it to them, Clarice? |
26847 | Did he say what had been his offence? |
26847 | Did n''t you take landmarks? 26847 Did she say nothing else?" |
26847 | Did you ever hear the like? 26847 Did you ever take so many fish out of a brook in one day before? |
26847 | Did you tell Mabel and Jane of this? |
26847 | Do I look like it? 26847 Do n''t you think my baby beautiful?" |
26847 | Do you call yourself and me spiritual men, Bob? |
26847 | Do you really want to know, Bob? |
26847 | Do you remember what De Senancour says, in_ Obermann_? |
26847 | Do you talk this way to your Princess, Bob? |
26847 | Does he take all the blame? |
26847 | Done? 26847 Drop the subject, will you? |
26847 | Eh? 26847 First then, how do you come to know so much about this?" |
26847 | God forbid: do I hold you cheap, that I should rate you so to others? 26847 Good heavens, Jane, what would you have? |
26847 | Hang my feelings: do you suppose I expend feelings on a misguided heifer? 26847 Have I been asleep, Bob? |
26847 | He planned beforehand to tell her so-- thought that was the right card to play, the proper way of wooing? |
26847 | How about the philanthropic dodge? 26847 How can you make such low suggestions? |
26847 | How could I? 26847 How could it be enough? |
26847 | How do_ you_ know what I would like? 26847 How were you able to speak so positively?" |
26847 | How will this do? 26847 How would you like politics? |
26847 | I ca n''t talk about it, except in this roundabout way: what''s the use? 26847 I do n''t see that,"said the troublesome Jane:"what was the use of your being there intermeddling?" |
26847 | I will do that, of course: why so many words about it? 26847 Is that all?" |
26847 | Jane,I said,"what do you suppose Clarice is up to now?" |
26847 | Jim, may n''t there be a little conceit of superior wisdom here? |
26847 | Just how did he insult her? 26847 Ladies and gentleman,"I said with dignity,"would you mind excusing me for a few moments? |
26847 | Mamma, why does n''t Mr. Hartman come back? 26847 My dear Clarice, if you set up as a Pessimist apostle, you will convert all the town, and that will never do.--You hear her, Jim? |
26847 | My dear sister, I will tell you anything you like, if you will only believe me; what is the use, if you wo n''t? 26847 My heart? |
26847 | Never; do you think Mabel and Jane would allow that, any more than I? 26847 No: why should I speak to her? |
26847 | Now is n''t that exactly like him? |
26847 | Now, brother, why will you be such an unconscionable humbug? 26847 Now, now-- do you think I would offer you secondhand goods? |
26847 | O, none, none whatever: how should you? 26847 Parents been dead long?" |
26847 | Princess dear, have I offended you? 26847 Princess dearest, do you like me better than you used to, or is this only part of the play, the excitement of practicing for a newcomer? |
26847 | Princess, have n''t you trampled on me enough? 26847 Prisoner at the bar, are you guilty or not guilty?" |
26847 | Report? |
26847 | Robert, are you angry with me? |
26847 | Robert, are you ever sincere in anything? 26847 Robert, can you come back at four?" |
26847 | Robert, do you remember our compact? |
26847 | Robert, why do n''t you ask me what I have done? 26847 Robert,"said he,"do you suppose I would have come here if I had known what an atrocious humbug you are? |
26847 | Say? 26847 Shall I becloud that pure and youthful brow with metaphysic fumes? |
26847 | She has a conscience, I hope? 26847 She suggested it, did she? |
26847 | So as to keep him in reach as material for you? 26847 So the outside world still has charms, eh? |
26847 | So you''d like me to rush off to- morrow? 26847 Suppose I did something wrong and foolish?" |
26847 | Suppose I were to leave you, and go out of your life? |
26847 | That must have been when you had vexed her with some of your blunders: you do make blunders, you know? 26847 The moonlight was very fine, I suppose?" |
26847 | Then Cl-- she knows that you know? |
26847 | Then why could n''t you let me know him? |
26847 | Then why not take the benefit of it, with the rest of us? 26847 Then you found that your imagination had created, or greatly magnified, the difficulties, and that your fears were unnecessary?" |
26847 | There, Jane, do you hear that? 26847 To me, eh? |
26847 | Unhappy man,she said, with her tragedy queen air,"is it possible you imagined that you were a better judge of the proprieties than I?" |
26847 | Well then, what does all this secrecy mean? 26847 Well then, why not go on with literature? |
26847 | Well, Jane? |
26847 | Well, Jim, what was''it''that you valued so, and who were''they''who took it away? |
26847 | Well, brother? |
26847 | Well, have you made any more blunders? |
26847 | Well, old man,I said as the effete steed began laboriously to get in motion,"how is your valuable health?" |
26847 | Well, old man,I said with a cheerful air,"how do you get on?" |
26847 | Well, she knows I am here; do you suppose I would have come if she objected? 26847 Well, what comes next? |
26847 | Well,I asked,"are you going to dispute that proposition? |
26847 | What about? 26847 What about?" |
26847 | What business had he there? |
26847 | What cause? |
26847 | What chance is there for me then? |
26847 | What did I tell you? 26847 What did the lady do then?" |
26847 | What do you take her for? 26847 What does it all mean, Harty?" |
26847 | What has Mr. Hartman to do with it? 26847 What have I ever been but your friend? |
26847 | What have you been doing to Clarice, Robert? |
26847 | What have you done? |
26847 | What is the matter with you, Robert? 26847 What is there to be done that is worth doing? |
26847 | What should I have? 26847 What the deuce did we come to such a blanked place for?" |
26847 | What the deuce do you mean now? |
26847 | What''s the good of that? |
26847 | What, whether you notice him or not? |
26847 | What_ do_ you talk of, all the time? |
26847 | When you are operating on Hartman, for instance, it might confuse the programme if I were to say anything to him, eh? |
26847 | Where have you been all the time? |
26847 | Who do you practice your wits on, up here? |
26847 | Who-- I? 26847 Why are you eloquent only when you speak of him, brother?" |
26847 | Why should I treat him kindly? |
26847 | Why, what do you know about it, Robert? |
26847 | Would n''t they go round without your help? 26847 Would you mind explaining?" |
26847 | Yes, but-- can''t you see? 26847 Yes; why not? |
26847 | Yes? |
26847 | You are sure you did n''t mention it yourself? 26847 You did not cheapen me, surely, Robert?" |
26847 | You goose, how often have I told you there was nothing to suspect? 26847 You have no word to send, I suppose?--No, of course not: how could you? |
26847 | ''I am: why am I?'' |
26847 | ''Is he not going off for his fall fishing?'' |
26847 | ''What is the good of man? |
26847 | --Now who the devil was that, confound him? |
26847 | A conscience? |
26847 | And I say, do you always stand guard over her when anybody comes near?" |
26847 | And how can I question her, as if from vulgar curiosity? |
26847 | And if I had one, what does it matter what may have become of it?" |
26847 | And now do you want any more, or have you learnt your lesson?" |
26847 | And so has Mabel: have n''t you, my love?" |
26847 | And what has come over her? |
26847 | And what rights has he as against hers? |
26847 | And which party is one to join, when he sees nothing in either but selfish greed and stale traditions? |
26847 | And why should they go around, anyway? |
26847 | And your Princess, you think is of our society?" |
26847 | Anything else? |
26847 | Are not private talents a public trust? |
26847 | Are there any prayer- meetings near by, where I can go to freshen up?" |
26847 | Are you less concerned for her happiness than we are? |
26847 | Are you six years old? |
26847 | Are you up to another scramble?" |
26847 | As we went back he suddenly said,"Bob, who is this Clarice that your sister mentioned at the table? |
26847 | Bid me leap from yon beetling crag into the billows''angry roar--""Will you stop that, or shall I go into the house? |
26847 | Bob, will you be my friend?" |
26847 | Brother, how could you?" |
26847 | But I say, what did you mean about my being a cub at college?" |
26847 | But I say, what shall we do for a surgeon?" |
26847 | But a rock is a rock, and a field is a field, and who wants to know whether a tree is elm or maple? |
26847 | But by any of us; and more especially by-- ah-- by him?" |
26847 | But did n''t he ask?" |
26847 | But do n''t you want some supper?" |
26847 | But do you think me such a cad as to go back on my principles in search of so poor a shadow as happiness? |
26847 | But how can I leave the business now?" |
26847 | But how the deuce is one to remember all these rules and regulations? |
26847 | But if you give me your honor that a loss of heart is not the cause of these lamentations--""Why will you press that point, Bob? |
26847 | But practically, what am I to do?" |
26847 | But really now, are you going to uphold him in this-- against me?" |
26847 | But that was all nonsense: he never saw anybody like Clarice before-- how should he? |
26847 | But was it necessary to tell so many lies, Bob?" |
26847 | But what part do you want me to dress for in this improving moral drama?" |
26847 | But what the deuce am I to do? |
26847 | But what would you have me do?" |
26847 | But why did you lead me such a dance, and get me lost in that unconscionable doghole of a wilderness?" |
26847 | But, Bob, do you know why I love you?" |
26847 | But, if I may make so bold as to inquire, what are you up to now?" |
26847 | By the way, what_ is_ my real character? |
26847 | Ca n''t they attend to the business?" |
26847 | Ca n''t you see that it was impossible for me to let her know till I had had it out with you?" |
26847 | Ca n''t you see that the poor man is lonely, and really wants you?" |
26847 | Ca n''t you see, Jim? |
26847 | Can Hartman have waked her up too? |
26847 | Can you never be serious, Robert?" |
26847 | Can you never be serious, man?" |
26847 | Cousin Clarice, what have you done to him?" |
26847 | Dear Jane, can you not persuade her to treat my poor friend kindly?" |
26847 | Did it take you three hours to tell him that? |
26847 | Did n''t I manage it well? |
26847 | Did n''t one of your old philosophers say something like that?" |
26847 | Did n''t you tell me to keep dark, and not mention you?" |
26847 | Did you enjoy keeping this one, Bob?" |
26847 | Did you ever hear of such absurdity?" |
26847 | Did you expect that two such persons as they would agree easily and at once? |
26847 | Did you wish to speak to me particularly?" |
26847 | Did your friend never think that the girl might have led him on, either seriously or for mere amusement? |
26847 | Did your hero suppose it would interest nobody but himself?" |
26847 | Do I strike you as being changed for the better?" |
26847 | Do n''t you do as you like with me-- and with all of us? |
26847 | Do n''t you know that it is excessively difficult for her to allude, however remotely, to a matter like this? |
26847 | Do n''t you know that your good name is as sacred to me as Mabel''s? |
26847 | Do n''t you understand that in some cases a woman goes to a man, if there is one of the right kind at hand, much as a man goes to a woman? |
26847 | Do n''t you understand women yet?" |
26847 | Do the terms suit you?" |
26847 | Do treat him kindly, please; wo n''t you, now?" |
26847 | Do you desire to wait for that? |
26847 | Do you find this any better?" |
26847 | Do you imagine for a moment that my relatives, if I had any, would have subjected my innocence to such insidious guardianship? |
26847 | Do you know what even intelligent and charitable people would say of all this? |
26847 | Do you know where I would go if left to myself-- if these last months were blotted from the calendar?" |
26847 | Do you know, Princess, if you were to treat a stranger for half a day as you are treating me now, he would want to die for you?" |
26847 | Do you know, old man, that you are talking very freely?" |
26847 | Do you remember the time you had in class over that sonnet?" |
26847 | Do you see anything noble in this petty struggle for existence? |
26847 | Do you suppose I care less for Clarice''s happiness than you do-- or for Jim''s either? |
26847 | Do you suppose I''ve forgotten the larks we used to have, and the scrapes you got me out of, and how you coached me through that exam, in Calculus? |
26847 | Do you suppose women, of the high- minded and superior sort, have no hearts, no consciences, no sense of the duties of humanity? |
26847 | Do you think I would be fool enough to try any tricks on you, when I should be found out at once?" |
26847 | Do you think I would tempt you to violate what might be a confidence, Robert?" |
26847 | Do you think I''m trying to play some trick on you, after your model? |
26847 | Do you think men and women are mere puppets for you to play with? |
26847 | Do you think you belonged to Our Society in those days, Bob?" |
26847 | Does he think I am going up there merely to fish and hunt, and hear him talk a lot of rubbish about the Vanity of Life? |
26847 | Does her mind match her personal attractions?" |
26847 | Does she appreciate such fidelity?" |
26847 | Does the Madam object?" |
26847 | Excuse me at dinner, wo n''t you? |
26847 | Family duties first, my dear; what so sacred, so primary, as the ties of Home? |
26847 | Fancy name, is n''t it?" |
26847 | For instance, we often fancy that they care for us when they don''t-- and whose fault is that but ours? |
26847 | Forgive me this once, wo n''t you? |
26847 | Grant that my notions are as false and monstrous as you think them: a pleasant lot for my wife, would n''t it, to be in constant contact with them? |
26847 | Had n''t I better call them in?" |
26847 | Hartman is a luminous and transparent soul-- too much so for his own good: why did I practise occasionally on him? |
26847 | Hartman?" |
26847 | Hartman?" |
26847 | Has Clarice spoken to you? |
26847 | Has the Princess been taking her into the plan too, as well as me? |
26847 | Have I been so harsh with you, or so terrible of late?" |
26847 | Have I done anything wrong, and made a mess of this as usual?" |
26847 | Have I merited your approval, Serene Highness?" |
26847 | Have I not been serious through two weary months, and eminently so all this afternoon? |
26847 | Have I not set myself aside? |
26847 | Have I offended you? |
26847 | Have n''t I said enough? |
26847 | Have n''t you made mischief enough between them already?" |
26847 | Have to go back to it now and then, to keep alive, do you?" |
26847 | Have we any right to overlook the misery of millions, because a few of us like each other and are outwardly comfortable? |
26847 | Have you brought me here to destroy my faith, and pollute my morals, and poison my young life with the spectacle of your turpitude?" |
26847 | Have you got your best coat on?" |
26847 | Have you never seen me in action before?" |
26847 | Have you no proper respect for the head of the house?" |
26847 | Have you not been preparing me, and all of us, for this visit, for the last month? |
26847 | Have you returned with empty hands?" |
26847 | Have you spoken to Clarice yet?" |
26847 | He apologized, of course?" |
26847 | He has written me again, and this is what he says:"Do you want to confirm the heretical opinions you argued against so manfully? |
26847 | He--""Look here, my aged friend; why should you accuse me of playing durn tricks on people? |
26847 | Herbert must be right: what has Clarice done to him?" |
26847 | How can I change an opinion that is based accurately on facts? |
26847 | How can I go off blindly on a fool''s errand-- in her interest, but without commission or instructions?" |
26847 | How can I put a knife into the wound? |
26847 | How can I stride up to her and shout,''Here, tell me what to say to your runaway lover''? |
26847 | How can I tell whether I can trust you? |
26847 | How can you be so positive?" |
26847 | How can you expect to hear anything when you keep on interrupting Clarice like this?" |
26847 | How could I tell her?" |
26847 | How do all these poor creatures live? |
26847 | How do you expect a member from Wayback to be posted on all the usages of metropolitan society? |
26847 | How is this for a rehearsal?" |
26847 | How many people would sit out this talk of ours, or read it if we put it in print? |
26847 | How should I know what she wants of you? |
26847 | How should I know? |
26847 | How should I, a helpless stranger in a strange land, betrayed by the friend in whom I trusted? |
26847 | How''s them gells o''yourn as wanted to foller ye up here las''time?" |
26847 | I am prejudiced, you say? |
26847 | I began;"withdrawing from the world?" |
26847 | I believe I let you play on me to your heart''s content, and never complained-- did I?" |
26847 | I could n''t bring him along, you know: where is your sense of propriety? |
26847 | I did n''t say what her way might be in this case, did I? |
26847 | I knew it of old: what business had I to expose myself again? |
26847 | I mean, has your majesty any further commands? |
26847 | I must ask you one thing: why did you bring me here, to expose me to all this?" |
26847 | I say, Clarice, how long do you mean to go on in this way? |
26847 | I say, Clarice, you wo n''t be rough on poor Hartman, will you? |
26847 | I suppose it would hardly do for me to go back with you?" |
26847 | I tried to take a high hand, but what can a man do against three women? |
26847 | I was wrong, and I''m very sorry: what more can a man say? |
26847 | If I am to learn peace from a fine day, what from a stormy one? |
26847 | If I find in it something unique and precious, shall I thrust that aside, because the statutes have not provided for such a case? |
26847 | If I may n''t talk to anybody else, ca n''t I come to you with my opinions-- in odd moments, when your serene highness has nothing better on hand?" |
26847 | If a man has brains or a soul about him, what can he do with them in such a crowd? |
26847 | If so, is there any special sacredness about cold facts, that they should get up on end and demand to be published everywhere continually? |
26847 | If the minions of the law were after me, would I thank Mabel and Jane and Herbert for telling them which way I had gone? |
26847 | If you do n''t feel up to moral grandeur, why not go in for peace? |
26847 | If you startle the audience with such a speech as that, what will Mr. Hartman think? |
26847 | Imagine the rest, ca n''t you? |
26847 | In fact, I''ll not start till she does-- how could I? |
26847 | In the name of Satan and all the devils, what are you after now?" |
26847 | Is he lord of the manor, that no one may trespass on his demesne?" |
26847 | Is it my habit to go around trampling on the finer feelings of our nature? |
26847 | Is it necessary to go through all these formalities?" |
26847 | Is she satisfied?" |
26847 | Is this your diplomacy?" |
26847 | It is not of me she is thinking all this time: how should it be? |
26847 | It''s all very nice for me, but how about Hartman? |
26847 | Jim, have you got any grudge against me?" |
26847 | May I tell her what we have agreed on?" |
26847 | May I tell him that he can write to you?" |
26847 | Must I explain all this to you, as if you were Herbert? |
26847 | Must a man live in the woods, to form his own ethical code? |
26847 | Must my despicable selfishness add to her burdens? |
26847 | Must we arrange all the preliminaries? |
26847 | Not a word, of course, about our compact, and these rehearsals, and my coaching you-- O you great booby, were you capable of blurting that out? |
26847 | Now does she mean herself and Jane by that, or only Clarice and Hartman? |
26847 | Now how does Jane come to know so much? |
26847 | Now that is a nice way for the wife of one''s bosom to talk, is n''t it? |
26847 | Now was ever the superior male intellect thus disparaged? |
26847 | Now what the deuce did I say that for? |
26847 | Now what was it she knew? |
26847 | O Lord, is this to be the shape of it after all? |
26847 | O, Herbert? |
26847 | O, were you joking? |
26847 | Of course I maintained your dignity: what else was I there for? |
26847 | Once for all, will you do as I bid you, or not?" |
26847 | Or does he scent my deeper motives-- discern the Ethiopian within the encompassing pale, as they say in Boston? |
26847 | Poor Bob, who should know you through and through if I don''t?--Why do n''t you talk to me that way then, and improve me too?" |
26847 | Robert, where did you learn to respect a woman so?" |
26847 | Say I got my living by a certain craft, would that make the craft noble? |
26847 | See human nature? |
26847 | See that trout jump, in the pool down yonder? |
26847 | See?" |
26847 | Shall I sit passive, and see the clouds of care growing heavier about the wife of my bosom, and the furrows deepening in that once marble brow? |
26847 | Shall I, in base hope of easing my own burden, throw it on somebody else who but for me might go through existence lightly? |
26847 | She does not care especially for me: why should she? |
26847 | She had me there: who would expect a woman to remember things and bring them up in this way, so long after? |
26847 | She is younger than we: why should I bore her? |
26847 | She never was a coquette; but what is a girl so endowed to do? |
26847 | Should I call sentient beings out of the blessed gulf of nothingness, that they may pay a duty to my weakness by and by, and curse me in their hearts? |
26847 | Should I soil your dainty muslins with the antique dust of folios, and oil from the midnight lamp? |
26847 | So he never thought afterwards that there might have been a basis of fact for the fancy that made the trouble?" |
26847 | So long ago, you say, that I''ve forgotten what it''s like? |
26847 | So long as it was or might be merely herself, what could she do?" |
26847 | So that Miss Elliston is in a measure dependent on your kindness?" |
26847 | So that was only one of your pretences?" |
26847 | So what on earth is the use of making a fuss about it now? |
26847 | So when I was taking him to Newport, I said what it was desirable to say, and omitted what was not: how else should a rational man talk? |
26847 | So you do believe in something, after all?" |
26847 | Soothing effect of Nature on a world- worn bosom, and all that? |
26847 | Suppose people in general were to take up with these cheerful notions of yours, and go away from each other and out in the backwoods-- what then?" |
26847 | Tell me one thing: why did you never mention her to me?" |
26847 | That is fair to all parties, is n''t it?" |
26847 | That''s about it, eh?" |
26847 | The guilt of duplicity has lain heavy on my conscience for two months, but how can I help it? |
26847 | The madness which urged him on can easily be understood and-- except by the one concerned-- pardoned; but what devil possessed her, who shall say? |
26847 | Then a thought suddenly struck me: why not head off the difficulty by improving my position beforehand? |
26847 | There''s no danger of interference from the police up here, I judge? |
26847 | They could n''t be sorry for the lady-- why should they?" |
26847 | They might say,''If we enjoy our misery, what right have the rest of you to interfere?'' |
26847 | They must like it, or why should they do it? |
26847 | They were both foolish, of course; but what proportion does their joint offence bear to their punishment-- and ours? |
26847 | To what circumstance do you allude?" |
26847 | Truth for Truth''s sake is a fine motto, now?" |
26847 | Was I rough with you last night? |
26847 | Was Tommy the ewe- lamb, and did the dogs play Nathan and David with him?" |
26847 | Was it not selfish to leave me thus unconsoled and unconverted?" |
26847 | Was it that girl you met at Newport and afterwards in Naples? |
26847 | Was n''t I to come to you with notions that I could n''t put in words to anybody else?" |
26847 | Was n''t that right? |
26847 | Was that why you were so fond of Clarice, because she sometimes humored you? |
26847 | Well then, what in thunder have you been making all this fuss about, and pitching into me for?" |
26847 | Well then: you said something to Mabel about my health, and the fall fishing?" |
26847 | Well, anything more?" |
26847 | Well, is that all? |
26847 | Well, shall we fight about that? |
26847 | Well, why borrow trouble? |
26847 | Were explanations due from our side? |
26847 | What are a man''s feelings anyway, compared with a woman''s? |
26847 | What are flashing eyes, and tossing ringlets, and rosy lips, and jewelled fingers, to minds like ours? |
26847 | What are my feelings, my petty reluctance, to her interests? |
26847 | What are the arrangements?" |
26847 | What are your clerks paid for? |
26847 | What can a man like you know of the motives and intentions of a woman like me? |
26847 | What could the old fool be thinking of? |
26847 | What did Heine say about his irregular Latin nouns? |
26847 | What did I tell you about your looks? |
26847 | What did I tell you last night? |
26847 | What did I tell you? |
26847 | What did he say?" |
26847 | What did you say about me?" |
26847 | What did you talk about last night on the boat?" |
26847 | What do you and he know about a woman''s feelings?" |
26847 | What do you take me for, Clarice? |
26847 | What do you take me for? |
26847 | What do you think of Clarice?" |
26847 | What do you want me to do now?" |
26847 | What do you want to be playing these games on me for?" |
26847 | What does Clarice say to this? |
26847 | What does Mabel know?" |
26847 | What does a fellow want with slang, and pipes, and beer, and cheating other fellows on the street, when he has such entertainments at home? |
26847 | What does she want of your help in a thing like this? |
26847 | What else are you trying to conceal?" |
26847 | What else do you do?" |
26847 | What else have you to tell me? |
26847 | What has this to do with your defence of buffoonery, and apotheosis of clowns and pantomimes?" |
26847 | What have I got to be angry about now?" |
26847 | What have we to do with girls? |
26847 | What have you got? |
26847 | What have you to say to me then?" |
26847 | What if I quarreled with him? |
26847 | What if she had what she wanted within reach, and rudely thrust it away?" |
26847 | What is a plain man to do in it? |
26847 | What is it this time?" |
26847 | What is it you keep hinting at? |
26847 | What loftier, more disinterested task than to reclaim the wanderer, and guide the penitent in the way wherein he should go? |
26847 | What put you up to this?" |
26847 | What right had he to think of himself alone? |
26847 | What right have I?" |
26847 | What shall I say about you?" |
26847 | What use have I for a heart, any more than for a poodle? |
26847 | What was your motive in keeping this from me?" |
26847 | What were you talking about so long?" |
26847 | What were you two talking about all last evening? |
26847 | What will Mr. Hartman think of your morals?" |
26847 | What would I want to deceive you for? |
26847 | What would I want to hurt you for? |
26847 | What would she do that for?" |
26847 | What would they say of your theories, and your way of life? |
26847 | What would you do with a child who will keep on playing about moving cars, or mill machinery? |
26847 | What''s that got to do with it?" |
26847 | What''s the good of it?" |
26847 | What''s the good of that, when one is not a transcendent genius, destined for posterity? |
26847 | What''s the matter with you, old man?" |
26847 | What, I''have n''t done anything then, after all?'' |
26847 | When I see you at those little games of which you are to enjoy a monopoly, ca n''t I have an opinion of them?" |
26847 | When did I ever return aught but good for evil? |
26847 | When she is simple and obvious, she seems to reside in bare facts, which we may easily respect too much, for what are they but blackguard carnalities? |
26847 | When we got out under the pure breezes of heaven, Hartman turned to me and said,"So you call this reconciling me to domestic life, do you?" |
26847 | Where can you put them?" |
26847 | Where did Jane learn these tricks? |
26847 | Where do you propose to guide me to?" |
26847 | Where do you think I ought to go?" |
26847 | Where have you been to acquire such ideas and such manners? |
26847 | Where shall a man go for gentle sympathy and that sort of thing, if not to his own sister? |
26847 | Where then will be your gibes, your quips, your quiddities? |
26847 | Where will you get candor and veracity, those priceless pearls, if not from me?" |
26847 | Who misses me-- or what if some few did for a while? |
26847 | Who should know what her plans are, if not you? |
26847 | Who was talking of him?" |
26847 | Who would have thought him capable of such mean jealousy? |
26847 | Who''s playing tricks upon travellers, and misleading a confiding friend now? |
26847 | Whose employ are you in?" |
26847 | Whose fault was it?" |
26847 | Why ca n''t I see things at once, like Hartman? |
26847 | Why can you not learn that matters would move just as well, yes, and better, without your continual interference, dear? |
26847 | Why did n''t you go for a Professorship?" |
26847 | Why did n''t you use it on me? |
26847 | Why did you leave me so long in the dark, Bob?" |
26847 | Why do n''t you advise me to set up a kindergarten? |
26847 | Why do n''t you speak out and come straight to the point?" |
26847 | Why do you belie yourself so and hide your inmost self from all but me?" |
26847 | Why do you sit there grinning like an idiot?" |
26847 | Why do you suspect him so?" |
26847 | Why expose yourself to its temptations, its dangers, its hollow and soul- wearying forms? |
26847 | Why is it that the garish day seems to freeze our finer emotions, and reduce us to the monotonous level of a dull cold practicality? |
26847 | Why is it?" |
26847 | Why should I desire to supply the confiding public with shoes, or sugar, or sealing- wax? |
26847 | Why should I swell the number? |
26847 | Why should I?" |
26847 | Why will you insist on a definiteness which has so little place in nature? |
26847 | Why will you rob her and the world? |
26847 | Will what I propose answer?" |
26847 | Will you come now?" |
26847 | Will you never learn a decent respect for women-- you with a wife of your own, and boys growing up? |
26847 | Will you speak to her, or will you not?" |
26847 | Would I have married a man who neglected duty, and allowed his business to go to ruin, and his family to come to want? |
26847 | Would I sit down and howl over that? |
26847 | Would she let him stay there forever?" |
26847 | Would you desert your friend for me?" |
26847 | Would you take her part against me, and be my enemy-- you who are my only friend?" |
26847 | Would you take my part against him?" |
26847 | Yes, but what right have they to rope in the rest of us, who are not so addicted to the luxury of grief, and make us miserable too? |
26847 | You believed in friendship before; had n''t you better tell me what you think ails you?" |
26847 | You ca n''t expect him to take the same interest in Mr. Hartman as in Clarice: would he care for us as he does, if we were men? |
26847 | You did n''t expect balls and a casino, did you? |
26847 | You did n''t expect me to carry''em on a string over my shoulder, did you? |
26847 | You do n''t mean it would have done good instead of harm if I had told you earlier?" |
26847 | You have n''t been playing it on me, I hope? |
26847 | You have not betrayed her? |
26847 | You haven''t-- I suppose-- any word-- from Her?" |
26847 | You know how the books on Astronomy are made? |
26847 | You mean, brother, that you will do nothing till she authorizes you?" |
26847 | You promise?" |
26847 | You remember the Prime Minister, who after an exciting debate used to go home and play with his children? |
26847 | You say it never occurred to him that the worst part of his offence might be his levanting in such haste? |
26847 | You say the girl had shown goodness of heart, and a real interest in him? |
26847 | You see Mrs. T., Hartman? |
26847 | You understand?" |
26847 | You will not let it turn you against him now-- this fact that I was there? |
26847 | You will receive him kindly, for my sake, will you not?" |
26847 | You wo n''t mind my silence, or wait for me to speak? |
26847 | [ O thrice- accursed idiot, did I leave Mabel''s letter lying around loose?] |
26847 | [ She has, eh? |
26847 | _ If?_ Of course it will: it shall be all right, my dear child. |
26847 | and their eminent attainments? |
26847 | cried Clarice;"what had our coming to do with Mr. Hartman? |
26847 | or do you suppose I would say all this to any chance comer? |
26847 | that it might have been a more appropriate act of penitence to wait a day, or five minutes, and give the lady a chance to forgive him?" |
26847 | the rhyme and reason of a rural life, is it? |
26847 | what is the matter with them?" |
26847 | what should I do?" |
26847 | would I lie to you?" |
26847 | you great goose, what does she want with your preparation? |
36160 | A day to make one happy,continued Rachel; and she smiled at her own thoughts; for on such a beautiful day, how could she but prosper? |
36160 | A grocer''s shop? |
36160 | Am I? |
36160 | And Madame Rose,said Rachel,"where is Madame Rose?" |
36160 | And could you find a man of my age half so healthy, and so strong as I am-- just tell me that? |
36160 | And did n''t you make all them square boxes, a whole dozen of them? |
36160 | And did n''t you paint the walls? |
36160 | And here I am, dear,said Rachel, going in to her,"I am come to sit a while with you; for I am sure your poor father wants rest, does he not?" |
36160 | And is it thus, indeed, that fathers love their daughters? |
36160 | And must I leave it, Miss Gray? |
36160 | And no tea? |
36160 | And what did I come to live here for? |
36160 | And what does he do? |
36160 | And what more,thought Rachel,"can I hope or wish for?" |
36160 | And what shall we do with the old? |
36160 | And what will you give, then? |
36160 | And where did you think, stupid, that the money you have been nursed with these three months came from? 36160 And why not try again?" |
36160 | And why should n''t I? |
36160 | And you-- how do you get on? 36160 And, Mary, did you pray for your father?" |
36160 | Are you afraid when you are alone? |
36160 | As to the Chartists? |
36160 | Ay,thought Rachel,"you do not, my poor child, for what do you know of death?" |
36160 | Back or front? |
36160 | But could you not have stayed here? |
36160 | But do you sleep at night? |
36160 | But her father ai n''t a child, is he? |
36160 | But the Teapot, father,cried Mary,"where''s the Teapot?" |
36160 | But what brought Mrs. Brown here? |
36160 | But, father, you do n''t mean to say you let the room to him, without knowing his name? |
36160 | Dear me, father, how can you? |
36160 | Do n''t cry, Miss Gray,she said,"_ I_ do n''t cry; but do you know, it seems so odd that I should die, does n''t it now?" |
36160 | Do n''t you remember the lepers in the Gospel, who were made clean by our Saviour? 36160 Father,"querulously said Mary,"why did you shut the shop so early?" |
36160 | Father,said Rachel, speaking from her very heart, and looking earnestly in his face,"may I come and live with you?" |
36160 | Father,she said,"I have been a naughty child, have I not?" |
36160 | Going, Sir? |
36160 | Got anything to do? |
36160 | How I am,he echoed, with a suspicious gathering of the brow,"and why should n''t I be well, just tell me that?" |
36160 | How are you to- night, Mary? |
36160 | How much money have you got, father? |
36160 | How shall I pay Miss Gray for my little Mary''s keep? |
36160 | I dare say it does: you remind me of a little story I once read; shall I tell it to you? |
36160 | I did n''t say you was, did I? |
36160 | I have an old dress at home, that will just do for her,timidly said Rachel"Shall I bring it to- morrow night?" |
36160 | I spent a week on that Teapot,he said"did n''t I, Mary?" |
36160 | If I go on prospering so,he thought,"why should I not take-- in time, of course-- some smart young fellow to help me in the shop? |
36160 | Is it? |
36160 | Just stitch on, will you? |
36160 | Just take that paper, and leave it at the''Rose,''will you? 36160 Mary,"she resumed, after a pause,"you will not be afraid, if I go out, and leave you awhile alone, will you?" |
36160 | Mary,she said to her, one morning,"what ails you? |
36160 | Mary,she softly whispered,"did you say your prayers to- night?" |
36160 | Might she come to see him? |
36160 | Miss Gray,said Mary,"am_ I_ going to die?" |
36160 | Mother,asked Rachel, leaning up on one elbow,"was it you who called me, Rachel?" |
36160 | Mr. Jones,she said, somewhat sadly,"I must go where I am told, and do as I am bid; but, indeed, why do you not keep better tea?" |
36160 | None, sir? |
36160 | Now, Miss Gray,she said, with solemn indignation,"what do you mean by bringing back work in this style? |
36160 | Now, Rachel, what are you doing up there? |
36160 | Now, Rachel, what are you moping about? |
36160 | Pulling it down,he said, after looking at them for awhile,"an old rubbishing concern-- ain''t it?" |
36160 | S''pose I do? |
36160 | Sorry to hear you have been ill,said Saunders sitting down,"but you are coming round, ai n''t you?" |
36160 | Terms? |
36160 | Then what do you come creeping and crawling about the place for? |
36160 | Want anything? |
36160 | Want you? 36160 Well but, Miss Gray,"she said, at length,"what is there like me in this story; I am not a leper, am I?" |
36160 | Well then, s''pose you do-- you can tell me something about him, ca n''t you? |
36160 | Well, Miss Gray,''tain''t amiss, is it? |
36160 | Well, Mr. Jones,she cried,"and how are you? |
36160 | Well, and ca n''t you get the shop-- our shop-- done up too? |
36160 | Well, and how''s the old lady? |
36160 | Well, but what is it to be? |
36160 | Well, but what was it before you polished it up, father? |
36160 | Well, but what''s a man without capital? |
36160 | Well, but where''s the handle, then? |
36160 | Well, father, and how''s this week? |
36160 | Well, father, have you let the room? |
36160 | Well, father,eagerly exclaimed Mary, as soon as she saw her father;"who is he? |
36160 | Well, my girl, and how are you to- day? |
36160 | Well, one must not grudge time or trouble, must one, Mrs. Gray? 36160 Well, well, what''s the matter?" |
36160 | Well, what about it? |
36160 | Well,said Rachel,"how is Mary?" |
36160 | What about that? 36160 What ails you, dear?" |
36160 | What are you keeping Miss Gray there for? |
36160 | What for, child? |
36160 | What for? |
36160 | What for? |
36160 | What is it, my darling? |
36160 | What''s a leper? |
36160 | What''s his name? |
36160 | What''s the matter, father? |
36160 | Where is Mary? |
36160 | Where was the use, when he could not go on? |
36160 | Where''s the lid? |
36160 | Where''s the use of leaving it open? |
36160 | Who else did, I should like to know? |
36160 | Who ever said I would give anything? 36160 Who is gone, my dear?" |
36160 | Who is she? |
36160 | Who knows,she often asked herself, in her waking dreams,"who knows if the hour is not come at last? |
36160 | Who knows,thought Rachel,"but he will return some day? |
36160 | Who said I did n''t? |
36160 | Why ai nt I been a calling of you this last hour? |
36160 | Why did she not come then? |
36160 | Why do you tell me all these things? |
36160 | Why that''s what I always say,cried the bailiff with a second oath, rather bigger than the first,"a man must do his duty, must n''t he?" |
36160 | Why, here''s the handle, to be sure,replied Jones, rather nettled,"do n''t you see?" |
36160 | Why, where are you going? |
36160 | Will you send him to the workhouse, or not? |
36160 | You do n''t know who is going to take it next, do you? |
36160 | You do n''t mean to say my child is ill, Miss Gray? |
36160 | You forgive me, do n''t you? |
36160 | A time may come when the London churchyard shall be remembered as a thing that has been and is no more; but now who knows it not? |
36160 | Again he bent, and softly whispered:"My darling, did you say your prayers this morning?" |
36160 | Ai n''t she now, Jane? |
36160 | An ounce of your four shilling best, Mr. Jones, if you please?" |
36160 | And I think I have proved it; for have n''t I given you my little Mary? |
36160 | And do you think I''m agoing to stand that?" |
36160 | And if I did look at the shop at times, why, a cat can look at a king, ca n''t he?" |
36160 | And now, as he walked home, dreaming, he could not but sigh, for there was room, he could not doubt it-- but where was the capital? |
36160 | And now, ladies, we''ll put away the Teapot, and step into the parlour, and have a cup of tea, eh?" |
36160 | And s''pose you add a few pots of pickles?" |
36160 | And so she''s quite well, is she?" |
36160 | And so they were, but what sort of a shop was it to be? |
36160 | And so you''re not married yet-- are you, my girl?" |
36160 | And though Rachel was not unconscious of her offence, she added:"And strong or weak, father, are we not all in the hands of God?" |
36160 | And thus with harmless pleasure he could look around him and repeat:"Well, Miss Gray,''tain''t amiss, is it?" |
36160 | And to whom should Jane, when she wanted money, have come, but to me? |
36160 | And was it not all honourable, fair play?" |
36160 | And what sort of a shop-- public- house? |
36160 | And who but Rachel found Jane''s first tooth? |
36160 | And why and how should a step- mother have loved Rachel when her own father did not? |
36160 | And, as I was saying, that Saunders--""But, Mr. Jones, do n''t you think you had better see a doctor?" |
36160 | As she closed the parlour door, he looked at her, and lowering his voice, he said hesitatingly:"I could n''t see her, could I, Miss Gray?" |
36160 | As to bringing your father here, you must have been mad to think of it; for, if you ca n''t support yourself, how can you support him? |
36160 | Ask them to study: why, what is there they do not know, from the most futile accomplishment to the most abstruse science? |
36160 | At length, she wondered; then she feared-- why was her father''s house so silent and so deserted? |
36160 | Awhile he mused, then suddenly he observed:"Mary, my dear, had n''t you better go to bed?" |
36160 | Besides, if it be the will of God, must I not submit?" |
36160 | Besides, what had she to lose? |
36160 | Besides,"she added, checking a thought which might, she feared, be too proud,"besides, who, and what am I, that I should repine?" |
36160 | Brown?" |
36160 | But of this, what did Richard Jones-- the most unspiritual of good men, know? |
36160 | But, Mr. Jones,"she added, in a low timid voice,"why did you tell the man it was firewood, when you meant it as a counter?" |
36160 | But, indeed, when did she not pray? |
36160 | Did he know her? |
36160 | Did n''t you know of it?" |
36160 | Do n''t it, Mary?" |
36160 | Do you know him?" |
36160 | Do you wish for anything?" |
36160 | Do you wish to try the drawers? |
36160 | Eh?" |
36160 | Had she not failed that day-- had she not been too cold in her entreaties, too easily daunted by the first rejection? |
36160 | Had she not lent twenty pound three and six to Rachel? |
36160 | He had heard her out very quietly, and very quietly he replied:"Rachel, what did I go to America for?" |
36160 | He had not grown tired of Mary''s company; why had Mary grown tired of his? |
36160 | He questioned one of their body: what was to be sold in that shop-- did he know? |
36160 | He''ll pay his rent, and he''s respectable, and more do n''t concern us; and it''s time for you to go to Miss Gray, ai n''t it?" |
36160 | How dare you?" |
36160 | How long ago is it since you, and your mother, and Mary and I we settled that shop? |
36160 | I ai nt in the rag and bottle line, am I?" |
36160 | I did n''t ask to come in, did I? |
36160 | I didn''t-- did I?" |
36160 | If her little troubles were thus treated-- how would her heavier griefs fare? |
36160 | Is not profit the abject of commerce? |
36160 | Is there the sign of illness, or of disease upon me?" |
36160 | It rose to her lips to say--"If you were not the first to make little of me, would others dare to do so?" |
36160 | It was a happy death- bed-- one to waken hope, not to call forth sorrow; and yet what became of the life of Rachel when Jane was gone? |
36160 | Jim,"he added, hailing a lad who was passing by,"just tell them at the''Rose''to send down a pint of half- and- half, will you? |
36160 | Jones?" |
36160 | Keep quiet, will you?" |
36160 | Like to see it, Sir? |
36160 | Love me at once he can not; but why should he not with time?" |
36160 | Make me a cup of tea-- will you? |
36160 | Mary-- Mary, dear, just mind the shop awhile, will you?" |
36160 | Marylebone, ai n''t it? |
36160 | Miss Gray? |
36160 | Miss Gray?" |
36160 | Miss Gray?" |
36160 | Now, Rachel, where are you going?" |
36160 | Of that strength he had boasted in the morning; twelve hours had not gone round-- where was it now? |
36160 | Or was this but a false alarm, the phantom of his fears? |
36160 | Rachel the simpleton-- Rachel the slighted and laughed- at dressmaker? |
36160 | Rachel''s momentary fear was already over; she had said to herself,"and what can happen to me without God''s will?" |
36160 | Reader, hare you known many thinkers? |
36160 | She had grown up in the belief of her father''s rooted indifference; might she not have been mistaken? |
36160 | She looked at Rachel fixedly, earnestly;"Miss Gray,"she said;"what do you mean?" |
36160 | She might-- but where would the use have been? |
36160 | She succeeded so well that she only awoke from her dream when Mrs. Brown said to her,"Well, Rachel, why do n''t you answer, then?" |
36160 | She was free to depart any day she liked; and since she preferred to stay, why not bear it all patiently? |
36160 | Smith?" |
36160 | So, that is my reward for saving you from beggary, is it? |
36160 | Take down the shutters? |
36160 | The badness of others do n''t make us good-- does it? |
36160 | Then it was not to be Mr. Smithson''s own? |
36160 | Then, again she withdrew from him and said:"Father, do you know me?" |
36160 | Then, with her fading eyes fixed on Mary''s face, she said to Rachel:"Rachel, tell your father that I forgive him, will you?" |
36160 | There is an end to all things; and as for his old age, should he grow old, had he not the parish and the workhouse? |
36160 | To both still came the thought:"Was this the return to make to Rachel Gray for all her kindness?" |
36160 | Two hours had passed thus when Jones said to him:"You do n''t want for anything, do you?" |
36160 | Was he, Jones, now that his business was really improving, was he threatened with a rival? |
36160 | Was it not enough that she could not win the affection she most longed for? |
36160 | Was not Rachel beholden to her for food, shelter, chemist''s bill, and physician''s fees? |
36160 | Was the man right-- was he wrong? |
36160 | Well, I did consent, and I did compete with you, and knocked you over, as it were, but Mr. Jones, would not another have done it? |
36160 | Well, Rachel, and how are you getting on? |
36160 | Well, and what have you got to say to that, I should like to know?" |
36160 | What does he do? |
36160 | What if her mother should suspect that she had gone up for the purpose of thinking? |
36160 | What is he? |
36160 | What were those busy carpenters about? |
36160 | What''s his parish? |
36160 | When and how should she be able to pay so large a sum? |
36160 | When did prayer fail to prompt the kind, gentle words that fell from her lips, or to lend its daily grace to a pure and blameless life? |
36160 | When was God divided from her thoughts? |
36160 | Where are ye, elements of power and pathos of our modern epic: the novel? |
36160 | Where was little, blue- eyed Jane, her younger sister, her little companion and friend? |
36160 | Who but Rachel taught Jane to speak; and taught her how to walk? |
36160 | Who can tell how far the spirit lived in that dead body? |
36160 | Who knows-- who can tell? |
36160 | Whose else? |
36160 | Why did she pick up strange acquaintances?--above all, why did she mope, and want to be in the little back room? |
36160 | Why should he not do it? |
36160 | Why should she not, like the prodigal son, rise and go to her father? |
36160 | Why should she? |
36160 | Why was she not like every one? |
36160 | Without much minding these advantages, the stranger cast a quick look round the room, then said in his curt way:"Take four shillings for it? |
36160 | Wo n''t we, Mary?" |
36160 | You''re a milliner, stay- maker-- ain''t you?" |
36160 | ai nt you?" |
36160 | and is not competition the fairest way of securing profit? |
36160 | and should not, therefore, her will be Rachel''s law, and her pleasure be Rachel''s pleasure? |
36160 | and what do you stand dreaming there for? |
36160 | and what should I want you for?" |
36160 | asked Jones, looking as simple as he could,"stables?" |
36160 | at length said Rachel,"why did you not come to work to day, were you unwell?" |
36160 | but did n''t I always say so?" |
36160 | ca n''t you find it?" |
36160 | cried Jones, in his turn losing his temper,"just keep a civil tongue in your head, will you? |
36160 | do n''t you see they are making fun of you?" |
36160 | do you know me?" |
36160 | drawers of every size, some small, some large, just such drawers as he had in his shop? |
36160 | had he deceived him? |
36160 | had he spoken the truth? |
36160 | has it? |
36160 | he said,"this ai nt a stylish neighbourhood-- and who''ll buy my macaroni and my sauces?" |
36160 | if he took his own will for that of the Almighty, did he fall into a very uncommon mistake? |
36160 | inquired Jones, warming with his subject"Was I not a poor fellow once, and did I not marry my master''s daughter?" |
36160 | interrupted Mr. Jones,"how am I to know all that? |
36160 | it''s Mr. Smithson''s, is it?" |
36160 | it''s to be a shop, is it? |
36160 | murmured an inner voice;"the kingdom of Heaven is taken by storm-- and what is the kingdom of Heaven, but the realm of love?" |
36160 | said Rachel,"no, Mr. Jones, I only asked her why she did not come this morning?" |
36160 | she added with a sigh,"have you never noticed how like she is to what our own little Jane once was?" |
36160 | she began breathlessly,"What do you think? |
36160 | she cried within her heart,"why must I stand here in darkness looking at you? |
36160 | she cried,"do you know me?" |
36160 | she said,"why do n''t you take down the shutters?" |
36160 | she said,"you do n''t mean to call crocuses creatures-- do you? |
36160 | was it not possible that his daughter could become dear to Thomas Gray, as other daughters were dear to their father? |
36160 | we''ll take care of you,"zealously said Jane,"sha n''t we, Mary?" |
36160 | what now was her fate? |
36160 | what''s that?" |
36160 | who listens like Adam in Eden to the voice of the Lord, and treasures in his or her own heart that source of all knowledge? |
36160 | who made the counter?" |
36160 | why can not I go in to you, like other daughters to their father? |
36160 | why do you not love your child?" |
36160 | why is there so much sin?" |
36160 | why were they fabricating shelves and drawers? |
36160 | you do n''t care-- do you? |
36160 | you want to take it, do you?" |
36160 | zealously cried Mary, not relishing so much modesty,"why, did n''t you nail them shelves with your own hands?" |
41207 | Am I free? |
41207 | Are there not things more important than my head? |
41207 | Did she die a Christian? |
41207 | Everything, from the grain of sand to the plant, from the plant to Man, has its own law; how then can Humanity be without its law? |
41207 | God will not ask us,''What hast thou done for thy own soul?'' 41207 If there be no Mind supreme over all human minds, who can save us from the caprice of our fellows, should they chance to be stronger than ourselves? |
41207 | Italy, my Italy,he said,"the Italy that I have preached, the Italy of our dreams? |
41207 | Think you that poetry, whose birth was ushered by such deeds as these, can die ere it has lived? 41207 What good are ideas,"he asked,"unless you incarnate them in deeds?" |
41207 | What is liberty of trade for the man without capital or credit? 41207 What matter,"he wrote,"how many years or months I still live down here? |
41207 | When I hear men say,''There is a just man,''I ask,''How many souls are saved by him?'' |
41207 | Why do I speak to you of your duties before I speak to you of your rights? |
41207 | ***** How does he rank as a politician? |
41207 | A popular rhyme of the time, attributed to Dall''Ongaro, said:-- Where is Mazzini? |
41207 | Are race and geographical features, language and literature, customs and traditions? |
41207 | Are the grave- diggers to be suppressed in Hamlet? |
41207 | Are we believing in a millennium? |
41207 | Are we to copy, to reproduce Nature? |
41207 | Are you ever talking about me? |
41207 | But do rain or sunshine change his journey''s end?" |
41207 | But how shall man search for the ideal, how learn the providential design? |
41207 | But thou, didst thou not hear thy son, so dear to Genius and to Love, when he prayed for those who slew him? |
41207 | But what are my countrymen to do, who are trodden down under the iron heel of a foreign tyranny? |
41207 | But when the Austrians had been driven out, was Italy to be a federation of states or one united country? |
41207 | Can not she find a womanly feeling in her heart and ask the Cabinet to commute the punishment? |
41207 | DEAR FRIEND,--What can I say? |
41207 | Do they or not make for the country''s good? |
41207 | Do you smoke much?... |
41207 | Does Christianity supply it? |
41207 | Does she read a newspaper? |
41207 | Everything is now resting on Garibaldi: will he go on, without_ interruption_, in his invading career, or will he not? |
41207 | Give my love to Mrs Malleson and to Miss K. M. How are they? |
41207 | His last conscious words were--"Believe in God? |
41207 | How are you? |
41207 | How is your father? |
41207 | How is your wife? |
41207 | How many poor hens kept in a state of bondage, and tied by the leg somewhere, are awaiting for a revolutionist to untie them?... |
41207 | How to discern it? |
41207 | How train them to perfect honesty,"when tyranny and espionage compel men to be false or silent on two- thirds of their opinions?" |
41207 | How will you give him more time and more energy to develop his faculties except by lessening the number of hours of labour and increasing his profits? |
41207 | I think they are philosophically and politically wrong; but are we to refute a philosophical error with hanging?" |
41207 | If the progress of humanity is preordained, what need for man to use his puny powers? |
41207 | If there be no law, sacred and inviolable, not created by man, what standard can we find to judge whether an act be just or not? |
41207 | In the name of whom or what can we protest against oppression and inequality? |
41207 | Is Nature anything but the symbolic representation of some truth, which we are to evolve? |
41207 | Is he still enthusiastic about Gladstone? |
41207 | Is not the grotesque causing the beautiful to shine by contrast? |
41207 | Is not_ every_ object more or less so? |
41207 | Is that a heresy for you? |
41207 | Italy, the great, the beautiful, the moral Italy of my heart? |
41207 | MY DEAR FRIEND,--Are you astonished at our inertness? |
41207 | Only there must be in Love absolute_ trust_; and it is very seldom that this blessing depends[? |
41207 | Only, what is Beauty? |
41207 | Or is the drapery of Nature, Nature? |
41207 | Or was it rather the noble error of one, who, with his mind fixed on the highest, scorns the high? |
41207 | Shall I love you less because I go elsewhere to work? |
41207 | Shall it on Earth? |
41207 | Shall the battle be finally won during life- time? |
41207 | Stansfeld said,"Why should not all property be vested in society?" |
41207 | The men whom he had sent to a patriot''s death, had they died in vain? |
41207 | They gave no answer to the question, For what are men to use their liberty? |
41207 | Was compromise with Piedmont impossible? |
41207 | Was it all a frightful error, an empty dream born of ambition and pride of intellect? |
41207 | Was it for some grandiose, impossible chimera, that he had taken men from quiet useful lives and the simple round of kindliness? |
41207 | What are free opportunities of education for him who has no time for study?" |
41207 | What are you doing at Pinner? |
41207 | What authority had he still to preach a creed, which meant the sacrifice of thousands more, the unhappiness of many another mother? |
41207 | What do you anticipate for England''s politics? |
41207 | What do you read? |
41207 | What does Peter say? |
41207 | What field for literature like the mighty, moving pageant of the democratic world? |
41207 | What good were rights to men, who were too poor or ignorant to use them? |
41207 | What if he dreamed dreams, that for generations yet may be no more than dreams? |
41207 | What if he marred his work by mistakes and miscalculations? |
41207 | What if his mental ken reached not to all the knowledge of the age? |
41207 | What little dogs have you caused to disappear? |
41207 | What on earth has he at his age to think about? |
41207 | What on earth,"asked the offended officer,"has he at his age to think about? |
41207 | What then is the body of doctrine for the Church of the future, as Mazzini conceived it? |
41207 | What, then, are the inherent, essential marks of nationality? |
41207 | When he asked the Piedmontese government,"Are you with Austria or against her?" |
41207 | Where is then a possible foundation for your essays and sketches? |
41207 | Who am I, whom he praises?" |
41207 | Who shall say, who does best service for humanity, he who seeks the small attainable, or he who''heaven''s success finds or earth''s failure?'' |
41207 | Why is Nature beautiful? |
41207 | Why should he consent? |
41207 | Why should men die for their fellows, why suffer prison, exile, poverty, if happiness be the end of life? |
41207 | Why should not Mazzini abandon his impossible dream of the republic, and work together for the bigger end with a man as democratic as himself? |
41207 | Why should they toil on, knowing they would not see their labour''s fruits, to make life better for a future generation? |
41207 | Will you call him bad? |
41207 | Will you love me less, when you can only love me by working? |
41207 | Would he, had he had the opportunity, have done what he held higher than to teach through books, and been the missionary of a religion? |
41207 | Would his mission have found an answer or ended in pitiable collapse? |
41207 | [ 17] Who will say that this last more modest vision may not some day and in some sense be fulfilled? |
41207 | [ 33] Will not some Italian artist paint the scene? |
41207 | [ 49]--or twenty ready to take £ 50 each? |
41207 | against me? |
41207 | at our talking so much and doing so little? |
41207 | but''What hast thou done for the souls of others, the sister- souls I gave thee?''" |
41207 | or to add a work of our own, finding out the idea shut in within every symbol? |
35698 | How do you make that out, Master Vellum? |
35698 | Indeed,said Mrs. D.,"does he turn the Corner?" |
35698 | Wherein lies Happiness? 35698 Why do n''t you see? |
35698 | ''O mighty Princess, did you ne''er hear tell What your poor servants know but too too well? |
35698 | --And again,"Keats,"says a friend,"when will you come to town again?" |
35698 | 1818? |
35698 | 2, 1817? |
35698 | 29? |
35698 | A year ago I could not understand in the slightest degree Raphael''s cartoons-- now I begin to read them a little-- And how did I learn to do so? |
35698 | Ai n''t I its uncle? |
35698 | Alas, my friend, your coat sits very well; Where may your Taylor live? |
35698 | All I can do is by plump contrasts; were the fingers made to squeeze a guinea or a white hand?--were the lips made to hold a pen or a kiss? |
35698 | And how do you prove that there is no such principle giving a bias to the imagination and a false colouring to poetry? |
35698 | And is not this extraordinary talk for the writer of Endymion, whose mind was like a pack of scattered cards? |
35698 | And what have you there in the Basket? |
35698 | And yet does not the word"mum"go for one''s finger beside the nose? |
35698 | Are there any flowers in bloom you like-- any beautiful heaths-- any streets full of Corset Makers? |
35698 | Are these facts or prejudices? |
35698 | Are you quizzing me or Miss Waldegrave when you talk of promenading? |
35698 | As soon as I saw them so nearly I said to myself"How is it they did not beckon Burns to some grand attempt at Epic?" |
35698 | Because you were in expectation of George''s Letter and so waited? |
35698 | But is this fair? |
35698 | But, will it not hurt you? |
35698 | Can it be that even the greatest Philosopher ever arrived at his Goal without putting aside numerous objections? |
35698 | Did I not in a letter to you make a promise to do so? |
35698 | Did not Mrs. A. sport her Carriage and one? |
35698 | Did our great Poets ever write short Pieces? |
35698 | Do n''t you think I am brushing up in the letter way? |
35698 | Do not they like this better than what they can read through before Mrs. Williams comes down stairs? |
35698 | Do we read with more pleasure of the ravages of a beast of prey than of the Shepherd''s pipe upon the Mountain? |
35698 | Do you desire Compliments to one another? |
35698 | Do you know Uncle Redhall? |
35698 | Do you know him? |
35698 | Do you not see how necessary a World of Pains and troubles is to school an Intelligence and make it a soul? |
35698 | Do you not think this is ominous of good? |
35698 | Do you not think this of great import? |
35698 | Do you ride on Horseback? |
35698 | Does Mrs. Hunt tear linen as straight as ever? |
35698 | Does Mrs. S. cut bread and butter as neatly as ever? |
35698 | Does Shelley go on telling strange stories of the deaths of kings? |
35698 | Does she continue the Medicines that benefited her so much? |
35698 | For what listen they? |
35698 | From want of regular rest I have been rather_ narvus_--and the passage in_ Lear_--"Do you not hear the sea?" |
35698 | Give me this credit-- Do you not think I strive-- to know myself? |
35698 | Good Heavens Lady how the gemini Did you get here? |
35698 | Had I not better begin to look about me now? |
35698 | Has Martin met with the Cumberland Beggar, or been wondering at the old Leech- gatherer? |
35698 | Has he a turn for fossils? |
35698 | Have these hot days I brag of so much been well or ill for your health? |
35698 | Have ye tippled drink more fine Than mine Host''s Canary wine? |
35698 | Have you a clear hard frost as we have? |
35698 | Have you heard any further mention of his retiring from Business? |
35698 | Have you heard from Rice? |
35698 | Have you heard in any way of George? |
35698 | Have you met with any Pheasants? |
35698 | Have you shot a Buffalo? |
35698 | Have you some warm furs? |
35698 | Hear ye not the hum Of mighty workings in the human mart? |
35698 | Here are the Mermaid lines, Souls of Poets dead and gone, What Elysium have ye known, Happy field, or mossy cavern, Fairer than the Mermaid Tavern? |
35698 | Here it is,"How is it wi''yoursel?" |
35698 | Here''s some doggrel for you-- Perhaps you would like a bit of b----hrell-- Where be ye going, you Devon Maid? |
35698 | His Psyche true? |
35698 | How are the Nymphs? |
35698 | How are you going on now? |
35698 | How came miledi to give one Lisbon wine-- had she drained the Gooseberry? |
35698 | How came you on with my young Master Yorkshire Man? |
35698 | How can that be when Endymion and I are at the bottom of the sea? |
35698 | How can you ask such a Question? |
35698 | How could I employ myself out of reach of libraries? |
35698 | How could you do without that assistance? |
35698 | How do you come on with the gun? |
35698 | How does the work go on? |
35698 | How goes it with Brown? |
35698 | How have you got on among them? |
35698 | How is Hazlitt? |
35698 | How is it that by extreme opposites we have, as it were, got discontented nerves? |
35698 | How is it that his circumstances have altered so suddenly? |
35698 | How is the old tadpole gardener and little Master next door? |
35698 | How then are these sparks which are God to have identity given them-- so as ever to possess a bliss peculiar to each one''s individual existence? |
35698 | How, but by the medium of a world like this? |
35698 | However, I hope to do my duty to myself in a week or so; and then I''ll try what I can do for my neighbour-- now, is not this virtuous? |
35698 | Hunt, got into your new house? |
35698 | I can not always be( how do you spell it?) |
35698 | I go amongst the buildings of a city and I see a Man hurrying along-- to what? |
35698 | I have nothing to speak of but myself, and what can I say but what I feel? |
35698 | I know that they are more happy and comfortable than I am; therefore why should I trouble myself about it? |
35698 | I mean in what mood and with what accompaniment do you like the sea best? |
35698 | I must absolutely get over this-- but how? |
35698 | I should have delighted in setting off for London for the sensation merely,--for what should I do there? |
35698 | I think of seeing her to- morrow; have you any message? |
35698 | I thought it better not, for better times will certainly come, and why should they be unhappy in the meantime? |
35698 | If Reynolds had not taken to the law, would he not be earning something? |
35698 | If better events supersede this necessity what harm will be done? |
35698 | If he will say this to Reynolds, what would he to other people? |
35698 | In Devonshire they say,"Well, where be ye going?" |
35698 | In that which becks,"etc., 64 Whitehead, 63, 82"Why did I laugh to- night? |
35698 | Intelligences are atoms of perception-- they know and they see and they are pure, in short they are God-- how then are Souls to be made? |
35698 | Is he in town yet? |
35698 | Is it a paradox of my creating that''one murder makes a villain millions a Hero''? |
35698 | Is it too daring to fancy Shakspeare this Presider? |
35698 | Is there another life? |
35698 | Is there any news of George? |
35698 | Is this to be borne? |
35698 | Is this worth louting or playing the hypocrite for? |
35698 | Know you the three great crimes in faery land? |
35698 | LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI O what can ail thee Knight at arms Alone and palely loitering? |
35698 | Lamb took hold of the long clothes, saying:"Where, God bless me, where does it leave off?" |
35698 | Marie they are all gone hame Frae happy wadding, Whilst I-- Ah is it not a shame? |
35698 | May I sing to thee As thou wast hymned on the shores of Baià ¦? |
35698 | Might I not at that very instant have been cogitating on the Characters of Saturn and Ops? |
35698 | Must he die Circled by a humane society? |
35698 | My dear Bailey-- Twelve days have pass''d since your last reached me.--What has gone through the myriads of human minds since the 12th? |
35698 | My dear Brother and Sister-- How is it that we have not heard from you from the Settlement yet? |
35698 | My dear Brown, what am I to do? |
35698 | My dear Fanny-- Your Letter to me at Bedhampton hurt me very much,--What objection can there be to your receiving a Letter from me? |
35698 | My dear Taylor-- Can you lend me £30 for a short time? |
35698 | N._ Yes( with a grin), it''s Mr. Hunt''s, is n''t it?--_Gattie._ Hunt''s? |
35698 | Not a syllable about my friends? |
35698 | Now is there anything more unpleasant( it may come among the thousand and one) than to be so journeying and to miss the goal at last? |
35698 | Now why did you not send the key of your cupboard, which, I know, was full of papers? |
35698 | Now you have by this time crumpled up your large Bonnet, what do you wear-- a cap? |
35698 | O what can ail thee Knight at arms So haggard, and so woe- begone? |
35698 | O where?" |
35698 | O, where are thy dominions? |
35698 | Old Peter Pindar is just dead: what will the old King and he say to each other? |
35698 | Or are fruits of paradise Sweeter than those dainty pies Of Venison? |
35698 | Or may I woo thee In earlier Sicilian? |
35698 | Peacock has damned satire-- Ollier has damn''d Music-- Hazlitt has damned the bigoted and the blue- stockinged; how durst the Man?! |
35698 | Perhaps a superior being may look upon Shakspeare in the same light-- is it possible? |
35698 | Perhaps there might be a quarrel)[106]***** I ought to make a large"?" |
35698 | Red Crag!--What Madam can you then repent Of all the toil and vigour you have spent To see Ben Nevis and to touch his nose? |
35698 | Richer is uncellar''d cavern, Than the merry mermaid Tavern? |
35698 | Shakspeare makes Enobarb say-- Where''s Antony? |
35698 | Shall I awake and find all this a dream? |
35698 | Shall I dance with Miss Waldegrave? |
35698 | Shall I give you Miss Brawne? |
35698 | Shall you be able to get a good pointer or so? |
35698 | Should you like me for a neighbour again? |
35698 | So how am I to see Haslam''s lady and family, if I even went? |
35698 | So how can I with any face begin without a dissertation on letter- writing? |
35698 | Souls of Poets dead and gone, Are the winds a sweeter home? |
35698 | Surely I dreamt to- day; or did I see The winged Psyche, with awaked eyes? |
35698 | Sweet little red- feet why did you die? |
35698 | TO FANNY KEATS April 17, 1819? |
35698 | TO JOSEPH SEVERN Dec. 6? |
35698 | TO JOSEPH SEVERN Oct. 27? |
35698 | That if one be a Self- deluder accounts must be balanced? |
35698 | That is the nearest place-- or by our la''kin or lady kin, that is by the virgin Mary''s kindred, is there not a twig- manufacturer in Walthamstow? |
35698 | That was no wonder; but Goodman Delver, where was the wonder then? |
35698 | The occasion of my writing to- day is the enclosed letter-- by Postmark from Miss W----[49] Does she expect you in town George? |
35698 | The winged boy I knew: But who wast thou O happy happy dove? |
35698 | Then how can you be so unreasonable as to ask me why I did not? |
35698 | Then who would go Into dark Soho, And chatter with dack''d hair''d critics, When he can stay For the new- mown hay, And startle the dappled Prickets? |
35698 | Then, why are you at Carisbrooke? |
35698 | There are knotted oaks-- there are lusty rivulets? |
35698 | There, you rogue, I put you to the torture; but you must bring your philosophy to bear, as I do mine, really, or how should I be able to live? |
35698 | These Kirk- men have done Scotland good( Query?). |
35698 | They are great Men doubtless, but how are they to be compared to those our countrymen Milton and the two Sidneys? |
35698 | They really surprised me with super civility-- how did Mrs. A. manage it? |
35698 | Thieves and murderers would gain rank in the world, for would any of them have the poorness of spirit to condescend to be a Twang- dillo- dee? |
35698 | Through the medium of the Heart? |
35698 | To beg suffrages for a seat on the benches of a myriad- aristocracy in letters? |
35698 | Trimmer? |
35698 | Wait for the issue of this Tragedy? |
35698 | Was I born for this end? |
35698 | Well, Hunt-- What about Hunt? |
35698 | Well, whispered Fanny to me, if it is born with us, how can we help it? |
35698 | Wentworth Place, Monday Morn--[ December 6? |
35698 | Wentworth Place, Wednesday[ October 27? |
35698 | Were I in health it would make me ill, and how can I bear it in my state? |
35698 | What Madam was it you? |
35698 | What are you doing this morning? |
35698 | What can I do? |
35698 | What can we do now? |
35698 | What could I do there? |
35698 | What could I have done without my Plaid? |
35698 | What do then? |
35698 | What do you have for breakfast, dinner, and supper? |
35698 | What is to be the end of this? |
35698 | What makes the great difference between valesmen, flatlandmen and mountaineers? |
35698 | What reparation can you make to me and my family? |
35698 | What sort of a place is Retford? |
35698 | What sort of shoes have you to fit those pretty feet of yours? |
35698 | What think you of this? |
35698 | What think you of £25,000? |
35698 | When I asked for letters at Port Patrick, the man asked what regiment? |
35698 | When I asked"Is Mrs. Wylie within?" |
35698 | Where are you now?--in Judea, Cappadocia, or the parts of Libya about Cyrene? |
35698 | Where can I look for consolation or ease? |
35698 | Where do you sup? |
35698 | Where''s the Maid Whose lip mature is ever new? |
35698 | Where''s the cheek that doth not fade, Too much gaz''d at? |
35698 | Where''s the eye, however blue, Doth not weary? |
35698 | Where''s the face One would meet in every place? |
35698 | Where''s the voice however soft One would hear too oft and oft? |
35698 | Where? |
35698 | Where_ might_ my Taylor live? |
35698 | Which is the best of Shakspeare''s plays? |
35698 | Which, by the bye, will be a capital motto for my poem, wo n''t it? |
35698 | Whisper''d I, and touch''d his brow;"What art thou? |
35698 | Who can help it? |
35698 | Who could wish to be among the common- place crowd of the little famous-- who are each individually lost in a throng made up of themselves? |
35698 | Who would be Braggadochio to Johnny Bull? |
35698 | Who would expect to find the ruins of a fine Cathedral Church, of Cloisters Colleges Monasteries and Nunneries in so remote an Island? |
35698 | Who would live in a region of Mists, Game Laws, indemnity Bills, etc., when there is such a place as Italy? |
35698 | Why be teased with"nice- eyed wagtails,"when we have in sight"the Cherub Contemplation"? |
35698 | Why did I laugh? |
35698 | Why did I not stop at Oxford in my way? |
35698 | Why did he make you believe that he was a man of property? |
35698 | Why have you not written to me? |
35698 | Why not live sweetly as in the green trees? |
35698 | Why pretty thing could you not live with me? |
35698 | Why should the_ old_ Cat come to me? |
35698 | Why should we be owls, when we can be eagles? |
35698 | Why should we kick against the Pricks, when we can walk on Roses? |
35698 | Why with Wordsworth''s"Matthew with a bough of wilding in his hand,"when we can have Jacques"under an oak,"etc.? |
35698 | Why would you leave me-- sweet dove why? |
35698 | Why, did I not promise to do so? |
35698 | Will it be before you have passed? |
35698 | Will not this do? |
35698 | Will the little bairn have made his entrance before you have this? |
35698 | Will you have the goodness to do this? |
35698 | With what sensation do you read Fielding?--and do not Hogarth''s pictures seem an old thing to you? |
35698 | Would it not be a good speck to send you some vine roots-- could it be done? |
35698 | Ye tight little fairy just fresh from the dairy, Will ye give me some cream if I ask it? |
35698 | Yet may I not in this be free from sin? |
35698 | Yet when I consider that a sheet of paper contains room only for three pages and a half, how can I do justice to such a pregnant subject? |
35698 | You ask,''Are we gratified by the cruelties of Domitian or Nero?'' |
35698 | You know a good number of English ladies; what encomium could you give of half a dozen of them? |
35698 | You, sir, do you not all this? |
35698 | [ 104] So copied by Woodhouse: query"battle- axe"? |
35698 | [ 31]_ Sic_: for"unpaid"? |
35698 | [ 95] For"put together"? |
35698 | [ April 17, 1819?] |
35698 | [ Hampstead, March 1818?] |
35698 | [ London,] Sunday Evening[ March 2, 1817?]. |
35698 | [ March 29? |
35698 | and how is the heart to become this Medium but in a world of Circumstances? |
35698 | and tell me who Has a Mistress so divine? |
35698 | and what are touchstones but provings of his heart, but fortifiers or alterers of his nature? |
35698 | and what art thou?" |
35698 | and what is this?" |
35698 | do you pay the Miss Birkbecks a morning visit-- have you any tea? |
35698 | do you put your hair in papers of a night? |
35698 | is not this a tooth?" |
35698 | is where do you hang out? |
35698 | let me see!--being half- drowned by falling from a precipice, is a very romantic affair: why should I not take it to myself? |
35698 | or do you milk- and- water with them-- What place of Worship do you go to-- the Quakers, the Moravians, the Unitarians, or the Methodists? |
35698 | or is it not true that here, as in other cases, the enormity of the evil overpowers and makes a convert of the imagination by its very magnitude? |
35698 | or thy smiles Seek as they once were sought, in Grecian isles, By Bards who died content on pleasant sward, Leaving great verse unto a little clan? |
35698 | that is, is he capable of sinking up to his Middle in a Morass? |
35698 | thou and I are here sad and alone; Say, wherefore did I laugh? |
35698 | who can avoid these chances? |
35698 | who would not rest satisfied with his hintings at good and evil in the Paradise Lost, when just free from the Inquisition and burning in Smithfield? |
35698 | without mentioning lunch and bever,[98] and wet and snack-- and a bit to stay one''s stomach? |
4814 | I have tamed people of iron in my day,said he, contemptuously,"shall I not easily crush these men of butter?" |
4814 | What vulpine kind of mercy was it on the part of the Cardinal, while making such deadly insinuations, to recommend the imprisoned victim to clemency? |
4814 | What will the Duke of Alva and all the Spaniards say of such a precipitate flight? |
4814 | Will they not say that your Excellency has fled from the consciousness of guilt? |
34224 | And then he-- hum-- did it? |
34224 | And what do you say of him who is hated by all the people of his village? |
34224 | And what is that, princess? |
34224 | And what is your rate of charge for the''_ odor femminino_''? |
34224 | Anything else? |
34224 | Anything else? |
34224 | Are you sure you can control yourself, Miss Verinder? |
34224 | By what right are we enemies, princess? |
34224 | Can you tell me what I ought to think of a certain Samuel Brohl? |
34224 | Do you doubt it? |
34224 | Do you mean to watch him while he sleeps? |
34224 | Do you really mean to say that you do n''t feel any interest in what you are going to do? |
34224 | Do you refuse to give me satisfaction? |
34224 | Does nobody ever kiss you, poor little man? |
34224 | Gabbett, you''ve been out before-- how''s it done? |
34224 | Has my poor salon still the misfortune to be hurtful to you? |
34224 | He there, who looks like an end of thread that has escaped out of a tailor''s needle? |
34224 | Him? 34224 Honored sir, will you do me the favor to view and to make trial of this purse?" |
34224 | How do I know? 34224 How do I know?" |
34224 | How is he now? |
34224 | How the devil am I to sleep,he said,"with_ this_ on my mind?" |
34224 | How used you the Great Seal of England? |
34224 | I suppose the room must be dark, as it was last year? |
34224 | If I refuse to give it up, you will doubtless appeal to my delicacy? |
34224 | Is he nervous? 34224 Is it my lot to die? |
34224 | Is it, Gabbett? |
34224 | Is there any objection, sir,he asked,"to taking Mr. Bruff into this part of the business?" |
34224 | Is there much more? |
34224 | Might I presume to ask,he said,"what my young lady and the medicine chest have got to do with each other?" |
34224 | O Death, canst thou not wait? 34224 Shall it be counsel?" |
34224 | Since therefore it is clear that what is self- moved is eternal, who can deny that this essential characteristic has been imparted to the soul? 34224 That was the last?" |
34224 | Then how used you it? |
34224 | Used it,--yet could not explain where it was? |
34224 | What do you mean, child? |
34224 | What is it, you mite? |
34224 | What is the matter, Sylvia? |
34224 | What satisfaction do I owe you? |
34224 | What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
34224 | What was it the lady that kissed us said, Tommy? |
34224 | What would you do without me? |
34224 | When? |
34224 | Where are we to go? 34224 Where''s Cox?" |
34224 | Who knows? |
34224 | Who then, my liege? |
34224 | Why should you disturb him? |
34224 | Why, do you think of selling me your clothing? |
34224 | Why? |
34224 | Will it hurt much, Tommy? |
34224 | Will you swear it? |
34224 | Yea, Godès armès,quoth this riotóur,"Is it such peril with him for to meet? |
34224 | [ 223] The proudest of these riotourès three Answéred again:What, carl,[224] with sorry grace, Why art thou all forwrappèd[225] save thy face? |
34224 | _ Eh bien!_ what is it? |
34224 | ***** Have you ever, Philip, my boy, looked at it in this way? |
34224 | --"Have you ever seen any evidence, my old friend,"said I,"of that?" |
34224 | A pause in the action of the opium? |
34224 | After all that has happened, may I trust to your influence to back me?" |
34224 | After what you have both seen, are you both satisfied so far?" |
34224 | Again, what should you say was the virtue of asses and mules? |
34224 | Ah, What else is like the gondola? |
34224 | And again, what about being with my brother, or leaving him and taking my son? |
34224 | And did you hail the platform wild Where once the Austrian fell Beneath the shaft of Tell? |
34224 | And does n''t he sometimes wonder whether he has gained most or lost most by learning his trade? |
34224 | And even though we shall meet immediately, yet will you write to me anything you can find to say? |
34224 | And he added,"If you are fond of being astonished, monsieur, will you remain still another instant in this den?" |
34224 | And if misfortune continues to persecute us, what will become of our poor boy? |
34224 | And if such be the result, what shall we gain by what is called the progress of society? |
34224 | And is it contended that the major part of this Babel congregation is invested with the right to build up at its pleasure a new government? |
34224 | And it must all happen again in the same way, must n''t it?" |
34224 | And what good is it when we are together and chatter whatever comes to our tongues? |
34224 | And what kind of vine shall we admire? |
34224 | And what said all you more? |
34224 | And what shall I say about my boy Marcus, who ever since his faculties of perception awoke has felt the sharpest pangs of sorrow and misery? |
34224 | And when the malicious devices of their enemies were perfected( for what further could they attempt after their death?) |
34224 | And where the land she travels from? |
34224 | And who may measure the value of this department of public duty? |
34224 | Are not all her visible charms sown thick with what are to him the signs and symbols of hidden decay? |
34224 | Are you sure it will do no harm?" |
34224 | As I kept my eyes more intently fixed upon this spot, Africanus said to me:--"How long, I beg of thee, will thy spirit be chained down to earth? |
34224 | As soon as I had recovered myself I said,"What is this sound, so great and so sweet, which fills my ears?" |
34224 | At civil hospitable men, that fear The gods? |
34224 | At the city gate I was compelled to hear again from the sentinel,"Where has the gentleman left his shadow?" |
34224 | At what do you value this work of art?" |
34224 | Be ye afraid of me that am your friend? |
34224 | But grant that the people of Spanish America are ignorant, and incompetent for free government; to whom is that ignorance to be ascribed? |
34224 | But he is well? |
34224 | But he will win back the constitution? |
34224 | But how much further shall I pursue the unattainable? |
34224 | But nathèless, if I can shape it so, That it departed were among us two, Had I not done a friendès turn to thee?" |
34224 | But surely it is hard to give up one''s children? |
34224 | But then I undertook the management of those games which Cæsar''s heir celebrated for Cæsar''s victory? |
34224 | But what is experience where opium is concerned? |
34224 | But will you therefore also prove false and faithless to your country, or obey the impulses of a just and patriotic indignation? |
34224 | But, it may be asked, May there not be some danger in considering religion in a merely human point of view? |
34224 | By- and- by the watchman came back and said:--"Did n''t that lunatic tell you he was asleep when he first came up here?" |
34224 | Can you show me the key? |
34224 | Can you think of your victims without disquietude and without remorse?" |
34224 | Christ is not risen? |
34224 | Could he not, for example, have prevented the Three Children at the outset from falling into trial? |
34224 | Do I believe in Samuel Brohl? |
34224 | Do idealists trouble their heads with such vile questions?" |
34224 | Do n''t you know how to read?" |
34224 | Do they not sometimes haunt your dreams? |
34224 | Do we mean that he sacrifices what is most properly himself, the principle of piety and virtue? |
34224 | Do you admit that, so far?" |
34224 | Do you see that State which, compelled by me to submit to the Roman people, renews its former wars, and can not endure to remain at peace?" |
34224 | Do you think it will succeed? |
34224 | Does he ever see her beauty at all, or does n''t he simply view her professionally and comment upon her unwholesome condition all to himself? |
34224 | Does our religion shrink from the light? |
34224 | Dost thou see the abundance of resource belonging to God? |
34224 | FRIEND This riddling tale, to what does it belong? |
34224 | Far, far ahead, is all her seamen know; And where the land she travels from? |
34224 | Finally, what more suitable part is there for a good peace- loving man, and a good citizen, than to keep aloof from civil dissensions? |
34224 | For pray what is the pain of laying aside anger against one who hath aggrieved thee? |
34224 | For what is it which upsets thy mind, and why art thou sorrowful and dejected? |
34224 | For what notoriety that lives in the mouths of men, or what glory that is worthy of being sought after, art thou able to secure? |
34224 | From time to time she said,"Where is my portrait? |
34224 | Hast not heard the king''s command? |
34224 | Hast thou for cooking a turn, little Lady Clarissa? |
34224 | Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man? |
34224 | Have we not lost all Picenum? |
34224 | Have ye no mannès heart, and have a beard? |
34224 | He fixed on Antoinette a fascinating glance which said,"What matter my name, my lies, and the rest? |
34224 | He said to Camille,"Where and when? |
34224 | He was answered,"While you do not know life, how can you know about death?" |
34224 | His face lighted, and he confronted the ragged candidate with this question:--"Where lieth the Great Seal? |
34224 | His hand trembled as he held the candle, and he whispered anxiously,"Are you sure, miss, it''s the right drawer?" |
34224 | How am I to describe him? |
34224 | How are we to live?" |
34224 | How durst ye say for shame unto your love, That anything might maken you afeard? |
34224 | How long will it be before anything happens?" |
34224 | How then must I act, since either alternative will involve the greatest difficulty, the greatest mental anxiety? |
34224 | How through the open door you rushed, across the court- yard flew; How sprawling in your terror on the wine- press beam you lay? |
34224 | I have asked whether Henry the Eighth was an amiable character? |
34224 | I said to him in conclusion,"Will you be good enough to show me to bed?" |
34224 | I wonder whether I am afraid too? |
34224 | If one more burden has now been laid upon you, could any addition be made to your pain? |
34224 | In summer, when the woodland rings, He asks"What mean these noises?" |
34224 | In the fields are birds[ so called]; many take the name[?] |
34224 | Indeed, and keeps to employ her talent How many, pray? |
34224 | Is He not risen? |
34224 | Is he not risen, and shall we not rise? |
34224 | Is it his face that has recommended him? |
34224 | Is it necessary to mention that I gave way? |
34224 | Is it not manifest that these are the things which constitute the virtue of the horse, not the others? |
34224 | Is it not to the execrable system of Spain, which she seeks again to establish and to perpetuate? |
34224 | Is it possible then for me, who wanted all to be left uninjured, not to feel indignation that he by whom this was secured is dead? |
34224 | Is that the deputy come to wake him to the torment of living? |
34224 | Is there any one of these things that has not been taken away before it was given? |
34224 | Is this because I like him, or because I am afraid of him? |
34224 | Is''t history? |
34224 | It is my duty as a citizen to desire the preservation of the constitution? |
34224 | Just then the night watchman happened in, and was about to happen out again, when he noticed Ealer and exclaimed:--"Who is at the wheel, sir?" |
34224 | Lady Sophie''s so good to the sick, so firm and so gentle: Is there a nobler sphere than of hospital nurse and matron? |
34224 | Lo Cato, which that was so wise a man, Said he not thus? |
34224 | Lo Croesus, which that was of Lydia king, Met[356] he not that he sat upon a tree, Which signified he should anhangèd be? |
34224 | Mademoiselle de Moriaz replied,"Do you not see that there is no sunshine?" |
34224 | May I hope that you will be near town when I am there, so that I may as usual avail myself in everything of your advice and means of assistance? |
34224 | Moreover, even those who speak of us, for how long a time will they speak? |
34224 | Mr. Swinburne comments upon this aspect of his career in a jocular couplet--"What brought good Wilkie''s genius nigh perdition? |
34224 | My genial spirits fail; And what can these avail, To lift the smothering weight from off my breast? |
34224 | No-- But lies and molders low? |
34224 | Now singeth, sir, for saintè Charity, Let see, can ye your father counterfeit?" |
34224 | Now what was there at the present time that could attach her very strongly to life? |
34224 | Nymphs bred high On tops of hills, or in the founts of floods, In herby marshes, or in leavy woods? |
34224 | Oh, mem,"with a sudden crimsoning of the little face,"may I fetch Billy?" |
34224 | Or are they high- spoke men I now am near? |
34224 | Or it is for her sake, I suppose, that you are grieving? |
34224 | Or rather say at once, within what space Of time this wild disastrous change took place? |
34224 | Or what if e''en, as runs a tale, the Ten Saw, heard, and touched, again and yet again? |
34224 | Or what kind of virtue do we predicate of an olive? |
34224 | PHANTOM OR FACT? |
34224 | People gathered by the Wu flag[?]." |
34224 | Perhaps he has been made the victim of some political persecution? |
34224 | Perhaps he is in correspondence with his government? |
34224 | Place-- titles-- salary-- a gilded chain-- Or throne of corses which his sword has slain? |
34224 | Say that I now follow this; then whither? |
34224 | See ye that oak? |
34224 | Seest thou not into what a holy place thou hast come? |
34224 | Shall I leave them together? |
34224 | Shall we say that their outside trappings contribute anything to their own proper virtue? |
34224 | Such griefs with such men well agree, But wherefore, wherefore fall on me? |
34224 | Suddenly he heard a harsh voice saying to Madame de Lorcy,"Where is Count Larinski? |
34224 | THE LATEST DECALOGUE Thou shalt have one God only: who Would be at the expense of two? |
34224 | THE UNKNOWN COURSE Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
34224 | That I allow; but is anything worse than this? |
34224 | The Master said,"While you are not able to serve men, how can you serve their spirits?" |
34224 | The account is closed, and what have you, what has she, to charge of injustice against Fate? |
34224 | The king turned to Tom, and said kindly:--"My poor boy, how was it that you could remember where I hid the Seal, when I could not remember it myself?" |
34224 | The prospect of a wedded life with a husband chosen from our young men of rank? |
34224 | The terms were bad? |
34224 | The wiser part are everywhere silent; and who would revile a whole nation for the sake of the loud ones? |
34224 | The younger[ are] the passive multitude[?] |
34224 | Then what on earth is the good of writing? |
34224 | Then why, my soul, dost thou complain-- Why drooping seek the dark recess? |
34224 | They look into each other''s famine- sharpened faces, and wonder"Who next?" |
34224 | Tom Canty turned upon him and said sharply:--"Why dost thou hesitate? |
34224 | Tsze Kung asked, saying,"What do you say of a man who is loved by all the people of his village?" |
34224 | Turning toward M. Langis, he cried,"Will you now do me the honor of fighting with me?" |
34224 | Unless you object, Mr. Jennings, to my importing_ that_ amount of common- sense into the proceedings?" |
34224 | Was it for yourselves only that you nobly fought? |
34224 | Was it possible that the sedative action of the opium was making itself felt already? |
34224 | Was it round?--and thick?--and had it letters and devices graved upon it?--Yes? |
34224 | Was some constitutional peculiarity in him feeling the influence in some new way? |
34224 | We will only ask, which of us is in a position to put his theory to the test first?" |
34224 | Were we to fail, on the very brink of success? |
34224 | What are they? |
34224 | What did we dream, what wake we to discover? |
34224 | What difficulty is there in being delivered from envy and ill- will? |
34224 | What does the lovely flush in a beauty''s cheek mean to a doctor but a"break"that ripples above some deadly disease? |
34224 | What fatigue is it not to swear? |
34224 | What harm had they done you, those poor Cossacks? |
34224 | What have we gained by the war? |
34224 | What hurries to the gaming tables the man of prosperous fortune and ample resources? |
34224 | What if the women, ere the dawn was gray, Saw one or more great angels, as they say( Angels, or Him himself)? |
34224 | What is an ideal world? |
34224 | What is it that makes me unable to blame them or to ridicule them in_ him_? |
34224 | What is our situation now? |
34224 | What is the charm which attaches the statesman to an office which almost weighs him down with labor and an appalling responsibility? |
34224 | What labor is it to pray, and to ask for a thousand good things from God, who is ready to give? |
34224 | What labor is it, not to speak evil of any one? |
34224 | What needeth it to sermon of it more? |
34224 | What place indeed will be safe for me, supposing I now find the sea calm enough, before I have actually joined him? |
34224 | What pleasures, then, of the body can be compared with the privileges of authority? |
34224 | What preparations have been made to warrant such a hope? |
34224 | What reason is there why you should allow the private grief which has befallen you to distress you so terribly? |
34224 | What sea is ever calm? |
34224 | What should I more unto this talè sayn? |
34224 | What sort of a character had he?" |
34224 | What strange disguise hast now put on To_ make believe_ that thou art gone? |
34224 | What suffering is it not to utter shameful words, nor to revile, nor to insult another? |
34224 | What talk is this about my Cid-- him of Bivar I mean? |
34224 | What tell''st thou now about? |
34224 | What terms ought not to have been accepted sooner than abandon our country? |
34224 | What then is the virtue of a horse? |
34224 | What then is the virtue of man? |
34224 | What trouble is it to love one''s neighbor? |
34224 | What was I to make of this singular proposition to sell my own shadow? |
34224 | What wouldst thou have a good great man obtain? |
34224 | What, however, is so agreeable to nature as for an old man to die? |
34224 | When asked what we were to gain by war, he answered,"What are we not to lose by peace? |
34224 | When will the ceremony take place?" |
34224 | When? |
34224 | Whence learnt you that heroic measure? |
34224 | Where is it situated? |
34224 | Where is that native simple heart, Devote to Virtue, Fancy, Art? |
34224 | Where learnt you that heroic measure? |
34224 | Where learnt you that heroic measure? |
34224 | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? |
34224 | Which of them need be rinsed? |
34224 | Who are the people that are to tear up the whole fabric of human society, whenever and as often as caprice or passion may prompt them? |
34224 | Who are you, to dare compare yourself with Count Larinski?... |
34224 | Who could tell? |
34224 | Who in the farthest remaining regions of the rising and the setting sun, or on the confines of the north and the south, will hear thy name? |
34224 | Who knows? |
34224 | Who would not lie, to be loved by you?" |
34224 | Who would now sit down to read a work professedly theological? |
34224 | Whom?" |
34224 | Why did I meet you? |
34224 | Why has the first rank among sports been given to the chase? |
34224 | Why livest thou so long in so great age?" |
34224 | Why lose I time in these things? |
34224 | Why shall I not hasten to go to you?" |
34224 | Why should I not as well eke tell you all The portraitúre, that was upon the wall Within the temple of mighty Mars the red? |
34224 | Why so? |
34224 | Why stand ye looking up to heaven, where him ye ne''er may see, Neither ascending hence, nor returning hither again? |
34224 | Why then dost thou fear temporal things which pass away like the stream of a river? |
34224 | Why, goddess, why, to us denied, Lay''st thou thy ancient lyre aside? |
34224 | Will Christianity be the less true for appearing the more beautiful? |
34224 | Will you have my smelling- bottle?" |
34224 | Will you not silent keep that mouth where truth was never found? |
34224 | Will you think better of it, and try your teeth in my fat neck? |
34224 | Would he go back now, as I believed he had gone back then, to his bed- chamber? |
34224 | Would he leave the room? |
34224 | Would he show us what he had done with the Diamond when he had returned to his own room? |
34224 | Would his next proceeding be the same as the proceeding of last year? |
34224 | Would the monster find opportunity to rush at him, and braving the blood- stained axe, kill him by main force? |
34224 | Would you follow it in poetry? |
34224 | Would you have us always open to the reproach of enveloping our tenets in sacred obscurity, lest their falsehood should be detected? |
34224 | Wouldst thou not submit both to do and to suffer all things, whatsoever he who promised these things commanded? |
34224 | Yet the solution must be found; for what can one do? |
34224 | You are a craven at the core,--tall, handsome, as you stand; How dare you talk as now you talk, you tongue without a hand?... |
34224 | You have forgotten it?" |
34224 | You have nothing more to sell me?" |
34224 | You, young girl, who have had such advantages, learnt so quickly, Can you not teach? |
34224 | [ 245] What shall we do? |
34224 | _ Ere_ I was old? |
34224 | a pause in the action of the brain? |
34224 | and can ye be aghast of swevenès[296]? |
34224 | and which need not? |
34224 | and whither and for what? |
34224 | and whither back, or why? |
34224 | each a space Of some few yards before his face; Does that the whole wide plan explain? |
34224 | especially when Archias has employed all his genius with the utmost zeal in celebrating the glory and renown of the Roman people? |
34224 | fit for me to bear To wash at flood the weeds I can not wear Before re- purified? |
34224 | good friend, have not you then enough of your own shadow? |
34224 | have we not abandoned the whole of our treasure, public and private, to the foe? |
34224 | have we not left open the road to the capital? |
34224 | his extraordinary power, his loving- kindness and care? |
34224 | is he out of temper? |
34224 | is it not the power of carrying burdens with contentment, and accomplishing journeys with ease, and having hoofs like rock? |
34224 | is it to have large boughs and great luxuriance of leaves, or to exhibit an abundance of its proper fruit dispersed over all parts of the tree? |
34224 | one which abounds in leaves and branches, or one which is laden with fruit? |
34224 | or Aspiration? |
34224 | or Resolve?) |
34224 | or an idle song? |
34224 | or dwell injurious mortals here, Unjust and churlish? |
34224 | or that our minds could bear being kept so constantly on the stretch if we did not relax them by that same study? |
34224 | or what shall it avail a nation to save the whole of a miserable trade and lose its liberties? |
34224 | or would he sleep, and be himself a victim? |
34224 | since this is life, as I hear Africanus say, why do I tarry upon earth? |
34224 | the heart is prone to fall away, Her high and cherished visions to forget; And if thou takest, how wilt thou repay So vast, so dread a debt?" |
34224 | the lion scare have you forgotten too? |
34224 | to what use? |
34224 | vision? |
34224 | was the like ever seen? |
34224 | were those identical great men, whose virtues have been recorded in books, accomplished in all that learning which you are extolling so highly?" |
34224 | what consolation for the soul? |
34224 | what do you see? |
34224 | what fruition? |
34224 | what honeyed draught holds nothing but the sweet? |
34224 | what hope? |
34224 | what is there in man''s life that can be called long? |
34224 | what say you more? |
34224 | what shall we to him say?" |
34224 | when shall my bonès be at rest? |
34224 | whether Mr. Murderer and Mrs. Murderess Manning were not both unusually stout people? |
34224 | whether Pope Alexander the Sixth was a good man? |
34224 | who wend[236] To- day, that we should have so fair a grace? |
34224 | why could I not see you without recognizing in you the dream of my whole life? |
34224 | why these brinie teeres? |
34224 | why will ye gon? |
34224 | why wylt thou goe, Wythoute thye lovynge wyfe? |
34224 | with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure? |
34224 | you admit then that Samuel Brohl has a word of honor-- that when he has sworn he can be believed?" |
34224 | you at last acknowledge that your fainting fit was comedy?" |
1672 | ''And do you think that a man who is unable to help himself is in a good condition?'' |
1672 | ''But is not rhetoric a fine thing?'' |
1672 | ''But what part?'' |
1672 | ''Certainly,''he will answer,''for is not health the greatest good? |
1672 | ''Do you mean to say that the rhetoricians are esteemed flatterers?'' |
1672 | ''Health first, beauty next, wealth third,''in the words of the old song, or how would you rank them? |
1672 | ''What do you mean?'' |
1672 | ''What is cookery?'' |
1672 | ''What is rhetoric?'' |
1672 | ''What is the art of Rhetoric?'' |
1672 | ''What is the use of coming to you, Gorgias?'' |
1672 | ''Who is Gorgias?'' |
1672 | ''Who knows,''as Euripides says,''whether life may not be death, and death life?'' |
1672 | ''Why will you continue splitting words? |
1672 | ''Why, have they not great power, and can they not do whatever they desire?'' |
1672 | ), with the making of garments? |
1672 | All this is a hindrance to them; there are the clothes of the judges and the clothes of the judged.--What is to be done? |
1672 | Am I not right Callicles? |
1672 | Am I not right in my recollection? |
1672 | Am I not right? |
1672 | And I am going to ask-- what is this power of persuasion which is given by rhetoric, and about what? |
1672 | And I would have you observe, that I am right in asking this further question: If I asked,''What sort of a painter is Zeuxis?'' |
1672 | And I would still ask, whether you say that pleasure and good are the same, or whether there is some pleasure which is not a good? |
1672 | And as Callicles is about to enter public life, should we not examine him? |
1672 | And do you consider wealth to be the greatest good of man? |
1672 | And do you mean to say also that if he meets with retribution and punishment he will still be happy? |
1672 | And if he asked again:''What is the art of calculation?'' |
1672 | And if he further said,''Concerned with what?'' |
1672 | And is not the soul which has an order of her own better than that which has no order? |
1672 | And is not the virtue of each thing dependent on order or arrangement? |
1672 | And is the pleasant to be pursued for the sake of the good? |
1672 | And must he not be courageous? |
1672 | And of harp- playing and dithyrambic poetry in general, what would you say? |
1672 | And suppose, again, I were to say that astronomy is only words-- he would ask,''Words about what, Socrates?'' |
1672 | And that is pleasant at the presence of which we are pleased, and that is good at the presence of which we are good? |
1672 | And that which is orderly is temperate? |
1672 | And that which makes a thing good is the proper order inhering in each thing? |
1672 | And the soul which has order is orderly? |
1672 | And the temperate soul is good? |
1672 | And then he will be sure to go on and ask,''What good? |
1672 | And then he would proceed to ask:''Words about what?'' |
1672 | And to be itching and always scratching? |
1672 | And to indulge unnatural desires, if they are abundantly satisfied? |
1672 | And we are good, and all good things whatever are good when some virtue is present in us or them? |
1672 | And what do you say of that other rhetoric which addresses the Athenian assembly and the assemblies of freemen in other states? |
1672 | And what is my sort? |
1672 | And what knowledge can be nobler? |
1672 | And when I ask, Who are you? |
1672 | And who are you? |
1672 | And will not the temperate man do what is proper, both in relation to the gods and to men;--for he would not be temperate if he did not? |
1672 | And yet there is an inconsistency: for should not Socrates too have taught the citizens better than to put him to death? |
1672 | And yet, on your principle, what justice or reason is there in your refusal? |
1672 | And you would admit that to drink, when you are thirsty, is pleasant? |
1672 | Are the superior and better and stronger the same or different? |
1672 | Are you disposed to admit that? |
1672 | Are you of the same opinion still? |
1672 | As we likewise enquire, What will become of them after death? |
1672 | At your age, Socrates, are you not ashamed to be catching at words and chuckling over some verbal slip? |
1672 | Both the wise man and the brave man we allow to be good? |
1672 | But I shall not tell him whether rhetoric is a fine thing or not, until I have first answered,''What is rhetoric?'' |
1672 | But do you really suppose that I or any other human being denies that some pleasures are good and others bad? |
1672 | But if there were no future, might he not still be happy in the performance of an action which was attended only by a painful death? |
1672 | But if we, Polus, are right, do you see what follows, or shall we draw out the consequences in form? |
1672 | But is he as ignorant of just and unjust as he is of medicine or building? |
1672 | But is not virtue something different from saving and being saved? |
1672 | But please to refresh my memory a little; did you say--''in an unjust attempt to make himself a tyrant''? |
1672 | But tell me, Gorgias, what are the best? |
1672 | But to return to our argument:--Does not a man cease from thirsting and from the pleasure of drinking at the same moment? |
1672 | But what do you mean by the better? |
1672 | But what reason is there in this? |
1672 | But where are the orators among whom you find the latter? |
1672 | But who would undertake a public building, if he had never had a teacher of the art of building, and had never constructed a building before? |
1672 | But why, if I have a suspicion, do I ask instead of telling you? |
1672 | But, my good friend, where is the refutation? |
1672 | CALLICLES: And do you think, Socrates, that a man who is thus defenceless is in a good position? |
1672 | CALLICLES: And is not that just the provoking thing? |
1672 | CALLICLES: And what difference does that make? |
1672 | CALLICLES: And what does our friend Socrates, of Foxton, say-- does he assent to this, or not? |
1672 | CALLICLES: And you are the man who can not speak unless there is some one to answer? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Are you not ashamed, Socrates, of introducing such topics into the argument? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Can not you finish without my help, either talking straight on, or questioning and answering yourself? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Do you want me to agree with you? |
1672 | CALLICLES: I suppose that you mean health and strength? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Quite so, Socrates; and they are really fools, for how can a man be happy who is the servant of anything? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Tell me, Chaerephon, is Socrates in earnest, or is he joking? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Well, but how does that prove Pericles''badness? |
1672 | CALLICLES: What do you mean by his''ruling over himself''? |
1672 | CALLICLES: What do you mean? |
1672 | CALLICLES: What do you mean? |
1672 | CALLICLES: What is the matter, Chaerephon-- does Socrates want to hear Gorgias? |
1672 | CALLICLES: What is your meaning, Socrates? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Why not give the name yourself, Socrates? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Why? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Yes, I do; but what is the inference? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Yes, but why talk of men who are good for nothing? |
1672 | CALLICLES: Yes, certainly; but what is your drift? |
1672 | CHAEREPHON: And do you, Polus, think that you can answer better than Gorgias? |
1672 | CHAEREPHON: And if he had the skill of Aristophon the son of Aglaophon, or of his brother Polygnotus, what ought we to call him? |
1672 | CHAEREPHON: Then we should be right in calling him a physician? |
1672 | CHAEREPHON: What do you mean? |
1672 | CHAEREPHON: What question? |
1672 | CHAEREPHON: What shall I ask him? |
1672 | Can anything be more irrational, my friends, than this? |
1672 | Consider:--You would say that to suffer punishment is another name for being justly corrected when you do wrong? |
1672 | Could he be said to regard even their pleasure? |
1672 | Did he perform with any view to the good of his hearers? |
1672 | Did not the very persons whom he was serving ostracize him, in order that they might not hear his voice for ten years? |
1672 | Did they employ these advantages with a view to philosophy, gathering from every nature some addition to their store of knowledge? |
1672 | Did you not say, that suffering wrong was more evil, and doing wrong more disgraceful? |
1672 | Do I make any impression on you, and are you coming over to the opinion that the orderly are happier than the intemperate? |
1672 | Do I not convince you that the opposite is the truth? |
1672 | Do they suppose that the rule of justice is the rule of the stronger or of the better?'' |
1672 | Do we not often hear the novel writer censured for attempting to convey a lesson to the minds of his readers? |
1672 | Do you know any other effect of rhetoric over and above that of producing persuasion? |
1672 | Do you laugh, Polus? |
1672 | Do you mean that your art produces the greatest good? |
1672 | Do you not agree? |
1672 | Do you say''Yes''or''No''to that? |
1672 | Do you understand? |
1672 | Does Callicles agree to this division? |
1672 | Does not that appear to be an art which seeks only pleasure, Callicles, and thinks of nothing else? |
1672 | Does not the art of making money? |
1672 | Does not the art of medicine? |
1672 | For all our life long we are talking with ourselves:--What is thought but speech? |
1672 | For do not we too accuse as well as excuse ourselves? |
1672 | For on what principle of justice did Xerxes invade Hellas, or his father the Scythians? |
1672 | For that would not be right, Polus; but I shall be happy to answer, if you will ask me, What part of flattery is rhetoric? |
1672 | For will any one ever acknowledge that he does not know, or can not teach, the nature of justice? |
1672 | For you were saying just now that the courageous and the wise are the good-- would you not say so? |
1672 | For, first, you defined the superior to be the stronger, and then the wiser, and now something else;--what DO you mean? |
1672 | GORGIAS: A part of what, Socrates? |
1672 | GORGIAS: Then why not ask him yourself? |
1672 | GORGIAS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
1672 | GORGIAS: What is coming, Socrates? |
1672 | GORGIAS: What matter? |
1672 | GORGIAS: Yes, I know the song; but what is your drift? |
1672 | Have I not told you that the superior is the better?'' |
1672 | Have they not been invented wholly for the sake of pleasure? |
1672 | Have they not very great power in states? |
1672 | Have we not already admitted many times over that such is the duty of a public man? |
1672 | How are they to be? |
1672 | How is the inconsistency to be explained? |
1672 | How then can pleasure be the same as good, or pain as evil? |
1672 | How will you answer them? |
1672 | How would Gorgias explain this phenomenon? |
1672 | I mean to ask whether a man will escape injustice if he has only the will to escape, or must he have provided himself with the power? |
1672 | I mean to say-- Does he who teaches anything persuade men of that which he teaches or not? |
1672 | I mean, for example, that if a man strikes, there must be something which is stricken? |
1672 | I was saying that to do is worse than to suffer injustice? |
1672 | If we admit what has been just now said, every man ought in every way to guard himself against doing wrong, for he will thereby suffer great evil? |
1672 | In the first division the question is asked-- What is rhetoric? |
1672 | In the first place, what say you of flute- playing? |
1672 | Is not suffering injustice a greater evil? |
1672 | Is not that true? |
1672 | Is not this a fact? |
1672 | Is not this true? |
1672 | Is not this, as they say, to begin with the big jar when you are learning the potter''s art; which is a foolish thing? |
1672 | Is that the paradox which, as you say, can not be refuted? |
1672 | Is the final result, that he gets rid of them both together? |
1672 | Is there any comparison between him and the pleader? |
1672 | Is this true? |
1672 | Look at the matter in this way:--In respect of a man''s estate, do you see any greater evil than poverty? |
1672 | May I ask then whether you will answer in turn and have your words put to the proof? |
1672 | May I assume this to be your opinion? |
1672 | May not the service of God, which is the more disinterested, be in like manner the higher? |
1672 | Might not the novelist, too, make an ideal, or rather many ideals of social life, better than a thousand sermons? |
1672 | Must not the defence be one which will avert the greatest of human evils? |
1672 | Must not the very opposite be true,--if he is to be like the tyrant in his injustice, and to have influence with him? |
1672 | Must we not try and make them as good as possible? |
1672 | Nay, did not Pericles make the citizens worse? |
1672 | Nay, will he not rather do all the evil which he can and escape? |
1672 | No other answer can I give, Callicles dear; have you any? |
1672 | Or do I fail to persuade you, and, however many tales I rehearse to you, do you continue of the same opinion still? |
1672 | Or must the pupil know these things and come to you knowing them before he can acquire the art of rhetoric? |
1672 | Or will you be unable to teach him rhetoric at all, unless he knows the truth of these things first? |
1672 | Or would you venture to say, that they too are happy, if they only get enough of what they want? |
1672 | Ought he not to have the name which is given to his brother? |
1672 | Ought the physician then to have a larger share of meats and drinks? |
1672 | POLUS: An experience in what? |
1672 | POLUS: And I should say neither I, nor any man: would you yourself, for example, suffer rather than do injustice? |
1672 | POLUS: And are the good rhetoricians meanly regarded in states, under the idea that they are flatterers? |
1672 | POLUS: And are those of whom I spoke wretches? |
1672 | POLUS: And can not you tell at once, and without having an acquaintance with him, whether a man is happy? |
1672 | POLUS: And do even you, Socrates, seriously believe what you are now saying about rhetoric? |
1672 | POLUS: And do you think that he is happy or miserable? |
1672 | POLUS: And if able to gratify others, must not rhetoric be a fine thing? |
1672 | POLUS: And is not that a great power? |
1672 | POLUS: And noble or ignoble? |
1672 | POLUS: And so you think that he who slays any one whom he pleases, and justly slays him, is pitiable and wretched? |
1672 | POLUS: Ask:-- CHAEREPHON: My question is this: If Gorgias had the skill of his brother Herodicus, what ought we to call him? |
1672 | POLUS: At any rate you will allow that he who is unjustly put to death is wretched, and to be pitied? |
1672 | POLUS: But do you not think, Socrates, that you have been sufficiently refuted, when you say that which no human being will allow? |
1672 | POLUS: But is it the greatest? |
1672 | POLUS: But they do what they think best? |
1672 | POLUS: Did I not hear you say that rhetoric was a sort of experience? |
1672 | POLUS: Does rhetoric seem to you to be an experience? |
1672 | POLUS: How can that be, Socrates? |
1672 | POLUS: How not regarded? |
1672 | POLUS: How two questions? |
1672 | POLUS: I will ask and do you answer? |
1672 | POLUS: I will ask; and do you answer me, Socrates, the same question which Gorgias, as you suppose, is unable to answer: What is rhetoric? |
1672 | POLUS: In either case is he not equally to be envied? |
1672 | POLUS: In what? |
1672 | POLUS: Of what profession? |
1672 | POLUS: Then are cookery and rhetoric the same? |
1672 | POLUS: Then clearly, Socrates, you would say that you did not even know whether the great king was a happy man? |
1672 | POLUS: Then surely they do as they will? |
1672 | POLUS: Then what, in your opinion, is rhetoric? |
1672 | POLUS: Then would you rather suffer than do injustice? |
1672 | POLUS: Then you would not wish to be a tyrant? |
1672 | POLUS: Then, according to your doctrine, the said Archelaus is miserable? |
1672 | POLUS: Were you not saying just now that he is wretched? |
1672 | POLUS: What do you mean, Socrates? |
1672 | POLUS: What do you mean? |
1672 | POLUS: What do you mean? |
1672 | POLUS: What does that matter if I answer well enough for you? |
1672 | POLUS: What makes you say so, Socrates? |
1672 | POLUS: What sort of an art is cookery? |
1672 | POLUS: What then? |
1672 | POLUS: What thing? |
1672 | POLUS: Why''forbear''? |
1672 | POLUS: Why, did I not say that it was the noblest of arts? |
1672 | POLUS: Why, have you not already said that they do as they think best? |
1672 | POLUS: Will you enumerate them? |
1672 | POLUS: You are hard of refutation, Socrates, but might not a child refute that statement? |
1672 | POLUS: You see, I presume, that Archelaus the son of Perdiccas is now the ruler of Macedonia? |
1672 | Perhaps, however, you do not even now understand what I mean? |
1672 | Polus asks,''What thing?'' |
1672 | SOCRATES: A useful thing, then? |
1672 | SOCRATES: About that you and I may be supposed to agree? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Again, if we take the arts of which we were just now speaking:--do not arithmetic and the arithmeticians teach us the properties of number? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Again, in a man''s bodily frame, you would say that the evil is weakness and disease and deformity? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Although he is not a physician:--is he? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And I affirm that he is most miserable, and that those who are punished are less miserable-- are you going to refute this proposition also? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And a foolish man too? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And according to the argument the rhetorician must be a just man? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are not all things either good or evil, or intermediate and indifferent? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are not just men gentle, as Homer says?--or are you of another mind? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are not these pleasures or goods present to those who rejoice-- if they do rejoice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are only the cowards pained at the approach of their enemies, or are the brave also pained? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are they equally pained? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are they not better pleased at the enemy''s departure? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are we late for a feast? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And are we to say that you are able to make other men rhetoricians? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And as for the Muse of Tragedy, that solemn and august personage-- what are her aspirations? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And deformity or disgrace may be equally measured by the opposite standard of pain and evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And did you ever see a sensible man rejoicing or sorrowing? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And did you never see a foolish child rejoicing? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And do not the poets in the theatres seem to you to be rhetoricians? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And do not those who rightly punish others, punish them in accordance with a certain rule of justice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And do you call the fools and cowards good men? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And do you mean by the better the same as the superior? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And do you not imagine that the soul likewise has some evil of her own? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And do you, Callicles, seriously maintain what you are saying? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And does he have and not have good and happiness, and their opposites, evil and misery, in a similar alternation? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And does not gymnastic also treat of discourse concerning the good or evil condition of the body? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And does not the same argument hold of the soul, my good sir? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And does not the same hold in all other cases? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And further, that to suffer punishment is the way to be released from this evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he has the second place, who is delivered from vice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he is to be thirsting and drinking? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he may have strength and weakness in the same way, by fits? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he who has joy is good? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he who has learned medicine is a physician, in like manner? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he who has learned music a musician? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he who is in pain is evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he who is just may be supposed to do what is just? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And he who punishes rightly, punishes justly? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if a man burns, there is something which is burned? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if he burns in excess or so as to cause pain, the thing burned will be burned in the same way? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if he cuts, the same argument holds-- there will be something cut? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if he is hungry, or has any other desire, does he not cease from the desire and the pleasure at the same moment? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if pleasantly, then also happily? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if the cutting be great or deep or such as will cause pain, the cut will be of the same nature? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if the most disgraceful, then also the worst? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if the striker strikes violently or quickly, that which is struck will be struck violently or quickly? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if they were more savage, must they not have been more unjust and inferior? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And if what is honourable, then what is good, for the honourable is either pleasant or useful? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And in pain? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And in the same way there are good pains and there are evil pains? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And in the same way, he who has learned what is just is just? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And in the sentence which you have just uttered, the word''thirsty''implies pain? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And in this way he will have accomplished, as you and your friends would say, the end of becoming a great man and not suffering injury? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And is he not then delivered from the greatest evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And is not that the sort of thing, Callicles, which we were just now describing as flattery? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And is not the same true of all similar arts, as, for example, the art of playing the lyre at festivals? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And is not this universally true? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And is the''having learned''the same as''having believed,''and are learning and belief the same things? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And is this notion true of one soul, or of two or more? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And it has been proved to be true? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And justice punishes us, and makes us more just, and is the medicine of our vice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And justice, if the best, gives the greatest pleasure or advantage or both? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And may not the same be said of the beauty of knowledge? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And most disgraceful either because most painful and causing excessive pain, or most hurtful, or both? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And music is concerned with the composition of melodies? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And must not the just man always desire to do what is just? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And must we not have the same end in view in the treatment of our city and citizens? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And not to suffer, is to perpetuate the evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And now injustice and all evil in the soul has been admitted by us to be most disgraceful? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And now let us have from you, Gorgias, the truth about rhetoric: which you would admit( would you not?) |
1672 | SOCRATES: And now, which will you do, ask or answer? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And of two deformed things, that which exceeds in deformity or disgrace, exceeds either in pain or evil-- must it not be so? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And ought not the better to have a larger share? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And ought we not to choose and use the good pleasures and pains? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And punishment is an evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And since they are superior, the laws which are made by them are by nature good? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And suffering implies an agent? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And that is now discovered to be more evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And that which exceeds most in hurtfulness will be the greatest of evils? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And that which is just has been admitted to be honourable? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the beneficial are those which do some good, and the hurtful are those which do some evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the foolish man and the coward to be evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the foolish; so it would seem? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the greater disgrace is the greater evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the one which had pleasure in view was just a vulgar flattery:--was not that another of our conclusions? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the other had in view the greatest improvement of that which was ministered to, whether body or soul? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the reason for asking this second question would be, that there are other painters besides, who paint many other figures? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the same is true of a ship? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the same may be said of the human body? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the suffering to him who is stricken is of the same nature as the act of him who strikes? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And the word''drinking''is expressive of pleasure, and of the satisfaction of the want? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And there is also''having believed''? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And therefore he acts justly? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And therefore persuade us of them? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And therefore to be unjust and intemperate, and cowardly and ignorant, is more painful than to be poor and sick? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And thirst, too, is painful? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And this speech is addressed to a crowd of people? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And this you would call injustice and ignorance and cowardice, and the like? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And those who are in pain have evil or sorrow present with them? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And to restrain her from her appetites is to chastise her? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And to understand that about which they speak? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And to whom do we go with the unjust and intemperate? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And was not Pericles a shepherd of men? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And was not punishment said by us to be a deliverance from the greatest of evils, which is vice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And were you not saying just now, that some courage implied knowledge? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what art frees us from disease? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what art will protect us from suffering injustice, if not wholly, yet as far as possible? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of doing injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of his father, Meles the harp- player? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what do you say of the choral art and of dithyrambic poetry?--are not they of the same nature? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what from vice and injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what would you consider this to be? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And what would you say of the soul? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And when he has got rid of his ophthalmia, has he got rid of the health of his eyes too? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And when we kill a man we kill him or exile him or despoil him of his goods, because, as we think, it will conduce to our good? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And which of the evils is the most disgraceful?--Is not the most disgraceful of them injustice, and in general the evil of the soul? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And which rejoiced most at the departure of the enemy, the coward or the brave? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And why? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And will not the patient suffer that which the agent does, and will not the suffering have the quality of the action? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And will therefore never be willing to do injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And will you also do me the favour of saying whether man is an animal? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And would he be the happier man in his bodily condition, who is healed, or who never was out of health? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And would you maintain that if a fool does what he thinks best, this is a good, and would you call this great power? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And would you not allow that all just things are honourable in so far as they are just? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And would you prefer a greater evil or a greater dishonour to a less one? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And would you say that courage differed from pleasure? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And would you say that pleasure and knowledge are the same, or not the same? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And would you still say that the evil are evil by reason of the presence of evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And yet rhetoric makes men able to speak? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And yet those who have learned as well as those who have believed are persuaded? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And you said the opposite? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And you were speaking of courage and knowledge as two things different from one another? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And you would call sounds and music beautiful for the same reason? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And you, like him, invite any one to ask you about anything which he pleases, and you will know how to answer him? |
1672 | SOCRATES: And, therefore, when Pericles first began to speak in the assembly, the Athenians were not so good as when he spoke last? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Are these indifferent things done for the sake of the good, or the good for the sake of the indifferent? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But can every man choose what pleasures are good and what are evil, or must he have art or knowledge of them in detail? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But can you tell me why you disapprove of such a power? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But does he do what he wills if he does what is evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But does not the art of medicine, which we were just now mentioning, also make men able to understand and speak about the sick? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But have not you and the world already agreed that to do injustice is more disgraceful than to suffer? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But he does not cease from good and evil at the same moment, as you have admitted: do you still adhere to what you said? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But he surely can not have the same eyes well and sound at the same time? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But if he is to have more power of persuasion than the physician, he will have greater power than he who knows? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But if not in pain, then not in both? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But if there had been no one but Zeuxis who painted them, then you would have answered very well? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But if they were good, then clearly each of them must have made the citizens better instead of worse? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But is the being healed a pleasant thing, and are those who are being healed pleased? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But not the evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But now we are affirming that the aforesaid rhetorician will never have done injustice at all? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But surely the wise and brave are the good, and the foolish and the cowardly are the bad? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But then again, what was the observation which you just now made, about doing and suffering wrong? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But what if the itching is not confined to the head? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But whether rulers or subjects will they or will they not have more than themselves, my friend? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But will he also escape from doing injury? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But will you answer? |
1672 | SOCRATES: But you admitted, that when in pain a man might also have pleasure? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Consider again:--Where there is an agent, must there not also be a patient? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Do I understand you to mean what I mean by the term''benefited''? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Do men appear to you to will that which they do, or to will that further end for the sake of which they do a thing? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Do you mean that you will teach him to gain the ears of the multitude on any subject, and this not by instruction but by persuasion? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Do you mean what sort of an art? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Do you never hear our professors of education speaking in this inconsistent manner? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Do you see the inference:--that pleasure and pain are simultaneous, when you say that being thirsty, you drink? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Does not a man cease from his thirst and from his pleasure in drinking at the same time? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Enough: And did you ever see a coward in battle? |
1672 | SOCRATES: For in my opinion there is no profit in a man''s life if his body is in an evil plight-- in that case his life also is evil: am I not right? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Go back now to our former admissions.--Did you say that to hunger, I mean the mere state of hunger, was pleasant or painful? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Have the wise man and the fool, the brave and the coward, joy and pain in nearly equal degrees? |
1672 | SOCRATES: I am glad to hear it; answer me in like manner about rhetoric: with what is rhetoric concerned? |
1672 | SOCRATES: I know; but still the actual hunger is painful: am I not right? |
1672 | SOCRATES: I said also that the wicked are miserable, and you refuted me? |
1672 | SOCRATES: I suppose that he is affected by them, and gets rid of them in turns? |
1672 | SOCRATES: I understand you to say, if I am not mistaken, that the honourable is not the same as the good, or the disgraceful as the evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: If then there be anything which a man has and has not at the same time, clearly that can not be good and evil-- do we agree? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Is it not a fact that injustice, and the doing of injustice, is the greatest of evils? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Is not this the conclusion, if the premises are not disproven? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Is that a question or the beginning of a speech? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Justly or unjustly, do you mean? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Laws and institutions also have no beauty in them except in so far as they are useful or pleasant or both? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Listen to me, then, while I recapitulate the argument:--Is the pleasant the same as the good? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Men who do any of these things do them for the sake of the good? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Must I then say with Epicharmus,''Two men spoke before, but now one shall be enough''? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Nay, I said a part of flattery; if at your age, Polus, you can not remember, what will you do by- and- by, when you get older? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Need I adduce any more instances, or would you agree that all wants or desires are painful? |
1672 | SOCRATES: No matter; then the cowards, and not only the brave, rejoice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Now I want to know about rhetoric in the same way;--is rhetoric the only art which brings persuasion, or do other arts have the same effect? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Now, what art is there which delivers us from poverty? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Of discourse concerning diseases? |
1672 | SOCRATES: On the other hand, if the unjust be not punished, then, according to you, he will be happy? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Or swiftness and slowness? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Say rather, Polus, impossible; for who can refute the truth? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Shall we then assume two sorts of persuasion,--one which is the source of belief without knowledge, as the other is of knowledge? |
1672 | SOCRATES: So then, in mind, body, and estate, which are three, you have pointed out three corresponding evils-- injustice, disease, poverty? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Such treatment will be better for the soul herself? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Surely, then, the just man will never consent to do injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Take the case of any bodily affection:--a man may have the complaint in his eyes which is called ophthalmia? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Tell me, then, when do you say that they are good and when that they are evil-- what principle do you lay down? |
1672 | SOCRATES: That again, Gorgias is ambiguous; I am still in the dark: for which are the greatest and best of human things? |
1672 | SOCRATES: That is to say, he who receives admonition and rebuke and punishment? |
1672 | SOCRATES: That is to say, in evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: That would surely be marvellous and absurd? |
1672 | SOCRATES: The beneficial are good, and the hurtful are evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: The degrees of good and evil vary with the degrees of pleasure and of pain? |
1672 | SOCRATES: The flatterer? |
1672 | SOCRATES: The good and evil both have joy and pain, but, perhaps, the evil has more of them? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then I am to call you a rhetorician? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then I was right in saying that a man may do what seems good to him in a state, and not have great power, and not do what he wills? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then a man may delight a whole assembly, and yet have no regard for their true interests? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then are the good and bad good and bad in a nearly equal degree, or have the bad the advantage both in good and evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then arithmetic as well as rhetoric is an artificer of persuasion? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then doing injustice will have an excess of evil, and will therefore be a greater evil than suffering injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then he ceases from pain and pleasure at the same moment? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then he is benefited? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then he lives worst, who, having been unjust, has no deliverance from injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then he who is punished and suffers retribution, suffers justly? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then he who is punished is delivered from the evil of his soul? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then he who is punished suffers what is good? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then if great power is a good as you allow, will such a one have great power in a state? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then injustice and intemperance, and in general the depravity of the soul, are the greatest of evils? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then let me raise another question; there is such a thing as''having learned''? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then medicine also treats of discourse? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then pleasure is not the same as good fortune, or pain the same as evil fortune, and therefore the good is not the same as the pleasant? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then poetry is a sort of rhetoric? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then restraint or chastisement is better for the soul than intemperance or the absence of control, which you were just now preferring? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then rhetoric does not treat of all kinds of discourse? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then rhetoric is not the only artificer of persuasion? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then the art of money- making frees a man from poverty; medicine from disease; and justice from intemperance and injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then the good and the bad are pleased and pained in a nearly equal degree? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then the house in which order and regularity prevail is good; that in which there is disorder, evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then the laws of the many are the laws of the superior? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then the many are by nature superior to the one, against whom, as you were saying, they make the laws? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then the punisher does what is honourable, and the punished suffers what is honourable? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then they are the laws of the better; for the superior class are far better, as you were saying? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then they can only exceed in the other? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then they do not exceed in pain? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then those who rejoice are good when goods are present with them? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then those who rejoice are good, and those who are in pain evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then those who want nothing are not truly said to be happy? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then to which service of the State do you invite me? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then upon this view, Pericles was not a good statesman? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then we have found the reason why there is no dishonour in a man receiving pay who is called in to advise about building or any other art? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then, as this is admitted, let me ask whether being punished is suffering or acting? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then, as would appear, power and art have to be provided in order that we may do no injustice? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then, as you are in earnest, shall we proceed with the argument? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Then, if you approve the question, Gorgias, what is the answer? |
1672 | SOCRATES: There is pleasure in drinking? |
1672 | SOCRATES: To do wrong, then, is second only in the scale of evils; but to do wrong and not to be punished, is first and greatest of all? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Very good, Callicles; but will he answer our questions? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well now, suppose that we strip all poetry of song and rhythm and metre, there will remain speech? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well, Polus, but if this is true, where is the great use of rhetoric? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well, and is not he who has learned carpentering a carpenter? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well, and was not this the point in dispute, my friend? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well, but do you admit that the wiser is the better? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well, but is there a false knowledge as well as a true? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well, if you are willing to proceed, determine this question for me:--There is something, I presume, which you would call knowledge? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Well, my friend, but what do you think of swimming; is that an art of any great pretensions? |
1672 | SOCRATES: What are we to do, then? |
1672 | SOCRATES: What are you saying, Polus? |
1672 | SOCRATES: What events? |
1672 | SOCRATES: What is the name which is given to the effect of harmony and order in the body? |
1672 | SOCRATES: What sort of discourse, Gorgias?--such discourse as would teach the sick under what treatment they might get well? |
1672 | SOCRATES: When you are thirsty? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Which condition may not be really good, but good only in appearance? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Which rejoice and sorrow most-- the wise or the foolish? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Which, then, is the best of these three? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Why then? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Why, did you not say just now that the rhetoricians are like tyrants, and that they kill and despoil or exile any one whom they please? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Will you ask me, what sort of an art is cookery? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Will you understand my answer? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Will you, who are so desirous to gratify others, afford a slight gratification to me? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Wisdom and health and wealth and the like you would call goods, and their opposites evils? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Words which do what? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Would any other man prefer a greater to a less evil? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Would he not be utterly at a loss for a reply? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Yes, I do; and what is the name which you would give to the effect of harmony and order in the soul? |
1672 | SOCRATES: Yes, because the patient is delivered from a great evil; and this is the advantage of enduring the pain-- that you get well? |
1672 | SOCRATES: You further said that the wrong- doer is happy if he be unpunished? |
1672 | SOCRATES: You said also, that no man could have good and evil fortune at the same time? |
1672 | SOCRATES: You were saying, in fact, that the rhetorician will have greater powers of persuasion than the physician even in a matter of health? |
1672 | SOCRATES: You would further admit that there is a good condition of either of them? |
1672 | SOCRATES:--Who are to punish them? |
1672 | Shall I pursue the question? |
1672 | Shall I tell you why I anticipate this? |
1672 | Shall I tell you why I think so? |
1672 | Shall we break off in the middle? |
1672 | Shall we say that? |
1672 | Should we not examine him before we entrusted him with the office? |
1672 | Such are their respective lives:--And now would you say that the life of the intemperate is happier than that of the temperate? |
1672 | Tell me, Callicles, if a person were to ask these questions of you, what would you answer? |
1672 | Tell me, Socrates, are you in earnest, or only in jest? |
1672 | Tell me, then, Callicles, how about making any of the citizens better? |
1672 | Than themselves? |
1672 | The answer depends on another question: What use did the children of Cronos make of their time? |
1672 | Then are not the many superior to the one, and the opinions of the many better? |
1672 | Then these are the points at issue between us-- are they not? |
1672 | There remains the other question: Is a guilty man better off when he is punished or when he is unpunished? |
1672 | This is what I believe that you mean( and you must not suppose that I am word- catching), if you allow that the one is superior to the ten thousand? |
1672 | Though we are not going to banish the poets, how can we suppose that such utterances have any healing or life- giving influence on the minds of men? |
1672 | To him again I shall say, Who are you, honest friend, and what is your business? |
1672 | To what class of things do the words which rhetoric uses relate? |
1672 | Under his protection he will suffer no evil, but will he also do no evil? |
1672 | Was not this said? |
1672 | Was there ever a man who was once vicious, or unjust, or intemperate, or foolish, and became by the help of Callicles good and noble? |
1672 | Was there ever such a man, whether citizen or stranger, slave or freeman? |
1672 | We ask the question, Where were men before birth? |
1672 | We may assume the existence of bodies and of souls? |
1672 | Well, you and I say to him, and are you a creator of wealth? |
1672 | What do you mean? |
1672 | What do you say to this? |
1672 | What do you say? |
1672 | What do you say? |
1672 | What do you suppose that the physician would be able to reply when he found himself in such a predicament? |
1672 | What greater good can men have, Socrates?'' |
1672 | What is feeling but rhetoric? |
1672 | What is to be said about all this? |
1672 | What nonsense are you talking? |
1672 | What part of flattery is rhetoric? |
1672 | What right have you to despise the engine- maker, and the others whom I was just now mentioning? |
1672 | What then distinguishes rhetoric from the other arts which have to do with words? |
1672 | What then is his meaning? |
1672 | When the assembly meets to elect a physician or a shipwright or any other craftsman, will the rhetorician be taken into counsel? |
1672 | Which of the arts then are flatteries? |
1672 | Who is the true poet? |
1672 | Whom did they make better? |
1672 | Whom has he made better? |
1672 | Whom would you say that you had improved by your conversation? |
1672 | Why are you silent, Polus? |
1672 | Why do I say this? |
1672 | Why do you ask me whether rhetoric is a fine thing or not, when I have not as yet told you what rhetoric is? |
1672 | Why do you not answer? |
1672 | Why will you not answer? |
1672 | Will Callicles still maintain this? |
1672 | Will he not rather contrive to do as much wrong as possible, and not be punished? |
1672 | Will the good soul be that in which disorder is prevalent, or that in which there is harmony and order? |
1672 | Will you ask me another question-- What is cookery? |
1672 | Will you keep your promise, and answer shortly the questions which are asked of you? |
1672 | Would he not be a bad manager of any animals who received them gentle, and made them fiercer than they were when he received them? |
1672 | You mean to say that one man of sense ought to rule over ten thousand fools? |
1672 | You say that you can make any man, who will learn of you, a rhetorician? |
1672 | You will admit, I suppose, that good and evil fortune are opposed to each other? |
1672 | and does all happiness consist in this? |
1672 | and was any one else ever known to be cured by him, whether slave or freeman? |
1672 | and you said,''The painter of figures,''should I not be right in asking,''What kind of figures, and where do you find them?'' |
1672 | are they not like tyrants? |
1672 | did you never hear that Themistocles was a good man, and Cimon and Miltiades and Pericles, who is just lately dead, and whom you heard yourself? |
1672 | do you mean that I may not use as many words as I please? |
1672 | do you think that rhetoric is flattery? |
1672 | must he have the power, or only the will to obtain them? |
1672 | my philosopher, is that your line? |
1672 | or the good for the sake of the pleasant? |
1672 | or the weaver to have more coats, or the cobbler larger shoes, or the farmer more seed? |
1672 | or what ignorance more disgraceful than this? |
1672 | or who would undertake the duty of state- physician, if he had never cured either himself or any one else? |
1672 | or would you say that the coward has more? |
1672 | to be one of those arts which act always and fulfil all their ends through the medium of words? |
1672 | will you ask him, Chaerephon--? |
1672 | you mean those fools,--the temperate? |
41735 | ''How are your daughters?'' |
41735 | ''Is it possible that your Grace has ever heard of_ me_?'' |
41735 | 19 PAYING ONE''S SHOT 27 WHAT IS WOMAN''S WORK? |
41735 | A memory by which her children may order their own lives in proud assurance that so they will order them best for virtue and for honour? |
41735 | After a certain time of such an existence, can we wonder if her complexion fades and her eyes grow dim? |
41735 | And if they know nothing of all this, why then should others? |
41735 | And when is it done? |
41735 | And yet what has she to complain of? |
41735 | Are not lace and velvet_ de rigueur_ for women of condition? |
41735 | Are they not told that they are the lilies of the ecclesiastical garden? |
41735 | Are they qualifying themselves to act in concert with men, by assuming an absolute moral supremacy which it is a kind of sacrilege to deny? |
41735 | Are they really''no gentlemen''and''no ladies,''according to the famous formula of the kitchen? |
41735 | Are you not an educated person with a soul to be saved? |
41735 | Besides, what is there about her that you or any one should love? |
41735 | But again we ask: What is flirting? |
41735 | But do we wish that our women should become subjects for an English Juvenal? |
41735 | But if the two keep well together? |
41735 | But what about the consequences? |
41735 | But what can one say to them? |
41735 | But what is flirting? |
41735 | But when the tower fell, where was the ivy? |
41735 | Can the most exacting woman ask for more? |
41735 | Did any one ever know a scrambling woman ready at the moment in her own house? |
41735 | Do not our splendid passionate creatures lead madly wretched lives and make miserably uncomfortable homes? |
41735 | Does one flight of stairs transpose morality? |
41735 | For what are coarse material mendings to the æsthetic soul yearning after the Infinite and worshipping at the feet of the prophet? |
41735 | For whom, but for her, are the''little secrets''which are continually being advertised as woman''s social salvation-- regardless of grammar? |
41735 | Have we not our Tupper? |
41735 | Her loss is too recent to admit of any thought of reparation; and yet what man does not think of that time of reparation? |
41735 | How is it done? |
41735 | How is it done? |
41735 | How much of this pretended awakening is real? |
41735 | How much of this sudden spiritual insight is true, and not a mere phrasing, artfully adopted for pleasantness only? |
41735 | If she had to lose an arm or a leg, she would go to her trouble like a Trojan; and why not others? |
41735 | If she was not strong enough to root out the tares while still green and tender, can she wonder at their luxuriant growth about her feet now? |
41735 | Is dancing all the''round''dances together? |
41735 | Is it not the game? |
41735 | Is she not a doll? |
41735 | Is sitting away in corners, talking in low voices and looking personally affronted if any unlucky outsider comes within earshot, flirting? |
41735 | It is a thing that will not bear reasoning on, being simply a form of the old''who will guard the guardian?'' |
41735 | Love you? |
41735 | One has to fall to her share; there is no help for it; and the whole contest is, which shall it be? |
41735 | Perhaps the anecdote was just a trifle doubtful; granted; but what does the wife take by her remonstrance? |
41735 | She is affectionate and devoted; but of what use are affection and devotion without guiding sense or judgment? |
41735 | She may know that the meaning is to annoy; but who can act on meaning as against manner? |
41735 | The cruel parent is the favourite whipping- boy of poetry and fiction; and yet which is likely to be the better guide-- reason or passion? |
41735 | The sacredness of a Mohammedan''s womankind must be so complete that they are even nameless to the coarser sex; and not,''How is your wife?'' |
41735 | They are selfish, cruel, tyrannical, sensual, unjust, bloodthirsty-- where does the list end? |
41735 | What are the hot flushes of passion, the bitter tears of grief, the frenzy of despair, to her? |
41735 | What are we to say then of our flirts if this maxim be true? |
41735 | What can she expect? |
41735 | What can they do to please you? |
41735 | What can they say to such an anomaly? |
41735 | What constitutes its essence? |
41735 | What degradation, for instance, is there in cookery? |
41735 | What do they hold themselves made for? |
41735 | What does she leave behind her? |
41735 | What good in life does this kind of woman do? |
41735 | What have they done that you should speak to them so harshly? |
41735 | What is flirting? |
41735 | What is the secret? |
41735 | What is there in practical housekeeping less honourable than the ordinary work of middle- class gentlewomen? |
41735 | What makes the difference between it and chaff on the one hand, and it and love- making on the other? |
41735 | What worse example could be given to the young? |
41735 | What would become of us if all our women were like her? |
41735 | What, then, do they want? |
41735 | When such a woman as this is one of the matrons, and consequently one of the leaders of society, what can we expect from the girls? |
41735 | Who can define or determine? |
41735 | Who will direct the directress? |
41735 | Why can not men be her friends? |
41735 | Why have you waited until they were successful before you recognized their value? |
41735 | Why were you not cap in hand when they went bare- headed? |
41735 | You ask them what is amiss? |
41735 | _ WHAT IS WOMAN''S WORK?_ This is a question which one half the world is at this moment asking the other half; with very wild answers as the result. |
41735 | and are not our glorious heroines better in pictures and in fiction than seated by the domestic fire, or checking the baker''s bill? |
41735 | and does not the very essence of her dollhood lie in this want of perceptive faculty both for things and feelings? |
41735 | and how much more home happiness would there not be if wives would take in hand that great cold- mutton question? |
41735 | and if she be more than usually charming in person and well dowered in purse, what man does not think of himself as the best repairer she could take? |
41735 | and to whose interference will the interferer submit? |
41735 | and what is the grim female but the embodiment of the''rigour of the game''in all matters? |
41735 | and why is it that they never can please you whatever they do? |
41735 | and why should women shrink from doing for utility, and for the general comfort of the family, what they would do at any time for vanity or idleness? |
41735 | and''what?'' |
41735 | another glass of whisky? |
41735 | but,''How is your house?'' |
41735 | calculation or impulse? |
41735 | can you then be ignorant of things with which every one of culture is familiar? |
41735 | experience or ignorance? |
41735 | had we not our''Satan''Montgomery? |
41735 | if that inexpressible air of haggard weariness creeps over her, which ages even a young girl and makes a mature woman substantially an old one? |
41735 | marry you? |
41735 | maturity which can judge or youth which can only feel? |
41735 | more wine? |
41735 | or is it like an unmortared heap of bricks, potential utilities if conditions were changed, but valueless as things are? |
41735 | or the pert, smart, trim little female, with no more biceps than a ladybird, and of just about equal strength with a sparrow? |
41735 | or, what do they mean by their absurd conduct? |
41735 | or,''How can you eat that horrid pastry? |
41735 | the divinely appointed missionaries for the preservation of virtue and godly truth in the world? |
41735 | what about the disclosure of your secret follies and the uncovering of the foundations on which the libel rested? |
41735 | which craftiest to slip out of them? |
41735 | which is strongest to break her bonds? |
41735 | which most resolute not to bear them from the beginning? |
41735 | who cares to cultivate the acquaintance of men or women who are unable to make him any return? |
43743 | Is it not by a misapplication of talents,said one,"that our present mortifications arise? |
43743 | What is more honorable than age? |
43743 | ''How? |
43743 | ''No passion( replied Mrs Dorothea) how comes he then to write such fine letters?'' |
43743 | ''Of what use in the world( said she) is an erudition so savage, and so full of presumption?'' |
43743 | ''Why then, replied Lord Munster, did you leave her? |
43743 | --he then sunk almost motionless in a chair!--Lord Munster carelessly answered--''Bingley, are you mad? |
43743 | After a few moments''expressive silence, I desired to know what commands she meant to honor me with? |
43743 | Alas, in what way did I lose his confidence? |
43743 | Are there not many occasions in life in which it would be reasonable to say,_ I conjure you to forget and forgive the injury you have done me_? |
43743 | Are you thirsty? |
43743 | Beau.--All this is charming; but what sort of a table is kept? |
43743 | Beau.--Did not Hercules escape from it, and carry Cerberus along with him? |
43743 | Beau.--There are fine women then, of course? |
43743 | Beau.--With all my heart, I believe I shall meet more people of fashion there[49]; but, good master Charon, in what way shall I pass my time? |
43743 | But are there no public places? |
43743 | But hark''ee, master Charon, is there good music? |
43743 | But pray, madam, what becomes of your servants all this time? |
43743 | But what can not necessity and cruelty make men do? |
43743 | But why, said I, madam, need you go to court of a Sunday, why not of a Thursday as well? |
43743 | Can I cease to love you? |
43743 | Can I forget you? |
43743 | Did not à � neas( with the assistance of the golden bough, and led by the Cumà ¦ an Sybil) take the same journey to pay a visit to his father? |
43743 | Does not every body say what they do not mean, and promise what they never intend to perform? |
43743 | Had he not, said he, the indiscretion to betray weakness, even to myself? |
43743 | He heard this, he said, from a brother, who had an intrigue with one of the Duchess''s maids.--Is the duke then married? |
43743 | Her apprehensions were considerably increased, when the earl asked her, in a harsh tone,_ her business with him_? |
43743 | How is the hardy Briton''s spirit tam''d By thy oppressive pride!-when danger comes Who shall defend thy property? |
43743 | I am again at a loss; did I hear you right? |
43743 | I answered,"They were charming,"and asked if it was possible he had resisted the charms of the beautiful countess? |
43743 | I hold the_ thread_ of his peace: can I forget its delicate texture, or that it is warped with_ those_ of his heart? |
43743 | I hope you only appoint them to attend you home? |
43743 | I hope, said she, you are in the court party and may get a pension? |
43743 | If I imbibed his ideas, could I be blamed for it? |
43743 | In such a situation what must a clergyman do? |
43743 | In what country is not the name of Peter celebrated, the greatest legislator that modern times have seen? |
43743 | Is it not injurious and ridiculous to censure others for thinking in the same manner we ourselves should have done under the same circumstances? |
43743 | Is not this the supreme enjoyment in nature? |
43743 | Is not this the unhappy case of this country at present? |
43743 | Le curà © s''informe s''il vit seul; et avec qui, Monsieur, repond- il, voudriez- vous que je và © casse? |
43743 | Lord Spangle asked Miss_ Ton_, how soon she got to bed the other morning? |
43743 | Mais, Monsieur, continue le curà ©, si vous êtes seul, pourquoi demandez vous plus de pain que ce qui vous est necessaire? |
43743 | Might it not prove an useful institution if public societies were erected on this plan? |
43743 | Miss Bingley would often reason with her aunt on this subject? |
43743 | Monsieur, s''ecrie en pleurant l''infortune, si je m''en dà © fais, qui est ce qui m''aimera? |
43743 | My passion I thought was indeed the only one I could not make: how was it possible I should? |
43743 | No; that poor Briton, whom thou hast undone By prosecutions-- will he not retort,"What''s liberty to me? |
43743 | Our Sovereign has the power-- but the parliament has still the law of that power[23].--What people on earth can say the same? |
43743 | Pray, said I, at what time did you sup? |
43743 | Shall I hazard life"For those imperious lordlings, who denied"That privilege, which Heaven and nature meant"For food, or sport, or exercise to all?"'' |
43743 | Shall he preach or write against them? |
43743 | Shall he then be quite silent, and neither preach nor write about them at all? |
43743 | She inquired, In what way she was culpable to them? |
43743 | The Goddess of Folly, with her cap and bells, approached Lady Darnley; who, smiling, asked her what had procured her the honor of her company? |
43743 | The husband stopped a moment to recollect himself; and then asks St Peter, Whether or not his wife was there? |
43743 | The marquis enquired what I thought of his sister, and her fair friend? |
43743 | Unassisted by Agrippa and Mecà ¦ nas, where should we have placed Augustus? |
43743 | Upon Lady Frances''s return home, her father gayly enquired, What she thought of his intended bride? |
43743 | What are they but monopolists in blood, That to themselves endeavour to preserve Inviolate the cruel privilege Of slaughter and destruction? |
43743 | What artist drew the picture? |
43743 | What forbearance did it not cost me? |
43743 | What is this But petty tyranny, th''ambitious child Of luxury and pride? |
43743 | What, said they, could engage Mr Villars to devote all his time to her? |
43743 | Where did you see her? |
43743 | Why did he forsake her; why did he lay her open to temptations? |
43743 | Why have we not them in this country, and dromedaries and camels? |
43743 | Why may not I, like Orpheus, go to visit it while living? |
43743 | Why should I not then, Eliza Finlay Spinster, attempt delineating manners, which I have really seen? |
43743 | Wilt thou partake of the feast of shells, or be honored with the dangers of the chase? |
43743 | You ask me if I have got no more lovers? |
43743 | [ 18] She answered,''What situation is like that of a man, who with one stroke of a pen makes himself obeyed from one end of the world to the other? |
43743 | _ Can so much gall in holy breasts reside?_ Boileau''s Lutrin. |
43743 | but convinced of the happiness of my rival, what did I not suffer? |
43743 | but the shining acts of Richelieu? |
43743 | do not those emotions constitute our happiness? |
43743 | have not our enemies taken the advantage of it?" |
43743 | is not friendship between a man and a woman a chimera, the mark of a passion which honor or self- interest bids them conceal? |
43743 | must he preach and maintain doctrines he disapproves of? |
43743 | replied Lord Finlay,''why suppress them? |
43743 | said he:"Is not wisdom entailed on it? |
43743 | shall I welcome thy approach? |
43743 | thine? |
43743 | thyself? |
4315 | And why, if you would satisfy my curiosity? |
4315 | Are you going to stay? |
4315 | Are you really Burton? |
4315 | Are you satisfied? |
4315 | Are you sure,enquired the Khedive, pointing to some of the rocks,"that this and this contain gold?" |
4315 | Can you remember any of his sayings? |
4315 | Dark the night and fears possess us, Of the waves and whirlpools wild: Of our case what know the lightly Laden on the shores that dwell? |
4315 | Did you like Damascus? |
4315 | Did you see my letter in The World? |
4315 | Do you think,said the Wali, with his twitching moustache and curious, sleek, unctuous smile,"do you think you would know your friend again?" |
4315 | Does n''t this,said Lord Houghton, raising a bumper to his lips,"make you feel as if you were drinking out of the skulls of poor devil authors?" |
4315 | Has it ever occurred to you, Sir Richard,enquired Dr. Baker,"that in the event of your death the manuscript might be burnt? |
4315 | Hath evil eye ensorcelled thee? |
4315 | How? |
4315 | I will then cometh this to thee? |
4315 | Is it true, Sir Richard,a young curate once innocently inquired,"that you shot a man near Mecca?" |
4315 | Is not the highest honour His who from the worst can draw the best? |
4315 | The Christian World? |
4315 | Then you suppose I am going to die? |
4315 | Well, where am I to go? |
4315 | Well,he would ask, when he entered the house,"has Frederick started for the River Plate yet? |
4315 | Were n''t you badly wounded? |
4315 | What manner of men must you English be,he said,"to leave such a paradise and travel to such a pandemonium as ours without compulsion?" |
4315 | What shall we do with our old maids? |
4315 | What''s this? |
4315 | Who sleeps in this unmarked Quoth I,Who sleepeth in this grave?" |
4315 | Why not,said one,"open a shop somewhere near the Prophet''s Mosque? |
4315 | Why so downcast? |
4315 | Why,asked Richards,"do you live in a flat and so high up?" |
4315 | Why,he asks,"should Englishmen poison or stab their wives when a few months at Zanzibar would do the business more quietly and effectually?" |
4315 | Would you a Sufi be? |
4315 | ''What is that?'' |
4315 | 1882? |
4315 | A short quotation must suffice:"When does the character of a man correspond to that of a beast?" |
4315 | And your fellow- sufferer from leather emanations, the Sanskiritist?" |
4315 | Are we likely to meet at the British Association?" |
4315 | At which he laboured for so many weary hours? |
4315 | Burton?" |
4315 | But his spirit? |
4315 | But me hither?" |
4315 | But that is nothing; the question is, are they readable English? |
4315 | But was Burton really disappointed? |
4315 | Can you tell me what number of pages they contain? |
4315 | Could n''t you write some trash-- novels, I mean?" |
4315 | Did ever tale- teller compare with Shahrazad? |
4315 | Do you not see it?" |
4315 | Do you think of the Crystal Palace this year? |
4315 | Eh, darling?" |
4315 | G. Percy Badger( of the Dictionary)? |
4315 | Harrison?) |
4315 | Has there been any unpleasantness about plain speaking? |
4315 | Have you a copy of Trebutien? |
4315 | Have you heard that Pickering and Chatto, of Haymarket, London, are going to print 100( photogravure) illustrations of the Nights? |
4315 | Have you the Arabian Nights published in Turkish by Mr. Clermont Ganneau? |
4315 | How am I going to reward him? |
4315 | How d''ye do?" |
4315 | I said, and the tomb?" |
4315 | I,''Wottest thou not how Quoth I,''Dost thou not I love thee and what I have know how I love thee suffered for thy sake? |
4315 | If they remonstrated, she used to retort,"Yes, and how do you like It?" |
4315 | Is Sarah( What''s her name? |
4315 | Is this a sin? |
4315 | Of course I do n''t know Arabic, but who does? |
4315 | Other people go, why should n''t we? |
4315 | Perhaps it will be asked, What has been lost by this action of Lady Burton''s? |
4315 | She says,"I saw that death was near....''Would you like to see Allah?'' |
4315 | The great questions was, Would she live to complete her task? |
4315 | The old man turned to the speaker his worn face and sunken eyes and said with excitement,"Do you think so? |
4315 | The spirits of the departed, can they revive us? |
4315 | They run:"Athanaeum Club,"Sept. 20''72"My dear Cousin,"When and where can I see you? |
4315 | Turning to Mr. Cautley, Lady Burton asked:"What religion shall I say?" |
4315 | Upon one of these meetings in a Swiss hotel, Burton burst out affectionately with,"And what the devil brought you here?" |
4315 | What do you say to meeting him at the Langham 7 p.m. table d''hote hour?.... |
4315 | What had he not seen? |
4315 | What more do I want to know?''" |
4315 | What would he care for the applause of fifteen hundred men now-- for the whole world''s praise, and God offended? |
4315 | When all was over, he touched the priest on the shoulder and said gravely and slowly, pointing to Mrs. Burton:"Do you know who this is? |
4315 | Who does not sympathise with the Trader who killed the invisible son of the jinni? |
4315 | Who has not dreamt of the poor fisherman and the pot that was covered with the seal of King Solomon? |
4315 | Why do n''t you make him go?" |
4315 | Why should it die with me? |
4315 | Why the devil does n''t he? |
4315 | With his curious feline laugh, Burton enquired,"Did n''t they offer you any?" |
4315 | Would he revive? |
4315 | Would it be dishonest to transfer a tale from one night or nights to another or others? |
4315 | Would you a Sufi be? |
4315 | Writing to Payne, 15th January, 1883, Burton says,"Has Arbuthnot sent you his Vatsyayana? |
4315 | [ 298] What news are there of him? |
4315 | [ 411] Which are they? |
4315 | [ Footnote 440: Ought there not to be notices prohibiting this habit in our public reference libraries? |
4315 | [ Footnote 446: Payne has--"Where are not the old Chosroes, tyrants of a bygone day? |
4315 | [ Footnote 558: Mr. Watts- Dunton, need we say? |
4315 | [ Footnote 60:"How,"asked Mr. J. F. Collingwood of him many years after,"do you manage to learn a language so rapidly and thoroughly?" |
4315 | company with lepers?" |
4315 | distinguished those who work"Whence, then, cometh saintly miracles; whence, this to thee?" |
4315 | how do you?" |
4315 | i.? |
4315 | may be? |
4315 | she echoed,"the valuable manuscript? |
4315 | the same? |
4315 | where are they?" |
4315 | will be finished? |
19082 | 11Is not He who created man able to quicken the dead? |
19082 | 12The scoffers say,''Shall we be raised to life, and our forefathers too, after we have become dust and bones? |
19082 | 14What does Abraham to those circumcised who have sinned too much? |
19082 | 22 Does it not seem perfectly plain that John''s doctrine of the Christ is at bottom identical with Philo''s doctrine of the Logos? 19082 32 And again he writes,"If souls survive, how has ethereal space made room for them all from eternity? |
19082 | 34 Was Jesusfrom above,"while wicked men were"from beneath"? |
19082 | 7 Origen also and who, after the apostles themselves, knew their thoughts and their use of language better than he? 19082 All things remain as they were: where is the promise of his appearing?" |
19082 | But some one will say, How are the dead raised up? 19082 Can you cast a pair for me?" |
19082 | Else why stand we in jeopardy every hour? |
19082 | For what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
19082 | Hath the news of the overwhelming day of judgment reached thee? 19082 If souls be substances corporeal, Be they as big just as the body is? |
19082 | In this tabernacle we groan, being burdened,and,"Who shall deliver me from this body of death?" |
19082 | Is the law against the promises of God? 19082 Jesus said not unto him,''He shall not die;''but,''If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee?''" |
19082 | Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost? |
19082 | O Charidas, what are the things below? 19082 O eternity, what art thou? |
19082 | So, thou hast immortality in mind? 19082 That I can,"says the man:"will you have them large or small?" |
19082 | Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall be those things thou hast gathered? |
19082 | What aileth them, that they believe not the resurrection? 19082 What and if ye shall see the Son of Man ascend up where he was before?" |
19082 | What if some did not believe? 19082 When bodies are raised, will each soul spontaneously know its own and enter it? |
19082 | Wherefore, if ye be dead with Christ, why are ye subject to worldly ordinances? 19082 Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ?" |
19082 | Why is God here? 19082 Why,"complainingly sighed the afflicted patriarch,"why died I not at my birth? |
19082 | Will all have one size and one sex? |
19082 | Will all rise of the same age? |
19082 | Will each one''s hairs and nails all be restored to him in the resurrection? |
19082 | Will the deformities and scars of our present bodies be retained in the resurrection? |
19082 | ''Then why was this cross put over you?'' |
19082 | 15. preservation of health because it can not be an everlasting possession? |
19082 | 22 The Resurrection of Spring, p. 26. just like them? |
19082 | 40 Tanslation by Dr. Stevenson, p. 23. the highest state of being? |
19082 | 6, 2. circumstances, than it is for him to go to heaven to such an experience as the faithful follower of Christ supposes is there awaiting him? |
19082 | 7 What debauched unbeliever ever inculcated a viler or a more fatal doctrine? |
19082 | 8 In seasons of imminent danger as in a shipwreck it was customary for a man to ask his companion, Hast thou been initiated? |
19082 | According to the Zoroastrian modes of thought, what would have been the fate of man had Ahriman not existed or not interfered? |
19082 | Accordingly, the question next arises, What is death when considered in this its true aspect? |
19082 | Admitting the truth of the common doctrine of the atonement, why did Christ die? |
19082 | And Pluto? |
19082 | And am I then revenged To take him in the purging of his soul, When he is fit and season''d for his passage? |
19082 | And can it be that every soul in the universe is better than the Maker and Father of the universe? |
19082 | And how will it be with us then? |
19082 | And is a common man better than Christ? |
19082 | And is it not an incredible blasphemy to deny to the deified Christ a magnanimity equal to that which any good man would exhibit? |
19082 | And is it not equally obvious, that it can lay no sort of claim to logical validity? |
19082 | And is man better than his Maker? |
19082 | And is not this a desertion of the orthodox doctrine of the Church? |
19082 | And is this blood, then, form''d but to be shed? |
19082 | And lives there a man of unperverted soul who would not decidedly prefer to have no God rather than to have such a one? |
19082 | And now, recalling the varied studies we have passed through, and seeking for the conclusion or root of the matter, what shall we say? |
19082 | And we find the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews thus replying to the question, Why did Christ die? |
19082 | And what do history and prophecy show more plainly than the tendency to a convergence of all humanity in every man? |
19082 | And what is that but the very consciousness, or the subject as its own object? |
19082 | And what method is there of crushing or evaporating these out of being? |
19082 | And what period can we imagine to terminate the unimpeded spirit''s abilities to learn, to enjoy, to expand? |
19082 | And what reception do the conclusions of those few meet at the hands of the public? |
19082 | And what the returns to earth? |
19082 | And whither do we go? |
19082 | And why should not the two shades be conceived, if either? |
19082 | And, however that Power be named, is it not God? |
19082 | Are not the poetic process and its sophistry clear? |
19082 | Are there not Those that fall down out of humanity Into the story where the four legg''d dwell?" |
19082 | Are there not souls"To whom dishonor''s shadow is a substance More terrible than death here and hereafter"? |
19082 | Are you a Gentile, an idolatrous member of the uncircumcision, or a scorner of the Levitic and Rabbinical customs? |
19082 | Are you afflicted? |
19082 | Are you blessed? |
19082 | Are you in danger? |
19082 | As long as you live, is it not glory and reward enough to have conquered the beasts at Ephesus? |
19082 | Because in death thou dost not know that thou art, therefore fearest thou that thou shalt be no more? |
19082 | Believing, as he certainly did, in a devil, the author and lord of darkness, falsehood, and death, would he not conceive a kingdom for him? |
19082 | Besides, had there been no sin, could not man have been drowned if he fell into the water without knowing how to swim? |
19082 | Besides, if they slept, how knew they what transpired in the mean time? |
19082 | Besides, there is a parallel fact of deep significance in our unquestionable experience;"For is not our first year forgot? |
19082 | But admitting the clauses apparently descriptive of the nature of this retribution to be metaphorical, yet what shall we think of its duration? |
19082 | But how did the Gentiles enter into belief and participation of the glad tidings? |
19082 | But how does such an antagonism arise? |
19082 | But if an indefinite number of impressions were superimposed on the same paper, could the fumes of mercury restore any one called for at random? |
19082 | But if such a world of fire, crowded with the writhing damned, ever existed at all, could it exist forever? |
19082 | But if the doctrine be true, and he is on probation under it, is it fair that he should be left honestly in ignorance or doubt about it? |
19082 | But if the souls live so long in heaven and hell without their flesh, why need they ever resume it? |
19082 | But some one may say,"If I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me if the dead rise not?" |
19082 | But that plausibility becomes an extreme probability nay, shall we not say certainty? |
19082 | But what are good and evil? |
19082 | But what else means the minute morbid anatomy of death beds, the prurient curiosity to know how the dying one bore himself in the solemn passage? |
19082 | But what is the prophecy, and how is it to be fulfilled? |
19082 | But what shall solace or end it if they know that hell''s borders are to be enlarged and to rage with avenging misery forever? |
19082 | But what was to become of the righteous and redeemed? |
19082 | But whence did we come? |
19082 | But, waiving that, what would the legitimate correspondence to it be for man? |
19082 | By what proofs is so tremendous a conclusion supported? |
19082 | Callimachus wrote the following couplet as an epitaph on the celebrated misanthrope:"Timon, hat''st thou the world or Hades worse? |
19082 | Can a breath move Mount Kaf? |
19082 | Can a ganglion solve a problem in Euclid or understand the Theodicee of Leibnitz? |
19082 | Can a mathematical number tell the difference between good and evil? |
19082 | Can air feel? |
19082 | Can air, earth, water, fire, live and we dead? |
19082 | Can an action love and hate, choose and resolve, rejoice and grieve, remember, repent, and pray? |
19082 | Can any defective technicality damn such a man? |
19082 | Can blood see? |
19082 | Can earth be jealous of a rival and loyal to a duty? |
19082 | Can egotistic folly any further go? |
19082 | Can every element our elements mar? |
19082 | Can fire think? |
19082 | Can human thought divine the answer? |
19082 | Can it be left there forever? |
19082 | Can it be that the roar of its furnace shall rage on, and the wail of the execrable anguish ascend, eternally? |
19082 | Can the fearful anguish of bereavement be gratuitous? |
19082 | Can water will? |
19082 | Can we imagine that we are the creators of God? |
19082 | Comes not death as a means to bear him thither? |
19082 | Compare the following text:"The baptism of John, whence was it, from Heaven, or of men?" |
19082 | Considering, then, that beatific experience of which heaven consists, under the metaphor of a city, what are its ways of entrance? |
19082 | Could Christ be satisfied? |
19082 | Could God suffer it? |
19082 | Could any conventional arrangement, or accident of locality, save such a man, while his character remained unchanged? |
19082 | Could the angels be contented when they contemplated the far off lurid orb and knew the agonies that fed its conscious conflagration? |
19082 | Could the saved be happy and passive in heaven when the muffled shrieks of their brethren, faint from the distance, fell on their ears? |
19082 | Could they have dreamed it? |
19082 | Cur? |
19082 | Destroy his organization, and what follows? |
19082 | Did Jesus perform miraculous works? |
19082 | Did they except none from the remediless doom of Hades? |
19082 | Do you belong to the chosen family of Abraham, and are you undefiled in relation to all the requirements of our code? |
19082 | Does a surprising piece of good fortune accrue to any one, splendid riches, a commanding position, a peerless friendship? |
19082 | Does it follow that at that time it was a common belief that the trees actually went forth occasionally to choose them a king? |
19082 | Does it not betoken a preserved epitome of the long history of slowly rising existence? |
19082 | Does justice heed the wrath of the offended, or the guilt of the offender? |
19082 | Does not the record plainly show this to an impartial reader? |
19082 | Does not the simple truth of love conquer and trample the world''s aggregated lie? |
19082 | Does not the whole idea appear rather like a rhetorical image than like a sober theological doctrine? |
19082 | Does the butterfly ever come back to put on the exuvia that have perished in the ground? |
19082 | Does the engineer die when the fire goes out and the locomotive stops? |
19082 | Dormant in the body, dead with the body, laid in the tomb? |
19082 | Doth it not seem the impression of a seal Can be no larger than the wax? |
19082 | Eliphaz the Temanite says,"Is not God in the height of heaven? |
19082 | Exhausted with wanderings, sated with experiments, will he not pray for the exempted lot of a contented fruition in repose? |
19082 | For a delegation was once sent to ask Jesus,"Art thou Elias? |
19082 | For example: what direct proof is there that Christ, when he vanished from the disciples, went to the presence of God in heaven, to die no more? |
19082 | For is it not one flexible instant of opportunity, and then an adamantine immortality of doom? |
19082 | For what purpose, then, was it thought that Jesus went to the imprisoned souls of the under world? |
19082 | For what were the most vivid of all the experiences men had among their fellows on earth? |
19082 | Fourthly, after the notion of a great, epochal resurrection, as a reply to the inquiry, What is to become of the soul? |
19082 | God asked Gabriel,"Whence comes that Amen?" |
19082 | Had Jesus an inspiration and a knowledge not vouchsafed to the princes of this world? |
19082 | Had it been all along credited in its literal sense, as a divine revelation, could this be so? |
19082 | Had not Plato that idea? |
19082 | Hast grounds that will not let thee doubt it? |
19082 | Have we not eternity in our thought, infinitude in our view, and God for our guide? |
19082 | He says, while answering the question, How are the dead raised up, and with what body do they come? |
19082 | He took my father grossly full of bread, With all his crimes broad blown, as flush as May; And how his audit stands who knows save Heaven? |
19082 | He waits passively for the resistless round of fate to bear him away, ah, whither? |
19082 | Here we are, And there we go: but where? |
19082 | His disciples once asked him,"What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" |
19082 | How came the notions of punishment, fire, brimstone, and kindred imagery, to be connected with it? |
19082 | How can it be remedied? |
19082 | How can men be guilty of a sin committed thousands of years before they were born, and deserve to be sent to hopeless hell for it? |
19082 | How can we demonstrate that it does not fall within the same class on the laws of evidence?" |
19082 | How can we pass to its citizenship? |
19082 | How does any one know that the mind of Jesus dialectically grasped the metaphysical notion of eternity and deliberately intended to express it? |
19082 | How does it comport with the old traditions? |
19082 | How does that event, admitted as a fact, rest in the average personal experience of Christians now? |
19082 | How has the earth found room for all the bodies buried in it? |
19082 | How have these horrors obtained such a seated hold in the world? |
19082 | How is it possible for any one to doubt that the text under consideration teaches his subterranean mission during the period of his bodily burial? |
19082 | How is this to be done? |
19082 | How much of the current representations in relation to another life were held as strict verity? |
19082 | How much, now, does this second fact imply? |
19082 | How, then, can it be said that the doctrine of a future life for man is revealed by it or implicated in it? |
19082 | I a lost soul? |
19082 | I separated from hope and from peace forever? |
19082 | If Nirwana be simply annihilation, why is it not so stated? |
19082 | If a building tumbled upon him, would he not have been crushed? |
19082 | If a man believe in no future life, is he thereby absolved from the moral law? |
19082 | If by"the dead"was meant"the bodies,"why are we not told so? |
19082 | If death be absolute, is it not an evil? |
19082 | If light can thus deceive, wherefore not life?" |
19082 | If man be not destined for perennial life, why is this dread of non existence woven into the soul''s inmost fibres? |
19082 | If on the first day you should shatter it, and thus rob it of one day''s life, would you be guilty of murder? |
19082 | If the souls of men are ideas of God, must they not be as enduring as his mind? |
19082 | If there be no future for him, why is he tortured with the inspiring idea of the eternal pursuit of the still flying goal of perfection? |
19082 | In a little while, as the ravaging reaper sweeps on his way, who will not have still more there, or be there himself? |
19082 | In distinction, then, from the monstrous mass of mistakes denoted by it, what is the truth carried in the awful word, hell? |
19082 | In reference to the question, Can ephemera have a moral law? |
19082 | In reply to those who argue thus, it is obvious to ask, whence did they learn all this? |
19082 | In that case, would not his mind have dwelt upon the wonderful anticipated phenomenon? |
19082 | In the first place, what view of the Father himself, the absolute Deity, do these writings present? |
19082 | In the resurrection, whose shall it be? |
19082 | In what sense can the passing of Christ''s soul into heaven after death be said to have done away with sin? |
19082 | Into the transparent sphere of perfect intelligence? |
19082 | Into the vacant dark of nothingness? |
19082 | Introduction to Study of Natural History, p. 57. of man? |
19082 | Is a threat efficacious over men in proportion to its intrinsic terror, or in proportion as it is personally felt and feared by them? |
19082 | Is he merely taunted with the starry sky, and mocked with an infinite illusion of progress, suddenly barred with endless night and oblivion? |
19082 | Is he not in a competent hell? |
19082 | Is it absolutely unending? |
19082 | Is it not a gratuitous fiction of theologians? |
19082 | Is it not a peurility to suppose that God has such documents? |
19082 | Is it not an absurdity to affirm that nerves and blood, flesh and bones, are responsible, guilty, must be punished? |
19082 | Is it not astonishing how these theologians find out so much? |
19082 | Is it not fitter that he be welcomed by triumphant initiation into the family of the deathless Father? |
19082 | Is it not so in the usage of John? |
19082 | Is it not strictly true that the thought that even one should have endless woe"Would cast a shadow on the throne of God And darken heaven"? |
19082 | Is it not the same law, still expressing the same meaning? |
19082 | Is it possible that the hero and the martyr and the saint, whose experience is laden with painful sacrifices for humanity, are mistaken? |
19082 | Is it worse to have nothing than it is to have infinite torture? |
19082 | Is not an agent necessary for an action? |
19082 | Is not the truth of ignorance better than the falsity of superstition? |
19082 | Is not this notion of the judgment being delegated to Jesus plainly adopted from the political image of a deputy? |
19082 | Is not this paragraph a disgusting combination of ignorance and arrogance? |
19082 | Is the overthrow of a country foretold? |
19082 | Is the sin measured by the dignity of the lawgiver, or by the responsibility of the law breaker? |
19082 | Is there a contradiction, then, in Paul? |
19082 | Is there any more real reason for believing this doctrine than there is for believing the other kindred schemes? |
19082 | Is there leisure for sport and business, or room for science and literature, or mood for pleasures and amenities? |
19082 | Is there no mind behind it and above it, making use of it as a servant? |
19082 | Is there not just as much reason for holding to the literal accuracy and validity of the result in one case as in another? |
19082 | Is there not truth in the poet''s picture of the meeting of child and parent in heaven? |
19082 | Is this Christ''s Father? |
19082 | Is this revelation, science, logic, or is it mythology? |
19082 | It demands,"Who art thou, O, maiden, uglier and more detestable than I ever saw in the world?" |
19082 | It has been asked,"If the incendiary be, like the fire he kindles, a result of material combinations, shall he not be treated in the same way?" |
19082 | It is an arrant begging of the question; for the very problem is, Does not an invisible spiritual entity survive the visible material disintegration? |
19082 | It is said that Araf seems hell to the blessed but paradise to the damned; for does not every thing depend on the point of view? |
19082 | Jochanan was dying, his disciples asked him,''Light of Israel, main pillar of the right, thou strong hammer, why dost thou weep?'' |
19082 | Let one pass in absence from childhood to maturity, and who that had not seen him in the mean time could tell that it was he? |
19082 | Life crowd a grain, from air''s vast realms effaced? |
19082 | Lord?" |
19082 | Meanwhile, shall we not be magnanimous to forgive and help, diligent to study and achieve, trustful and content to abide the invisible issue? |
19082 | Milton asks,"For who would lose, Though full of pain, this intellectual being?" |
19082 | Mohammed replied,"When day comes, where is night?" |
19082 | Moreover, what had occurred to effect the alleged new belief? |
19082 | Much is implied in this term and its accompaniments, and may be drawn out by answering the questions, What is heaven? |
19082 | Must not that be to the right port? |
19082 | Must not the pilgrim pine and tire for a goal of rest? |
19082 | Now, as a solitary exception to this, are minds absolutely destroyed? |
19082 | Now, does not the consciousness of infinity imply the infinity of consciousness? |
19082 | Now, if there be in man no personal entity, what is it that with so much joy attains Nirwana? |
19082 | Now, of what was it intended as the symbol? |
19082 | O Death, thou last enemy, where is thy sting? |
19082 | O Death, where is thy sting? |
19082 | O Hades, thou gloomy prison, where is thy victory?''" |
19082 | O Hades, where is thy victory?''" |
19082 | O blessed wealth and wretched freedom, how shall we perfect and reconcile them? |
19082 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
19082 | Oh, how shall I escape, and obtain eternal bliss?''" |
19082 | Oh, when shall we learn that a loving pity, a filial faith, a patient modesty, best become us and fit our state? |
19082 | On entering heaven, what magic shall work such a demoniacal change in him? |
19082 | On what grounds are we to believe them? |
19082 | On what principle is a part of the undivided apocalyptic portrayal rendered as emblem, the rest accepted as absolute verity? |
19082 | Or are they a direct vision and audience of it? |
19082 | Or shoot they out to the height ethereal? |
19082 | Or who could find, Whilst fly and leaf and insect stood reveal''d, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind? |
19082 | Or, to go still further back, why did he not, foreseeing Adam''s fall, refrain from creating even him? |
19082 | Orphal, Sind die Thiere blos sinnliche Geschopfe? |
19082 | Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?" |
19082 | Peter Lombard says,"What did the Redeemer do to the despot who had us in his bonds? |
19082 | Plotinus said,"If God repents having made the world, why does he defer its destruction? |
19082 | Regarding the Hebrew narrative as an indigenous growth, then, how shall we explain its origin, purport, and authority? |
19082 | Schlegel has somewhere asked the question,"Is life in us, or are we in life?" |
19082 | Secondly, if the resurrection did not take place, what became of the Savior''s body? |
19082 | Secondly, when he exclaims,"Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?" |
19082 | Shall he deliver his spirit from the hand of Sheol?" |
19082 | Shall heaven be held before man simply as a piece of meat before a hungry dog to make him jump well? |
19082 | Shall not Heaven pluck and wear them on her bosom? |
19082 | Shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect?" |
19082 | Shall"infants be not raised in the smallness of body in which they died, but increase by the wondrous and most swift work of God"? |
19082 | Should we not take a case in which God''s will is so far plainly fulfilled, in order to trace that will farther and even to its finality? |
19082 | Should you not think at least once a day of the fifty thousand who that day sink to the doom of the lost?" |
19082 | Since we can not eat sweet and wholesome food forever, shall we therefore at once saturate our stomachs with nauseating poisons? |
19082 | Studien and Kritiken, 1885, band i.,"Ist die Lehre von der Anferstehung des Leibes nicht ein alt Persische Lehre?" |
19082 | That is to say, was it of human or of Divine origin and authority? |
19082 | That is to say, whence originated the sentence of death upon man? |
19082 | The Persian poet, Buzurgi, says on this theme,"What is the soul? |
19082 | The Pharisee rejoins,"Can not God, then, who formed man of water,( gutta seminis humida,) much more re form him of clay?" |
19082 | The consequence has been that while elsewhere the ultimate standard by which to try a doctrine is, What do the most competent judges say? |
19082 | The deluge he certainly regarded as literal: was not, then, in his conception, the fire, too, literal? |
19082 | The dirge like burden of their poetry was literally these words:"What man is he that liveth and shall not see death? |
19082 | The essence of the controversy, then, is exactly this: Is the mind an entity? |
19082 | The ghost of miserable Patroclus calve to him and said,"Sleepest thou and art forgetful of me, O Achilles?" |
19082 | The ghost summoned from beneath by the witch of Endor said,"Why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up?" |
19082 | The important question here is, What did the Fathers suppose the essence of Christ''s redemptive work to be? |
19082 | The king accused them of theft; but they severally replied, the lame man, How could I reach it? |
19082 | The leaf a world, the firmament a waste?" |
19082 | The man that loves the Lord shall have length of days; the unjust, though for a moment he flourishes, yet the wind bloweth, and where is he? |
19082 | The only question is, what meaning was it intended to convey? |
19082 | The problem to be solved is, Does the man who is now a soul in a body remain a soul when the body dissolves? |
19082 | The question is,"What difference should it make to us whether we admit or deny the fact of a future life?" |
19082 | The question now arises, What did the Greeks think in relation to the ascent of human souls into heaven among the gods? |
19082 | The reply to the question, What is that relation? |
19082 | The second question that arises is, What was the significance of the funeral ceremonies celebrated by the Egyptians over their dead? |
19082 | The termination of all the functions he knows, what else can it be but his virtual annihilation? |
19082 | The theories in theological systems being but philosophy, why should they not be freely subjected to philosophical criticism? |
19082 | The unsatisfied and longing soul has created the doctrine of a future life, has it? |
19082 | The will is free now: what shall suddenly paralyze or annihilate that freedom when the soul leaves the body? |
19082 | The world reflecting from every corner the lurid glare of hell, who can do any thing else but shudder and pray? |
19082 | Then Jesus asked, But who think ye that I am? |
19082 | Then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written,''Death is swallowed up in victory?" |
19082 | Then the question arises, In what way is this done? |
19082 | There are invitations and opportunities to change from evil to good here: why not hereafter? |
19082 | Therefore does it not follow by all the necessities of logic? |
19082 | They once asked Jesus,"Who did sin, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?" |
19082 | This believing instinct, so deeply seated in our consciousness, natural, innocent, universal, whence came it, and why was it given? |
19082 | This, what is it but great Nature''s testimony, God''s silent avowal, that we are to meet in eternity? |
19082 | Thus to ignore the only solemn and worthy standard of judging an abstract doctrine, namely, Is it a truth or a falsehood? |
19082 | To be saved, and in paradise, what is it but to be a pure instrument to echo the music of divine things? |
19082 | Upon the mist veiled ocean launching then, he will sail where? |
19082 | Was Jesus sent among men with a special commission? |
19082 | Was Jesus the Son of God? |
19082 | Was Jesus the subject of a peculiar glory, bestowed upon him by the Father? |
19082 | Was there no path for the wisest and best souls to climb starry Olympus? |
19082 | We are met upon the threshold of our inquiry by the essential question, What, according to Paul, was the mission of Christ? |
19082 | We, whose minds comprehend all things? |
19082 | Well, is not the resurrection a pendant to the doctrine of Satan? |
19082 | Well, then, how does God treat offenders now? |
19082 | Were the angels who came down to the earth with Christ to the judgment never to return to their native seats? |
19082 | Were they not honest? |
19082 | Were they permanently to transfer their deathless citizenship from the sky to Judea? |
19082 | What animal can there be superior to me? |
19082 | What are presentiments but divine wings of the spirit fluttering toward our unseen goal? |
19082 | What are the results or penalties of it? |
19082 | What are they? |
19082 | What can be plainer than that? |
19082 | What can the everlasting deprivation of all good be called but an immense evil to its subject? |
19082 | What caused the snake to crawl on his belly in the dust, while other creatures walk on feet or fly with wings? |
19082 | What could be a more explicit declaration of this than the following? |
19082 | What crucible shall burn up the ultimate of force? |
19082 | What did he accomplish? |
19082 | What did he really mean to teach by it? |
19082 | What do they mean? |
19082 | What does Strauss mean by"the nerve spirit"? |
19082 | What does the great harmony of truth require? |
19082 | What does unprejudiced reason dictate? |
19082 | What fate has befallen him? |
19082 | What force is there to compel them into nothing? |
19082 | What good is there in the baseless conceit and gratuitous disgust of saying,"The next world is in the grave, betwixt the teeth of the worm"? |
19082 | What hems us in when we think, feel, and imagine? |
19082 | What in the hidden future portions of our destiny would be harmonic and complementary as related with the parts here experienced? |
19082 | What is death? |
19082 | What is it, expressed by the term"death,"which is found by the adherents of the devil distinctively? |
19082 | What is that common ground and element but the presence of a percipient volitional force, whether manifested or unmanifested, still there? |
19082 | What is the Brahmanic method of salvation, or secret of emancipation? |
19082 | What is the complete doctrine to which fragmentary references are here made? |
19082 | What is the real character of the retributions in the future state? |
19082 | What justice, what justice, is here in this? |
19082 | What material processes shall ever disintegrate the simplicity of spirit? |
19082 | What moral conditions alter the case then? |
19082 | What portions were regarded as fable or symbolism? |
19082 | What profiteth it? |
19082 | What profiteth it? |
19082 | What proof is there that the symbol denotes this? |
19082 | What shall, we add to man To bring him higher?" |
19082 | What sort of a figure would the segments which we now see, compose, if they were completed? |
19082 | What then? |
19082 | What though Decay''s shapeless hand extinguish us? |
19082 | What though the number of telescopic worlds were raised to the ten thousandth power, and each orb were as large as all of them combined would now be? |
19082 | What tree is man the seed of? |
19082 | What was the Jewish idea of salvation, or citizenship in the kingdom of God? |
19082 | What was the condition of acceptance in the Pharisaic church? |
19082 | What was the meaning of this ceremony? |
19082 | What was the meaning or aim of his death and resurrection? |
19082 | What, now, is the real meaning of these pregnant phrases? |
19082 | What, then, do they mean? |
19082 | What, then, does the phrase"redemption by the death of Christ"mean? |
19082 | What, then, is the meaning of the fear, suffering and horror, which so often accompany or follow sin? |
19082 | What, then, shall we say? |
19082 | What, then, were the essence and method of Christ''s redemptive mission according to the Fathers? |
19082 | When the engine madly plunges off the embankment or bridge of life, does the engineer perish in the ruin, or nimbly leap off and immortally escape? |
19082 | When the fireman risks his life to save a child from the flames of a tumbling house, is the hope of heaven his motive? |
19082 | When the soldier spurns an offered bribe and will not betray his comrades nor desert his post, is the fear of hell all that animates him? |
19082 | Whence and how arose this heterogeneous mass of notions? |
19082 | Where could man, scorched by the fires of the sun of this world, look for felicity, were it not for the shade afforded by the tree of emancipation? |
19082 | Where, then, did he suppose the soul of his crucified Master had been during the interval between his death and his resurrection? |
19082 | Whither has he gone? |
19082 | Whither? |
19082 | Who among us can dwell in everlasting burnings?" |
19082 | Who are citizens of, and who are aliens from, the kingdom of God? |
19082 | Who but must feel the pathos and admire the charity of these eloquent words of Henry Giles? |
19082 | Who can answer the question which rises to heaven from the abyss of the damned? |
19082 | Who can believe it, knowing what it is that he believes? |
19082 | Who can believe that it was for either of those purposes that they embalmed the multitudes of animals whose mummies the explorer is still turning up? |
19082 | Who can count the confessors who have thought it bliss and glory to be martyrs for truth and God? |
19082 | Who can linger there and listen, unmoved, to the sublime lament of things that die? |
19082 | Who could consent to that? |
19082 | Who has not endeared relatives, choice friends, freshly or long ago removed from this earth into the unknown clime? |
19082 | Who will save me?" |
19082 | Who would wish anything worse for him? |
19082 | Why do we not live immortally as we are? |
19082 | Why is he gifted with powers of reason and demands of love so far beyond his conditions? |
19082 | Why is it so calmly assumed that God can not pardon, and that therefore sinners must be given over to endless pains? |
19082 | Why may not pardon from unpurchased grace be vouchsafed as well after death as before? |
19082 | Why may not that untraceable something which has gone still exist? |
19082 | Why should recourse be had to a phrase partially descriptive of one feature, instead of comprehensively announcing or implying the whole case? |
19082 | Why should the power of hope, and joy, and faith, change into inanity and oblivion? |
19082 | Why should thy cruel arrow smite yon bird? |
19082 | Why should we shudder or grieve? |
19082 | Why then do we shun death with anxious strife? |
19082 | Why, or how, then, would a similar feat prove the opposite doctrine? |
19082 | Why, then, did he die? |
19082 | Why, then, has that of Christ alone made such a change in the faith of the world? |
19082 | Why, then, shall we select from the mass of metaphors a few of the most violent, and insist on rendering these as veritable statements of fact? |
19082 | Why, then, was he not left in peaceful nonentity? |
19082 | Why, then, we ask, is the faith in a future life for man suffering such a marked decay in the present generation of Christendom? |
19082 | Will Daniel Lambert, the mammoth of men, appear weighing half a ton? |
19082 | Will he do it? |
19082 | Will not the unimpeded Spirit of Christ lead all free minds and loving hearts to one conclusion? |
19082 | Will the King connive at this nefarious prowler and permit him to carry out his design? |
19082 | Will the Siamese twins then be again joined by the living ligament of their congenital band? |
19082 | Will the time ever come when that tortoise shall so rise up that its neck shall enter the hole of the yoke? |
19082 | Will you accept the horizon of your mind as the limit of the universe? |
19082 | Will you pass to meet them not having thought of them for years, having perhaps forgotten them? |
19082 | With which shall he be raised? |
19082 | World on world Are they forever heaping up, and still The mighty measure never, never full?" |
19082 | Would a designing knave voluntarily reveal to a suspicious scrutiny actions and traits naturally subversive of confidence in him? |
19082 | Would he not, then, in all probability, believe in a local hell? |
19082 | Would it not, moreover, be most marvellous if they were such heated fanatics, all of them, so many men? |
19082 | Would not his whole soul have been wrapped up in it, and his speech have been almost incessantly about it? |
19082 | Would they have done this save from simple hearted truthfulness? |
19082 | Yes; but if Paradise be above the heavens, and hell below the seventh earth, then how can Sirat be extended over hell for people to pass to Paradise? |
19082 | Yes; but the inquiry is, what is the mind itself? |
19082 | Yes; but what is it that presides over, takes up, and preserves this succession? |
19082 | Yet are not the principles of science as much glimpses of the mind of God as any sentences in the Bible are? |
19082 | Yet logically what separates it from the resurrection of Christ? |
19082 | a doctrine, or a coming event? |
19082 | a general truth to enlighten and guide uncertain men, or an approaching deliverance to console and encourage the desponding Jews? |
19082 | and how, in their estimation, did he achieve that work? |
19082 | and that the slattern and the voluptuary and the sluggard, whose course is one of base self indulgence, are correct? |
19082 | and what details are connected with them? |
19082 | and with what body do they come?" |
19082 | are will, conscience, thought, and love annihilated? |
19082 | art thou that prophet?" |
19082 | art thou the Messiah? |
19082 | blasphemy any further go? |
19082 | but it is wherever God''s approving presence extends: and is that not wherever the pure in heart are found? |
19082 | can the yearning prophecies of the smitten heart be all false? |
19082 | eternal pain for me? |
19082 | has old Adam snorted all this time Under some senselesse clod, with sleep ydead?" |
19082 | he who once was rich but for our sakes became poor? |
19082 | he who poured his blood on Judea''s awful summit, be satisfied? |
19082 | he whose loving soul breathed itself forth in the tender words,"Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest"? |
19082 | how can ye escape the condemnation of Gehenna?" |
19082 | in glory? |
19082 | in his life, and brought to a focus in his martyr death? |
19082 | in temptation? |
19082 | in theology it is, What do the committed priests say? |
19082 | is it not enough to have borne the wretchedness of this life, that we must also endure another?" |
19082 | must they not have considered him as a pledge that their sins were forgiven, their doom reversed, and heaven attainable? |
19082 | not, what are its acts? |
19082 | or is it a collection of functions? |
19082 | or the capacity of the higher? |
19082 | or the fifth? |
19082 | or the last? |
19082 | or will the power of God distribute them as they belong?" |
19082 | or with all? |
19082 | or, across that dark gulf, shall we be united again in purer bonds? |
19082 | somewhere in the ample creation and in the boundless ages, join, with the old familiar love, our long parted, fondly cherished, never forgotten dead?" |
19082 | that is, to bring Christ down; or,''Who shall descend into the under world?'' |
19082 | the blind man, How could I see it? |
19082 | the genius of a Shakspeare, whose imagination exhausted worlds and then invented new? |
19082 | the heart of a Borromeo, whose seraphic love expanded to the limits of sympathetic being? |
19082 | the soul of a Wycliffe, whose undaunted will, in faithful consecration to duty, faced the fires of martyrdom and never blenched? |
19082 | what difference would that make in the facts of human nature and destiny? |
19082 | what hadst thou to do in hell When thou didst bower the spirit of a fiend In mortal paradise of such sweet flesh?" |
19082 | what other definition and affirmation of salvation conceivable? |
19082 | what shall I do? |
19082 | will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?" |
19082 | with the first? |
27889 | If it is not,he replied,"when will it be?" |
27889 | Pray, what is that? |
27889 | Shall I beat the bush and another take the bird? |
27889 | We are by nature all as one, all alike, if you see us naked; let us wear theirs and they our clothes, and what is the difference? |
27889 | What muscles are those? |
27889 | Why, then,said some one to him,"do not you die?" |
27889 | ''T is insensible, then? |
27889 | --an echo answers,"Where? |
27889 | 1, 20._ What find you better or more honourable than age? |
27889 | 1._ Can one desire too much of a good thing? |
27889 | 1._ Condemn the fault, and not the actor of it? |
27889 | 1._ Has this fellow no feeling of his business? |
27889 | 1._ Is it so nominated in the bond? |
27889 | 1._ Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love? |
27889 | 1._ Is she not passing fair? |
27889 | 1._ Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? |
27889 | 1._ Is this that haughty gallant, gay Lothario? |
27889 | 1._ Shall I never see a bachelor of threescore again? |
27889 | 1._ She was a wight, if ever such wight were,--_ Des._ To do what? |
27889 | 1._ Think you I am no stronger than my sex, Being so father''d and so husbanded? |
27889 | 1._ What seest thou else In the dark backward and abysm of time? |
27889 | 1._ What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom? |
27889 | 1._ Why may not that be the skull of a lawyer? |
27889 | 1._ Why should a man, whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster? |
27889 | 1._ Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him? |
27889 | 1.__ Cornelia._ What flowers are these? |
27889 | 10._ Seest thou a man diligent in his business? |
27889 | 11._ Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned? |
27889 | 11._ Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
27889 | 12._ Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? |
27889 | 13._ Is there no balm in Gilead? |
27889 | 14._ For a man can lose neither the past nor the future; for how can one take from him that which is not his? |
27889 | 16._ How long halt ye between two opinions? |
27889 | 17._ Do you seek Alcides''equal? |
27889 | 1773._ Was ever poet so trusted before? |
27889 | 18._ The Lord opened the mouth of the ass, and she said unto Balaam, What have I done unto thee, that thou hast smitten me these three times? |
27889 | 2, 8._(_ 675._) What now if the sky were to fall? |
27889 | 2._ A simple child That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death? |
27889 | 2._ Are you good men and true? |
27889 | 2._ Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? |
27889 | 2._ Condemn you me for that the duke did love me? |
27889 | 2._ Didst thou never hear That things ill got had ever bad success? |
27889 | 2._ Do you think I am easier to be played on than a pipe? |
27889 | 2._ For where is any author in the world Teaches such beauty as a woman''s eye? |
27889 | 2._ In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But being season''d with a gracious voice Obscures the show of evil? |
27889 | 2._ Is not old wine wholesomest, old pippins toothsomest, old wood burns brightest, old linen wash whitest? |
27889 | 2._ Is not this a lamentable thing, that of the skin of an innocent lamb should be made parchment? |
27889 | 2._ No scandal about Queen Elizabeth, I hope? |
27889 | 2._ Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart or in the head? |
27889 | 2._ Think''st thou existence doth depend on time? |
27889 | 2._ Use every man after his desert, and who should''scape whipping? |
27889 | 2._ Was ever book containing such vile matter So fairly bound? |
27889 | 2._ Was ever woman in this humour wooed? |
27889 | 2._ What imports the nomination of this gentleman? |
27889 | 2._ What precious drops are those Which silently each other''s track pursue, Bright as young diamonds in their infant dew? |
27889 | 2._ What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, That he should weep for her? |
27889 | 2._ Who is here so base that would be a bondman? |
27889 | 2._ You are not like Cerberus, three gentlemen at once, are you? |
27889 | 2._ Your fathers, where are they? |
27889 | 2._"Darest thou, Cassius, now Leap in with me into this angry flood, And swim to yonder point?" |
27889 | 2._[105- 4] What''s in a name? |
27889 | 2._[120- 1] Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? |
27889 | 2.__ Cel._ Not a word? |
27889 | 2.__ Clo._ What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl? |
27889 | 2.__ Falstaff._ What wind blew you hither, Pistol? |
27889 | 2.__ Ham._ Do you see yonder cloud that''s almost in shape of a camel? |
27889 | 2.__ Ham._ His beard was grizzled,--no? |
27889 | 2.__ Ham._ Is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring? |
27889 | 2.__ Pol._ What do you read, my lord? |
27889 | 2.__ Serv._ Where dwellest thou? |
27889 | 20._ Am I my brother''s keeper? |
27889 | 20._ Doth perfect beauty stand in need of praise at all? |
27889 | 22._ If they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry? |
27889 | 22._ Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge? |
27889 | 23._ What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
27889 | 25._ Canst thou draw out leviathan with an hook? |
27889 | 254(? |
27889 | 28._ A wounded spirit who can bear? |
27889 | 28._ Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour? |
27889 | 3._ For when did friendship take A breed for barren metal of his friend? |
27889 | 3._ Have you summoned your wits from wool- gathering? |
27889 | 3._ Hear you this Triton of the minnows? |
27889 | 3._ I said, an elder soldier, not a better: Did I say"better"? |
27889 | 3._ Is it a world to hide virtues in? |
27889 | 3._ Is there no respect of place, parsons, nor time in you? |
27889 | 3._ O, who can hold a fire in his hand By thinking on the frosty Caucasus? |
27889 | 3._ Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn? |
27889 | 3._ Shall quips and sentences and these paper bullets of the brain awe a man from the career of his humour? |
27889 | 3._ Should I have answer''d Caius Cassius so? |
27889 | 3._ Sits the wind in that corner? |
27889 | 3._ Stands Scotland where it did? |
27889 | 3._ Under which king, Bezonian? |
27889 | 3._ What are these So wither''d and so wild in their attire, That look not like the inhabitants o''the earth, And yet are on''t? |
27889 | 3._ What, all my pretty chickens and their dam At one fell swoop? |
27889 | 3._ Wherefore are these things hid? |
27889 | 3._ Who can not give good counsel? |
27889 | 3._[120- 2] Who can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, Loyal and neutral, in a moment? |
27889 | 3.__ 2 Watch._ How if a''will not stand? |
27889 | 3.__ Brutus._ Then I shall see thee again? |
27889 | 3.__ Iago._ What, are you hurt, lieutenant? |
27889 | 3.__ Sir To._ Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale? |
27889 | 31._ Canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons? |
27889 | 32._ Hath not thy heart within thee burned At evening''s calm and holy hour? |
27889 | 4._ Call you that backing of your friends? |
27889 | 4._ Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer''s cloud, Without our special wonder? |
27889 | 4._ How is''t with you, That you do bend your eye on vacancy? |
27889 | 4._ What act That roars so loud, and thunders in the index? |
27889 | 4._ What doth gravity out of his bed at midnight? |
27889 | 4._ Who ever loved that loved not at first sight? |
27889 | 4.__ Duke._ And what''s her history? |
27889 | 4.__ Macb._ What is the night? |
27889 | 40._ Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing? |
27889 | 46(?)-120(?) |
27889 | 5._ Art thou there, truepenny? |
27889 | 5._ For who hath despised the day of small things? |
27889 | 5._ Indeed, what is there that does not appear marvellous when it comes to our knowledge for the first time? |
27889 | 5._ Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? |
27889 | 5._ What the devil did he want in that galley? |
27889 | 5._ What will not woman, gentle woman dare, When strong affection stirs her spirit up? |
27889 | 5._ Where''s my serpent of old Nile? |
27889 | 5.__ 1 W._ When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain? |
27889 | 50._ Did not our heart burn within us while he talked with us? |
27889 | 52._ O death, where is thy sting? |
27889 | 570(?)-490(?) |
27889 | 59._ Why is it that we entertain the belief that for every purpose odd numbers are the most effectual? |
27889 | 6._ Must I hold a candle to my shames? |
27889 | 6._ Why doth one man''s yawning make another yawn? |
27889 | 7._ You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet, Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? |
27889 | 7.__ Macb._ If we should fail? |
27889 | 8._ Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
27889 | 809._ Who knows but life be that which men call death,[699- 3] And death what men call life? |
27889 | 9._ Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? |
27889 | 9._ Is Saul also among the prophets? |
27889 | 9._ Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new? |
27889 | 9._ Watchman, what of the night? |
27889 | 9._ Why should the Devil have all the good tunes? |
27889 | A Tragedy._ But whither am I strayed? |
27889 | A better buckler I can soon regain; But who can get another life again? |
27889 | A woman asked the coachman,"Are you full inside?" |
27889 | ANNE CRAWFORD( 1734- 1801):_ Kathleen Mavourneen._ Who can refute a sneer? |
27889 | Ah, who can tell how hard it is to climb The steep where Fame''s proud temple shines afar? |
27889 | Ah, who shall lead us thither? |
27889 | Am I not a man and a brother? |
27889 | And echo answered,"Where are they?" |
27889 | And happy always was it for that son Whose father for his hoarding went to hell? |
27889 | And is there love In heavenly spirits to these Creatures bace? |
27889 | And that which was prov''d true before Prove false again? |
27889 | And the prophets, do they live forever? |
27889 | And who gave thee that jolly red nose? |
27889 | And why does thy nose look so blue? |
27889 | Antagoras replied,"Do you think, O king, that Agamemnon, when he did such exploits, was a peeping in his army to see who boiled congers?" |
27889 | Apology for Raimond Sebond._ When I play with my cat, who knows whether I do not make her more sport than she makes me? |
27889 | Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight? |
27889 | As a bankrupt thief turns thief- taker in despair, so an unsuccessful author turns critic.--SHELLEY:_ Fragments of Adonais._ You know who critics are? |
27889 | Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be? |
27889 | Book i. Stanza 1._"But what good came of it at last?" |
27889 | Bright jewels of the mine, The wealth of seas, the spoils of war? |
27889 | Burned at Smithfield, Feb. 14, 1554._[687- 2]***** And shall Trelawny die? |
27889 | But if you chance to be placed in some superior station, will you presently set yourself up for a tyrant? |
27889 | But will it not live with the living? |
27889 | Ca n''t I another''s face commend, And to her virtues be a friend, But instantly your forehead lowers, As if_ her_ merit lessen''d_ yours_? |
27889 | Can honour set to a leg? |
27889 | Can honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of death? |
27889 | Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creation, hues like hers? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 1._ Where the virgins are soft as the roses they twine, And all save the spirit of man is divine? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 1._ Who hath not proved how feebly words essay To fix one spark of beauty''s heavenly ray? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 17._ But, oh ye lords of ladies intellectual, Inform us truly,--have they not henpeck''d you all? |
27889 | Canto i. Stanza 216._ What is the end of fame? |
27889 | Canto iii._"What is good for a bootless bene?" |
27889 | Canto v. Stanza 16._ And dar''st thou then To beard the lion in his den, The Douglas in his hall? |
27889 | Canto v. Stanza 30._ Where, where was Roderick then? |
27889 | Costs it more pain that this ye call A"great event"should come to pass From that? |
27889 | Could not the grave forget thee, and lay low Some less majestic, less beloved head? |
27889 | Cui Bono?_ In the name of the Prophet-- figs. |
27889 | Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What need''st thou such weak witness of thy name? |
27889 | Dialogue i.__ Lord M._ What religion is he of? |
27889 | Did Shakespeare? |
27889 | Do your joys with age diminish? |
27889 | Doth he feel it? |
27889 | Doth he hear it? |
27889 | Drinking._ Fill all the glasses there, for why Should every creature drink but I? |
27889 | Edinburgh Review, 1828._ How does the poet speak to men with power, but by being still more a man than they? |
27889 | Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality? |
27889 | Fast asleep? |
27889 | Fond hope of many nations, art thou dead? |
27889 | HARRIET W. SEWALL( 1819- 1889):_ Why thus longing?_ Do n''t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? |
27889 | HARRIET W. SEWALL( 1819- 1889):_ Why thus longing?_ Do n''t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? |
27889 | Hark, in thine ear: change places; and, handy- dandy, which is the justice, which is the thief? |
27889 | Hast any philosophy in thee, shepherd? |
27889 | Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man? |
27889 | Hath not a Jew eyes? |
27889 | Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? |
27889 | Hath thy toil O''er books consum''d the midnight oil? |
27889 | Heaven sends us good meat, but the Devil sends cooks? |
27889 | Honour hath no skill in surgery, then? |
27889 | How a good yoke of bullocks at Stamford fair? |
27889 | How begot, how nourished? |
27889 | How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae weary fu''o''care? |
27889 | How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are? |
27889 | I can not play alone: The summer comes with flower and bee,-- Where is my brother gone? |
27889 | I love it, I love it, and who shall dare To chide me for loving that old arm- chair? |
27889 | III._ What gentle ghost, besprent with April dew, Hails me so solemnly to yonder yew? |
27889 | In parts superior what advantage lies? |
27889 | Is it for that the winds, slipping the smooth oil, have no force, nor cause any waves? |
27889 | Is it not man that keeps and serves me? |
27889 | Is there no physician there? |
27889 | Is this the great poet whose works so content us? |
27889 | JAMES G. PERCIVAL( 1795- 1856):_ To Seneca Lake._ What fairy- like music steals over the sea, Entrancing our senses with charmed melody? |
27889 | JOSEPH E. CARPENTER( 1813-----):_ What are the wild Waves saying?_ Well, General, we have not had many dead cavalrymen lying about lately. |
27889 | Last line._ I am his Highness''dog at Kew; Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you? |
27889 | Let her and Falsehood grapple: who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter? |
27889 | Life let us cherish, while yet the taper glows, And the fresh flow''ret pluck ere it close; Why are we fond of toil and care? |
27889 | Line 1._ Is there no bright reversion in the sky For those who greatly think, or bravely die? |
27889 | Line 1003._ He''s gone, and who knows how he may report Thy words by adding fuel to the flame? |
27889 | Line 1073._ Why comes temptation, but for man to meet And master and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph? |
27889 | Line 13._ Say first, of God above or man below, What can we reason but from what we know? |
27889 | Line 139._ Why has not man a microscopic eye? |
27889 | Line 197._ What needs my Shakespeare for his honour''d bones,-- The labour of an age in piled stones? |
27889 | Line 203._ What can ennoble sots or slaves or cowards? |
27889 | Line 207._ Who but must laugh, if such a man there be? |
27889 | Line 213._ Was I deceiv''d, or did a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night? |
27889 | Line 217._ Ask where''s the North? |
27889 | Line 221._ Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment? |
27889 | Line 254._ Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land? |
27889 | Line 257._ Why should not conscience have vacation As well as other courts o''th''nation? |
27889 | Line 270._ Who shall decide when doctors disagree, And soundest casuists doubt, like you and me? |
27889 | Line 282._ Among unequals what society Can sort, what harmony, or true delight? |
27889 | Line 283._ But who can paint Like Nature? |
27889 | Line 293._ What boots it at one gate to make defence, And at another to let in the foe? |
27889 | Line 309._ For what is worth in anything But so much money as''t will bring? |
27889 | Line 316._ Must helpless man, in ignorance sedate, Roll darkling down the torrent of his fate? |
27889 | Line 317._ He that imposes an oath makes it, Not he that for convenience takes it; Then how can any man be said To break an oath he never made? |
27889 | Line 379._ O little booke, thou art so unconning, How darst thou put thy- self in prees for drede? |
27889 | Line 379._ Say, shall my little bark attendant sail, Pursue the triumph and partake the gale? |
27889 | Line 463._ And would''st thou evil for his good repay? |
27889 | Line 47._ Falsely luxurious, will not man awake? |
27889 | Line 472._ Who hath not own''d, with rapture- smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name? |
27889 | Line 51._ What is it but a map of busy life, Its fluctuations, and its vast concerns? |
27889 | Line 55._ Which way shall I fly Infinite wrath and infinite despair? |
27889 | Line 65._ What though the field be lost? |
27889 | Line 666._ Whence and what art thou, execrable shape? |
27889 | Line 687._ What makes all doctrines plain and clear? |
27889 | Line 775._ Must I thus leave thee, Paradise?--thus leave Thee, native soil, these happy walks and shades? |
27889 | Line 873._ But how carve way i''the life that lies before, If bent on groaning ever for the past? |
27889 | Line 88._ Ever charming, ever new, When will the landscape tire the view? |
27889 | March, 1775._ Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
27889 | Mark you His absolute"shall"? |
27889 | Methought I saw the footsteps of a throne.--WORDSWORTH:_ Sonnet._[ 26- 2] If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be? |
27889 | Must in death your daylight finish? |
27889 | Need I say She was enchanted by the wicked spells Of Gebir, whom with lust of power inflamed The western winds have landed on our coast? |
27889 | Nemo est nisi ipse( Do you seek Alcides''equal? |
27889 | No feat which, done, would make time break, And let us pent- up creatures through Into eternity, our due? |
27889 | No forcing earth teach heaven''s employ? |
27889 | Not one now, to mock your own grinning? |
27889 | Now, in the names of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Cæsar feed, That he is grown so great? |
27889 | O grave, where is thy victory? |
27889 | Of the Art of Conversation._ What if he has borrowed the matter and spoiled the form, as it oft falls out? |
27889 | Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? |
27889 | Oh when shall it dawn on the night of the grave? |
27889 | Oh why should the spirit of mortal be proud? |
27889 | Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast? |
27889 | Or if I would delight my private hours With music or with poem, where so soon As in our native language can I find That solace? |
27889 | Or make pale my cheeks with care,''Cause another''s rosy are? |
27889 | Or that his hallow''d relics should be hid Under a star- y- pointing pyramid? |
27889 | Or wallow naked in December snow By thinking on fantastic summer''s heat? |
27889 | Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught? |
27889 | PRIOR:_ Upon a passage in the Scaligerana._[ 180- 2] What beckoning ghost along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade? |
27889 | Pay every debt, as if God wrote the bill? |
27889 | Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love, But-- why did you kick me down stairs? |
27889 | Prelude to Part First._ And what is so rare as a day in June? |
27889 | Prithee, why so pale? |
27889 | Prithee, why so pale? |
27889 | Question ix._ Why does pouring oil on the sea make it clear and calm? |
27889 | Quite chap- fallen? |
27889 | ROBERT HAWKER( 1753- 1827):_ Benediction._ Roy''s wife of Aldivalloch, Wat ye how she cheated me, As I came o''er the braes of Balloch? |
27889 | Said he,"How are we fallen among them more than they among us?" |
27889 | Said one to Iphicrates,"What are ye afraid of?" |
27889 | Shall I bid her goe and spare not? |
27889 | Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman''s fair? |
27889 | She coldly said, her long- lasht eyes abased,_ Is this the mighty ocean? |
27889 | Shikspur? |
27889 | Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne? |
27889 | Since no man has aught of what he leaves, what is''t to leave betimes? |
27889 | Sister Anne, do you see any one coming? |
27889 | St. 12._ And is there care in Heaven? |
27889 | St. 43._ Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercy ever hope to have? |
27889 | Stanza 1._ And after all, what is a lie? |
27889 | Stanza 1._ Art thou a friend to Roderick? |
27889 | Stanza 1._ But what am I? |
27889 | Stanza 10._ Can storied urn, or animated bust, Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath? |
27889 | Stanza 100._ And who( in time) knows whither we may vent The treasure of our tongue? |
27889 | Stanza 11._ Where''s the coward that would not dare To fight for such a land? |
27889 | Stanza 145._ Scion of chiefs and monarchs, where art thou? |
27889 | Stanza 2._ Where is it now, the glory and the dream? |
27889 | Stanza 4._ But how can he expect that others should Build for him, sow for him, and at his call Love him, who for himself will take no heed at all? |
27889 | Stanza 55._ Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove An unrelenting foe to love; And when we meet a mutual heart, Come in between and bid us part? |
27889 | Stanza 8._ And what is friendship but a name, A charm that lulls to sleep, A shade that follows wealth or fame, And leaves the wretch to weep? |
27889 | Streaming eyes and breaking hearts; Or all the same as if he had not been? |
27889 | Tell( for you can) what is it to be wise? |
27889 | The Rat- catcher and Cats._ Is there no hope? |
27889 | The Shepherd and the Philosopher._ Whence is thy learning? |
27889 | The Shepherd and the Philosopher._ Where yet was ever found a mother Who''d give her booby for another? |
27889 | The references are to the text of Umpfenbach._[702- 1]) Do not they bring it to pass by knowing that they know nothing at all? |
27889 | This Goldsmith''s fine feast, who has written fine books? |
27889 | To that dry drudgery at the desk''s dead wood? |
27889 | To the inquiry of"What religion?" |
27889 | To what strange shores This gain of our best glory shall be sent T''enrich unknowing nations with our stores? |
27889 | Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason? |
27889 | Was ever woman in this humour won? |
27889 | Was man made a wheel- work to wind up, And be discharged, and straight wound up anew? |
27889 | Was she not fair? |
27889 | Was she not fruitful?" |
27889 | Was thy dream then a shadowy lie? |
27889 | Was your youth of pleasure wasteful? |
27889 | Washing._ FOOTNOTES:[ 20- 1]_ Falstaff._ What wind blew you hither, Pistol? |
27889 | What art can wash her guilt away? |
27889 | What cat''s averse to fish? |
27889 | What female heart can gold despise? |
27889 | What if I doe? |
27889 | What is honour? |
27889 | What is in that word honour; what is that honour? |
27889 | What is it? |
27889 | What is matter? |
27889 | What need a vermeil- tinctur''d lip for that, Love- darting eyes, or tresses like the morn? |
27889 | What news on the Rialto? |
27889 | What shall I do to be forever known, And make the age to come my own? |
27889 | What shall I render to my God For all his gifts to me? |
27889 | What will Mrs. Grundy say? |
27889 | What worlds in the yet unformed Occident May come refin''d with th''accents that are ours? |
27889 | What would the world do without tea?--how did it exist? |
27889 | What would you have, O man? |
27889 | What''s not devoured by Time''s devouring hand? |
27889 | When Adam dolve, and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
27889 | When cowards mock the patriot''s fate, Who hangs his head for shame? |
27889 | Where are the snows of last year? |
27889 | Where be his quiddities now, his quillets, his cases, his tenures, and his tricks? |
27889 | Where be your gibes now; your gambols, your songs? |
27889 | Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us? |
27889 | Where left you Chrononhotonthologos? |
27889 | Where''s Troy, and where''s the Maypole in the Strand? |
27889 | While Cato gives his little senate laws, What bosom beats not in his country''s cause? |
27889 | Who blushes at the name? |
27889 | Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? |
27889 | Who fears to speak of Ninety- eight? |
27889 | Who hath it? |
27889 | Who in widow weeds appears, Laden with unhonoured years, Noosing with care a bursting purse, Baited with many a deadly curse? |
27889 | Who would not weep, if Atticus were he? |
27889 | Who wrote it? |
27889 | Whose heart hath ne''er within him burn''d[488- 1] As home his footsteps he hath turn''d From wandering on a foreign strand? |
27889 | Why all this toil and trouble? |
27889 | Why ar''n''t they all contented like me? |
27889 | Why choose the rankling thorn to wear? |
27889 | Why do n''t the men propose? |
27889 | Why flash those sparks of fury from your eyes? |
27889 | Why is thy countenance sad, and why are thine eyes red with weeping? |
27889 | Why may not imagination trace the noble dust of Alexander, till we find it stopping a bung- hole? |
27889 | Why should I hurt thee? |
27889 | Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction? |
27889 | Why wish we warfare? |
27889 | Why"small"? |
27889 | Why, man of morals, tell me why? |
27889 | Why? |
27889 | Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail? |
27889 | With these dark words begins my tale; And their meaning is, Whence can comfort spring When prayer is of no avail? |
27889 | Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? |
27889 | Yea, but how if honour prick me off when I come on,--how then? |
27889 | Yet who would tread again the scene He trod through life before? |
27889 | You have the letters Cadmus gave,-- Think ye he meant them for a slave? |
27889 | [ 171- 2] Is not old wine wholesomest, old pippins toothsomest, old wood burns brightest, old linen wash whitest? |
27889 | [ 26- 2]_ Poem._ If she seem not chaste to me, What care I how chaste she be? |
27889 | [ 292- 1]_ Introduction to Polite Conversation._ Do you think I was born in a wood to be afraid of an owl? |
27889 | [ 318- 1] Why may not a goose say thus? |
27889 | [ 352- 1]_ The Double Falsehood._ FOOTNOTES:[ 352- 1] Quæris Alcidæ parem? |
27889 | [ 360- 1]_ Maxims prefixed to Poor Richard''s Almanac, 1757._ Dost thou love life? |
27889 | [ 405- 1]_ King Cophetua and the Beggar- maid._"What is thy name, faire maid?" |
27889 | [ 405- 2]_ King Cophetua and the Beggar- maid._ And how should I know your true love From many another one? |
27889 | [ 406- 4]_ Sir Launcelot du Lake._ Shall I bid her goe? |
27889 | [ 449- 2]_ I hae a Wife o''my Ain._ Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind? |
27889 | [ 560- 1] What is mind? |
27889 | [ 598- 1]_ Good Bye._ For what are they all in their high conceit, When man in the bush with God may meet? |
27889 | [ 709- 2]_ Maxim 262._ What is left when honour is lost? |
27889 | [ 717- 1] Why does pouring oil on the sea make it clear and calm? |
27889 | [ 718- 4] How many things, too, are looked upon as quite impossible until they have been actually effected? |
27889 | [ 725- 1] The pilot telling Antigonus the enemy outnumbered him in ships, he said,"But how many ships do you reckon my presence to be worth?" |
27889 | [ 725- 5]_ Life of Lysander._ Did you not know, then, that to- day Lucullus sups with Lucullus? |
27889 | [ 741- 1]_ Which are the most crafty, Water or Land Animals? |
27889 | [ 758- 7]"How thick do you judge the planks of our ship to be?" |
27889 | [ 782- 1]_ First Week, Third Day._ For where''s the state beneath the firmament That doth excel the bees for government? |
27889 | _ 2 Clo._ But is this law? |
27889 | _ A Death in the Desert._ What? |
27889 | _ A True Hymn._ Wouldst thou both eat thy cake and have it? |
27889 | _ Advice to a Lady._ What is your sex''s earliest, latest care, Your heart''s supreme ambition? |
27889 | _ After._ Ah, did you once see Shelley plain, And did he stop and speak to you, And did you speak to him again? |
27889 | _ Areopagitica._ Who shall silence all the airs and madrigals that whisper softness in chambers? |
27889 | _ B._ What more? |
27889 | _ Ballad upon a Wedding._ Why so pale and wan, fond lover? |
27889 | _ Beauty._ Wilt thou seal up the avenues of ill? |
27889 | _ Bonny Lesley._ Ye banks and braes o''bonny Doon, How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair? |
27889 | _ Circa_ 720(?) |
27889 | _ Cos._ Pray now, what may be that same bed of honour? |
27889 | _ Eveleen''s Bower._ Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights by my side In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree? |
27889 | _ Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg._ Those old credulities, to Nature dear, Shall they no longer bloom upon the stock Of history? |
27889 | _ Faustus._ Was this the face that launch''d a thousand ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium? |
27889 | _ Fly not yet._ When did morning ever break, And find such beaming eyes awake? |
27889 | _ For a Very Little Child._[535- 1] Who ran to help me when I fell, And would some pretty story tell, Or kiss the place to make it well? |
27889 | _ From the Persian._ What constitutes a state? |
27889 | _ Guy of Gisborne._ Have you not heard these many years ago Jeptha was judge of Israel? |
27889 | _ Ham._ Or like a whale? |
27889 | _ Hot._ Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them? |
27889 | _ How shall I woo?_ A friendship that like love is warm; A love like friendship, steady. |
27889 | _ In a Balcony._ Was there nought better than to enjoy? |
27889 | _ Judges v. 27._ Is not the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage of Abi- ezer? |
27889 | _ Kitty._ Shikspur? |
27889 | _ Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers._ What sought they thus afar? |
27889 | _ Letter, Jan. 28, 1821._ What say you to such a supper with such a woman? |
27889 | _ Life of Coriolanus._ A Roman divorced from his wife, being highly blamed by his friends, who demanded,"Was she not chaste? |
27889 | _ Lines by a Clerk._ Where go the poet''s lines? |
27889 | _ Morning._ Why should we faint and fear to live alone, Since all alone, so Heaven has willed, we die? |
27889 | _ Of Man''s Progress in Virtue._ What is bigger than an elephant? |
27889 | _ Old England is our Home._"Will you walk into my parlour?" |
27889 | _ On his Blindness._ What neat repast shall feast us, light and choice, Of Attic taste? |
27889 | _ Poem._ If she undervalue me, What care I how fair she be? |
27889 | _ Political Precepts._ Leo Byzantius said,"What would you do, if you saw my wife, who scarce reaches up to my knees? |
27889 | _ Poor Jack._ Did you ever hear of Captain Wattle? |
27889 | _ Ruth._ When he is forsaken, Wither''d and shaken, What can an old man do but die? |
27889 | _ Sacrifice._ For what avail the plough or sail, Or land or life, if freedom fail? |
27889 | _ Stanzas._ Hear ye not the hum Of mighty workings? |
27889 | _ The Death of the Virtuous._ Child of mortality, whence comest thou? |
27889 | _ The Dying Christian to his Soul._ Tell me, my soul, can this be death? |
27889 | _ The Dying Christian to his Soul._ What beckoning ghost along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade? |
27889 | _ The Gardener''s Daughter._ Of love that never found his earthly close, What sequel? |
27889 | _ The Hermit._ But when shall spring visit the mouldering urn? |
27889 | _ The Issues of Life and Death._ Who that hath ever been Could bear to be no more? |
27889 | _ The Last Rose of Summer._ When true hearts lie wither''d And fond ones are flown, Oh, who would inhabit This bleak world alone? |
27889 | _ The Little Cloud._ Friend after friend departs; Who hath not lost a friend? |
27889 | _ The May Queen._ Ah, why Should life all labour be? |
27889 | _ The Rock of Rubies, and the Quarrie of Pearls._ Some asked how pearls did grow, and where? |
27889 | _ The World._ What then remains but that we still should cry For being born, and, being born, to die? |
27889 | _ This Lime- tree Bower my Prison._ Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course? |
27889 | _ Tumble- down Dick._ Can any man have a higher notion of the rule of right and the eternal fitness of things? |
27889 | _ Welcome me Home._ Why do n''t the men propose, Mamma? |
27889 | _ What is Prayer?_ Prayer is the burden of a sigh, The falling of a tear, The upward glancing of an eye When none but God is near. |
27889 | _ Which are the most crafty, Water or Land Animals? |
27889 | _ Why do n''t the Men propose?_ She wore a wreath of roses The night that first we met. |
27889 | _ Written the night before his death.--Found in his Bible in the Gate- house at Westminster._ Shall I, like an hermit, dwell On a rock or in a cell? |
27889 | a soldier, and afeard? |
27889 | alive, and so bold, O earth? |
27889 | are you yet living? |
27889 | become of me? |
27889 | can Sporus feel? |
27889 | can a Roman senate long debate Which of the two to choose, slavery or death? |
27889 | can it be That this is all remains of thee? |
27889 | could not one suffice? |
27889 | do n''t ye hear it roar now? |
27889 | has she done this to thee? |
27889 | hast thou wandered there, To waft us home the message of despair? |
27889 | he turned to his friend and said,"Have I not unawares spoken some mischievous thing or other?" |
27889 | how have I frighted thee, That thou no more wilt weigh my eyelids down And steep my senses in forgetfulness? |
27889 | ii._ FOOTNOTES:[ 769- 2] But where is last year''s snow? |
27889 | iii._ When is man strong until he feels alone? |
27889 | iv._ Can we ever have too much of a good thing? |
27889 | iv._ Have you found your life distasteful? |
27889 | iv._ How does the meadow- flower its bloom unfold? |
27889 | iv._ What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe, save that it runs back to a successful soldier? |
27889 | ix._ Very late in life, when he was studying geometry, some one said to Lacydes,"Is it then a time for you to be learning now?" |
27889 | ix._ Would yee both eat your cake and have your cake? |
27889 | know ye not, Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow? |
27889 | l._ Would you damn your precious soul? |
27889 | line 303._[ 261- 1] One of our poets( which is it?) |
27889 | must one swear to the truth of a song? |
27889 | no: or an arm? |
27889 | no: or take away the grief of a wound? |
27889 | note 8._[ 686- 1] The same proverb existed in German:-- So Adam reutte, und Eva span, Wer war da ein eddelman? |
27889 | once more who would not be a boy? |
27889 | or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat- oppressed brain? |
27889 | p. 38._ Are these the choice dishes the Doctor has sent us? |
27889 | p. 8._ Live or die, sink or swim.--PEELE:_ Edward I._( 1584?). |
27889 | paragraph 53._ What Heraclitus would not laugh, or what Democritus would not weep? |
27889 | shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice? |
27889 | that parchment, being scribbled o''er, should undo a man? |
27889 | the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it; This little speck, the British Isles? |
27889 | to the hurried question of despair:"Where is my child?" |
27889 | v._ Shall I show you the muscular training of a philosopher? |
27889 | vi._ Why do you lead me a wild- goose chase? |
27889 | vii._ When the liquor''s out, why clink the cannikin? |
27889 | viii._ Euripides says,-- Who knows but that this life is really death, And whether death is not what men call life? |
27889 | viii._ Have you not heard it said full oft, A woman''s nay doth stand for naught? |
27889 | viii._ Who is so deafe or so blinde as is hee That wilfully will neither heare nor see? |
27889 | what boots the long laborious Quest?_ Of blessed consolations in distress. |
27889 | what light through yonder window breaks? |
27889 | what power divine Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine? |
27889 | what would you have with my wife?" |
27889 | where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face? |
27889 | where is thy blush? |
27889 | where is thy sting? |
27889 | where is thy victory? |
27889 | wherefore art thou Romeo? |
27889 | wherefore welcome won Xerxes, Xantippus, Xavier, Xenophon? |
27889 | why dost thou shiver and shake, Gaffer Grey? |
27889 | why should sorrow O''er that brow a shadow fling? |
27889 | why should they know their fate, Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies? |
27889 | will you not bear with your own brother, who has God for his Father, as being a son from the same stock, and of the same high descent? |
27889 | wilt thou the spigot wield? |
27889 | wouldst thou have a serpent sting thee twice? |
27889 | x._ Are we to mark this day with a white or a black stone? |
27889 | x._ To what happy accident[402- 4] is it that we owe so unexpected a visit? |
27889 | xi._ I would have nobody to control me; I would be absolute: and who but I? |
27889 | xi._ Who is worse shod than the shoemaker''s wife? |
27889 | xix._ When lovely woman stoops to folly, And finds too late that men betray, What charm can soothe her melancholy? |
27889 | xlvi._ How shall I be able to rule over others, that have not full power and command of myself? |
27889 | xvi._ What is the first business of one who studies philosophy? |
27889 | xx._ Why, then, do you walk as if you had swallowed a ramrod? |
27889 | xxi._ Who is there whom bright and agreeable children do not attract to play and creep and prattle with them? |
27889 | xxiii._ How does the water Come down at Lodore? |
27889 | your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table on a roar? |
19569 | ''Remember eternal at my heart?'' 19569 A spy?" |
19569 | Against me? |
19569 | Ah, Mademoiselle has her ticket of admission? |
19569 | Ah, then surely, Mademoiselle, you will share your luck with us in some way? 19569 Am I to have it taken down? |
19569 | Am I to take your silence as assent? |
19569 | Am I? |
19569 | And I know him well enough to be sure that he has tried to see you again, to justify himself? |
19569 | And I----"You love me? |
19569 | And about Angelo-- what? |
19569 | And could he tell you? |
19569 | And have you got your papers for Italy? |
19569 | And keep enough to go on playing with? |
19569 | And now, Mademoiselle? 19569 And the baggage, Mademoiselle?" |
19569 | And the maximum on twenty- four? |
19569 | And will you forgive me, for not forgiving you? |
19569 | And you are alone? |
19569 | And you took that to yourself? |
19569 | And you were so lucky at first, that you''ve lived on your winnings, and have never had to write a cheque on your own bank in England or anywhere? |
19569 | Are n''t you coming with us, Angelo? |
19569 | Are n''t you taking luggage? |
19569 | Are we to go? |
19569 | Are you suffering? |
19569 | Are you sure you''re not saying this for my sake? |
19569 | Are you terrified? |
19569 | Are you the woman to whom my cousin refers, Miss Grant? |
19569 | As she''s here in the house, how did Mary come to be suspected? |
19569 | At Monte-- does that mean Monte Carlo? 19569 Because you ca n''t count aunts, can you, especially if they dislike you very much?" |
19569 | Because-- what? |
19569 | But I do feel so-- well, undressed almost, without my rings; do n''t you? |
19569 | But I thought Lord Dauntrey had done well with his system? |
19569 | But I_ have_ got something to do with it, have n''t I? |
19569 | But if it happens to be true? |
19569 | But it''s the fortune of war, is n''t it? 19569 But supposing you change your mind, and want come back and try your luck? |
19569 | But will you put the money on for me? 19569 But you''re going to look for her all the same?" |
19569 | But--and she lost interest in Mary--"aren''t we silly? |
19569 | But, dear Mademoiselle,Madeleine was pleading at a little distance,"why wo n''t you go to supper? |
19569 | But-- what have I done to make the fools misunderstand? 19569 But-- where?" |
19569 | Ca n''t we go on being friends? |
19569 | Ca n''t we save you the trouble? |
19569 | Ca n''t you, Prince-- well, not_ say_ it, but do something to rescue Miss Grant, without damage to any one''s feelings? |
19569 | Can she be the one who''s made the sensation? |
19569 | Can you carry people? |
19569 | Can you think of any reason for the bad English? |
19569 | Captain Hannaford is your friend, is n''t he? |
19569 | Cats may look at kings, and I suppose kings embrace queens, do n''t they? 19569 Could it be possible?" |
19569 | Could it be the Prince? |
19569 | Could n''t the Casino spare Lord Dauntrey five hundred pounds, at least? |
19569 | Could one not make facts pleasant to see, if one must look them in the face? |
19569 | Did she say whether she was staying in the neighbourhood? |
19569 | Did you accept? |
19569 | Did you know the lady''s face? |
19569 | Did you-- don''t answer unless you care to-- ever tell Marie about Idina? |
19569 | Do I know who that person is? |
19569 | Do n''t I know? |
19569 | Do n''t you? 19569 Do you dream for a moment that if-- if there were any inquiry the police would n''t be able find out we were in this thing?" |
19569 | Do you know the Château Lontana? |
19569 | Do you know the lady, by any chance,he asked lightly,"or did you buy merely as an admirer of beauty?" |
19569 | Do you know,she said,"why I came here-- I mean, why the curà © asked me? |
19569 | Do you mind? 19569 Do you really mean that, I wonder?" |
19569 | Do you suppose they guess that we found out what really happened to Marie, after she ran away? |
19569 | Do you think I could get away without any one noticing? 19569 Do you think I shall be able to hold my own against the lovely ladies who are coming?" |
19569 | Do you think I''d take her, if I thought there were? |
19569 | Do you think Miss Bland cold? |
19569 | Do you think my letter would ever come to your eyes? 19569 Do you understand that I''m married to the brother of the man you''re engaged to marry?" |
19569 | Do you want me to say what I really think, or to pay you compliments? |
19569 | Does Monsieur le Curà © consider it good to gamble at Monte Carlo? |
19569 | Does it comfort you a little to know that here''s one man who''d do anything for you? |
19569 | Does it matter more about making others happy? |
19569 | Does it mean anything to you? |
19569 | Does it not matter to ourselves? |
19569 | Does my brother know? |
19569 | Does n''t it look stupid down there? |
19569 | Does n''t know where you''re going? |
19569 | Does n''t your wife let you smoke when you''re with her? |
19569 | Does that mean you will come? |
19569 | Doing any good? |
19569 | Downstairs? |
19569 | Even if you have this right,the voice said,"will it bring you happiness to use it? |
19569 | For the first time? |
19569 | Has n''t she told you? |
19569 | Have I got to be agreeable to any mothers or aunts she may have lurking in the background? |
19569 | Have n''t I changed? 19569 Have n''t I? |
19569 | Have n''t you any mercy in your heart? |
19569 | Have n''t you heard any news of us this last week? |
19569 | Have n''t you made a good many acquaintances? |
19569 | Have we sunk to this? |
19569 | Have you been in-- have you seen her? |
19569 | Have you none now? |
19569 | Have you taken both berths? |
19569 | Here for the Nice flying week? |
19569 | Home? |
19569 | How are you, Captain Hannaford? |
19569 | How can I tell, Principe? 19569 How could she know?" |
19569 | How could you forgive me, when you thought of me as you did? 19569 How do you happen to be here at this time of day?" |
19569 | How do you know it was Idina, if she did n''t give her name? |
19569 | How do you know that? |
19569 | How long shall you stay? |
19569 | How long was it after your novitiate began that the money was left you? |
19569 | How old are you, Miss Grant? |
19569 | How shall I get away from them? |
19569 | I am to go downstairs and look at this lady, then? |
19569 | I do n''t quite see----"You''re going alone? |
19569 | I do n''t suppose the gamblers go to hear his sermons? |
19569 | I hope Mary''s well? |
19569 | I mean does he know the rest? |
19569 | I suppose she does n''t make it a point for me to stay through the whole evening? |
19569 | I suppose you did n''t give her much satisfaction? |
19569 | I wonder what a graphologist-- if that''s the right word-- would make of this handwriting? 19569 I wonder?" |
19569 | I wonder? |
19569 | I wonder? |
19569 | I''ll make it short, because you will wish to play, is it not? 19569 I-- are you quite sure that you''re to be here?" |
19569 | I? |
19569 | I? |
19569 | I? |
19569 | If I did, what would you say? |
19569 | If I should get out here, could I use my ticket afterward on to Florence? |
19569 | If I tell you a lady whom I am anxious-- particularly anxious-- to please, will be angry with me if you refuse? 19569 If I''m a coward, what are you?" |
19569 | In what way? |
19569 | Is Monte Carlo like that? |
19569 | Is Mr. Schuyler at home? |
19569 | Is St. George his name? |
19569 | Is it Miss Grant? |
19569 | Is it to see your villa? |
19569 | Is she away for Christmas? |
19569 | Is she going to your place? |
19569 | Is that a custom here? |
19569 | Is that the way you think of me in these days? |
19569 | Is the lady''s husband here? |
19569 | Is there a''dreadfully?'' 19569 Is this going on all night?" |
19569 | Is this the truth? |
19569 | It was he who asked you? |
19569 | It-- they do say that-- that it was an accident? |
19569 | Like a lot of toy houses for children to play with? |
19569 | Lord and Lady Dauntrey? |
19569 | Madame d''Ambre? |
19569 | Madame or Mademoiselle? |
19569 | Many unpleasant things are true, but why rake them up unless there''s something great in the theme that makes them worth retelling? |
19569 | Mary''s not ill, I hope? |
19569 | Maybe you mean to win a lot of money at Monte, and buy some? |
19569 | Me dine at your Hôtel de Paris, my son? 19569 Me, a detective? |
19569 | Men or women? |
19569 | Miss Grant? |
19569 | Miss Maxwell, will you come? |
19569 | Miss Maxwell, will you let me go now at once to Italy in your car? |
19569 | My-- dear girl, what has possessed you? 19569 Naturally we accept the kind invitation, is it not so, dear Mademoiselle?" |
19569 | Next week? |
19569 | Not her heart? 19569 Nothing very bad, I hope?" |
19569 | Now, I ask you, is it the right spirit, to talk of''amusing yourself''in taking up your new parochial duties? |
19569 | Oh, Lady Dauntrey, what does he mean? |
19569 | Oh, is it_ that_ girl? 19569 Oh, then you''ll be getting out almost at once?" |
19569 | Oh, why? |
19569 | Oh, would he not? 19569 Oh, you want me to help her? |
19569 | One other thing? |
19569 | Princess Della Robbia? |
19569 | Quel hôtel, Mademoiselle? |
19569 | Sha n''t I see anything now? 19569 Shall I blow my horn and try to make some one come?" |
19569 | Shall I put something for you on twenty- four? |
19569 | Shall we have coffee on the loggia? |
19569 | Shall we move over there, before the tram gets going too fast? |
19569 | Shall we say three o''clock? 19569 She always did look hard, except----""Except? |
19569 | She is here, then? |
19569 | She who has won a fortune asks us who have nothing what she can do for us? 19569 Still, if I bring you luck at the game, and you win, I shall feel I have earned something, is it not?" |
19569 | Still? 19569 Suppose, though, you go on losing? |
19569 | Surely Mademoiselle wishes to add to her happiness by making others happy? |
19569 | Surely you must have read of Glenn Curtiss and his_ Triad_, that made such a sensation in America? 19569 Surely you read about their wedding in South Africa last Spring?" |
19569 | That accounts for what she is, does it not? |
19569 | That is all? |
19569 | That''s the way I''m to help her-- by calling? 19569 The gracious Signore is a relative who has come for her?" |
19569 | The question is, what is sufficient? 19569 The third waltz?" |
19569 | Then will you take my bag, too, please? |
19569 | Then you mean to live there? |
19569 | Then, my poor child, did you think it less wrong to send him to his ruin? |
19569 | Those people must have heard me ring the doorbell, I suppose? |
19569 | To his ruin-- I? |
19569 | Too late for what? |
19569 | Truly? 19569 Unless you want to switch me off the subject of----""The Poor Dear? |
19569 | Unless,Eve broke in quickly,"you''d rather lend us enough to get us out of the whole scrape? |
19569 | Until after I came? |
19569 | Was she not well then? |
19569 | We should both like that, should n''t we, Miss Jewett? |
19569 | Well, if you did n''t tell me, somebody else must have, must n''t they-- else how could I know? |
19569 | Well? |
19569 | Were they about-- my brother? |
19569 | Were you afraid? |
19569 | Were? 19569 What about supper?" |
19569 | What about the distant cousin over there who was going to leave her money? |
19569 | What am I to say to Vanno? |
19569 | What am I, to judge? 19569 What are we to do, sir? |
19569 | What can I do? |
19569 | What can make you think of Monte Carlo? |
19569 | What did he tell you? |
19569 | What do you call language? |
19569 | What do you know about her? |
19569 | What do you mean? |
19569 | What do you want me to do? |
19569 | What do you wish me to do for you? |
19569 | What does it matter,she said,"whether we are happy or not?" |
19569 | What does that 0 mean, on the little brown square between the red and black numbers? |
19569 | What has become of the Dauntreys? 19569 What has he told you?" |
19569 | What have I done-- what do I do-- that could make people think I am-- not good?--make them think they have a right to insult me? |
19569 | What have you to do, except to dress? |
19569 | What is it? |
19569 | What is she going to do now,_ cette petite sorcière_? |
19569 | What is that Signora''s name? |
19569 | What is the matter? |
19569 | What is the matter? |
19569 | What is the matter? |
19569 | What is the thing in your mind? |
19569 | What is there to be excited about? |
19569 | What makes you believe I am good, if others do n''t believe it? |
19569 | What next? |
19569 | What questions did she ask you? |
19569 | What shall I have to do? |
19569 | What thing? |
19569 | What was she like? |
19569 | What was that I caught as I arrived, about''finding out the great secret?'' |
19569 | What would a spy do here? |
19569 | What would you have me do when my wife and I get to England without a penny? |
19569 | What''s in your mind? 19569 When did she come here?" |
19569 | When did you see her last? |
19569 | Where are they? |
19569 | Where do you want to go? |
19569 | Where has Miss Grant gone? |
19569 | Where is the Signore now? |
19569 | Where is the lady who usually sits opposite? |
19569 | Where is your village? |
19569 | Where must we go to ask for the_ viatique_? |
19569 | Where''s Angelo? |
19569 | Where''s Mary? |
19569 | Where''s your father? |
19569 | Wherever you go? 19569 Which am I?" |
19569 | Which of us is here? |
19569 | Who are''they''? |
19569 | Who could it have been? |
19569 | Who is it? |
19569 | Who told me what? |
19569 | Who was that? |
19569 | Who_ was_ she? |
19569 | Why do you say that? |
19569 | Why does the Signorina keep her room? |
19569 | Why does your face suddenly look as if you suspected me of criminal intentions? |
19569 | Why is it the best of people always advise you not to do all the things you want to do, and vice versa? |
19569 | Why not follow your brother Angelo''s example? |
19569 | Why not spread your store here on the table, and let us all work out the calculation? 19569 Why not with a bride?" |
19569 | Why not''duck?'' 19569 Why not?" |
19569 | Why not? |
19569 | Why poor Dick? |
19569 | Why should any one suspect the contrary? |
19569 | Why should it occur to me to go to Monte Carlo? |
19569 | Why should n''t we pick the things up on our way, if we''re to have a carriage? |
19569 | Why should we wait for a train? 19569 Why should you say that?" |
19569 | Why take such a person for your heroine? |
19569 | Why was it so strange that she should call? |
19569 | Why were you not happy leaving them alone with her? 19569 Why-- don''t you like rings?" |
19569 | Why-- what makes you think that? |
19569 | Will it be out of doors? |
19569 | Will the Signore step into the house? |
19569 | Will you come down to the Condamine and see my hydro- aeroplane to- morrow? 19569 Will you come with me where we can speak alone, without being interrupted?" |
19569 | Will you come, Miss Grant? |
19569 | Will you dance with me? |
19569 | Will you dine with me to- night? |
19569 | Will you do the thing if she stands by you? |
19569 | Will you forgive me? |
19569 | Will you give me one of those roses,he asked,"to keep for a souvenir?" |
19569 | Will you not take Madame''s advice, and my invitation? |
19569 | Will you see my brother and his wife now, and tell them what you know? |
19569 | Will you sell me that picture? |
19569 | Will you sign if I bring you the pen? |
19569 | Will you tell the Signorina that Prince Giovanni Della Robbia has come? |
19569 | Willing? 19569 Wo n''t you come with me to Monte Carlo?" |
19569 | Wo n''t you take us with you? |
19569 | Would afternoon suit you? 19569 Would n''t you rather go home if-- if I ordered you a cab?" |
19569 | Would the Dauntreys tell, if they knew? 19569 Would you be afraid to see the ghosts of those lovers?" |
19569 | Would you have me be cruel? 19569 Would you have me live in my villa alone?" |
19569 | Would you like us to go out, and let you read your letter alone with the Prince? |
19569 | You are-- er-- thinking of Doctor Smythe, dear? |
19569 | You call the Hôtel de Paris''home?'' |
19569 | You can see she means to in the end, so why disturb yourself? 19569 You did not ask? |
19569 | You do n''t know? 19569 You do n''t mean that you''d go up with me?" |
19569 | You know from the lawyer that Captain Hannaford has given his place to me? |
19569 | You really want frankness? |
19569 | You recognize the lady from my description? |
19569 | You see that woman in the chair you are touching? 19569 You swear that you''ve said nothing to Vanno, to make him suspect? |
19569 | You will write to him? |
19569 | You won? |
19569 | You would n''t be afraid? |
19569 | You''re sure you''re not wanting your silver? |
19569 | You''re sure--_sure_ you wo n''t let anything drop, by mistake? |
19569 | You''re writing a novel together? |
19569 | You-- love me? |
19569 | You-- you could n''t go to- day, I suppose? |
19569 | Your brother''s house? |
19569 | _ I!_ Why, Marie dearest, did n''t you just hear me say I''d rather die than hurt you? 19569 _ Not_ one of those pink and white girls picked out in blue and gold, one sees about so much?" |
19569 | A conventional"How do you do?" |
19569 | A view of the sea? |
19569 | After all, what did Angelo or any one in the world matter, except Mary? |
19569 | Air- pirate?" |
19569 | All the most interesting"personages"on the Riviera passed through Rose''s pretty rooms that afternoon, if but to say"How do you do?" |
19569 | And Peter, though dear and kind, had no right---- Why not obey the bird voice, and get out quickly while there was time? |
19569 | And besides-- if it should be true, what your father was afraid of----""What?" |
19569 | And besides----""Besides-- what?" |
19569 | And does your friend Mrs. Winter approve?" |
19569 | And hats? |
19569 | And if, unfortunately, the trunks had all gone, Mademoiselle would want not only one dress but several? |
19569 | And perhaps Angelo has written?" |
19569 | And she is quite young?" |
19569 | And the next favour I ask of you, if you possibly can, will you grant it?" |
19569 | And then I nearly lost you-- but we wo n''t talk of that, because you have forgiven me: and forgiving means forgetting, does n''t it?" |
19569 | And then?" |
19569 | And we''re_ meant_ to have them, else why should we have been thrown in her way just at the right moment? |
19569 | And were you thinking of trying its effect again to- night, if these friends had n''t come in time to cheer you up, and so put off the evil day?" |
19569 | And will you please begin to be frivolous by calling me Peter?" |
19569 | And would Mademoiselle pay now, or at her hotel? |
19569 | And yours?" |
19569 | And-- forgive me-- your heroine is n''t of a very interesting type, is she? |
19569 | Angelo?" |
19569 | Are there two?" |
19569 | Are they all so much worse than women, I wonder? |
19569 | Are we to have been strangers to each other till to- day-- is that it?" |
19569 | As I suppose your one has?" |
19569 | As Rose Winter had said to Carleton,"Who_ is n''t_ Who, if they can play bridge?" |
19569 | But I thought even then-- I guessed----""What?" |
19569 | But as it is----"Then, far down within herself, a tiny voice said:"Why should n''t you get out-- now, quickly, while there''s time?" |
19569 | But can you make up to him by your love for all he will have to lose? |
19569 | But do n''t you have to be prim with him?" |
19569 | But talking of the weather draws people together, do n''t you think? |
19569 | But under which of the three heads would you yourself put your friend? |
19569 | But was it the only difference? |
19569 | But what do_ you_ know of the pigeon- shooters, Marie mia? |
19569 | But what has happened to us since? |
19569 | But what''s the good of worrying? |
19569 | But what''s to become of us? |
19569 | But who is''She''?" |
19569 | But why did he not have the words put in his own language, which he knew?" |
19569 | But you can see for yourself, mother--_is_ she the kind that will let men alone? |
19569 | But you? |
19569 | But-- could she let him take her in that way? |
19569 | Can a man shake hands like that with a woman, she wondered, if he is broken- hearted because she has refused him? |
19569 | Can we not sympathize, Marie mia?" |
19569 | Can you love a man who does things he knows to be beneath him? |
19569 | Could Vanno believe her not innocent-- now? |
19569 | Could it be possible that any one else had a right to come in with her? |
19569 | Could it be that the engagement had been broken off? |
19569 | DO YOU REGRET IT?''"] |
19569 | Dark or fair?--not her past, but her complexion?" |
19569 | Dauntrey, will you go on to the railway station and order a commissionnaire to fetch Mary''s things from the Winters''house? |
19569 | Did n''t she write? |
19569 | Did n''t you guess what was in my mind?" |
19569 | Did n''t you know that?" |
19569 | Did she mention her friend Molly Maxwell?" |
19569 | Did you ever hear the story or see the play of Galatea?" |
19569 | Did you know she was on the Riviera?" |
19569 | Did you think they might do her harm?" |
19569 | Do n''t you see that?" |
19569 | Do n''t you see?" |
19569 | Do n''t you think it sounds just like the crackle of cold, overdone toast?" |
19569 | Do n''t you understand that I love you desperately, that I ca n''t bear my life because I love you so, and because I see you drowning? |
19569 | Do you intend to pay me?" |
19569 | Do you know, I should n''t wonder if she''d gone to the Château Lontana?" |
19569 | Do you love me enough and want me enough to take me without proof of what I say? |
19569 | Do you mind?" |
19569 | Do you not owe me something for the good turn I have done you to- night?" |
19569 | Do you regret it?" |
19569 | Do you regret it?''" |
19569 | Do you think he went on without looking? |
19569 | Do you think she can be in Monte Carlo?" |
19569 | Do you want my advice?" |
19569 | Do you want to play, Mademoiselle? |
19569 | Do you want to see them?" |
19569 | Had Mademoiselle but the time to look? |
19569 | Had he begged anything of her for himself? |
19569 | Had he not broken his resolve for a good motive and for the girl''s sake, not his own? |
19569 | Had she definitely proved herself unworthy, or had Vanno openly done her some injustice, which had wrought bitterness for both? |
19569 | Has nobody told you that there are no inquests of coroners here in this principality? |
19569 | Have I accused you of anything?" |
19569 | Have you been there yet, Miss Grant?" |
19569 | Have you ever heard his story?" |
19569 | Have you met him?" |
19569 | He had followed an angel, and found her-- what? |
19569 | He was so much in the East, was he not? |
19569 | He would have passed Peter also like a whirlwind, unconscious of her existence, had she not called out sharply,"Is it Prince Giovanni Della Robbia?" |
19569 | Her large eyes, of that golden gray rimmed with violet, called hazel, seemed to be asking,"What is life?" |
19569 | How I do love pictures under curtains, do n''t you? |
19569 | How can I save any one from a thing I do myself-- a thing I feel I shall keep on doing?" |
19569 | How could he tell even now that this girl was not a clever actress who judged him well and planned to lead him on? |
19569 | How could one whose small knowledge of women good and bad came mostly through hearsay be sure of a woman? |
19569 | How could she tell? |
19569 | How dare a fellow like that have the impudence to fall in love with a girl like her?" |
19569 | How dare you say such a thing of our curà ©''s Prince? |
19569 | How did you come to marry such a chap?" |
19569 | How have we so drifted apart? |
19569 | How long do you say it is since you were a pupil at that convent, where I believe you admit having been-- St. Ursula- of- the- Lake, in Scotland?" |
19569 | How should I?" |
19569 | I ask you, my child, to tell me whether or no I have guessed right?" |
19569 | I began because I was miserable, but----""Was it I who made you miserable?" |
19569 | I believe in such things, do n''t you?" |
19569 | I could accept, I suppose?" |
19569 | I could sell some to help the Home, could n''t I? |
19569 | I do n''t go barking and biting at the poor sheep''s heels(_ have_ sheep heels? |
19569 | I do n''t suppose you ever saw a cocktail of any sort, much less one called the''rainbow?'' |
19569 | I expect"--and she smiled--"that you have n''t made many long journeys?" |
19569 | I had no idea that Marie Gaunt----""Did you speak about the convent?" |
19569 | I have not been happy leaving them alone with her, but what could I do? |
19569 | I hope I have done right?" |
19569 | I hope I was not indiscreet?" |
19569 | I hope you are going to lunch with us afterward?" |
19569 | I hope you have n''t been waiting long?" |
19569 | I suppose we do n''t mind, do we?" |
19569 | I suppose you_ knew_ about me, always-- you and-- Peter?" |
19569 | I think I heard you telling the Wardropp girl-- wretched little beast!--that you had a big legacy left you?" |
19569 | I wish now-- that is, I hope I have n''t behaved in ways to make people misunderstand?" |
19569 | I wonder if it''s true she''s won thousands of pounds?" |
19569 | I wonder--_would_ you be inclined to lend us-- say, a thousand pounds, just to tide over the few weeks till our dividends come? |
19569 | I''m glad, yes, I''m glad, I was in time, and yet-- oh, Mary, you_ wo n''t_ go to Monte Carlo, will you?" |
19569 | I''m sure you''re more modern?" |
19569 | I''ve wanted nothing else since before you were out of short frocks, but----""Then why did n''t you tell me so before I put them on? |
19569 | If she remembers, can she refuse to forgive me?" |
19569 | If you lose, what matter? |
19569 | If you think it unsuitable for a lady alone, what about me, a poor country priest from the mountains?" |
19569 | Instead of passing him, she asked,"Are you coming my way?" |
19569 | Is breakfast ready, Mademoiselle Luciola? |
19569 | Is it a case of love at first sight, old man?" |
19569 | Is n''t it a good plot?" |
19569 | Is n''t it a shame?" |
19569 | Is n''t that a darling expression? |
19569 | Is n''t there? |
19569 | Is she French, Italian, Russian?" |
19569 | Is she pretty, and is she American-- or what?" |
19569 | Is ten o''clock too early?" |
19569 | Is that not a good name for the wee body-- Firefly? |
19569 | Is there any message you would like to leave?" |
19569 | Is there anything very different about me, and the way I behave, from other girls or women-- those who try to be good and nice, I mean?" |
19569 | It is odd, is n''t it, that we should choose girls of names so much alike? |
19569 | It was in a paper here, that tells us all the news about everybody, in English: who''s who( but who is n''t who nowadays who can play bridge? |
19569 | It''s no use being at a resort if you do n''t get into the smart set, is it?" |
19569 | It''s true, is n''t it, that Captain Hannaford left the château he bought to you?" |
19569 | It-- it wo n''t run you down low to let us have a thousand?" |
19569 | Jewesses can be the most beautiful women in the world, do n''t you think? |
19569 | Looking at my rings?" |
19569 | Mademoiselle is a stranger then? |
19569 | Marie Gaunt, and-- but what is your Miss Grant''s Christian name?" |
19569 | Mary, are you sure-- sure of yourself-- that you wo n''t give me away?" |
19569 | Mary-- you wo n''t tell Vanno? |
19569 | No good my refusing now, as you''re already in?" |
19569 | No matter how great his love, the question must creep into his mind sometimes:"What if she is the woman Angelo thinks her? |
19569 | Nobody could answer that question; but"_ What_ was she?" |
19569 | Now do you wonder I want him to get what he can out of the Casino? |
19569 | Now----""Now what does it matter?" |
19569 | Oh, Jim, we''ve both been rather silly, have n''t we? |
19569 | Oh, Mrs. Winter, he is not-- dead? |
19569 | Oh, dear, I do_ hope_ she is n''t a deserving case? |
19569 | On what errand had she come alone to this place? |
19569 | Only a very special kind of an ass tries that twice: but still, I did hope----""Yes, there''s that''but still''feeling, is n''t there?" |
19569 | Or did she expect you to believe things against her?" |
19569 | Or one of the dozens?" |
19569 | Or,"Have you seen Miss Grant? |
19569 | Ought n''t we to be nice and sweet to them? |
19569 | Partly----""Well?" |
19569 | Perhaps you can lend me a few things for to- night?" |
19569 | Perhaps you''ve met him?" |
19569 | Shall I or not? |
19569 | Shall I tell you the story of the old man? |
19569 | Shall he marry us?" |
19569 | Shall it be trente et quarante or roulette? |
19569 | She is still here, then?" |
19569 | She seemed to be saying to herself dazedly,"What has happened to me? |
19569 | Sickly pale, she fixed her eyes upon him, unable to speak, though her lips fell apart, seeming to form the word"Who?" |
19569 | Since the whole universe was made up of marvels almost beyond credence, who with certainty could say"no?" |
19569 | So what is the use----""Of going on?" |
19569 | So-- she is losing? |
19569 | Still, I presume you need n''t worry if the Casino should get back every penny they''ve given you? |
19569 | Supposing the curà © had said to himself that he saw Miss Grant and thought nothing but good of her? |
19569 | Surely with all your knowledge, you know a drug that can temporarily weaken a person''s will? |
19569 | Surely you''ll be rather lonely in your''home''then, or have you friends who are going to take you away for the day?" |
19569 | Tables treating you well?" |
19569 | That is an odd fancy, is n''t it? |
19569 | That was before he had ever spoken one word to you, or you to him; but now, I feel sure, you have met?" |
19569 | That was odd, was n''t it? |
19569 | The favour you wished to ask? |
19569 | The part of him that was aristocrat and ascetic excused itself, asking what he could have done, better than he had done? |
19569 | The place is near Ventimiglia, is n''t it? |
19569 | The question is, do you think_ it_ is pretty?" |
19569 | Then she was silent for a moment, thinking; but at last she put a sudden question:"What happened to Galatea?" |
19569 | There are servants at the Château Lontana who expect you, anyhow, I suppose?" |
19569 | There must be something that girl could take which would make her willing to follow our suggestions? |
19569 | They had walked on for a moment or two in silence, when Dauntrey asked abruptly:"Do you know what you''re letting yourself in for?" |
19569 | Think, if we had never met?" |
19569 | To whom could she have gone? |
19569 | Twenty- seven years, is it not?" |
19569 | Unless----""Unless what?" |
19569 | Was it a moonlight scene?" |
19569 | We can go this afternoon, I''m sure, ca n''t we, Marie?" |
19569 | We''ve done with that lure light forever, have n''t we?" |
19569 | Well, you can imagine just how much that girl knew about life, ca n''t you? |
19569 | What are girls and men for?" |
19569 | What can you have to tell of a great noble in his position-- you-- a little no- one- at- all?" |
19569 | What can your people have been made of, letting you run about alone-- a girl like you?" |
19569 | What did she not remember about that, her first and only visit to a theatre? |
19569 | What did you call her?" |
19569 | What do you say?" |
19569 | What do you think of our story so far, Angelo? |
19569 | What do you think of the story, Princess?" |
19569 | What does it all mean?" |
19569 | What harm have men done me, that I should avoid them, just because they are men? |
19569 | What has it to do with me?" |
19569 | What have I myself been doing?" |
19569 | What have you come for?" |
19569 | What if Vanno could see her now? |
19569 | What if it were true? |
19569 | What if she has made a fool of me?" |
19569 | What if we, too, should be parted?" |
19569 | What more do you ask? |
19569 | What time to- morrow? |
19569 | What use is two thousand francs except to gamble with? |
19569 | What were a few days more or less? |
19569 | What will start your mind to working on the subject? |
19569 | What will you do? |
19569 | What would you? |
19569 | What''s her name?" |
19569 | What''s the maximum?" |
19569 | What''s the rest, Vanno?" |
19569 | When are you starting, dear?" |
19569 | When did you see her last?" |
19569 | When he comes into his fortune, perhaps he will pay them-- who knows? |
19569 | When he told you about his brother and sister- in- law, did he mention my name as-- as a girl?" |
19569 | When shall we go?" |
19569 | When she had first told herself that she could not stay at the convent, they had asked, looking toward the world,"What is life?" |
19569 | Where could she be? |
19569 | Where have you been, to avoid them? |
19569 | Where shall we go? |
19569 | Where''s she staying?" |
19569 | Who can tell about such things in life, things that are in life yet beyond and behind it, where we can catch only whispers of a message and a mystery? |
19569 | Who gambled away the money I made, slaving in the house, taking boarders and trying to hold my head up? |
19569 | Who is it says romance is the quality of_ strangeness_ in beauty? |
19569 | Who knows what one may do? |
19569 | Who knows? |
19569 | Who told you? |
19569 | Why did n''t you tell me before about her visit to the curà ©?" |
19569 | Why do n''t you come and take it?" |
19569 | Why do you go out of your way to remind me of misery?" |
19569 | Why does he pitch his tent on the threshold of Monte, if not for the Casino?" |
19569 | Why make the rest of us gloomy by putting nasty details in the papers, when we''ve come here to enjoy ourselves? |
19569 | Why not be engaged for luncheon and invite them for tea?" |
19569 | Why not let us all three go to Italy with that, and Dauntrey can finance you with the Casino money till you get some from your bank? |
19569 | Why not that one? |
19569 | Why not there? |
19569 | Why should I be punished?" |
19569 | Why should Miss Bland wish to torture Angelo''s wife, even if she knew anything? |
19569 | Why should we be now in this lonely house, no one knowing that we''re here? |
19569 | Will I_ not_ give you lunch? |
19569 | Will any one come?" |
19569 | Will the Signorina and her friends come in? |
19569 | Will you and Mary forgive me?" |
19569 | Will you both go to call upon her with me-- and be kind?" |
19569 | Will you give me lunch? |
19569 | Will you let me guide you somewhere, and give you a surprise?" |
19569 | Will you let me tell you something about it-- unless you know its history already?" |
19569 | Will you try a simple chance, red or black, for instance? |
19569 | Winter?" |
19569 | Wo n''t you three be my guests at Ciro''s?" |
19569 | Wo n''t you wait till then-- only till the end of the summer? |
19569 | Would Mademoiselle wait or look in again? |
19569 | Would it not be wise to put Nathalie into service, at a distance from Cap Martin, so that everything might be forgotten? |
19569 | Would n''t that drive them to being worse?" |
19569 | Would n''t you like to have an English doctor prescribe for your headache? |
19569 | Would you accept? |
19569 | Would you take me on the terrace? |
19569 | XI The first question Mary asked on coming downstairs in the morning was,"At what hour does the Casino open?" |
19569 | XIII"You know the two beggars who stand by the bridge, just over the Monegasque frontier as you go toward Cabbà ©-Roquebrune and Mentone?" |
19569 | Yet what good could come of talking to one who had never met the girl? |
19569 | You can afford to give me back 10 per cent., ca n''t you?" |
19569 | You did n''t think she''d try to do Marie a mischief?" |
19569 | You do n''t mean-- you ca n''t mean----""Do you want me to mean it?--Do you want me----""Want you? |
19569 | You got my letter? |
19569 | You know why?" |
19569 | You remember the blazing hot day we had last week?" |
19569 | You sent him away?" |
19569 | You wanted to go, even then, for two whole years?" |
19569 | You will tell them to- day-- what has happened?" |
19569 | You would n''t really like it, would you?" |
19569 | You''re_ quite_ sure she is n''t a Person?" |
19569 | Your own Prince Vanno?" |
19569 | he wondered,"Was she young and beautiful?" |
19569 | if I''m a goose, what_ are_ you? |
19569 | said Schuyler,"Do n''t you know me better? |
19569 | which I suppose you want to give your roulette teacher?" |
19569 | you have n''t come here from Scotland alone?" |
45369 | Can it be possible? |
45369 | Can it be that such is their function? |
45369 | A great many people, ought we to write? |
45369 | A large number also are_ carnivorous_ creatures: need we mention the spider- tribe? |
45369 | And if so, have they blood like ours? |
45369 | And is this all that we can mention about the structure of an egg? |
45369 | And so with me: God may order and arrange the great events in my life; but are not the little ones too small for Him to regard?" |
45369 | Are there then no anxious mothers concerned in the well- being of their eggs among insects also? |
45369 | But how do these indefatigable attendants ascertain precisely the moment when their aid is required? |
45369 | But how? |
45369 | But it may be asked, What of the colouring matter? |
45369 | But it may now be asked, What is a pupa, and what are the differences between it and a larva, and between it and the perfect insect? |
45369 | But it may perhaps be asked, where are its tools, and by what means does it succeed in casting up these loads of earth? |
45369 | But what then? |
45369 | But, it will be asked, how do they contrive so to keep the sides of the bag from flapping together as to prevent them from closing? |
45369 | By what hidden and mysterious power this has been effected who can tell? |
45369 | Can insects foretell the state of the weather? |
45369 | Can it be possible? |
45369 | Can it endure the penetrating tooth of frost, or the overwhelming shower of rain? |
45369 | Can we question that the merry grasshopper, chirping all day in the field, is heard by its mate? |
45369 | Does God take thought for these, and will He not much more care for and arrange well every event in the lives of his faithful children? |
45369 | From these necessary details let us turn to make the difficult, but important inquiry-- How are the wings expanded? |
45369 | How can it tell that its future progeny will eat this food, or that food? |
45369 | How can the poor blow- fly, when it leaves its eggs on our food, be certain that it is appointing a suitable place for the birth- spot of its progeny? |
45369 | How is it to disengage itself from its case, and be suspended in the air while it climbs up to take its place? |
45369 | How is it to get back to the hole at which it entered? |
45369 | How is it to reach the surface, even now? |
45369 | How is the moth to make its way through the dense mass of fibres all glued together, which walls her in on every side? |
45369 | How is this fresh difficulty to be overcome? |
45369 | How is this guarded against? |
45369 | How, then, it may be asked, does the larva acquire new hairs to take the place of the old ones? |
45369 | How, then, it may be asked? |
45369 | How, then, shall the insect know the exact place where its portal is situated? |
45369 | How, without a clue, shall it discover in its dark abode the precise circle which requires only a push to throw open its gate? |
45369 | In both cases, the_ vitality_ of the membranous or fleshy receptacle secures it from the action of the included fluid; but_ how_, who shall explain?" |
45369 | Is the egg of a spider the same in the number and nature of its parts as that of a butterfly, or the egg of a gnat as that of a beetle? |
45369 | Is there no striking and broad difference to mark the nature of the future insect? |
45369 | It may be asked, Are these all lost in the perfect insect; or are they still to be traced in it? |
45369 | Its eye, and probably ears, and means of touch, have all come before us; but where, it will be asked, is its tongue? |
45369 | Let us now ask what is the use of these singular organs of the insect? |
45369 | Need we say how it can be easily accounted for? |
45369 | Need we say these are the butterflies? |
45369 | On examining the body we see, indeed, a pair of shining horny plates on its back; but surely these are not wings? |
45369 | On watching her closely we find her busy at some self- imposed occupation; what is its nature? |
45369 | Or can it endure to be from week to week, from month to month, without a mouthful of food? |
45369 | Shall little haughty ignorance pronounce His works unwise, of which the smallest part Exceeds the narrow vision of her mind?" |
45369 | Some one perhaps will say,_ Breathe_?--do larvæ breathe? |
45369 | Surely, as we should imagine, there must be some important differences between these, otherwise why such immense differences in the perfect insect? |
45369 | Thus imperilled, what chance has the larva against foes so numerous, and in a contest so unequal? |
45369 | WHAT IS A PUPA? |
45369 | Was ever mother''s love more plainly manifested than this love? |
45369 | Were all the eggs produced by insects to be hatched and to bring forth living progeny, we may well ask what would become of mankind? |
45369 | Were they dead? |
45369 | What have either of these to do with an insect? |
45369 | What is it to do? |
45369 | What is to be done? |
45369 | What is to become of the larva? |
45369 | What should we think of a quadruped as large as a bull, whose eyes occupied great part of its head, its forehead, and the greater portion of its face? |
45369 | What, then, can this beating organ be which we behold? |
45369 | Whither, then, must we go to watch the awakening of life in the insect? |
45369 | Who has not himself performed, or been the subject of, the trick of causing a grain of barley to creep up the sleeve? |
45369 | Who would imagine that caterpillar, grub, maggot, and larva, signified one and the same stage of the life of an insect? |
45369 | Why does it not select the green surface of the leaf, or the warm corner of the window, or the bare earth, for this purpose? |
45369 | Why is this, we ask, that in all cases insects eat less when they are fully developed, than when in their infancy and youth? |
45369 | Why is this? |
45369 | Why, then, should the love- tap of an insignificant beetle have received such an interpretation? |
45369 | Yet how can this be, when the insect is under water the whole time up to its becoming a perfect moth? |
45369 | and if so, by what means? |
45369 | and, as we would also suggest, How could he ensure that the bird would not actually have eaten up the objects of his care? |
45369 | by what means do they, from being thick, soft, and moist, become thin, hard, and dry? |
45369 | could any one believe that these strange, and some of them awful looking larvæ ever became_ butterflies_? |
45369 | or does the tap of the death- tick beetle, formerly commemorated, draw forth no answering tap from its companion on the other side of the post? |
45369 | or that the cricket on the hearth sings for its fellows, or only to please_ our_ ears? |
40794 | ( 1) Do ideas present themselves except in situations which are doubtful and inquired into? |
40794 | ( 3) Do they have any part to play in the conduct of inquiry? |
40794 | ( 5) And, finally, does validity have anything to do with truth? |
40794 | And how can it discriminate unless by telling by what road they got into our experience and what they do after they get there? |
40794 | And if the worlds are all private, pray who judges their likeness or unlikeness? |
40794 | And is judgment properly more than tentative save as it terminates in a known fact, i.e., a fact present without the intermediary of reflection? |
40794 | And that means what force shall the thing as means be given? |
40794 | And, if the latter, does the object, God as defined, or the notion, or the belief( the acceptance of the notion) effect these consequent values? |
40794 | And, once more, unless there is such a transition, is reasoning possible? |
40794 | Are they there? |
40794 | But how can a situation which is incomplete in fact be completely known until it_ is_ complete? |
40794 | But if the former, why should there be an idea at all, and why should it have to be tested by the fact? |
40794 | But if thought just accepts its material, how can there be any distinctive aim or activity of thought at all? |
40794 | But if we are concerned with a matter of serious analysis, one is bound to ask, Whence come these adjectives? |
40794 | But is smelling a case of knowledge? |
40794 | But they part company when a fundamental question is raised: Is all organized meaning the work of thought? |
40794 | But when thinking becomes research, when the doubt- inquiry function comes to its own, the problem is just: What is the fact? |
40794 | Can a satisfaction dependent on an assumption that an idea is already true be relevant to testing the truth of an idea? |
40794 | Can we"know that objects of sense, or very similar objects, exist at times when we are not perceiving them? |
40794 | Do they exist except when judgment is in suspense? |
40794 | Do they exist side by side with the facts when the facts are themselves known? |
40794 | Do they not all agree in setting up something fixed outside inquiry, supplying both its material and its limit? |
40794 | Do they really indicate fire? |
40794 | Do they serve to direct observation, colligate data, and guide experimentation, or are they otiose? |
40794 | Do they, therefore, already subsist in some realm of subsistence? |
40794 | Does this coequal presence guarantee an objectivity? |
40794 | Does this phase of the moon really mean rain, or does it just happen that the rain- storm comes when the moon has reached this phase? |
40794 | Except on the basis stated, what is the transition from the function of meaning to_ a_ meaning as an entity in reasoning? |
40794 | For example, my primary( and ultimate) judgment has to do, say, with buying a suit of clothes: whether to buy and, if so, what? |
40794 | Has it gained in validity in ceasing to be an independent myth, in becoming an element in systematized myth? |
40794 | Has not the lesson, however, been so well learned that we can drop reference to experience? |
40794 | How about that truth upon which we fall back as guaranteeing the credibility of other statements-- how about our major premise? |
40794 | How about their respective adaptability to the chief wearing use I have in mind? |
40794 | How can a thing be eaten unless it is, in and of itself, a food? |
40794 | How can such a standard be known? |
40794 | How can the former in any sense give a check or test of the value of the latter? |
40794 | How can this difference be explained? |
40794 | How can thought compare meanings with existences? |
40794 | How do their patterns compare? |
40794 | How do we know the same is not the case with the ideas which are the product of our most deliberate and extended scientific inquiry? |
40794 | How does it know which to eliminate as irrelevant and which to confirm as grounded? |
40794 | How does the non- pragmatic view consider that verification takes place? |
40794 | How does thought know which of the combinations are merely coincident and which are merely coherent? |
40794 | How far is it possible and legitimate to extend or generalize the results reached to apply to all propositions of facts? |
40794 | How is it, moreover, that even the act of being aware is describable as"momentary"? |
40794 | How shall it secure this? |
40794 | How shall we describe it? |
40794 | How then can its existence, even if its perception be but momentary, raise a question of"other times"at all? |
40794 | How then can value be given, as efficiency is given, until the end is chosen? |
40794 | How, after all, does even the ideally perfect valid thought apply or refer to reality? |
40794 | How, the implication runs, could reflection become generalized save by elimination of details as irrelevant? |
40794 | If the goodness of consequences arises from the context of the idea in belief rather than from the idea itself, does it have any verifying force? |
40794 | If there are, are they like those characters which books on logic talk about? |
40794 | In the end the one problem holds: How do the specifications of thought as such hold good of reality as such? |
40794 | Is a difference more than merely one of formulation? |
40794 | Is it an absolute which transcends and absorbs the difference? |
40794 | Is it an idea? |
40794 | Is not the distinction mere hair- splitting unless it is a way of smuggling in a quasi- idealistic dependence upon thought? |
40794 | Is or is not a personal factor found in truth evaluations? |
40794 | Is the agreement ultimately a matter of self- consistency of ideas? |
40794 | Is the photograph, then, to be conceived as a psychical somewhat? |
40794 | Is the way out now so simple? |
40794 | Is the_ object_ immediate or is it the object of an immediate noting? |
40794 | Is this to be taken in a static or in a dynamic way? |
40794 | It reads:"What difference would it practically make to anyone if this notion rather than that notion were true? |
40794 | It was hard up against its own dilemma: How can a man inquire? |
40794 | Just how does such agreement differ from success? |
40794 | More generally, what is the position of analytic realism about the future? |
40794 | Not what is the test of thought at large, but what validates and confirms_ this_ thought? |
40794 | Now is this meaning intended to_ replace_ the meaning of a"seeing force which runs things"? |
40794 | Now where does the argument stand? |
40794 | Or does it mean that, irrespective of the existence of any such object, a belief in it has that value? |
40794 | Or does it merely superadd a value to a meaning already fixed? |
40794 | Or is it intended to superadd a pragmatic value and validation to that concept of a seeing force? |
40794 | Or( if the superstition persists as to smell) is gnawing or poking a case of knowledge? |
40794 | Or, in another mode of statement:"Can the existence of anything other than our own[63] hard data be inferred from the existence of those data?" |
40794 | Pray what is this room and what defines the position( standpoint and perspective) of the two men and the standpoint"intermediate"between them? |
40794 | Shall I take it as means to present enjoyment, or as a( negative) condition of future health? |
40794 | Still the query haunts us: Is this so in truth? |
40794 | Supposing the individual stands still and attempts to compare his idea with the reality, with what reality is he to compare it? |
40794 | That is to say: Does it express the fact that a given content or meaning is_ de facto_ presented to the consciousness of all alike? |
40794 | The more specific question is: How does the particular functional situation termed the reflective behave? |
40794 | The question is worth asking: Is not the marked aversion on the part of some philosophers to any reference to psychology a Freudian symptom? |
40794 | The question which I raised in the last paragraph may then be restated in this fashion: Are there such features? |
40794 | The significance of these may be doubted: Do they_ mean_ real change in the sun or in the earth? |
40794 | Then what has become of the postulate that truth is agreement of idea with existence beyond idea? |
40794 | Then, once more, what is the test of any specific judgment? |
40794 | Truth means, as a matter of course, agreement, correspondence, of idea and fact( p. 198), but what do agreement, correspondence, mean? |
40794 | Under these conditions we get such questions as the following: What is the relation of rational thought to crude or unreflective experience? |
40794 | Unless a meaning is an inferred object, detached and fixed as a term capable of independent development, what sort of a ghostly Being is it? |
40794 | Unless there is some such conception as this, what conception of agreement is possible except the experimental or practical one? |
40794 | We have them; they exist; now what do they mean? |
40794 | What about their durability? |
40794 | What are the prices of given suits? |
40794 | What are their styles in respect to current fashion? |
40794 | What are these grounds? |
40794 | What has become of the correspondence of fact and thought? |
40794 | What is the barrier which prevents reason from complete penetration into the world of truth? |
40794 | What is the bearing of this account upon the"empirical datum"? |
40794 | What is the experience in which the survey of both idea and existence is made and their agreement recognized? |
40794 | What is the reason for using the term at all in philosophy? |
40794 | What is the relation of thought to reality? |
40794 | What is the validity of the various forms of thinking which find expression in the various types of judgment and in the various forms of inference? |
40794 | What is the value of the pleasure of eating the lobster as compared with the pains of indigestion? |
40794 | What shall we say of the validity of such processes? |
40794 | What we have to reckon with is not the problem of, How can I think_ überhaupt_? |
40794 | What will I have the situation_ become_ as between alternatives? |
40794 | What_ is_ a thing when it is not yet discovered and yet is tentatively entertained and tested? |
40794 | Whence does it derive its guaranty? |
40794 | Which of the three doctrines is to be regarded as the legitimate exponent of the procedure of thought manifested in modern science? |
40794 | Who are the"we,"and what does"own"mean, and how is ownership established? |
40794 | Why is there a task of transformation? |
40794 | Why so uneven, so partial, in your attitude toward ubiquitous relations? |
40794 | Why, it will be asked, does a man buy a suit of clothes unless that is a value, or at least a proximate means to a further value? |
40794 | but, How shall I think right_ here and now_? |
48334 | ''Came it to perfection elsewhere in one year? |
48334 | ''Who so happy,''he said,''as the most wicked, who so unhappy as the best servant?'' |
48334 | 16_s.__ INDIA, WHAT CAN IT TEACH US?_ A Course of Lectures delivered before the University of Cambridge. |
48334 | And even if it be granted that he was technically guilty of treason, could his wife be considered equally guilty? |
48334 | And whom would you have me trust, Mr. Stukeley? |
48334 | Besides, it was asked, why was not the Earldom given in the usual way to Con and his heirs male? |
48334 | Did he propose that the colonists in Clandeboye and between the Blackwater and the Pale should be English or Irish, or a mixture of both? |
48334 | Had Maguire, Magennis, and MacMahon agreed to contribute towards the maintenance of 100 horse and 200 foot? |
48334 | How he proves his title to be O''Neill, having never been admitted by the sovereign? |
48334 | Is it to the enjoyance of your inheritance and country that you seek? |
48334 | Morgan of Pencoed; Red Bay, Lord Rich; Bunneygal(? |
48334 | My lord, who shall render my brother his life if he die? |
48334 | Shall I live and suffer all this? |
48334 | Shane has been profuse in offering his services-- what are they? |
48334 | The''Marquis''alluded to by Shane, in his letter to the Cardinals, would seem to be D''Elboeuf; but was he in England with Shane? |
48334 | Wales and Northumbria had been settled by Presidents, and why not Munster? |
48334 | Were his towns to be walled with stone or earth, or with a mixture of both? |
48334 | What arrangements could be made for provisions, for maintaining garrisons, for labour and material? |
48334 | What authority and jurisdiction does Shane claim by virtue of tribal election? |
48334 | What countries doth Shane claim to rule thereby? |
48334 | What do you desire, or what is the mark you shoot at? |
48334 | What honour were it to that house if the Earl would bring in that brother''s head with his own hands? |
48334 | What obedience and service hath O''Neill hitherto borne to the Crown of Ireland? |
48334 | What petitions did Shane intend to make to the Queen when he first proposed to come over? |
48334 | What should move you, then, to seek war, when in peace and with honour you may enjoy all that is your right? |
48334 | Why should not the Baron''s son be Earl according to his patent? |
48334 | _ R._ Judging from Shane''s antecedents, is he likely to perform such a promise? |
16208 | ''Tis said, ambition in his breast does rage: Who would not be the hero of an age? |
16208 | ( For I remember not thy face in heaven) Or by command, or hither led by choice? |
16208 | --_Magne regnator deum, Tam lentus audis scelera? |
16208 | Abstract of all that''s excellent in woman, can you be friend to murder? |
16208 | Ah, whither does he run[_ At the door._ On pointed swords? |
16208 | Ai- je du mettre au jour l''opprobre de son lit? |
16208 | Am I a Cleopatra? |
16208 | Am I condemned to be the second man, Who e''er complained he virtue served in vain? |
16208 | Am I false, Or infamous? |
16208 | Am I known No more? |
16208 | Am I to live, or die? |
16208 | And art thou dead? |
16208 | And bring coarse fare, when appetite is gone? |
16208 | And from the abundance of whose soul and heat, The o''erflowing served to make your mind so great? |
16208 | And seest not sin obscures thy god- like frame? |
16208 | And she received my message, with as true, With as unfeigned a sorrow, as you brought it? |
16208 | And should I Forsake this beauty? |
16208 | And this the climate we must change for heaven? |
16208 | And to whom could I more fitly apply myself than to your lordship, who have not only an inborn, but an hereditary loyalty? |
16208 | And wanting subjects to his haughty will, On this mean work employed his trifling skill? |
16208 | And was I worth a tear? |
16208 | And was he blest with bolder ignorance? |
16208 | And what a poor figure would Mr Bayes have made, without his_ Egad, and all that_?" |
16208 | And you, not Aureng- Zebe, condemned to die? |
16208 | And, would you multiply more ruins on me? |
16208 | Are all the flights of heroic poetry to be concluded bombast, unnatural, and mere madness, because they are not affected with their excellencies? |
16208 | Are there yet more Morats? |
16208 | Are ye all dead? |
16208 | Are you indeed returned, are you the same? |
16208 | Are you well awake? |
16208 | Are your beds of down? |
16208 | Art thou some other Adam, formed from earth, And comest to claim an equal share, by birth, In this fair field? |
16208 | At Actium, who betrayed him? |
16208 | Be pardoned, and confess I loved not well? |
16208 | Beauty, like ice, our footing does betray; Who can tread sure on the smooth slippery way? |
16208 | Behold it on the murderer''s hand; A robber first, he took degrees in mischief, And grew to what he is: Know you that diamond, And whose it was? |
16208 | Blame me not, heaven; if thou love''s power hast tried, What could be so unjust to be denied? |
16208 | Bright as a goddess? |
16208 | But bears its workings outward to the world? |
16208 | But here you stand accused of no less crimes than robbery first, then murder, and last, treason: What can you say to clear yourself? |
16208 | But say, from whence this new combustion springs? |
16208 | But shall I speak? |
16208 | But what is death? |
16208 | But what of all my conquest can I boast? |
16208 | But what of that? |
16208 | But what success did your injustice find? |
16208 | But wherefore waste I precious hours with thee? |
16208 | But, how, sir, how have you from virtue swerved? |
16208 | But, who''s that stranger? |
16208 | By violence? |
16208 | By what sure means can I their bliss invade? |
16208 | Can beauty wonder, and not pity raise? |
16208 | Can it find a curse Beyond our separation? |
16208 | Can there be freedom, when what now seems free Was founded on some first necessity? |
16208 | Can they be friends of Antony, who revel When Antony''s in danger? |
16208 | Can you not one poor life to her afford, Her, who gave up whole nations to your sword? |
16208 | Can you not one, one parting look afford? |
16208 | Can you not tell her, you must part? |
16208 | Canst thou remember, When, swelled with hatred, thou beheld''st her first As accessary to thy brother''s death? |
16208 | Condemned to live with subjects ever mute; A savage prince, unpleased, though absolute? |
16208 | Could Aureng- Zebe so lovely seem to thee, And I want eyes that noble worth to see? |
16208 | Could I do so? |
16208 | Could he be just, or kind? |
16208 | Could he speak More plainly? |
16208 | Could his brutal mind Be wrought upon? |
16208 | Could you resolve, on any terms, to part? |
16208 | Desired of gods, and envied even by Jove: And dost thou ignorance or fear pretend? |
16208 | Devois- je en lui faisant un recit trop sincere, D''un indigne rougeur couvrir le front d''un pere? |
16208 | Did I not tell you, I would be deceived? |
16208 | Did not you o''er- rule, And force my plain, direct, and open love, Into these crooked paths of jealousy? |
16208 | Did we concur to life, or chuse to be? |
16208 | Did we solicit heaven to mould our clay? |
16208 | Did you not say my lover should be king? |
16208 | Didst thou but now plead on thy knees for life, And offer''dst to make known my innocence In Harman''s injuries? |
16208 | Didst thou not shrink behind me from those eyes And whisper in my ear,--Oh, tell her not That I accused her of my brother''s death? |
16208 | Didst thou not shrink behind me from those eyes, And whisper in my ear, Oh, tell her not That I accused her of my brother''s death? |
16208 | Do not I know him? |
16208 | Do you still love your Isabinda? |
16208 | Does she deserve this blessing? |
16208 | Dost thou think me desperate, Without just cause? |
16208 | Drives me before him, To the world''s ridge, and sweeps me off like rubbish? |
16208 | Durst he, who does but for my pleasure live, Intrench on love, my great prerogative? |
16208 | Ecquando sæva fulmen emittes manu, Si nunc serenum est? |
16208 | Empire is sweet; but how if heaven has spied? |
16208 | Exeunt severally.__ Enter_ ADAM_ and_ EVE,_ affrighted.__ Adam._ In what dark cavern shall I hide my head? |
16208 | Fan me, you winds: What, not one breath of air? |
16208 | Farewell, you flowers, whose buds, with early care, I watched, and to the chearful sun did rear: Who now shall bind your stems? |
16208 | First tell me, were you chosen by my lord? |
16208 | For favours, cheap and common, who would strive, Which, like abandoned prostitutes, you give? |
16208 | For that I am[_ Rising._ I know, because I think; but whence I came, Or how this frame of mine began to be, What other being can disclose to me? |
16208 | From darkness to produce us to the day? |
16208 | Good heavens, is this,--is this the man who braves me? |
16208 | Had I been such, what hindered me to take The crown? |
16208 | Hast thou been never base? |
16208 | Hast thou not seen my morning chambers filled With sceptered slaves, who waited to salute me? |
16208 | Hast thou not still some grudgings of thy fever? |
16208 | Have I heard one kind word before I part? |
16208 | Have I not horns, and tail, and leathern wings? |
16208 | Have I then lived to be excused to Cæsar? |
16208 | Hero? |
16208 | How bears he this last blow? |
16208 | How can our prophet suffer you to reign, When he looks down, and sees your brother slain? |
16208 | How is heaven kind, where I have nothing won, And fortune only pays me with my own? |
16208 | I can not go one moment from your sight, And must I go for ever? |
16208 | I can, I can forgive: Is that a task To love like mine? |
16208 | I could wish--_ Ind._ What? |
16208 | I fell by this, and, since their strength is less, Why should not equal means give like success? |
16208 | I find a secret yielding in my soul; But Cleopatra, who would die with me, Must she be left? |
16208 | I grant that my suspicions were unjust; But would you leave me, for a small distrust? |
16208 | I grow a fool, and show my rage again:''Tis nature''s fault; and why should I complain? |
16208 | I love the wretch; but stay, shall I afford Him part? |
16208 | I thought your love eternal: Was it tied So loosely, that a quarrel could divide? |
16208 | If I should die, and He above provide Some other Eve, and place her in my stead? |
16208 | If a little glittering in discourse has passed them on us for witty men, where was the necessity of undeceiving the world? |
16208 | If bounteous nature, if indulgent heaven Have given me charms to please the bravest man, Should I not thank them? |
16208 | Ill lodged, and weak to act what it designed? |
16208 | In the mean time, what right can be pretended by these men to attempt innovation in church or state? |
16208 | Is Aureng- Zebe so known? |
16208 | Is death no more? |
16208 | Is intellectual food to man denied, Which brutes have with so much advantage tried? |
16208 | Is it but, perhaps you love? |
16208 | Is it for thee to spy upon my soul, And see its inward mourning? |
16208 | Is love so strange? |
16208 | Is not your father chief? |
16208 | Is our perfection of so frail a make, As every plot can undermine or shake? |
16208 | Is she fair? |
16208 | Is that a hard request? |
16208 | Is their pain less, who yet behind thee stay? |
16208 | Is there no smooth descent? |
16208 | Is there one god unsworn to my destruction? |
16208 | Is this my hoped success? |
16208 | Is this so strange? |
16208 | Jun._ Have I not eyes? |
16208 | Jun._ If I durst trust you now? |
16208 | Jun._ Resolve me first one question: Did you not draw your sword this night before, To rescue one opprest with odds? |
16208 | Jun._ Tied to a tree and gagged, and--_ Fisc._ And what? |
16208 | Jun._ What do you mean? |
16208 | Jun._ What would you have me do then? |
16208 | Jun._ Who goes there? |
16208 | Jun._ Your reason for this sudden change? |
16208 | Lead to the mosque.--_ Mor._ Love''s pleasures, why should dull devotion stay? |
16208 | Less to yourself, or me? |
16208 | Let me think: What can I say, to save myself from death? |
16208 | Like boys unto a muss, kings would start forth And cry, your will.--Have you no ears? |
16208 | Look on her, view her well, and those she brings: Are they all strangers to your eyes? |
16208 | Look on these; Are they not yours? |
16208 | Lost the first fruits of joy you should possess In my return, and made my triumph less? |
16208 | May I believe you love me? |
16208 | Methought-- but why do I my bliss delay, By thinking what I thought? |
16208 | Morat without does for your ruin wait; And would you lose the buckler of your state? |
16208 | Must I new bars to my own joy create? |
16208 | Must I offer love? |
16208 | Must I weep too? |
16208 | Must I without you, then, in wild woods dwell? |
16208 | Must I your cold long- labouring age sustain, And be to empty joys provoked in vain? |
16208 | My Aureng- Zebe,( may I not call you so?) |
16208 | My eyes, my soul, my all!--[_ Embraces her.__ Vent._ And what''s this toy, In balance with your fortune, honour, fame? |
16208 | My joys, my only joys, are centered here: What place have I to go to? |
16208 | My own kingdom? |
16208 | My queen and thou have got the start of me, And I''m the lag of honour.--Gone so soon? |
16208 | No circumstance of grief you did deny; And what could she give more, who durst not die? |
16208 | No more: Remember you have bravely done; Shall treason end what loyalty begun? |
16208 | None answer me? |
16208 | Nor only tried themselves, but frankly, more, To me have offered their unenvied store? |
16208 | Not Cleopatra? |
16208 | Not one brave man dare, with a monarch, fall? |
16208 | Now, what news, my Charmion? |
16208 | Now, what success? |
16208 | Now, what''s the event? |
16208 | Or am I dead before I knew, and thou The first kind ghost that meets me? |
16208 | Or am I dead? |
16208 | Or are you turned a Dolabella too, And let this Fury loose? |
16208 | Or do they vain authority pretend O''er human fates, and their weak empire show, Which can not guard their images below? |
16208 | Or does my willing mind delude my eyes, And shows the figure always present there? |
16208 | Or fear the frown Of him who threw you hence, and joys to see Your abject state confess his victory? |
16208 | Or have not I a heart? |
16208 | Or have so weak a judgment shown, In chusing you, to change you for a throne? |
16208 | Or is it probable that very man, Who actually did kill him afterwards, Should save his life so little time before? |
16208 | Or is''t some angel, pitying what I bore, Who takes that shape, to make my wonder more? |
16208 | Or know you, Arimant, yourself, or me? |
16208 | Or liv''st thou? |
16208 | Or sought you this employment? |
16208 | Or sprung of heavenly race? |
16208 | Or that, for greatness, I can love betray? |
16208 | Or thou less hardy to endure than they? |
16208 | Or was it chance? |
16208 | Or what love- secret, which I must not hear? |
16208 | Or what so ill return have I deserved? |
16208 | Or who can break the chain which limits men To act what is unchangeably forecast, Since the first cause gives motion to the last? |
16208 | Our question thou evad''st: How didst thou dare To break hell bounds, and near this human pair In nightly ambush lie? |
16208 | Pourguoi, par quel caprice, Laissés vous le champ libre a votre accusatrice? |
16208 | Pray, Mynheer Fiscal, what think you of the English? |
16208 | Pray, what makes any thing a sin but law? |
16208 | Print his base image on his sovereign''s coin? |
16208 | Receive you, sighing after other charms, And take an absent husband in my arms? |
16208 | Refuse myself what I had forced from fate? |
16208 | Resolve me;( for you know my destiny Is Aureng- Zebes) say, do I live or die? |
16208 | Respect is for a wife: Am I that thing, That dull insipid lump, without desires, And without power to give them? |
16208 | SCENE 1.--_A Champaign Country._ ADAM,_ as newly created, laid on a bed of moss and flowers, by a rock.__ Adam._ What am I? |
16208 | Sawest thou not late a speckled serpent rear His gilded spires to climb on yon''fair tree? |
16208 | Secure of empire in that beauteous breast, Who would not give their crowns to be so blest? |
16208 | Sen._ Friend, he shall ask your pardon, or I''ll no longer own him; what, ungrateful to a man, whose valour has preserved him? |
16208 | Sen._ I warrant you.--What, my brave bonny bridegroom, not yet dressed? |
16208 | Sen._ What say you to this accusation, Van Herring? |
16208 | Severe decrees may keep our tongues in awe; But to our thoughts, what edict can give law? |
16208 | Shall she possess his love, when I am dead? |
16208 | Shame of your sex, Dost thou not blush, to own those black endearments, That make sin pleasing? |
16208 | She dies for love; but she has known its joys: Gods, is this just, that I, who know no joys, Must die, because she loves? |
16208 | Should I not seek The clemency of some more temperate clime, To purge my gloom; and, by the sun refined, Bask in his beams, and bleach me in the wind? |
16208 | Should I, who cultivated love with blood, Refuse possession of approaching good? |
16208 | Should I, who found the means to''scape, not dare To change my sulphurous smoke for upper air? |
16208 | Should he be wholly wretched? |
16208 | Should mistresses be left, And not provide against a time of change? |
16208 | Should we a rebel son''s excuse receive, Because he was begot without his leave? |
16208 | Since''tis to that they their own greatness owe Above, why should they question mine below? |
16208 | Since''twas his choice, not ours, which placed us here, The laws we did not chuse why should we bear? |
16208 | Sleep you so easy there? |
16208 | So weak your charms, that, like a winter''s night, Twinkling with stars, they freeze me, while they light? |
16208 | Some one( but who that task dares undertake?) |
16208 | Speak, was''t not so? |
16208 | Speak; would you have me perish by my stay? |
16208 | Suppose( what I''ll not grant) injustice done; Is judging me the duty of a son? |
16208 | Tell me which part it does necessitate? |
16208 | Tell me, how was''t? |
16208 | Tell me, what is''t at which great spirits aim, What most yourself desire? |
16208 | Ten years love, And not a moment lost, but all improved To the utmost joys,--what ages have we liv''d? |
16208 | That I have lost for you: Or to the Romans? |
16208 | That blood, which flushes guilty in your face? |
16208 | That crawling insect, who from mud began, Warmed by my beams, and kindled into man? |
16208 | The beasts, since we are fallen, their lords despise; And, passing, look at me with glaring eyes: Must I then wander helpless, and alone? |
16208 | The blame be mine; you warned, and I refused: What would you more? |
16208 | The good we have enjoyed from heaven''s free will, And shall we murmur to endure the ill? |
16208 | The least unmortgaged hope? |
16208 | Then, Dolabella, where was then thy soul? |
16208 | Then, Dolabella, where was then thy soul? |
16208 | Then, we must part? |
16208 | They hate me for your sake: Or must I wander The wide world o''er, a helpless, banished woman, Banished for love of you; banished from you? |
16208 | Think you he would not sigh, though he must leave me? |
16208 | Think you my aged veins so faintly beat, They rise no higher than to friendship''s heat? |
16208 | Think, and but think, of what I loved so well? |
16208 | This all- perfect creature? |
16208 | This fair defect, this helpless aid, called wife; The bending crutch of a decrepid life? |
16208 | This fruit-- why dost thou shake? |
16208 | This impudence of age, whence can it spring? |
16208 | Though I deserve this usage, Was it like you to give it? |
16208 | Though interest his restraint has justified, Can life, and to a brother, be denied? |
16208 | To cure their mad ambition, they were sent To rule a distant province each alone: What could a careful father more have done? |
16208 | To place myself beneath the mighty flaw, Thus to be crushed, and pounded into atoms, By its o''erwhelming weight? |
16208 | To stand by my fair fame, and guard the approaches From the ill tongues of men? |
16208 | Vous laissés dans l''erreur un pere qui vous uime? |
16208 | Was it for me to prop The ruins of a falling majesty? |
16208 | Was it our will which formed, or was it He? |
16208 | Was it so hard for you to bear our parting? |
16208 | Was it to please me with a name alone? |
16208 | Was not thy fury quite disarmed with murder? |
16208 | Was not thy fury quite disarmed with wonder? |
16208 | Was plighted faith so weakly sealed above, That, for one error, I must lose your love? |
16208 | We''re now alone, in secresy and silence; And is not this like lovers? |
16208 | Were I no queen, did you my beauty weigh, My youth in bloom, your age in its decay? |
16208 | Were there so many hours For your unkindness, and not one for love? |
16208 | Wert thou to empire, by my baseness, brought, And wouldst thou ravish what so dear I bought? |
16208 | What courage tamely could to death consent, And not, by striking first, the blow prevent? |
16208 | What enemies had he, who should assault him? |
16208 | What had my age to do with love''s delight, Shut out from all enjoyments but the sight? |
16208 | What harms it you that Cleopatra''s just? |
16208 | What hindered me to have led my conquering eagles To fill Octavius''bands? |
16208 | What if any other English? |
16208 | What if her husband should have found her? |
16208 | What if we find some easier enterprise? |
16208 | What injury To him, to wear the robe which he throws by? |
16208 | What mean these endless jars of trading nations? |
16208 | What means that lovely fruit? |
16208 | What meant you when you called me to a throne? |
16208 | What must I do? |
16208 | What secret meaning have you in those words Of-- my farewell? |
16208 | What shall I say? |
16208 | What should I fight for now? |
16208 | What then remains but battle? |
16208 | What think''st thou was his answer? |
16208 | What though I am not loved? |
16208 | What would you more? |
16208 | What''s here? |
16208 | When I, in fight, sustained your Thunderer, And heaven on me alone spent half his war, Think''st thou those wounds were light? |
16208 | When right, when nature, struggled in my heart; When heaven called on me for thy brother''s claim, Broke all, and sullied my unspotted fame? |
16208 | When she exacts it, can I stoop so low? |
16208 | When thou would''st work, one tender touch, one smile( How can I hold?) |
16208 | When will you thunder, if it now be clear? |
16208 | Whence begun? |
16208 | Where have you learnt that answer? |
16208 | Where seek retreat, now innocence is fled? |
16208 | Where shall I find him, where? |
16208 | Whither? |
16208 | Who am I? |
16208 | Who am I? |
16208 | Who bids my age make way? |
16208 | Who dares adventure more for both than I? |
16208 | Who knows what adverse fortune may befal? |
16208 | Who made him cheap at Rome, but Cleopatra? |
16208 | Who made him scorned abroad, but Cleopatra? |
16208 | Who made his children orphans, and poor me A wretched widow? |
16208 | Who made them the trustees, or, to speak a little nearer their own language, the keepers of the liberty of England? |
16208 | Who would excel, when few can make a test Betwixt indifferent writing and the best? |
16208 | Why am I ranked in state above the rest, If, while I stand of sovereign power possest, Another dares, in danger, farther go? |
16208 | Why am I thus to slavery designed, And yet am cheated with a freeborn mind? |
16208 | Why am I trusted with myself at large, When he''s more able to sustain the charge? |
16208 | Why are you made so excellently fair? |
16208 | Why did my arms in battle prosperous prove, To gain the barren praise of filial love? |
16208 | Why did they refuse to march? |
16208 | Why do you stare and tremble? |
16208 | Why does it seem so strange? |
16208 | Why have you brought me back to this loathed being, The abode of falsehood, violated vows, And injured love? |
16208 | Why here alone? |
16208 | Why should a man like this, Who dares not trust his fate for one great action, Be all the care of heaven? |
16208 | Why should he lord it O''er fourscore thousand men, of whom each one Is braver than himself? |
16208 | Why should they fight indeed, to make her conquer, And make you more a slave? |
16208 | Why stayest thou here? |
16208 | Why was that fatal knot of marriage tied, Which did, by making us too near, divide? |
16208 | Why was this sin of nature made on earth? |
16208 | Why will you be so excellently good? |
16208 | Will he be kind? |
16208 | Will he condemn you for a petty rape? |
16208 | Will you go? |
16208 | With eastern monarchs, who forgot the sun, To worship my uprising? |
16208 | With, or without you, I can have no rest: What shall I do? |
16208 | Would a man who has an ill title to an estate, but yet is in possession of it; would he bring it of his own accord, to be tried at Westminster? |
16208 | Would you cast off a slave who followed you? |
16208 | Would you indeed? |
16208 | Yes, but he''ll say, you left Octavia for me;-- And, can you blame me to receive that love, Which quitted such desert, for worthless me? |
16208 | Yet grant that all the love she boasts were true, Has she not ruined you? |
16208 | Yet neither stirs nor speaks? |
16208 | Yet who can hope but well, since even success Makes foes secure, and makes our danger less? |
16208 | Yet, is there any more? |
16208 | Yet, who should put his life in danger thus? |
16208 | Yield me to Cæsar''s pride? |
16208 | You do not speak: My friend dumb too? |
16208 | You have subverted( may I dare to accuse you of it?) |
16208 | You know you must obey me, soon or late: Why should you vainly struggle with your fate? |
16208 | You plead each other''s cause: What witness have you, That you but meant to raise my jealousy? |
16208 | You said I loved you; and, in recompence, You bid me turn a traitor:--Did I think You would have used me thus? |
16208 | You will not leave me then? |
16208 | You will not see her? |
16208 | You would be killed like Tully, would you? |
16208 | You would free me, And would be dropt at Athens; was''t not so? |
16208 | [_ A distant shout within.__ Char._ Have comfort, madam: Did you mark that shout? |
16208 | [_ Aside.__ Emp._ Did he, my slave, presume to look so high? |
16208 | [_ Aside.__ Jul._ I may build upon your promise, then? |
16208 | [_ Aside.__ Octav._ Would you triumph o''er poor Octavia''s virtue? |
16208 | [_ Drawing him aside.__ Vent._ My lord? |
16208 | [_ Embracing him._ Why was this trial thine, of loving best? |
16208 | [_ Exit.__ Adam._ In love, what use of prudence can there be? |
16208 | [_ Goes a step or two, while the other approaches his wife._] What shall I be, before I come again? |
16208 | [_ Goes out, and returns again._ Wilt thou forgive my fondness this once more? |
16208 | [_ Guns go off within.__ Van Her._ Heard you those guns? |
16208 | [_ Holds out her arm, and draws it back._ Coward flesh, Would''st thou conspire with Cæsar to betray me, As thou wert none of mine? |
16208 | [_ Is going.__ Emp._ Somewhat I had forgot; come back again: So weary of a father''s company? |
16208 | [_ Offers to kiss her.__ Nour._ Me would you have,--me your faint kisses prove, The dregs and droppings of enervate love? |
16208 | [_ Runs to embrace him._ Art thou returned at last, my better half? |
16208 | [_ Runs to him.__ Ant._ Art thou living? |
16208 | [_ She frowns._ How can you look with such relentless eyes? |
16208 | [_ Shout within.__ Abas._ What new alarms are these? |
16208 | [_ Stands before him.__ Ant._[_ Starting up._] Art thou Ventidius? |
16208 | [_ Starting back.__ Vent._ What, is she poison to you? |
16208 | [_ Takes it up._] Oh, by the inscription,''tis a memorial of what he means to do this day: What''s here? |
16208 | [_ Taking him by the hand._ Behold me now no longer for your foe; I am not, can not be your enemy: Look, is there any malice in my eye? |
16208 | [_ Taking the cup from him.__ Nour._ What foolish pity has possessed your mind, To alter what your prudence once designed? |
16208 | [_ They withdraw to a corner of the stage; and_ VENTIDIUS,_ with the other, comes forward to the front.__ Vent._ Not see him, say you? |
16208 | [_ Weeping.__ Enter Emperor.__ Emp._ When your triumphant fortune high appears, What cause can draw these unbecoming tears? |
16208 | _ Adam._ Better constrained to good, than free to ill._ Raph._ But what reward or punishment could be, If man to neither good nor ill were free? |
16208 | _ Adam._ Freedom of will of all good things is best; But can it be by finite man possest? |
16208 | _ Adam._ Grant heaven could once have given us liberty; Are we not bounded now, by firm decree, Since whatsoe''er is pre- ordained must be? |
16208 | _ Adam._ What more can heaven bestow, or man require? |
16208 | _ Adam._ Whate''er shall be the event, the lot is cast; Where appetites are given, what sin to taste? |
16208 | _ Adam._ Why did he reason in my soul implant, And speech, the effect of reason? |
16208 | _ Adam._ Yet causes their effects necessitate In willing agents: Where is freedom then? |
16208 | _ Alex._ And dreamed you this? |
16208 | _ Alex._ And would you more? |
16208 | _ Alex._ Does this weak passion Become a mighty queen? |
16208 | _ Alex._ What means my lord? |
16208 | _ Alex._''Tis your last remedy, and strongest too: And then this Dolabella, who so fit To practise on? |
16208 | _ Angel._ Say, who enjoined this harsh command? |
16208 | _ Angel._ Why was it made so fair, why placed in sight? |
16208 | _ Ant._ A word in private.-- When saw you Dolabella? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Alexas is not so: He, he confest it; He, who, next hell, best knew it, he avowed it Why do I seek a proof beyond yourself? |
16208 | _ Ant._ And who must wear them then? |
16208 | _ Ant._ And yet you first Persuaded me: How come you altered since? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Are they noble? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Are you my friend, Ventidius? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Art thou not one? |
16208 | _ Ant._ But have I no remembrance? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Fortune is Cæsar''s now; and what am I? |
16208 | _ Ant._ I did not think so; I said it in my rage: Pr''ythee, forgive me: Why didst thou tempt my anger, by discovery Of what I would not hear? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Is there yet left A possibility of aid from valour? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Is this friendly done? |
16208 | _ Ant._ More softly.--My farewell? |
16208 | _ Ant._ My Cleopatra? |
16208 | _ Ant._ No more? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Now thou hast seen me, art thou satified? |
16208 | _ Ant._ O, Dolabella, which way shall I turn? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Octavia, I was looking you, my love: What, are your letters ready? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Then art thou innocent, my poor dear love? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Therefore you would leave me? |
16208 | _ Ant._ This from a friend? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Unwillingly? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Well, Dolabella, you performed my message? |
16208 | _ Ant._ What is''t, Ventidius? |
16208 | _ Ant._ What was''t they said? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Where left you them? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Which way? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Who knows, but we may pierce through all their troops, And reach my veterans yet? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Why didst thou mock my hopes with promised aids, To double my despair? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Why dost thou drive me from myself, to search For foreign aids? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Why? |
16208 | _ Ant._ Wilt thou not live, to speak some good of me? |
16208 | _ Ant._[_ Aside._] Well, I must man it out:--What would the queen? |
16208 | _ Arim._ And I the messenger to him from you? |
16208 | _ Arim._ Can you be cured, and tell not your disease? |
16208 | _ Arim._ How, sir? |
16208 | _ Arim._ What lover could to greater joy be raised? |
16208 | _ Arim._ What of the emperor? |
16208 | _ Arim._ Why did you speak? |
16208 | _ Arim._ Would I, without dispute, your will obey, And could you, in return, my life betray? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Alas, what fury''s this? |
16208 | _ Aur._ And whence had she the power to work your change? |
16208 | _ Aur._ And''tis by that you would your falsehood hide? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Are you so lost to shame? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Behold these dying eyes, see their submissive awe; These tears, which fear of death could never draw: Heard you that sigh? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Can Indamora prove So altered? |
16208 | _ Aur._ How look the people in this turn of state? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Is that the business? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Now you distract me more: Shall then the day, Which views my triumph, see our loves decay? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Of me? |
16208 | _ Aur._ What have I said or done, That I no longer must be called your son? |
16208 | _ Aur._ When did I complain? |
16208 | _ Aur._ Whence can proceed so wonderful a change? |
16208 | _ Beam._ Come, shall we backward to the castle? |
16208 | _ Beam._ How is it, friend? |
16208 | _ Beam._ What conspiracy? |
16208 | _ Beam._ What proofs have you of this? |
16208 | _ Beam._ You seem amazed at somewhat? |
16208 | _ Char._ I found him, madam--_ Cleo._ A long speech preparing? |
16208 | _ Char._ To what end These ensigns of your pomp and royalty? |
16208 | _ Char._ What must be done? |
16208 | _ Claudia._ Who? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Can I do this? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Can heaven prepare A newer torment? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Could you not beg An hour''s admittance to his private ear? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Did he then weep? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ How is it with you? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ How less pleasing? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ How shall I plead my cause, when you, my judge, Already have condemned me? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ How? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ I am no queen: Is this to be a queen, to be besieged By yon insulting Roman, and to wait Each hour the victor''s chain? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ In the first place, I am to be forsaken; is''t not so? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Is that a word For Antony to use to Cleopatra? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Is this a meeting? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Must I bid you twice? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Then must we part? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ What shall I do, or whither shall I turn? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ What tell''st thou me of Egypt? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Where is my lord? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Who says we must? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Why should''st thou make that question? |
16208 | _ Cleo._ Yet may I speak? |
16208 | _ Col._ But where can be this jolly bridegroom? |
16208 | _ Col._ How is this? |
16208 | _ Col._ I wonder what''s become of her? |
16208 | _ Col._ What plot is this you speak of? |
16208 | _ Dola._ And should my weakness be a plea for yours? |
16208 | _ Dola._ Know you his business? |
16208 | _ Dola._ My lord, have I Deserved to be thus used? |
16208 | _ Dola._ What shall I answer? |
16208 | _ Dola._ What''s false, my lord? |
16208 | _ Dola._ Why would you shift it from yourself, on me? |
16208 | _ Dola._ Why? |
16208 | _ Dola._ Yes; when his end is so, I must join with him; Indeed I must, and yet you must not chide: Why am I else your friend? |
16208 | _ Dola._ Yet, are you cold? |
16208 | _ Dola._ You''ll remember To whom you stand obliged? |
16208 | _ Emp._ Can you forgive me? |
16208 | _ Emp._ Disturb me not;-- How can my latest hour be better spent? |
16208 | _ Emp._ What can I more? |
16208 | _ Emp._ What can be sweeter than our native home? |
16208 | _ Emp._ What danger, Arimant, is this you fear? |
16208 | _ Emp._ What pleasure can there be in that estate, Which your unquietness has made me hate? |
16208 | _ Emp._ What rage transports you? |
16208 | _ Enter Guards.__ Aur._ Slave, for me? |
16208 | _ Enter_ NOURMAHAL_ hastily.__ Nour._ What have I done, that Nourmahal must prove The scorn and triumph of a rival''s love? |
16208 | _ Enter_ VENTIDIUS_ above.__ Vent._ Alone, and talking to himself? |
16208 | _ Eve._ Alas, who dares dispute with him that right? |
16208 | _ Eve._ Have you that privilege of only wise, And would you yield to her you so despise? |
16208 | _ Eve._ He eats, and lives, in knowledge greater grown:[_ Aside._ Was death invented then for us alone? |
16208 | _ Eve._ I grant him armed with subtilty and hate; But why should we suspect our happy state? |
16208 | _ Eve._ In vain: What hope to shun his piercing sight, Who from dark chaos struck the sparks of light? |
16208 | _ Eve._ Must we this blissful paradise forego? |
16208 | _ Eve._ Tell me, ye hills and dales, and thou fair sun, Who shin''st above, what am I? |
16208 | _ Eve._ To make thee such, what miracle was shown? |
16208 | _ Eve._ What art thou, or from whence? |
16208 | _ Eve._ What reason makes my small request unfit? |
16208 | _ Eve._ What shall we do? |
16208 | _ Eve._ What, but our good, could he design in this, Who gave us all, and placed in perfect bliss? |
16208 | _ Eve._ Who would the miseries of man foreknow? |
16208 | _ Eve._ Why is life forced on man, who, might he chuse, Would not accept what he with pain must lose? |
16208 | _ Eve._ Why seek you death? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ A friend: I was just in quest of you, so are all the company: Where have you left the bride? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ And swear secresy? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ And will you let him live, who did this act? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ But what if he will not be so civil to be killed that way? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Came you from the port, gentlemen? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Hark, I hear the company walking this way; will you withdraw? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Is the brave Towerson returned? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ No? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ None? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Not after it was done? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Not name it, and yet do it? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Now, captain, when perform you what you promised, concerning Towerson''s death? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ The accident was wondrous strange: Did you neither know your assassinates, nor your deliverer? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ To dispatch her immediately; could you be so senseless to ravish her, and let her live? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ To have his blood is not amiss, so far I go with you; but take me with you further for the means: First, what''s the injury? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Well, they come; I''ll put you in a way, and wish you good success; but do you hear? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Whither so fast, mynheer? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Whom, Towerson? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ Will you not please to call the prisoners in? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ You die in charity, I hope? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ You will undertake it then? |
16208 | _ Fisc._ You''ll not confess yet, captain? |
16208 | _ Gab._ And who but man should judge of man''s free state? |
16208 | _ Gab._ If any spirit come to invade, or scout From hell, what earthy fence can keep him out? |
16208 | _ Gab._ Think''st thou, vain spirit, thy glories are the same? |
16208 | _ Har._ And a tub to leak in, boy; when was this table without a leaking vessel? |
16208 | _ Har._ Are you yet moved? |
16208 | _ Har._ Away, I''ll hear no more.--Now who comes the next? |
16208 | _ Har._ But what''s this to the English? |
16208 | _ Har._ Do you mock us, sirrah? |
16208 | _ Har._ Is their East India fleet bound outward for these parts, or cast away, or met at sea by pirates? |
16208 | _ Har._ Were not you, Mr Beamont, and you, Collins both accessary to the horrid plot, for the surprisal of this fort and island? |
16208 | _ Har._ What say you, woman? |
16208 | _ Har._ Where are the prisoners? |
16208 | _ Har._''Tis well you are merry; will you yet confess? |
16208 | _ Hé que nai- je point dit? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Alas, is he then dead? |
16208 | _ Ind._ And therefore''twas I changed that name before; I called you friend, and could you wish for more? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Could that decree from any brother come? |
16208 | _ Ind._ From me, what pardon can you hope to have, Robbed of my love, and treated as a slave? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Have you considered what the event would be? |
16208 | _ Ind._ He may? |
16208 | _ Ind._ How are you injured? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Must I advise? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Should I from Aureng- Zebe my heart divide, To love a monster, and a parricide? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Suppose he has o''ercome; must I find place Among his conquered foes, and sue for grace? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Think you, base interest souls like mine can sway? |
16208 | _ Ind._ To what may not desert like yours pretend? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Was''t not enough, you took my crown away, But cruelly you must my love betray? |
16208 | _ Ind._ What have I done thus to inflame your hate? |
16208 | _ Ind._ What reason for your curses can you find? |
16208 | _ Ind._ What shall I do or say? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Where youth and power are joined!--has he a name? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Who told you this? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Will you yet hear me? |
16208 | _ Ind._ You first betrayed your trust, in loving me; And should not I my own advantage see? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Your accusation must, I see, take place;-- And am I guilty, infamous, and base? |
16208 | _ Ind._ Your victory, alas, begets my fears: Can you not then triumph without my tears? |
16208 | _ Iras._ The aspicks, madam? |
16208 | _ Iras._ Will you then die? |
16208 | _ Isab._ Am I in fault if you are miserable? |
16208 | _ Isab._ Come, sir, which is the way? |
16208 | _ Isab._ Do I hold my love, do I embrace him after a tedious absence of three years? |
16208 | _ Isab._ Do you still love me? |
16208 | _ Isab._ Dost thou not fear a heaven? |
16208 | _ Isab._ How could you be so long away? |
16208 | _ Isab._ If Towerson would, think''st thou my soul so poor, To own thy sin, and make the base act mine, By chusing him who did it? |
16208 | _ Isab._ Is it permitted me to see your eyes Once more, before eternal night shall close them? |
16208 | _ Isab._ My love so near? |
16208 | _ Isab._ Who saw the bridegroom last? |
16208 | _ Jul._ Do you think I''ll ever come into a bed with him, who robbed me of my dear sweet man? |
16208 | _ Jul._ I have heard enough of England; have you nothing to return upon the Netherlands? |
16208 | _ Jul._ I have your word for this, and if you break it, how shall I trust you for your marrying me? |
16208 | _ Jul._ Pray leave this talk, and let us try if we can surprise the lovers under some convenient tree: Shall we separate, and look them? |
16208 | _ Luc._ Who told you how your form was first designed? |
16208 | _ Luci._ A golden palace let be raised on high; To imitate? |
16208 | _ Lucif._ Lives there, who would not seek to force his way, From pain to ease, from darkness to the day? |
16208 | _ Lucif._ Must they then die, if they attempt to know? |
16208 | _ Lucif._ Who would not tell what thou vouchsaf''st to hear? |
16208 | _ Lucifer._ But where dwells man? |
16208 | _ Mel._ And can you, then, deny those eyes you praise? |
16208 | _ Mel._ Can flowers but droop in absence of the sun, Which waked their sweets? |
16208 | _ Mel._ Can misery no place of safety know? |
16208 | _ Mel._ From your loved presence how can I depart? |
16208 | _ Mel._ I pity, as my own, your hard estate: But what can my weak charity afford? |
16208 | _ Mel._ Should I not chide, that you could stay and see Those joys, preferring public pomp to me? |
16208 | _ Mel._ Why did I not in prison die, before My fatal freedom made me suffer more? |
16208 | _ Mel._ You wrong my love; what grief do I betray? |
16208 | _ Mel._''Tis part of your own being to invade--_ Mor._ Nay, if she fail to move, would you persuade? |
16208 | _ Mor._ Be happy, Melesinda; cease to grieve, And for a more deserving husband live:-- Can you forgive me? |
16208 | _ Mor._ Comes he to upbraid us with his innocence? |
16208 | _ Mor._ Have you no more? |
16208 | _ Mor._ What business has my conscience with a crown? |
16208 | _ Mor._ What did that greatness in a woman''s mind? |
16208 | _ Mor._ What if I please to lengthen out his date A day, and take a pride to cozen fate? |
16208 | _ Mor._ Why do you give your mind this needless care, And for yourself, and me, new pains prepare? |
16208 | _ Mor._ Would you force love upon me, which I shun? |
16208 | _ Myr._ Why then does Antony dream out his hours, And tempts not fortune for a noble day, Which might redeem what Actium lost? |
16208 | _ Nour._ And who could else employ my thought? |
16208 | _ Nour._ Can kindness to desert, like yours, be strange? |
16208 | _ Nour._ Not guilty, when thy looks my power betray, Seduce mankind, my subject, from my sway, Take all my hearts and all my eyes away? |
16208 | _ Nour._ What am I, that you dare to bind my hand? |
16208 | _ Nour._ What''s love to you? |
16208 | _ Nour._ Where are those powers which monarchs should defend? |
16208 | _ Nour._ Why dost thou shake? |
16208 | _ Nour._ Why dost thou start? |
16208 | _ Nour._ You made my liberty your late request; Is no return due from a grateful breast? |
16208 | _ Nour._''Tis true; but who was e''er in love, and wise? |
16208 | _ Octav._ Are you concerned, That she''s found false? |
16208 | _ Octav._ Begged it, my lord? |
16208 | _ Octav._ Must I bear this? |
16208 | _ Octav._ Wherein have I offended you, my lord, That I am bid to leave you? |
16208 | _ Per._ Dare you adventure on an action, as brave as theirs is base? |
16208 | _ Per._ Must they be told into my wife''s hand, too? |
16208 | _ Per._ Was ever villany like this of these unknown assassins? |
16208 | _ Per._ What if I come myself? |
16208 | _ Quoi vous pouvés vous taire en ce peril extreme? |
16208 | _ Serap._ How stands the queen affected? |
16208 | _ Serap._ I came from Pharos; From viewing( spare me, and imagine it) Our land''s last hope, your navy--_ Cleo._ Vanquished? |
16208 | _ Serap._ The queen, where is she? |
16208 | _ Serap._ Where, where''s the queen? |
16208 | _ Serap._''Twas what I feared.-- Charmion, is this well done? |
16208 | _ The_ SCENE_ opens, and discovers the English tortured, and the Dutch tormenting them.__ Fisc._ Now, sir, how does the object like you? |
16208 | _ They enter.__ Dola._ Saw you the emperor, Ventidius? |
16208 | _ To them, the Emperor.__ Emp._ Am I forsaken, and betrayed, by all? |
16208 | _ Tow._ And, sir, why should we not? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Can death, which is our greatest enemy, be good? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Heaven suffered more in that, than you, or I, Wherefore have I been faithful to my trust, True to my love, and tender to the opprest? |
16208 | _ Tow._ How can you think I was? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Is this true, Isabinda? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Let me first Be bold to question you: What circumstance Can make this, your pretended plot, seem likely? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Our masters? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Where is your husband, countrywoman? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Why, is aught happened since I saw you last? |
16208 | _ Tow._ Yield Isabinda to you? |
16208 | _ Van Her._ But in regard of the late league and union betwixt the nations, how can this be answered? |
16208 | _ Van Her._ Did he confess no more? |
16208 | _ Van Her._ Did he not leave a mistress in these parts, a native of this island of Amboyna? |
16208 | _ Van Her._ Did the last ships, which came from Holland to these parts, bring us no news of moment? |
16208 | _ Van Her._ How the devil came she off? |
16208 | _ Van Her._ Whence comes this news? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Again? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Are you Antony? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Does the mute sacrifice upbraid the priest? |
16208 | _ Vent._ For showing you yourself, Which none else durst have done? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Has he courage? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Have you no friend In all his army, who has power to move him? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Is''t come to this? |
16208 | _ Vent._ That''s my royal master; And, shall we fight? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Then, granting this, What power was theirs, who wrought so hard a temper To honourable terms? |
16208 | _ Vent._ There''s but one way shut up: How came I hither? |
16208 | _ Vent._ What has my age deserved, that you should think I would abuse your ears with perjury? |
16208 | _ Vent._ What lethargy has crept into your soul? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Who shall guard mine, For living after you? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Would you be taken? |
16208 | _ Vent._ Would you believe he loved you? |
16208 | _ Vent._ You would be lost then? |
16208 | _ Vent._[_ Aside._] O, wheel you there? |
16208 | _ Wom._ But of a courage full as manly; there is no sex in souls; would you have English wives shew less of bravery than their children do? |
16208 | _ Woman._''Twas heaven; and who can heaven withstand? |
16208 | a disease? |
16208 | am I blessed, and see thee here? |
16208 | and darest not gloriously offend? |
16208 | and how? |
16208 | and is all perfection Confined to her? |
16208 | and on what errand sent? |
16208 | and what have I not said or done? |
16208 | and why, young stripling? |
16208 | and will he not forsake me? |
16208 | and, what law is there here against it? |
16208 | are you not fair? |
16208 | can you this, without just vengeance, hear? |
16208 | concerned too? |
16208 | did love ne''er bend Thy frailer virtue, to betray thy friend? |
16208 | did then our great Creator grant That privilege, which we, their masters, want, To these inferior brings? |
16208 | do I dream? |
16208 | does Aureng- Zebe yet live? |
16208 | for my conscience and its peace I gave;-- Why was my reason made my passion''s slave? |
16208 | has nature No secret call, no whisper they are yours? |
16208 | have I lost Morat for this? |
16208 | he alone, In this blessed day, a day so much his own? |
16208 | how could you bear a part, Who bore not mine, but with a bleeding heart? |
16208 | how could you betray This tender heart, which with an infant fondness Lay lulled betwixt your bosoms, and there slept, Secure of injured faith? |
16208 | might not I Share in your entertainment? |
16208 | more fighting kings? |
16208 | must I see, and must have none? |
16208 | my old friend steal a wedding from me? |
16208 | nay, do I live? |
16208 | no painless way Of kindly mixing with our native clay? |
16208 | or did invent the story,[_ Shewing himself._ To frighten our Egyptian boys withal, And train them up, betimes, in fear of priesthood? |
16208 | or from whence? |
16208 | or stand they thus neglected, As they are mine? |
16208 | or what feelings of terror can be excited by the idea of an opera hell, composed of pasteboard and flaming rosin? |
16208 | or where direct our flight? |
16208 | or, is it some Illusion of the night? |
16208 | or, when you fall, With fountain streams your fainting souls recal? |
16208 | pity pleads for Octavia; But does it not plead more for Cleopatra? |
16208 | shall I bring The love you bore me for my advocate? |
16208 | shall I set A man, my equal, in the place of Jove, As he could give me being? |
16208 | should I be ashamed, And not be proud? |
16208 | since heaven foreknows my will, Why am I not tied up from doing ill? |
16208 | some spectre, such As in these Asian parts more frequently appear? |
16208 | tam lentus vides? |
16208 | that I should die With a hard thought of you? |
16208 | that''s hard; well, you can be secret, captain, for your own sake, I hope? |
16208 | the pretty hand in earnest? |
16208 | to gain you kingdoms, Which, for a kiss, at your next midnight feast, You''ll sell to her? |
16208 | to hunt my memory, And range all o''er a waste and barren place, To find a friend? |
16208 | what means this pomp? |
16208 | what more could at your wish be done, Than two such conquests gained by such a son? |
16208 | what power thy life can save? |
16208 | what unmanly odds is this? |
16208 | where is he? |
16208 | where? |
16208 | who waits without? |
16208 | why do I make this useless moan? |
16208 | why must man from woman take his birth? |
16208 | wilt thou forsake me, in distress,[_ Kneeling._ For that which now is past me to redress? |
16208 | would''st thou betray him too? |
16208 | yet what is this to heaven, where I Sat next, so almost equalled the Most High? |
16208 | your loyal, your victorious son? |
47204 | Are you, indeed? 47204 Booth led boldly with his big bass drum,_ Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_ The saints smiled gravely as they said,''He''s come.'' |
47204 | Den whut_ am_ you skeered ob? |
47204 | Does your uncle travel much? |
47204 | Have you, indeed? 47204 My dearest Catherine, what have you been doing with yourself all the morning? |
47204 | Yes, pretty well; but are they all horrid? 47204 ( Suddenly) Jim, they wo n''t have brought me up against her, will they? |
47204 | And God said to the man,"Wherefore can I not send thee to Hell, and for what reason?" |
47204 | And God said to the man,"Wherefore can I not send thee unto Heaven, and for what reason?" |
47204 | And after all, what do the poor things get out of it? |
47204 | And as his_ La Horla_ strongly reflects FitzJames O''Brien''s_ What Was It? |
47204 | And what would a stage manager do with the rhythm of the universe, which enters into Dreiser''s play? |
47204 | And who can say that our dream life is altogether baseless and unreal? |
47204 | And why do they never wear out? |
47204 | Are men skeptical of the existence of any but a satiric or symbolic heaven, or merely doubtful of reaching there? |
47204 | Are you not wild to know?" |
47204 | Are you sure they are all horrid?" |
47204 | As Lord Dunsany says of it,"Who can say of insanity,--whether it be divine or of the Pit?" |
47204 | As the old uncle is almost breathing his last, he cries out,"What the devil brings you here?" |
47204 | But where did the second wife''s soul go, pray,--the"she o''the she"as Patience Worth would say? |
47204 | Cain asks the unhappy spirit,"But didst thou not find favor in the sight of the Lord thy God?" |
47204 | Does he drink the wrong elixir, or have all his calculations been wrong? |
47204 | Each man is asked by name,"How is it with you?" |
47204 | For psychologic subtlety, for haunting horror, what is a crashing helmet or a dismembered ghost compared with Brown''s Wieland? |
47204 | Have you gone on with_ Udolpho_?" |
47204 | He dies that night,--of what? |
47204 | How could one stage such action, for instance, as his citizens turning into witch- cats or his Giant Devil looming mightily in the heavens? |
47204 | How know you that you have not died elsewhere and that this is not the Heaven which there you dreamed? |
47204 | How know you that your Hell may not lie only in not recognizing this as Heaven?" |
47204 | I fell on my knees before her and kissed-- what? |
47204 | I have nothing to say to you?" |
47204 | If now we study a science where once men believed blindly in a Black Art, is the result really less mysterious? |
47204 | If one could point with absolute certainty to the source for every one of Shakespeare''s plots, would that explain his art? |
47204 | In fact, without the sense of the marvelous, the unreal, the wonderful, the magical, what would poetry mean to us? |
47204 | In tropic countries we have stories of supernatural snakes, who appear in various forms, as were- snakes, shall we say? |
47204 | J. M. Barrie in_ Peter Pan_ won the doubtful world over to a confessed faith in the fairy- folk, for did we not see the marvels before our eyes? |
47204 | Now, what was the status of those ghosts? |
47204 | Of poison, of fear, of supernatural suggestion, or in the natural course of events? |
47204 | Of what stuff are ghost- clothes made? |
47204 | One hears echoing through all literature Man Friday''s unanswerable question,"Why not God kill debbil?" |
47204 | Or we reflect that he may be a case of metempsychosis and treat him courteously, for who knows what we may be ourselves some day? |
47204 | Some of the Gothic ghosts have a strange vitality,--and, after all, where would be the phantoms of to- day but for their early services? |
47204 | The author of the drama admits getting his material from a French play, but where did Polidori get his? |
47204 | The writer queries,"If the soul exists, where had that soul been? |
47204 | The young man at last cries out in desperation,"What are you waiting for? |
47204 | Walpole says in a letter: Shall I even confess to you what was the origin of this romance? |
47204 | Was not this suggested by Rupert Brooke''s poem,_ Failure_? |
47204 | Was there a ghost if the person was n''t really dead? |
47204 | What are the rackings of monkish vindictiveness when set against the agonies of an unbalanced mind turned in upon itself? |
47204 | What are they all?" |
47204 | What can it be? |
47204 | What careth Yohu? |
47204 | What could be more beautiful than the incident in_ They_? |
47204 | What could he do? |
47204 | What regions did it relinquish at the command of the reviving body?" |
47204 | What''s the good of seeing it fall?" |
47204 | Who but Maupassant could make a story of ghastly hideousness out of a parrot that swears? |
47204 | Whut you skeered ob when dey ain''no ghosts?" |
47204 | [ 96]_ What Was It? |
1177 | Do you admit that any one purposing to build a perfect house( 13) will plan to make it at once as pleasant and as useful to live in as possible? |
1177 | Do you think, sirs, that we ought to thank Theodote for displaying her beauty to us, or she us for coming to gaze at her?... 1177 From whom may the doer of a deed of kindness more confidently expect the recompense of gratitude than from your lover of the law? |
1177 | Heracles hearing these words made answer:''What, O lady, is the name you bear?'' 1177 It is pleasant to have one''s house cool in summer and warm in winter, is it not?" |
1177 | Or,interposed another,"what if the dainty dishes he devours are out of all proportion to the rest of his meal-- what of him?" |
1177 | Rep.372 C.( 5) Or,"The conversation had fallen upon names: what is the precise thing denoted under such and such a term? |
1177 | Shall I appoint a mariner to be skipper of my vessel, or a landsman? |
1177 | Then spoke Virtue:''Nay, wretched one, what good thing hast thou? 1177 Was it open to him,"Socrates inquired of the speaker,"in case he failed to understand their commands in any point, to ask for an explanation?" |
1177 | You have not( in your employ) a body of handicraftsmen of any sort? |
1177 | and what of the man who eats much{ opson} on the top of a little({ sitos})? |
1177 | could you say that the beneficial is anything else than good( or a good)? |
1177 | his practice must square with his knowledge and be the outward expression of his belief? |
1177 | ( 1) Or,"When some one retorted upon him with the question:''Can courage be taught?''" |
1177 | ( 11) But for me what disgrace is it that others should fail of a just decision and right acts concerning me?... |
1177 | ( 12)( 12) Or,"how do you make a well- proportioned corselet fit an ill- proportioned body? |
1177 | ( 12)( 12) Or,"may a man deal with his fellow- men arbitrarily according to his fancy?" |
1177 | ( 14) Add,"Can service ally in friendship with disservice? |
1177 | ( 14) Can service ally in friendship with disservice? |
1177 | ( 14) The question arises: how far is the conversation historical or imaginary? |
1177 | ( 14)( 14) Or,"Is that to choose the path of safety, think you? |
1177 | ( 15) I suppose you try to run off one string of letters to- day and to- morrow another? |
1177 | ( 18)( 18) Or,"and no one who knows what he must and should do imagines that he must and should not do it?" |
1177 | ( 19)( 19) Or,"and nobody that you know of does the contrary of what he thinks he should do?" |
1177 | ( 2) Or,"the money- lender? |
1177 | ( 20) or( as the youth signified dissent) possibly a rhapsodist? |
1177 | ( 21)( 21) Or,"is of greater evidential value,""ubi res adsunt, quid opus est verbis?" |
1177 | ( 22)( 22) Or,"is not abstinence from wrongdoing synonymous with righteous behaviour?" |
1177 | ( 28) How then should a man honour the gods with more beautiful or holier honour than by doing what they bid him? |
1177 | ( 28) Why? |
1177 | ( 3) Do not you see how each time he has been choragos( 4) he has been successful with one chorus after another? |
1177 | ( 3) Or add,"''What is this among things? |
1177 | ( 3) Was a man able on the one hand to recognise things beautiful and good sufficiently to live in them? |
1177 | ( 33)( 33) Or,"Can it be said that those who are unable to cope nobly with their perilous surroundings know how they ought to deal with them?" |
1177 | ( 38) Such being his conduct, was he not worthy of high honour from the state of Athens? |
1177 | ( 41)( 41) Or,"In the management of moneys, then, his strength will consist in his rendering the state better provided with ways and means?" |
1177 | ( 5) Whereupon Socrates, appealing to the company:"Can we explain why we call a man a''dainty fellow''? |
1177 | ( 5)( 5) Or,"can you give me a definition of the pious man? |
1177 | ( 6) Is it not so? |
1177 | ( 6) this coping of the region above the eyes with cornice- work of eyebrow so that no drop of sweat fall from the head and injure them? |
1177 | ( 6){ opsophagos}={ opson}( or relish) eater, and so a"gourmand"or"epicure"; but how to define a gourmand? |
1177 | ( 8)"And if this be so concerning wisdom,{ sophia}, what of{ sophrasune}, soundness of soul-- sobriety?" |
1177 | ( Let us pause and ask how could man die more nobly and more beautifully than in the way described? |
1177 | ( rejoined Socrates), do you not see that to gratify a man like yourself is far pleasanter as a matter of self- interest than to quarrel with you? |
1177 | --"Do you find it strange"( he continued),"that to the Godhead it should appear better for me to close my life at once? |
1177 | 7 D. In answer to the question: what is leisure? |
1177 | A man had administered a severe whipping to the slave in attendance on him, and when Socrates asked:"Why he was so wroth with his own serving- man?" |
1177 | After such sort he handled the question, what is the virtue of a good leader? |
1177 | Again, suppose he deceives the foe while at war with them? |
1177 | Again, to chastise the bad and reward the good belongs to both alike, methinks? |
1177 | Ah, Glaucon( he exclaimed), so you have determined to become prime minister? |
1177 | And I presume that he who does what is just is just, and he who does what is unjust is unjust? |
1177 | And I presume the law- loving citizen will do what is just and right, while the lawless man will do what is unjust and wrong? |
1177 | And also to assign to those best qualified to perform them their distinctive tasks? |
1177 | And am I to hold away from their attendant topics also-- the just, the holy, and the like? |
1177 | And by things right and just you know what sort of things are meant? |
1177 | And by what like contrivance would you have me catch my lovers? |
1177 | And can worse befall a man, think you? |
1177 | And can you suppose any other people to be good in respect of such things except those who are able to cope with them and turn them to noble account? |
1177 | And can you tell me what sort of person the pious man is? |
1177 | And did the magic words of this spell serve for all men alike? |
1177 | And did you imagine( replied Socrates) that it was possible for a bad man to make good friends? |
1177 | And did you notice an inscription somewhere on the temple:{ GNOMI SEAUTON}--KNOW THYSELF? |
1177 | And do anxiety and relief of mind occasioned by the good or evil fortune of those we love both wear the same expression? |
1177 | And do you consider it to the interest of both alike to win the adherence of supporters and allies? |
1177 | And do you know of anybody doing other than what he feels bound to do? |
1177 | And do you not agree that he who is destined to rule must train himself to bear these things lightly? |
1177 | And do you not regard it as right and just to abstain from wrong? |
1177 | And do you suppose that any one who knows what things he ought to do supposes that he ought not to do them? |
1177 | And do you think the Boeotians could furnish a better pick of fine healthy men than the Athenians? |
1177 | And does any man honour the gods otherwise than he thinks he ought? |
1177 | And does he who lies and deceives with intent know what is right rather than he who does either or both unconsciously? |
1177 | And does it not closely concern them both to be good guardians of their respective charges? |
1177 | And does not the faithful imitation of the various affections of the body when engaged in any action impart a particular pleasure to the beholder? |
1177 | And for the better-- which? |
1177 | And has this mother ever done you any injury-- such as people frequently receive from beasts, by bite or kick? |
1177 | And have upright men( continued Socrates) their distinctive and appropriate works like those of carpenters or shoe- makers? |
1177 | And have you thought how to whet the courage of your troopers? |
1177 | And have you troubled your head at all to consider how you are to secure the obedience of your men? |
1177 | And have you understood what it is they do to get that bad name? |
1177 | And he who has the{ episteme} of things rightful is more righteous than he who lacks the{ episteme}? |
1177 | And he who honours as he ought is a pious man? |
1177 | And he who knows how he must honour the gods conceives that he ought not to do so except in the manner which accords with his knowledge? |
1177 | And how did Themistocles( 11) win our city''s love? |
1177 | And how did he come off on the journey? |
1177 | And how long do you expect your body to be equal to providing the necessaries of life for hire? |
1177 | And how many others, pray, do you suppose have been seized on account of their wisdom, and despatched to the great king and at his court enslaved? |
1177 | And how might I hit upon any artifice to attract him? |
1177 | And if he had faith in the gods, how could he fail to recognise them? |
1177 | And if there is to be no laying on of the hands, there must be no application either of the lips; is it agreed? |
1177 | And if we turn to private life, what better protection can a man have than obedience to the laws? |
1177 | And if you wanted to induce some friend to look after your affairs during your absence abroad, how would you achieve your purpose? |
1177 | And if you wished to get some foreign friend to take you under his roof while visiting his country, what would you do? |
1177 | And in the event of war, by rendering his state superior to her antagonists? |
1177 | And in your opinion, Hippias, is the legislation of the gods just and righteous, or the reverse of what is just and righteous? |
1177 | And is it allowable to honour the gods in any mode or fashion one likes? |
1177 | And is it your opinion that there is a lore and science of Right and Justice just as there is of letters and grammar? |
1177 | And is there anything else good except that which is beneficial, should you say? |
1177 | And is this, that, and the other thing beautiful for aught else except that to which it may be beautifully applied? |
1177 | And is wisdom anything else than that by which a man is wise, think you? |
1177 | And just as the carpenter is able to exhibit his works and products, the righteous man should be able to expound and set forth his, should he not? |
1177 | And let us not forget that the moon herself not only makes clear to us the quarters of the night, but of the month also? |
1177 | And loaves of bread? |
1177 | And pray what is this theory( 20) of yours on the subject? |
1177 | And should you say that any one obeys the laws without knowing what the laws ordain? |
1177 | And so I propound the question to myself as follows:"Have friends, like slaves, their market values?" |
1177 | And the beautiful: can we speak of a thing as beautiful in any other way than relatively? |
1177 | And the enslavement of free- born men? |
1177 | And the same pupil must be furnished with a power of holding out against thirst also when the craving to quench it comes upon him? |
1177 | And these things around and about us, enormous in size, infinite in number, owe their orderly arrangement, as you suppose, to some vacuity of wit? |
1177 | And they who deal well and nobly by mankind are well- doers in respect of human affairs? |
1177 | And they who deal with one another as they ought, deal well and nobly-- is it not so? |
1177 | And this I take to be the strictly legal view of the case, for what does the law require? |
1177 | And this too is plain, is it not: that through self- knowledge men meet with countless blessings, and through ignorance of themselves with many evils? |
1177 | And this, which is the source of opposite effects to the very worst, will be the very best of things? |
1177 | And those people who are of a kind to cope but badly with the same occurrences, it would seem, are bad? |
1177 | And thus, in the art of spinning wool, he liked to point out that women are the rulers of men-- and why? |
1177 | And to win the kindly feeling of their subordinates must surely be the noble ambition of both? |
1177 | And upon his asking"How?" |
1177 | And we can not allow any of these to lie on the R side of the account, to the side of right and justice, can we, Euthydemus? |
1177 | And we may take it the state will grow wealthier in proportion as her revenues increase? |
1177 | And what has such a one to do with the spilling of blood? |
1177 | And what have you seen him doing, that you give him so bad a character? |
1177 | And what is it in which you desire to excel, Euthydemus, that you collect books? |
1177 | And what is the distinction, Euthydemus( he asked), between a man devoid of self- control and the dullest of brute beasts? |
1177 | And what is the inevitable penalty paid by those who, being related as parents and children, intermingle in marriage? |
1177 | And what of courage,( 29) Euthydemus? |
1177 | And what of measures passed by a minority, not by persuasion of the majority, but in the exercise of its power only? |
1177 | And what of this: that whereas we need nutriment, this too the heavenly powers yield us? |
1177 | And what shall we say that wisdom is? |
1177 | And what sort of lords and masters are those, think you, who at once put a stop to what is best and enforce what is worst? |
1177 | And what sort of slavery do you take to be the worst? |
1177 | And when Euthydemus was silent, considering what answer he should make, Socrates added: Possibly you want to be a great doctor? |
1177 | And when the other asked:"And what may that be?" |
1177 | And when( asked he), can health be a source of evil, or disease a source of good? |
1177 | And wherein have you detected in me this power, that you pass so severe a sentence upon me? |
1177 | And which among the components of happiness and well- being can possibly be questionable? |
1177 | And which is colder for bathing-- yours or the cold spring in the cave of Amphiaraus? |
1177 | And which of the two knows what is right-- he who intentionally lies and deceives, or he who lies and deceives unconsciously? |
1177 | And which of the two would you take to be the more united people-- the friendlier among themselves? |
1177 | And which should you say was more a man of letters( 34)--he who intentionally misspells or misreads, or he who does so unconsciously? |
1177 | And which should you say were the better human beings, the free- born members of your household or Ceramon''s slaves? |
1177 | And whom do you consider to be the people? |
1177 | And why do men go soldiering except to ameliorate existence? |
1177 | And why? |
1177 | And would it not seem to be a base thing for a man to be affected like the silliest bird or beast? |
1177 | And yet you imagine that elsewhere no spark of wisdom is to be found? |
1177 | And you admit that people reckon the ungrateful among wrongdoers? |
1177 | And you know the appellation given to certain people--"slavish,"( 39) or,"little better than a slave?" |
1177 | And( 8) soundness of soul, the spirit of temperate modesty? |
1177 | And, I presume, also the prohibition of intermarriage between parents and children? |
1177 | And, I presume, to honour parents is also customary everywhere? |
1177 | And, again, to have some one over you who will prevent you doing the like seems a loss of freedom? |
1177 | And, on the other, he who has the knowledge of what is right is more righteous than he who lacks that knowledge? |
1177 | Are not these intended for you also? |
1177 | Are they admired the rather or despised? |
1177 | Are they all like each other? |
1177 | Are we to be called dainty eaters because we like our bread buttered?" |
1177 | Are we, or are we not, to apply the term violence to these? |
1177 | Are you not a man? |
1177 | Are you not an Athenian? |
1177 | As though a man should inquire,"Am I to choose an expert driver as my coachman, or one who has never handled the reins?" |
1177 | Barley meal is a useful product, is it not? |
1177 | But do you know any other love- charms, Socrates? |
1177 | But do you not see that modesty and timidity are feelings implanted in man''s nature? |
1177 | But how are we to test these qualities, Socrates, before acquaintance? |
1177 | But how convert them into friends? |
1177 | But how or why should they breed them ill where nothing hinders them, being of a good stock themselves and producing from stock as good? |
1177 | But is it likely now? |
1177 | But may I ask is this judgment the result of personal inspection? |
1177 | But maybe there is another considerable advantage in this"fitting"? |
1177 | But now, Euthydemus, has it ever occurred to you to note one fact? |
1177 | But now, are you aware, Hippias, of certain unwritten laws? |
1177 | But now, he who honours lawfully honours as he ought? |
1177 | But now, with regard to human beings; is it allowable to deal with men in any way one pleases? |
1177 | But perhaps you object to enthusiasm displayed in defence of one''s home and fatherland in war? |
1177 | But suppose I do, and suppose that, for all my attempts, he shows no change for the better? |
1177 | But suppose you sweep away the outposts( he asked), may not something worse, think you, be the consequence? |
1177 | But supposing a man to be elected general, and he succeeds in enslaving an unjust, wicked, and hostile state, are we to say that he is doing wrong? |
1177 | But tell me( he proceeded), do you owe service to any living being, think you? |
1177 | But tell me, did he teach you how to draw up troops in general, or specifically where and how to apply each particular kind of tactical arrangement? |
1177 | But tell me, how shall I assist you best, think you? |
1177 | But then are not the wearer''s bodies themselves( asked Socrates) some well proportioned and others ill? |
1177 | But then, he who does what is just and right is upright and just? |
1177 | But then, he who does what is just and right is upright and just? |
1177 | But would it not have been better to inquire first what is the work or function of a good citizen? |
1177 | But, Pericles, violence and lawlessness-- how do we define them? |
1177 | But, Socrates, what kind of man shall we endeavour to make our friend? |
1177 | By praising you falsely or by persuading you to try to be a good man? |
1177 | Can a man be said, do you think, to know himself who knows his own name and nothing more? |
1177 | Can anything more seriously militate against these than this same incontinence? |
1177 | Can it be said that those who are unable to cope well with them or to turn them to noble account know how they must and should deal with them? |
1177 | Can it be that you alone are excepted as a signal instance of Divine neglect? |
1177 | Can it be that you despise these penalties affixed to an evil habit? |
1177 | Can you tell us what set you wishing to be a general of cavalry, young sir? |
1177 | Can you then assert( asked Socrates) of these unwritten laws that men made them? |
1177 | Clearly they are wise in what they know;( 23) for how could a man have wisdom in that which he does not know? |
1177 | Come now, what when the people of Athens make inquiry by oracle, and the gods''answer comes? |
1177 | Could we expect such an one to save us or to master our foes? |
1177 | Deceit too is not uncommon? |
1177 | Did they not make the tongue also? |
1177 | Did you, possibly, pay no regard to the inscription? |
1177 | Do I understand you to ask me whether I know anything good for fever? |
1177 | Do human beings in general attain to well- tempered manhood by a course of idling, or by carefully attending to what will be of use? |
1177 | Do not you know that relatively to the same standard all things are at once beautiful and good? |
1177 | Do you agree, then, that we must hold aloof from every one so dominated? |
1177 | Do you find that your domestics seem to mind drinking it or washing in it? |
1177 | Do you imagine that one thing is good and another beautiful? |
1177 | Do you mean to assert that the same things may be beautiful and ugly? |
1177 | Do you mean to assert( he asked) that lawful and just are synonymous terms? |
1177 | Do you not know that even a weakling by nature may, by dint of exercise and practice, come to outdo a giant who neglects his body? |
1177 | Do you not know the sharper the appetite the less the need of sauces, the keener the thirst the less the desire for out- of- the- way drinks? |
1177 | Do you not note your brother''s character, proud and frank and sensitive to honour? |
1177 | Do you not observe their discipline in all naval matters? |
1177 | Do you not see how dangerous it is for a man to speak or act beyond the range( 14) of his knowledge? |
1177 | Do you not see( to speak of a much less noble sort of game) what a number of devices are needed to bag a hare? |
1177 | Do you pour contempt upon those blessings which flow from the healthy state? |
1177 | Do you really mean, Socrates, that it is the function of the same man to provide efficient choruses and to act as commander- in- chief? |
1177 | Do you think you could lightly endure them? |
1177 | Does it seem to you that the same thing is equally advantageous to all? |
1177 | Does it surprise you? |
1177 | Does not the term apply to all who can make any sort of useful product or commodity? |
1177 | Does not the very soundness imply at once health and strength? |
1177 | Does some terror confound? |
1177 | Does that sound like the perfection of athletic training? |
1177 | Doing? |
1177 | Empty- handed, or had he something to carry? |
1177 | Enact on the hypothesis that it is right to do what is good? |
1177 | Even so; but ought we to regard those things which at one moment benefit and at another moment injure us in any strict sense good rather than evil? |
1177 | For I presume you can not make them all exactly equal and of one pattern-- if you make them fit, as of course you do? |
1177 | For how can such people, the ungrateful, or reckless, or covetous, or faithless, or incontinent, adhere together as friends? |
1177 | For how long a time could the corn supplies from the country districts support the city? |
1177 | For how should they who do evil be friends with those who hate all evil- doing? |
1177 | For what other creature, to begin with, has a soul to appreciate the existence of the gods who have arranged this grand and beauteous universe? |
1177 | For who would care to have in his house a fellow with so slight a disposition to work and so strong a propensity to extravagance? |
1177 | From what source shall we learn them? |
1177 | From what source, then, do you get your means of subsistence? |
1177 | Had he, on the other hand, knowledge of the"base and foul"so as to beware of them? |
1177 | Had the Sirens only to utter this one incantation, and was every listener constrained to stay? |
1177 | Have you ever seen me battling with any one for shade on account of the heat? |
1177 | He did not, did not he? |
1177 | He would ask first: Did these investigators feel their knowledge of things human so complete that they betook themselves to these lofty speculations? |
1177 | He would be forced to imitate the good flute player in the externals of his art, would he not? |
1177 | Here would have been a fair test to apply to Socrates: Was he guilty of any base conduct himself? |
1177 | How am I to teach them that? |
1177 | How appropriate( 11) would such a preface sound on the lips of any one seeking, say, the office of state physician,( 12) would it not? |
1177 | How are we to inculcate this lesson? |
1177 | How are you to teach them that? |
1177 | How can you suppose that they do not so take thought? |
1177 | How could a man be wise in what he lacks the knowledge of?" |
1177 | How much sorrow and pain, when you were ill? |
1177 | How shall I woo and win you? |
1177 | How should I be ignorant of the art of dealing with my brother if I know the art of repaying kind words and good deeds in kind? |
1177 | How so? |
1177 | How so? |
1177 | How then shall I create this hunger in the heart of my friends? |
1177 | How then( he asked) can that be beautiful which is unlike the beautiful? |
1177 | How will you charge at the head of such a troop, and win glory for the state? |
1177 | I ask you, when you see all these things constructed with such show of foresight can you doubt whether they are products of chance or intelligence? |
1177 | I have fourteen free- born souls, I tell you, under my single roof, and how are we to live? |
1177 | I presume that those who obey the laws do what is just and right? |
1177 | I presume to turn a thing to its proper use is to apply it beautifully? |
1177 | I presume you also know who the rich are? |
1177 | I presume you rank courage among things beautiful? |
1177 | I suppose you mean that, besides his other qualifications a commandant of cavalry must have command of speech and argument? |
1177 | I suppose you refer to that judgment of the gods which, for their virtue''s sake, Cecrops and his followers were called on to decide? |
1177 | I suppose, Parrhasius( said he), painting may be defined as"a representation of visible objects,"may it not? |
1177 | I understand you to say that a straightforward course is not in every case to be pursued even in dealing with friends? |
1177 | IV At another time, seeing Nicomachides on his way back from the elections( of magistrates),( 1) he asked him: Who are elected generals, Nicomachides? |
1177 | IX Being again asked by some one: could courage be taught,( 1) or did it come by nature? |
1177 | If this then be so concerning these virtues,( 9) what with regard to carefulness and devotion to all that ought to occupy us? |
1177 | If thou openest thy lips in speech, who will believe thy word? |
1177 | If, then, I can prove to my troopers that I am better than all of them, will that suffice to win their obedience? |
1177 | Ignorance, for instance, of smithying? |
1177 | In answer to the question: what is envy? |
1177 | In conduct and language his behaviour conformed to the rule laid down by the Pythia( 2) in reply to the question,"How shall we act?" |
1177 | In fact, then, the wise are wise in knowledge? |
1177 | In making a purchase even, I am not to ask, what is the price of this? |
1177 | In the first place, what evidence did they produce that Socrates refused to recognise the gods acknowledged by the state? |
1177 | In what way? |
1177 | Is he more likely to secure his salvation that way, think you, or to compass his own swift destruction?" |
1177 | Is he not expected to get up and offer him his seat, to pay him the honour of a soft couch,( 6) to yield him precedence in argument? |
1177 | Is it a term suggestive of the wisdom or the ignorance of those to whom it is applied? |
1177 | Is it not rather to sign his own death- warrent?" |
1177 | Is it not so? |
1177 | Is it not the custom everywhere for the younger to step aside when he meets his elder in the street and to give him place? |
1177 | Is it not when a stronger man forces a weaker to do what seems right to him-- not by persuasion but by compulsion? |
1177 | Is that the ground of your confidence? |
1177 | Is that your attitude, or do you admit that you owe allegiance to somebody? |
1177 | Is the author thinking of a life- and- death struggle with Thebes? |
1177 | Is the sequel extraordinary? |
1177 | Is there need of kindly action in any quarter? |
1177 | Is this possibly the explanation? |
1177 | It comes to this then: he who knows what the law requires in reference to the gods will honour the gods in the lawful way? |
1177 | It follows, then, that in proportion to the greatness of the benefit conferred, the greater his misdoing who fails to requite the kindness? |
1177 | It is a fair inference, is it not, that he who has the{ episteme} of grammar is more grammatical than he who has no such{ episteme}? |
1177 | It is a noble quality? |
1177 | It looks, does it not, Euthydemus, as if self- control were the best thing a man could have? |
1177 | It seems that those who have no fear in face of dangers, simply because they do not know what they are, are not courageous? |
1177 | It seems that you regard courage as useful to no mean end? |
1177 | It would appear that he who knows what the law requires with respect to the gods will correctly be defined as a pious man, and that is our definition? |
1177 | It would appear, then, that the law- loving man is just, and the lawless unjust? |
1177 | It would seem that he who knows what things are lawful( 20) as concerning men does the things that are just and right? |
1177 | It would seem that the seed of those who are not yet in their prime or have passed their prime is not good? |
1177 | It would seem that the useful is beautiful relatively to that for which it is of use? |
1177 | It would seem the wisdom of each is limited to his knowledge; each is wise only in what he knows? |
1177 | It would seem then that the sculptor is called upon to incorporate in his ideal form the workings and energies also of the soul? |
1177 | It would seem then( pursued Socrates) that the incontinent man is bound over to the worst sort of slavery, would it not? |
1177 | It would seem then, Hippias, the gods themselves are well pleased that"the lawful"and"the just"should be synonymous? |
1177 | It would seem to follow that if a tyrant, without persuading the citizens, drives them by enactment to do certain things-- that is lawlessness? |
1177 | It would seem to follow that knowledge and wisdom are the same? |
1177 | It would seem to follow that the beneficial is good relatively to him to whom it is beneficial? |
1177 | It would seem to follow that they who do what the laws ordain both do what is right and just and what they ought? |
1177 | It would seem to follow that those who have the knowledge how to behave are also those who have the power? |
1177 | It would seem you are decidedly of opinion that the incontinent are the reverse of free? |
1177 | It would seem, conversely, that they who cope ill have made some egregious blunder? |
1177 | Let us take the case of deceiving a friend to his detriment: which is the more wrongful-- to do so voluntarily or unintentionally? |
1177 | Lying exists among men, does it not? |
1177 | May I ask, does it seem to you possible for a man to know all the things that are? |
1177 | May it be that both one and the other class do use these circumstances as they think they must and should? |
1177 | May it not perhaps be( asked Socrates) that in this department they are officered by those who have the least knowledge? |
1177 | May our body be said to have a soul? |
1177 | Must there not be a reciprocity of service to make friendship lasting?" |
1177 | Must we not suppose that these too will take their sorrows lightly, looking to these high ends? |
1177 | Nay, how( he answered) should that be, for how could they all have come together from the ends of the earth? |
1177 | Nay, what sort of meshes have I? |
1177 | No doubt( replied Socrates) you have accomplished that initial step? |
1177 | No? |
1177 | Nor answers either, I suppose, if the inquiry concerns what I know, as, for instance, where does Charicles live? |
1177 | Now I ask you, have you ever noticed that I keep more within doors than others on account of the cold? |
1177 | Now is it not insensate stupidity( 8) to use for injury what was meant for advantage? |
1177 | Now you, I daresay, through versatility of knowledge,( 14) never say the same thing twice over on the same subject? |
1177 | Now, why? |
1177 | Obviously you propose to remove all those which are superfluous? |
1177 | Once more then: how should a man of this character corrupt the young? |
1177 | Only, will you be"at home"to me? |
1177 | Or again, what good would there be in odours if nostrils had not been bestowed upon us? |
1177 | Or did they maintain that they were playing their proper parts in thus neglecting the affairs of man to speculate on the concerns of God? |
1177 | Or do you believe that your mother is really ill disposed towards you? |
1177 | Or do you maintain that the evil habit is healthier, and in general more useful than the good? |
1177 | Or do you not think that a fact is worth more as evidence than a word? |
1177 | Or have the fruits of your marketing a flavour denied to mine? |
1177 | Or have you not heard of the"woes of Palamedes,"( 51) that commonest theme of song, how for his wisdom''s sake Odysseus envied him and slew him? |
1177 | Or how do you proceed when you discover the like tendency in one of your domestics? |
1177 | Or on an embassy as a diplomatist, I presume, by securing friends in place of enemies? |
1177 | Or steals and pillages their property? |
1177 | Or, to put it conversely, what slave of pleasure will not suffer degeneracy of soul and body? |
1177 | Please, Pericles, can you teach me what a law is? |
1177 | Possibly Xenophon is imitating( caricaturing?) |
1177 | Possibly in face of terrors and dangers you would consider it an advantage to be ignorant of them? |
1177 | Possibly( he answered); but why do you address these questions to me? |
1177 | Pray tell me, Theodote, have you an estate in the country? |
1177 | Pray, my son, did you ever hear of certain people being called ungrateful? |
1177 | Prepared not to please or try to please a single soul? |
1177 | Presently Socrates proceeded: Then this is clear, Glaucon, is it not? |
1177 | Shall the vanguard consist of men who are greediest of honour? |
1177 | Shall we begin our inquiry from the beginning, as it were, with the bare elements of food and nutriment? |
1177 | Shall we not admit that he is doing what is right? |
1177 | Shall we then at this point turn and inquire which of the two are likely to lead the pleasanter life, the rulers or the ruled? |
1177 | Shall we( Socrates continued), shall we balance the arguments for and against, and consider to what extent the possibility does exist? |
1177 | Should he not try to become as dear as possible, so that his friends will not care to give him up? |
1177 | Should you not have said that he was remarkable for his prudence rather than thoughtless or foolhardy? |
1177 | So here, maybe, you will try to add to the wealth of the state? |
1177 | So tell me, Aristodemus( he began), are there any human beings who have won your admiration for their wisdom? |
1177 | So then everything which we set down on the side of Wrong will now have to be placed to the credit of Right? |
1177 | So then you would counsel me to weave myself some sort of net? |
1177 | Socrates said:( 5) Tell me, Euthydemus, has it ever struck you to observe what tender pains the gods have taken to furnish man with all his needs? |
1177 | Suppose we stop and consider that very point: how do masters deal with that sort of domestic? |
1177 | Suppose you wanted to get some acquaintance to invite you to dinner when he next keeps holy day,( 4) what steps would you take? |
1177 | Supposing it is not the majority, but, as in the case of an oligarchy, the minority, who meet and enact the rules of conduct, what are these? |
1177 | Tell me( said Socrates, addressing Critobulus), supposing we stood in need of a good friend, how should we set about his discovery? |
1177 | Tell me( said he), Euthydemus, what sort of thing you take piety to be? |
1177 | Tell me, Diodorus, if one of your slaves runs away, are you at pains to recover him? |
1177 | Tell me, Euthydemus( he began), do you believe freedom to be a noble and magnificent acquisition, whether for a man or for a state? |
1177 | Tell me, Xenophon, have you not always believed Critobulus to be a man of sound sense, not wild and self- willed? |
1177 | Tell me, does it seem to you that the wise are wise in what they know,( 22) or are there any who are wise in what they know not? |
1177 | That is a true saying; but how, Socrates, should a man best bring them to this virtue? |
1177 | That much I made quite sure I knew, at any rate; since if I did not know even myself, what in the world did I know? |
1177 | The command to which you are appointed concerns horses and riders, does it not? |
1177 | The first thing will be to make them expert in mounting their chargers? |
1177 | The greatest of all penalties; for what worse calamity can human beings suffer in the production of offspring than to misbeget? |
1177 | The listener must needs be brought to ask himself,"Of what worth am I to my friends?" |
1177 | The works of the temperate spirit and the works of incontinency are, I take it, diametrically opposed? |
1177 | The wretch who can so behave must surely be tormented by an evil spirit? |
1177 | Then I presume even a basket for carrying dung( 11) is a beautiful thing? |
1177 | Then Socrates: Well, but the council which sits on Areopagos is composed of citizens of approved( 28) character, is it not? |
1177 | Then Socrates: Which, think you, would be harder to bear-- a wild beast''s savagery or a mother''s? |
1177 | Then Theodote: Oh why, Socrates, why are you not by my side( like the huntsman''s assistant) to help me catch my friends and lovers? |
1177 | Then children who are so produced are produced not as they ought to be? |
1177 | Then do you believe him to be a free man who is ruled by the pleasures of the body, and thereby can not perform what is best? |
1177 | Then do you wish to be an architect? |
1177 | Then do you wish to be an astronomer? |
1177 | Then for inflammation of the eyes? |
1177 | Then he who knows these laws will know how he must honour the gods? |
1177 | Then health and disease themselves when they prove to be sources of any good are good, but when of any evil, evil? |
1177 | Then here again are looks with it is possible to represent? |
1177 | Then how do you make this quality apparent to the customer so as to justify the higher price-- by measure or weight? |
1177 | Then how do you manage to make the corselet well proportioned if it is to fit an ill- proportioned body? |
1177 | Then if a tyrant, holding the chief power in the state, enacts rules of conduct for the citizens, are these enactments law? |
1177 | Then if that is how the matter stands, ingratitude would be an instance of pure unadulterate wrongdoing? |
1177 | Then is it not to the interest of both to get the upper hand of these? |
1177 | Then it equally concerns them both to be painstaking and prodigal of toil in all their doings? |
1177 | Then it would seem that it is impossible for a man to be all- wise? |
1177 | Then on whom, or what, was the assurance rooted, if not upon God? |
1177 | Then perhaps you possess a house and large revenues along with it? |
1177 | Then possibly ignorance of carpentering? |
1177 | Then the right way to produce children is not that way? |
1177 | Then the voluntary misspeller may be a lettered person, but the involuntary offender is an illiterate? |
1177 | Then these too may be imitated? |
1177 | Then this look, this glance, at any rate may be imitated in the eyes, may it not? |
1177 | Then those who deal with one another in this way, deal with each other as they ought? |
1177 | Then we must in every way strain every nerve to avoid the imputation of being slaves? |
1177 | Then we must keep away from him too? |
1177 | Then what if there is danger to be faced? |
1177 | Then why do you not keep a watchman willing and competent to ward off this pack of people who seek to injure you? |
1177 | Then would you for our benefit enumerate the land and naval forces first of Athens and then of our opponents? |
1177 | Then would you kindly tell us from what sources the revenues of the state are at present derived, and what is their present magnitude? |
1177 | Then you know who the poor are, of course? |
1177 | Then your household do not know how to make any of these? |
1177 | Then, by all that is sacred( Socrates continued), do not keep us in the dark, but tell us in what way do you propose first to benefit the state? |
1177 | Then, on the ground that they are free- born and your kinswomen, you think that they ought to do nothing but eat and sleep? |
1177 | Then, when you can not persuade your uncle, do you imagine you will be able to make the whole Athenian people, uncle and all, obey you? |
1177 | Thereupon Euthydemus: Be assured I fully concur in your opinion; the precept KNOW THYSELF can not be too highly valued; but what is the application? |
1177 | Thereupon Socrates: Tell me, Euthydemus, have you ever been to Delphi? |
1177 | Think of a horse or a yoke of oxen; they have their worth; but who shall gauge the worth of a worthy friend? |
1177 | Think you not that to you also the answer is given? |
1177 | To obey neither general nor ruler of any sort? |
1177 | To which Socrates replied: Tell me, Crito, you keep dogs, do you not, to ward off wolves from your flocks? |
1177 | To which Socrates: Why do not you tell them the fable of the dog? |
1177 | To which Socrates:"Did it ever strike you to consider which of the two in that case the more deserves a whipping-- the master or the man?" |
1177 | To which side of the account then shall we place it? |
1177 | To which side shall we place deceit? |
1177 | Very good, no doubt, if the professor taught you to distinguish good and bad; but if not, where is the use of your learning? |
1177 | Was it that he did not sacrifice? |
1177 | Well now, tell me, is there nobody whom Chaerephon can please any more than he can please yourself; or do some people find him agreeable enough? |
1177 | Well then, for hunger? |
1177 | Well then, is it not a common duty of both to procure the ready obedience of those under them to their orders? |
1177 | Well then, until we have got beyond the region of conjecture shall we defer giving advice on the matter? |
1177 | Well then, you know that in point of numbers the Athenians are not inferior to the Boeotians? |
1177 | Well then, your statement is this: on the one hand, the man who has the knowledge of letters is more lettered than he who has no such knowledge? |
1177 | Well( replied Socrates), I presume you know quite well the distinction between good and bad things: your knowledge may be relied upon so far? |
1177 | Well, and a continence in regard to matters sexual so great that nothing of the sort shall prevent him from doing his duty? |
1177 | Well, and chicanery( 27) or mischief of any sort? |
1177 | Well, and doubtless you feel to have a spark of wisdom yourself? |
1177 | Well, and in parliamentary debate, by putting a stop to party strife and fostering civic concord? |
1177 | Well, and on which of the two shall be bestowed, as a further gift, the voluntary resolution to face toils rather than turn and flee from them? |
1177 | Well, and to which of them will it better accord to be taught all knowledge necessary towards the mastery of antagonists? |
1177 | Well, and what do you say to cloaks for men and for women-- tunics, mantles, vests? |
1177 | Well, and what of that other chance companion-- your fellow- traveller by land or sea? |
1177 | Well, and will you not lay your hand to improve the men themselves? |
1177 | Well, but now suppose you had had to carry his baggage, what would your condition have been like? |
1177 | Well, but the kindly look of love, the angry glance of hate at any one, do find expression in the human subject, do they not? |
1177 | Well, but when it comes to the hazard of engagement, what will you do then? |
1177 | Well, do you wish to be a mathematician, like Theodorus? |
1177 | Well, if one of your domestics is sick, do you tend him and call in the doctors to save his life? |
1177 | Well, ignorance of shoemaking? |
1177 | Well, it is a custom universally respected, is it not, to return good for good, and kindness with kindness? |
1177 | Well, now, is it possible to know what a popular state is without knowing who the people are? |
1177 | Well, prosperity, well- being( 53)( he exclaimed), must surely be a blessing, and that the most indisputable, Socrates? |
1177 | Well, shall we see, then, how we may best avoid making blunders between them? |
1177 | Well, shall you regard it as a part of your duty to see that as many of your men as possible can take aim and shoot on horseback? |
1177 | Well, then, we may expect, may we not, that a desire to grasp food at certain seasons will exhibit itself in both the children? |
1177 | Well; you take no notice of the dog''s ill- temper, you try to propitiate him by kindness; but your brother? |
1177 | Were it not well, Aristippus, to lay to heart these sayings, and to strive to bethink you somewhat of that which touches the future of our life? |
1177 | Were you travelling alone, or was your man- servant with you? |
1177 | Were you under the impression that the commandant was not to open his mouth? |
1177 | What are meant by just and unjust? |
1177 | What becomes of your cavalry force then? |
1177 | What can you expect but to make shipwreck of the craft and yourself together? |
1177 | What do you say? |
1177 | What do you take them to be? |
1177 | What fact? |
1177 | What father, himself sharing the society of his own children, is held to blame for their transgressions, if only his own goodness be established? |
1177 | What is a handicraftsman? |
1177 | What is a state? |
1177 | What is justice? |
1177 | What is left him but to lead a life stale and unprofitable, the scorn and mockery of men? |
1177 | What is piety? |
1177 | What is the beautiful? |
1177 | What is the particular action to which the term applies? |
1177 | What of this, since, to put it compendiously, there is nothing serviceable to the life of man worth speaking of but owes its fabrication to fire? |
1177 | What offspring then( he asked) will be ill produced, ill begotten, and ill born, if not these? |
1177 | What other tribe of animals save man can render service to the gods? |
1177 | What quarter of the world do you hail from, Eutherus? |
1177 | What sane man will venture to join thy rablle rout? |
1177 | What say you concerning such a boon? |
1177 | What say you, Antisthenes?--have friends their values like domestic slaves? |
1177 | What say you? |
1177 | What the noble? |
1177 | What the starting- point of self- examination? |
1177 | What then ought we to do now to recover our former virtue? |
1177 | What was your object? |
1177 | What way? |
1177 | What when they send portents to forewarn the states of Hellas? |
1177 | What, Hippias( Socrates retorted), have you not observed that I am in a chronic condition of proclaiming what I regard as just and upright? |
1177 | When put to the test would not your administration prove ruinous, and the figure you cut ridiculous? |
1177 | When shall we Athenians so obey our magistrates-- we who take a pride, as it were, in despising authority? |
1177 | When some one asked him:"What he regarded as the best pursuit or business( 15) for a man?" |
1177 | When some one else remarked"he was utterly prostrated after a long journey,"Socrates asked him:"Had he had any baggage to carry?" |
1177 | When some one was apprehending the journey to Olympia,"Why are you afraid of the long distance?" |
1177 | Where would you find a more arrant thief, savage, and murderer( 5) than the one? |
1177 | Which is hotter to the taste-- the water in your house or the hot spring in the temple of Asclepius? |
1177 | Which of them claims that? |
1177 | Which of these two sets respectively leads the happier life, in your opinion? |
1177 | Which, then, of the two must be trained, of his own free will,( 4) to prosecute a pressing business rather than gratify the belly? |
1177 | Who else, if not they? |
1177 | Who else, if not? |
1177 | Who has less claim to this than the incontinent man? |
1177 | Whom do you understand by poor and rich? |
1177 | Why did Homer, think you, designate Agamemnon"shepherd of the peoples"? |
1177 | Why, are you really versed in those things, Socrates? |
1177 | Why, bless your soul, do you not see he has only slaves and I have free- born souls to feed? |
1177 | Why, has not the fellow dared to steal a kiss from the son of Alcibiades, most fair of youths and in the golden prime? |
1177 | Why, how else should they deal with them? |
1177 | Why, in what else should a man be wise save only in knowledge? |
1177 | Why, surely you do not suppose you are going to ensnare that noblest of all game-- a lover, to wit-- in so artless a fashion? |
1177 | Why, to be sure; and is it not plain that these animals themselves are born and bred for the sake of man? |
1177 | Why, what will you have them to do, that you may believe and be persuaded that you too are in their thoughts? |
1177 | Will he, with the"beautiful and noble"at his side, be less able to aid his friends? |
1177 | Will not he rather, in proportion as the boy deteriorates in the company of the latter, bestow more heartfelt praise upon the former? |
1177 | Will they manipulate these and the like to suit their needs? |
1177 | Without self- restraint who can lay any good lesson to heart or practise it when learnt in any degree worth speaking of? |
1177 | Would not men have discovered the imposture in all this lapse of time? |
1177 | Would you mention to us their names? |
1177 | Yet they are both sure to meet with enemies? |
1177 | You are not an employer of labour on a large scale? |
1177 | You can not help feeling that they are costly to you, and they must see that you find them a burthen? |
1177 | You know how they capture the creatures on which they live;( 7) by weaving webs of gossamer, is it not? |
1177 | You mean it is a title particularly to those who are ignorant of the beautiful, the good, the just? |
1177 | You mean( Socrates continued) that it is not the exactly- modelled corselet which fits, but that which does not gall the wearer in the using? |
1177 | You state that so and so, whom you admire, is a better citizen that this other whom I admire? |
1177 | You understand what is meant by laws of a city or state? |
1177 | You wish to know what a law is? |
1177 | You would imply, Socrates, would you not, that if we want to win the love of any good man we need to be good ourselves in speech and action? |
1177 | You would say that a thing which is beneficial to one is sometimes hurtful to another? |
1177 | a Hellene? |
1177 | again this readiness of the ear to catch all sounds and yet not to be surcharged? |
1177 | and do you imagine that these lovely creatures infuse nothing with their kiss, simply because you do not see the poison? |
1177 | and even if they had so done, men are not all of one speech? |
1177 | and how are we to effect the capture of this friend of our choice, whom the gods approve? |
1177 | and what do you expect your fate to be after that kiss? |
1177 | and what is its definition?'' |
1177 | and what of that other whose passion for money- making is so absorbing that he has no leisure for anything else, save how he may add to his gains? |
1177 | and what of the man whose strength lies in monetary transactions? |
1177 | and when we have discovered a man whose friendship is worth having, how ought we to make him our friend? |
1177 | and whom would one select as the recipient of kindness rather than a man susceptible of gratitude?" |
1177 | and, that even the winds of heaven may not visit them too roughly, this planting of the eyelashes as a protecting screen? |
1177 | come now, Euthydemus, as concerning the good: ought we to search for the good in this way? |
1177 | did not Socrates cause his associates to despise the established laws when he dwelt on the folly of appointing state officers by ballot? |
1177 | for possibly to perform what is best appears to you to savour of freedom? |
1177 | have you gone yourself and examined the defences? |
1177 | he answered:"Successful conduct";( 16) and to a second question:"Did he then regard good fortune as an end to be pursued?" |
1177 | how well proportioned?" |
1177 | if the vendor is under the age of thirty? |
1177 | is it indifferent to you whether these be friends or not, or do you admit that the goodwill of these is worth securing by some pains on your part? |
1177 | no one will buy it; money? |
1177 | of course we are to include these, for what would happiness be without these? |
1177 | or are you prepared to stand alone? |
1177 | or because they thought, if only we are leagued with him we shall become adepts in statecraft and unrivalled in the arts of speech and action? |
1177 | or can you name any beautiful thing, body, vessel, or whatever it be, which you know of as universally beautiful? |
1177 | or did you give it heed and try to discover who and what you were? |
1177 | or do you rather rest secure in the consciousness that you would prove such a slave as no master would care to keep? |
1177 | or else( 2)"and what is beneficial is good( or a good)? |
1177 | or has no such notion perhaps ever entered their heads, and will they be content simply to know how such things come into existence? |
1177 | or how do you know that they are all maintained as you say? |
1177 | or is all this quite incapable of being depicted? |
1177 | or is it anything else?" |
1177 | or that he dispensed with divination? |
1177 | or to a question of arithmetic,"Does twice five make ten?" |
1177 | or to all mankind? |
1177 | or to do what is bad? |
1177 | or what sweet thing art thou acquainted with-- that wilt stir neither hand nor foot to gain it? |
1177 | or where is Critias to be found? |
1177 | or will his power to benefit the community be shortened because the flower of that community are fellow- workers in that work? |
1177 | p. 381:"in regard to the question wherein consists{ to kalon}?" |
1177 | still repeating the same old talk,( 13) Socrates, which I used to hear from you long ago? |
1177 | that you must needs benefit the city, since you desire to reap her honours? |
1177 | the position of the mouth again, close to the eyes and nostrils as a portal of ingress for all the creature''s supplies? |
1177 | this capacity of the front teeth of all animals to cut and of the"grinders"to receive the food and reduce it to pulp? |
1177 | to follow none? |
1177 | to kindle in them rage to meet the enemy?--which things are but stimulants to make stout hearts stouter? |
1177 | what by courage and cowardice? |
1177 | what by sobriety and madness? |
1177 | what is a ruler over men? |
1177 | what is a ruling character? |
1177 | what is a statesman? |
1177 | what is he like? |
1177 | what is impiety? |
1177 | what is your starting- point? |
1177 | what of any others, you may light upon? |
1177 | what of the quarrelsome and factious person( 4) whose main object is to saddle his friends with a host of enemies? |
1177 | what the base? |
1177 | what the ugly? |
1177 | where shall goodwill and faithfulness be found among men? |
1177 | where such a portent of insolence, incontinence, and high- handedness as the other? |
1177 | where then is his liability to the indictment to be found? |
1177 | will not sheer plundering be free to any ruffian who likes?... |
1177 | will you tell me that? |
1177 | would he not be doing what is right? |
1177 | your answer to- day will differ from that of yesterday? |
48533 | And know ye not how wildly ye have called On Death, and tried to catch him by the wing, Or let yourself be trodden under foot By him? |
48533 | And must ye grumble? |
48533 | And what revenge Could help thee? |
48533 | And what then is the world? |
48533 | Canst thou be dead? |
48533 | DOWN THE STREAM[ Illustration] From whence the brook? |
48533 | Have ye never known what fear Can make of you? |
48533 | He was the light and life and joy Of all her world, how could she then refrain And love not, when her brother was a god? |
48533 | If thou wert sinless, would not dancing rays Laugh through the night and gladden other planets? |
48533 | Is it not Enough? |
48533 | Love So great, so faithful, unforgetting and Unselfish-- must it sleep? |
48533 | Must ye strive To take away the light and dew, that fall Not to your share? |
48533 | Or art thou dark because thy womb must be The grave of all thy children, Mother Earth? |
48533 | Or hast Thou stolen wondrous goods, in gliding from The sun? |
48533 | REST[ Illustration] And did they say that rest was not so sweet, Old age a sadness, no repose at all? |
48533 | Revealest thou what worlds have thought in distant, Unfathomable dream? |
48533 | Thou fearest the world? |
48533 | Thou wouldst not Suffer it to become a stone to crush thee? |
48533 | Thy heart Is gold: hast thou betrayed the sun? |
48533 | What hast thou done to be condemned to darkness, To be a living hell, wherein the souls Of millions suffer until death? |
48533 | What? |
48533 | When God had laid the gift into thy heart, Thy hand, upon the road thou hadst to tread? |
48533 | Wherefore doth fire still melt the gold in depths So fathomless, that not a spark may light The poor outside? |
48533 | Wherefore is Earth so dark and yet alive? |
48533 | Why art thou dark, O Earth? |
48533 | Why ask and why despair? |
48533 | Why hast thou ta''en thy peaceful Queen? |
48533 | Why not be happy with the sun, the dew, The other flowery hearts that, full of life Unfold their petals, which are deep like thine, And rich as thine? |
48533 | With all thy strength thou art but what Is wanted-- tree or grassblade-- never ask Wherefore? |
48533 | Would not thy bosom''s warmth give life again To yonder ghost, thy mate in misery? |
48533 | Wouldst thou be rewarded? |
48533 | and canst thou look so stern? |
39551 | Am I my brother''s keeper? |
39551 | Thou art the man,of Nathan to David,"Hast thou killed, and also taken possession?" |
39551 | What is good? |
39551 | What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own life? |
39551 | [ 52] Another suggestion of the book is that evil comes to prove man''s sincerity:Does Job serve God for naught?" |
39551 | [ 60] Is not serving God for hire a form of prostitution? 39551 [ 66] And if I decide that the crooked way is the easier, why shall I not follow it? |
39551 | [ 72]= Plato''s Ideal State.=--How then is the State constituted and governed which is to provide for man''s full development, his complete good? 39551 ( 1) Does individualism provide for real as well as formal freedom? 39551 ( 1) What is the Good, the end in any voluntary act? 39551 ( 2) Does it distribute the benefits widely or to the few? 39551 ( 2) How is this good known? 39551 ( 3) When the good is known, how is it_ acknowledged_; how does it acquire authority? 39551 ( 4) What is the place of selfhood in the moral process? 39551 ( b) It emphasized the_ personal interest_, the affective or emotional side of conduct, and made the moral problem take the form,What is the good?" |
39551 | ( b) What is the difference between the morally good and the morally bad in the self? |
39551 | 376; ambiguity of term selfish, 377; are results selfish? |
39551 | = Ambiguity in the Conception.=--Is self- realization the end? |
39551 | = Why Obey Laws?=--And if laws and social codes are but class legislation, conventional, why obey them? |
39551 | All men are equal before God; why should one man assume to command another because of birth? |
39551 | An analogy with a political problem may aid: Has a nation the right to exclude( or tax heavily) goods or persons from other countries? |
39551 | And if he sells his stock at the market price to invest the money elsewhere, is it not still the price of fraud or blood? |
39551 | And if so, how? |
39551 | And the lover of honor,--what will be his opinion? |
39551 | And there are three kinds of pleasure, which are their several objects? |
39551 | And this question assumes two forms:( a) What is the relation of the good of the self to the good of others? |
39551 | And to the inevitable inquiry"What then is the law of reason?" |
39551 | Are not other results, playing with other boys, convivial companionship, which are reached more easily and pleasantly, really more valuable? |
39551 | Are our present rules adequate to such a situation as that of the present? |
39551 | Are we not justified in suspecting a person''s good faith when his good intentions uniformly bring suffering to others? |
39551 | But does it follow that such men are moved_ merely_ by the thought of gain to themselves? |
39551 | But granting that nature is rightful master, is"nature"to be sought in the primitive beginnings, or in the fullest development? |
39551 | But how do we know which faculty_ is_ higher, and hence what satisfaction is more valuable? |
39551 | But people may ask, what is the motive in this? |
39551 | But what are the consequences by which we determine anything to be good or bad? |
39551 | But what if there are no gods? |
39551 | But what is his due? |
39551 | But where shall such adults be found, and where is the social order so good that it is capable of right training of its own immature members? |
39551 | But who is now so simple as to suppose that the"shepherds"fatten or tend the sheep with a view to the good of the sheep, and not to their own good? |
39551 | But why is it counterfeit? |
39551 | Can material goods be so produced and distributed as to promote this democratic ideal? |
39551 | Can the result, then, be just or fair? |
39551 | Can we measure it by his past alone; or is it due every one to regard him as a man with a future as well? |
39551 | Could it be imagined that man could know his own good and yet not seek it? |
39551 | Do society''s present methods of industry, commerce, art, and education distribute these goods in a just manner? |
39551 | Does a man, or even an institution, act morally if he invests in such corporations in which he finds himself helpless as an individual stockholder? |
39551 | Does it distribute them justly or unjustly? |
39551 | Does it make a difference whether the union is open to all, or whether the dues are fixed so high as to limit the membership? |
39551 | Does the institution in its present form promote the good of those who have no property as well as of those who have it, or only of those who own? |
39551 | Does the phrase refer to their conscious and express intent? |
39551 | Does the process tend to a broad and general distribution of goods in return for services rendered, or to make"the rich richer and the poor poorer?" |
39551 | First of all, we may fairly ask of a process, Does it give to each member the kind of service needed by him? |
39551 | For example:"May I, when in distress, make a promise with the intention not to keep it?... |
39551 | For on what principle of justice did Xerxes invade Hellas, or his father the Scythians? |
39551 | He can hardly avoid admitting this,--can he now? |
39551 | Hence, if this is the good, why should a man trouble himself about social standards or social obligations? |
39551 | Hosea''s wife had forsaken him, and should not the love of people to Jehovah be as personal and sincere as that of wife to husband? |
39551 | How are_ they_ affected by the way in which some one activity is exercised? |
39551 | How can morality be expected to improve when the fundamental agency and method of business and industry is contradictory to morality? |
39551 | How can such a thing as"duty"exist at all? |
39551 | How can that which makes an intention make no difference to it, and to the act which proceeds from it? |
39551 | How do we break out of this empty circle into specific knowledge of the specific right things to be done? |
39551 | How far may one enjoy the goods of life in an exclusive way and how far is it his duty to share with others? |
39551 | How far may the union combine with the capitalist to raise prices to the consumer? |
39551 | How far shall it serve a limited group, the union, at the expense of other workers in the same trade-- non- unionists? |
39551 | How many in the fulfillment of the intention to remain at home with one''s family and secure profitable contracts from the government? |
39551 | How many units of pleasure are contained in the fulfillment of the intention to go to war for one''s country? |
39551 | How shall one set be measured over against the other? |
39551 | How shall the pains involved in each set be detected and have their exact numerical force assigned them? |
39551 | How would such a rule apply itself to any particular case which needed to be judged? |
39551 | If I go to the water fall, shall I go over the moor or take the path through the wood? |
39551 | If all men are accounted equal in the State, why not in wealth? |
39551 | If land is monopolized by a few who can levy a toll upon all the rest of society, how can justice obtain? |
39551 | If pleasure is the good, and if all desire is naturally for the good, why should desire have to be constrained? |
39551 | If so, is this fair to the boys or unskilled laborers who would like to enter? |
39551 | If this was the result of"free contract,"what further proof was necessary that"freedom"was a mere empty term-- a name with no reality? |
39551 | If we do not question his good faith, do we not regard him as needing moral enlightenment, and a change of disposition? |
39551 | If wealth and gain were the criterion, then what the lover of gain praised and blamed would surely be the truest? |
39551 | In economic terms, Does it produce the kinds of goods which society needs and desires? |
39551 | Is any better than experience and wisdom and reason? |
39551 | Is it because the moral law, the law of reason, requires it? |
39551 | Is it directly perceived, and if so, how? |
39551 | Is it for the sake of the resulting happiness? |
39551 | Is it, after all, so important, so desirable? |
39551 | Is the number of property- owners increasing or diminishing? |
39551 | Is there any intrinsic moral connection between the_ mental_ and the_ overt_ in activity? |
39551 | Is this an inevitable dilemma? |
39551 | It Makes Morality Really Important.=--Would there be any use or sense in moral acts if they did not tend to promote welfare, individual and social? |
39551 | It is not so much"How many goods can be produced?" |
39551 | Just what is the process by which we judge of the worth of particular proposals, plans, courses of actions, desires? |
39551 | Let this continue, and how long will the former stay in the field? |
39551 | May it maintain a"closed shop"? |
39551 | Micah''s"Shall I give my first- born for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?" |
39551 | Must we either recognize no moral differences in men, or else be more merciless than the old orthodox doctrine of hereditary or imputed guilt? |
39551 | Of if honor or victory or courage, in that case the ambitions or contentments would decide best? |
39551 | On the other hand, indicating the supremacy of the voluntary attitude over consequences, we have,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
39551 | Or is it worked out through inquiry and reflection? |
39551 | Or shall there be other rules for division-- either made and enforced by society or made by the individual and enforced by his own conscience? |
39551 | Or to put the same thing from another angle: if the family and the modern movement toward equality are at variance, which ought to give way? |
39551 | Says James:[125]"What constitutes the difficulty for a man laboring under an unwise passion acting as if the passion were unwise?... |
39551 | Shall I walk to the water fall today? |
39551 | Shall all share alike? |
39551 | Shall every one keep what he can get? |
39551 | Shall he agree to a higher price at which all can do business, or insist on the lower which benefits the consumer and also himself? |
39551 | Shall the apprentices be limited to keep up the wage by limiting the supply? |
39551 | Shall the hours be reduced and wages raised as high as possible, or is there a"fair"standard-- fair to both consumer and laborer? |
39551 | Shall the owner have it all, or shall the community have it all, or shall there be a division? |
39551 | Should a man be allowed to transmit all his property to his heirs, or should it be in part reserved by society? |
39551 | Should there be any limit to the amount of land or other property which an individual or corporation may own? |
39551 | Suppose, then, the question is raised, How can we make a just distribution? |
39551 | The Values of Art and Industry.=--Are all these wider interests and fuller powers good? |
39551 | The appeal is to himself; what does_ he_ really think the desirable end? |
39551 | The gods were supposed to reward the good and punish the evil,[64] but how could this be reconciled with their practices? |
39551 | The question is then this: does the family necessarily involve inequality, or can it be maintained on a basis of equality? |
39551 | The question rather is,_ How far are these very political, religious, and other aspects implicitly moral_? |
39551 | The same final standard of value appears in the question of Jesus,"What shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his own life?" |
39551 | They already make him wince: how long will he sit listening to the fairy- tales of his boyhood and shrink from manhood''s task?" |
39551 | They were the challenge of the Adversary,"Doth Job fear God for naught?" |
39551 | This change in apparent worth raises a new question: Is the aim first set up of the value it seemed to be? |
39551 | This is the question finally at stake in any genuinely moral situation: What shall the agent_ be_? |
39551 | Well, but what ought to be the criterion? |
39551 | What are the distinctive problems which must be dealt with in the course of such a discussion? |
39551 | What are their rational origin, place, and function? |
39551 | What are virtues and vices as dispositions of the self? |
39551 | What do good and bad mean as terms of voluntary behavior? |
39551 | What does it mean to say that one pleasure, as an external and future fact, is equal to another? |
39551 | What influence can the small shareholders in a railway company, or a great industrial corporation, or labor union, have? |
39551 | What is that? |
39551 | What is the essence of well- being? |
39551 | What is the good which while good in direct enjoyment also brings with it fuller and more continuous life? |
39551 | What is the nature of the genuine article? |
39551 | What is the place of_ law_, of control, in the moral life? |
39551 | What is the principle in this case? |
39551 | What kind of public wealth should be given into absolute control of private individuals or impersonal corporations? |
39551 | What makes the supreme appeal to him? |
39551 | What principle can be employed to adjust such a question? |
39551 | What relevancy has the quantitative comparison to a judgment of moral worth? |
39551 | What sort of a character shall he assume? |
39551 | What sort of an agent, of a person, shall he be? |
39551 | What then are the differentiating traits, the special earmarks, presented by the situation which we identify as distinctively moral? |
39551 | What was to be cleared up? |
39551 | What, if anything, can justify a nation or smaller group from excluding others from its benefits? |
39551 | What, then, are the virtues? |
39551 | When do we assume that so far as the will was concerned it did aim at the result and aimed at it thoroughly, without evasion and without reservation? |
39551 | Which shall he decide for, and why? |
39551 | Why does the person aim at perfection? |
39551 | Why? |
39551 | [ 120]= Overt Action Proves Will.=--Again, under what circumstances do we actually"take the will for the deed"? |
39551 | [ 89] Tolstoy,_ What is Art?_[ 90] P. 40. |
39551 | _ Commercial and political individualism_:--Class interests, 119; why obey laws? |
39551 | _ Self- love and benevolence; or egoism and altruism_:--The"crux"of ethical speculation, 375; are all motives selfish? |
39551 | _ The Object of Desire_:--Is it pleasure? |
39551 | as having possibilities for good as well as achievements in bad? |
39551 | as"Who is to get them?" |
39551 | i.e., shall reason form the standard as well as apply it? |
39551 | in a life of isolation, or in a life of society? |
39551 | in the desires and passions, or in reason and a harmonious life? |
39551 | or is wisdom itself a good, and is it better to satisfy certain impulses rather than others? |
39551 | or to their objective results when put into operation, irrespective of explicit desire and aim? |
39551 | or, shall I ramble along the sea shore? |
39551 | or, suppose them to have no care of human things, why in either case should we mind about concealment? |
39551 | to the question, What is_ good_--good for_ me_? |
39551 | v.; Harnack,_ What is Christianity?_ tr. |
40435 | Disgraced in the opinion of every one,replies Sokrates? |
40435 | Scais- tu au moins ce que c''est que la matière? 40435 What are the conditions under which subordinates will cheerfully obey their commanders?" |
40435 | Wheat is the Holy, what is the Unholy? 40435 Why are you so curious to know what_ I myself_ have determined on the point? |
40435 | ( said he) have none of us before your time talked about the Good and the Just? |
40435 | 38- 39:--"The question is often asked, and properly so, in regard to any supposed moral standard, What is its sanction? |
40435 | After the decease of these last- mentioned authors, who can say what became of their MSS.? |
40435 | Again, as to predicates-- when you say,_ The man runs_, or_ The man is good_, what do you mean by the predicate_ runs_, or is_ good_? |
40435 | And if, adopting any one of them, we reject the others, upon what grounds are we to justify our preference? |
40435 | Another argument of Zeno is to the following effect:--"Does a grain of millet, when dropped upon the floor, make sound? |
40435 | Are not you aware that the hemlock of Sokrates is in store for_ you_ also?" |
40435 | Are there no limits( as Hobbes is so much denounced for maintaining)? |
40435 | Are these virtues teachable? |
40435 | Are three grains few, and four_ many_?--or, where will you draw the line between Few and Many? |
40435 | As we know little about Plato except from his works, the first question to be decided is, Which_ are_ his real works? |
40435 | But can we do this with our present scanty information? |
40435 | But if no portion of its continuity can be thus present, how can Time possibly be present, to which such continuity is essential?" |
40435 | But is all that is just necessarily holy? |
40435 | But the question asked was-- What is Holiness generally? |
40435 | But what are those great works which the Gods bring about by our agency? |
40435 | But what is this_ true determinately_, but true_ upon our knowledge_ or_ evidently true_? |
40435 | But what other name was so natural or likely for Anaxagoras himself to choose?] |
40435 | But what part? |
40435 | Did he publish any of them during the lifetime of Sokrates? |
40435 | Do you imagine, that the Good is one thing, and the Beautiful another? |
40435 | Do you not know that all things are good and beautiful in relation to the same purpose? |
40435 | Eh bien( dit le Sirien), cette chose qui te paroît être divisible, pésante, et grise, me dirois tu bien ce que c''est? |
40435 | Erdmann,"Comment seroit il possible qu''aucune chose existât, si l''être même, ipsum Esse, n''avoit l''existence? |
40435 | He may have done this: but how are we to prove it? |
40435 | How can you properly say( he argues) that you_ know_ the compound AB, when you know neither A nor B separately? |
40435 | How did he get his reputation?] |
40435 | How happens it that no despot has ever yet done this? |
40435 | How much does it attenuate the value of his intentions, as proofs of an internal philosophical sequence? |
40435 | How therefore can it be present at all in any of them? |
40435 | How? |
40435 | How? |
40435 | If that were so( Ast argues), how can we explain the fact, that in most of the dialogues there is no philosophical result at all? |
40435 | If you speak of Man in general( he said), what, or whom, do you mean? |
40435 | In appreciating a philosopher, it is usual to ask, What authoritative creed has he proclaimed, for disciples to swear allegiance to? |
40435 | In other words, how can the One be Many, and how can the Many be One? |
40435 | In regard to the question, Which were Plato''s genuine works? |
40435 | In what manner does ministration, called_ holiness_, benefit or improve the Gods? |
40435 | In what then does its essence consist? |
40435 | In what then does its essence consist? |
40435 | Is it possible that any one can have preferred an indictment against you? |
40435 | Is the proceeding recommended just or unjust? |
40435 | Is the proceeding recommended just or unjust? |
40435 | It is that branch which concerns ministration by men to the Gods 447 Ministration to the Gods? |
40435 | Krobylus, one of the accusers, said to him,"Are_ you_ come to plead on behalf of another? |
40435 | Mais qu''est ce donc_ qu''une pleurésie_? |
40435 | Moreover, at the very outset of the enquiry, we have to ask, At what period of life did Plato begin to publish his dialogues? |
40435 | Next, by what arguments has he enforced or made them good? |
40435 | No.--Does a bushel of millet make sound under the same circumstances? |
40435 | O(/ti e)kei= noi me\n ta\ sapra\ tau= ta a)po\ dogma/ tôn lalou= sin? |
40435 | Or do you suppose that we can not follow out what each of them is, and that we pronounce the words as empty and unmeaning sounds? |
40435 | Or does the earliest of them date from a time after the death of Sokrates? |
40435 | Or is it holy for this reason, because they do love it? |
40435 | Ou)dei\s ê(mô= n pro\ sou= e)/legen a)gatho\n ê)\ di/ kaion? |
40435 | Qu''est- ce que la loi de la pesanteur? |
40435 | Quanti Platonis vel libros novêre vel nomen? |
40435 | Qui a démontré qu''il sera demain jour, et que nous mourrons-- et qu''y a- t- il de plus cru? |
40435 | Quid ergo? |
40435 | Quotusquisque nunc Aristotelem legit? |
40435 | Si singulas disciplinas percipere magnum est, quanto majus omnes? |
40435 | Sokrates asks him-- What is Holiness? |
40435 | Sokrates asks him-- What is Holiness?] |
40435 | Tell me what is the general constituent feature of_ Holiness_? |
40435 | Tell me-- to what end does the work conduce? |
40435 | That we are gainers by what they give, is clear enough; but what do they gain on their side? |
40435 | The first of the two is an obscure and imperfect reply to the great Sokratic problem-- What is Justice? |
40435 | The latter asked Sokrates,"Do you know anything good?" |
40435 | The like question about the hairs on a man''s head-- How many must he lose before he can be said to have only a few, or to be bald?] |
40435 | The question asked was, not What are the antecedent conditions or causes of rain, thunder, or earthquakes, but Who rains and thunders? |
40435 | The questions about which you and I and other men quarrel are, What is just or unjust, honourable or base, good or evil? |
40435 | This antithesis appears as an answer when we put the question-- What is the ultimate authority? |
40435 | This is what gives rise to the question-- What is the essential scheme for the Individual? |
40435 | Ti/ ga\r le/ gei? |
40435 | To the Sokratic question, What is the Bonum? |
40435 | To what did the dialogues composed by the first Aristippus refer? |
40435 | To what ought he to conform-- what shall he aim at? |
40435 | To what purpose? |
40435 | To what purpose? |
40435 | To\ poi= on dê/? |
40435 | Tu vois quelques attributs: mais le fond de la chose, le connois tu? |
40435 | Ubi apud antiquiores latuit amor iste investigandæ veritatis?" |
40435 | Was he right in disobeying? |
40435 | Were they not also in the library at the time when Kallimachus compiled his tables? |
40435 | What are the motives to obey it? |
40435 | What brings you here, Sokrates( asks Euthyphron), away from your usual haunts? |
40435 | What is Injustice? |
40435 | What is a law? |
40435 | What is justice? |
40435 | What is that common essence, or same character, which belongs to and distinguishes all holy or pious acts? |
40435 | What is that end which the Gods accomplish, through our agency as workmen? |
40435 | What is that specific property, by the common possession of which all holy things are entitled to be called holy? |
40435 | What is the Honourable and the Base? |
40435 | What is the Just and the Unjust? |
40435 | What number of grains make a heap-- or are many? |
40435 | What positive system, or positive truths previously unknown or unproved, has he established? |
40435 | Whence does it derive its binding force? |
40435 | Where are we to find a trustworthy Platonic Canon? |
40435 | Where was any certain permanent custody provided for them? |
40435 | Where, however, is the security that the undertaking would produce three oboli a day to each subscriber?" |
40435 | Which was in the right here? |
40435 | Who produces earthquakes? |
40435 | Why then should any one wish to read written reports of his conversations? |
40435 | Xenophon accordingly went to Delphi: but instead of asking the question broadly--"Shall I go, or shall I decline to go?" |
40435 | Yes.--Is there not a determinate proportion between the bushel and the grain? |
40435 | [ 119] Which of them are we to follow? |
40435 | [ 133] How can the Form( Man, White, Good,& c.) be present at one and the same time in many distinct individuals? |
40435 | [ 149]--Which of the two do you consider to live most pleasantly, the rulers or the ruled? |
40435 | [ 41] Otherwise, why do you not throw up your sceptre? |
40435 | [ 44] What is that something-- the common essence or idea? |
40435 | [ 49] Tell me, what is the characteristic essence of piety as well as impiety?" |
40435 | [ Footnote 2: Aristophanes, Nubes, 368,[ Greek: A)lla\ ti/ s u(/ei?] |
40435 | [ Footnote 70: Plato, Parmenidês, p. 156 D- E.[ Greek: Po/ t''ou)=n, metaba/ llei? |
40435 | [ Greek: A)=r''ou)=n e)sti/ to\ a)/topon tou= to, e)n ô)=| to/ t''a)\n ei)/ê o(/te metaba/ llei? |
40435 | [ Greek: Dia\ ti/ ou)=n e)kei= noi( oi( polloi\, oi( i)diô= tai) u(mô= n( tôn philoso/ phôn) i)schuro/ teroi? |
40435 | [ Greek: Po/ te ga\r e)n ê(mi= n au)toi= s ou)k e)/stin o( tha/ natos? |
40435 | [ Greek: Pô= s ô)= Zê/ nôn, tou= to le/ geis? |
40435 | [ Greek: Ti/ de\ oi( polue/ laioi? |
40435 | [ Greek: Ti/ ou)=n? |
40435 | [ Greek: Ti/ s ou)=n pot''e)sti\ te/ chnê tê= s paraskeuê= s tou= mêde\n a)dikei= sthai ê)\ ô(s o)li/ gista? |
40435 | [ Greek: a)/xion ga\r pa= n tô= n o)/ntôn pou= ei)=nai; ei) de\ o( to/ pos tô= n o)/ntôn, pou= a)\n ei)/ê?]] |
40435 | [ Greek: kai\ tou= to pô= s ou)k a)mathi/ a e)sti\n au)tê\ ê( e)ponei/ distos, ê( tou= oi)/esthai ei)de/ nai a(\ ou)k oi)=den?]] |
40435 | [ Greek: tau= ta ga\r e)gô\ a)kou/ sas e)nethumou/ mên ou(tôsi/, Ti/ pote le/ gei o( theo\s kai\ ti/ pote ai)ni/ ttetai? |
40435 | [ Greek: ti/ ga\r kai\ phê/ somen, oi(/ ge kai\ au)toi\ o(mologou= men peri\ au)tô= n mêde\n ei)de/ nai?]] |
40435 | [ Greek: to\ o)rtha\ doxa/ zein kai\ a)/neu tou= e)/chein lo/ gon dou= nai, ou)k oi)=sth''o(/ti ou)/te e)pi/ stasthai e)stin? |
40435 | [ Greek: tou/ tôn tô= n pollô= n kalô= n mô= n ti e)/stin, o( ou)k ai)schro\n phanê/ setai? |
40435 | [ Greek: ê)\ a)rkei= u(mi= n to\ ê(de/ ôs katabiô= nai to\n bi/ on a)/neu lupô= n? |
40435 | [ Side- note: Ministration to the Gods? |
40435 | [ Side- note: When did Plato begin to compose? |
40435 | ]\_ Sokr._--What sort of ministration? |
40435 | _ Sokr._--Do the Gods love the holy, because it_ is_ holy? |
40435 | _ Sokr._--Then it appears that the holy is what the Gods love? |
40435 | _ Which_ Dionysius is meant?--the elder or the younger? |
40435 | _ istius vitii num nostra culpa est_? |
40435 | a)/logon ga\r pra= gma pô= s a)\n ei)/ê e)pistê/ mê?] |
40435 | and if so, which? |
40435 | c. 14, p. 26 D.[ Greek: ô)= thauma/ sie Me/ lête, i(na ti/ tau= ta le/ geis? |
40435 | c. 4, p. 20 B- C.[ Greek: ti/ s tê= s toiau/ tês a)retê= s, tê= s a)nthrôpi/ nês te kai\ politikê= s, e)pistê/ môn e)sti/ n? |
40435 | e)/ti de\ e(/na e)o/ nta to\n Ê(rakle/ a, kai\ e)/ti a)/nthrôpon, ô(s dê/ phasi, kô= s phu/ sin e)/chei polla\s muria/ das phoneu= sai? |
40435 | e)gô\ ga\r dê\ ou)/te me/ ga ou)/te smikro\n xu/ noida e)mautô=| sopho\s ô)/n; ti/ ou)=n pote le/ gei pha/ skôn e)me\ sophô/ taton ei)=nai? |
40435 | kai\ nê\ Di/ a pa/ lin le/ ontos kai\ kuno\s to\ tre/ chein, katêgorou= men? |
40435 | kai\ tô= n dikai/ ôn, o(\ ou)k a)/dikon? |
40435 | kai\ tô= n o(si/ ôn, o(\ ou)k a)no/ sion?] |
40435 | or how is it to be distinguished from other parts or branches of the just? |
40435 | or more specifically, What is the source of its obligation? |
40435 | or that Sokrates in the Philêbus and Republic is older than in the Kratylus or Gorgias? |
40435 | ou)de\ ê(/lion ou)de\ selê/ nên a)/ra nomi/ zô theou\s ei)=nai, ô(/sper oi( a)/lloi a)/nthrôpoi?]] |
40435 | the four obedient citizens, or the one disobedient? |
40435 | ti/ de\ oi( gnô/ mê| kai\ a)rguri/ ô| duna/ menoi chrêmati/ zesthai? |
40435 | ti/ de\ oi( polupro/ batoi? |
40435 | what are temperance and courage? |
40435 | what are the limits of obedience to the laws? |
40435 | what is injustice? |
40435 | what is law, lawlessness, democracy, aristocracy? |
40435 | what is the government of mankind, and the attributes which qualify any one for exercising such government? |
40435 | what number are few? |
40435 | where does the right of final decision reside, on problems and disputes ethical, political, æsthetical? |
40435 | ê)\ mê\ parakolouthou= ntes ti/ e)sti tou/ tôn e(/kaston, a)sê/ môs kai\ kenô= s e)phtheggo/ metha ta\s phôna/ s?] |
4823 | As for Don Charles,he says,"was he not our future sovereign? |
4823 | Die, treacherous villain? |
4823 | I have tamed people of iron in my day,said he, contemptuously,"shall I not easily crush these men of butter?" |
4823 | Is he, or am I, to command in this campaign? 4823 Is the army of the Prince of Orange a flock of wild geese,"he asked,"that it can fly over rivers like the Meuse?" |
4823 | Is the word of a king,said the dowager to the commissioners, who were insisting upon guarantees,"is the word of a king not sufficient?" |
4823 | Shall I be secure there? |
4823 | What do you say to that, Don Francis? |
4823 | Whence has the Duke of Alva the power of which he boasts, but from yourselves-- from Netherland cities? 4823 --Why does not your Most Christian master,"asked Alva,"order these Frenchmen in Mons to come to him under oath to make no disturbance? |
4823 | A little startled, the Duke rejoined,"Do you doubt that the cities will keep their promises? |
4823 | From such a Regent, surrounded by such councillors, was the work of William de Nassau''s hands to gain applause? |
4823 | Had the city, indeed, been carried in the night; had the massacre already commenced; had all this labor and audacity been expended in vain? |
4823 | Has his Church therefore come to caught? |
4823 | Has the strong arm of the Lord thereby grown weaker? |
4823 | He asked the Bishop, with many expressions of amazement, whether pardon was impossible; whether delay at least might not be obtained? |
4823 | He waved his broadleaved felt hat for silence, and then exclaimed, in language which has been almost literally preserved, What would ye, my friends? |
4823 | How could the nation now consent to the daily impositions which were practised? |
4823 | If defeated, what would become of the King''s authority, with rebellious troops triumphant in rebellious provinces? |
4823 | Shall all this be destroyed by the Spanish guns, or shall we rush to the rescue of our friends?" |
4823 | To this end had Columbus discovered a hemisphere for Castile and Aragon, and the new Indies revealed their hidden treasures? |
4823 | Was William of Orange to receive absolute commands from the Duke of Alva? |
4823 | Were not all lovers of good government"erecting their heads like dromedaries?" |
4823 | Were not carnage and plunder the very elements in which they disported themselves? |
4823 | What could they comprehend of living fountains and of heavenly dews? |
4823 | What course was the Prince of Orange to adopt? |
4823 | What vulpine kind of mercy was it on the part of the Cardinal, while making such deadly insinuations, to recommend the imprisoned victim to clemency? |
4823 | What was it to them that carnage and plunder had been spared in one of the richest and most populous cities in Christendom? |
4823 | What were debtors, robbers, murderers, compared to heretics? |
4823 | What will the Duke of Alva and all the Spaniards say of such a precipitate flight? |
4823 | What, meanwhile, was the policy of the government? |
4823 | Whence his ships, supplies, money, weapons, soldiers? |
4823 | Who else could look into the future, and into Philip''s heart so unerringly? |
4823 | Who now did reverence to a King so criminal and so fallen? |
4823 | Why do ye murmur that we do not break our vows and surrender the city to the Spaniards? |
4823 | Why has poor Netherland thus become degenerate and bastard? |
4823 | Why has the Almighty suffered such crimes to be perpetrated in His sacred name? |
4823 | Why should Meghem''s loitering and mutinous troops, arriving at the eleventh hour, share in the triumph and the spoil? |
4823 | Will they not say that your Excellency has fled from the consciousness of guilt? |
4823 | You will ask why I am in Mons at the head of an armed force: are any of you ignorant of Alva''s cruelties? |
44034 | [ 26] Could Juliette fail to dread such a woman, one so versed by the practice of her profession in the wiles that attract men? 44034 _ Mon Dieu_,"it wailed,"_ qu''est- ce qui remplit tout le c[oe]ur?_"And at last the poet walked up to place the answer at the feet of his new friend. |
44034 | A recovery is looked for next year, but I have my doubts about it, have n''t you? |
44034 | After all, this child seemed fond of him-- but whom was she not fond of? |
44034 | And for what? |
44034 | Are you capable, I ask you, of loving me as much as I love you, or half as much? |
44034 | Are you less sad and painfully pre- occupied than yesterday, my adored one? |
44034 | Are you prepared to carry it through?" |
44034 | Are you satisfied? |
44034 | As for you, you old lunatic, what have you to complain of? |
44034 | At your divine feet or your celestial brow? |
44034 | Beloved, did you work late last night? |
44034 | Besides, how could the disapproval of a few miserable wretches and idiots affect the magnificent verses of_ Marion_? |
44034 | Besides, why should I complain of my mode of life more to- day, than yesterday? |
44034 | But I trust that day will never dawn, will it, my angel? |
44034 | But you are indifferent-- you can calmly let my soul die of inanition-- do you not love me, then? |
44034 | Could she refrain from warning her lover against her, day after day, like one draws attention to a danger, a scourge, or a tempest? |
44034 | Did Toto take back his quince jelly? |
44034 | Did it reach you in time? |
44034 | Did you gather in a good harvest of glances, smiles and flattery yesterday from the women you met? |
44034 | Did you give Dédé the sachet? |
44034 | Did you have a better night, or did fatigue and excitement prevent you from sleeping? |
44034 | Did you have a good night? |
44034 | Did you love me? |
44034 | Did you sleep better last night, my great, little man? |
44034 | Do you hear? |
44034 | Do you love me? |
44034 | Do you still love me? |
44034 | Do you still need a secretary? |
44034 | Does it not lift a weight from your heart, you who have such a noble soul? |
44034 | Does not all that make it worth while for you to be frank, loyal, and ever faithful towards me? |
44034 | Does this fresh crisis foreshadow my speedy recovery? |
44034 | Had he lost some precious article of faith or conviction, or was it that the mainspring of his enthusiasm had failed him? |
44034 | Had the whole character of the poet changed? |
44034 | Have you been writing to me under the old chestnut- tree? |
44034 | He writes:"Is not this a great pleasure to you? |
44034 | How are you this morning? |
44034 | How are you this morning? |
44034 | How are you this morning? |
44034 | How are you, my Toto? |
44034 | How are you, my darling? |
44034 | How are you? |
44034 | How are you? |
44034 | How are you? |
44034 | How are your adored eyes, my Toto? |
44034 | How are your eyes, my Toto? |
44034 | How can I evade its ghastly grip, how keep myself from suicide, from the desperate hankering after death? |
44034 | How can I thank you adequately, or describe my gratitude? |
44034 | How can I ward off the fate that is hanging over you? |
44034 | How did the little invalid sleep last night? |
44034 | How did you manage to fit into your bed? |
44034 | How did you spend the night, adored one? |
44034 | How many will you waste? |
44034 | I am much to be pitied, for I am jealous, and of whom? |
44034 | I forgot until you reminded me that you have been forbidden to walk much, but I do trust it did you no harm; did it, Victor darling? |
44034 | I have nothing to fear from you, have I, my darling? |
44034 | I love you-- do you know that? |
44034 | If you gave up loving me, or worse, loved me less, what should I make of life in that great empty drawing- room? |
44034 | Is it a mark of your confidence or of your indifference? |
44034 | Is it indeed possible that you are safe, my poor treasure, and that I have nothing further to fear for your life or liberty? |
44034 | Is it really true? |
44034 | Is it to allow time for intrigues against the incorruptible consciences of my lords the judges? |
44034 | Is it true that you do not mind one little bit? |
44034 | Is it true that you love me, and that you deign to rely upon me in the difficult passages of life? |
44034 | Is that His justice? |
44034 | It is absurd of me to be such a little craven; besides, what harm can a_ cabal_ do you? |
44034 | It was difficult, but of what are you not capable when you set your mind to a thing? |
44034 | My God, what will become of me if you stay away much longer, when I have refrained with such difficulty from sending to get news of you? |
44034 | My Victor, can you forgive me? |
44034 | My Victor, what is going to become of us? |
44034 | My admiration? |
44034 | My little darling man, are you not soon coming to me? |
44034 | Oh, God, dost Thou hate me? |
44034 | Ought I to tell you everything-- would it be wrong to conceal from you the imminent sorrow that is going to wring your heart once more? |
44034 | Perhaps you only said it idly as one of the compliments one is constrained to make to the woman who loves one? |
44034 | Remain here? |
44034 | Run away from you? |
44034 | Shall you be at Auteuil all day? |
44034 | Should he select roses or pears, myrtle or cypress? |
44034 | So long as my love is not called into question, what does it matter how, and when, my body changes its_ habitat_ and moves from Brussels to Jersey? |
44034 | Still, I am conscious of something within me, greater than either wealth or intellect; but is it powerful enough to rivet you to me for ever? |
44034 | Surely such a sum should provide ordinary comforts-- there should be no suggestion of squalid poverty? |
44034 | Surely, if the doctors were not certain of curing her, they would not keep her so long in Paris, away from all her belongings, in winter weather? |
44034 | Tell me, how are you after your evening at Court? |
44034 | There are no wrinkles in the heart, and you will see my face only in the reflection of your attachment, eh, Victor, my beloved? |
44034 | Therefore I ask you in all good faith, what use am I to you in this island, apart from my functions of copyist? |
44034 | Verse or prose? |
44034 | We must make this last sacrifice to human malignity, in order to have the right to love each other openly afterwards; do you not agree, my beloved? |
44034 | Were not these people going to wrest her poet from her? |
44034 | Were you warmer? |
44034 | What am I saying? |
44034 | What am I to do with this poor body bereft of its soul when you are not by? |
44034 | What am I to do, beloved? |
44034 | What are you about, my adored one? |
44034 | What can I say or do? |
44034 | What can I think, or rather what am I to fear? |
44034 | What can we do to avert the misfortune that threatens us? |
44034 | What do you think of the taking of Constantine? |
44034 | What does it matter if you are denied the justice you deserve? |
44034 | What have I done to deserve such wretchedness? |
44034 | What is to become of me all this wretched day if I may not see you? |
44034 | What is to become of me? |
44034 | What is your opinion? |
44034 | What matter that you should be held responsible in part for my troubles? |
44034 | What more can I do to find favour in His eyes? |
44034 | What more do you want? |
44034 | What shall I express first? |
44034 | What sort of a night did you have? |
44034 | What state are you in yourself? |
44034 | What will happen to me, shut up here, all alone with that terrible anniversary, the 28th June, 1851? |
44034 | What, then, had happened between the dates of the two portraits? |
44034 | When do you intend to keep them, I wonder? |
44034 | When shall I see you again, treasure? |
44034 | Where are you, my beloved? |
44034 | Which do you like best, quality or quantity? |
44034 | Which dress should she wear? |
44034 | Which is best? |
44034 | Which of us two is the best lover, eh? |
44034 | Who has the right to demand from you an account of the measure of the sacrifices you have made for me? |
44034 | Who is the favoured one you aspire to put in my place? |
44034 | Who sat in a prominent box and opposed the firmest front to the hissing crowd? |
44034 | Who ventured to accuse Beauvallet of murdering the part of the Duke Job? |
44034 | Who was there that did not figure on the list of her lovers? |
44034 | Whom are you so anxious to please, my bright boy? |
44034 | Why carry_ four keys_ in your pocket, like the gaoler in a comic opera, if you do not make use of them on the proper occasion? |
44034 | Why continue this custom of writing to you twice a day, when the pretext for doing so has faded from our joint lives? |
44034 | Why do you no longer desire it? |
44034 | Why must the case be adjourned for a week? |
44034 | Why then, is the reason of this gloomy and profound despair which robs me of strength and reason? |
44034 | Why, why, why am I like this, oh, my God? |
44034 | Will it ever return? |
44034 | Will she lose her reason? |
44034 | Will that be sufficient to stop the tongue of scandal? |
44034 | Will you take me back? |
44034 | Yet, have you kept your word? |
44034 | You are not jealous? |
44034 | You do forgive me, do you not? |
44034 | You remember what I used to say to you when_ Marie Tudor_ was in rehearsal? |
44034 | [ 62] Can you think of any way out of the trouble? |
44034 | [ 89] In what condition is your family? |
44034 | _ 3 p.m._ You wish me not to be anxious, not to relinquish a tussle in which I am unarmed? |
44034 | _ June 3rd, 5.30 p.m., 1841._ Where shall I begin, my love? |
44034 | _ Monday, 6 p.m., April 15th, 1839._ Why is it, my little beloved, that you always seem so jealous? |
44034 | _ Monday, 8 p.m., September._ Are you proposing to cut out all the dandies and bloods of the capital? |
44034 | _ Saturday, 1.30 p.m., April 11th( 1835)._ Why were you so smart just now? |
44034 | _ Saturday, 6.30 p.m., August 20th, 1842._ I am a strange creature-- at least you think so, do you not, beloved? |
44034 | _ Sunday, 5.45 p.m., January 21st, 1838._ Must it always be my lot to wait, dearly beloved? |
44034 | _ Wednesday, 4.30 p.m., September 13th, 1843._ Where are you? |
44034 | and you love me as much as ever? |
44034 | who is caught? |
18684 | A transcendentalist, eh? 18684 Ah,"he exclaimed, addressing Mrs. Culpepper dramatically,"what better proof would you have of our brotherhood than our common bondage to you? |
18684 | All right, General-- all right; what can I do for you? |
18684 | And do you love me? |
18684 | And it will gut you? |
18684 | And let the bank bust and the farmers slide? |
18684 | And take it from the bank you''ve just got done robbing of everything but the wall- paper? |
18684 | And then what? |
18684 | And they are not going to have it? |
18684 | And what did she say? |
18684 | And what will that be? |
18684 | And when the gardener puts us away for our winter''s sleep? |
18684 | And you forged his note,--and are carrying it? |
18684 | And you got Brownwell to sign a lot of accommodation paper there at the bank? |
18684 | And you love her with all your life-- don''t you, Nealie? |
18684 | Anything new? |
18684 | Bob, did you take my gloves? |
18684 | Bob, what is it? |
18684 | But if we can''t-- if Gabe wo n''t be-- be-- well, be reasonable? 18684 But if you had a million, you could do more good with it than you are doing now, could n''t you?" |
18684 | But is it the moon? |
18684 | But now that you''ve got him, what are you going to do with him? 18684 But what''ll we do about those taxes?" |
18684 | But why? |
18684 | But you have been busy? |
18684 | But you''ll try, Molly, wo n''t you-- you''ll try? |
18684 | But, father,she said as she put her hand on his arm,"what if I do n''t want them to stand around? |
18684 | But, father-- father,exclaimed the boy,"how can I? |
18684 | Buying what? |
18684 | Ca n''t you see how you have failed? |
18684 | Ca n''t you see your failure? 18684 Delighted, sir, delighted,"exclaimed Dolan, as he rose to go;"we were going, anyway-- weren''t we, General?" |
18684 | Did he just bluff with me when he called me a boodler and threw me downstairs in the county convention? |
18684 | Did you deliver my note this morning? |
18684 | Did you find him sociable? |
18684 | Did you know it was the thirteenth? |
18684 | Do n''t know what a gallus- looking slink is, do you? 18684 Do n''t you know what''s a- happening to John?" |
18684 | Do n''t you suppose, Jake, that Mart, by circulating down there with his basket so much, encourages the people to be shiftless? 18684 Do n''t you think,"cried Barclay, as he limped down the diagonal of the rug,"that you should do something? |
18684 | Do you believe in signs? |
18684 | Do you know,he asked,"what I always remember when I hear that call? |
18684 | Do you remember the rubber ring I gave you? |
18684 | Do you see that break in the foundation, Mr. Barclay? 18684 Do you suppose he thinks he''ll win?" |
18684 | Do you suppose it would be all right? |
18684 | Do you suppose they''re engaged? |
18684 | Ever go in swimming with the horses, Senator? |
18684 | Ever have any other love affair, son? |
18684 | Father,he asked blankly,"do you know what that means?" |
18684 | For me? |
18684 | Going-- going where? |
18684 | Have n''t I got a right to lie to you if I want to? |
18684 | Have n''t you heard? |
18684 | He played the Largo well-- didn''t he? 18684 Hello-- hello-- hello,"he cried nervously,"hello-- who is this?" |
18684 | Here you, Jake Dolan,called Barclay,"what do you mean by accusing me of murdering Bob Hendricks? |
18684 | How did it happen? |
18684 | How do you figure it out, General? |
18684 | How do you like Jeanette? |
18684 | How do you like this, you old skeezicks? |
18684 | How long will you be gone, Jake? |
18684 | How''s he getting on? |
18684 | How,he asked in his thick asthmatic voice, mushy with emotion,"how in the world did this happen, John? |
18684 | I think she needs me, dear; wo n''t you come, too? |
18684 | I was just thinking whether we had potatoes enough to make hash for breakfast; have we, Molly? |
18684 | If the moon is off there, three or thirty or three hundred million miles away in the sky, where has it been these forty years? 18684 In the children-- at school?" |
18684 | Is Adrian better? |
18684 | Is he? |
18684 | Is it crooked, Neal? |
18684 | Is it not so? |
18684 | Is it so hopeless as that? |
18684 | Is that all? |
18684 | Is that so? |
18684 | Is this you, Nealie Ward? |
18684 | It''s typhoid for my poor who died like sheep last year,she cried,"or my good name and yours, is it, Bob? |
18684 | Jane,he asked suddenly,"Jane-- when does a man begin to grow old? |
18684 | Jeanette,he cried so suddenly that it startled her,"are you still moping after Neal Ward? |
18684 | Jeanette,he said that night at dinner,"where''s my shot- gun?" |
18684 | John, how''s your ma going to get on without you? 18684 John--"Molly Brown well hesitated, and then took courage and cried:"Wo n''t you-- won''t you for Ellen''s sake? |
18684 | Let me tell you; do you remember the day you called me up into your office and asked me to hold Adrian in town to save the wheat company? 18684 Let who in?" |
18684 | Lige,began Barclay,"did you tell Adrian of that note last night?" |
18684 | Martin, did John Barclay make you invite that woman to your house-- that Bemis woman? |
18684 | Molly dear,began the mother again,"ca n''t you write to Bob to- morrow and urge him to stay-- for me? |
18684 | Mornin'', Johnnie-- how does your corporocity sagashiate this mornin''? |
18684 | Mrs. Dorman is putting new awnings on the rear windows of her store-- did you get that? |
18684 | My God, boys, have n''t you heard-- haven''t you heard? |
18684 | Neal,asked Barclay, as Mrs. Brownwell left the room,"how old are you? |
18684 | Neal,she asked finally,"what do you put in those letters? |
18684 | No, father,she answered simply, and continued,"What can I do with all that money?" |
18684 | No-- but do you want to know who did say it? |
18684 | Now, General, will you let me do a little of this talking? |
18684 | Now, another thing-- you got Brownwell to lend the colonel that money? |
18684 | Oh, all right-- it''s you, John? 18684 Oh, father, why did n''t you come in?" |
18684 | Oh, that''s all right, Molly-- what is it? |
18684 | Oh, you were, were you? |
18684 | Oh,said the colonel, and then panted a moment before asking,"Has any one told you how it happened?" |
18684 | Oh-- I do n''t know,replied the other from his enchanted world and then asked absently,"Why?" |
18684 | Papa, how much money has John? |
18684 | Rather leaves us in the air-- doesn''t it? |
18684 | Robert Hendricks,asked the colonel, as he bored his deep black eyes into the younger man,"did you know about that option in the wheat land mortgage? |
18684 | Say, Jane,he exclaimed,"was n''t that''Marche Triomphante to- night great?" |
18684 | Shall we go to bed now, dear? 18684 She stood staring at me for one dreadful minute, and then she asked,''How did he die, Philemon?'' |
18684 | So he says seventy thousand is too much for the company and me to owe? |
18684 | So old Watts thought I would n''t, did he? |
18684 | So that was why? 18684 So we ca n''t pay it back if we want to? |
18684 | So ye''re going to college-- ay, Johnnie? |
18684 | So you stood up for the old scoundrel, did you? |
18684 | So you think John Barclay could have saved Bob Hendricks''life, do you, Oscar? |
18684 | So you want me to get off, do you? |
18684 | Tell me, Uncle Watts,she asked,"why did you make such a long poem about such a short girl?" |
18684 | That''s it, only--"But suppose some one finds it out? |
18684 | That''s just what I''m a- comin''to,--the Priest or the Levite? |
18684 | That''s not much-- who else? |
18684 | The colonel''s a funny old rooster-- isn''t he? |
18684 | They did? |
18684 | Tired of it? |
18684 | To the lady herself? |
18684 | Too young for what? |
18684 | Tough-- wasn''t it? |
18684 | Turn tail, will you, my little man? 18684 Very hard up?" |
18684 | Was he going with Jane Mason then, Watts,--I forget? |
18684 | Was it that or lie, John? |
18684 | Watts,asked Barclay, after the others had gone, and the little man at the bench did not speak,"Watts, what''s got into the people of this country? |
18684 | Watts,cried Barclay,"what do you think about it-- you, your own self, what do you think way down in your heart?" |
18684 | We do n''t know much, do we? |
18684 | Well, Adrian,she answered,"this is the end, I suppose?" |
18684 | Well, General, what''s the trouble? |
18684 | Well, Mart said,''Where''re the men they caught-- won''t they help?'' 18684 Well, children,"she said, as she stood by the Wards at their work,"preparing your miracles?" |
18684 | Well, did John give you back the mortgage, father? |
18684 | Well, mother-- what is it? |
18684 | Well, my dear Miss Nancy,he exclaimed,"when did you get religion?" |
18684 | Well, what are you going to do about it? |
18684 | Well, where does Watts come in? |
18684 | Well, why does n''t she send this man about his business? |
18684 | Well, why not? |
18684 | Well,asked the elder man, tentatively,"how does mother stand on Jeanette?" |
18684 | Well,he said to Lycurgus Mason as the old man reached for his watch,"how about it?" |
18684 | Well,he said, and hesitated a moment,"well, Nellie, I suppose you''re still waiting?" |
18684 | Well,returned Hendricks,"he borrowed a lot fifteen years ago or such a matter; why?" |
18684 | Well,said Barclay, turning toward his visitor brusquely,"why wo n''t you renew that accommodation paper for me again?" |
18684 | Well,said Mrs. Barclay, as they pulled up the bank of the Sycamore for home,"I suppose it will be you and Molly next, Bob?" |
18684 | Well-- don''t that beat the Jews? 18684 Well-- what if he does know it?" |
18684 | What about Neal-- how does he feel? |
18684 | What are you going to do for furniture? |
18684 | What are you going to do to Bob? |
18684 | What are you going to say, John? |
18684 | What car? |
18684 | What did he say? |
18684 | What did she say? |
18684 | What did they do? |
18684 | What did you do? 18684 What do they say?" |
18684 | What do you mean? |
18684 | What do you think? |
18684 | What meeting? |
18684 | What then? |
18684 | What time in the seventies? |
18684 | What would you have them do with the money when they get it,he growled,"burn it?" |
18684 | What''s the matter with you, Watts? |
18684 | What''s the news with you, boy? |
18684 | What''s the trouble, comrade-- what''s wrong? |
18684 | What''s this, Jake-- what''s this I hear? |
18684 | What-- none of the mince pie, John? 18684 What?" |
18684 | What? |
18684 | What? |
18684 | When? |
18684 | Who else? |
18684 | Who said so? |
18684 | Who told you,he asked,"who told you?" |
18684 | Who was it? |
18684 | Who''s it about? |
18684 | Why do n''t you go to her, Neal, and tell her? |
18684 | Why do n''t you? |
18684 | Why not? |
18684 | Why not? |
18684 | Why, did you lose them? |
18684 | Why, no, of course not, father-- why should he? |
18684 | Why, our car? |
18684 | Why,asked Barclay,"what''s it to us? |
18684 | Why-- why-- why? |
18684 | Why? |
18684 | Why? |
18684 | Widder who? |
18684 | Will Henry Schnitzler be stiff- necked about his monument there by the gate? |
18684 | Will it? |
18684 | Will you? |
18684 | Yes, but then, John-- what then? |
18684 | Yes, but what, John Barclay-- what? |
18684 | Yes, probably,replied the general, and asked,"Does she intend to marry him, do you think?" |
18684 | You are n''t fooling me, are you, John? |
18684 | You could n''t explain it to her, I suppose? |
18684 | You have n''t a little elderberry wine, have you, mother? |
18684 | You know he loves you, do n''t you, dear? |
18684 | You know what I think, father-- you know very well, do n''t you? |
18684 | You mean that I''ve got to pay as I go, or Providence will keep books on me and foreclose? |
18684 | You mean the East End Mission? 18684 You''re afraid of my name-- now?" |
18684 | You''re not getting along fast enough, eh? |
18684 | ''A what?'' |
18684 | ''And do n''t need the money at all?'' |
18684 | ''And him president of the Golden Belt Elevator Co.?'' |
18684 | ''And you call that smart?'' |
18684 | ''Did he save her?'' |
18684 | ''Fine?'' |
18684 | ''How much is it?'' |
18684 | ''Lige,''I said,''was Judge So- and- So a pretty honest judge?'' |
18684 | ''What fer-- in the name of all the saints?'' |
18684 | ''What orphan asylum?'' |
18684 | ''You know they found Trixie Lee guilty this afternoon in the justice court, do n''t you?'' |
18684 | 2?" |
18684 | A moment later he added,"Do n''t you see, son-- don''t you see, Neal?" |
18684 | A silence fell, and the woman broke it with a cry:"Oh, John Barclay, John Barclay, must your traffic in souls reach your own flesh and blood? |
18684 | A woman asked,"And where were you wounded, son?" |
18684 | After a moment Hendricks''answer was:"Then he has just gone; and will not be back?" |
18684 | After a pause he added,"Would you like to go back?" |
18684 | Again the grin came over his face, and at the end of a pause Barclay said:--"Well, if not, what then?" |
18684 | All good stories begin so-- don''t they? |
18684 | An hour has passed now, while we have watched the restless eyes at their work, and what has passed with the hour? |
18684 | An impulse loosened his tongue, and he asked:--"Why not? |
18684 | An''old Cap Lee of the Red Legs was her father; did you know that, Jake?'' |
18684 | And I says,''D''ye know what I''m goin''to do when I get home?'' |
18684 | And Molly Culpepper replied,"When are you going, Bob?" |
18684 | And a man who should be young for twenty years yet, who should have been useful for thirty years-- and now what is he? |
18684 | And as the wife stroked his head she whispered,"How that prayer has been answered, John-- dear, has n''t it?" |
18684 | And has n''t John told you of the plan he''s worked out for Bob to go to New York this winter?" |
18684 | And if we were all sane all the time, how would the angels ever get babies into the world at all, at all? |
18684 | And now, John, is n''t this like Jane?" |
18684 | And oh, my dear, my dear--"he broke out,"what profiteth a man if he gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? |
18684 | And so I say, why should I put my head in a noose here in your bank-- what''s the use? |
18684 | And so long as we are here in the court- house, and the custodian is gone, would you like to step in and see Martin Culpepper across the hall? |
18684 | And that is why Miss Barclay called"876, Please-- yes, 8- 7- 6;"and then said:"Hello-- hello, is this 876? |
18684 | And the man replied:"Me? |
18684 | And then Neal, suddenly finding the language of his line back to Adam, looks up to say,"Oh, yes, I forgot-- but have you read''Monsieur Beaucaire''?" |
18684 | And then at last-- Tears? |
18684 | And then-- What, tears? |
18684 | And they support rather short legs-- my goodness, of course she has legs-- did you think her shoes were pinned to her over- skirt? |
18684 | And we''re entitled to a good round inventor''s profit, ai n''t we? |
18684 | And what would she have made of him? |
18684 | And when the man affirmed Barclay''s theory, he asked,"How long does it take it to get down here?" |
18684 | And when they said he would be shot, he answered again,"Vell, vot of it?" |
18684 | Anthony?" |
18684 | Are n''t you a married woman of lawful age? |
18684 | Are they, then, tears of repentance? |
18684 | Are we carrying his account nine thousand short on our books, and making his pass- book balance?" |
18684 | Are you full of remorse and going to turn state''s evidence?" |
18684 | Are you going to let them pay them, or are you going to make them sell under that option that you''ve got in them?" |
18684 | Are you well taken care of at the hotel?" |
18684 | Barclay felt the man''s attention, and whirling about in his chair licking an envelope flap, he said,"Well, General-- what''s on your mind?" |
18684 | Barclay laughed and asked,"Well, Mr. Brownwell, as between friends may I ask how''circumstances''are getting on?" |
18684 | Barclay listened to her story, and then wheeled in his chair and exclaimed,"Can Adrian publish that book?" |
18684 | Barclay looked up quickly, caught the young man''s abashed smile, and asked,"Does she know you''re here?" |
18684 | Barclay nodded at the general without speaking, and Dolan said:--"Cool, ai n''t it? |
18684 | Barclay put it on the table before Hendricks and looked steadily at him a minute before saying,"Bob-- see that note?" |
18684 | Barclay was about to laugh, but instead he said,"Well, you are not a quitter; why do n''t you go ahead and get her?" |
18684 | Barclay was anxious to get back to his"Evening Star"and his dream of power, so he asked,"Why, Molly, what''s wrong?" |
18684 | Barclay, sitting at his desk, playing with a paper- weight, snarled back:"Why do n''t you get in the market yourself, if you think I''ve sold you out? |
18684 | Barclay?" |
18684 | Barclay?--for himself? |
18684 | Before he could parry Barclay assaulted him again with:"Starving to death, eh? |
18684 | Bemis continued:"Brace up, John-- what''s turned you baby when we''ve got the whole thing won? |
18684 | Bob''s eyes and Molly''s met, and the man shuddered at what he saw of pathos and yearning, and he said:"Well, why not? |
18684 | Brownwell?" |
18684 | But are you sorry enough to go to jail a pauper, like father, or wander over the earth alone, like Bob, or come and beg for money, like me?" |
18684 | But did you hear that fine, trembling, animal whine-- that cry that wrenched itself out of set teeth like a living thing? |
18684 | But does that settle the question of who''s got the moon-- me or the cosmos-- as the poets call it?" |
18684 | But his only reply when they told him he was a fool was,"Vell, vot of it?" |
18684 | But if we were not all stark mad sometimes, how would the world go round? |
18684 | But in a moment from across his desk the daughter spoke,"Why do n''t you go to John or Carnine, father?" |
18684 | But is it? |
18684 | But what am I going to do about him, sir-- the contemptible scamp who publicly sued his own wife''s father? |
18684 | But who cares now what Lincoln said? |
18684 | But why? |
18684 | But, dearie-- don''t you see she thinks if she does, her father and mother will lose the big house, and Bob will be involved in some kind of trouble? |
18684 | By the way, General, what did you get?" |
18684 | By the way, did you ever meet me?" |
18684 | Ca n''t they be free and independent?" |
18684 | Ca n''t you make him straighten things out?" |
18684 | Ca n''t you see it would ruin her, you fool? |
18684 | Ca n''t you see it, Nealie-- can''t you see it? |
18684 | Ca n''t you see it?" |
18684 | Ca n''t you see, John, he''s my boy, and that I have a right to know?" |
18684 | Can you buy that with your millions piled on millions?" |
18684 | Can you?" |
18684 | Colonel Culpepper dropped a"Why?" |
18684 | Colonel, has the jury come to a verdict yet?" |
18684 | Come on, my dear-- isn''t it very late?" |
18684 | Could n''t we help him?" |
18684 | Culpepper?" |
18684 | Dear, do n''t you see the child does n''t realize it? |
18684 | Did I sell her, Bob, did I sell my little girl?" |
18684 | Did he take it? |
18684 | Did it come because outside the band had halted and was playing that old song to serenade Watts McHurdie? |
18684 | Did she break it or did you? |
18684 | Did you know that?" |
18684 | Do n''t the majority rule in this country?" |
18684 | Do n''t you remember me bending over the town wash- tub when you were a child, Johnnie? |
18684 | Do n''t you see Nellie''s all ready and waitin''--just fairly honin'', and longin'', I may say, for a home and a place to begin to live?" |
18684 | Do n''t you see? |
18684 | Do n''t you think that''s long enough?" |
18684 | Do n''t you, Molly?" |
18684 | Do you happen to know who I am?" |
18684 | Do you love him? |
18684 | Do you remember, Bob, that day at Wilson''s Creek after we got separated in the Battle I ran into a pile of cavalry writhing in a road? |
18684 | Do you see?" |
18684 | Do you think I''m a fool?" |
18684 | Do you understand?" |
18684 | Do you understand?" |
18684 | Do you want me to go and get him for you?" |
18684 | Does n''t that sound good to you?" |
18684 | Dolan looked at the stars, while a pipe and a cigar had burned out before Hendricks spoke,"Well, chatterbox?" |
18684 | Each of the four stanzas began with two lines that asked:"Oh, do n''t you remember the old river road, that ran through the sweet- scented wood?" |
18684 | Eh, ma?" |
18684 | Eh?" |
18684 | Even the scientists do not know the material things that the atoms radiate, so why should we be asked to define the essence of souls? |
18684 | Finally Jeanette asked,"And are we poor, father-- poor?" |
18684 | Finally she said,"Johnnie, play me''Ever of Thee I''m fondly Thinking,''wo n''t you, before you go?" |
18684 | Finally, when the man seemed a little harsh in his questions, the boy''s eyes brimmed and he said:"Whur''d my pa be if he was alive to- day? |
18684 | For all of us? |
18684 | For if our waking hours are passed in worlds so wide apart, who shall know where we walk in dreams? |
18684 | For the sordid thorns that pierced our bleeding hearts-- what are they but ashes to- day, blown on the winds of yesterday?" |
18684 | For was she not a Junior at the state university, if you please? |
18684 | For what was you conniving against the big man? |
18684 | Generally the father had risen and walked away, but that night he turned upon her and said:--"Jeanette, do n''t you like to be rich? |
18684 | Has it made you happy, John? |
18684 | Have n''t the courts decided that that kind of an option is a sale-- clear through to the United States Supreme Court?" |
18684 | Have n''t you enough money now?" |
18684 | Have n''t you enough without selling her into Egypt, too? |
18684 | Have you forgotten the''Bohemian Girl''and those Schubert songs?" |
18684 | Have you got any fellow in your office who can fix up a charter that will let us buy and sell grain, and also sell the Barclay Economy Strip?" |
18684 | Have you heard of any villas for the Barclays in Newport? |
18684 | He added slowly,"You understand?" |
18684 | He began to palaver, but his mother cut him short, as she exclaimed:--"Why do n''t you let Him in, John?" |
18684 | He began,"Do n''t you think, mother, I have suffered--""Suffered, boy? |
18684 | He chewed for a minute in peace and chuckled,"Well-- Bob, I suppose you''ll be next?" |
18684 | He cried out,"Yes, Ellen, do you-- do you?" |
18684 | He cried,"Is it really you, Jeanette-- is it you?" |
18684 | He did not speak for a long time, and then he asked,"Did we whip''em?" |
18684 | He drummed on his desk a moment and then asked,"Does your father know how much it is?" |
18684 | He drummed with his fingers for a moment before continuing,"I suppose you got about half of those contracts, did n''t you?" |
18684 | He explained,"The branch in her room rings when we use this one,"and then asked,"Do you know where he is-- at home or at the office?" |
18684 | He folded his hands on his knees, and they sat silent for a time, and then he asked in a dead voice,"You know I love you-- still, do n''t you, Molly?" |
18684 | He handed her the letter addressed to Mrs. Brownwell, and then asked,"Is the sister about?" |
18684 | He laughed quietly, and asked,"Jane, do you remember that old red braid?" |
18684 | He looked at her closely, and she coloured and shook her head vehemently as she replied:"Oh, no, father-- no, ca n''t you get it somewhere else? |
18684 | He looked at the driver moving away, and then the boy''s face set hard and he said:"Well-- what''s the use of blubbering over him? |
18684 | He paused a moment, and the girl asked,"Tell me, John, will the wheat straighten things up at the bank?" |
18684 | He put his arms about his wife and his daughter tenderly, and said before they started up the street,"It never grows old-- does it?" |
18684 | He put out his fat hand, and said:--"Robert, will you come into the back room with me a moment? |
18684 | He shakes his head, and finally she asks,"When?" |
18684 | He squeezed her hand and cried out in exultation,"It''s great, is n''t it-- the finest mill on this planet, my dear-- do you realize that?" |
18684 | He took hold of John''s arm as he pleaded,"Johnnie-- boy-- Johnnie, do you understand?" |
18684 | He took it, glanced at it a moment, and then said:"I''m no good at translating another man''s figures-- how is it in short?--Right down to bed- rock?" |
18684 | Hendricks did not reply at once, and the colonel broke forth:"Bob Hendricks, why did you and my little girl quarrel? |
18684 | Hendricks picked up the note, and after examining it a moment, asked quickly,"John, is that Gabe''s signature?" |
18684 | Hendricks?" |
18684 | Hendricks?" |
18684 | Hendricks?" |
18684 | Hendricks?" |
18684 | Here I am a man climbing up my sixties, and when have I seen the moon? |
18684 | Here is a case where might and right conflict-- how about it? |
18684 | Here you are, fifty- four years old, and what have you done? |
18684 | How can I?" |
18684 | How could he, Aunt Molly-- how could he?" |
18684 | How did he do it?" |
18684 | How did he know? |
18684 | How did it happen?" |
18684 | How do we know so many things in this world that are neither seen nor heard? |
18684 | How long ago did he leave?" |
18684 | How would visions in thin air congeal into facts, how would the aspirations of the race make history? |
18684 | How would you like me to take your girl and blacken her heart and teach her the wiles of the outcasts? |
18684 | How would you like that? |
18684 | How''s that?" |
18684 | How''s that?" |
18684 | I knew your secret and you--""My secret,"said Adrian,"my secret?" |
18684 | I mean some one of consequence?" |
18684 | I says:''He does, does he? |
18684 | I seem to feel you now, dear soul-- did the music fling your spirit free for a second till it touched my own? |
18684 | I shall play my hand out-- and hearts are trumps-- are they not?" |
18684 | I wonder why?" |
18684 | If we were not all mad sometimes, who would make our dreams come true? |
18684 | In a moment he asked,"Well, Jeanette, what do you think of it?" |
18684 | In a moment he was saying,"So you have not heard, are unaware, entirely ignorant, in point of fact, of my misfortunes?" |
18684 | In the seat by Barclay was a cigar- box, and Lycurgus cut in, before John could speak, with,"Well, which is it?" |
18684 | In the years they had been apart a thousand things had stirred in their hearts to say at this time, yet all their voices spoke was,"Well, Molly?" |
18684 | Is it as good as Belva Lockwood''s? |
18684 | Is it material power you want? |
18684 | Is it not sweet?'' |
18684 | Is it your world or mine?" |
18684 | Is it, Bob?" |
18684 | Is n''t he selling his soul to the devil by bits? |
18684 | Is n''t it a little unusual? |
18684 | Is n''t it all a myth? |
18684 | Is n''t it odd that I should hear that song, and yet not hear it, and have it running through my mind?" |
18684 | Is n''t that fine, John?" |
18684 | Is that the way, John?" |
18684 | Is that your idea?" |
18684 | Is there any confidence in God''s world so sacred as your duty to mankind? |
18684 | Is there any tie, even that of your wife, so sacred as that which binds you to humanity? |
18684 | Is this you, Aunt Molly? |
18684 | It''s funny, ai n''t it-- the way we all pick big ones-- we sawed- offs"? |
18684 | Jane paused a moment and added:"Did you notice the colonel? |
18684 | Jeanette asked,"Where was the car?" |
18684 | John worked at it a moment and handed it to her with,"Why?" |
18684 | Johnnie Barclay wired him to leave the dump up in the City and come down here, and what for, do you think? |
18684 | Judge Bemis-- say, that sounds all right, does n''t it?" |
18684 | Leave it where it is-- in the shape of securities and stocks and credits-- what will it do? |
18684 | Let''s get back to the settlement-- fix them up and bring them over to the bank this morning, will you?" |
18684 | Look at it, my boy-- what are you suffering for? |
18684 | Lost your grip-- going back to Alabama with the banjo on your knee, are you?" |
18684 | Lycurgus fumbled under the box lid for a cigar as he got into the buggy, and repeated:"Mother needs me, eh? |
18684 | Make him a devil worshipper?" |
18684 | McHurdie flashed his yellow- toothed smile upon his friend and replied,"Or less than one?" |
18684 | Me?" |
18684 | Men say:"How can these things be-- if might makes right? |
18684 | Mollie Brownwell looked at him with hard eyes for a moment, and then asked,"What did Neal do?" |
18684 | Mrs. Brownwell turned in to the sidewalk and called,"Neal, can you run over to the house a moment this evening?" |
18684 | My gracious, Martin, how could you?" |
18684 | Neal Ward, sitting in his room, heard Barclay say:"What kind of a damn bunco game were you fellows putting up on me in 1900? |
18684 | Neal,"she asked, looking earnestly into his face,"why do you write to Jeanette Barclay every day of your life and not mail the letters?" |
18684 | No, girls never did that in their grandmothers''days, so of course who would imagine they would do so now? |
18684 | Now Adam said,"Have you heard the new song that the morning stars are singing together?" |
18684 | Now who did they vote against? |
18684 | Now why?" |
18684 | Now you would n''t think he''d do that for old Mart, would you? |
18684 | Now, General, what do you owe?" |
18684 | Now, Neal-- why?" |
18684 | Observe any understudies for Jane around the place? |
18684 | Oh, Bob-- Bob, I told you I was unworthy-- now do you understand?" |
18684 | Oh, Nealie, Nealie-- do you love her that much-- that you take your heart and your life to her without hope or without sign or answer every day?" |
18684 | Once as the morning dawned he asked the nurse whom he met in the hall,"Is it typhoid?" |
18684 | Other girls in the dining room of the Thayer House were rattling the dinner dishes and singing"Sweet Belle Mahone"and"Do you love me, Molly Darling?" |
18684 | Ought you to do that? |
18684 | Over and over he sang it and exclaimed between breaths:"Say-- ain''t that fine? |
18684 | Perhaps both are right-- who knows? |
18684 | Presently he rose, and stood before Ward and spoke rather harshly:"What I am going to do is this--? |
18684 | Say, what did she say to that?" |
18684 | See any yachts on the Sycamore? |
18684 | Sells mud mixed with oatmeal?'' |
18684 | Shall the curtain go up now? |
18684 | Shall we open the great iron door, and go into the cell room? |
18684 | She answered the question of his eyes, rocking her body as she spoke,"Bob-- do you understand now?" |
18684 | She flushed and cried,"Ca n''t you find some way for father to borrow the money and pay Mr. Brownwell-- now that your wheat is turning out so well?" |
18684 | She hesitated and cried,"Why are we so stupid now-- now when every second counts?" |
18684 | She knew that she would say,"I am not worthy-- not worthy any more-- Bob, do you understand?" |
18684 | She looked at her chair arm and asked,"Did you know they had n''t bloomed?" |
18684 | She looked up at him with the pallid face stained with fresh tears and asked,"I have-- I have-- haven''t I, John, have n''t I?" |
18684 | She put her hand on the rock between them, and said,"You remember that night when you went away before?" |
18684 | She puts nuts in hers-- I''ve eaten it; do you like it with nuts in it?" |
18684 | She said,"Do n''t you think it''s getting late?" |
18684 | She stood a moment looking out of the window and cried,"Oh, John, John, is n''t there some way out-- isn''t there, John?" |
18684 | She turned to leave him, and he cried:--"My dear, my dear-- why do n''t you go to him?" |
18684 | She was a stranger to the town, and she said to him,"What does the doctor tell you?" |
18684 | So he asked,"Are you worried about money matters, General?" |
18684 | Some one in the line asks the man,"Where''s Price?" |
18684 | Something was working under McHurdie''s belt, for Bob could hear it chuckling as he chewed:"Was n''t she a buster? |
18684 | Suffered? |
18684 | Tears for Mr. Barclay? |
18684 | That day last week Phil Ward-- who was he, anyway? |
18684 | The Wards watched her as she strode down the hill, and finally as he bent to his work the general asked:--"Lucy, what does she think of John?" |
18684 | The boy leaned awkwardly toward her and their hands met on the rock, and he withdrew his as he asked,"Do you-- do you?" |
18684 | The colonel slapped his right hand on his knee and exclaimed:"Watts McHurdie-- what''s the matter with you, man? |
18684 | The colonel''s voice broke as he added:"In God''s name, Bob, tell me-- did I sell Molly? |
18684 | The general, writing at his desk, asked,"Who?" |
18684 | The girl gasped:--"Why, John Barclay,--it ai n''t no such thing-- does your ma know it?" |
18684 | The girl shook her head and cried,"But how could he?" |
18684 | The girl stared at her and asked:"Why, Aunt Molly-- what is it? |
18684 | The girl stepped to the toe mark and cried,"What?" |
18684 | The girl was digging in a crevice for a stone and said,"Can you get that out?" |
18684 | The girl''s face blanched, and she looked at the floor and spoke,"And Bob-- when can he come back?" |
18684 | The madame and I,"with a flourish of his cane,"came to that agreement early, eh, my dear, eh?" |
18684 | The man blinked a moment at the lights and looked toward his wife, who was busy at a table, as he said:"Who? |
18684 | The men whom you bought and paid for do n''t stay bought-- do they, my boy? |
18684 | The old man sank into it and looked helplessly into the drawn hard face of the younger man and sighed,"Well, John?" |
18684 | The son looked up from the picture and said,"And you know, father, what the world would think of me-- a spy, an informer-- an ingrate?" |
18684 | The thing seemed to drive her mad by its insistence-- a horrible racking thing that all but shook her, and she chattered at it:"Why not? |
18684 | The two men stared at each other like growling dogs for a moment, and then Barclay turned away with,"What is there in the typhoid talk?" |
18684 | Then Mr. Dolan, listening in the next room, heard this:"You say Judge Bemis phoned to him? |
18684 | Then added:"Molly dear, will you bring me my overcoat-- please?" |
18684 | Then automatically he heard himself say,"Oh, Molly, can you run up a minute?" |
18684 | Then he added,"What does your mother think of Bob?" |
18684 | Then he asked in a low tone, as one who had fear in his heart:"Do you recognize me? |
18684 | Then he put his head forward, and whispered confidentially:--"What''d you ruther do or go a- fishing?" |
18684 | Then he said,"Funny, ai n''t it?" |
18684 | Then she cried out,"Oh, father, I can''t-- I can''t--"After a moment she turned and looked at him, and asked,"Would you? |
18684 | Then she faced the boy and said,"What is it?" |
18684 | Then she looked at him a long second and said,"Do you remember years ago at the Frye boy''s party-- when we were little tots, and I chose you?" |
18684 | Then she says,"Is this long enough-- do you want it back now?" |
18684 | Then something throbbed in his brain and made him say:--"So you''d like to hear Gilmore, too?" |
18684 | Then whose was it? |
18684 | There is a silence, and then he risks it-- and the thing he has been trying to say comes out,"I wonder if you will do something for me, Jeanette?" |
18684 | There they sat down, and Jeanette began--"Neal said he told you about the ring?" |
18684 | There was a long pause while Watts screwed up his courage to say,"Still kind of thinking about that preacher?" |
18684 | There was a pause for a reply; but none came; then the voice said,"Are you there, Mr. Hendricks-- do you hear me?" |
18684 | There''s Watts over there in the next cot; he got a little scratch too-- didn''t you, Watts?" |
18684 | There''s no law against the railroads that ship our stuff buying the Economy Door Strip, is there? |
18684 | These county attorneys and attorneys- general seem to delight in it-- now why? |
18684 | They had ridden half an hour without speaking when Bob Hendricks said,"Awful fine girls-- aren''t they?" |
18684 | They stood silent in the joy of their ecstacy for a long minute, then he asked gently:"Do you understand, Molly,--do you understand? |
18684 | They were but a few yards from the forks of the road, and as they came to it she said:--"Boy-- which way to town?" |
18684 | Think it will freeze?" |
18684 | This I know, only she is proud-- proud with the Barclay pride; but in her heart she loves you; is not that enough?'' |
18684 | Turn state''s evidence, Jake Dolan, and tell the truth-- what becomes of me?" |
18684 | Walking to them quickly, and lifting her arms, as she neared the squaw''s pony, the white woman said:--"Why, Johnnie Barclay, where have you been?" |
18684 | Ward and Bemis ran up, motioning the men back, and Ward cried,"Shall we help you save your stock and barn, or must we fight?" |
18684 | Ward motioned the colonel to a seat and asked impatiently,"Ashamed?" |
18684 | Was it an era of music, or is childhood the period of music? |
18684 | Was it not natural that Watts McHurdie should dread the white light that beats upon the throne of the sheriff''s office? |
18684 | Was it not natural that lilacs should grow in April? |
18684 | Was n''t that funny?" |
18684 | Was n''t your sainted father a Democrat, boy, a Democrat like me, sir,--a Union Democrat in point of fact?" |
18684 | Was that true?" |
18684 | Watts dropped his instantly, and exclaimed,"You''re a terrible handsome girl, Nellie--? |
18684 | Watts had gone into the store to wait on a customer, and the woman, seeing the man''s anguish, came to him and said:"Why, John, what is it? |
18684 | Watts lays down the paper and wipes his spectacles, and finally he says:--"And Neal wrote that?" |
18684 | We did n''t kill Hendricks, did we? |
18684 | Well, I saved you, did n''t I?" |
18684 | Well, now, ai n''t that just like a woman, taking a man from his work in the middle of the day? |
18684 | What am I doing that I have n''t been doing?" |
18684 | What am I going to do?" |
18684 | What are you doing back here? |
18684 | What are you going to do for him? |
18684 | What are you going to name her?" |
18684 | What can a man do in a time like this-- I ask you, what can he do?" |
18684 | What could she say? |
18684 | What could they possibly have against him? |
18684 | What did I do with it? |
18684 | What did I have to do with it?" |
18684 | What did he do with it finally?" |
18684 | What do they care for the people? |
18684 | What do you think of that for brass?" |
18684 | What does she want?" |
18684 | What have I done that they should begin pounding me this way?" |
18684 | What have I done? |
18684 | What have I done? |
18684 | What have you done?" |
18684 | What indeed are sordid thorns when the"large white plumes are dancing"--what indeed? |
18684 | What is sleep, but the proof that death is but a sleep? |
18684 | What kind of a fellow is he, anyway? |
18684 | What more could an honest girl ask? |
18684 | What of it? |
18684 | What right have you got to run for state senator, anyway?'' |
18684 | What then?" |
18684 | What would you do, Robert? |
18684 | What''s got into the people? |
18684 | What''s the use of your pretending to be as bad as Lige Bemis? |
18684 | What''s this Provisions Company but a game? |
18684 | When he went out the colonel said,"What''s he going to run for this year?" |
18684 | When the awakened one saw nothing, John tried to scream, but could only gasp,"Do n''t you see Ellen-- there-- there by the table?" |
18684 | When the wolves got after you, did I come blubbering to you to lay down and take a light sentence?" |
18684 | When you get this, ca n''t you go to your great organ and play him back into consciousness and tell him Bob says good- by?" |
18684 | Where is Adrian?" |
18684 | Where is he?" |
18684 | Which of you has won his practical fight in this practical world-- his God or your God; the ideal world or the material world, boy? |
18684 | While he was jamming in a final stick, Colonel Culpepper inquired,"Well, am I an appearance or an entity?" |
18684 | Who cares to know that Cæsar was a rake, and that William the Conqueror was a robber? |
18684 | Who is he, anyway-- who got him his job? |
18684 | Who started this story?" |
18684 | Who was Robert Hendricks? |
18684 | Who, indeed? |
18684 | Why did n''t you go to Carnine or Barclay?" |
18684 | Why do n''t you invest something and make something?" |
18684 | Why do n''t you lend the old man some money?" |
18684 | Why do you suppose he''s laying off the hands at the strip factory?" |
18684 | Why do you write them at all?" |
18684 | Why not give Hally her show? |
18684 | Why not? |
18684 | Why not? |
18684 | Why not?" |
18684 | Why not?" |
18684 | Why should I accept Him?" |
18684 | Why should I have to bother about it?" |
18684 | Why should I pay a million dollars to irresponsible newspapers? |
18684 | Why should he remember the ugly farm- yard, the hard faces of the men, the straw- covered frame they called a barn, and the unpainted house? |
18684 | Why should they? |
18684 | Why, not even you, Miss Nancy-- not even you, who love tears so? |
18684 | Why? |
18684 | Why? |
18684 | Why? |
18684 | Why? |
18684 | Why?" |
18684 | Will it bring Jane back? |
18684 | Will it give Jeanette her heart''s desire, and make her happy all her life? |
18684 | Will you promise, man?" |
18684 | Wo n''t you bring yours there, too, dear? |
18684 | Would you?" |
18684 | Yes, sir-- what do you think of that? |
18684 | Yes-- is Mrs. Brownwell in? |
18684 | You ask about his funeral? |
18684 | You do? |
18684 | You got my money; that''s all right; I did n''t squeal at the assessment, did I?" |
18684 | You have enough money-- why do n''t you stop getting it and do something with it worth while?" |
18684 | You know I did-- don''t you remember?" |
18684 | and long enough for him to answer,"Why, did you lose them?" |
18684 | and to that prayer, as she said it, the something in her heart kept gibbering,"Why not? |
18684 | and"Well, Bob?" |
18684 | as you followed her through the door back to the moon- lit porch? |
18684 | asked Hendricks,"and buy back Molly with stolen money? |
18684 | asks Mart,''fine? |
18684 | celebration? |
18684 | did you know it?" |
18684 | stock?" |
18684 | was an economic necessity? |
18684 | what''s wrong?" |
34611 | ''And where was ye last night, might I axe?'' 34611 ''Can you drink whisky?'' |
34611 | ''Manson,''she said, addressing my father,''is this woman your wife?'' |
34611 | ''Mother of Pathrick,''said he,''an''did ye come down all the way in your yacht and not know Timber Island when you''d see it?'' 34611 ''Tell me, now,''he said, after I had got all the information I wanted,''have ye a berth for an old salty aboard that craft?'' |
34611 | A lubber''s mistake,quoth he; and then, after a little,"I wonder what it''s like outside?" |
34611 | A penny for your thoughts? |
34611 | After all, was it not possible to continue in the upper air? |
34611 | Ai n''t he a brick? |
34611 | And do you admire her very much? |
34611 | And does she dance well? |
34611 | And how are you? |
34611 | And how do you propose to end it? |
34611 | And how have you been since I saw you last? |
34611 | And how will you account for your absence from home? |
34611 | And it would have been possible for you, when you went to the side door, to have handed the money to some one there ready to receive it? |
34611 | And now that you must have got about as far as you can at present, how does the theory affect you? |
34611 | And shall we rig this spinnaker boom on her? |
34611 | And what about the tutor that told the stories about you? |
34611 | And what belief did you come to care about? |
34611 | And what brought you into town to- day? |
34611 | And what else did you find upon him? |
34611 | And what? |
34611 | Are you aware that you have been made a victim of in a matter where the Victoria Bank was robbed of fifty thousand dollars? |
34611 | Are you aware that you were tried this morning for stealing that money? |
34611 | Are you ready? 34611 Are you sure of it?" |
34611 | Bad news, I suppose? |
34611 | But as to your religion? |
34611 | But do n''t you think he looks as if he wished to find his next partner? 34611 But, my dear Jack, have we not been enjoying a fine view of the lake all day? |
34611 | But, my dear fellow, wo n''t she object? |
34611 | But,she said,"people who are most imperfect surely may have great happiness in their faith?" |
34611 | Can you really defeat him? 34611 Come at last, have you?" |
34611 | Could it cross the lake? |
34611 | Could it have crossed the lake yesterday? |
34611 | Could not Mr. Bean do the same every day? 34611 Credit? |
34611 | Did any person tell you to go in this way, instead of by steamer or railway? |
34611 | Did any person tell you to take your valises to the yacht club early on Wednesday morning? |
34611 | Did you ever see that waistcoat before? |
34611 | Did you ever see that waistcoat before? |
34611 | Did you examine the well? |
34611 | Did you get this other waistcoat at the same time? |
34611 | Did you issue a marriage license on, let me see, two weeks ago to- morrow-- on the 23d? |
34611 | Did you never see this old man before? |
34611 | Did you sound it? |
34611 | Do n''t you intend to make any defense or have any assistance? 34611 Do n''t you think it is pleasanter in here?" |
34611 | Do n''t you think, Geoffrey, that that would be a good thing to do? 34611 Do you find it so hard to be happy?" |
34611 | Do you find that it makes any difference? |
34611 | Do you mean the Gull Light? |
34611 | Does anybody know where Mr. Cresswell is? |
34611 | Does n''t it make me look hideous? |
34611 | Does this package look anything like the one you then saw? |
34611 | Does''anybody''include me? |
34611 | During your trial this morning I think I heard you say that the bills you saw on Hampstead''s desk were all dark- green colored? |
34611 | Gor any washstands on board? |
34611 | Got a partnership? |
34611 | Got any more toasts like this? |
34611 | Had he been speculating at all? |
34611 | Had the client any money? |
34611 | Had we not better wait, then, for the week to expire? |
34611 | Has not Jack given any notice of his intention to leave the bank? |
34611 | Have you any of it to spare? |
34611 | How are the partitions between the stalls or boxes of the different clerks in the Victoria Bank constructed? |
34611 | How are things in the bank? |
34611 | How did you make so much money to- day, father? |
34611 | How did you manage to find out all about the surroundings? |
34611 | How do I know? 34611 How long after Mr. Cresswell went out did you notice that the money was gone?" |
34611 | How long do you suppose? |
34611 | How much will you have? |
34611 | How much would you give, Miss Mackintosh? |
34611 | How much? |
34611 | How should a man be, who is on the high road to fortune? |
34611 | How''s the well? |
34611 | How- de- do, Miss Lindon? |
34611 | I can run fast, can I not? |
34611 | I hope you will not think me inquisitive? |
34611 | Is it? |
34611 | Is not this outer side door sometimes left open in hot weather? |
34611 | Is she dead, then? |
34611 | Is that all the objection? |
34611 | Is that all? |
34611 | Is that the costume you go cruising in? |
34611 | Is your cigar the olive- branch? 34611 Jack?" |
34611 | Long introductions are so tiresome, are they not? |
34611 | May I ask if you at any time during the morning left your stall? |
34611 | Money? 34611 My deah fellah,"he said,"where did you get that dreadful waistcoat?" |
34611 | My dear skipper, how can you ever get a dinner cooked in such a sea as this? 34611 Not get married, Maurice? |
34611 | Not piracy, is it? |
34611 | Not the giddy delight of walking on King Street, I hope? |
34611 | Now what was their unhappy condition? 34611 Now, why were you so generous with Mr. Hampstead''s clothes, and why should he consent to give them to the boy?" |
34611 | Now, will you be so good as to say candidly what gain you or any one else ever received from thinking in such channels as these? |
34611 | Object? 34611 Object? |
34611 | Oh, how can you go on sleeping at such a time? 34611 Oh, why do you make me do everything that is wrong? |
34611 | Oh,he said, as he rolled over on his back with his head resting in his hands,"was n''t that beautiful?" |
34611 | Only_ pro tem._, though? |
34611 | Or it would have been easy for any of the other bank officials to have taken the money? |
34611 | Perhaps you have his record written down somewhere? |
34611 | Say, dearest,he cooed into his ear,"at about what hour will this heavenly- repast be ready?" |
34611 | So you are Jonathan''s David, are you? |
34611 | So you have come back to Toronto at last? |
34611 | Spinnaker on who? 34611 Surely, Charley, you have not been gambling on Sunday?" |
34611 | That was the night of the day the fifty thousand dollars was stolen from the bank? |
34611 | The Gull? |
34611 | Then you make evolution a part of your religion? |
34611 | Then, if the door of your box was closed you could not see who came in or out of Mr. Cresswell''s stall? |
34611 | They certainly seem very devoted, do they not? |
34611 | They would be kind words in their tone, full of sympathy, words that I love to hear-- that I hear like music in my ears when you are out of sight? 34611 This package of money, as it lay, could have been seen from the public hall- way of the bank through your front wicket, could it not?" |
34611 | To- morrow? |
34611 | Was the lost money in the place you say at that time? |
34611 | Washstands? 34611 Well, I find it a little warm here, do n''t you? |
34611 | Well, Mrs. Dusenall,said Mr. Cowper thoughtfully,"I have myself, over there in the bay, a small smoke- grinder that--""A-- what?" |
34611 | Well, gentlemen, am I to proceed or not? 34611 Well, now, you wo n''t forget your promise, old lady, will you?" |
34611 | Well, what do you say, mother? |
34611 | Well, what ought I to say? |
34611 | Well, what size was the skiff he went off in? |
34611 | Well, where was I? 34611 Well, who the deuce cares for a mains''l?" |
34611 | Well-- will you all love me? |
34611 | Well? |
34611 | Wha''for? |
34611 | Wha''s matter? |
34611 | What about it? |
34611 | What about the husband? |
34611 | What are you doing there with my clothes? |
34611 | What are you thinking of, Margaret? |
34611 | What are you trying to get at now? |
34611 | What did you do with it then? |
34611 | What did you say then, Jack? 34611 What do you mean by going off this way with the ship''s boats?" |
34611 | What do you say, Margaret? |
34611 | What for? |
34611 | What has that to do with it? |
34611 | What is a spinnaker boom? 34611 What is a wise man? |
34611 | What is that, dear Geoffrey? 34611 What is there more to say?" |
34611 | What made you go off in that way? |
34611 | What news? |
34611 | What sort of a time did you have? 34611 What street is this?" |
34611 | What''s a poor kind of a joke? 34611 What''s the matter with you?" |
34611 | What''s the odds as long as you''re happy and the''rosy''is close at hand? |
34611 | What, then, becomes of the search for the unattainable after marriage? |
34611 | What? 34611 When did you see it last?" |
34611 | Where are you? |
34611 | Where did you leave the bills? |
34611 | Where were you on Wednesday night last, about one or two o''clock in the evening? |
34611 | Where''s Jack? |
34611 | Who is out there with you? |
34611 | Who is that you are bowing to? |
34611 | Who''s touching your lee- backstay? |
34611 | Why did you do that? |
34611 | Why do you give yourself so much trouble? |
34611 | Why have you and Jack not gone yet to California? |
34611 | Why not? |
34611 | Why, where are we? |
34611 | Why? |
34611 | Wo n''t she take the peak again? 34611 You are not going to tell me that?" |
34611 | You do not pretend to identify these bills yourself? |
34611 | You evidently did everything he told you? |
34611 | You have something to tell me? |
34611 | You make Buffalo the scene of your official duties? |
34611 | You mean to be tried now? |
34611 | You say that none of the yachts left the harbor yesterday? |
34611 | You wished to go away secretly? |
34611 | ''Can you tell me,''I asked,''the name of that round island over there?'' |
34611 | ''So you have been here before?'' |
34611 | ... Should I go to church, And see the holy edifice of stone, And not bethink me straight of dangerous rocks? |
34611 | A coincidence, is it not?" |
34611 | A gift? |
34611 | A man leaning over from the upper deck of the steamer cried:"What schooner is that?" |
34611 | About a quarter- past eleven o''clock Jack put his head to Geoffrey''s wicket and they whispered together: Jack said,"Time for me to be off?" |
34611 | After he had briefly described his return to Toronto with his prisoner, the crown attorney asked him:"Did you find any articles upon his person?" |
34611 | After he was sworn, Rankin asked him:"You went away last Wednesday on a schooner called the North Star?" |
34611 | An''he looks at it awful hard and sez,''Where did yer get it? |
34611 | And now I say, will you stand by me?" |
34611 | And so you are engaged?" |
34611 | And who do you think she was?" |
34611 | And who would inquire the reasons for this favoritism? |
34611 | And why should she have to mask her face and hide it from the public? |
34611 | Anything gone wrong? |
34611 | Are those your bills?" |
34611 | Are we to understand, then, that you object to novel reading on moral grounds?" |
34611 | Been here before? |
34611 | But how have you arranged everything? |
34611 | But perhaps we can manage a few more, Miss Lindon?" |
34611 | But was the happiness of Margaret''s life to be cast aside? |
34611 | But what did the detective care for his condition? |
34611 | But what had friend Maurice meant by saddling the context on him in that malevolent way? |
34611 | But what was she to do? |
34611 | But where will these beautiful possibilities be if her sin is found out? |
34611 | But, about your father? |
34611 | By the way, Geoffrey, if it is not an impertinent question for your future wife to ask, who_ was_ your grandfather?" |
34611 | By the way, how are you carrying your money?" |
34611 | Ca n''t you let her name alone? |
34611 | Charley answered that the race came off on the day after to- morrow, and, as they had to get to Toronto somehow, why not behind the steamer? |
34611 | Charley, who was steering, asked of one of the English hands, who was carefully crawling aft to take the wheel,"How''s everything forward?" |
34611 | Congratulation or balm for wounds?" |
34611 | Could he really have thought that Belial''s character was also Geoffrey''s? |
34611 | Could you favor us with the lines just preceding what you first quoted?" |
34611 | Could you not learn the manly art of kicking, as well?" |
34611 | Cresswell?" |
34611 | Cresswell?" |
34611 | D''you think I do n''t know? |
34611 | D''you think I have n''t been through the whole gamut-- from Alpha to Omaha-- with all the hemidemisemiquavers thrown in? |
34611 | Deduct the fun from their books and the shadowy plot, and what remains? |
34611 | Did Mr. Hampstead object?" |
34611 | Did either of us ever try by word or deed to improve the other? |
34611 | Did n''t you take it out of me own hands not two hours ago? |
34611 | Did not the ruder people receive the simple laws which Moses learned in Egypt? |
34611 | Did she not risk her good name for him? |
34611 | Do me credit? |
34611 | Do n''t I always do you credit?" |
34611 | Do n''t you see that I want to give you a chance? |
34611 | Do n''t you see? |
34611 | Do n''t you think so? |
34611 | Do n''t you understand?" |
34611 | Do they intend that, after all, I shall die an old maid? |
34611 | Do you assist him in his studies?" |
34611 | Do you expect us to be dumb?" |
34611 | Do you imagine that you will always be content with small pleasures?" |
34611 | Do you know Buffalo at all?" |
34611 | Do you like to be here, Nina?" |
34611 | Do you like to be here-- with me, Nina?" |
34611 | Do you not think so, Hampstead?" |
34611 | Do you see it?" |
34611 | Do you suppose I keep an inventory of prices to assist me in conversation?" |
34611 | Do you think I will allow her to step in and be blamed for what it was your whim to go in for-- risks and all?" |
34611 | Does it not seem a sweet and fitting overture to the whole oratorio of the voyage before them? |
34611 | Does not my ruin give me a right to speak? |
34611 | Filched, perchance, from the pursy coal- bins of monopoly?" |
34611 | For whom bindest thou In wreaths thy golden hair, Plain in its neatness? |
34611 | Geoffrey persisted, more gravely, in a reproachful tone;"You do n''t mean to say, Jack, that you doubt that what a clergyman says is true?" |
34611 | Geoffrey said to her:"Those rugs and cushions in the canoe look very inviting, do they not?" |
34611 | Go at once--""But Nina, darling what_ is_ the matter?" |
34611 | Going far?" |
34611 | Got back?" |
34611 | Has Her Majesty gone back on you again?" |
34611 | Has Mr. Cresswell won the prize?" |
34611 | Have I the floor, or not?" |
34611 | Have n''t you got some lions''dens that want looking after?" |
34611 | Have you a pole? |
34611 | Have you ever called upon the Lindons?" |
34611 | Have you got it there?'' |
34611 | Have you not got a lady- love, Morry, to bring along? |
34611 | He added:"Let me see-- a? |
34611 | He banged about some drawers, as if he were looking for something, and then called out:"Jack?" |
34611 | He declared Lemons would not wash himself, and he asked what should be done with him? |
34611 | He looked at the card amused, and as he scratched a long mark across all five, he drawled,"May I have the pleasure of-- some dances?" |
34611 | He said:"Can not a fellow do a decent thing once in a way without hearing from you?" |
34611 | He was saying to himself:"Why not sneak in under a jib? |
34611 | He went to him and said simply, for it was so difficult to make him understand:"Do you want to be tried now or afterward?" |
34611 | Here they rested, while Margaret, lost in the charm of the surroundings, exclaimed:"Could anything be more delightful than this?" |
34611 | How am I? |
34611 | How are you?" |
34611 | How can I tell the feelings in a young lady''s mind; the thoughts in a young gentleman''s bosom? |
34611 | How could they any longer strive to reach the longed- for haven when the mainsail of the yawl was blown away?" |
34611 | How dare you, you bad boy? |
34611 | How much did it put the old man back?" |
34611 | How much did it spoil the old man?" |
34611 | I do n''t want to interrupt you, but what do you think makes them look like that?" |
34611 | I suppose money is an element in a congregation which gentlemen of your calling do not object to?" |
34611 | I thought the Dallases lived in Rochester?" |
34611 | If I thought you did I--""Was I saying unkind things?" |
34611 | If he failed, what then? |
34611 | If not there, where was he? |
34611 | If not too much trouble, would you call here at five o''clock? |
34611 | If one could live to be two hundred years old, would it not be delightful?" |
34611 | In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt, But, being seasoned with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil? |
34611 | In religion, What dammà © d error, but some sober brow Will bless it, and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament? |
34611 | In the course of their walk Geoffrey asked, for want of something better to say:"How goes the law, Rankin? |
34611 | Is it impossible for anybody to beat the enemy?" |
34611 | Is it not enough for you to raise the devil in me, without scheming to give her trouble? |
34611 | Is it not enough that those most competent to decide have decided? |
34611 | Is it not true that we acquire knowledge as we are able to receive it? |
34611 | Is it true, Nina, that you will take me at last?" |
34611 | Is not the sea Made for the free, Land for courts and chains alone? |
34611 | Is that all the money you can spend? |
34611 | Is this the paper you found?" |
34611 | It does not look well; now, does it?" |
34611 | Jack looked a little brighter here, and said weakly:"Certainly-- why not?" |
34611 | Just so, what about him?" |
34611 | Ladies and gentlemen, have you charged your glasses?" |
34611 | Margaret said tearfully,"Oh, what can I do?" |
34611 | Margaret sat down again, her face lighted with excitement, and said all in a breath:"Was not that splendid? |
34611 | Mr. Cowper said,"How do you do, ladies and gentlemen?" |
34611 | No doubt it would, but was it safe to let the steamer leave them? |
34611 | No matter how she treated Jack, was she not honest with Geoffrey? |
34611 | No? |
34611 | Now, how much would you like this morning? |
34611 | Now, how much, my dear, will this little visit cost me, I wonder? |
34611 | Now, what do you say?" |
34611 | Oh, how oft shall he On faith, and changed gods, complain, To whom thou untried seemest fair? |
34611 | Oh, why are you so masterful?" |
34611 | Old people well?" |
34611 | Once or twice, seeing him turn toward her so attentively, she turned also and said,"Do n''t you think so?" |
34611 | One of them at last said:"Is every man here a Union man?" |
34611 | Or even under bare poles? |
34611 | Or, if the harbor was intricate, why not heave to under the mizzen and signal for a tug?" |
34611 | Ought they to cut the towline, get up a bit of a sail, and endeavor to make the north shore of the lake? |
34611 | Ought they to cut the towline, throw out the inside ballast, and cut away the mast to ease the straining at the seams? |
34611 | Perhaps you know this gentleman quite well-- and are laughing at my stupidity?" |
34611 | Pickings? |
34611 | Politics and religion excluded, of course, as in any other club?" |
34611 | Presently Charley, thoughtfully:"Say, Jack, what was the matter with that boat, any way?" |
34611 | Presently he said, in resonant tones, deep and musical:"Do you like to be here, Nina?" |
34611 | Priest, did you ever see that waistcoat before?" |
34611 | Rankin put aside Byles on Bills and arose with dignity:"What say you, henchman? |
34611 | Rankin?" |
34611 | Rankin?" |
34611 | Rankin?" |
34611 | Seizing me by the hair?" |
34611 | Shall all his aspirations toward nature go for nothing? |
34611 | She merely said, therefore, intending to drop the matter gently:"How very old the senior Mr. Hampstead must be?" |
34611 | She seemed to divine what was in his mind, for she made him feel more at ease by a gentler tone:"Alone? |
34611 | She then pretended to know nothing about the engagement, and said, with cat- like sweetness:"I thought you did not care for Margaret''s dancing much? |
34611 | She took the reins in a half- dazed way and asked vaguely:"What will I do with the horse when I get to the town?" |
34611 | So Mr. Hampstead was entertaining his friends that night?" |
34611 | So we all went in a body, as a kind o''depitation from ourselves, and says us to the old man:''Hev you guv up the nevigation of this vessel? |
34611 | Supply the office by bringing up his friends when prepared to be lavish with money?" |
34611 | Surely you do n''t think that you would conjure up the romance, do you?" |
34611 | That Toronto yacht, the Ideal, I suppose, could--""Oh, you know the Ideal?" |
34611 | That would do well enough to remove the eyesore with, but how could he row and hold the boat- hook at the same time? |
34611 | The girls looked guilty, with an expression of"Oh, have n''t we been bad?" |
34611 | The ledger- keeper from A to M, who occupied the stall beyond Jack''s, then growled out:"What''s the matter with you?" |
34611 | Then she said, after a long silence:"Would it not be as well to let Margaret wear this brown veil a few times, Geoffrey? |
34611 | Then, somehow, the conversation got back to the police court, and the question,"What is a criminal?" |
34611 | Then, turning to Geoffrey, with simplicity,"Are we engaged?" |
34611 | These experiences, leading to police- court items and police- court savages, brought up the question of"What is a savage?" |
34611 | These make no proof; the savage has none of them; and if they were proof, whither do man''s aspirations chiefly point? |
34611 | Things stirring?" |
34611 | This friendship between them-- what did it amount to? |
34611 | This time she caught herself, and asked herself why? |
34611 | To earth or to heaven?" |
34611 | Was it the formation of his jaw? |
34611 | What about the tutor? |
34611 | What about your beastly tutor? |
34611 | What are ye after, man?" |
34611 | What are you doing this afternoon? |
34611 | What are you going to compete for to- day?" |
34611 | What do you say to calling it''An Association for the Propagation of Friendly Feeling among Themselves''?" |
34611 | What do you want?" |
34611 | What if he refuses?" |
34611 | What is a special train without champagne?" |
34611 | What is it you want to- night? |
34611 | What is there definitely held out as reward by religions to make men improve? |
34611 | What is your good news? |
34611 | What is''t, but to be nothing else but mad? |
34611 | What island is that over there?'' |
34611 | What should a man be called who had in him these combinations? |
34611 | What slender youth, bedewed with liquid odors, Courts thee on roses in some pleasant cave, Pyrrha? |
34611 | What was he going to say? |
34611 | What will those women think?" |
34611 | What will you? |
34611 | What''s he talking about? |
34611 | What''s the matter with you, any way?" |
34611 | When did you turn over the new leaf? |
34611 | When everything was settled in the compartment she said in a worried nervous way to Jack:"And I suppose you will be wanting me to write to you?" |
34611 | Where does that side door lead?" |
34611 | Where had those thousands melted away to? |
34611 | Where was the harm? |
34611 | Where--?" |
34611 | Which do you wish to do?" |
34611 | Which, of the two, was the more innocent-- which, of the two, had the better right or duty to bear the brunt of the disaster? |
34611 | Who are you that you should presume to insult me? |
34611 | Who issued the warrant, and what is it about?" |
34611 | Who knows? |
34611 | Who''s forrud?" |
34611 | Why do we like his stories so much, I wonder?" |
34611 | Why do you go out of your way to say unkind things? |
34611 | Why do you talk in this strain? |
34611 | Why is it when they say he ca n''t do it that it never occurs to her that he wo n''t? |
34611 | Why plod along on microscopic savings, like a mere machine to be fed and to work? |
34611 | Why should Margaret have blushed as she did so? |
34611 | Why should she die?" |
34611 | Why should we drink them separately? |
34611 | Why will you never get married?" |
34611 | Why, dash it, I cleared fifty thousand dollars before lunch- time to- day, and now how much will you have of it?" |
34611 | Why, then, build Queen Anne houses in a place where the mind refuses to think of anything but the Indian?" |
34611 | Will you marry me?" |
34611 | Will you walk in?" |
34611 | Wo n''t you come and help me to find Sarah?" |
34611 | Would it be all the same if I went to you about Monday week?" |
34611 | Would n''t a Turkish bath satisfy you? |
34611 | Would not Jack be with her always to serve as a safeguard? |
34611 | Would not the boat leak less while proceeding in an ordinary way, instead of being dragged from wave to wave? |
34611 | Would you know the boat he went in if you saw it?" |
34611 | You always look so-- in fact, so different from that sort of person, do n''t you know?" |
34611 | You are bound now by your professional creed not to divulge, are you not?" |
34611 | You do not object to my doing this, do you?" |
34611 | You mind old Rennardson? |
34611 | You must be wrong when you say there is nothing in the world worth living for?" |
34611 | You remember Sophronia B., when she was with us? |
34611 | You study science, then, to persuade yourself that when you die you will remain teetotally dead?" |
34611 | Your maiden name was-- a?" |
34611 | ai n''t he soft?" |
34611 | and did not Christianity expand those laws by teaching the religion of sympathy? |
34611 | and throw over the French count that proposed to me in London?" |
34611 | and who is she that she should be held over my head? |
34611 | are my words but as wind that you should mock me with their emptiness? |
34611 | are they not?" |
34611 | did you not hear? |
34611 | explanations!--why are men so curious? |
34611 | is n''t it nice of me to say that? |
34611 | or have you arranged anything?" |
34611 | or what?" |
34611 | toasts at such an informal luncheon as this, Jack?" |
34611 | whither dost thou fly? |
34611 | you have n''t got a client, have you?" |
34611 | you wo n''t wash yourself?" |
47157 | Art thou come again,she cried,"to bear me to some son of earth beloved of thee, that I may serve his pleasure to my own shame? |
47157 | Him answered swift- footed Achilles:Why, dearest and most honored, hast thou hither come, to lay on me this thy behest? |
47157 | How long will ye lie idle? |
47157 | Is she heavier than she used to be? |
47157 | What mean you,they exclaim,"by scenting like a dog for blood upon this royal threshold?" |
47157 | What was Laius like? |
47157 | What,he asks,"is the value of tears now, of prayers now? |
47157 | What,says the messenger,"do you fear her because she is your mother? |
47157 | Where did you find me? |
47157 | Where now,shouts impious Jocasta,"are your oracles-- that you should slay your father? |
47157 | Who told you all this? |
47157 | Who were with him? |
47157 | Why? |
47157 | ..."What is the advantage of noble birth, if favor follow not the speech and counsel of a man?" |
47157 | A wide application may thus be given to Augustine''s passionate outcry:"Quo vobis adhuc et adhuc ambulare vias difficiles et laboriosas? |
47157 | And for whom has he done this? |
47157 | And what has he received as guerdon? |
47157 | But is all this of any value except as a machine for arranging and formulating thoughts and opinions? |
47157 | But is this all? |
47157 | But who sought to preserve the antiquated hymns to Phoebus and to Zeus, when the rites of Isis and Serapis and the Phrygian mother were in vogue? |
47157 | Can we doubt that Æschylus availed himself of this so solemn and sublime a cadence? |
47157 | Cassandra only answers:"Are not these children wailing for their death enough? |
47157 | Does Max Müller mean that language suffered, or that the thinking subject suffered through the action of the bane? |
47157 | For what do men disquiet themselves in warfare to the death, and tossing on sea- waves? |
47157 | From what glory, from what immeasurable bliss, have I now sunk to roam with mortals on this earth?" |
47157 | Had ever any other man so splendid a heritage of song allotted to him? |
47157 | Had the Greek race perceptions infinitely finer than ours? |
47157 | Had there been any one to ask the myth- maker: Who told you this strange tale? |
47157 | He asks at once:"Where was the spot?" |
47157 | He stood above the hero''s head, and spake to him:"Sleepest thou, and me hast thou forgotten, Achilles? |
47157 | Hear ye not whereby, Loving like ghouls these banquets, ye''re become To gods abominable? |
47157 | Her second- sight pierces the palace- walls, and she shrieks:"Mad woman, are you decking your husband for the bath? |
47157 | Here, again, all turns upon the question, What sort of universals? |
47157 | Hesiod poses the eternal problems: What is the origin and destiny of mankind? |
47157 | How came the gods to be our tyrants? |
47157 | How can he pipe or sing, when from the market- place he sees his own land made the prey of revellers? |
47157 | How could a poet have bewailed his loves or losses in the stately structure of the Pindaric ode? |
47157 | How darest thou descend to Hades, where dwell the thoughtless dead, the phantoms of men whose life is done? |
47157 | How did evil and pain and disease begin? |
47157 | How did it come into existence? |
47157 | How then could being have a future or a past? |
47157 | How, thinkest thou, can man of the Achaians with glad heart follow at thy word to take the field or fight the foe? |
47157 | In other words, is this, which the current hand- books tell us about Herakles, the pith of the matter as it appeared to the Greeks? |
47157 | Is Agamemnon really to be slain? |
47157 | Is everything the dawn? |
47157 | Is it a net of hell? |
47157 | Is it so? |
47157 | Is not the shield of Achilles, like Dante''s pavement of the purgatorial staircase, a forecast of the future? |
47157 | Is not their flesh, tasted by their father at their uncle''s board, my witness?" |
47157 | Need we ask ourselves again the question whether he existed, or whether he sprang into the full possession of consummate art without a predecessor? |
47157 | Now, however, we ask, In what true sense was Prometheus criminal? |
47157 | One of these concerned Helen: Did she really go to Troy? |
47157 | Say, is it to behold the violence of Agamemnon, Atreus''s son? |
47157 | See you not how foolish it is to trust to Phoebus and to auguries of birds? |
47157 | See you those children seated on the house- roof? |
47157 | Shall I, to please Agamemnon, hasten on my own end? |
47157 | Then Cassandra breaks forth afresh, this time vaticinating imminent calamity:"What is she plotting, what doom unbearable? |
47157 | Then, too, what necessity could have forced it to the birth at an earlier or later moment? |
47157 | This rouses the Chorus, and they ask:"What cry of wailing hast thou shrieked about Apollo? |
47157 | Those very woes, perhaps, may have added pathos to her charm; for had not she too suffered in the strife of men? |
47157 | Was he not, therefore, justified in saying that he had won again his rights divine, and transformed himself into a god on earth? |
47157 | Was it possible that anything so exquisite should have endured rough ravishment and borne the travail of the siege of Troy? |
47157 | We hear the voice that called--# ô houtos houtos Oidipous ti mellomen chôrein? |
47157 | What can be left unsaid of the many thoughts that ought to be expressed? |
47157 | What can be said adequate to such a theme? |
47157 | What happens to literature in this period of metamorphosis, expansion, and anarchy? |
47157 | What he saw with his fancy, could the heroic artisans have fashioned with their tools? |
47157 | What is justice? |
47157 | What is the meaning of these changes? |
47157 | What is the use of all this muscular development? |
47157 | What origin shall we seek of it? |
47157 | What shall we have? |
47157 | What was mythology before Homer? |
47157 | What, then, was this central subject, which gives the unity of a true work of art to the_ Iliad_? |
47157 | What? |
47157 | When Theodora was exhibiting her naked charms in the arena, who could commend the study of Anacreon in the school- room? |
47157 | Where and how did it grow? |
47157 | Who can endure to look upon these things?" |
47157 | Who does not know his lines upon the valley of Eurotas? |
47157 | Whose daughter was Helen? |
47157 | Why linger they in those hypæthral temple- chambers, resonant with song and gladdened by the feet of youths and maidens bearing bays? |
47157 | Why should we toil painfully upon the upward path of virtue? |
47157 | Why wear I, then, these gauds to laugh me down-- This rod, these necklace- wreaths oracular? |
47157 | Why, then, is the style called Dorian? |
47157 | Will ye not put an end to this accursed slaughter? |
47157 | Will ye not see that ye consume each other in blind ignorance of soul?" |
47157 | Yet how could he forget the grief of his bereavement, the taunts of Achilles and Thersites, and the ten years''toil at Troy endured for her? |
47157 | Yet who has read the_ Iliad_ without carrying away a distinct conception of this, the most lovable among the women of Homer? |
47157 | is everything the sun? |
47157 | is there, then, among the dead soul and the shade of life, but thought is theirs no more at all? |
47157 | or must we hence away? |
47157 | pôs gar authis an palin strateum''agoimi tauton eisapax tresas?# when she persists, he repeats# mê peith''ha mê dei#. |
47157 | what god, what hero, what man shall we make famous?" |
47157 | what is your authority for imposing it upon us? |
47157 | why prophesy my death? |
36164 | A medical connoisseur of_ your_ cultivation and experience as a matter of course put mustard poultices to the patient''s feet? 36164 And is my death a thing so very improbable after all?" |
36164 | And that horrible brute with him, I suppose, of course? |
36164 | And what should that be? |
36164 | And what, if you please, is there to make it a compulsory matter that I should go there at all? 36164 And where did_ you_ get hold of it?" |
36164 | Are you a regular practitioner, Sir? |
36164 | Are you as happy as I? |
36164 | Are you not going to stay with us? |
36164 | Are you sure you feel quite well after being so much vexed? |
36164 | But why not? |
36164 | But,asked Clotilda,"must we not forgive even the_ wrong_ done by our enemies? |
36164 | Can my Lenette''s poor baby be dead? |
36164 | Could n''t you have done that up here? |
36164 | Dear me, have I been forgetting it? |
36164 | Dear me,said the Rath,"what may that be in flower there?" |
36164 | Do you know who_ I_ am, Sir? |
36164 | Firmian,said Nathalie,"what would you have?" |
36164 | Have you forgotten, then quite,he stammered,"what I told you these flowers meant?" |
36164 | I say, sir, will you just be good enough to look at that house, that one there-- do you notice anything particular? |
36164 | In that case why should I not? |
36164 | Is that really all? |
36164 | It was no good,she said,"what would he think of me?" |
36164 | My marriage wreath? |
36164 | Not sparkling then, I''m sure? |
36164 | Perhaps_ warm_ water would be more likely to do so, would it? |
36164 | Suppose,said he,"anybody should come across my dear_ real_ Heinrich( whose name I steal) in the vicinity of me, a coiner of false names, what then? |
36164 | That lowering powder of yours,said the vindictive Doctor,"seems to have lowered_ his_ temperature pretty effectively; he''s cool enough_ now_, eh?" |
36164 | Well darling, and how are you getting on? |
36164 | Well, Lenette? |
36164 | Well, and what said Lenette to all this? |
36164 | What does it matter? |
36164 | What is it all about, wife? |
36164 | What is it your pleasure to have written to- day, Sir? |
36164 | Where is your wife, sir? |
36164 | Which would he like better? |
36164 | Who is to save us from these bodily senses? |
36164 | Why did I vex you so often, and pain you, even by my death, and be so unforgiving to all your little innocent crotchets? |
36164 | Why is it, I wonder? |
36164 | Would inflammation of the lungs be to your taste? 36164 Would n''t it be better to pawn the checked calico?" |
36164 | Yes, I have to thank_ them_ for this, it is true, but what is their reward? 36164 You call at Mr. Siebenkæs''s pretty often yourself, do you not?" |
36164 | You do n''t notice anything particular? |
36164 | You?--oh, you? 36164 ( he thought)can it be that she does really love him?" |
36164 | ), she threw down to him the question,"Is Mr. von Meyern out yet?" |
36164 | ***** And why is it that_ my_ own heart breaks in twain with such a pang? |
36164 | A soft voice cried in an eager, hasty way,"Do n''t you know me?" |
36164 | Am_ I_ annoyed because_ he_ kissed_ you_ while I was away?" |
36164 | And I descended to where the very shadow cast by Being dies out and ends, and I gazed out into the gulf beyond, and cried,''Father, where art Thou?'' |
36164 | And am I drawing up my bill of divorce and Uriah- letter here with my own very hands?" |
36164 | And can a name fulfil the marriage vow?" |
36164 | And has your honesty ever been put on its trial and punished, you cheating old grey- headed vagabond? |
36164 | And he stretched forth his pale and shadowy hand and took her own, saying,"My darling, why is it that you weep? |
36164 | And now,_ what_ last word am I to carry to my_ good_,_ dear_ beloved Firmian?" |
36164 | And she only once made him any pertinent answer, namely,"How long will it be before we''re without a farthing in the house?" |
36164 | And was there not always a grand, blue, starry sky spread out above his soul, in the shape of death? |
36164 | And what are your countless brothers who, with you, came thirty- two years ago into this vapour- ball, thinking now? |
36164 | And what time has he left for his work? |
36164 | And which of us could assume the name of a beloved person, and go and act unworthily? |
36164 | And why is it that prisoners and the sick are so wretched in their confinement? |
36164 | And you remembered that this was my birthday? |
36164 | And"Why do the clergy get up processions only for rain or fine weather? |
36164 | Answer me quietly you say you never received any letter on the subject, do you?" |
36164 | Are not your own days fleeting by like vapours through a chilly sky, above a dead earth, floating away towards the night?" |
36164 | Are you not my appointed_ præfica_ and keening- woman? |
36164 | Are you still afraid?" |
36164 | Art thou happy too? |
36164 | Blinded by the evening sun, he felt for Firmian''s hand, crying,"Where''s your hand, dear friend? |
36164 | But are the advocate and I the same person? |
36164 | But can anything make a better of it? |
36164 | But how go matters in_ our_ wilderness here-- which leads to Egypt, not to the promised land? |
36164 | But she did n''t_ know_ that she had been faithful, and said,"to whom should I be_ un_faithful?" |
36164 | But the poor curate''s, the reading- master''s, the scholar''s, good wife, what is her comfort in her misery? |
36164 | But was not everything destined to turn out ten times better? |
36164 | But what is it, this postscript life, after all? |
36164 | But what said Lenette to all this? |
36164 | But what would the Saxon treasurer have written? |
36164 | But why was she thus to- day? |
36164 | But you will be able to have done with all this deception_ now_, and to make amends for it, will you not?" |
36164 | But, dear reader,_ are_ we not_ all_ in Firmian''s position? |
36164 | Callest thou me once more? |
36164 | Can I expect to be any the better for it? |
36164 | Can it really be the case that all that I said to you in the carriage simply went in at one ear and out at the other? |
36164 | Can it? |
36164 | Can no woman say,''I want a dollar for it,''and there an end of the story? |
36164 | Can no woman say,''The head- clout will be ready to- morrow,''and then an end of the matter? |
36164 | Can this be right?" |
36164 | Can_ you_ not do it, for instance?" |
36164 | Come, let''s hear what you''ve got to say to that?" |
36164 | Comes it from your custom of showing only one of your faces at a time, like your sister and prototype, the moon? |
36164 | Could_ I_ live long, if_ you_ were dead?" |
36164 | Do n''t you understand me? |
36164 | Do you dislike it? |
36164 | Do you find that the Cardinal of Lorraine is as anxious to stand godfather to your son as he was to Agrippa''s? |
36164 | Do you know how many people it takes to constitute a tumult by law? |
36164 | Do you know who''s going to be her husband? |
36164 | Does a genius want an imitator? |
36164 | Does an extravagant person who chances to come to poverty deserve a severer punishment than one who does not? |
36164 | Does it ever strike you that you''ll have to answer for this and your other pranks one day? |
36164 | Does the nearness or the remoteness of our everlasting good- bye make any difference? |
36164 | Dost thou see and know thy earth?" |
36164 | Edit errors? |
36164 | Firmian stammered,"Will you always like me, and shall I see you soon again?" |
36164 | For what harm would one do them then? |
36164 | For which reason they prefer arguing to writing; as_ Simonides_, when he was asked by the king the question,"What is God?" |
36164 | From whom did you get hold of this evil weed?" |
36164 | Had n''t Siebenkæs a whole silver mine and a coining mill, in the shape of seven law suits all going on, full of veins of rich ore? |
36164 | Have I lost_ you_ too? |
36164 | Have I not even kept the vow I made to_ you_--that I should not see you again till after my death?" |
36164 | Have you not the slightest idea what I am driving at?" |
36164 | He asked himself,"_ What_ is my Lenette doing now? |
36164 | He therefore( as the couple were coming back into the room), cried out, in a loud, anxious voice,"Firmian, how do you feel now?" |
36164 | He wanted no pity, and said,"If_ I_ am quite happy, why should_ you_ be pitying me?" |
36164 | Henry waited till the greater billows had subsided somewhat, and then quietly put the question:"Now?" |
36164 | Henry, do n''t you yet believe in the soul''s immortality?" |
36164 | Her eager eyes shone out once more through two tear- drops, and she asked,"What am I to do?" |
36164 | Here she drew her husband''s ear softly down to her lips and said,"What would you like me to get for supper? |
36164 | His emotion now took a new bent, one more in harmony with hers, but he masked this behind the question,"What made you come back in such a hurry?" |
36164 | How can a Rump Parliament wear spectacles, or use ear trumpets? |
36164 | How every soul in this great corpse- trench of an universe is utterly alone? |
36164 | How is a man to get a coherent idea, fit to go to the printer and publisher, into his head with all this sweeping and scrubbing going on?" |
36164 | How long will the poor''s advocate manage to live on the produce of the pawned pewter, and on the price of the two reviews which he is going to write? |
36164 | How were it if I had actually possessed this flowery island in waking life, and it had been submerged in the sea by an earthquake? |
36164 | How would Fate rescue and recover him from this poison- vapour, this azote- gas, of anguish and anxiety? |
36164 | How would it cure the finger- worm in his ring finger? |
36164 | If this be so, then, what does the author''s pen do? |
36164 | In brief, the Count could not but believe what he was told; who would think of such an absurd story as the one I am telling here? |
36164 | In short, was this entire ludicrous interruption of the whole company of street singers not the precise end aimed at by both the advocates? |
36164 | In what well- known work( let me ask you) does Paul Jovius style_ you_ a_ portentosum ingenium_? |
36164 | Indeed, what_ is_ there in the grave? |
36164 | Is a plate an apostle, do you think? |
36164 | Is it come to this with the monæcius head of the world, that it has_ no_ head left for a seed- vessel?'' |
36164 | Is it names or bodies that exchange rings? |
36164 | Is my fuguing incorrect, or my whistling a breach of the rules of pure composition?" |
36164 | Is n''t it enough if_ you_ do the howling? |
36164 | Is there no God?" |
36164 | Is this a man still near me? |
36164 | Knowest thou not the Eden from whence thou hast gone out?" |
36164 | Lenette, tell me, is it really a positive impossibility for a woman to say,''It''s four o''clock,''instead of''The four quarters to four have gone?'' |
36164 | Moreover, who could be more ready than he to make a perfectly clean breast of the whole story to the Count as soon as ever the proper time came? |
36164 | Mr. Siebenkæs, do you know who this is? |
36164 | Nathalie saw and read this; she took the book in haste, snapped the clasp to, and then, when she had done so, said,"You have no objection, have you?" |
36164 | Nathalie went up to him, and at once cried out,"What is there to see in that to- day? |
36164 | Nathalie, do n''t you know me? |
36164 | Nathalie, who had heard what the child said, came down, and said, with a blush,"Is it I, darling? |
36164 | Next time, as she let it be almost too long before she snuffed, he looked at her interrogatively, and said,"Well? |
36164 | Now what all this time did Stanislaus Siebenkæs think and do? |
36164 | Of whom is she thinking? |
36164 | Old Sabel''s in the house, is she not? |
36164 | On the whole, lawyers are not so indifferent to the question,"What is the law?" |
36164 | Only, I presume, it was too late for them to be of any use, was it?" |
36164 | Or are we only appearing to ourselves? |
36164 | Or was it_ you_, sir?" |
36164 | Or( inasmuch as there are four female hands playing a duet sonata on his heart), a bouquet for his button- hole at the very least?" |
36164 | Several of these chairs I got last spring at a third of their value, and very handsome they are, do n''t you think so? |
36164 | Shall we?" |
36164 | She comes and says,"Are not the rosebuds blown yet which I gave you?" |
36164 | She gazed at him much astonished, saying,"We are going to be friends, then, are we, to- day? |
36164 | She lifted her streaming eyes to his and said,"You think so, too, do you not? |
36164 | She often said to him,"I''m sure people must think you''re not quite right in the head;"to which he would answer,"And am I?" |
36164 | She resumed her petition in the old tone saying,"I may keep the siphon and the horse, may n''t I? |
36164 | She tried to rise, but her friend held her, with his hand all thorns and blood, and said,"_ Can_ you leave me, Nathalie?" |
36164 | Should you?" |
36164 | Some few readers will probably say"What else was it?" |
36164 | Some minutes after, when the snuffing came a little too soon, he asked, though somewhat doubtfully,"Dirty clothes for the wash already?" |
36164 | Somewhat hurt, but still beaming as affectionately as ever, he said--"Am I not worth a kiss, Madam Siebenkæs?" |
36164 | Suppose I were to say to you, pawn your watch, how would you like that?" |
36164 | Suppose it were to strike you in your sin?" |
36164 | Tell me truly now, has your immortal heart been pained by the tragical fate of the soup- tureen, or was it only your pericardium? |
36164 | Tell me, are you quite as you used to be in Augspurg? |
36164 | Tell me, what does Mr. Stiefel think about the earthquake?" |
36164 | The advocate swallowed about half a pint of bedroom air, and said, in measured accents--"You''re at your brushing and sweeping again, are you? |
36164 | The coffins of the coming year have, as in times of pestilence, no inscriptions yet-- why should the names appear upon them? |
36164 | The notary paused, and asked in amazement,"Am I to put this stuff, and more like it, down upon paper?" |
36164 | The question is, shalt thou, when next new year''s day comes, be able to hear; or lying, by that time, crumbling into dust?" |
36164 | The second was, that let Siebenkæs shout a thing to her, as distinctly as man could, her first answer was,"What?" |
36164 | This is all the impression my good counsel and comforting words have made upon your mind, is it? |
36164 | This pained him greatly, and he said,"Do you suppose I am any happier than you are yourself?" |
36164 | Was she right? |
36164 | What are we breaking with one another_ for_, if we come really to think about it? |
36164 | What author reckons you among the_ clarissima sui sæculi lumina_? |
36164 | What can I do? |
36164 | What did Firmian do? |
36164 | What do you think, or what do you_ say_( if you like the expression better), to this new style of life? |
36164 | What dost thou long for, Nathalie? |
36164 | What dost thou pray for, Nathalie? |
36164 | What have we left but an unavailing sorrow, a dumb repentance, and never- ending bitter tears? |
36164 | What is all this fuss about? |
36164 | What is it? |
36164 | What is the good of clipping a ripple or two away from the ocean, when there are still clouds and billows? |
36164 | What is the use of_ seeing_ one''s errors, when the_ causes_ of them are still in force? |
36164 | What modern town, I ask, can point to so many free inhabitants? |
36164 | What then is she to hold to? |
36164 | What was to be done, then? |
36164 | What would you_ do_?" |
36164 | What''s the girl to_ you_?" |
36164 | Where have we been so long? |
36164 | Which of us in this room is it that is the real dead man appearing to the other? |
36164 | Who is there amongst us to whom Music has not brought back his childhood a thousand times? |
36164 | Who is to make up to us for the lack of a gentle, quiet temperament? |
36164 | Who is with her?" |
36164 | Who, or what?" |
36164 | Why does n''t she rub herself with a towel when anybody breathes upon her? |
36164 | Why does she smile now, like some happy mother? |
36164 | Why is this? |
36164 | Why must it take me twenty years to abandon an error, when I need not hold it twenty hours?" |
36164 | Why not purify her lips with soap after a fly has deposited itself( and not_ only_ itself) upon them? |
36164 | Why should I not,_ then_ also, say,"The island was but a dream"? |
36164 | Why should it be that, long ere I came to their parting, I could not keep my own tears back? |
36164 | Why should we make fools of ourselves in this way about the matter?" |
36164 | Why strive already to see the darting flames of conflagrations yet to come, and to hear the dismal turmoil, the bitter wail, of a woe as yet unborn? |
36164 | Will you forget me?" |
36164 | Will you forgive me? |
36164 | Yet who thinks of such a thing, Venner?" |
36164 | You were_ once_ my friend, I know; am I quite forgotten? |
36164 | _ Why_ is it that I am not to see you again after we have said good- bye? |
36164 | and no more about it? |
36164 | and were not all his ostensible farewells_ real_ ones after all? |
36164 | as to the question,"What is justice?" |
36164 | asked the child;"the lady who took me out of the water the day before yesterday? |
36164 | cried Lenette;"what are you doing with a lot of my chintz on the back of you?" |
36164 | cried Siebenkæs,"what do I require it for, at all?" |
36164 | cried he, while his wife echoed, unbidden, from the door,"Has_ he_ been in the house?" |
36164 | dear, good Lenette,"the voice within him cried,"why can I not press thee to this full, tender heart, here in this paradise, in bliss? |
36164 | did you really do all this yesterday? |
36164 | do n''t you hear what a terrible storm?" |
36164 | has that war game of yours been worth the candles and the trouble? |
36164 | have_ we_ any children? |
36164 | how can you be so naughty to your old ragamuffin of a Siebenkæs, or whatever his name may be?" |
36164 | how_ can_ the world make such an exceedingly bad shot as that? |
36164 | if every soul be its own father and creator, why shall it not be its own destroying angel too? |
36164 | if you had only snuffed, as you ought to have done----""You''re in fun, are you not?" |
36164 | is it come to selling our dishes?" |
36164 | is it you?" |
36164 | is_ any_ one a whit better? |
36164 | mad unreasoning Chance-- when will ye dash this fabric into atoms, and me too? |
36164 | must every tulip be out up for salad, and all altar- cloths made into camisoles?" |
36164 | must_ this_ joy be taken from me like all the rest? |
36164 | my dear Christian, is it not because in this church those who once lay upon your heart and mine are mouldering into dust? |
36164 | never wrote the letter, eh? |
36164 | or from a peevish discontent with destiny? |
36164 | or is its cause a sweet, delicious, overflowing happiness and gladness, making the heart too full and the tongue too hard to move? |
36164 | or,"What do you say?" |
36164 | said Luna,"how can that be possible?" |
36164 | said Siebenkæs, with comic warmth,"If apoplexy gives me_ two_ pretty powerful strokes, what more can a doctor desire? |
36164 | self- conceit-- in the genius, and not in the dunce? |
36164 | thou kind heaven; and whither, whither, whither? |
36164 | was_ he_ in my room just now?" |
36164 | well?" |
36164 | what would''st thou have on earth? |
36164 | where is that boundless breast of thine, that I may rest upon it? |
36164 | why did you persuade me to accept the fruit that grows upon his grave-- and, as it were, open that grave anew every year? |
36164 | why has torturing destiny laid the waxen image of an angel upon all our breasts,[117] and lowered us into the chill life? |
36164 | you my three_ me''s_, what say you to the fourth?" |
53648 | Again-- I have been enquired of, what can a man do to make property in Texas? |
53648 | As a last resort,( could a virtuous woman think so?) |
53648 | Better take property or life; for what of value has a man left when deprived of his"good name?" |
53648 | Can the result be doubtful? |
53648 | I have been frequently asked, what particular spot in Texas is the most desirable for an emigrant to settle in? |
53648 | Is Texas a desirable place for a northern man? |
53648 | Is it not in accordance with the christian religion, if a brother offend, to go_ privately to him_, and tell him his fault? |
53648 | Is this denied? |
53648 | It has often been asked, who built these mounds, and for what purpose were they erected? |
53648 | Shall I be asked to particularize? |
53648 | The clerk would sing out,"Wood- pile, wood- pile, where are the wooders?" |
53648 | The rider checked his horse and said, who''s there? |
53648 | What rational man would think of it? |
53648 | What would the people of the several States say to this? |
53648 | What, then, is the conclusion of the whole matter? |
53648 | Who are the inhabitants of Illinois? |
53648 | Who built them? |
53648 | Who will be the biographer of_ Sam Patch_? |
51786 | ''An older friend?'' |
51786 | ''And what does he do at the house when his father is away?'' |
51786 | ''And who is he,''I asked,''who has arranged with the skipper?'' |
51786 | ''Are you tired of this place?'' |
51786 | ''Did you not get my letters? |
51786 | ''Had n''t they best be handed over to the police?'' |
51786 | ''Has my face assumed any terrific aspect? |
51786 | ''Have you spoken to Mary yet?'' |
51786 | ''I want to know why you never answered my letter about the bunch of keys you advertised as having found, and which I lost? |
51786 | ''If you know,''I said,''what do you ask me for? |
51786 | ''To what purpose is this waste?'' |
51786 | ''Well, you feel quite confident about her then; her courage wo n''t fail, you think?'' |
51786 | ''Were you passing along Oxford Street on the morning that this bunch of keys was found?'' |
51786 | ''What is the crank?'' |
51786 | ''Who are you with?'' |
51786 | ''Who are you?'' |
51786 | ''You are not alone here?'' |
51786 | ''_ Her_ courage fail? |
51786 | ''_ Him!_''almost screeched the man( although, mind you, he never once forgot his hoarse whisper);''was it him you licked? |
51786 | Am I so much worse- looking than usual?'' |
51786 | And if you think I am what you say, you do n''t suppose I shall tell you my business, do you?'' |
51786 | But how was such an undertaking to be begun? |
51786 | Does he come down here to give lessons?'' |
51786 | Have n''t you been on the lurk round his house for two days past? |
51786 | Have you been fighting?'' |
51786 | He stopped here, to see what I would say; but though I was ten times more surprised than ever, I kept my countenance, and only said:''Well?'' |
51786 | How is desertion to be stopped? |
51786 | I must own, however, that I did not expect to see anything worth notice, for what could there be? |
51786 | I said( and then I saw the young man go into the house);''and what''s the quarrel about?'' |
51786 | I says to my railway friend,''is n''t that Sims Reeves? |
51786 | Now ai n''t you, sergeant?'' |
51786 | On going back to his cell he says to himself:''What can I do now to avenge myself on the authorities?'' |
51786 | One may well ask, which were the barbarians, they or the Spaniards who soon made a Sahara of that which they found a Goshen? |
51786 | Romantic story, is n''t it? |
51786 | Shall I leave him to take you to Mrs Vereker?'' |
51786 | Suppose, for instance, that prisoners are employed in gardens where vegetables are cultivated for barrack- use, what will be the consequence? |
51786 | Understand it? |
51786 | Was it not, Mary?'' |
51786 | Was n''t you there this morning?'' |
51786 | What if Gordon Frazer were still in existence? |
51786 | What if this fancy of hers, coming so close upon my sure forebodings, should be a reality? |
51786 | What more agonising sight can the sick- room give us to gaze upon? |
51786 | What then is to be done? |
51786 | Why is this wheel not made to pump water or grind corn or do some other useful work? |
51786 | Why should a man be degraded into a machine, and made to turn a wheel merely for the sake of turning it? |
51786 | Will he not in this way lose all self- respect? |
51786 | You will help me to find him; will you not?'' |
51786 | he said,''what have you been doing to your face? |
51786 | what is it?'' |
47677 | Of what use, Pasiphaë, is it to put on those costly garments? 47677 What will become of me?" |
47677 | And am I to endure it? |
47677 | And could you, forsooth, have preferred Hermione[ 990] to Helen? |
47677 | And dost thou entrust, madman, the timid doves to the hawk? |
47677 | And is any one in my presence to be making signs to my mistress? |
47677 | And is not my anger to hurry me away to any extreme? |
47677 | And now again beating her most beauteous bosom with her hands, she cried--"That perfidious man has gone; what will become of me?" |
47677 | And shall a keeper, forsooth, hinder you from being able to write, when an opportunity is given you for taking the bath? |
47677 | And thus he spoke:"Why spoil your charming eyes with tears? |
47677 | And was Gorge[ 991] more attractive than her mother? |
47677 | And why deliver the sheep- fold to the ravening wolf? |
47677 | And will that day then come, on which thou, the most graceful of all objects, glittering with gold, shalt go, drawn by the four snow- white steeds? |
47677 | Beauty is the gift of the Divinity; how many a one prides herself on her beauty? |
47677 | But be it our study to lie on the watch for fame; who would have known of Homer, if the Iliad, a never- dying work, had lain concealed? |
47677 | But for you as well to be watched, whom the Lictor''s rod[ 1112] has but just set at liberty, who can endure it? |
47677 | But the unhappy father, a father now no longer, cried aloud,"Icarus, where art thou? |
47677 | But why dwell upon trifles? |
47677 | But why should you be deceived, since new pleasures are delightful, and since what is strange attracts the feelings more than what is one''s own? |
47677 | By whom have not been lamented the flames[ 757] of the Ephyrean Creusa? |
47677 | Dost thou entrust the well- filled sheep- fold to the mountain wolf? |
47677 | Even should they deceive you, what do you lose? |
47677 | Even the Courts,( who would have believed it?) |
47677 | For, why, even now, are Juno and Pallas ashamed at not having gained the decision in the Phrygian groves? |
47677 | If Andromache was clad in a coarse tunic, what wonder is it? |
47677 | In return for their service, the female, slaves were made free, and received marriage portion? |
47677 | Let Sappho, too, be well known; for what is there more exciting than she? |
47677 | Let the fair one eye the youth in a kindly manner; let her heave sighs from her very heart, and let her enquire, why it is he comes so late? |
47677 | Medea, the parent, too, stained with the blood of her children? |
47677 | One of the multitude may say,"Why add venom to the serpent? |
47677 | Or than him, through whom[ 1065] the father is deceived by the tricks of the crafty Geta? |
47677 | Or under what part of the sky dost thou fly?" |
47677 | Or who, on the deep sea, would hoard up the expanse of waters? |
47677 | Perhaps, too, the lying maid will say with a haughty air,"Why is that fellow blocking up our door?" |
47677 | Shall I complain, or_ only_ remind you how all right and wrong is confused? |
47677 | Shall I tell what it was that ruined thee? |
47677 | Shut the door of your chamber, why expose the work half done? |
47677 | Soon will he be thoroughly persuaded, one? |
47677 | Take care to make promises: for what harm is there in promising? |
47677 | Tell me, what are you losing but the water, which you may take up again? |
47677 | Then to me she said,"Why have the unfortunate fair deserved this? |
47677 | Though Adonis be allowed to Venus, whom she yet laments; whence had she Æneas and Hermione[ 1016] for her children? |
47677 | Through the information of the Sun( who is there that can deceive the Sun? |
47677 | To what point does not art proceed? |
47677 | What advice, but thine own, has the fair made use of? |
47677 | What am I to say on clothing? |
47677 | What art thou doing, descendant of Æacus? |
47677 | What but fame alone is sought by the hallowed Poets? |
47677 | What can a keeper do, when there are so many Theatres in the City? |
47677 | What discreet person would not mingle kisses with tender words? |
47677 | What forbids me to apply illustrations from great matters to small ones, and not to be standing in awe of the name of a general? |
47677 | What hast thou to do with a mirror, when accompanying the herds of the mountain? |
47677 | What hast thou to do with work- baskets? |
47677 | What is she to do? |
47677 | What is the wise man to do, when even the fool is gratified with a present? |
47677 | What is the woman to do, when the man, himself, is still more effeminate, and himself perchance may have still more male admirers? |
47677 | What is there harder than stone? |
47677 | What meant, Menelaus, this stupidity of thine? |
47677 | What more yielding than water? |
47677 | What must I do? |
47677 | What need is there to be teaching stratagems and trifling precepts, when the keeper may be purchased by the smallest present? |
47677 | What safety is there, while the defiler of character exists, and desires to be thought that he is that which it has not proved his lot to be? |
47677 | What should they do? |
47677 | What the impulse of thy disquieted breast? |
47677 | What was becoming to Phoebus, to whom is it not becoming? |
47677 | What was there for Andromeda, when bound, less to hope for, than that her tears could possibly charm any one? |
47677 | What was there more coy than Atalanta of Nonacris? |
47677 | What, Parthian, dost thou leave to the conquered, who dost fly that thou mayst overcome? |
47677 | What, Procris, were thy feelings, when thus, in thy frenzy, thou didst he concealed? |
47677 | What, wretched man, art thou about? |
47677 | When a female confidant can carry the note you have penned, which her broad girth[ 1113] can conceal in her warm bosom? |
47677 | When she is sitting in attendance upon the sistra of the Pharian heifer, and at the place where her male friends are forbidden to go? |
47677 | When, eagerly she is a spectator of the harnessed steeds? |
47677 | Where now is this violence? |
47677 | Whither, in my folly, am I led on? |
47677 | Who could have supposed it? |
47677 | Who would forbid light to be taken from another light presented? |
47677 | Who would have known of Danâe, if she had been for ever shut up, and if, till an old woman, she had continued concealed in her tower? |
47677 | Who, but one bereft of sense, would declaim before a charming mistress? |
47677 | Who, in that throng, did not find an object for him to love? |
47677 | Whom would not the paint disgust, besmeared all over your face, when, through its own weight, it flows and falls upon your heated bosom? |
47677 | Why enumerate the resorts of fair ones suited for your search? |
47677 | Why hasten then, young man? |
47677 | Why hold the allotted flax in thy right hand, by which Hector shall fall? |
47677 | Why is the cause of the fairness of your complexion known to me? |
47677 | Why is the smell of the oesypum[ 1042] so powerful, sent from Athens though it be, an extract drawn from the filthy fleece of the sheep? |
47677 | Why mention Baiæ,[ 747] and the shores covered with sails, and the waters which send forth the smoke from the warm sulphur? |
47677 | Why mention Byblis, who burned with a forbidden passion for her brother, and who resolutely atoned with the halter for her crimes? |
47677 | Why should I recommend you to send tender lines as well? |
47677 | Why should your mistress be able to say of you,"There is no getting rid of this man?" |
47677 | Why with bared breast do I strive against the foe, and why, myself, am I betrayed through information that is my own? |
47677 | Why, Phineus, dost thou tear out the eyes of thy guiltless sons? |
47677 | Why, foolish one, art thou so often arranging thy smoothed locks? |
47677 | Why, learned Erato, art thou thus diverging into the medical art? |
47677 | Why, with gentle voice, Deidamia, dost thou detain the perpetrator of thy disgrace? |
47677 | You inquire if it is of use[ 764] to win the handmaid herself? |
47677 | [ 974] Who would dare to publish to the profane the rites of Ceres,[ 975] and the great mysteries that were established in the Thracian Samos? |
47677 | _ Misfortunes often sharpen the genius_; who could have ever believed, that a mortal could attempt the paths of the air? |
47677 | ``` An fuit hoc ipsum, quod te lasciva juvaret```` Ad tua victrices membra venire manus? |
47677 | and words which are wo nt to please the men? |
47677 | did a foreign flame torment? |
47677 | how oft with jealous look does she eye a cow, and say,"Why is she thus pleasing to my love? |
43680 | And what are we going to do? 43680 At home, where is that strong authority for which the whole country is craving? |
43680 | But why speak of mothers, of orphaned children? 43680 Have you applied for admission to the Revolutionary Battalion?" |
43680 | How shall we drive? 43680 How will you decide? |
43680 | How? |
43680 | Is this your last word? |
43680 | May I come in? |
43680 | Wait a bit, my friend,boomed Yassny,"was it not you that came in to- day with the new lot... you were carrying a large placard? |
43680 | Well,he said,"if such are the orders, what''s to be done?" |
43680 | What is the meaning of this? 43680 What is your Company, I ask you?" |
43680 | What is your Company? |
43680 | What the devil does this mean? 43680 What will things be afterwards?" |
43680 | What? 43680 When will there be an end to all this? |
43680 | Where is the love of country, where is patriotism? 43680 Will you quail now? |
43680 | You? 43680 [ 64] What could I bring the men? |
43680 | ''Could the Armies resist an organised German offensive in their present condition, numerical and technical?'' |
43680 | ''What is the reason? |
43680 | ( a prayer in which the Emperor was mentioned)? |
43680 | ***** Afterwards? |
43680 | ***** What place did the Stavka occupy as a military and political factor of the Revolutionary period? |
43680 | ***** What, then, were these Army Organisations doing that were supposed to reconstruct"the freest Army in the world"? |
43680 | A great statesman and military leader had thus left the stage, whose virtue-- one of many-- was his implicit loyalty( or was it a defect?) |
43680 | A tall, stout soldier ascended the platform, and began speaking in a loud, hysterical voice:"Comrades, you have heard? |
43680 | Albov, have you not yet thought of suicide?" |
43680 | Alexeiev said:"Do I not give you a full share of the work? |
43680 | An animated conversation began on the usual anxious themes: how did matters stand with the land; would peace be concluded soon? |
43680 | And if not-- was it to be War? |
43680 | And we, who along with you have now carried our heavy cross into the fourth year of the War-- we are now to be regarded as your enemies? |
43680 | Are you ready for the advance and are you certain to be successful? |
43680 | Bearing in mind the ample material collected by the Stavka, Vinnichenko''s half- hearted confession to a French correspondent(?) |
43680 | Brussilov sometimes interrupted me and said with strong feeling:"Do you think that I am not disgusted at having constantly to wave the Red rag? |
43680 | But we, are we entitled not only to encourage them, but to take upon ourselves the decision?" |
43680 | But why did two or three thousand orthodox Russians, bred in the mystic rites of their faith, remain indifferent to such a sacrilege? |
43680 | But, most of all, with what words can one move men to face death when all their feelings are veiled by one feeling-- that of self- preservation? |
43680 | But_ over there_, was there an actual chance, or was everything being done in heroic desperation? |
43680 | Can it be that the Russian soldier is capable of informing the enemy of my arrival at the position?'' |
43680 | Could n''t they be rung up?" |
43680 | Could such a one sell himself? |
43680 | Could the Revolution give new birth to men or make them perfect? |
43680 | Did the_ cadres_ of the Commanding Officers really improve? |
43680 | Do you understand?" |
43680 | Does it hurt you much? |
43680 | Dost thou hear the whisper on their lips, from which thou hast driven the smile of joy for evermore? |
43680 | For two months I had worked like a slave and my outlook had widened, but had I achieved anything for the preservation of the Army? |
43680 | For whom should we pray at Divine Service? |
43680 | From whom? |
43680 | Good Heavens, what was the matter with these men, with the reasonable creature of God, with the Russian field- labourer? |
43680 | Have not these ideas left somewhat too deep traces in the minds, not so much perhaps of the popular masses as of their leaders? |
43680 | He glanced through a loop- hole and, starting back, asked nervously:"What is that?" |
43680 | He was dismissed by the Army Commander, and afterwards expressed to me his sincere astonishment:"Why had he been dismissed? |
43680 | How can I appeal to the soldiers to continue the War and to stay at the Front?" |
43680 | How can business be done when the Soviet and the licentious soldiery hold the Government pinioned? |
43680 | How could a real soldier, appealing to the sense of duty, to obedience and to a struggle for the Mother Country, compete with such demagogues? |
43680 | How have they dared to appoint him without my knowledge?" |
43680 | How many inconsolable mothers hast thou left? |
43680 | How many orphans hast thou made? |
43680 | I hope that you will back me?" |
43680 | I hope you will understand this? |
43680 | I lay, covered head and all by my cloak and, under a shower of oaths, tried to see things clearly:"What have I done to deserve this?" |
43680 | I turned to Markov:"What, my dear Professor, is this the end?" |
43680 | In April and May of 1917, in spite of our victory(?) |
43680 | In the course of a subsequent talk I had with one of the men, he said to me:"If there are to be no annexations, why do we want that hill top?" |
43680 | Is it because that, of the officers who led you in the beginning, there is not one left in the regiment who is not maimed?" |
43680 | Is it because we never sent you into action, but led you, bestrewing with officers''corpses the whole of the path covered by the regiment? |
43680 | Is it possible that we may now abandon the Allied cause and be false to our obligations? |
43680 | Is it the temporary Committee which created the Provisional Government, or is it the latter? |
43680 | Is it to be an offensive or a defensive campaign? |
43680 | Is that not the limit? |
43680 | Is this ignorance or triviality? |
43680 | Kerensky hesitated, but what about the support of the Commissars and Committees? |
43680 | Look here, Albov, you are not in a hurry, are you? |
43680 | Need we adduce further proofs? |
43680 | Now, General, may I rely on your support?" |
43680 | Of course, in so far as that Government submits to the will of the Soviets?... |
43680 | Perhaps you would like me to go for the doctor?" |
43680 | Savinkov''s persistent advice? |
43680 | Somebody asked Dragomirov:"How long do you think the war will last?" |
43680 | The oppressive isolation felt by the Minister of War after the conference of July 16th? |
43680 | The police( Militia? |
43680 | The question arises-- Is the Chancellor capable of solving them? |
43680 | The question was, when would it stop and upon whose head would it fall? |
43680 | The world has condemned them; but are all those who speak of the matter so unanimous and sincere in their condemnation? |
43680 | Then he remarked:"''Do you feel all the nightmare horror of this silence? |
43680 | Then why do n''t you thrust the bayonet into me? |
43680 | To make his exit from life? |
43680 | Trotsky explained this contradiction by saying that, owing to constant re- elections, the Soviets reflected the true(?) |
43680 | Was a mechanical change of personnel capable of killing a system which for many years had weakened the impulse for work and for self- improvement? |
43680 | Was it not for the War Ministry to hasten the death by a resolute and hopeless surgical operation?" |
43680 | Was it possible to combat this unconcealed care for their own safety? |
43680 | Was it, perhaps, that he used the wrong words, or was not able to say what he meant? |
43680 | Was that playing the part of a Don Quixote? |
43680 | Was the Central Committee of the Soviet invested with actual power? |
43680 | Was the oath a sham? |
43680 | Was work in common possible in these circumstances? |
43680 | We were thus confronted with a crucial question: SHOULD THE RUSSIAN ARMY ADVANCE? |
43680 | Were the conscious leaders of the Soviet really convinced that such a danger existed, or were they fanning this unfounded fear as a tactical move? |
43680 | What are you about, Lieutenant?" |
43680 | What can I do? |
43680 | What can you do? |
43680 | What does it matter that the masses of the Army accepted the new order and the new Constitution sincerely, honestly and with enthusiasm? |
43680 | What had become of the former animation, friendly talk, healthy laughter and torrents of reminiscences of a stormy, hard, but glorious life of war? |
43680 | What happened? |
43680 | What have I done to them? |
43680 | What if the advance were to disclose our impotence? |
43680 | What is it all about? |
43680 | What is the Government going to do? |
43680 | What methods did the Democracy have recourse to? |
43680 | What more could I tell them? |
43680 | What of the famous"Freedom from Bondage"of the soldier? |
43680 | What province are you from?" |
43680 | What should I say to the officers, sorrowfully and patiently awaiting the end of the regular and merciless lingering death of the Army? |
43680 | What then? |
43680 | What was that? |
43680 | What was the condition of the Russian Army at the outbreak of the Revolution? |
43680 | What was the impression produced by that fateful Order? |
43680 | What was the result? |
43680 | What would happen were there no Soviet? |
43680 | What would the future bring? |
43680 | What, then, was the effect of the Mother Country idea upon the conscience of the old Army? |
43680 | When have you had time to get worn out, poor fellow?" |
43680 | Whence? |
43680 | Where do these men get so much brutality, so much baseness?" |
43680 | Where is that powerful authority which would force every citizen to do his duty honestly by the Motherland? |
43680 | Whether it was a German one or whether our own people did not recognise him-- who knows?" |
43680 | Who knows? |
43680 | Who were the members of the Committees? |
43680 | Why should we allow ourselves to be maimed?" |
43680 | Why? |
43680 | Will it be possible to level the same accusation against you? |
43680 | Will it find enough strength and boldness to burst the fetters placed on it by the Bolshevistic Soviet? |
43680 | Will the Russian Army allow this to happen? |
43680 | Will the Russian people remain steadfast, or will the Defeatist tendencies prevail? |
43680 | Will the torrent swell? |
43680 | Will we not thrust this insolent foe out of our country and let the diplomatists conclude peace afterwards, with annexations or without them? |
43680 | Will you kindly restore it? |
43680 | Would it not appear that had the order been changed in which the links had stood in that chain salvation might have ensued? |
43680 | Would you come to the door, enemy machine- guns permitting?" |
43680 | Would you then agree to work with me again?" |
43680 | You had better report it or else, who knows?" |
43680 | You? |
43680 | force every citizen to do his duty honestly by the Motherland? |
43680 | force every citizen to do his duty honestly by the Motherland?" |
5505 | And can the daughter of Porphyrius say this? |
5505 | And it was a hard task even for you-- a painful duty-- was it not? |
5505 | And you are charged to lay hands on the god? |
5505 | And you did it,she cried,"because you felt that you must and will be wholly what you profess to be? |
5505 | Are you then a Christian? |
5505 | But where shall we go to-- where? 5505 No, Apuleius, Serapis is not what you believe him to be; for, if he were, would he suffer his enemies to overthrow his temple and his image? |
5505 | You are sure of it? |
5505 | And now-- to what end? |
5505 | And you are weeping? |
5505 | But Gorgo could not reply; she colored deeply and Apuleius vehemently repeated his question:"Then you really are a Christian?" |
5505 | But at length the girl looked up with an eager gaze and said, sadly enough:"You said something about an antidote to poison, Apuleius? |
5505 | But is not that subtly true? |
5505 | But who can calculate evidence of the future fate of the soul? |
5505 | But why be angry with him? |
5505 | Everything is going; do you see-- do you feel? |
5505 | Everything is sinking; hold me, save me; the floor is going from under me.--Where is Porphyrius? |
5505 | Father-- where is my father?" |
5505 | Had she brought the leech and the exorciser? |
5505 | I ask you, to what end? |
5505 | Rapture and anguish-- who can lay down the border line that divides them? |
5505 | See, Orpheus, Herse-- do you see Him coming?" |
5505 | Then my father tried to escape the final destruction by attempting to kill himself.--Is it so?" |
5505 | There is no ill- feeling, is there, nothing to come between us?" |
5505 | There-- just here-- my sight is so dazzled, I can not make it out.--And if I could, what matter? |
5505 | To him Gorgo, was the noblest of God''s creatures, and how could he have borne to go through life at her side with a stain on his honor? |
5505 | What can they mean? |
5505 | What does it matter about me? |
5505 | What object could the Imperial cavalry have in placing themselves by that strong and impenetrable spot? |
5505 | Where is my father?" |
5505 | Who can alter here below what has been decided above? |
5505 | Why does he not, at this supreme moment, inspire his worshippers with courage? |
5505 | Will He then once more embody the ideas of Man-- and Apples and Pears? |
11901 | A memory? |
11901 | About the glove, too? |
11901 | Alice,he said eagerly,"what would you say if you were not afraid to speak?" |
11901 | Am I laughing, Aaron? 11901 Am I so different, Corp?" |
11901 | Am I to be condemned because I can not? |
11901 | An unhappy memory? |
11901 | And always with me? |
11901 | And did he tell you why she had gone? |
11901 | And for that you will love me a little, wo n''t you? 11901 And he never will marry,"said little Elspeth, almost fiercely;"will you, Tommy?" |
11901 | And him too, Aaron? |
11901 | And it could not hold its meetings with the old enthusiasm, could it,she asked sweetly,"if you came back? |
11901 | And leave me? |
11901 | And leave me? |
11901 | And my name? |
11901 | And now you are apologizing to me, I understand? |
11901 | And she still warns you against me? |
11901 | And then did you live for a long time somewhere else? |
11901 | And then? |
11901 | And this is the way? |
11901 | And when we got back to earth? |
11901 | And would you mind asking him to come at once, Grizel? |
11901 | And you have no more fear? |
11901 | And you will come and see me? |
11901 | And you wo n''t question me any more? |
11901 | And you would not cease to love me if you could? |
11901 | And you wrote that letter, you filled me with joy, so that you should gloat over my disappointment? |
11901 | And you, Elspeth? |
11901 | And your work? |
11901 | Any feathers left, do you think, Grizel? |
11901 | Anyone with Elspeth? |
11901 | Are they really clever this time? |
11901 | Are you angry with me for that? |
11901 | Are you done? |
11901 | Are you engaged to be married, Grizel? |
11901 | Are you glad? |
11901 | Are you insinuating that there are more of them? |
11901 | Are you not? |
11901 | Are you really glad that I love you, Grizel? |
11901 | Are you still-- what I think you? |
11901 | Are you trying to screen Grizel? |
11901 | Are you wearing your goloshes? |
11901 | At least,he said meekly,"it was courageous of me to tell you the truth in the end?" |
11901 | Ay, you have; but since when? 11901 Because I continued to do it?" |
11901 | Before God, is this true? |
11901 | But I am right, am I not, Grizel? |
11901 | But if I feel it,she said, shuddering also, yet unable to deceive herself,"what difference do I make by saying it? |
11901 | But if they are true? |
11901 | But need that make any difference? |
11901 | But of what am I vain, Grizel? 11901 But the one thing you shall never do, Grizel, is to interfere with my work; I swear it, do you hear? |
11901 | But to whom, then, is this memory painful, Grizel? |
11901 | But was it no vulgar? |
11901 | But we ca n''t turn back the clock, can we, Corp? |
11901 | But what does it mean? |
11901 | But what kind of love? |
11901 | But what sent her,he asked eagerly,"on that journey?" |
11901 | But what was it you cried out? |
11901 | But who says so, Aaron? 11901 But why did you pretend to have forgotten?" |
11901 | But why does she not know? |
11901 | But why? |
11901 | But you do? |
11901 | But you know where it is? |
11901 | But you never were as old as you are to- day, were you? |
11901 | But you would have preferred''beloved''? |
11901 | By the way, what is it about? |
11901 | Ca n''t you guess where it is? |
11901 | Can I help that? |
11901 | Can we not be happy in the present, and leave the future to take care of itself? |
11901 | Can you think it makes me love you less,she sobbed,"because I love him, too? |
11901 | Cause? 11901 Could I help that?" |
11901 | Could it have been taken out on the way here? |
11901 | Could you not guess even that? |
11901 | David, can I not even make you angry with me? |
11901 | Dead? |
11901 | Desire to marry her gone? |
11901 | Did I never tell you of my little gods? 11901 Did I not?" |
11901 | Did I say I was going out? |
11901 | Did he ask you to tell me that? |
11901 | Did he ever give you any trouble? |
11901 | Did he say he telled me her name? |
11901 | Did he say that? 11901 Did it seem long?" |
11901 | Did that capacity go with the others, David? |
11901 | Did we ever ken he was finding it, Grizel, till he did find it? 11901 Did you come here to say that to me, Grizel?" |
11901 | Did you ever hear your own heart beat, Alice? |
11901 | Did you go away? |
11901 | Did you like the first words of it, Grizel? |
11901 | Did you live here long ago? |
11901 | Did you not know it, Grizel? |
11901 | Did you really think your manuscript was lost? |
11901 | Did you see me die? |
11901 | Did you think as much of her as that? |
11901 | Did you? |
11901 | Do I wish I did not? |
11901 | Do I, Gavinia? |
11901 | Do even you grow tired of her? |
11901 | Do n''t I? |
11901 | Do n''t you believe me, dear? |
11901 | Do n''t you see what it means? 11901 Do n''t you see what they will say?" |
11901 | Do n''t you think this is all rather silly? |
11901 | Do n''t you understand that she would stop him, though it were for no better reasons than selfish ones? 11901 Do n''t you?" |
11901 | Do we know the truth now? |
11901 | Do you ever rock them now when people annoy you? |
11901 | Do you expect my face to fall at that? |
11901 | Do you forgive me, Grizel? 11901 Do you hear it?" |
11901 | Do you ken what is going on, man? |
11901 | Do you know any Bett? |
11901 | Do you know,Tommy said,"what I have told you is really at least half the truth? |
11901 | Do you like me to think you one? |
11901 | Do you love her, David? |
11901 | Do you love her? |
11901 | Do you mean that we should discourage David? |
11901 | Do you mean that you do n''t love me? |
11901 | Do you mean that you never cared for me? |
11901 | Do you mean you wanted to? |
11901 | Do you mean,she asked indignantly,"that you think he did not do it?" |
11901 | Do you mind talking it over with me, Grizel? |
11901 | Do you mind? |
11901 | Do you mind? |
11901 | Do you really think she could, Grizel? |
11901 | Do you remember him, Grizel? |
11901 | Do you remember the old doctor who called you his little housekeeper? 11901 Do you think I could go now?" |
11901 | Do you think I''m just pretending they''re there? |
11901 | Do you think him handsome? |
11901 | Do you think me a child because I blow kisses to her? |
11901 | Do you want it to be the same-- do you really want it? 11901 Does it look as if I thought little of you?" |
11901 | Does she know? |
11901 | Does she know? |
11901 | Does she mean to her father''s house? |
11901 | Does the man think I am in love with him? |
11901 | Else what,he asked,"would make him hand it to me so solemn- like, and tell me to pass it on to her if he was drowned? |
11901 | Elspeth,said Tommy,"what do you say to going north and having a sight of Thrums again?" |
11901 | Fear of the prescription? |
11901 | Follow whom? |
11901 | Grizel, has it passed away altogether now? |
11901 | Grizel,Tommy entreated her,"you know who I am, do n''t you?" |
11901 | Grizel,he cried,"can we not be as we have been?" |
11901 | Had you any shooting? |
11901 | Haemorrhage into the neighbouring joint on inflammation? |
11901 | Has Elspeth a baby? |
11901 | Has it ever struck you,he asked,"that you are very unlike other women?" |
11901 | Has she come back? |
11901 | Has that story got abroad? |
11901 | Have I hurt you? |
11901 | Have I mentioned it? |
11901 | Have I no cause to be angry? |
11901 | Have you asked her? |
11901 | Have you destroyed it? |
11901 | Have you ever seriously wondered why I do n''t marry? |
11901 | Have you made your peace with him? |
11901 | Have you never had to walk me off? |
11901 | Have you not been to see him yet? |
11901 | Have you not one word of praise for such a splendid deed? |
11901 | Have you not seen it yourself, Grizel? |
11901 | Have you not seen it yourself? |
11901 | Have you noticed,he asked awkwardly,"that I sometimes whistle?" |
11901 | He forbids it? |
11901 | How can she make them all up? |
11901 | How can you be so cruel? 11901 How can you stand so still?" |
11901 | How could she help it? |
11901 | How could that have helped you? |
11901 | How could you help it, rather? |
11901 | How is that dear, darling little Agnes-- Elspeth? |
11901 | How much self- respect do you think is left for me after to- day? |
11901 | How the---- could you know that? |
11901 | I admire brave men,she replied,"and he is one, is he not?" |
11901 | I do n''t want to hurt you-- you know that; but please tell me, did you really do it? 11901 I follow you,"she replied;"but what does it matter? |
11901 | I have known all the time, Aaron, but have I interfered? |
11901 | I suppose she is the lady of the arbour? |
11901 | I suppose,she said gently, to bring him out of the reverie into which he had sunk,"I suppose it happened some time ago?" |
11901 | I think it was your baby, Corp. Did you hear it, Grizel? |
11901 | I think so much of them that how could I stand by silently and watch them go? |
11901 | If you do n''t know----"Is it Elspeth? |
11901 | If you moved me? |
11901 | In my absence? |
11901 | In spite of the want of them? |
11901 | Is Elspeth back? |
11901 | Is any woman ever afraid of that? |
11901 | Is he really happy? 11901 Is he sorry he did it? |
11901 | Is it Sentimental Tommy still? |
11901 | Is it a book? |
11901 | Is it a pity for him that he married me? 11901 Is it a pity for me? |
11901 | Is it a polite letter? |
11901 | Is it here you want to bide? |
11901 | Is it my money, or what? 11901 Is it not home, Grizel, when you are with me?" |
11901 | Is it possible he is so fond of her as that? |
11901 | Is it right, oh, is it right? |
11901 | Is it so cold as that? |
11901 | Is it so painful to you even to hear me say it? |
11901 | Is it so still? |
11901 | Is it the same love that it was? 11901 Is it true, what people are saying?" |
11901 | Is it, Grizel? |
11901 | Is mine the first half? 11901 Is that a scientific fact?" |
11901 | Is there any more, David? |
11901 | Is there any woman in the world, Grizel, with whom you would change places? |
11901 | Is there anything between those two, do you think? |
11901 | Is there no hope for me? |
11901 | Is there nothing you will let me do for you, Grizel? |
11901 | Is this chapter yours or mine? |
11901 | Is this only pity for me, Grizel,he implored, looking into her face as if to learn his fate,"or is it love indeed?" |
11901 | Is this your first visit? |
11901 | Is what you have told me true, that it would help you? |
11901 | It is all true, Alice, is it not? |
11901 | It is not true? |
11901 | Ladies and gentlemen,she cried,"how could I help it?" |
11901 | Lately, Grizel? |
11901 | May I ask what it is that my oldest friend accuses me of? 11901 May I?" |
11901 | Mr. Sandys, you have been so good, I wonder if you would tell me her name? |
11901 | My attempt to regain my old power over you has not been very successful, has it, David? 11901 My eyes?" |
11901 | Need we speak of this, Grizel? |
11901 | Never as a girl? |
11901 | No,cried Tommy, in agony,"she''s my sister, and we''re orphans, and did you think I could have the heart to leave Elspeth behind?" |
11901 | No; but could she? |
11901 | Not until I wanted you to? |
11901 | Not with me? |
11901 | Nothing monstrous in my letting you give Elspeth them? |
11901 | Now, am I as round as all that? |
11901 | Obedient? |
11901 | Of me? |
11901 | Of what? |
11901 | Of whom? |
11901 | Oh, David,she exclaimed,"what else do you think your patients and I talk of when I am trying to nurse them? |
11901 | Oh, Grizel, do you think I could find happiness apart from you for a day? 11901 Oh, Tommy, have I not told you? |
11901 | Oh, beautiful one, are you really mine? 11901 Oh, do you care less for me now?" |
11901 | Oh, how ever could you have found that out? |
11901 | Oh, mother, do you see me? 11901 Oh, woman, woman, can you ask?" |
11901 | Oh,she cried, with a movement that was a passionate caress,"do you indeed love me so much as that? |
11901 | Or I could go with you? |
11901 | P.S.,it said"How is Sentimental Tommy?" |
11901 | Perhaps I ask too much, but it is this: may I keep your glove? |
11901 | Perhaps only? |
11901 | Pretty, are they not? |
11901 | Rather pretty, do n''t you think? |
11901 | Really, Grizel--"Is it not true? |
11901 | Seriously, Grizel? |
11901 | Shall I fling it away? |
11901 | Shall I help you out? |
11901 | Shall I tell you why? |
11901 | So long as I had you, Elspeth,he said reproachfully,"was not that enough?" |
11901 | So you and he do n''t correspond now? |
11901 | So,said she slowly,"you are apologizing to me for not going on?" |
11901 | Something you have seen in your paper? |
11901 | Such as? |
11901 | Surely not so sweet as the other, Grizel? |
11901 | Surely you could fight against them and drive them away? |
11901 | Tell me,she cried like a suppliant,"how have I done it?" |
11901 | That disdainful look is you,he told her,"and I admire it more than anything in nature; and yet, Alice, and yet----""Well?" |
11901 | The de''il tak''you,he cried,"how did you find out that?" |
11901 | The same as what, Grizel? |
11901 | The spirit has all gone out of him; what am I afraid of? |
11901 | The whole o''t? |
11901 | Then he would marry you? |
11901 | Then why not give it up? |
11901 | Then why say such things, Grizel? |
11901 | Then you did not marry him, after all? |
11901 | Then you do give me credit for a little courage? |
11901 | Then you do really have a tiny bit of hope? |
11901 | There has been nothing to cause it, has there? |
11901 | There was no jouking her,said Corp."Do you mind how that used to bother you?" |
11901 | Understand what? |
11901 | Was it not enough for you that I should think she did it? |
11901 | Was it not she who passed just now? |
11901 | Was it really you? |
11901 | Was it very sudden? |
11901 | Was she beautiful? |
11901 | Was that the something? |
11901 | Was there no reason why I should not seek to discover it? |
11901 | We shall take her away,David said, and when he and Tommy were left together he asked:"Do you see what it means?" |
11901 | Well, where are we to send her? |
11901 | Well, which am I? |
11901 | Well? |
11901 | Well? |
11901 | Well? |
11901 | Were you caught in the rain? |
11901 | Were you not afraid? |
11901 | Were you trying to walk it off? |
11901 | What am I? |
11901 | What are they saying? |
11901 | What are you looking so holy about? |
11901 | What did I say? |
11901 | What did we see? 11901 What did you tell him?" |
11901 | What do you mean? |
11901 | What do you think of her? |
11901 | What do you think of him? |
11901 | What does that matter, if it does you harm? |
11901 | What does that matter,she replied distressfully,"if it is true? |
11901 | What does the world look like to you, my darling? 11901 What else could have made me come?" |
11901 | What else could make her want to be alone with him? |
11901 | What glove? |
11901 | What is it to- day? |
11901 | What is it, David? |
11901 | What is my name? |
11901 | What is she like? |
11901 | What is sun? 11901 What is there monstrous,"she asked,"in your being so good to Elspeth? |
11901 | What is to be done, Elspeth? |
11901 | What is true? |
11901 | What is your name? |
11901 | What is? |
11901 | What laddie? |
11901 | What made you think of that? |
11901 | What makes you say that? 11901 What makes you think that?" |
11901 | What more, Grizel? 11901 What pleasure should she be able to sook out o''his keeping ding- ding- danging on about that woman?" |
11901 | What shall I do to- morrow? |
11901 | What was his name, Grizel? |
11901 | What woman? |
11901 | What would the bairn say if he kent I made you greet? |
11901 | What? |
11901 | What? |
11901 | Whatever has come over you both? |
11901 | When are we to see the result? |
11901 | When that which you want has come to you, Elspeth, how can I but be glad? 11901 When was I ever afraid of you?" |
11901 | Where did you copy this from? |
11901 | Where is it, Alice? 11901 Where is your home?" |
11901 | Where was it? |
11901 | Where,cried Pym, turning over the leaves in a panic,"where is the scene in the burning house?" |
11901 | Where? |
11901 | Which are you doing now? |
11901 | Which of them all is me, Grizel? |
11901 | Who are you? |
11901 | Who is it? |
11901 | Who is that? |
11901 | Who is this girl? |
11901 | Who lives there now? |
11901 | Who was he? |
11901 | Who? |
11901 | Who? |
11901 | Whose baby was it? |
11901 | Why are n''t you nice to me? |
11901 | Why are you glad, Grizel? |
11901 | Why did n''t you, Elspeth? |
11901 | Why did n''t you? |
11901 | Why did you not tell me when we met the other day? |
11901 | Why did you walk as if you were lame? |
11901 | Why do n''t you have two copies? |
11901 | Why do n''t you laugh, Grizel? |
11901 | Why do you call me that? |
11901 | Why do you read this to me? |
11901 | Why have you changed so? |
11901 | Why have you come back? |
11901 | Why have you told me this? |
11901 | Why is it? |
11901 | Why not tell him that you want it as much as he? |
11901 | Why not? |
11901 | Why should pretence please me? |
11901 | Why so smart as that? |
11901 | Why withdraw the book? |
11901 | Why? 11901 Why?" |
11901 | Why? |
11901 | Why? |
11901 | Why? |
11901 | Why? |
11901 | With how many tears on them? |
11901 | Would not that please you? |
11901 | Would you have her live if her mind remains affected? |
11901 | Would you like to hear it? |
11901 | Would you take her back, Gavinia,Tommy asked humbly,"if she continues to want it?" |
11901 | Would you? |
11901 | Yea? |
11901 | You are just nineteen, I think? |
11901 | You are not angry with me for writing it? |
11901 | You are not angry with me, are you, for being almost sorry for her? 11901 You are not angry?" |
11901 | You are not sorry, are you? |
11901 | You are quite sure that you mean that,she might ask timidly,"and that you are not flinging away your life on me?" |
11901 | You are sure you are happy again, Grizel? 11901 You are to call the baby Tommy?" |
11901 | You can believe that of your Grizel? |
11901 | You can think of no other way in which it might have disappeared? |
11901 | You could keep something back from me, Grizel? |
11901 | You dared to conceive that? |
11901 | You did not even say that you would-- consult me? |
11901 | You do know, do n''t you? |
11901 | You do n''t follow him into the parlour? |
11901 | You do n''t mean that it is me? |
11901 | You do n''t mean to say that you think I am afraid of you still? |
11901 | You do n''t really mean that? |
11901 | You have been looking me up in the dictionary, have you, Grizel? |
11901 | You mean some one who is dead? |
11901 | You mean you want me to let you off? |
11901 | You must be sorry for him? |
11901 | You prepare the aristocracy for the stage, do n''t you? |
11901 | You taught me, long ago, what was the right thing to say about babies, and how could I be sure it was you until I saw your arms rocking? |
11901 | You think I am like her in appearance? |
11901 | You think a great deal, do n''t you? |
11901 | You took it from my bag, did you not? |
11901 | You understand, do n''t you? |
11901 | You-- said you would marry him, Elspeth? |
11901 | Your Christian name, boy? |
11901 | ''Is he much changed?'' |
11901 | ''Was this Thomas Sandys''s piano?'' |
11901 | ''Where is your independence, Grizel?'' |
11901 | ( What could it be?) |
11901 | A member said, with a laugh,''I wonder for how long men can be together without talking gamesomely of women?'' |
11901 | A mother, they say, can never quite forget her boy-- oh, Grizel, is it true? |
11901 | About what? |
11901 | Afore I can get rid o''them they gie a squeak and cry,''Was that Thomas Sandys''s bed?'' |
11901 | After all, had she not been moved? |
11901 | After all, how could she let his monstrous stupidity wound a heart protected by such a letter? |
11901 | Ah, Aaron, do you not see that your dislike gives me the more reason only to esteem you?" |
11901 | Ah, Grizel, why do you sit there in the cold? |
11901 | Ah, Tommy, you bore with her with infinite patience, but did it never strike you that she kept you to the earth? |
11901 | Ah, but was she? |
11901 | Ah, of course he felt it, but was it quite as much to him as it was to her? |
11901 | All gone, all shaved, and for what? |
11901 | All memories, however sad, of loved ones become sweet, do n''t they, when we get far enough away from them?" |
11901 | Am I a baby only, Grizel?" |
11901 | Am I here to beg you to do it again, or to defy it?" |
11901 | Am I not a wonder?" |
11901 | Am I to be sent away?" |
11901 | Am I to bring in my box? |
11901 | An inventor? |
11901 | And I myself am the meaner thing than the book, am I?" |
11901 | And could you let me go?" |
11901 | And did he really love her? |
11901 | And do you know what she said about your dear wet eyes, Grizel? |
11901 | And do you know why she left us so suddenly? |
11901 | And even of these Spartans how many would have let the reward slip through their fingers rather than wound the feelings of a girl? |
11901 | And had he really done so? |
11901 | And he was sure it was a sprain? |
11901 | And if it was, did there remain in him enough of humanity to give him the right to ask a little sympathy of those who can love? |
11901 | And the other Jacobites, what of them? |
11901 | And then he cried,"Since when has Grizel ceased to care for housekeeping?" |
11901 | And what could he do but look at her with the wonder and the awe that come to every man who, for one moment in his life, knows a woman well? |
11901 | And when Elspeth said the words that were so difficult to him, he wondered,"Did she say that because she knew I wished it?" |
11901 | And when he blinked at this, she took him roughly by the arm and cried,"Wherever''s Grizel?" |
11901 | And whose season was it? |
11901 | And why should she not obey, when it was all a jest? |
11901 | And yet,"she said philosophically,"I daresay you feel just the same?" |
11901 | And"Listen,"he said, when they had sat down, crushed, by the old Cuttle Well,"do you hear anything?" |
11901 | Are they not wet? |
11901 | Are you glad, glad?" |
11901 | Are you laughing at me for this? |
11901 | Are you sorry that Grizel knew? |
11901 | Are you sure you are not confusing me with mamma?" |
11901 | Are you to grow weak, Grizel, as I grow strong?" |
11901 | At first Pym''s only comment was,"It is the same old drivel as before; what more can they want?" |
11901 | At times, is he just a weeny bit sorry?" |
11901 | Ay, I suppose you dinna want to tell me what it is that has lichted you up again?" |
11901 | Ay, you ken that without my telling you, but do you ken what makes me tell you now? |
11901 | Bring her with you if you must; but do n''t you think that the nice, quiet country with the thingumbobs all in bloom would suit her best? |
11901 | Broken your wife''s heart, have you? |
11901 | But amanuensis? |
11901 | But how could she love him? |
11901 | But how had he let her know? |
11901 | But they always insist that you are an iceberg, and am I so much to blame if that look of hauteur deceived me with the rest? |
11901 | But was Tommy the only sufferer? |
11901 | But was it, then, all a dream? |
11901 | But was she? |
11901 | But what did you do when you went home?" |
11901 | But what was it, Grizel? |
11901 | But what was the truth? |
11901 | But why had she never worn it, when she wanted so much to do so, and it was hers? |
11901 | By the way, what would she have known? |
11901 | CHAPTER III SANDYS ON WOMAN"Can you kindly tell me the name of the book I want?" |
11901 | Can I ever be proud of your love again?" |
11901 | Corp, can you help me to lift my foot on to that chair? |
11901 | Could he resist her in anything? |
11901 | Could it be that David had proposed to her at the waterside? |
11901 | Could she admit that the letter was unopened, and why? |
11901 | Could she be expected to smile while her noble brother did this great deed of sacrifice? |
11901 | Could this be he? |
11901 | Courageous of Tommy, was it not? |
11901 | Deprived of Gavinia''s counsel, and afraid to hurt Elspeth, he sought out the doctor and said bluntly to him,"How is it he never writes to Grizel? |
11901 | Did David know the truth from Grizel? |
11901 | Did Tommy chuckle when he saw David''s eyes following her? |
11901 | Did Tommy deserve that look? |
11901 | Did he hear anything else? |
11901 | Did he know anything more? |
11901 | Did he not want that? |
11901 | Did it do anything strange when you had it there?" |
11901 | Did you no ken he was lying on chairs?" |
11901 | Did you not notice that I was crying?" |
11901 | Did you notice, Alice, or was it but a fancy of my own, that when he had seen the expression on your face the sun quite slunk away?" |
11901 | Did you try? |
11901 | Do I hurt you, darling?" |
11901 | Do I like your disdain, Alice, or does it make me writhe? |
11901 | Do n''t you follow me?" |
11901 | Do n''t you see I was doing it only to make a woman of you? |
11901 | Do n''t you think you could say that men who have never had a sister are peculiarly gentle and considerate to women?" |
11901 | Do we know all that Grizel had to fight? |
11901 | Do we know all that Grizel had to fight? |
11901 | Do you hear me, madam? |
11901 | Do you know Mrs. McLean invited us to stay with her? |
11901 | Do you know what it was? |
11901 | Do you know why that look of elation had come suddenly to her face? |
11901 | Do you know why?" |
11901 | Do you mind how feared we used to be at that house?" |
11901 | Do you mind o''her mother? |
11901 | Do you mind that swear word o''his--''stroke''? |
11901 | Do you notice how simple the wording is? |
11901 | Do you remember how, in the old days, I sometimes danced for joy? |
11901 | Do you remember how, when I was a child, you used to be horrified because I prayed standing? |
11901 | Do you remember the long, lonely path between two ragged little dykes that led from the Den to the house of the Painted Lady? |
11901 | Do you remember what she was?" |
11901 | Do you remember what you said:''It is to save you acute pain that I want to see Corp first''?" |
11901 | Do you remember?" |
11901 | Do you remember?" |
11901 | Do you see her now, ready to start? |
11901 | Do you see her standing on tiptoe to see the last of them? |
11901 | Do you see now why my eyes look wistful? |
11901 | Do you see that Tommy was doing all this for Grizel and pretending to her that it was for himself? |
11901 | Do you see that now, woman?" |
11901 | Do you see the piano?" |
11901 | Do you think the joy that had been lit in her heart was dead? |
11901 | Do you think the radiance had gone from her face now? |
11901 | Do you, David?" |
11901 | Does it need an interpreter? |
11901 | Does one finger of your hand plot against another? |
11901 | Does the reader think it was love? |
11901 | Easy- going Pym laughed, then said irritably,"Of what use could a mere boy be to me?" |
11901 | Even when she said,"Which foot is it?" |
11901 | Fears,"she continued, so wistfully,"that it is too beautiful to end happily? |
11901 | Fond o''her, was he? |
11901 | For when literature had to be judged, who could be so grim a critic as this usually lenient toper? |
11901 | Had Corp concocted that story about her father to blind them? |
11901 | Had ever a heart better right to expand? |
11901 | Had he been left a fortune? |
11901 | Had he fallen? |
11901 | Had he hopped? |
11901 | Had he not been sharpening his tools in this belief for years? |
11901 | Had not Tommy taught her this? |
11901 | Had she really been as far as London? |
11901 | Had they quarrelled? |
11901 | Had you no feeling for her?" |
11901 | Has he any idea of what the story is to be about? |
11901 | Has it ever been noticed that the proper remark does not always gain in propriety with repetition? |
11901 | Has the shock stunned you, Tommy? |
11901 | Have I been too cunning, or have you seen through me all the time? |
11901 | Have they been waiting for you in the Den, Grizel, all this time? |
11901 | Have you decided on the name?" |
11901 | Have you found your mother''s legacy at last? |
11901 | Have you got it here?" |
11901 | He had been so true yesterday; oh, how could she tremble to- day? |
11901 | He had told the truth, and if what he imagined was twenty times more real to him than what was really there, how could Tommy help it? |
11901 | He knew it was tragic that such love as hers should be given to him, but what more could he do than he was doing? |
11901 | He would have liked to say, in a careless voice,"Rather pretty, is n''t she?" |
11901 | Her mother subsequently said that she understood he wrote books, and would he deposit five pounds? |
11901 | Her nose is a little tilted, is it not?" |
11901 | Hi, where are you, Corp? |
11901 | His suspicions had to find vent in words:"You dinna speir wha the women- folk are?" |
11901 | How can I answer, who love her the more only? |
11901 | How can anyone look at me and not see you? |
11901 | How can you be angry with me?" |
11901 | How could Grizel do anything that would give him the right to be angry with her? |
11901 | How could Grizel have doubted Tommy? |
11901 | How could I give you cause?" |
11901 | How could he think of anything but it? |
11901 | How could she be other than glorious when there was so much to do? |
11901 | How could she know that he was to strike her? |
11901 | How could she wait until to- morrow? |
11901 | How could you think otherwise?" |
11901 | How had she contrived it? |
11901 | How is it he is in sic a state? |
11901 | How many men would have had the courage to wrick their foot as he had done? |
11901 | How to inform Tommy without letting Grizel know? |
11901 | How was Grizel to understand that he had meant nothing in particular by them? |
11901 | I am not morbid, am I, in thinking of her still as some one apart from myself? |
11901 | I am quite the right man to consult at such a moment, am I not?" |
11901 | I did not know you had the same fears; I thought that perhaps they came only to women; have you had them before? |
11901 | I have behaved since then as if that was what I meant, have I? |
11901 | I have decided to go on with this thing because it seems best for you; but is it? |
11901 | I look as if I had meant something worse, do I? |
11901 | I mean, did you do it in the way we have been led to suppose?" |
11901 | I suppose I ought not to ask your age?" |
11901 | I wish you and David so much happiness; you wo n''t refuse it, will you?" |
11901 | I wonder if you misread him so utterly as to believe that he thought himself something of a prize? |
11901 | I wonder what can be the reason?" |
11901 | I wonder what you would have done?" |
11901 | I wonder whether any of you read it now? |
11901 | If he reproved her, she replied meekly,"What can you expect frae a woman that doesna wear gloves?" |
11901 | If he would not fight, why should she? |
11901 | If hers lagged, what did it matter? |
11901 | If she gives you everything, how can she give you more? |
11901 | If your love makes you sorrowful, how can I be proud of it? |
11901 | In her heart she had exulted from the first in his success, and she should have been still more glad( should she not?) |
11901 | In saying that love, and love alone, brought you back, you are admitting, are you not, that you were talking wildly about loss of pride and honour? |
11901 | In those first days she sometimes asked him,"Did you do it out of love, or was it pity only?" |
11901 | Is it because you are so sure of me?" |
11901 | Is it my book?" |
11901 | Is it of no avail?" |
11901 | Is it the night air that makes you shiver?" |
11901 | Is it too much?" |
11901 | Is not that loving her for the wrong thing?" |
11901 | Is that because she was my mother? |
11901 | Is that your way of saying it? |
11901 | Is the king of the_ Penny Number_ already no more than a button that once upon a time kept Tommy''s person together? |
11901 | Is there a finer word in the language? |
11901 | It began in dread, but ended so joyfully, do you think Grizel grudged the dread? |
11901 | It is an ecstasy to you, is it not, to feel that I know you so well?" |
11901 | It is essential that you should run up to see your publisher, is it not? |
11901 | It is not wicked, is it, to think that?" |
11901 | It was not Margaret? |
11901 | It was"Am I not to see it on your finger once?" |
11901 | It will be a grim business, Gemmell, as you know, and if I am Sentimental Tommy through it all, why grudge me my comic little strut?" |
11901 | It would be rather pitiful, would it not, if I have gone through so much for no end at all?" |
11901 | Jerry?" |
11901 | Loud above his voice his ashen face was speaking to her, and she cried in terror,"What is wrong?" |
11901 | Love was their theme; but how to know what was said when between lovers it is only the loose change of conversation that gets into words? |
11901 | May I have it, please?" |
11901 | May we lift your head to show her your joyous face? |
11901 | Meaning to do her a service, Tommy communicated this to her; and then, what do you think? |
11901 | Most of them thought he was being accused of something vile, and the Dominie demanded, with a light heart,"Who is the woman?" |
11901 | Mr. Sandys was from first to last a man of character, but why when others falter was he always so sure- footed? |
11901 | Neither did he; but,"Why should you? |
11901 | Now was not that good of Tommy? |
11901 | Odd, is it not, if true, that a man should travel so far to see a lip curl up?" |
11901 | Oh, could it be she? |
11901 | Oh, could they not tell her where he was? |
11901 | Oh, have you heard a voice crying,''It is too beautiful; it can never be''?" |
11901 | Oh, how could she get through to- morrow? |
11901 | Oh, it would even be easy to me to deceive myself; but should I do it?" |
11901 | Oh, mother, did you hear me? |
11901 | Oh, my love, you have done so much, will you do no more?" |
11901 | Oh, who would be so cruel as to ask a boy to love? |
11901 | Oh, why had he not told Elspeth at once? |
11901 | Or Matilda? |
11901 | Or was it Martha? |
11901 | Perhaps she was dead? |
11901 | Perhaps you do n''t even believe that I was Captain Ure?" |
11901 | Result of reflection, that if the name had been mentioned to Corp, which he doubted, it began with M. Was it Mary? |
11901 | Sandys, where are we to take her to?" |
11901 | Sandys?" |
11901 | Sandys?" |
11901 | Sandys?" |
11901 | Shall I tell you,"he said gently,"what I believe is Elspeth''s outlook exactly, just now? |
11901 | Shall we go on?" |
11901 | Shall we quote? |
11901 | She asked curiously:"What did you do last night, after you left me? |
11901 | She could say that to him, but to herself? |
11901 | She cried in anxiety:"Have I told you, or did you find out?" |
11901 | She had always thought that she was a nice girl, but was she? |
11901 | She said"Womanly?" |
11901 | She sat thus for a long time; she had so much for which to thank God, though not with her lips, for how could they keep pace with her heart? |
11901 | She was insane, was she not? |
11901 | Should he keep that sorrowful figure a man or turn it into a woman? |
11901 | Should you have taken it with you, Tommy? |
11901 | Since you took to making printed books?" |
11901 | So my letter seemed to annoy him, did it?" |
11901 | That was why you wanted to prevent Corp''s telling me about the glove, was it not? |
11901 | The book, she knew, was beautiful; but it was the writer of the book she was peering for-- the Tommy she had known so well, what had he grown into? |
11901 | Their daughters, athirst for a new sensation, thrilled at the thought,"Will he talk to us as nobly as he writes?" |
11901 | Then why do you pretend to know? |
11901 | Then, if he feared that she was willing to be his, it must have been because he thought she loved him? |
11901 | There was nothing small about Tommy, was there? |
11901 | There were a hundred or more at dinner, and they were all saying the same thing:"Where have you been to- day?" |
11901 | They were his very words, were they no, man?" |
11901 | This love that all his books were about-- what was it? |
11901 | This would not bring her any sooner to him than if she waited here until to- morrow; but how could she sit still till to- morrow? |
11901 | This, of course, did not prevent her saying, with a sob,"Wha is the woman?" |
11901 | To- morrow, when I hear the town ringing your praises, I shall not say,''Yes, is n''t he wonderful?'' |
11901 | Tommy interrupted her:"Now what did you mean by that?" |
11901 | Tommy was taken aback, but replied, with gentle dignity,"Do you think, Grizel, I would let that make any difference in my estimate of him?" |
11901 | Tommy, do n''t you see?" |
11901 | Too busy? |
11901 | Was Grizel not as nice as she used to be? |
11901 | Was he a knave? |
11901 | Was he feeling to his marrow that as soon as those other two figures rounded the bend in the stream he and she would have the world to themselves? |
11901 | Was he in great pain? |
11901 | Was he jesting? |
11901 | Was he quite well when he went away? |
11901 | Was he still the same, quite the same? |
11901 | Was he unforgivable, or was it some flaw in the making of him for which he was not responsible? |
11901 | Was he, indeed, a monster? |
11901 | Was it a dream only?" |
11901 | Was it all a mistake of his? |
11901 | Was it because he knew her so well? |
11901 | Was it because he never tried to uncork himself? |
11901 | Was it even make- belief? |
11901 | Was it helplessness that man loved in woman, then? |
11901 | Was it maidenly to bring the glove and hand it to him without a tremor? |
11901 | Was it possible she had misjudged him? |
11901 | Was it possible that the fear of him which the years had driven out of the girl still lived a ghost''s life to haunt the woman? |
11901 | Was it pride that supported her in the trying hour? |
11901 | Was it she?" |
11901 | Was it that? |
11901 | Was not that a feather? |
11901 | Was she prepared to make a man of him at the cost of his possible love? |
11901 | Was she to be blamed for thinking so meanly of Tommy? |
11901 | Was that any reason why he should not feel sorry for Aaron? |
11901 | Was there ever a kind I couldna manage?" |
11901 | Well, what did it matter to her? |
11901 | Well, what more did the little inquisitor want to know?" |
11901 | Well, why do n''t you tell her, Tommy? |
11901 | What are her own troubles to a woman when there is something to do for the man she loves? |
11901 | What are we to do with it now?" |
11901 | What did come out this month? |
11901 | What did he hear? |
11901 | What did we do?" |
11901 | What did you hear?" |
11901 | What do they say? |
11901 | What do you say to pitying instead of cursing him? |
11901 | What else could have made you dislocate your ankle rather than admit that you had been rather silly?" |
11901 | What garred them telegraph for him? |
11901 | What had Aaron been doing with Tommy? |
11901 | What has come over you? |
11901 | What is genius? |
11901 | What is it they do next in Pym and even more expensive authors? |
11901 | What is rain?" |
11901 | What is that called?" |
11901 | What right had I, of all people, to expect a love so rare and beautiful as yours to last? |
11901 | What shall I do to make you love me? |
11901 | What shall we say? |
11901 | What she jumped to was the vital question, Who was the woman? |
11901 | What was Lady Pippinworth beside this glorious woman? |
11901 | What was her strange attraction? |
11901 | What was his name?" |
11901 | What was it in women that made men love them? |
11901 | What was the individuality behind the work? |
11901 | What was this Grizel was saying? |
11901 | What was this dreadful thing? |
11901 | What were all her mockings but a beckoning to him to come on? |
11901 | What you were once willing to do for love, will you do for pity now?" |
11901 | Whaur''s the woman that could help it?" |
11901 | When I saw you coming to meet me half- way-- oh, Grizel, tell me that you were doing that?" |
11901 | When anything so tremendous happened as the meeting of these two, how could they find words at once? |
11901 | When did it happen? |
11901 | When he stood still and listened he could hear the friends of his youth at play, and they seemed to be calling:"Are you coming, Corp? |
11901 | When it was steady again,"You did not say that, did you?" |
11901 | When? |
11901 | Where are the words you want to torment me with? |
11901 | Where does yours begin?" |
11901 | Where?" |
11901 | Wherever is she? |
11901 | Who are you, that talks of going to him as your right? |
11901 | Who said that Tommy could not love? |
11901 | Who would have believed it?" |
11901 | Who would have expected to meet her here? |
11901 | Why are you so blind?" |
11901 | Why did she pause? |
11901 | Why did you always love him, you who saw into him so well and demanded so much of men? |
11901 | Why did you not prevent him?" |
11901 | Why do n''t you scratch and struggle for the last time? |
11901 | Why does not Corp come back?" |
11901 | Why does she leave Gavinia''s blue hearth this evening, and seek the solitary Den? |
11901 | Why had she come? |
11901 | Why had she gone off to London without telling anyone? |
11901 | Why have you grown so quiet, Alice? |
11901 | Will you be my wife?" |
11901 | Will you take charge of what may be left of it? |
11901 | Will you take it back to him?" |
11901 | Will you tell her, man, or will I?" |
11901 | Wo n''t you bear with me for a little longer?" |
11901 | Would Grizel call and be friendly? |
11901 | Would you like to make the woman unhappy, Tommy? |
11901 | Would you like to stop now?" |
11901 | Yes, of course he is happy when he is writing; but is he quite contented at other times? |
11901 | Yes, she knew he did, but how could he? |
11901 | Yet she went on briskly as if he had told her something:"Am I detaining you? |
11901 | You are not angry with me for speaking of her, are you? |
11901 | You are not angry with us, are you, Elspeth? |
11901 | You are not pretending in order to please me?" |
11901 | You had run away without paying your rent, was it? |
11901 | You love me, my peerless Alice, do n''t you? |
11901 | You were his little housekeeper; do n''t you remember? |
11901 | You were sure she could not, but if she could!--had that thought never made you flap your wings? |
11901 | You will love me at last, wo n''t you?" |
11901 | You will not be less grateful than a country boy? |
11901 | a senseless remark to a man whom it was bothering still-- or shall we say to a boy? |
11901 | and what should I do to- morrow? |
11901 | and which was the first time, and the second, and the third? |
11901 | cried Pym,"what sort of a boy is this?" |
11901 | does no one remember Pym for himself? |
11901 | he cried reproachfully, and then in a husky voice:"Can you really think so badly of me as that?" |
11901 | he demanded,"or do you no ken? |
11901 | he said,"why do you look at me in that way?" |
11901 | roared Pym,"are you married?" |
11901 | was one that he could dodge, as yet; but suppose Mrs. Jerry told his dear Elspeth of what had happened? |
11901 | what can have happened?" |
11901 | what did you hear?" |
11901 | what do you think, Grizel?" |
11901 | what had taken her to London? |
11901 | what was her damnable coldness compared to the love of Grizel? |
11901 | where had the ladies heard that name before? |
11901 | who wants them to be human? |
11901 | why had she sent that telegram? |
11901 | why had that frightened look come into her eyes? |
11901 | will you never understand how absolutely all of her a woman''s love can be? |
11901 | you have even been tinkering with my heroine''s personal appearance; what is this you have been doing to her nose?" |
36854 | ''How is it possible?'' 36854 A fanatic,"he thought,"what shall I do with him?" |
36854 | After the first evening? |
36854 | Ah then, it came to that? |
36854 | All, Victorine? |
36854 | Allow me to tell you how every thing came about? |
36854 | And Herr van der Weyden? |
36854 | And did I really love her? 36854 And did that never occur to you?" |
36854 | And did you never think what would come of this? |
36854 | And do you really think of departing at the New Year? |
36854 | And does that comfort me? |
36854 | And how is it to be explained? 36854 And how shall this broken- down, sick man, weary with his tortures, find it? |
36854 | And is Herr van der Weyden going back to Java again? |
36854 | And is the wound serious? |
36854 | And since when have we declined to admit Herr Berger? |
36854 | And then? |
36854 | And what did he say? |
36854 | And what was this one thing? |
36854 | And why should I? |
36854 | And will you perhaps also attempt to justify the fact that he never concerned himself about his child? |
36854 | And will you tell other people so? |
36854 | And you adhered to that,he began again,"whatever Father Rohn might say? |
36854 | And you answered? |
36854 | Are you cruel enough to remind me of that? |
36854 | Are you going already? 36854 Are you really ill?" |
36854 | Begun? 36854 Berger?" |
36854 | Better, I hope? |
36854 | Business? 36854 But can we ascribe all the blame to him?" |
36854 | But do you go? |
36854 | But do you know him? |
36854 | But ought this remote possibility to mislead you? 36854 But under what pretext? |
36854 | But what else could one expect? |
36854 | But what is this solution? |
36854 | But why not? 36854 But why?" |
36854 | But wo n''t you go up to the house after all? |
36854 | But you are going home? |
36854 | But you surely did not inquire about that? |
36854 | Can I believe you rather than my mother? 36854 Can I suffer this? |
36854 | Dead? |
36854 | Did he send you to me on this mission? |
36854 | Did the accused choose her Counsel? |
36854 | Did you come on that account? |
36854 | Did you tell the Chief Justice this? |
36854 | Do n''t be afraid-- I only want----"You have come to warn us? |
36854 | Do you know anything about the matter? |
36854 | Do you know what the man- servant is called? |
36854 | Does that poor creature in here strike you as being dangerous? |
36854 | Does your Lordship wish to make an inspection? |
36854 | Escaped? |
36854 | Has he been here already? |
36854 | Has he been here? |
36854 | Has she been suddenly taken ill? |
36854 | Have you read this, Sir? |
36854 | He asked me if there was no one I was attached to, who loved me, to whom my life or death mattered? 36854 He does not suspect it?" |
36854 | He is going to stay in Austria? |
36854 | He surely did n''t torture you with bigoted speeches? |
36854 | Her fate moves you? |
36854 | How am I to understand this? |
36854 | How are you? |
36854 | How can you know that? |
36854 | How could you tell this untruth? 36854 How did it come about that I broke my oath? |
36854 | How do you know that? |
36854 | How do you think of living now? |
36854 | How is Victorine Lippert? |
36854 | How long will this sleep last? |
36854 | How shall I thank you? |
36854 | How-- how does the case stand? |
36854 | I need not tremble any more? 36854 If it should be they?" |
36854 | If the worst were to happen? |
36854 | In Gratz? |
36854 | In any case? |
36854 | In the dark? |
36854 | In the first place: how would the fellow get out of the sick- room or out of his cell into the corridor of the female patients? 36854 In the prison?" |
36854 | Indeed? 36854 Indeed?" |
36854 | Indeed?--and what is the truth? |
36854 | Is this the way to go on after a bad attack of the heart on the evening before? 36854 It is all discovered, is it not?" |
36854 | It will not strike others, but will she not herself guess the truth? |
36854 | It-- it came upon you as a surprise? |
36854 | May I not? |
36854 | May he not pay a visit to a friend and stay to supper there? 36854 Monstrous, is n''t it? |
36854 | No,he then murmured,"how should I know him?" |
36854 | None the less resolved? |
36854 | Nor you either, Franz? |
36854 | Nothing, what should he say? 36854 Oh-- in what way?" |
36854 | Should I otherwise be so calm? 36854 So Fräulein von Tessenau is the happy bride?" |
36854 | So he has none the less resolved to go on with that? |
36854 | So many people believe in it, good earnest men who have seen and suffered much misfortune, how should a simple girl dare to doubt it? 36854 So many?" |
36854 | So people suspect nothing? 36854 Something, my Lord? |
36854 | Tessenau? |
36854 | Thank me?--What for? |
36854 | Thank you,said the raftsman after the door was shut"Well, how I know of your trouble? |
36854 | That was in the beginning of your career? |
36854 | The decision? 36854 The doctor told you? |
36854 | The door through which one can get from here into the prison? |
36854 | The law? 36854 The minister''s telegram?" |
36854 | The worse has past, has n''t it? |
36854 | Then I suppose you have come to buy the house? |
36854 | Then why do you dissent from me with such conviction? 36854 Then you refuse me justice?" |
36854 | Then you still insist that I shall proceed with it? |
36854 | There is such a veritable hurly- burly at the residence, that even Franz hardly knows his way about-- where do you mean to stay? |
36854 | This glimpse into a child''s soul makes you tremble? 36854 Was not the assassin an Italian?" |
36854 | Well, how goes it now? |
36854 | Well, what do you say to that? 36854 Well,"asked Berger,"is the witness here already? |
36854 | Well? |
36854 | What are you doing there? |
36854 | What are you studying so diligently? |
36854 | What are you thinking of? |
36854 | What do you say to this? |
36854 | What do you think of doing? |
36854 | What does that matter to me? 36854 What has happened?" |
36854 | What has happened? |
36854 | What have I done to you? |
36854 | What is the matter with you? 36854 What is there to prevent me? |
36854 | What is this? |
36854 | What need of asking? |
36854 | What shall I say? |
36854 | What to do? |
36854 | What will you do? |
36854 | What? 36854 What? |
36854 | What? |
36854 | When are you to take over the conduct of the Courts? |
36854 | When do you leave Bolosch? 36854 Where did you see him? |
36854 | Where is Fräulein Brigitta? |
36854 | Which are they, my lord? |
36854 | Who granted you the postponement? |
36854 | Who has been playing this joke upon you? 36854 Who is the bridegroom?" |
36854 | Whom does our present transaction relate to? |
36854 | Why did you not discover yourself to me, or why did you not appeal to the Emperor for pardon? |
36854 | Why do n''t you go to confession? |
36854 | Why do you say such a horrible thing? 36854 Why do you suppose that?" |
36854 | Why have you again put off going? |
36854 | Why not? |
36854 | Why should I? 36854 Why should you wish her to live? |
36854 | Why wo n''t you go to Vienna? 36854 Why, what is there to discover?" |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Will you allow me a question? |
36854 | Wo n''t you be too lonely there? |
36854 | Would it not be possible to take out a summons for perjury? |
36854 | Would this be justice? |
36854 | Yes, you must certainly be a countryman of his? |
36854 | You are angry with me? |
36854 | You are going to her? |
36854 | You are going to the trial? |
36854 | You are not going up to the house? |
36854 | You are taking up the studies of your youth again, Fräulein Brigitta? |
36854 | You asked him about her? |
36854 | You divine the rest? |
36854 | You have finished drawing up the appeal? 36854 You have now taken old Franz into your confidence?" |
36854 | You know nothing of him? |
36854 | You know there were not? |
36854 | You shudder, George? |
36854 | You took the girl abroad? |
36854 | You want to refer to something again? |
36854 | You_ will_ not? |
36854 | Your Lordship does not know? |
36854 | Your Lordship is going to receive the procession on my balcony? |
36854 | Your arms? |
36854 | Your lot? |
36854 | ''Are you still here?'' |
36854 | ''Do you recognize that coat of arms?'' |
36854 | ''Have you ever,''he now himself asked,''heard of any keys that my predecessor is said to have handed over?'' |
36854 | ''Have you received my citation?'' |
36854 | ''What are you looking for, my Lord?'' |
36854 | ''What do you want playing the spy here?'' |
36854 | ''What does this mean?'' |
36854 | ''What door?'' |
36854 | ''Why did you go away?'' |
36854 | ''Why did you not do your duty to your child? |
36854 | ''You are a German, are you not Baron Sendlingen? |
36854 | ''You wish to convince me that you were not in criminal collusion with Mirescul? |
36854 | ..."Do I know it?" |
36854 | After twenty- four hours nothing will be found, as we set about searching the house just to show our good intentions-- eh?'' |
36854 | Again he does not know whether he will see her or what he ought to do.... And do I know, would any one know in the presence of such a fate?" |
36854 | All the functionaries of the Courts fell into the greatest state of excitement: who was safe if Sendlingen fell? |
36854 | An energetic Judge could without doubt do so, but will old Hoche, now over seventy, succeed? |
36854 | And at the same time it frightened him: for how could he look him in the face? |
36854 | And could anything else be expected? |
36854 | And could you save her by such a step? |
36854 | And had not this change really set in even more visibly than her physical improvement? |
36854 | And has he, too, to expiate it with honour and life?" |
36854 | And how tragically it affects you? |
36854 | And if I did, how could that trouble me? |
36854 | And if Thou wouldst not do this, why didst Thou suffer us two to be born? |
36854 | And if he then approved of his friend''s resolution not to preside, could he now urge him to undertake a similar task? |
36854 | And if that were so, would it be cause for complaint? |
36854 | And is my guilt greater than his? |
36854 | And is such a person worth so much money? |
36854 | And just as before, it seemed to annoy him to be surprised in the act.--Isn''t that strange?" |
36854 | And therefore once again-- what will you do, Victor?" |
36854 | And while I drove home through the snow- lit winter''s night, I kept repeating these words, for how was I henceforth to live without seeing her?" |
36854 | And why was there no end to this suffering, a great, a liberating, a redeeming end? |
36854 | And why? |
36854 | Are there any pressing matters to be rid of?" |
36854 | At length Berger asked:"You did not know that she bore your child in her bosom?" |
36854 | Awful, thrilling was the cry-- a cry for help?--or a cry of baffled rage? |
36854 | Berger stood still irresolutely; the place was so desolate, so uncanny; should he stay any longer? |
36854 | Berger stopped irresolutely; should he wake him up and question him? |
36854 | Berger was silent-- should he, dared he, tell the truth? |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Besides you would not have starved here?'' |
36854 | But I, what can I appeal to? |
36854 | But can small expedients be of any use? |
36854 | But there we are confronted with the second riddle: how did she come by the file? |
36854 | But was it really all- just? |
36854 | But we took courage and told the man everything; our real name, and that we were only called von Tessenau here----""How did he come by this name?" |
36854 | But what can it matter to me in my position? |
36854 | But what is to be done to prevent it? |
36854 | But what result was to be expected? |
36854 | But what would be the good? |
36854 | But you are still young, why will you cease to hope? |
36854 | Ca n''t you understand that this life would be unendurable if a high- minded deed, a noble victory over self, did not at times rend the web? |
36854 | Can my honour be more sacred than her life?" |
36854 | Can this be against Thy will, Thou who art a God of love and mercy? |
36854 | Can this lessen the burden of the fate?--for her, for him?" |
36854 | Can you expect that of me?" |
36854 | Can you expect this of me, you, who are yourself a Judge, bound by oath to judge both high and low with the same measure?" |
36854 | Certainly my fears were foolish; how should it be found out? |
36854 | Certainly the conflict was now more acute, more painfully accentuated, but was Sendlingen''s duty as a Judge any the less on that account? |
36854 | Could he be guilty of perjury to save them both? |
36854 | Could he then say:''I have no suspicion who could have helped her?'' |
36854 | Dear Heaven, how wretched he looks, and I am not accustomed to be spoken to by him in that way; but what does that matter? |
36854 | Do n''t you see that a man in my situation can not think of himself or any such secondary consideration?" |
36854 | Do n''t you think so, my Lord?" |
36854 | Do you hear? |
36854 | Do you know him?" |
36854 | Do you know no remedy for it?" |
36854 | Do you know so certainly that you will still be here then, that you will still have time then to hurry to Vienna? |
36854 | Do you know this girl?" |
36854 | Do you know whom this concerns?" |
36854 | Do you see now that we liberals and our newspapers are some good? |
36854 | Do you still intend to appeal? |
36854 | Do you suppose that I never mean to enter that cell?" |
36854 | Does he not understand that this very explanation tells most of all against the Minister? |
36854 | Does n''t that appear probable to you too?" |
36854 | Does that strike you as being better? |
36854 | Does your Lordship desire that I should ask him for them?" |
36854 | For look here-- how does the case stand? |
36854 | From caution? |
36854 | From mistrust? |
36854 | Had he deserved this fate? |
36854 | Had not the doctor himself said that she could only be saved by a change in her frame of mind? |
36854 | Had the gentry no relations in Germany then? |
36854 | Has he had news from Vienna?" |
36854 | Has not justice suffered at your hands by your respect for the law, that justice, I mean, which speaks aloud in the heart of every man?" |
36854 | Has the decision arrived? |
36854 | Has your indisposition perhaps returned?" |
36854 | Have you anything else to do here? |
36854 | Have you begun the examination?" |
36854 | Have you ever visited and repeatedly visited other condemned criminals?" |
36854 | He has surely not been deceived? |
36854 | His Majesty is severely wounded, if it had not been for the presence of mind of the butcher, Ettenreich----"He stopped abruptly,"What is the matter?" |
36854 | How could he do this? |
36854 | How could you have the heart to renounce a career that smiles upon you as yours does?" |
36854 | How do you know that? |
36854 | How has Baron Sendlingen been since?" |
36854 | How should this poor, pale, timorous child defend herself alone against such a man? |
36854 | How_ could_ you?" |
36854 | I am no murderer, am I?" |
36854 | I bade her be of good cheer, and then I told her much about his Lordship-- who knows better how, who knows him better? |
36854 | I could only offer her my hand and ask:''Did that brute insult you?'' |
36854 | I had to have Mirescul arrested: were there not the bales of tobacco which the superintendent had seized? |
36854 | I might say to Him:''Was n''t I obliged to try and keep her from sin by using the strongest words? |
36854 | I warned you by your own life, and by causing your conscience and presentiments to speak to you-- why did you not obey Me? |
36854 | Is he so much under your thumb that he must give you previous notice of his intention? |
36854 | Is her guilt any the less for this, will this bring her child to life again? |
36854 | Is n''t it odious?" |
36854 | Is n''t that so? |
36854 | Is n''t that unjustifiable?" |
36854 | Is there a man in the wide world, who would have the heart to blame him for this? |
36854 | Is there anything else to be done?" |
36854 | It is inconceivable that the person has got out of the country; where would she get the money from? |
36854 | Just this one thing: does it follow that this man must be a wretch? |
36854 | May I accompany you back to your residence? |
36854 | May I read it? |
36854 | Most of them looked after him in utter astonishment; what could have brought the Chief Justice so early out of doors? |
36854 | My father''s fate-- my future ruined-- may a man fight against himself in this way? |
36854 | My heart is so full.... You are going to her-- are you not? |
36854 | No? |
36854 | Once more, and for the last time, I ask your Excellency, to what Court am I to surrender myself?" |
36854 | One thing more, where did Franz leave him?" |
36854 | Or have you ever perhaps known of a case among educated people?" |
36854 | Or was he silent because he could speak no more? |
36854 | Or was it perhaps the silent misery of his face, the beseeching look of his eyes? |
36854 | Ought fidelity to the Law be stronger than fidelity to Justice? |
36854 | Perhaps it is owing to overwork at the Inquiry in Vienna?" |
36854 | Perhaps-- for who knows himself and his own heart? |
36854 | Shall I pardon her now because she is the daughter of an influential man of rank, because she is your daughter? |
36854 | She had a claim upon me-- could I make her my wife? |
36854 | Should this consideration be more authoritative than every other? |
36854 | Since when?" |
36854 | Supposing he should now be examined on oath? |
36854 | Tell me yourself, my Lord, does she look as if she were ill?" |
36854 | That he is really guilty and can be convicted in spite of your neglect of duty? |
36854 | That you should pay her a visit? |
36854 | The barrister had a severe struggle with himself; should he tell the doctor the whole truth? |
36854 | The old gentleman, you say, comes from Bavaria?" |
36854 | The voice of nature speaks thus in the breast of every man, even the roughest, and should it be silent in me?" |
36854 | They were kind, good people at Oosterdaal, the driver had told her that the gentleman was going to have driven there, why had he given up the idea? |
36854 | This arrangement was evident enough, but how could I show surprise at what made me so blessed? |
36854 | Thou wilt make reparation, sayst Thou, in Thy Heaven? |
36854 | To our poor young lady, to Victorine?" |
36854 | Was it because his face seemed familiar to her, mysteriously familiar, as if she had seen it ever since she could think?... |
36854 | Was it not indelicate and selfish to gratify his own longing at the price of deeply and painfully stirring up his friend''s heart? |
36854 | Was not the position the same as on the day of the trial? |
36854 | Was the train too slow for him? |
36854 | We were at our wits''end? |
36854 | Were there not perhaps fatal circumstances that bound him against his will and prevented him doing his duty to your poor mother?" |
36854 | What business?" |
36854 | What do the doctors say?" |
36854 | What do you advise, my Lord?" |
36854 | What do you hope to attain? |
36854 | What do you think of that?" |
36854 | What does it matter to me what his name is, or his station? |
36854 | What does your Lordship say to this calamity? |
36854 | What else is Franz in the world for?" |
36854 | What is his object?" |
36854 | What is the reason of it?" |
36854 | What is the result?" |
36854 | What serious effect could this have upon the fate of your child? |
36854 | What shall I do; merciful Heaven, what shall I do?" |
36854 | What should he do? |
36854 | What would have been the result, your Excellency? |
36854 | When did he go out?" |
36854 | When do you go to Vienna?" |
36854 | When?" |
36854 | Whether he is living or dead? |
36854 | Who will vouch that it may not then be too late? |
36854 | Whom else have I to thank but you?" |
36854 | Why did Sendlingen hesitate to choose this course? |
36854 | Why do you upset me? |
36854 | Why expose yourself, for the sake of such an abandoned creature, to an action for libel on the part of the Countess and her servant? |
36854 | Why should the news distress you? |
36854 | Why should you have done this?" |
36854 | Why vainly sound the lowest depths? |
36854 | Why, therefore, did he wish that the attempt should be made? |
36854 | Why, what is the matter?" |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Will it be a solution if I succeed with my appeal, if the sentence of death is commuted to penal servitude for life or for twenty years? |
36854 | Will you believe me?" |
36854 | Would it not be possible to hand over the inquiry to some one else?" |
36854 | Would not Death have been a deliverer here? |
36854 | Would this flood ever subside again and the soil bring forth flowers and fruit? |
36854 | Would you perhaps like to preside at it?" |
36854 | You are surprised? |
36854 | You naturally want to conceal where your daughter is now living?" |
36854 | You say it is against your feelings to preside at to- morrow''s trial?" |
36854 | You want me to lodge a petition for pardon? |
36854 | You were very intimate with him, do you know?" |
36854 | You will take back your words, wo n''t you? |
36854 | asked Bergen"How am I to understand that?" |
36854 | goodness me, what is the matter with you? |
36854 | he has surely gone mad? |
36854 | said I,''what does he want there?'' |
36854 | the Lord Chief Justice and now----""Have you seen him?" |
36854 | there was no word of release or deliverance: how could I have broached it, how have claimed it from her? |
36854 | you have not received other news? |
54557 | Are the lights to be all of the same degree of brilliancy? |
54557 | Does he see it? |
54557 | Have you come across any serious difficulties in it as yet? |
54557 | What animal is it_ now_? |
54557 | What colour is it now? |
54557 | What colour is it? |
54557 | ''But, your highness, if the prince is damned, what will become of the bishop?'' |
54557 | ''Does it consist,''he asked,''of one or more planets, or other more minute asteroids, or only of cosmical dust? |
54557 | ''Had I not allowed some error in the theory to escape me? |
54557 | ''I held one finger of my right hand steadily before the top of its beak,--and what did I see? |
54557 | ''My rough draft?'' |
54557 | ''Why,''asks Antipholus of Syracuse,''is Time such a niggard of hair, being, as it is, so plentiful an excrement?'' |
54557 | ( such query marks are his own), 1711, 1721, 1731- 32, 1742(? |
54557 | ), 1752(? |
54557 | ), 1763, 1772- 73, 1783, 1793, 1804- 5(? |
54557 | 2.--Swift''s new Planet?] |
54557 | And he being so far from the infirmity, how could that small part of his substance carry away so great an impression of its share? |
54557 | And how so concealed that, till five- and- forty years after, I did not begin to be sensible of it? |
54557 | Can we hesitate as to the inference we should deduce from this result? |
54557 | Did the man dream that he was skirmishing? |
54557 | Does he become unconscious too? |
54557 | Edison?" |
54557 | He presents the whole series of decennial crises as follows:--1701? |
54557 | If so,_ when_, and_ how does he come to his consciousness_? |
54557 | If you say,"What animal is it?" |
54557 | May not idiot children in savage communities have an even worse chance of survival than under the Roman Empire? |
54557 | My father and mother both died of it, and all my brothers and sisters save one brother; yet I do not look consumptive, do I?'' |
54557 | On the other hand, the case of Sergeant F.( a few of the circumstances of which were mentioned in my essay entitled''Have we two Brains? |
54557 | Suppose the blow is hard enough to spoil the brain and stop the play of the organs, what happens then?'' |
54557 | What are these mysterious ray systems? |
54557 | What does this mean but that the oar is taken more sharply, and therefore much more effectively, through the water? |
54557 | What happens? |
54557 | With the idea rather of frightening her than of hurting her( does one missile out of a hundred flung at cats ever hit them?) |
54557 | can you waggle your left ear?'' |
54557 | or was he in the condition of one of Vaucanson''s automata-- a mechanism worked by molecular changes in his nervous system? |
54557 | or, peradventure, had it plunged into and got bewildered among the rings of meteorolites, which astronomers more than suspected? |
35174 | My thoughts? |
35174 | [ A] I say; and my lictors and all my retinue inquire:+ chaire+?" |
35174 | ''Tis well begun; But still how small a portion of thy just revenge Is that which gives thee present joy? |
35174 | 4. Who was the"first professor of Latin on record"? |
35174 | After the payment of the money and an interchange of civilities, says the friend:_ Davus._ But what''s the matter with you? |
35174 | Ah me, what have I done, Wretch that I am? |
35174 | All I meet Accost me thus--"Dear friend, you''re so Close to the gods, that you must know; About the Dacians have you heard Any fresh tidings?" |
35174 | Am I to think that he will be better now he''s old? |
35174 | And can it be? |
35174 | And could I shed my helpless children''s blood? |
35174 | And didst thou hope that thou couldst hide thy fell design, O faithless, and in silence steal away from this My land? |
35174 | And just at this moment out from Demipho''s house comes old Sophrona, Phanium''s nurse, who also seems to be in great distress: O, what_ shall_ I do? |
35174 | And shall I tamely view the wedding torches''glare? |
35174 | And shall he thus depart, Forgetting me and all my service? |
35174 | And shall this day go uneventful by, this day So hardly won, so grudgingly bestowed? |
35174 | And yet what do I care? |
35174 | Answer me that? |
35174 | Are n''t they alive? |
35174 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourself? |
35174 | Besides, what good would it do me to give you away? |
35174 | Best shield th''unfriended orphan? |
35174 | But I,-- When shall I see my city and my city''s walls? |
35174 | But how From this benumbing passion shall I free myself? |
35174 | But is n''t it the man I''m after-- the very man? |
35174 | But now, by what approach, Or by what weapon wilt thou threat the treacherous foe? |
35174 | But what about the daughter of our friend? |
35174 | But what about the pedagogue, the little lute- player''s young man? |
35174 | But what am I stopping here for? |
35174 | But what is your harvest-- what does opening up that field yield you? |
35174 | But whence that boldness, whence those parental rights, when you do worse, despite your age? |
35174 | But where do I come in on that score? |
35174 | But where is Antipho? |
35174 | But where is that? |
35174 | But where? |
35174 | But whither dost thou send me now? |
35174 | But whither hastes that throng Of furies? |
35174 | But who flings wide the royal palace doors? |
35174 | But why were you coming to me? |
35174 | But, uncle, has anything gone wrong with you? |
35174 | Can it be that under wintry skies Thou wouldest launch thy fleet and urge thy onward way''Mid stormy blasts across the sea, O cruel one? |
35174 | Come, how is she related to me? |
35174 | Demipho is quick to see his embarrassment: Well, why do n''t you speak? |
35174 | Demipho is talking to his friends._]_ Dem._ Did you ever hear of any one suffering more outrageous treatment than I have? |
35174 | Did he one sympathetic sigh of sorrow heave? |
35174 | Did he one tear let fall, o''ermastered by my grief? |
35174 | Did n''t she know her own father? |
35174 | Did n''t you say that you had something to say to me in private? |
35174 | Did you know him? |
35174 | Do you know what this fellow is talking about? |
35174 | Do you suppose that I do n''t see through you and your tricks? |
35174 | Do you think you can guy me by changing your minds like a pair of silly boys? |
35174 | Do you want me to seek no further in the matter? |
35174 | Does Demipho say so? |
35174 | Does Demipho say that Phanium is n''t related to him? |
35174 | Does it seem to you a shameful thing for your son, a young man, to have one wife, when you, an old man, have had two? |
35174 | Does not our love, and pledge of faith once given, Nor thought of Dido, doomed to die a cruel death, Detain thee? |
35174 | Does that suit you? |
35174 | Dost recognize thy wife? |
35174 | For in what fear or wish of ours are we guided by reason''s rule? |
35174 | For what could hands untrained in crime Accomplish? |
35174 | For who escapes her? |
35174 | For why Should I restrain my speech, or greater evil wait? |
35174 | From what different sources does Æneas throughout the poem receive guidance as to his future home? |
35174 | From what sources were the subjects of the old Roman tragedies taken? |
35174 | Good heavens, is the fellow crazy? |
35174 | Had he no more sense than to marry her himself? |
35174 | Has he no shame? |
35174 | Has love fulfilled a father''s hopes and surmounted the perils of the way? |
35174 | Hast thou then forgot the brazen bull, And his consuming breath? |
35174 | Have I asked anything wrong? |
35174 | Have you a mother or other relative dependent on you? |
35174 | Have you heard about Antipho? |
35174 | Have you paid the money yet? |
35174 | Have you so little confidence in me as that? |
35174 | Have you talked with the girl on whose account I''m taking Nausistrata in? |
35174 | He bade me bear on speeding pinions these commands: What dost thou here? |
35174 | He confesses his sin, he prays for pardon, he promises never to do so again: what more do you want? |
35174 | He paces back and forth in deep thought, muttering: Where_ can_ I find those women now, I wonder? |
35174 | He''s a very exclusive and level- headed fellow, now, is n''t he? |
35174 | His Lemnian daughter''s marriage with Antipho seems now safely provided for, but where_ is_ his Lemnian daughter and her mother? |
35174 | Historians, is your toil more productive? |
35174 | Ho there, my men, quick, fetch the torches, seize your arms, And man the oars!--What am I saying? |
35174 | How are you? |
35174 | How are you? |
35174 | How can that be? |
35174 | How can that be? |
35174 | How did Rome''s conquest of the Greek colonies in Italy help the development of Italian literature? |
35174 | How did his social position help to make his writings effective? |
35174 | How did the First Punic War affect this development? |
35174 | How did the Roman spirit differ from that of the Greek? |
35174 | How did the circumstances of the life of Persius differ from those of Horace? |
35174 | How did the civilization of Rome in 454 B. C. compare with that of Greece? |
35174 | How different is his poetry for this reason? |
35174 | How does Horace''s attitude toward his fellow- men differ from that of Lucilius? |
35174 | How does Vergil glorify Æneas in his descendants? |
35174 | How does Vergil''s treatment of the gods compare with that of Ovid? |
35174 | How does he deal with the Hellenizing tendencies of his time? |
35174 | How does he treat the subject of prayer in one of his famous satires? |
35174 | How does his style differ from that of Horace? |
35174 | How does it illustrate Seneca''s defects of style? |
35174 | How face the queen and put away her clinging love? |
35174 | How have fragments of his works been preserved to us? |
35174 | How in the world did he find that out? |
35174 | How is he getting on? |
35174 | How is his skill shown in his picture of the false suppliant? |
35174 | How many books of the poem are devoted to the wanderings of Æneas? |
35174 | How many pounds''weight will you find in that greatest of leaders? |
35174 | How now? |
35174 | How shall I meet this sudden disaster? |
35174 | How was Vergil fitted for his career both by nature and training? |
35174 | How was the poem saved from destruction? |
35174 | How? |
35174 | I ca n''t even marry that other girl now; for with what face could I go back to her after I had once thrown her over? |
35174 | I pump you? |
35174 | I trust all is well with you? |
35174 | I wish this were the end of the wretched business; but why should I hope it will be? |
35174 | I''ll be in for a row when your father gets back, but what of that? |
35174 | If my statement was false then, why did n''t your son refute it? |
35174 | If you do n''t stop--_ Dem._ What will you do? |
35174 | In what literary field did the Romans strike out for themselves? |
35174 | Into what select circle was he privileged to enter? |
35174 | Is it mine to look on your face, my son, and listen and reply as we talked of old? |
35174 | Is it war that_ you_ are going to make on_ us_, to expel us, blameless Harpies, from our ancestral realm? |
35174 | Is this Stilpho? |
35174 | Is''t I thou fleest? |
35174 | Is''t till Pygmalion shall come, And lay my walls in ruins, or the desert prince, Iarbus, lead me captive home? |
35174 | Must I drop, Like some discarded toy, out of his faithless heart? |
35174 | No matter how auspiciously you start with a plan, do you not live to regret your efforts and the attainment of your desire? |
35174 | Now, Chremes, what in the world is all this about? |
35174 | O most unhappy queen, Is it thus thy evil deeds are coming back to thee? |
35174 | O soul, Why dost thou hesitate? |
35174 | O, you''ve been telling him? |
35174 | Of what avail are pedigrees? |
35174 | On what occasions do the gods interfere to influence the progress of events? |
35174 | One question, friend, an easy one, in fine: What are thy thoughts of Jove? |
35174 | Or am I any more beautiful and attractive now than I was, Demipho? |
35174 | Or ca n''t I get even what is my legal right? |
35174 | Or if avenging war thou fear''st, Then banish both the culprits; why distinguish me From Jason? |
35174 | Or shall I hie me back To fair Thessalia''s realms? |
35174 | Or what mattered maiden rage? |
35174 | PART III EPIC POETRY Who Show''d me that epic was of all the king, Round, vast, and spanning all, like Saturn''s ring? |
35174 | Power? |
35174 | Said I:"What if he were marrying off an only daughter? |
35174 | Say, Sophrona, come away a little from that door, will you? |
35174 | See here, Chremes, shall we let this rascal cheat us out of our money and laugh in our faces besides? |
35174 | Shall I go up to her, or shall I wait until I understand better what she''s talking about? |
35174 | Shall I the Colchians seek again, My royal father''s realm whose soil is steeped in blood My brother shed? |
35174 | Shall he speak at your bidding? |
35174 | Shall men then pray for nothing? |
35174 | Shall then Creüsa brothers bear to these My children? |
35174 | So Phædria advances to his uncle with an effusive welcome:_ Phæd._ My dear uncle, how do you do? |
35174 | So you are the fellow that I left in charge of my son when I went away? |
35174 | So, when from town and all its ills I to my perch among the hills Retreat, what better theme to choose Than Satire for my homely muse? |
35174 | Tell me now, what do you take him for? |
35174 | The Bore starts in on the subject which is uppermost in his mind._] How do you and Mæcenas get on? |
35174 | The cruel terms of banishment Could Creon''s son- in- law not soften? |
35174 | The teacher fares no better: Who places in Celadus''and learned Palæmon''s lap a due reward for their scholastic toils? |
35174 | Thus do my wasted days slip by, Not without many a wish and sigh: Oh, when shall I the country see, Its woodlands green? |
35174 | To any individual?--But to whom? |
35174 | Was ever a man treated so outrageously? |
35174 | Was_ this_ the meaning of those frequent journeys and long stays at Lemnos? |
35174 | Was_ this_ why my rents ran down so? |
35174 | We have now reviewed two centuries of Roman preachers, and it may naturally be asked,"What was their influence upon the Roman world?" |
35174 | Well, why do n''t you do it then? |
35174 | Were you afraid that I would n''t do what I had promised? |
35174 | Wh- wh- who''s afraid? |
35174 | What Scylla famed? |
35174 | What advantage had he in his early education? |
35174 | What are the chief characteristics of_ Phormio_ of Terence? |
35174 | What are the crimes that brought them here? |
35174 | What are the marked qualities of his style? |
35174 | What are their defects? |
35174 | What are you waiting for? |
35174 | What assurance can you give me that this wo n''t happen again? |
35174 | What boots it, Ponticus, taking rank by length of descent, and having one''s ancestors''portrait- masks to show off? |
35174 | What burning Ætna placed On impious Titan''s heaving breast? |
35174 | What can he mean? |
35174 | What characteristic customs of the times are portrayed in the poem? |
35174 | What characteristic passages in the poem deal with the mystery of nature? |
35174 | What country dost thou bid me seek? |
35174 | What crimes does Vergil represent as unpardonable sins? |
35174 | What description does he give of his father? |
35174 | What did Vergil owe to this poem? |
35174 | What did the Romans themselves think of Lucilius? |
35174 | What did the Romans themselves think of him? |
35174 | What do we know of the life of Juvenal? |
35174 | What do you mean? |
35174 | What do you say? |
35174 | What does Vergil regard as unpardonable sins? |
35174 | What famous events took place within the lifetime of Lucilius? |
35174 | What four names besides that of Andronicus are representative of the old Roman tragedy? |
35174 | What glorious sires begat such worth? |
35174 | What happy ages gave you birth? |
35174 | What ideas does he set forth in his satire to Mæcenas? |
35174 | What in brief is the story of the remaining books? |
35174 | What in brief is the story of the_ Æneid_? |
35174 | What in the world is this fellow getting at? |
35174 | What interesting bit of self- portraiture appears in his_ Annals_? |
35174 | What is his criticism of Lucilius? |
35174 | What is his solemn warning to parents? |
35174 | What is it? |
35174 | What is known of the life of Nævius? |
35174 | What is the nature of his_ Bellum Punicum_? |
35174 | What is the nature of the_ Annals_? |
35174 | What is the outline of the story of Medea? |
35174 | What is the significance of it? |
35174 | What is to be done? |
35174 | What is true of the writers of tragedy after Accius? |
35174 | What laid low a Crassus, and a Pompey, and that leader who broke the proud Romans''spirit and brought them under his lash? |
35174 | What madness turns my brain? |
35174 | What may we suppose was the character of the rude satire of ancient Italy? |
35174 | What mean her frenzied threats? |
35174 | What mean their brandished fires? |
35174 | What of the_ Georgics_? |
35174 | What picture does he give of his life on his farm as contrasted with his life in Rome? |
35174 | What picture of life after death does the poem present? |
35174 | What picture of life in the Roman Forum does he present? |
35174 | What position did the Roman satirist occupy as a teacher of morals? |
35174 | What position does Ennius hold among Roman satirists? |
35174 | What progress did Latin literature make between the time of Ennius and that of Vergil? |
35174 | What qualities of Accius do we find in the fragments of his writings which remain? |
35174 | What qualities of the"bore"are brought out in his famous satire on this subject? |
35174 | What rage Of savage beast can equal mine? |
35174 | What religious motive seems to guide Æneas? |
35174 | What result followed the attempts of Nævius to write in the spirit of Old Comedy? |
35174 | What sea- engulfing pool? |
35174 | What sin have they that shedding of their wretched blood Would wash away? |
35174 | What sudden uproar meets my ear? |
35174 | What their quest? |
35174 | What their strong qualities? |
35174 | What then? |
35174 | What two writers alone of comedy are known to us from their works? |
35174 | What wait I more? |
35174 | What was Vergil''s probable purpose in writing the_ Æneid_? |
35174 | What was the character of the times in which he lived? |
35174 | What was the nature of the_ Eclogues_? |
35174 | What way by sea is open? |
35174 | What were the chief events in the life of Ennius? |
35174 | What''s that to us? |
35174 | What''s that? |
35174 | What''s to become of her? |
35174 | What, is the dirty fellow making game of me? |
35174 | What, then, is his end? |
35174 | What, then, may one rightly desire? |
35174 | When Anchises sees his son approaching, he cries out joyfully to him: And are you come at last? |
35174 | When on my table shall be seen Pythagoras''kinsman bean, And bacon, not too fat, embellish My dish of greens, and give it relish? |
35174 | When will the foaming wave of fury spend itself? |
35174 | Whence sprang the Trojans? |
35174 | Where are those women? |
35174 | Where are you going from here? |
35174 | Where get help? |
35174 | Where shall I find a friend in my distress, or to whom shall I go for advice? |
35174 | Which of the two would best dispense of laws? |
35174 | Which of these models did the Romans follow? |
35174 | Who in the world is this old woman coming out of my brother''s house? |
35174 | Who is this man? |
35174 | Who knows but some day this too will be remembered with pleasure? |
35174 | Who may pass his days in peace? |
35174 | Who will pay a historian as much as he would pay a reporter?... |
35174 | Whom threats this hellish host with horrid, bloody brands? |
35174 | Why bring our passions to the Immortals''shrine, And judge, from what this carnal sense delights, Of what is pleasing in their purer sights? |
35174 | Why could I not have torn his body limb from limb, And strewed his members on the deep? |
35174 | Why did n''t you take the other legal alternative, give her a dowry, and let her find another husband? |
35174 | Why did the Romans fail to develop a truly national tragedy? |
35174 | Why did the plays of Seneca have such an influence in England? |
35174 | Why did the_ Æneid_ never receive its finishing touches? |
35174 | Why do men pray so impiously and foolishly? |
35174 | Why does he deserve the title of"the father of Roman literature"? |
35174 | Why dost thou hesitate Upon the threshold of the deed? |
35174 | Why dost thou linger still? |
35174 | Why flow these streaming tears While with contending thoughts my wavering heart is torn? |
35174 | Why have the tragedies of Seneca special interest? |
35174 | Why is the loss of the great body of this work so much to be regretted? |
35174 | Why not to arms, and send our forces in pursuit, And bid them hurry down the vessels from the shore? |
35174 | Why should I flee alone? |
35174 | Why should I recount to you, Demipho, all that I have been to this man? |
35174 | Why should Medea flee? |
35174 | Why so? |
35174 | Why, what''s all this row about, husband? |
35174 | Will that do? |
35174 | With what face will you rebuke him? |
35174 | Wo n''t you answer me? |
35174 | Wo n''t you ever let up? |
35174 | Wo n''t you kindly attend me here in court a little while? |
35174 | Wo n''t you understand? |
35174 | Would n''t the girl have known her own father? |
35174 | Would you know their real gains? |
35174 | Wouldst thou prefer him to the herd of Rome? |
35174 | Yes, I go; but whither dost thou send me whom thou driv''st From out thy home? |
35174 | You do n''t suppose that I could hear everything that passed between them, from outside the door? |
35174 | You know our old man''s brother Chremes? |
35174 | You say that money secures help in sickness? |
35174 | You were the man, were you, Chremes? |
35174 | You would n''t have me insult the Jews, would you? |
35174 | [_ To Horace._] Will you come witness against him? |
35174 | _ Ant._ How is this? |
35174 | _ Ant._ Is this better? |
35174 | _ Ant._ Well, how will this expression do? |
35174 | _ Ant._ What for? |
35174 | _ Ant._ What for? |
35174 | _ Ant._ What is it? |
35174 | _ Ant._ What? |
35174 | _ Ant._ Wo n''t you stop? |
35174 | _ Bore._ You do n''t really mean that? |
35174 | _ Chorus._ By what snare taken? |
35174 | _ Chorus._ What harm could lurk in them? |
35174 | _ Chorus._ What the mode of death? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Agreed; but where is Phædria, my judge? |
35174 | _ Chr._ But what about that other girl who is said to be related to him? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Do you want to know? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Does it? |
35174 | _ Chr._ How''s that, Geta? |
35174 | _ Chr._ How? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Is n''t she a fine girl, just as I told you? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Is that door tight shut? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Well--_Naus._ Well? |
35174 | _ Chr._ What, Antipho? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Who''s Phormio? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Why not? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Why, what do you mean? |
35174 | _ Chr._ Wo n''t you keep still? |
35174 | _ Chr._ You are n''t going to believe him? |
35174 | _ Chr._ You do n''t mean to say he''s got two wives? |
35174 | _ Creon._ Why seek delay By speech? |
35174 | _ Da._ Has Antipho''s father come back yet? |
35174 | _ Da._ He has n''t much to pay for her, I suppose? |
35174 | _ Da._ How''s that? |
35174 | _ Da._ O Geta, what will become of you? |
35174 | _ Da._ O, come off, you dunce, you have just trusted money with me; are you afraid to lend me words? |
35174 | _ Da._ Well, Geta, can I do anything more for you? |
35174 | _ Da._ Well, what came next? |
35174 | _ Da._ What did he do? |
35174 | _ Da._ What''s that? |
35174 | _ Da._ When do you expect him? |
35174 | _ Da._ Why, would n''t his father have forgiven him when he came back? |
35174 | _ Dem._ A way out of it? |
35174 | _ Dem._ And is Phanium to remain? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Are we to drop her, then? |
35174 | _ Dem._ As if I did n''t know? |
35174 | _ Dem._ But how is any judge to know the justice of your case, when you do n''t say a word in self- defense, as I understand he did n''t? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Do you mean to say you would marry this girl if we gave her to you? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Do you want me to take your word for it? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Have you heard what has happened to my son while I was gone? |
35174 | _ Dem._ How can I, if you tell me nothing? |
35174 | _ Dem._ How can you ask, Phædria? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Nausistrata, I do n''t deny that he has been very much to blame in this matter; but is that any reason why you should not forgive him? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Not angry with him, indeed? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Sha''n''t I? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Well, Chremes, did you bring your daughter with you, for whose sake you went to Lemnos? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Well, then, why did n''t she tell his right name? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Well, what does she say? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Well, what now? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Well, what then? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What difference does that make to us? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What do you mean? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What do you mean? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What if he is over his head in debt? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What''s that you say? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What''s that? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What''s that? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What''s the matter? |
35174 | _ Dem._ What? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Where is Antipho now? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Who told you to say that? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Who? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Why ca n''t she? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Why do you wish it, Chremes? |
35174 | _ Dem._ Why not? |
35174 | _ Fuscus._ Where are you going? |
35174 | _ Ge._ And his son Phædria? |
35174 | _ Ge._ Borrowed it? |
35174 | _ Ge._ But do you know how much? |
35174 | _ Ge._ Do you catch on?--But who is this old man I see coming up the street? |
35174 | _ Ge._ Do you mean Phormio? |
35174 | _ Ge._ How are things with you? |
35174 | _ Ge._ How much? |
35174 | _ Ge._ Is n''t it enough if I say that you are fairly dripping with joy? |
35174 | _ Ge._ O, you were there, were you, Phormio? |
35174 | _ Ge._ What do you think? |
35174 | _ Ge._ What next? |
35174 | _ Ge._ What would you do if you had some harder job yet? |
35174 | _ Ge._ What, he allow his son to marry a poor girl that nobody knew anything about? |
35174 | _ Ge._"Do you say that the law will make him suffer for it if he casts her out? |
35174 | _ Geta._ Me? |
35174 | _ Horace._ Really? |
35174 | _ Jason._ But what resistance can we make, If war with double visage rear his horrid front,-- If Creon and Acastus join in common cause? |
35174 | _ Jason._ Dost thou reproach me with a guilty love? |
35174 | _ Jason._ What wouldst thou then? |
35174 | _ Jason._ Wretched one, and wilt thou, then Involve me also in thy fall? |
35174 | _ Medea._ Dost thou refuse me, then, one little space for tears? |
35174 | _ Medea._ For thy hate, poor soul, Dost thou a measure seek? |
35174 | _ Medea._ Of thee? |
35174 | _ Medea._ Thou bidst me flee? |
35174 | _ Medea._ Thou bidst me speed my flight? |
35174 | _ Medea._ What fraud can be devised In one short hour? |
35174 | _ Medea._ What the crime, my lord, or what the guilt That merits exile? |
35174 | _ Medea._ Why dost thou falter, O my soul? |
35174 | _ Medea._ Why keep''st thou then the gifts which it were shame to take? |
35174 | _ Medea._[_ Aside._] Doth he thus love his sons? |
35174 | _ Naus._ Good gracious, how can I believe one who has n''t said anything yet? |
35174 | _ Naus._ Husband, wo n''t you speak to me? |
35174 | _ Naus._ Well, have I deserved this treatment? |
35174 | _ Naus._ Well? |
35174 | _ Naus._ What is this man talking about, then? |
35174 | _ Naus._ Who''s calling me? |
35174 | _ Naus._ Why should I bear it with equanimity? |
35174 | _ Nurse._ And dost thou still delay? |
35174 | _ Nurse._ Dost thou not fear? |
35174 | _ Nurse._ My foster daughter, whither speedest thou abroad? |
35174 | _ Pho._ Ca n''t you see? |
35174 | _ Pho._ Do you want to begin right off, Nausistrata, and do something that will both make me happy and bring tears to your husband''s eyes? |
35174 | _ Pho._ How can I, when I have already used it to pay my debts with? |
35174 | _ Pho._ How can he answer you, when, by George, he does n''t know where he is? |
35174 | _ Pho._ I? |
35174 | _ Pho._ Is_ that_ your game? |
35174 | _ Pho._ Mine? |
35174 | _ Pho._ No, do you? |
35174 | _ Pho._ On the same business, perhaps? |
35174 | _ Pho._ To court, is it? |
35174 | _ Phor._ Did n''t you know your own cousin? |
35174 | _ Phor._ No? |
35174 | _ Phor._ The name? |
35174 | _ Phæd._ Now, Geta, what next? |
35174 | _ Phæd._ What do you mean? |
35174 | _ Phæd._ Why, uncle, you are n''t angry with him for that, are you? |
35174 | _ So._ No? |
35174 | _ So._ O, my goodness, are n''t you the man you always said you were? |
35174 | _ So._ What makes you so afraid of that door? |
35174 | _ So._ Who is this I hear calling my name? |
35174 | a pause? |
35174 | and how shall Antipho''s father be reconciled to the marriage so that he may not annul it or disown both the young people upon his return? |
35174 | and shall he go and mock our royal power? |
35174 | do_ you_ mean? |
35174 | exclaim? |
35174 | or with what hopes dost thou delay Upon the Libyan shores? |
35174 | the fear that smote thee, when, Upon the field of Mars, the earth- born brood stood forth To meet thy single sword? |
35174 | where am I? |
35174 | where do you come from? |
4927 | Am I on earth,he exclaimed,"or am I in Paradise? |
4927 | Am I, then,said Sacripant,"of so little esteem with you that you doubt my power to defend you? |
4927 | And what has Gan been plotting with Marsilius? |
4927 | And what weapon hast thou,said he,"if thy lance fail thee?" |
4927 | Did you hear the horn as I heard it? |
4927 | Do you hear that? |
4927 | How can a fool have such strength? |
4927 | How know you that? |
4927 | How now, cousin,cried Orlando,"have you too gone over to the enemy?" |
4927 | How shall I need them,said Rinaldo,"since I have lost my horse?" |
4927 | Is that the horse they presume to match with Marchevallee, the best steed that ever fed in the vales of Mount Atlas? |
4927 | Is this, then,she said,"the fruit of all my labors? |
4927 | O Bujaforte,said he,"I loved him indeed; but what does his son do here fighting against his friends?" |
4927 | O my friend,said he,"must then the body of our prince be the prey of wolves and ravens? |
4927 | Shall I not believe my own eyes and ears? |
4927 | Suppose they will not trust themselves with me? |
4927 | Tell me, I pray you,he said,"what benefit will accrue to him who shall get the better in this contest? |
4927 | They are already united by mutual vows,she said,"and in the sight of Heaven what more is necessary?" |
4927 | Well,cried the hero,"what news?" |
4927 | What are we to do,said he,"now that daylight has left us?" |
4927 | What is the meaning of this? |
4927 | Who is the loser now? |
4927 | ''What hope for us,''resumed the king,''if he brings with him a greater host than that?'' |
4927 | A prince of the house of Guienne, must he not blush at the cowardly abandonment of the faith of his fathers?" |
4927 | Ah, noble sir,"he added,"tell me, I beseech you, of what country and race you come?" |
4927 | And what is it, pray, that brings you into these parts? |
4927 | And, by the way, pray tell me, are you not that Orlando who makes such a noise in the world? |
4927 | Bradamante, addressing the host, said,"Could you furnish me a guide to conduct me to the castle of this enchanter?" |
4927 | But Alardo said,"Brother, let Bayard live a little longer; who knows what God may do for us?" |
4927 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4927 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4927 | But tell me, pilgrim, who is that man who stands beside you?" |
4927 | Crying out,"What are the emperor''s engagements to me?" |
4927 | Death seems his only remedy; but how to die? |
4927 | Do I indeed behold a chevalier of my own country, after fifteen years passed in this desert without seeing the face of a fellow- countryman?" |
4927 | Do you forget the battle of Albracca, and how, in your defence, I fought single- handed against Agrican and all his knights?" |
4927 | Do you prefer to rob me of my ring rather than receive it as a gift? |
4927 | Had I imagined that this hard bark covered a being possessed of feeling, could I have exposed such a beautiful myrtle to the insults of this steed? |
4927 | How could he suspect that falsehood and treason veiled themselves under smiles and the ingenuous air of truth? |
4927 | How could you fly from a single arm and think to escape?" |
4927 | I am a poor man, have you not something to give me?" |
4927 | I value not life compared with honor, and if I did, do you suppose, dear friend, that I could live without you? |
4927 | If you can not defend them against me, how pray will you do so when Orlando challenges them?" |
4927 | Is it treachery to punish affronts like these? |
4927 | Just then came along some country people, who said to one another,"Look, is not that the great horse Bayard that Rinaldo rides? |
4927 | Rinaldo replied,"Are you making sport of me? |
4927 | Rogero exclaimed as he came near,"What cruel hands, what barbarous soul, what fatal chance can have loaded thee with those chains?" |
4927 | Seeing the prince Orlando, one said to the rest,"What bird is this we have caught, without even setting a snare for him?" |
4927 | Shall I for the horse''s life provoke the anger of the king again?" |
4927 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4927 | So desperate was he that he took off his armor and his spurs, saying,"What need have I of these, since Bayard is lost?" |
4927 | Struck with the ingratitude which could thus recompense his services, he exclaimed:"Thankless beauty, is this then the reward you make me? |
4927 | The dwarf, approaching Huon, said, in a sweet voice, and in Huon''s own language,"Duke of Guienne, why do you shun me? |
4927 | The king said to Malagigi,"Friend, where did you get that beautiful cup?" |
4927 | The old man took the spurs, and put them into his sack, and said,"Noble sir, have you nothing else you can give me?" |
4927 | The traitor smiled at seeing her thus suspended, and, asking her in mockery,"Are you a good leaper?" |
4927 | Then a third time he said to Rinaldo,"Sir, have you nothing left to give me that I may remember you in my prayers?" |
4927 | Think not to avoid it by shutting your eyes, for how then will you be able to avoid his blows, and make him feel your own? |
4927 | To what new miseries do you doom me? |
4927 | Was it not clear that Providence led him on, and cleared the way for his happy success? |
4927 | Were you ever in love? |
4927 | What advantage have you derived from all your high deserts? |
4927 | What is the good of a gentleman''s poring all day over a book? |
4927 | Who could have believed that you would become the slave of a base enchantress? |
4927 | Why have you thought evil of me? |
4927 | Why tarry the horses of Rinaldo and Ricciardetto? |
4927 | Why, therefore, should either of us perish? |
4927 | Yet what could be done against foes without number? |
4927 | You surround him, and who receives tribute then?" |
4927 | darest thou maintain in arms the lie thou hast uttered?" |
4927 | exclaimed Bradamante,"what can be the cause of this sudden alarm?" |
4927 | exclaimed Rinaldo,"do you make me your sport?" |
4927 | exclaimed he,"how could I, dear Medoro, so forget myself as to consult my own safety without heeding yours?" |
4927 | he exclaimed,"do you dare to insult me at my own table? |
4927 | he exclaimed,"was there ever such a resemblance? |
4927 | how can you foresee his fate when you could not foresee your own? |
4927 | inquired Malagigi;"and what is to come of it?" |
4927 | master, how can I do that? |
4927 | my dear nephew,"exclaimed the Holy Father,"what harder penance could I impose than the Emperor has already done? |
4927 | said the Abbot of Cluny;"slaughter a Saracen prince without first offering him baptism?" |
4927 | said the pilgrim;"is Bayard there?" |
4927 | was this the end to which old quarrels were made up?" |
4927 | what availed it you to possess so many virtues and such fame? |
4927 | why should I fear his rage? |
38787 | ''And nobody else?'' 38787 ''And whom have you seen since?'' |
38787 | ''I have seen you,''said she, laughingly;''what would have been the good of sight to me, if I had not looked upon you? 38787 ''If she sees me, did you say?'' |
38787 | ''Why should it not be as you wish?'' 38787 ''Would that grieve me so much? |
38787 | ''You are hurt, Eulalie?'' 38787 ''You had seen me, and yet you continued to come to me; that is well; but whom did you see first?'' |
38787 | Ah, Gervais,exclaimed I, vehemently seizing her at the same time by the arm,"what have you done to him?" |
38787 | Ah-- well, well; where the devil is Nero? |
38787 | Alas, sir,said Marguerite,"have you met with Gervais?" |
38787 | And a dog? |
38787 | And are these all the friends you have? |
38787 | And is it usual for a boy of your years to hold that rank; or was there any thing peculiar in your case that obtained the promotion? |
38787 | And what became of him afterward? |
38787 | And what right have you to interfere now? |
38787 | And when you return from your relations, you will call on me? 38787 And who are you, my good fellow, so ready to impose yourself on the Court?" |
38787 | And why not come, then? |
38787 | And you sold out, I think-- to please the mistress, I suppose, Dutton? 38787 And your mother''s name, what was it?" |
38787 | Are you mad? 38787 Bushe,"said he,"came up to me one day with a very knowing look, and said,''Do you know, Curran, I have just left the pleasantest fellow I ever met?'' |
38787 | But am I to take leave of them in this fashion? |
38787 | But if it is his own fault-- if he has been imprudent? |
38787 | But why dost hate y^e priests? |
38787 | But why need I to concern myself about him? |
38787 | But you have a family I hope? |
38787 | Come, come, friend, has he not lost his teeth? |
38787 | Did I tell you, or did I not,said Dick,"that I would not have these horrid disreputable cubs of yours playing just before my lodge gates?" |
38787 | Digby, old fellow, can you lend me £ 100? |
38787 | Do you believe it? |
38787 | Do you glory in_ his_ shame, as well as your own? |
38787 | Do you say so? |
38787 | Do you think so? 38787 Do you think,"retorted the fellow,"that I know his age, as he does his horse''s, by_ the mark of mouth_?" |
38787 | Does the nation take a nap to- night? |
38787 | Gervais,replied I,"where is he?" |
38787 | Guilty or not guilty, sir? |
38787 | Ha, ha-- and what can she do? |
38787 | Had you a good passage? |
38787 | Handsome elevation-- classical, I take it-- eh? |
38787 | Hartley and Simpson you say? |
38787 | Have I no authority? |
38787 | Have you never been able to see? |
38787 | Have you never endeavored to release yourself from this contract? |
38787 | He did, sir, but--"But what? 38787 How came I by it? |
38787 | How came you by it? |
38787 | How hast fared, of late, Gammer? |
38787 | How is it that you appear to know me,said he,"for you do not belong to the valley? |
38787 | How know you that? |
38787 | How long? |
38787 | How much is it? |
38787 | In what have I tried to deceive you? |
38787 | Is it you? |
38787 | Is this the notorious Town- Major Dowall? |
38787 | It is; and I am here to know what your singular advertisement means? |
38787 | May I see this warrant, my lord? |
38787 | Of what dowager do you speak? |
38787 | Perhaps, sir, you or one of the company may have carried it by mistake into the drawing- room? |
38787 | Pleasant companions? |
38787 | Pray sit down, my good friend; you are blind, I fear? |
38787 | Shall I proceed any farther? 38787 She is dead, then?" |
38787 | That''s a bargain, then? |
38787 | Then what are ye talking about two hundred pounds for? |
38787 | Then what new impediment has arisen to our union? |
38787 | Then what''s to become of Tiernay,cried one,"if it be so hard to throw off this''coil of Englishman?'' |
38787 | Then why do you stay? 38787 This brooch is yours?" |
38787 | Those men-- those fellows at Rugby-- where did you meet with them? |
38787 | To take me back? |
38787 | Very likely; but what did she make my poor sister- in- law the queen suffer? 38787 Was it an accident which deprived you of your sight?" |
38787 | We demanded five hundred pounds for a Major on the staff; suppose we say two, Colonel, is that sufficient? |
38787 | Well, but what has all this to do with Gervais? |
38787 | Well,cried he, half angrily,"what''s the matter; are you so impatient that you must smash the furniture?" |
38787 | Well,said Richard,"I am not the sort of man you expected, eh? |
38787 | Well? |
38787 | What are you laughing at, friend-- what are you laughing at? 38787 What do I mean? |
38787 | What do you mean? |
38787 | What has happened? |
38787 | What have slippers and hair- brushes to do with attics? |
38787 | What have you to reply to this, Tiernay? |
38787 | What is your name? |
38787 | What matters it,jeeringly returned the hag,"since_ his_ name is not the one you bear?" |
38787 | What name are we to insert in the bond? |
38787 | What shall I have done with them? |
38787 | What''s your rank, sir? |
38787 | What, Maurice, do n''t you know me yet? |
38787 | What? |
38787 | What_ is_ the meaning of this? |
38787 | Where are you going to? |
38787 | Where were you born, then, Tiernay? |
38787 | Where''s George? 38787 Where?" |
38787 | Who is inclined to see Fieschi''s head chopped off? |
38787 | Who? |
38787 | Why are you so lazy? |
38787 | Why not? |
38787 | Why, really, my dear Harley, this man was no great friend of yours-- eh? |
38787 | Will they never come back again? |
38787 | Will you never forget that unlucky beverage? |
38787 | Yes, Astræa, I was conscious of some obstruction; but how could I divine what it was? 38787 Yes; you know my cousin, Sophy Clarke? |
38787 | You know us then? |
38787 | You mean,she replied, coldly, but in a tone that conveyed a feeling of rising scorn,"you mean our marriage?" |
38787 | Your Irish blood, then, had no share in your advancement? |
38787 | Your father was Irish, then? |
38787 | ''What were they about there?'' |
38787 | ''Why not? |
38787 | Algernon Digby, I do not forget you; but it seems England has forgotten?" |
38787 | Alice?" |
38787 | Am I not sufficiently rich to procure you servants and friends? |
38787 | And art thou, Stanley, of that sacred band? |
38787 | And now, can you guess who I am?" |
38787 | And shall the hymn be marr''d by thankless man, Most- favor''d; who with voice articulate Should lead the chorus of this lower world? |
38787 | And while, on the dullest of dull questions, Audley Egerton thus, not too lively himself, enforced attention, where was Harley L''Estrange? |
38787 | And why thy Locke, Who made the whole internal world his own? |
38787 | Answer me this, thou solemn right honorable-- Hast thou climbed to the heights of august contemplation? |
38787 | Apply to your master-- won''t he give you one?" |
38787 | As she perceived me, she exclaimed,"How fares it with my son, José Juan?" |
38787 | At table, discourse flowed soe thicke and faste that I mighte aim in vayn to chronicle it-- and why should I? |
38787 | Benjamin-- who?" |
38787 | But he? |
38787 | But of what avail was the attempt? |
38787 | But the last took his hand, and said, in a voice at once tremulous and soothing,"Is it possible that I see once more an old brother in arms? |
38787 | But what avails this wondrous waste of wealth, This gay profusion of luxurious bliss, This pomp of Nature? |
38787 | But who could argue such questions against convictions based upon individual and exceptional injuries? |
38787 | Can nothing be done? |
38787 | Can you show it me? |
38787 | Come, what has happened to you?--on half- pay?" |
38787 | Could not an animal or a machine do as much? |
38787 | Curran?" |
38787 | Defiance? |
38787 | Do you believe I will suffer this tamely? |
38787 | Do you believe such a thing credible? |
38787 | Do you think I can forget the abominable things she said, the falsehoods she told? |
38787 | Do you think you could thrust him into some small place in the colonies, or make him a king''s messenger, or something of the sort?" |
38787 | Doomed either way, which was I to choose? |
38787 | Examining a country squire who disputed a collier''s bill:"Did he not give you the_ coals_, friend?" |
38787 | For is there aught in sleep can charm the wise? |
38787 | For lofty sense, Creative fancy, and inspection keen Through the deep windings of the human heart, Is not wild Shakspeare thine and Nature''s boast? |
38787 | For me, what does it matter? |
38787 | For what purpose, devil as you are, did you do this?" |
38787 | From which astonish''d thought, recoiling, turns? |
38787 | Hast thou dreamed of a love known to the angels, or sought to seize in the Infinite the mystery of life?" |
38787 | Hast thou gazed on the stars with the rapt eye of song? |
38787 | Have I cured the payn in thy head?" |
38787 | Have you never heard him mentioned? |
38787 | Have you no particle of self- respect left?" |
38787 | Have you not pledged your faith to me?" |
38787 | Have you not seen it darkening every hour of our intercourse? |
38787 | Have you seen a ghost?" |
38787 | He sayth,"What hast thou, Meg?" |
38787 | He was staggered; and asked,"What do you advise?" |
38787 | Her history? |
38787 | His arts were baffled-- his pride turned to dust-- his love rejected? |
38787 | How could I, having experienced nothing but the most constant kindness and indulgence? |
38787 | How could he present himself? |
38787 | How could he speak to the general without risking the reception of some look or word which he could never pardon? |
38787 | How could this have happened, for he would not have been induced to leave his master, even for the most dainty morsel? |
38787 | How couldst find time for soe much labor? |
38787 | How many sympathies has not the following custom excited? |
38787 | I am young, I have much to learn, I love my studdies-- why interrupt them with other and lesse wise thoughts?" |
38787 | I asked myself the question-- was the time approaching when their fame, colonies, and possessions would be among the things that were? |
38787 | I askt,"Of what?" |
38787 | I exclaymed,"Will is very well in his way: why s^d we cross each other''s paths? |
38787 | I have begged without shame for myself; shall I be ashamed, then, to beg for her?" |
38787 | I said,"Why do you come to me? |
38787 | I suppose monsieur has not yet seen_ Little Necker_?" |
38787 | In such a taste may we not trace the old leaven of the first Revolution, and the germ of future ones? |
38787 | In what remote ocean had she met her doom? |
38787 | In what way would he be received? |
38787 | Is not each great, each amiable muse Of classic ages, in thy Milton met? |
38787 | Laying his hand kindly on my shoulder, this morning, he sayd,"Meg, how fares it with thee now? |
38787 | Living in this neighborhood, eh?" |
38787 | Look out of the window-- what do you see?" |
38787 | Not_ pretty_ Mary Kingsford now, then, I suppose?" |
38787 | Now, lean upon me; I see you should be at home-- which way?" |
38787 | Obey you? |
38787 | Oh, Lord L''Estrange?" |
38787 | On your oath, was n''t your payments_ slack_?" |
38787 | Poor wretch, hath this then beene thy toyl? |
38787 | Pride? |
38787 | Robert?" |
38787 | Say shall we wind Along the streams? |
38787 | Shall I remove this bandage, and cause the light of my eyes to be for ever extinguished? |
38787 | Shall little haughty ignorance pronounce His works unwise, of which the smallest part Exceeds the narrow vision of her mind? |
38787 | So lucky for me, is it not, since I must go to service? |
38787 | So you have a long journey before you?" |
38787 | Soon after the officer had departed, he said, suddenly,"This is a great honor, but am I expected to bring my instrument?" |
38787 | The alguazil led him to his own abode, and, on reaching it, what did he behold? |
38787 | The old Indian''s eyes sparkled with fiendish fury as she exclaimed,"And because you are without faith, you deem me without power? |
38787 | The world?--my soul? |
38787 | Their powerful herbs, and Ceres void of pain? |
38787 | Then flam''d thy spirit high; but who can speak The numerous worthies of the maiden- reign? |
38787 | Then laying his hand lightly on his friend''s shoulder, he said,"Is it for you, Audley Egerton, to speak sneeringly of boyish memories? |
38787 | This done, he turned to me once more--"Now for it: who are you, and what has happened to you?" |
38787 | To what port did she belong? |
38787 | Upon Mary replying that she did not comprehend him, his look became absolutely ferocious, and he exclaimed,"Oh, that''s your game, is it? |
38787 | Was there no beauty in this? |
38787 | Waters and Emily quite well?" |
38787 | What all that Afric''s golden rivers roll, Her odorous woods, and shining ivory stores? |
38787 | What does the prosecutor say the brooch is worth?" |
38787 | What else draws your thoughts from blue- books and beer- bills, to waste them on a vagrant like me? |
38787 | What else is it that binds us together? |
38787 | What else warms my heart when I meet you? |
38787 | What had he not seen? |
38787 | What has become of that vehement resolution, that brave self- reliance? |
38787 | What have I to lose? |
38787 | What human idea could be put into hod- carrying, mortar- spreading, and stone- cutting? |
38787 | What is a green ribbon?'' |
38787 | What is the impediment that stands in the way of our union?" |
38787 | What is the meaning of these dreadful words? |
38787 | What shall he do? |
38787 | What shall it be?" |
38787 | What their unplanted fruits? |
38787 | What was it? |
38787 | What was left to him out of this ruin of his long cherished scheme? |
38787 | What was left to him? |
38787 | What were Erasmus and I, dost thou suppose, at Will''s age? |
38787 | What!--hesitate? |
38787 | Whence could such an idea have come? |
38787 | Where had he not been? |
38787 | Where was she to find refuge? |
38787 | Wherefore should we choose? |
38787 | Which way, Amanda, shall we bend our course? |
38787 | Who can tell what two centuries may do in the way of giving a historical position to this rising heresy? |
38787 | Who can, unpitying, see the flowery race, Shed by the morn, their new- flush''d bloom resign, Before the parching beam? |
38787 | Why am I here alone with you?" |
38787 | Will the general receive him? |
38787 | Will you find him a place in the Stamp Office?" |
38787 | Without thee, what were unenlighten''d man? |
38787 | Woulde thy mother suit me better, dost thou suppose, if she coulde discuss polemicks like Luther or Melancthon? |
38787 | Ye prudes in virtue, say, Say, ye severest, what would you have done? |
38787 | Yet what do I say? |
38787 | You are happy at any rate, are you not Gervais?'' |
38787 | You do not forget my commission, with respect to the exile who has married into your brother''s family?" |
38787 | You have no objection to accompany me to the superintendent?" |
38787 | _ Grandmamma._--"Why what''s the matter with my Pet?" |
38787 | _ Wretch._--"Have we, love? |
38787 | a Frenchman,"exclaimed he,"and in that dress; what can that mean?" |
38787 | and whether a human mind should be bounded by the narrow routine of plodding toil, for the supplying of common wants? |
38787 | are you here?" |
38787 | dwelling as I doe at y^e fountayn head? |
38787 | is that you? |
38787 | just look at_ that_ now-- look at people by scores and thousands, leaving their families, and friends, and homes-- and what for but for gold? |
38787 | may I sing of thee? |
38787 | or ascend, While radiant Summer opens all its pride, Thy hill, delightful Sheen? |
38787 | or walk the smiling mead; Or court the forest glades? |
38787 | or wander wild Among the waving harvests? |
38787 | send no bursting fullness to my temples? |
38787 | take off your bandage, or you may become blind again?'' |
38787 | their toiling insects what, Their silky pride, and vegetable robes? |
38787 | vain fellow, who dares set limits to a woman''s curiosity, whose eyes are suddenly opened to the light?'' |
38787 | was your dog called Puck, too?" |
38787 | what avail their fatal treasures, hid Deep in the bowels of the pitying earth, Golconda''s gems, and sad Potosi''s mines? |
38787 | what could make you ask such a question? |
38787 | what does that mean? |
38787 | what not met, tried, suffered, sought, found, dared, done, won, lost, said? |
38787 | what the cool draughts, The ambrosial food, rich gums, and spicy health, Their forests yield? |
38787 | what, has he not been home since yesterday?" |
38787 | who is he?'' |
38787 | who told you so?" |
38787 | why does not he come to the door?" |
38787 | why how will you see him any sooner by this? |
38787 | you will not return to me; for who is the beautiful girl who would bestow her affection on a blind lover? |
5907 | And what greater misfortune can there be,replied Panza,"than the one that waits for time to put an end to it and death to remove it? |
5907 | But in how many does your worship think we shall have the use of our feet? |
5907 | If I only had it here, wretch that I am, what more should we want? |
5907 | What wouldst thou, brother Sancho? |
5907 | Can there be hope where fear is? |
5907 | If Chrysostom''s impatience and violent passion killed him, why should my modest behaviour and circumspection be blamed? |
5907 | If I preserve my purity in the society of the trees, why should he who would have me preserve it among men, seek to rob me of it? |
5907 | If this be so, as I believe it to be, why do you desire me to bend my will by force, for no other reason but that you say you love me? |
5907 | Nay-- tell me-- had Heaven made me ugly, as it has made me beautiful, could I with justice complain of you for not loving me? |
5907 | Ought I to shut mine eyes to jealousy, If through a thousand heart- wounds it appears? |
5907 | Were it well, When far more certain are the grounds of fear? |
41765 | Aimest thou at princes? |
41765 | And can not you rest the sky upon a mountain? |
41765 | And do you know,asked the damsel who had first spoken,"that a terrible dragon, with a hundred heads, keeps watch under the golden apple tree?" |
41765 | And how long a time,asked the hero,"will it take you to get the golden apples?" |
41765 | And how soon shall I be strong enough? |
41765 | And my poor companions,said Ulysses,"have they undergone a similar change through the arts of this wicked Circe?" |
41765 | And pray who may the Old One be? |
41765 | And what of it? |
41765 | And what on earth can be inside of it? |
41765 | And where did it come from? |
41765 | And why not? |
41765 | And you will stay with us,asked Epimetheus,"for ever and ever?" |
41765 | Are such as these fit weapons for chits? |
41765 | Are you awake, Prince Theseus? |
41765 | Art mocking me? 41765 But can I do nothing to help them?" |
41765 | But can you show me the way to the garden of the Hesperides? |
41765 | But how shall I ever find him? |
41765 | But who gave it to you? |
41765 | But why should you complain of the javelin? |
41765 | Can you tell me, pretty maidens,asked the stranger,"whether this is the right way to the garden of the Hesperides?" |
41765 | Did there really come any words out of the hole? |
41765 | Do you not believe,said he, looking at the damsels with a smile,"that such a blow would have crushed one of the dragon''s hundred heads?" |
41765 | Do you not know that this island is enchanted? 41765 Does your Majesty see his confusion?" |
41765 | Fools,he cried,"will ye let yourselves be cheated? |
41765 | For what new exploit does he demand our aid, what deed does he not dare to venture till he league our charmed fortune with his own? |
41765 | Have you anything to tell me, little bird? |
41765 | How came you by it? |
41765 | How hast thou dared to wander so far from the haunts of men? |
41765 | How, then, can I tell you what is inside? |
41765 | If it wearies me so much in ten minutes, how must it have wearied him in a thousand years? |
41765 | If the city of Megara is indeed defended by the deathless gods,said they,"what avails it to fight and to strive?" |
41765 | Is it a wholesome wine? |
41765 | Is it true that he hath many times swum across the sea and visited thee? |
41765 | Is my son here? |
41765 | Is the sky very heavy? |
41765 | Is there something alive in the box? 41765 Just take the sky upon your head one instant, will you? |
41765 | Many hath the sea- beast slain,she pleaded;"and why should he slay thee? |
41765 | May I ask,he inquired,"from what tree the javelin thou art holding was cut? |
41765 | My dear Epimetheus,cried Pandora,"have you heard this little voice?" |
41765 | My pretty bird,said Eurylochus-- for he was a wary person, and let no token of harm escape his notice--"my pretty bird, who sent you hither? |
41765 | Oh mortal, overbold,he asked,"how durst thou come down living to the realms of the dead?" |
41765 | Oh, brindled cow,cried he, in a tone of despair,"do you never mean to stop?" |
41765 | Pandora, what are you thinking of? |
41765 | Pray, what do you want with me? |
41765 | Pray, who are you, beautiful creature? |
41765 | Sacred oracle of Delphi,said he,"whither shall I go next in quest of my dear sister Europa?" |
41765 | See you,he said,"that youth leaning on a pointless spear? |
41765 | Shall I lift the lid again? |
41765 | So you have got the golden apples? |
41765 | Still burns thy rage? 41765 Tecmessa,"he asked,"where is our boy?" |
41765 | Tell me,cried he, before the Old One was well awake,"which is the way to the garden of the Hesperides?" |
41765 | That little bird, which met me at the edge of the cliff,exclaimed Ulysses;"was he a human being once?" |
41765 | Then if no man does thee harm, why these complaints? |
41765 | Well, but, dear mother,asked the boy,"why can not I go to this famous city of Athens, and tell King Ægeus that I am his son?" |
41765 | What ails thee, child? |
41765 | What can it be? |
41765 | What can that be? |
41765 | What do you want there? |
41765 | What fault is there in it? |
41765 | What hast thou seen from thy mountain- top? |
41765 | What hast thou to do with an affair like this? 41765 What kind of a monster may that be? |
41765 | What mean you, little bird? |
41765 | What message can our good brother Amasis have for us? |
41765 | What sayest thou? |
41765 | What shall I do? |
41765 | What sort of a staff had he? |
41765 | What will Epimetheus say? 41765 What, then, shall I do?" |
41765 | Whence can the box have come? |
41765 | Where are your two- and- twenty comrades? |
41765 | Wherefore come you hither, friends? |
41765 | Whither are you going in such a hurry, wise Ulysses? |
41765 | Whither dost thou hasten, Arethusa? |
41765 | Who are you, inside of this naughty box? |
41765 | Who are you? |
41765 | Who art thou who would''st speak with me? |
41765 | Who, and whence are ye? |
41765 | Why do you come alone? |
41765 | Why do you squeeze me so hard? 41765 Why dost thou stand there pale and silent? |
41765 | Why these tears? 41765 Why,"it whispered,"this wild grief? |
41765 | Would you like to know the fate of this other present-- the dog? 41765 Wretch,"cried Circe, giving him a smart stroke with her wand,"how dare you keep your human shape a moment longer? |
41765 | Young man,asked he, with his stern voice,"are you not appalled at the certainty of being devoured by this terrible Minotaur?" |
41765 | Am I permitted to see thy face and hear thy well- known voice once more?" |
41765 | And Julius cried out:"Ah, my lord, wherefore hast thou left thy city in such sorrow? |
41765 | And again:"Whither dost thou hasten?" |
41765 | And almost the first question which she put to him, after crossing the threshold, was this:"Epimetheus, what have you in that box?" |
41765 | And how can I possibly tie it up again?" |
41765 | And on that island, what do you think he saw? |
41765 | And pray, bold stranger, what do you want there?" |
41765 | And shall I now turn back from a beast of the sea?" |
41765 | And the king of the infernal gods asked:"What wouldst thou, mortal, who darest to enter unbidden this our realm of death?" |
41765 | And what do you think the snowy bull did next? |
41765 | And what is the message which you bring?" |
41765 | And whence could this bull have come? |
41765 | And whence do you come in that little cup?" |
41765 | And, as they stood there, cheek touching cheek, he heard her say,"Why art thou silent, O my love? |
41765 | And, indeed, why not? |
41765 | Are ye so slow of heart as not to detect Greek subtlety or the guile of Ulysses? |
41765 | As no one came, Narcissus called again,"Why do you shun me?" |
41765 | At this marvel his heart bounded wildly; but as the flame died down he said to himself,"Is not this another brain- sick phantom?" |
41765 | But Alpheus, noting the guile of the goddess, laughed aloud, for could he not at will become even as his own river? |
41765 | But say, how and where came ye on our shore?" |
41765 | But was it really and truly an old man? |
41765 | But what availed it? |
41765 | But what were the closest of human ties when the god had spoken? |
41765 | But what were they among so many? |
41765 | But when he saw Æneas moving to meet him, with outstretched arms and tearful eyes he cried:"O my son, my son, hast thou come to me indeed? |
41765 | But where was Priam the while? |
41765 | Can I have heard thee aright? |
41765 | Can brave souls bear malice e''en after death?" |
41765 | Can it be that a dumb creature mourns for what Noman and his hateful band have done to its lord? |
41765 | Can not I carry the golden apples to the king, your cousin, much quicker than you could? |
41765 | Can not the great goddess be appeased without this innocent victim?" |
41765 | Do I hear the voices of nymphs, or dryads, or of human maids?" |
41765 | Do you, then, love this king, your cousin, so very much?" |
41765 | Dost think, perchance, that this too is a dream? |
41765 | Dost thou forget thy mother and all her care for thee and thine? |
41765 | Dost thou indeed understand what thou sayest, fair maiden?" |
41765 | Dost thou not tremble, wicked king, to turn thine eyes inward on thine own heart? |
41765 | Ever and anon he would ask,"Where is Teucer? |
41765 | From the lover who could follow her even hither why should she fly? |
41765 | Had she missed the road, or had she fainted on the way? |
41765 | Has any man found means to hurt thee? |
41765 | Hast thou ever caught a glimpse of him?" |
41765 | Hast thou indeed forsaken forever all those who love thee?" |
41765 | Have I not prayed, have I not wept, have I not done thee true service? |
41765 | Have the jealous gods rejected the sacrifice?" |
41765 | Have we labored for nothing these nine weary years? |
41765 | Have you never made the sunshine dance into dark corners by reflecting it from a bit of looking- glass? |
41765 | He talked with the supposed spirit:"Why, beautiful being, do you shun me? |
41765 | Hector himself could not save us now; what can thy feeble arms avail? |
41765 | Her sisters were obeying their father''s command, and dared she alone be disobedient? |
41765 | How could he bring himself to desert the Queen whose heart he had won, and break his troth? |
41765 | How could he disobey the voice of the god? |
41765 | How could the business of the realm go on without the King''s recognized seal to set upon his ordinances? |
41765 | How shall I make him believe that I have not looked into the box?" |
41765 | How thinkest thou? |
41765 | If I should lose you too, as well as my little Europa, what would become of me?" |
41765 | If any such misfortune were to happen, how could he ever get rid of the sky? |
41765 | Is aught amiss?" |
41765 | Is he a son, or haply a grandson?" |
41765 | Is it an inspiration of heaven or only my own fiery spirit, pent up within these walls and fretting for the fray? |
41765 | Is it because I too am a king, that you desire so earnestly to speak with me? |
41765 | Is it not possible, at the risk of one''s life, to slay him?" |
41765 | Is it possessed by fierce barbarians who will slay, or by men who will prove pitiful? |
41765 | Is not Teucer returned? |
41765 | Is that a dagger in thy left hand?" |
41765 | Is this not Protesilaus, then, who seems to stand before me?" |
41765 | Know ye not the prophecy of Calchas, that in the tenth year, and not before, Troy was destined to fall? |
41765 | Never have I known fairer or gentler man than thou, and why should''st thou die? |
41765 | Now she could feel his hard breathing in her long hair; was there no escape? |
41765 | One day the youth, being separated from his companions, shouted aloud,"Who''s here?" |
41765 | Or could it be the beating of her heart? |
41765 | Or has some one been robbing thee by force or fraud?" |
41765 | Or was it merely the singing in Pandora''s ears? |
41765 | Pray, what would you advise me to do with him?" |
41765 | Seven years hath thy mother awaited thy homecoming, and shall her eyes see thee nevermore?" |
41765 | Shall I never hear them again? |
41765 | Shall I not share thy triumph or thy death? |
41765 | Shall this man snatch from you your brides and rule in peace on the throne which he hath stolen? |
41765 | Shall two perish instead of one? |
41765 | She had told Leander that the light was the signal that her office was ended for the day-- would he notice it? |
41765 | She waylaid her father as he went to the Council of the Elders and cried to him:"Father dear, may I have the high wain and the mules to- day? |
41765 | Should he obliterate the world- famous fresco of his banquet hall, or slay the most beautiful of his slaves? |
41765 | Should he sacrifice his favorite singer, his most gifted painter? |
41765 | Should her love be weaker than his? |
41765 | Strong- limbed art thou and brave; but what mortal shall stand against that strength? |
41765 | The courtiers whispered together in fear:"What can this mean? |
41765 | The gentle and innocent creature( for who could possibly doubt that he was so?) |
41765 | Then Minerva answered:"Wilt thou, great sire, rescue a man whom Fate has appointed to die? |
41765 | Then said King Minos coldly:"What wilt thou with me, maiden?" |
41765 | Then said Menelaus to Calchas:"Is there no other way? |
41765 | Then Æneas asked:"What youth is he, O father, who walks by his side in shining armor; but his countenance is sad, his eyes fixed upon the ground? |
41765 | They were childless and without hope of children, and if one of them were to die, how could the other live on? |
41765 | Thinkest thou, brother, alone to put thy head into the lion''s mouth? |
41765 | Thy name?" |
41765 | To save himself by flight was unthinkable, but should he rush at once on certain death? |
41765 | Was Theseus afraid? |
41765 | What angry gods have led thee, alive, to be companion of the dead? |
41765 | What harm can the lady of the palace and her maidens do to mariners and warriors like us?" |
41765 | What harm can there be in opening the box? |
41765 | What if she gave this tunic to the messenger, so that Hercules should wear it, and so by its virtue her husband be restored to her again? |
41765 | What if you should take my burden on your shoulders while I do your errand for you?" |
41765 | What in the world could we do without her? |
41765 | What in the world is better than gold?" |
41765 | What loss would he most mourn? |
41765 | What lover, however ardent his desire, dare venture to try his skill against Hercules? |
41765 | What mean those hideous scars?" |
41765 | What more proof would you have that this tale is true? |
41765 | What mortal, even if he possessed a hundred lives, could hope to escape the fangs of such a monster? |
41765 | What should it be but the most magnificent palace that had ever been seen in the world? |
41765 | What think you, brother? |
41765 | What was he to do? |
41765 | Where are you all? |
41765 | Where hast thou tarried this long, long while? |
41765 | Whither away? |
41765 | Who art thou that bringest the nectar of the gods? |
41765 | Who breaks upon thy sleep? |
41765 | Who can light on as happy a shore All the world o''er, all the world o''er? |
41765 | Who else would have borne with my infirmities as thou hast? |
41765 | Who has not seen on a starlight night Cassiopoeia seated on her golden throne? |
41765 | Who was the giver of so precious a present? |
41765 | Who will go in my company-- who?" |
41765 | Why am I alone a dreamer of dreams, the idler of an empty day?" |
41765 | Why is thy visage thus marred? |
41765 | Why should you flee as the trembling doe from the lion, the lamb from the hungry wolf, the dove from the pursuing falcon? |
41765 | Will ye leave your quarry when it is at the last gasp? |
41765 | Would he come? |
41765 | Your mother, beholding you safe and sound, will shed tears of joy; and what can she do more, should you win ever so great a victory? |
41765 | [ Illustration: PERSEUS AND ANDROMEDA]"Shall I flee from a beast of the deep?" |
41765 | asked Theseus,"if the labyrinth so bewilders me, as you say it will?" |
41765 | asked the sylvan god,"Art thou not afeard of all that might meet thee here in the deep forest?" |
41765 | cried King Ægeus,"why should you expose yourself to this horrible fate? |
41765 | cried Ulysses;"didst thou think to gorge thyself on me, whom the gods have made an instrument to punish thy churlish manners?" |
41765 | cried the queen;"the gods have already wrought wonders, why should they not give thee back thy life? |
41765 | do you smell the feast? |
41765 | do you think me so?" |
41765 | have the gods mocked me after all? |
41765 | he lamented,"upon what inhospitable coast have I been cast? |
41765 | must you go so soon?" |
41765 | nor taste those nice little savory dishes which my dearest wife knew how to serve up?" |
41765 | shouted Hercules very wrathfully,"do you intend to make me bear this burden for ever?" |
41765 | the cause of your death? |
41765 | thought Cadmus;"or have I been dreaming all this while?" |
41765 | was there ever such a gentle, sweet, pretty, and amiable creature as this bull, and ever such a nice playmate for a little girl? |
41765 | what should I do if_ she_ were gone?" |
41765 | wherefore shouldst thou leave me?" |
41765 | why have I made thee that thou should''st mock me thus? |
41765 | why have you opened this wicked box?" |
34543 | ''What are ye doing?'' 34543 Afraid you wo n''t get your fifteen shillings a week, are ye?" |
34543 | Ai n''t he a booty? |
34543 | And if you were left alone what would you do? |
34543 | And my father, Canon Lascelles-- really? 34543 And my mother-- where is she?" |
34543 | And you know what he goes there for? 34543 Any rabbit- skins, miss?" |
34543 | Are you going to deny it? |
34543 | Are you really living here alone? |
34543 | Are you sure? |
34543 | Are you telling us the minister has n''t given you the money? |
34543 | At the Barton? |
34543 | Aw, Peter, will''em du it? |
34543 | Aw, Peter, wun''t the volks look yaller when they sees''en? |
34543 | Aw, bain''t''em dafty? |
34543 | Aw, my dear, what be ye doing? |
34543 | Aw, my dear, what have ye done? |
34543 | B''est hungry? |
34543 | B''est sure that''s right? |
34543 | Bain''t he a proper young gentleman? |
34543 | Bain''t him a cruel noisy thing? |
34543 | Bain''t that artful now? |
34543 | Be I, sir? |
34543 | Be t''other train going to run into we? |
34543 | Be ye going down under? |
34543 | Be yew a criminal tu? |
34543 | Be yew going back? |
34543 | Be yew going far? |
34543 | Be yew going to break the mommet? |
34543 | Be''ye alright, Gran''vaither? |
34543 | Been here long, my jewel? |
34543 | Been to Lewside Cottage, has he? 34543 Boodles, what shall we do?" |
34543 | But I want to know if he is going to give me up? |
34543 | But as you are only an old daddy- man? |
34543 | But do n''t they know? 34543 But how did it get there?" |
34543 | But if he does come? |
34543 | But what are we going to inspect? |
34543 | But what is the rain doing now? |
34543 | Butter? |
34543 | Ca n''t us do nought? |
34543 | Ca n''t ye mix bread in my house? |
34543 | Can us hang''em up, du''ye reckon, Peter? |
34543 | Could n''t ye mak''one o''they? 34543 Could you meet me on Friday morning at eleven o''clock in Tavy woods?" |
34543 | Did ever see such a goosie? |
34543 | Did it hurt, Boodle- oodle? |
34543 | Did n''t I tell ye? |
34543 | Did you ever catch one? |
34543 | Did''st du it? |
34543 | Do angels have red hair? |
34543 | Do n''t the words pinch? 34543 Do n''t they do that? |
34543 | Do n''t this old place smell mucky? |
34543 | Do n''t you know what the policeman wants you for? |
34543 | Do you care? |
34543 | Do you know a drunken man when you see one? |
34543 | Do you suppose he had fallen from his horse and stunned himself? |
34543 | Do you think that is the carriage? |
34543 | Do you want Aubrey to marry this nameless girl? |
34543 | Does it require any answer? |
34543 | Does that hurt? |
34543 | Does that''dear''mean expensive? 34543 Du ye reckon they''ll know I be a criminal?" |
34543 | Du''ye feel like that, Peter? |
34543 | Du''ye mean Old Sal, my dear? 34543 Du''ye say he bain''t your husband?" |
34543 | Du''ye want master, sir? 34543 Edith?" |
34543 | Fine, and how be yew? |
34543 | Given him no tea? |
34543 | Going beyond? |
34543 | Going to chapel Sunday night? |
34543 | Going to the fair? |
34543 | Got a stick? |
34543 | Got any money? 34543 Got any money?" |
34543 | Got any promises? |
34543 | Happy, are ye? |
34543 | Has n''t he? |
34543 | Haunted water, daddy? |
34543 | Have a drop o''cider, will ye? 34543 Have we got anything for supper, Boodle- oodle?" |
34543 | Have we the right to work a mine upon the moor? |
34543 | Have ye got a home? |
34543 | Have ye purty nigh done? |
34543 | Have you no one to look after you? |
34543 | He was dead drunk? |
34543 | How are you going to answer this? |
34543 | How be I to mix bread''and get supper? 34543 How be I to work in dimsies?" |
34543 | How be us to stop''em? |
34543 | How be ye, Master? 34543 How be ye, my dear?" |
34543 | How can I? |
34543 | How could you say that you picked me up on your doorstep, and never knew where I had come from? |
34543 | How did I come to you? |
34543 | How did he know? 34543 How did you do it?" |
34543 | How did you get those clothes? |
34543 | How do ye come home? 34543 How is the old goose, Mary?" |
34543 | How many miles is that? |
34543 | How much have ye got in the money- box? |
34543 | How old is she? |
34543 | How would you like to come to the Barton, and be my married wife? 34543 I suppose he had n''t got it on that night?" |
34543 | I suppose those men were enjoying themselves, but what right have they to an enjoyment which makes other people suffer? 34543 I suppose you would n''t accept it?" |
34543 | I thought you said she was born in Lausanne at the Hotel Gibbon? |
34543 | I wants to know how yew be telling to I? |
34543 | If I ca n''t find out, Aubrey? |
34543 | If you ai n''t got the blooming oof, who has? |
34543 | In what condition was he when you found him lying upon the road? |
34543 | Is it all over? |
34543 | Is it his nature? |
34543 | Is it the Brute, daddy? |
34543 | Is that clock right? |
34543 | It made you cry? |
34543 | Look ye here, will ye? 34543 Made a mommet, ha''ye? |
34543 | May I laugh now? |
34543 | Milk? 34543 My poor child, how can you sit here in the cold? |
34543 | Need we proceed at this present''igh velocity, Mr. Pendoggat? 34543 No guardians? |
34543 | Not men? |
34543 | Nothing''bout Varmer Pendoggat and Chegwidden''s maid? |
34543 | Now I must find out all about them? |
34543 | Now? |
34543 | Pretty, ai n''t they? 34543 Put''en right, will ye?" |
34543 | Remember-- what? |
34543 | S''pose yew bain''t feeling good? |
34543 | See all that carved wood on the front of him? 34543 Shall I beat him?" |
34543 | Shall us dig up the pills and tak''some? |
34543 | Shall us get on? |
34543 | Shall us get on? |
34543 | Shall us get on? |
34543 | She said:''Aw, my dear, be ye sot by the window?'' 34543 Should you have cared very much, sweetheart?" |
34543 | So my name is really Lascelles? |
34543 | Stugged was he? 34543 Swear you''ll do it?" |
34543 | The carriage is there, I think? |
34543 | The child was baptised at St. Michael''s, Cornhill? |
34543 | The happiness or hell? |
34543 | Then how about Father Lascelles? |
34543 | Then what does he mean by saying I am of low birth and have no name? |
34543 | Thursday evenings usually? |
34543 | Tita? |
34543 | Was he drunk? |
34543 | Was it because I did n''t talk proper about''ell? |
34543 | Was it the same piece of jelly? 34543 Was''em all born dead?" |
34543 | Well, Mary, how are you? |
34543 | Well, my lad, how much do you want for your goose? 34543 Well, what about business?" |
34543 | What about my blooming money, though? |
34543 | What about that dirty mine? |
34543 | What about that sample you gave me when I came down before? 34543 What about the nickel that you said was going to make our fortunes?" |
34543 | What am I to do with it? |
34543 | What are those things in your basket? |
34543 | What are you a- saying? 34543 What are you talking about?" |
34543 | What be I to du? |
34543 | What be I to du? |
34543 | What be that? |
34543 | What be the matter? |
34543 | What be yew doing? |
34543 | What be yew going to du? |
34543 | What be yew going to du? |
34543 | What be yew leaving me? 34543 What be yew talking about?" |
34543 | What be''em getting away from? |
34543 | What can I do? |
34543 | What do he know about nickel? 34543 What do you mean, Mr. Pendoggat? |
34543 | What do you suppose she is doing now? 34543 What does that mean, Aubrey?" |
34543 | What du''ye call''en? |
34543 | What du''ye know''bout Varmer Pendoggat? |
34543 | What du''ye mean? |
34543 | What du''ye tak''for''en, Peter? |
34543 | What ha''I done, sir? |
34543 | What has he done? |
34543 | What have you been doing-- quarrelling? |
34543 | What is it? |
34543 | What is that light, over in the corner? |
34543 | What were they? |
34543 | What would I want to come wi''yew for, woman? |
34543 | What''s all that about bees? |
34543 | What''s that, woman? |
34543 | Whatever does it mean? |
34543 | When will you come? |
34543 | Where are you going, little radiance? |
34543 | Where are you taking me? |
34543 | Where be the oil? |
34543 | Where be the old goose yew was so fond of? |
34543 | Where be ye going? |
34543 | Where be yew going? |
34543 | Where be yew? |
34543 | Where be''em? |
34543 | Where have you come from? |
34543 | Where was I? |
34543 | Where will''em put the gold? |
34543 | Where''s the mine? |
34543 | Where''s your dog- licence? |
34543 | Where? |
34543 | Who be the mommet, Peter? 34543 Who be ye?" |
34543 | Who be ye? |
34543 | Who be ye? |
34543 | Who killed that old goose? |
34543 | Who told you that? |
34543 | Who was that a telling to I? |
34543 | Who''s to tell her? |
34543 | Who? 34543 Why am I not a humpback, or diseased in some way, or hideous, if I am an illegitimate child? |
34543 | Why ca n''t you stand up, man? |
34543 | Why did n''t ye tell me? |
34543 | Why did n''t ye tell to I avore? |
34543 | Why did n''t''em tak''he then? |
34543 | Why did you make up that queer story about finding me one night at your door? |
34543 | Why did you say just now he was not drunk when you found him? |
34543 | Why do n''t us get out and run away? |
34543 | Why do n''t ye burn''en, woman? |
34543 | Why du''ye call''em angels? |
34543 | Why ever could n''t you have told me all this before? 34543 Why has n''t he told me then?" |
34543 | Why have you told me? 34543 Why not marry?" |
34543 | Why not? 34543 Why not?" |
34543 | Why, Where''s Peter? |
34543 | Why, daddy? |
34543 | Why? |
34543 | Will us get hurt? |
34543 | Will ye give us a bite o''bread? 34543 Will you come and spend Christmas with us?" |
34543 | Wo n''t the butiful young gentleman come and live wi''ye? |
34543 | Would you like to show me over the cottage? |
34543 | Wun''t ye come tu? |
34543 | Yew stoled''en? |
34543 | Yew''m sick? |
34543 | You did not kiss her, I think? |
34543 | You have always meant it? 34543 You have n''t told any one about our meetings? |
34543 | You have often seen him galloping over the moor, in what some people might call a reckless way? |
34543 | You know the story of your birth then now? |
34543 | You mean my old daddy- man is my grandfather? |
34543 | You think Farmer Chegwidden had reached that stage? 34543 You were not astonished, as you know he is an habitual drunkard?" |
34543 | You will never kill her? |
34543 | You''d like to come to the Barton, would n''t you, my maid? |
34543 | You''ll live honest? |
34543 | You''ll live honest? |
34543 | You''ve been yetting too many worts? |
34543 | You''ve done with young Pugsley? |
34543 | Young Pugsley? |
34543 | A change for the worse? |
34543 | A real canon, a man with a sort of title?" |
34543 | Ai n''t ye got a pin to give''en? |
34543 | All the time she could hear Annie''s furious laughter and her mocking voice:"Why do n''t ye stand up to she, man? |
34543 | Am I to say to every one:''I am an illegitimate child, and therefore I am as black as the devil himself?'' |
34543 | And how be yew, my dear, and how be the old gentleman? |
34543 | And the others-- Katherine, Mary-- what are the rest?" |
34543 | And there was another Boodles coming towards him with the pleasant words:"Be this your little dog, mister? |
34543 | Animals have to be killed for food; but what would be done to a butcher who slaughtered his beasts in the middle of the street? |
34543 | Are n''t you worrying your dear old head about another queer puzzle? |
34543 | Are you ashamed of me?" |
34543 | Are you my mother''s father?" |
34543 | At last it said to the rain,''Where do_ yew_ come from?'' |
34543 | Aubrey is not coming home for Christmas then?" |
34543 | Aw now, did n''t I? |
34543 | Aw, my dear life, if I ca n''t tell a goosie when I sees him who can?" |
34543 | Bain''t it a shocking waste o''time?" |
34543 | Be I a liar, man?" |
34543 | Be it early next?" |
34543 | Be ye going, man? |
34543 | Be''ye mazed, my dear?" |
34543 | Bellamie?" |
34543 | Bellamie?" |
34543 | Bellamie?" |
34543 | Boodles?" |
34543 | Bread?" |
34543 | But what about their pastimes? |
34543 | But what am I to do? |
34543 | But what can ye du wi''dead babies, my dear,''cept get''em out o''the way?" |
34543 | But why had that face and voice suggested death, the death of a man who has used his power to deprive a poor wretch of his vineyard? |
34543 | By the road or moor?" |
34543 | Ca n''t you tell me what to do?'' |
34543 | Can us buy''em?" |
34543 | Can you buy a suit of clothes for half- a- crown? |
34543 | Cheese? |
34543 | Chegwidden comes off pretty often, I believe?" |
34543 | Chegwidden pushed closer, and asked hoarsely,"What do''ye think of it, varmer?" |
34543 | Coming wi''me, Mary Tavy? |
34543 | Did ever hear of trying to get a baby up wi''an ash- stick, woman?" |
34543 | Did n''t I whack they old breeks o''yourn? |
34543 | Did n''t your brother find''en wi''Chegwidden''s maid? |
34543 | Did n''t''en, Master? |
34543 | Did you ever see such a blaze?" |
34543 | Did you see her turn then? |
34543 | Did your-- did Mr. Weevil leave no will?" |
34543 | Do I deserve it? |
34543 | Do n''t I know he''s been wi''she for months, and used she as he''ve used me? |
34543 | Do n''t ye hear she, Ben?" |
34543 | Do n''t ye mind ole Will Chanter what had a fiddle like thikky one? |
34543 | Do n''t you feel surprised that Chegwidden has never hurt himself badly?" |
34543 | Do n''t you think it rather a good sermon for a babe and suckling?" |
34543 | Do you know why? |
34543 | Do you really know who my mother was?" |
34543 | Do you recognise the portrait?" |
34543 | Do you think I''d be such a fool as to give this find of mine away for nothing, as you might say, unless I''d got to?" |
34543 | Does anybody know of it?" |
34543 | Does it pinch here, Pezzack? |
34543 | Drag him in by the neck, du''ye? |
34543 | Du''ye hear, Peter?" |
34543 | Du''ye mind, Peter?" |
34543 | Du''ye understand that?" |
34543 | Du''ye understand what I be telling?" |
34543 | Du''ye understand what I mean?" |
34543 | Eightpence a pound, is it?" |
34543 | Every week the question came:"Why do n''t you write?" |
34543 | Father,"she laughed,"why do people ask idiotic questions, like I''m doing now?" |
34543 | For trampesing on the line a sum not exceeding forty shilluns--""Bain''t that better than getting smashed to pieces?" |
34543 | Found out what it''s worth a ton? |
34543 | Friday, day of regeneration, came clothed in a white mist, and found the girl asking herself:"Shall I try and make myself look older?" |
34543 | Got permission from the Duchy? |
34543 | Got your clothes ready?" |
34543 | Had he been drinking? |
34543 | Had it analysed yet? |
34543 | Had n''t he made any notes on that subject? |
34543 | Have a drop o''milk, will ye?" |
34543 | Have you been cruel and caught a wee mousie and hurt it so much that you could n''t let it go? |
34543 | He condescended, however, to observe in the severe tones which his uniform demanded:"Best be moving on, had n''t ye?" |
34543 | He could hardly have been more intoxicated than he was when you found him?" |
34543 | He had the same question for every one: might he have his little dog and talk to her for a bit? |
34543 | He made no reply, only moved away, but she followed, saying:"How about that letter yew had this morning?" |
34543 | He put down his pen, assumed the mantle of Nestor, and asked:"Can I oblige ye, Peter?" |
34543 | He put up his sharp face, and chirped pathetically:"Wun''t ye buy''em, gentlemen? |
34543 | He sat down in the dark, and as soon as the child entered began to quaver his usual grievance:"What right have they to make me suffer? |
34543 | He will be invited to sit by a smouldering peat- fire, and the proposal,"Have a drop o''cider? |
34543 | He would stare him in the face and say:"How be ye?" |
34543 | Her name-- let me see-- what was her name? |
34543 | How can I get at that treasure?'' |
34543 | How can you expect me to tell him to go away, and leave me, when I love him? |
34543 | How could a man be said to enjoy a fair if he went home sober? |
34543 | How could any story end unhappily on such a morning? |
34543 | How could it be thirty years ago, when I''m only just eighteen?" |
34543 | How could my mother be drowned before I was born?" |
34543 | How could you? |
34543 | How did he find that out?" |
34543 | How is it that Canon Lascelles had the same name as you? |
34543 | How would you feel if people found out you were n''t honest? |
34543 | How would you feel if you were sentenced for robbery? |
34543 | I do n''t know anything about nickel, except that I have some spoons and forks--""Do n''t you see we must get money to work it? |
34543 | I hope you have n''t been stealing anything?" |
34543 | I know that the sins of the parents are visited upon the children, but why should the children stand it? |
34543 | I may get her a ring, mother, may n''t I?" |
34543 | I think his name was Philip?" |
34543 | If I ca n''t mak''a living what be I to du?" |
34543 | If it is his nature to be gentle and affectionate, why should he be cruel too?" |
34543 | If matrimony is what people say it is, a sort of sacrament, how is it that children can be born without it?" |
34543 | If they did not protect law- abiding people from highwaymen and robbers, of what use were they? |
34543 | Is it true you are my grandfather?" |
34543 | Is n''t it butiful?" |
34543 | Jewels, Mr. Pendoggat? |
34543 | Ju had come to the cave gladly and found it homelike, so why not Thomasine? |
34543 | Killed him, have ye? |
34543 | May I get you a cup of tea?" |
34543 | Must they, poor little fools? |
34543 | Not hurt, are ye?" |
34543 | Now I want you to use your memory, and tell me if you have ever seen him more drunk than he was that night?" |
34543 | Now what shall I sing about? |
34543 | Oh, Aubrey, was it you and I who used to walk here-- years ago?" |
34543 | Oh, Mr. Pendoggat,''ow can you talk like this, and uncle listening?" |
34543 | Only one, I think?" |
34543 | Pendoggat?" |
34543 | Pendoggat?" |
34543 | Peter toddled off, got before the old clock, and inquired with solicitude:"How be''ye, Gran''vaither?" |
34543 | Pretty good stuff, ai n''t it? |
34543 | Sha n''t I look nice?" |
34543 | Shall I light the lamp and find it?" |
34543 | Shall I say weather permitting or God willing? |
34543 | Shall I tell you all that, darling?" |
34543 | She could not let him, but how was she to resist? |
34543 | She too looked ill and miserable, and when celestial beings suffered what chance was there for him? |
34543 | Suppose one of those rough men broke into her cottage?" |
34543 | Suppose the mine fails, where are you? |
34543 | Telled to ye same as Master might?" |
34543 | That was another suspicious feature; why should the clock be unable to talk then when it had chatted so freely a few minutes before? |
34543 | The answer was what might have been looked for, and ended with the usual question:"Why not?" |
34543 | The dog shrank back, frightened at such roughness, so the man promptly kicked her with his big boot and growled angrily,"Bite me, will ye?" |
34543 | Then she added:"Does Mr. Bellamie wish it?" |
34543 | Then what interest could he feel in Pendoggat that he should plead for the destruction of the mommet? |
34543 | There was a letter for you just now?" |
34543 | There''s nothing remarkable about that, but still you are well aware of it?" |
34543 | They do n''t know at Town Rising?" |
34543 | This is Thursday, is n''t it? |
34543 | Was he a relation?" |
34543 | We had a daughter, or was it a son? |
34543 | Were there not, upon every side, evidences of the existence of precious minerals in the shape of abandoned mines? |
34543 | Were you never in love when you were eighteen?" |
34543 | What am I to do when he comes home? |
34543 | What am I to do? |
34543 | What are all these things for-- pins, coins, coppers? |
34543 | What are you going to say for yourself? |
34543 | What chance had Brightly against a metallic creature like that? |
34543 | What could she say that the child would like to hear? |
34543 | What do they think of me? |
34543 | What do you mean?" |
34543 | What do you think of it?" |
34543 | What do you think of the nickel down under? |
34543 | What does he do with them? |
34543 | What du us want wi''another?" |
34543 | What else did he tell your father?" |
34543 | What happens to we if they blows on the trumpets?" |
34543 | What have I done? |
34543 | What have the ignorant, passionate, selfish creatures in common with the freshness and purity of the wind and rain? |
34543 | What have yew been a- doing of?" |
34543 | What have you been doing?" |
34543 | What have you done?" |
34543 | What is it? |
34543 | What is the matter with it?" |
34543 | What right have the brutes to torment me so?" |
34543 | What shall us du if it be judgment, Peter?" |
34543 | What was my mother like? |
34543 | What was the use of belonging to some one who did nothing for him? |
34543 | What was the use of such a defenceless creature, this sort of human rabbit whom any one could attack? |
34543 | What will the butiful young gentleman say when he sees you white and thin getting?" |
34543 | What would an unmarried girl du wi''dree babies?" |
34543 | What would you think, I''m asking ye, if you were found guilty of robbery and sent to prison? |
34543 | What''s a few furze- prickles?" |
34543 | What''s my tongue for? |
34543 | Whatever be the matter wi''us?" |
34543 | When are we going to start on the new chapel, minister? |
34543 | Where be the pills, then?" |
34543 | Where be us, Peter?" |
34543 | Where be ye going, my dear?" |
34543 | Who be going wi''ye?" |
34543 | Who be the mommet?" |
34543 | Who could explain these things? |
34543 | Who do they think I am?" |
34543 | Who is it to be?" |
34543 | Who shall tell? |
34543 | Who was my mother? |
34543 | Why ca n''t people invent something for small girls to do upon a rainy day? |
34543 | Why could n''t ogres leave them alone so that they could finish the story properly? |
34543 | Why did n''t he ask him?" |
34543 | Why did you tell Mr. Bellamie you are my grandfather, if you''re not?" |
34543 | Why do n''t ye du the like to she?" |
34543 | Why do n''t ye get away? |
34543 | Why do n''t ye get up?" |
34543 | Why do n''t ye get up?" |
34543 | Why do n''t ye throw her off, man?" |
34543 | Why do n''t you have a fire?" |
34543 | Why does n''t he write to me? |
34543 | Why ever should n''t I know? |
34543 | Why had he not accepted the story which she was so ready to believe? |
34543 | Why had he remained so long a mute inglorious scholar? |
34543 | Why have n''t I seen him? |
34543 | Why have n''t you ever told me?" |
34543 | Why is a girl as black as the devil just because no clergyman has jabbered some rubbish at her parents? |
34543 | Why may I not go a walk without being tortured? |
34543 | Why should I give up my liberty? |
34543 | Why should these people be outside the law because they are commoners? |
34543 | Why turn him out feeble and half blind when he had his living to make? |
34543 | Why, what''s the matter? |
34543 | Will ye please to step inside, Varmer Chegwidden?" |
34543 | Will you stand in with me, share the risks, and share the profits? |
34543 | Wun''t ye get up? |
34543 | You are a very generous man, but why do you let me into the secret?" |
34543 | You are not deceiving me?" |
34543 | You are not playing with me? |
34543 | You are the girl''s grandfather on the mother''s side?" |
34543 | You do n''t say they are jewels?" |
34543 | You go to get beer, do n''t you?" |
34543 | You know the Scorhill Rocks, my dears? |
34543 | You told your uncle that? |
34543 | You will be true to your little maid of the radiant head? |
34543 | You wo n''t kill her, will you, Mary?" |
34543 | You''re thinking of getting married?" |
27629 | A beacon fire alight? |
27629 | Am I counselling cruelly hard things, dear? |
27629 | Am I right? |
27629 | Am I so entirely unworthy-- unlovable? |
27629 | Am I so very dreadful that you ca n''t bear to come near me? |
27629 | Am I? 27629 Am I? |
27629 | And it was n''t a scrap of use? |
27629 | And was I very horrid to be playing up here in the cool all the time? |
27629 | And you are not disappointed, after nine months of it? |
27629 | And you came to tell me? |
27629 | And you did not tell him why? |
27629 | And you have actually--_done_ it, Theo? |
27629 | And you might just as well have come back strong and splendid, like you went away? |
27629 | And-- Theo? |
27629 | Another dress? 27629 Are n''t we good friends enough now to drop the formality?" |
27629 | Are these all? |
27629 | Are you as rabid as my brother and the Colonel because the poor man has dared to marry? |
27629 | Are you badly hurt? |
27629 | Are you in special need of encouragement just now, dear? |
27629 | Are you there, dear? |
27629 | Are you very happy sitting there? |
27629 | Are you, really? 27629 Are you_ sure_ there''s nothing else that can be done? |
27629 | Better now? |
27629 | Brought your pipe along? |
27629 | But do you, Theo--_do_ you? |
27629 | But how much is--_your_ share? |
27629 | But if I ca n''t do that, what_ can_ I do? |
27629 | But if you really ca n''t go back-- what then? |
27629 | But if you''re so keen about the place, why not insist upon going? 27629 But is n''t there more?" |
27629 | But tell me-- what''s the reason of all this? 27629 But the tournament? |
27629 | But then, properly behaved ladies do n''t ask you direct personal questions, do they? |
27629 | But then,--who else is it likely to be? |
27629 | But where the deuce_ is_ he? 27629 But who_ is_ your real partner?" |
27629 | But wo n''t any one be left to guard the station? 27629 But, Theo, I could n''t leave you like that-- just now, could I?" |
27629 | But, suppose she ca n''t realise either till-- too late? |
27629 | But-- surely-- that''s impossible? |
27629 | But-- wouldn''t you come too? |
27629 | By the way--Desmond turned upon him as he went with startling abruptness--"_Honor_ is n''t in any way mixed up with all this, is she?" |
27629 | Ca n''t I go to bed before they come, Theo? 27629 Ca n''t you see I''m in earnest? |
27629 | Ca n''t you see it for yourself, man? 27629 Ca n''t you see that the fact of your having no father to pull you up sharp puts you on your honour to keep straight in every way, on her account? |
27629 | Ca n''t you see that this is n''t a question-- of caring, but simply of doing my duty? 27629 Ca n''t you send the orderly?" |
27629 | Can I? 27629 Can any one ever understand-- this sort of thing? |
27629 | Could you manage to untie it and fix it up more firmly till Mackay comes? |
27629 | Could_ you_ do it for me, Honor? |
27629 | D''you feel like coming? |
27629 | D''you mean-- blindness? |
27629 | D''you_ mean_ that? |
27629 | Dear God, what_ ought_ I to do? |
27629 | Dearest, what_ has_ happened to make you look like that? |
27629 | Deprive him? 27629 Desmond included?" |
27629 | Did I say anything about paying me back? |
27629 | Did he? 27629 Did she seem-- much upset?" |
27629 | Did she? 27629 Did you feel at all ill this morning? |
27629 | Did you think I had deserted you altogether? |
27629 | Did-- did_ I_ make him bad? |
27629 | Do I look as hopelessly unsoldier- like as all_ that?_"No-- a thousand times, no! |
27629 | Do n''t you like him? |
27629 | Do n''t you, old man? 27629 Do they? |
27629 | Do they? 27629 Do you always order people to give you dances in that imperative fashion?" |
27629 | Do you care so much what I do with the rest of my life? |
27629 | Do you mean that-- really? 27629 Do you mean you ought to-- send her away?" |
27629 | Do you mean-- lending him money? |
27629 | Do you mean----? 27629 Do you mean----? |
27629 | Do you think the Colonel will come within a hundred miles of understanding and be persuaded to back me up? |
27629 | Does it hurt, Theo? |
27629 | Does it please you so tremendously? |
27629 | Does n''t it make things any easier to feel you are helping the Boy by giving up these few weeks of enjoyment? |
27629 | Does n''t to- night convince you that you''ve no right to leave them all? |
27629 | Done? |
27629 | Dunni,--what''s the meaning of this? |
27629 | Evelyn-- Ladybird-- have you nothing to say to me? |
27629 | Feel bad? |
27629 | Getting away-- where-- in Heaven''s name? |
27629 | Go home----? |
27629 | Going to join Ladybird at the club later on? |
27629 | Has anything else gone wrong? 27629 Have you any idea of the total?" |
27629 | Have you any plans-- beyond Le Trayas? |
27629 | Have you heard from Theo this week, Ladybird? |
27629 | Have you the smallest idea what the total damage amounts to? |
27629 | He''s rather a fine fellow, is n''t he? |
27629 | Honor, ca n''t you_ see_ that-- that I''m frightened and miserable about Theo, and I must have something to help me forget? 27629 Honor, what has upset you so?" |
27629 | Honor,he asked,"was I hard with Ladybird? |
27629 | Honor-- Honor, is it really so impossible-- as you think? 27629 Honor-- what_ are_ you going to do?" |
27629 | Honor? 27629 How about uniform for me, sir?" |
27629 | How about your trousseau? |
27629 | How can Love lose, doing of its kind, Even to the utmost? |
27629 | How could I dream that you would guess? |
27629 | How did she look? 27629 How did that last performance strike you? |
27629 | How do you know I play? |
27629 | How is it possible to make thanks, Hazúr...? |
27629 | How long will you be gone? |
27629 | How''s that? 27629 How_ can_ you manage to clear them off-- now?" |
27629 | How_ could_ I tell her? |
27629 | I say, Paul, old man,he remonstrated,"is n''t it some one else''s turn for an innings by this time? |
27629 | I wonder if you have the smallest recollection of me? |
27629 | I''m only wondering if you know what you''ve let yourself in for? 27629 I''ve got to do_ some_thing-- somehow, do n''t you see? |
27629 | If you feel so sure it will annoy him, why on earth do you do it? 27629 In spite of all it may involve-- for Ladybird?" |
27629 | Is any real love ever wasted? |
27629 | Is he_ here_? |
27629 | Is it going to be like that every time he comes? |
27629 | Is it really as bad as all that? |
27629 | Is it shocked you are because I speak of him so? 27629 Is it-- the worst?" |
27629 | Is it? 27629 Is it? |
27629 | Is it? 27629 Is n''t the fact of my coming here to stay two years sufficient proof of that?" |
27629 | Is she-- alive? |
27629 | Is that a hint to me to keep my distance? |
27629 | Is that big baby of yours making you anxious on account of this expedition? |
27629 | Is that how the other fellows look at it? |
27629 | Is that the truth? |
27629 | Is there no manner of wild tale you could invent now to rouse the blessed man? |
27629 | Is-- he still here? |
27629 | It can hardly be left like this? |
27629 | Ladybird, where_ are_ you? 27629 Look here, Linda,"he began at last,"when are we playing tennis again with little Mrs Desmond?" |
27629 | Look here, though-- can you manage it-- easily? |
27629 | May I come in? |
27629 | May I? |
27629 | Mind? 27629 Money?" |
27629 | Must we, Theo,--really? 27629 Not bad news of John?" |
27629 | Not gone out yet? |
27629 | Now perhaps you better understand-- this last year? |
27629 | Oh, Theo, what_ does_ it matter after all? |
27629 | Oh, how_ am_ I going to get home? |
27629 | Old times again, is it? |
27629 | On the Border? |
27629 | On your word, Theo? |
27629 | Only-- now that you understand, tell me-- tell me-- what_ must_ I do? |
27629 | Paul, old man,he said on a questioning note,"ca n''t you speak to a fellow? |
27629 | Paul,--was it your notion? |
27629 | Paul-- is there any real danger because of this fever? 27629 Purely as a favour to me?" |
27629 | Real music? 27629 Safe for an encore, that-- what? |
27629 | Shall you be very angry if I say that you have n''t yet looked thoroughly round this one? 27629 She is quite safe? |
27629 | So that''s a closed subject between us,--you understand? 27629 So that''s it, is it? |
27629 | So that''s your notion? 27629 So the picnic was a success?" |
27629 | So you''ve_ settled_ it all without saying a word to_ me_? |
27629 | Somebody left you a fortune? |
27629 | Something has upset you since you left? 27629 Studying the sunset, Evelyn?" |
27629 | Talked? |
27629 | Talking of hard cash-- what price d''you get? |
27629 | That means-- you insist on going? |
27629 | That was much too short, was n''t it? |
27629 | That you, Desmond? |
27629 | That you, Ladybird? |
27629 | That you? |
27629 | The Boy? |
27629 | The Captain Sahib? |
27629 | The Regiment or yourself? |
27629 | The brute did n''t dare to-- kiss you, did he, Ladybird? |
27629 | The old man going on well? |
27629 | The text is from Romans, I suppose? |
27629 | The whole Border- side is at your feet!--But what brought you back again, Rajinder Singh? |
27629 | Then why go at all? |
27629 | Then why not go there? 27629 Theo, are you really all right again? |
27629 | Theo,she said suddenly in an awe- struck undertone,"do you know what I was dreaming when you woke me? |
27629 | Theo,she whispered, kneeling down by him,"is it any good trying to speak to you now? |
27629 | Theo,--why, in Heaven''s name, wo n''t you cancel this wretched business, and take the money from me instead? |
27629 | Theo-- will you listen to me and not be so angry? 27629 There, that''s better, is n''t it?" |
27629 | To Mrs Riley''s----"And after? |
27629 | To- morrow-- to- morrow? 27629 Want to speak to me about something?" |
27629 | Was Evelyn with him when you left? |
27629 | Well done,he said heartily;"you did n''t expect us quite so soon, did you? |
27629 | Well, and if I have? |
27629 | Well, my dear, what else would you have? 27629 Well, then, ask her to tea here first, d''you see?" |
27629 | Well, then, why ca n''t you consider_ mine_ a little too? 27629 Well, then-- is it fair on Evelyn to make her upbringing responsible for such a serious turn of the wheel? |
27629 | Well, then----? |
27629 | Well, then? |
27629 | Well, what then? |
27629 | Well,he said,"what''s the difficulty? |
27629 | Well-- was that all? |
27629 | Well-- why not? |
27629 | Well? |
27629 | Well? |
27629 | Well? |
27629 | Well? |
27629 | What about? |
27629 | What are you so taken up with, Ladybird? |
27629 | What brought you back so early? |
27629 | What can he want over here so early? 27629 What devil''s work is this?" |
27629 | What did you do_ that_ for? |
27629 | What do you mean? |
27629 | What do you think she''s imagining by now? 27629 What do_ you_ know about my allowance?" |
27629 | What else is there for me to do? 27629 What is it you are reading? |
27629 | What is it? |
27629 | What is it? |
27629 | What is it? |
27629 | What is it? |
27629 | What is it? |
27629 | What is it? |
27629 | What is it? |
27629 | What is this that has come to little Mrs Desmond? |
27629 | What is wrong with Mrs Desmond? |
27629 | What kind of difficulty? |
27629 | What other reasons? 27629 What possessed her to go out again? |
27629 | What right have I to let him call himself my friend, if I fail him the first time things take an unpleasant turn? |
27629 | What the devil did the little fool do that for? |
27629 | What the hell has Olliver got to do with_ my wife_? 27629 What''s gone wrong with her? |
27629 | What''s the matter with you now? |
27629 | What''s the trouble, little woman? |
27629 | What''s up now? |
27629 | What''s up now? |
27629 | What''s your dissipated programme? |
27629 | What_ has_ happened to make you look like that? |
27629 | What_ have_ I done that you should treat me-- like this? |
27629 | What_ is_ the absorbing subject? |
27629 | What_ is_ the meaning of this, Evelyn? |
27629 | When is it going to be better? 27629 Where is she?" |
27629 | Where to, old man? |
27629 | Where would be the use? 27629 Where''s Evelyn, then?" |
27629 | Where''s Miss Kresney? |
27629 | Where''s the use of that?... 27629 Who is that?" |
27629 | Who on earth put that horrible dog there, Theo? 27629 Who-- what-- is in that other doolie?" |
27629 | Why am I suddenly to be discomfited by such elaborate thanks, such scathing politeness? |
27629 | Why apologise? |
27629 | Why bother about them at all? |
27629 | Why did you have everything different to- night just because of Mr Denvil? |
27629 | Why do n''t you''boot and saddle''too, Honor, an''ride along with us? |
27629 | Why just now? 27629 Why must_ you_ go, Theo? |
27629 | Why not, if I am glad to give it? |
27629 | Why not? 27629 Why on earth was Major Wyndham so dignified and disagreeable?" |
27629 | Why should you suddenly say that? |
27629 | Why the deuce should I bore you with myself, when you''re hot and tired? 27629 Why trouble your head about side issues? |
27629 | Why will you not say it, then? 27629 Why, Paul,"she said,"what brings you here? |
27629 | Why, in Heaven''s name, did n''t you tell me all this sooner? |
27629 | Why? 27629 Why? |
27629 | Why? 27629 Why_ are_ men so tiresome? |
27629 | Will it be Murree again this year? |
27629 | Will that cover everything? |
27629 | Will you have a congealed rasher or a tepid egg-- or both? |
27629 | Will you please-- forgive me? 27629 Will you think me very ill- mannered if I ask how you ever came to choose such a profession at all? |
27629 | Wo n''t you have a''peg''or a cup of tea, Theo? |
27629 | Wo n''t you leave me out of the programme, sir? 27629 Wo n''t you let me smoke, though? |
27629 | Wo n''t you take these yourself? |
27629 | Wo n''t you tell us how it happened? |
27629 | Would it? 27629 Would n''t it be well to send for Conolly?" |
27629 | Would n''t you prefer Simla? |
27629 | Would the Sirdar mind giving me a few details about the fighting on the 17th? |
27629 | Would you like to take this in yourself? |
27629 | Would you say that with the same assurance, I wonder, if it were John? 27629 Yes, it seems to express her, somehow-- doesn''t it?" |
27629 | Yet you intend to hold out against me? |
27629 | You actually thought of-- going-- before I came? 27629 You and I can have our talk out another time, ca n''t we?" |
27629 | You are in trouble? |
27629 | You are,--who else? 27629 You could follow him, I suppose?" |
27629 | You do n''t_ mean_ that, Theo-- seriously? |
27629 | You enjoyed yourself, I hope,--Miss Meredith? |
27629 | You find this sort of thing pleasant enough while Desmond''s away; but_ will_ you keep it up when he comes back? 27629 You have brought bad news?" |
27629 | You here? |
27629 | You mean-- is it about-- me? |
27629 | You saw Mackay? |
27629 | You see, do n''t you,Honor concluded, in a beseeching tone,"that it is not easy to make out what is really best, what is right to be done? |
27629 | You still love him better than any one in the world, then? |
27629 | You want me to go? |
27629 | You want me,Paul asked at length,"to pass all this on to Desmond? |
27629 | You were going to tell me about them, perhaps? |
27629 | You will abide by my decision? |
27629 | You wo n''t change and ride out a little way with us as the others mean to? |
27629 | You wondered? |
27629 | You would leave the Frontier-- the regiment-- and never come back? |
27629 | You would n''t mind if we put ourselves out a little to get him out of a difficulty? |
27629 | You''d prefer to stay here-- with me? |
27629 | You''ll be reasonable then, and-- obey orders? 27629 You''ll send me word how he goes on, wo n''t you?" |
27629 | You''re all right again now? 27629 You''re happy about it, are n''t you?" |
27629 | You''re not angry, are you-- that I-- didn''t understand sooner? |
27629 | You''ve noticed it, then? |
27629 | You''ve seen her? |
27629 | You_ do_? |
27629 | Your life and my own are to remain broken, unfulfilled, because of-- this incomprehensible thing? |
27629 | _ Desmond_--you do n''t mean----? |
27629 | _ Evelyn_--what is it? |
27629 | _ Impossible!_ What am I to understand by that? |
27629 | _ Is_ it?... 27629 _ Let_ you go? |
27629 | _ Rather_--if you''ll have me? |
27629 | _ Why_ is it such a heart- breaking tangle? |
27629 | _ You?_ Say what you please. 27629 Am I going-- to die? |
27629 | Am I so utterly devoid of understanding?" |
27629 | Am I to lie here like a log, with my own black thoughts for company? |
27629 | And Theo? |
27629 | And am I an unpardonable brute if I insist on holding out against her?" |
27629 | And now, perhaps you will reward me,--if I have n''t been too ungracious to deserve it?" |
27629 | And then-- how would she feel if she ever found out----""She never would----""How can you tell? |
27629 | And what is it they do after all, except play polo like maniacs, and play all manner of foolish pranks at Mess? |
27629 | And what of Frank Olliver? |
27629 | And what will come to the squadron, with both my troop commanders laid in their beds?" |
27629 | And when I make up my mind about a thing, it is as good as done, is n''t it?" |
27629 | And why is Honor wandering about with a pistol? |
27629 | And yet-- in a year-- who could tell? |
27629 | And yet-- in that case-- what hope of escape from this unholy tangle, from this fury of jealousy that had stabbed his manhood broad awake at last? |
27629 | And you can actually expect that_ I_--of all people-- will back you up in your desertion of him? |
27629 | And you''re riding a lot with me now-- isn''t that enough?" |
27629 | And you_ will_ come home for a little before going back?" |
27629 | And-- you----?" |
27629 | Any one been bothering you?" |
27629 | Anything seriously wrong?" |
27629 | Are n''t there natives out here who buy people''s jewels, or-- or lend them money when they want it in a hurry? |
27629 | Are you aware that it''s only two o''clock? |
27629 | Are you crazy? |
27629 | Are you sure it''s the right stuff?" |
27629 | Are you there?" |
27629 | Are you very cross with me?" |
27629 | Are you_ quite_ mad?" |
27629 | As captain of the team, do you think you are acting quite fairly by the Regiment?" |
27629 | As he will not ask us there, we will ask her here-- you see? |
27629 | Because you''re so nice and wet, and messy?" |
27629 | Besides-- nobody but_ me_ can give it-- or explain----""How can you explain? |
27629 | But I was too unhappy to trouble about that-- and----""You thought I might turn up before morning,--wasn''t that it?" |
27629 | But how about the fitness of parting with that pony just before the tournament? |
27629 | But how could I dream that-- all this would come of it? |
27629 | But in that event, what hope of meeting any of those other demands, that were again being urgently brought to her notice? |
27629 | But is it our business to enlighten him?" |
27629 | But it does n''t make a man less unworthy----""If it comes to that,"urged the diplomatist,"are any of us worthy?" |
27629 | But it goes against the grain to say anything at all, you understand?" |
27629 | But may n''t you just get out of the way of a bullet if you happen to see it coming?" |
27629 | But now-- now you know how it is with me, at least you will let me hope----?" |
27629 | But still----""Well--_what?_"His tone had a touch of defiance, almost of temper, purely refreshing to hear. |
27629 | But what particular kind of wisdom are you wanting from me to- day?" |
27629 | But why,--what''s the trouble, old man? |
27629 | But why?" |
27629 | But, Theo, did you get all these wounds and things trying to save the Boy?" |
27629 | But-- about yourself?" |
27629 | But-- couldn''t you go to him, just for now, Honor? |
27629 | But-- have you heard lately?" |
27629 | By the way, what arrangements are you making for Lahore?" |
27629 | Can I see Desmond again to- night?" |
27629 | Can we have a few words alone anywhere? |
27629 | Can you manage by yourself? |
27629 | Can you see him putting up with it under any circumstances?" |
27629 | Can you see me a little now?" |
27629 | D''you suppose you can go on indefinitely blowing hot and cold with a man; snubbing him one minute and drawing him on the next?" |
27629 | D''you think she would reallee come? |
27629 | Desmond had only one thought in his brain that morning--"How in the world am I going to tackle Honor?" |
27629 | Did she give you any sort of reason for that?" |
27629 | Did you notice nothing earlier?" |
27629 | Did you sleep a wink last night?" |
27629 | Do men often behave like that at balls, Theo?" |
27629 | Do n''t you think it is the other way about? |
27629 | Do you call this being a loyal wife? |
27629 | Do you know him and his wife at all?" |
27629 | Do you know where she went?" |
27629 | Do you like me, Theo, really?" |
27629 | Do you mean-- truthfully that you don''t-- love me any more?" |
27629 | Do you realise what you are saying?" |
27629 | Do you remember those Pindi days at all?" |
27629 | Do you see? |
27629 | Do you think I want to keep you here a moment later than you care to stay?" |
27629 | Do you want him?" |
27629 | Do you want the compact signed and sealed?" |
27629 | Does Frank know too?" |
27629 | Does n''t the arrangement suit you?" |
27629 | Does she know anything about all this?" |
27629 | Doth not my pearl and the light of my life await her chota hazri?" |
27629 | Eleven? |
27629 | Even if she_ was_ quit of that other confounded fellow, how could I face telling her-- the truth?" |
27629 | For who shall estimate the virtue that goes out from the hand- clasp of a brave man, to whose courage is added the strength of a stainless mind? |
27629 | GOOD ENOUGH, ISN''T IT? |
27629 | GOOD ENOUGH, ISN''T IT? |
27629 | Good enough, is n''t it?" |
27629 | Half- past?" |
27629 | Has Dr Mackay said anything definite? |
27629 | Has anything been happening?" |
27629 | Has she fainted? |
27629 | Has there been an accident?" |
27629 | Hath not the Miss Sahib herself rendered a like service? |
27629 | Have a''peg''?" |
27629 | Have n''t I said that if you want me to be nice, you must n''t plague me with stupid questions? |
27629 | Have n''t we had enough misery and depression----?" |
27629 | Have n''t you any for me to play with now?" |
27629 | Have you heard bad news?" |
27629 | Have you never been tempted to try again?" |
27629 | He has suffered enough as it is----""Have n''t_ I_ suffered just as much? |
27629 | He may learn more by travelling slowly, do n''t you think? |
27629 | He showed it to Major Wyndham, and asked:''Was it a practical joke?'' |
27629 | He will be here, in this house-- to- morrow?" |
27629 | Here?" |
27629 | Honor?" |
27629 | How about the other eight?" |
27629 | How about your mother?" |
27629 | How am I to help you, if you slam the door in my face?" |
27629 | How are you going to cut down expenses?" |
27629 | How can I possibly tell?" |
27629 | How can I take such a lot of money-- from you?" |
27629 | How can we manage about getting away?" |
27629 | How could I arrange such a thing without letting my brother know about it?" |
27629 | How could I think it is_ your_ fault, when you have always been so veree kind to us? |
27629 | How do you find out those sort of things?" |
27629 | How far was Theo responsible for that which had come about? |
27629 | How has he come to be''Paul''within this last fortnight?" |
27629 | How much did she dare confess to him even now? |
27629 | How much is it that you still owe these Kresneys?" |
27629 | How should we serve a stranger, Hazúr,--the pony and I?" |
27629 | How the devil''s_ that_ to be done?" |
27629 | How were such things to be worded? |
27629 | How would it be if I took you to Murree in a week''s time?" |
27629 | How would that suit you?" |
27629 | How''s_ that_ for a fine stroke, now?" |
27629 | How? |
27629 | How_ can_ you be so unkind?" |
27629 | I always did----""_ Men?_""Yes, men,"she nodded, smiling. |
27629 | I believe she''s happier in Kohat,--but----""But_ you_ are_ not_?" |
27629 | I ca n''t have him criticising her, even in his own mind; and who but you can I rely on to prevent it, by keeping her up to the mark? |
27629 | I gather, from what she said that-- there were difficulties----""Difficulties--?" |
27629 | I have come to ask if I may throw you over for Ladybird?" |
27629 | I hope you''re going off to the Hills very soon, now that Desmond is better?" |
27629 | I suppose you are going very soon now?" |
27629 | I thought-- perhaps-- you might know whether I could manage to do it-- up here?" |
27629 | I was half afraid----""Why on earth should n''t I? |
27629 | I wonder if I can speak without fear of your misunderstanding me?" |
27629 | I''m in the rear for the present, I suppose?" |
27629 | I''ve only been... a great many kinds of a fool: and_ you_----""Well, what of me? |
27629 | If Mr Kresney chose to be polite to her, why should she rebuff him and hurt his feelings, just because Theo had some stupid prejudice against him? |
27629 | If not,--and if he were to repeat the question in a more definite form-- how should she answer him? |
27629 | If the dog had bitten a few natives, who''d have cared?" |
27629 | If you have no hope for yourself, could you not bring yourself to partially fulfil mine? |
27629 | In the face of her discovery, dared she-- ought she to remain even a week longer under Theo''s roof? |
27629 | Is it bad? |
27629 | Is it fever also?" |
27629 | Is it quite generous of you to make it harder?" |
27629 | Is it really-- so impossible as you think?" |
27629 | Is n''t it a force outside the control of reason, of even the strongest will?" |
27629 | Is n''t she charming in that dress?" |
27629 | Is n''t that so?" |
27629 | Is n''t that so?" |
27629 | Is that it?" |
27629 | Is that your notion of taking charge of a patient? |
27629 | Is the strain going to be too much for her? |
27629 | Is there-- any one else?" |
27629 | Is this the first time he has trapped you with a convenient lie? |
27629 | It is not bad news from Kohat, I hope?" |
27629 | It is simply wiped off the slate-- you understand?" |
27629 | Looks peaceful enough now, does n''t he? |
27629 | May I invite myself to tea, please?" |
27629 | May I light a cigarette?" |
27629 | May I speak of it, Theo? |
27629 | May I speak out straight?" |
27629 | May I-- first, say one word to Paul?" |
27629 | May I?" |
27629 | Me?" |
27629 | Must I go and sit in the ladies''room till it''s over?" |
27629 | Nay, but who am I that I should speak thus? |
27629 | Not mail- day to- morrow, is it? |
27629 | Not troubled any more-- eh?" |
27629 | Nothing worse, I hope?" |
27629 | Nothing wrong with her?" |
27629 | Now shall we go for our ride? |
27629 | Now, have I said enough? |
27629 | Now-- shake hands on that, and stick to it, will you?" |
27629 | Of course there are others who would give their lives to save him from a minute''s pain; and you would let them take your place,--yours? |
27629 | On the other hand, where was the use of vexing Theo, when every one was doing their best to shield him from needless irritation? |
27629 | Or if it happened to be-- your own husband?" |
27629 | Or should it be good- morning?" |
27629 | Or was it yet to come? |
27629 | Or would he simply put her aside, with his inexorable quietness, that was far more terrible than any spoken word? |
27629 | Or would you rather go in and rest after all this?" |
27629 | Paul?" |
27629 | Perhaps you would like me to speak of it to him, if I get the chance?" |
27629 | Pretty good, was n''t it?" |
27629 | Rather nice to be married to the''finest fellow in Asia,''is n''t it?" |
27629 | Resentment against what, against whom? |
27629 | Shall I send Evelyn to help you?" |
27629 | Shall I take it now-- at once?" |
27629 | Shall we call it settled-- eh?" |
27629 | Shall you mind if I go shares in your special name for her? |
27629 | Shall you-- marry him?" |
27629 | She hates the place, does n''t she? |
27629 | She''s a little heedless and inexperienced still; and you''ll keep an eye on household matters more or less?" |
27629 | She''s just like my sister, and you must simply be Honor and Theo,... d''you see?" |
27629 | Since nothing else is possible, will you at least accept me as your permanent and-- devoted friend?" |
27629 | Surely Mrs Olliver stays?" |
27629 | Surely you care more for him, and for what comes to him, than your line of argument seems to imply?" |
27629 | THE DEVIL''S PECULIARITY? |
27629 | THE DEVIL''S PECULIARITY? |
27629 | Tell''em to saddle the Demon, will you? |
27629 | Temperature any lower?" |
27629 | That suit you, Colonel?" |
27629 | That was kind of her.--Sir John no worse?" |
27629 | That''s just the trouble,... do n''t you see?" |
27629 | That''s the real truth, I suppose?" |
27629 | That''s why they need to have such good grit in them,--don''t you see?" |
27629 | The Boy going on all right?" |
27629 | The big chaps?" |
27629 | Then catching a clearer view of the girl''s face:"My dear-- what is it?" |
27629 | Then turning again to the jhampanis, big with harrowing detail, added:"The devil who did this thing, hath he escaped?" |
27629 | Then:"Do n''t you think you are a little hard on me?" |
27629 | Then:"Shall we go and sit over by the river, Miss Meredith, and leave them to their sport?" |
27629 | There are very few men in the world like Major Wyndham; do n''t you think so? |
27629 | They have n''t been letting you do too much, have they?" |
27629 | They naturally want to know what you mean to do about the tournament after you have let your best pony go? |
27629 | Was he, even remotely, to blame? |
27629 | Was it actually she,--John''s sister-- her father''s daughter-- who had succumbed to this undreamed- of wrong? |
27629 | Was it even possible to say them at all? |
27629 | Was it even remotely possible----? |
27629 | Was it possible----? |
27629 | Was n''t that hateful?" |
27629 | Was the inevitable awakening over and done with? |
27629 | Was this to be the end of her high hopes and ideals,--of her resolute waiting and longing and praying for the very best that life and love could give? |
27629 | We wo n''t make mountains out of molehills, eh, Ladybird? |
27629 | Well?" |
27629 | What did he do?" |
27629 | What do you mean me to understand by it?" |
27629 | What do you think?" |
27629 | What do-- you-- mean?" |
27629 | What excuses could I possibly make?" |
27629 | What have you done? |
27629 | What possibility of ordering the two new gowns-- bare necessities, in her esteem-- to grace the coming Christmas week at Lahore? |
27629 | What was he getting so excited about just now?" |
27629 | What was it she meant to say to him? |
27629 | What will you say?" |
27629 | What''s come to you?" |
27629 | What''s that?" |
27629 | What''s the outcome?" |
27629 | What''s wrong with them, Theo? |
27629 | What''s your subject?" |
27629 | What?" |
27629 | When England takes it into her capricious head to do this sort of thing in May, how the devil can a human man keep his nose to the grindstone? |
27629 | When did you know the decision of the Board?" |
27629 | When''ll he be leaving?" |
27629 | Where in all the world was such a sum to be found without Theo''s help? |
27629 | Where is he? |
27629 | Where is the other one? |
27629 | Where on earth did you get it all?" |
27629 | Where''s Evelyn?" |
27629 | Where''s the good of us trying so hard to live on our pay, if it''s only to be flung about to help subalterns who do n''t try at all? |
27629 | Where''s the use of writing to her? |
27629 | Where''s the_ use_ of being married to him if he''s always going on like this? |
27629 | Where?" |
27629 | Why am_ I_ to be made uncomfortable on account of Mrs Denvil, when I''ve never even met her in my life?" |
27629 | Why do n''t you speak?" |
27629 | Why has n''t he come forward? |
27629 | Why have your spirits gone up with such a run this morning?" |
27629 | Why should she not obey him? |
27629 | Will that arrangement suit your Royal Highness?" |
27629 | Will that do?" |
27629 | Will that suit you?" |
27629 | Will you ask Honor to tell my wife, when she comes in, that I want to see her?" |
27629 | Will you believe that, and stay with us, in spite of all?" |
27629 | Will you believe that-- I am ever so sorry? |
27629 | Will you come?" |
27629 | Will you forgive me, Honor? |
27629 | Will you let Mrs Olliver know that, please? |
27629 | Will you let me have it and any others you happen to have by you?" |
27629 | Will you wipe out what I said-- and did just now? |
27629 | Will you-- in mercy to me-- reconsider your decision?" |
27629 | Will you--_will_ you leave things as they are, and put aside your impossible notion for good?" |
27629 | Will you--_will_ you?" |
27629 | Will you?" |
27629 | Will you?" |
27629 | Will you?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you come down and see it out?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you come home with me and have a talk, like old times? |
27629 | Wo n''t you let me explain?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you let me go, Theo, and at least try how it works?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you let me hear a little more, please?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you share it with me? |
27629 | Wo n''t you stay to dinner?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you stay too?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you tell me what''s wrong?" |
27629 | Wo n''t you try and help me, instead of making things harder for us both?" |
27629 | Would she even acquiesce if you put the matter before her now, child as she is?" |
27629 | Would she never come? |
27629 | Would you be content to live there-- for good?" |
27629 | Would you give her no voice in the matter-- treat her as if she were a mere child?" |
27629 | Would you_ let_ me go so soon?" |
27629 | Would your Honour''s servants permit? |
27629 | You are glad, I suppose? |
27629 | You can trust him to me, ca n''t you, though I_ am_ a mad Irishwoman? |
27629 | You can trust me, ca n''t you?" |
27629 | You carry it in your head?" |
27629 | You do n''t mean to tell me----?" |
27629 | You do_ pay_ for your things, I suppose?" |
27629 | You may have heard the name?" |
27629 | You remember?" |
27629 | You see the difference?" |
27629 | You see, do n''t you, that I ca n''t help it? |
27629 | You see-- it''s money----""Money? |
27629 | You surely could n''t have wished otherwise?" |
27629 | You understand me?" |
27629 | You will do the same, I presume?" |
27629 | You will go and lie down, perhaps, till tiffin time?" |
27629 | You wo n''t forget my note, will you? |
27629 | You wo n''t refuse me that much, will you-- Honor?" |
27629 | You wo n''t think me-- intrusive?" |
27629 | You would have simply-- bolted, and left me to come back to an empty house, if Honor had not prevented you? |
27629 | You''ll deign to make use of me so far? |
27629 | You''ll do what I ask, of course?" |
27629 | You''ll see after her, for me, wo n''t you, Honor? |
27629 | You''re fond of him, are n''t you?" |
27629 | You''re going yourself, I suppose?" |
27629 | You''re not going to fret about it, Ladybird-- are you?" |
27629 | You''ve not got to be running off anywhere else, have you?" |
27629 | You? |
27629 | [ 24] Can you manage with just a night- light carefully screened?" |
27629 | _ Can_ you do it-- really? |
27629 | _ Can_ you do it? |
27629 | _ Do_ you-- Honor?" |
27629 | _ You_ do n''t think-- do you-- that there is really any fear----?" |
27629 | fighting?" |
27629 | he broke out,"do n''t you see that you are forcing upon me a suspicion that is an insult to us both?" |
27629 | he murmured,"I wonder_ when_ you mean to grow into a woman?" |
27629 | he reflected as he went;"shall I ever be able to make her understand?" |
27629 | seriously?" |
27629 | she asked--"something nice?" |
27629 | she murmured, without uncovering her face--"that you would even imagine such a thing to be possible?" |
27629 | she protested,"you can ask that of me-- to- day?" |
27629 | she urged between irritation and despair,"when you know quite well it''s you-- that I love?" |
27629 | when?" |
40967 | Art thou a King then? |
40967 | Art thou the King of the Jews? |
40967 | Jesus answered him, Sayest thou this thing of thyself, or did others tell it thee of me? 40967 Pilate answered, Am I a Jew? |
40967 | Was it Celestine, Diocletian, or Esau? 40967 What accusation bring ye against this man?" |
40967 | What is truth? |
40967 | [ 104] Maddened by the relentless importunity of the mob, Pilate replied scornfully and mockingly:Shall I crucify your king?" |
40967 | [ 48] But why a crime? 40967 [ 99]"Barabbas, or Jesus which is called the Christ?" |
40967 | ''Is there any likelihood,''say they,''that Pilate should write such things to Tiberius concerning a man whom he had condemned to death? |
40967 | A. Adeone me delirare censes, ut ista esse credam? |
40967 | AUDITOR: Do you think I''m such a fool as to give credence to such things? |
40967 | AUDITOR: Why? |
40967 | Addressing Jesus, Pilate said:"Knowest thou not that I have power to crucify thee and have power to release thee? |
40967 | Addressing the prisoner, Pilate asked:"Art thou the King of the Jews?" |
40967 | Admitting that Jesus acknowledged the jurisdiction of Herod, was He compelled to answer irrelevant and impertinent questions? |
40967 | Admitting that this is true, is anything proved by the fact? |
40967 | Again, what Roman law was applicable to the charges made against Jesus to Pilate? |
40967 | Again, what charges were brought against Jesus at the hearing before Pilate? |
40967 | Alexander, Cæsar, Charlemagne, and myself founded great empires; but upon what did the creations of our genius depend? |
40967 | And Annas and Caiaphas said: Why are you so much moved? |
40967 | And Dysmas answering reproved him, saying: Dost thou not fear God, because thou art in the same condemnation? |
40967 | And I said to him, Who art thou, my lord? |
40967 | And Joseph said: Why have you called me? |
40967 | And Nicodemus says to them: How have you come into the synagogue? |
40967 | And Pilate says to the Jews: Do you not wonder how the tops of the standards were bent down and adored Jesus? |
40967 | And Pilate says to them: For what reason do they wish to put him to death? |
40967 | And Pilate sent for the Jews and said to them: Have you seen what has happened? |
40967 | And Pilate went again into the Pretorium and spoke to Jesus privately, and said to him: Art thou the king of the Jews? |
40967 | And Pilate, calling Annas and Caiaphas, says to them: What are proselytes? |
40967 | And Pilate, having called the runner, says to him: Why hast thou done this, and spread out thy cloak upon the earth and made Jesus walk upon it? |
40967 | And Pilate, having called them, says: Tell me how I, being a procurator, can try a king? |
40967 | And Pilate, having summoned Jesus, says to him: What do these witness against thee? |
40967 | And are we to imagine that they referred with such emphasis as they employed to the mere creations of their fancy? |
40967 | And first they call Adas and say to him: How didst thou see Jesus taken up? |
40967 | And if he had proposed it, who can make a doubt that the senate would not have immediately complied? |
40967 | And likewise Joseph also stepped out and said to them: Why are you angry against me because I begged the body of Jesus? |
40967 | And on the Sabbath our teachers and the priests and Levites sat questioning each other and saying: What is this wrath that has come upon us? |
40967 | And the Jews answering, say unto Pilate: Did we not tell thee that he was a sorcerer? |
40967 | And the Jews, noticing this and hearing it, say to Pilate: What more wilt thou hear of this blasphemy? |
40967 | And the Jews, seeing what the runner had done, cried out against Pilate, saying: Why hast thou ordered him to come in by a runner, and not by a crier? |
40967 | And the children of the prophets met him and said, O Elissæus, where is thy master Helias? |
40967 | And the elders of the Jews answered, and said to Jesus: What shall we see? |
40967 | And the procurator ordered the Jews to go outside of the Pretorium; and, summoning Jesus, he says to him: What shall I do to thee? |
40967 | And the procurator trembled, and said to all the multitude of the Jews: Why do you wish to pour out innocent blood? |
40967 | And the procurator, having called the standard bearers, says to them: Why have you done this? |
40967 | And they again said to them: Why have you come? |
40967 | And they asked him, and he said to them: Why have you not believed my son? |
40967 | And they call Phinees, the priest, and ask him also, saying: How didst thou see Jesus taken up? |
40967 | And they said to Elissæus, Has not a spirit seized him, and thrown him upon one of the mountains? |
40967 | Are not all these more than sufficient to condemn Him in their eyes and prove Him worthy of death? |
40967 | Are not these things sufficient to bring down upon him their condemnation? |
40967 | Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ? |
40967 | But others have appeared in it; would it not be possible to produce them also before history? |
40967 | But there are no Cæsars, no Napoleons, no Shakespeares, no Aristotles among them, you say? |
40967 | But they of two things chose the one; and who knows but that they chose the better? |
40967 | But was Pilate alone guilty of the crime of the crucifixion? |
40967 | But were they always a mere money- changing, money- getting, money- hoarding race? |
40967 | But who was this Herod before whom Jesus now appeared in chains? |
40967 | But why was Jesus sent to Herod? |
40967 | CHAPTER III POWERS AND DUTIES OF PILATE What were the powers and duties of Pilate as procurator of Judea? |
40967 | Can a more favorable verdict be expected of the members of the second chamber, composed as it was of men so conceited and arrogant? |
40967 | Can we, then, be astonished at the murderous hatred which these false and ambitious men conceived for Christ? |
40967 | Cocyti fremitus? |
40967 | Could impartiality be expected of those proud and selfish men, whose lips delighted in nothing so much as sounding their own praises? |
40967 | Could not Jesus, reasoned Pilate, be the son of the Hebrew Jehovah as Hercules was the son of Jupiter? |
40967 | Did Pilate apply Hebrew or Roman law to the charges presented to him against the Christ? |
40967 | Did Pilate apply these laws either in letter or in spirit? |
40967 | Did he imitate this model? |
40967 | Did he observe these rules and regulations? |
40967 | Did not the reception of his miracles and his triumphal entry into Jerusalem indicate His popularity with the plain people? |
40967 | Did the general laws of Roman provincial administration apply to this province? |
40967 | For how, thought Pilate, can He pretend to have a Kingdom, unless He pretends to be a king? |
40967 | For what else are your ensigns, flags, and standards, but crosses, gilt and beautiful? |
40967 | From out the anguish of his soul, the voice of Justice sends to his quivering lips the thrice- repeated question:"Why, what evil hath he done?" |
40967 | Has the emperor not appointed him to this place of dignity? |
40967 | Having decided that there were two trials, we are now ready to consider the questions: Were the two trials separate and independent? |
40967 | His first recorded words are:"What accusation bring ye against this man?" |
40967 | How did it happen that a sacrifice to Apollo gave favorable, and one to Diana unfavorable signs? |
40967 | If colossal forms of intellect and soul be invoked, does not the Jew still lead the universe? |
40967 | If not legally, was Pilate politically justified in delivering Jesus to be crucified? |
40967 | If not, is it rational to suppose that their innocent descendants have been the victims of this curse? |
40967 | If not, was the second trial a mere review of the first, or was the first a mere preliminary to the second? |
40967 | If not, was the second trial a mere review of the first, or was the first a mere preliminary to the second? |
40967 | If so, why were there two trials instead of one? |
40967 | In a cynical and sarcastic mood, Pilate turned to Jesus and asked:"What is truth? |
40967 | In the first place, were there two distinct trials of Jesus? |
40967 | Is anybody so keenly discerning as to see in Irish dispersion a divine or superhuman agency? |
40967 | Is it any wonder that the tragedy of the Prætorium and Golgotha, aside from its sacred aspects, is the most notable event in history? |
40967 | Is it not reasonably certain that a large majority of the countrymen of Jesus were his ardent well- wishers and sincerely regretted his untimely end? |
40967 | Is it not true that the Jewish people, as a race, were not parties to the condemnation and execution of the Christ? |
40967 | Is it possible to conceive that these friends and well- wishers were the inheritors of the curse of Heaven because of the crime of Golgotha? |
40967 | Is this not an error on their part? |
40967 | It may be analyzed thus: Confession: Inside the palace, Pilate asked Jesus the question:"Art thou the King of the Jews?" |
40967 | Jesus answered Pilate: Dost thou say this of thyself, or have others said it to thee of me? |
40967 | Levi says to them: Do you not know that from him I learned the law? |
40967 | M. An tu hæc non credis? |
40967 | Maybe so; but what of that? |
40967 | Now, in the light of the facts and principles just stated, what was the exact political status of the Jews at the time of Christ? |
40967 | Of what kind do you suppose are the meetings of these people? |
40967 | Or were peculiar rights and privileges granted to the strange people who inhabited it? |
40967 | Pilate answered Jesus: Am I also a Jew? |
40967 | Pilate said to him: Art thou, then, a king? |
40967 | Pilate said: Has God said that you are not to put to death, but that I am? |
40967 | Pilate saith unto them, What shall I do then with Jesus which is called the Christ? |
40967 | Pilate says to Annas and Caiaphas: Have you nothing to answer to this? |
40967 | Pilate says to him: What is truth? |
40967 | Pilate says to the Jews: Why should he die? |
40967 | Pilate says to them who said that the demons were subject to him: Why, then, were not your teachers also subject to him? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: And what did they shout in Hebrew? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: If you bear witness to the words spoken by the children, in what has the runner done wrong? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: What evil practices? |
40967 | Pilate says to them: Why do you gnash your teeth against him when you hear the truth? |
40967 | Pilate says: And what are the things which he does, to show that he wishes to do away with it? |
40967 | Pilate says: For a good work do they wish to put him to death? |
40967 | Pilate says: How given? |
40967 | Pilate says: Is truth not upon earth? |
40967 | Pilate says: What temple? |
40967 | Pilate says: What, then, shall we do to Jesus, who is called Christ? |
40967 | Romans, can you think youths initiated, under such oaths as theirs, are fit to be made soldiers? |
40967 | Sayest thou nothing? |
40967 | Shall these, contaminated with their own foul debaucheries and those of others, be champions for the chastity of your wives and children? |
40967 | Shall we not rather consider it as a matter of shame and remorse to ourselves? |
40967 | Suppose that he should do it while acting as an administrator, would it be less an assassination? |
40967 | Suppose that the Governor General should do this while sitting as a judge, would it not be judicial murder? |
40967 | Suppose this should happen beneath the American flag, what would be the judgment of the American people as to the merits of the proceedings? |
40967 | That arms should be intrusted with wretches brought out of that temple of obscenity? |
40967 | The Jews cry out and say to the runner: The sons of the Hebrews shouted in Hebrew; whence, then, hast thou the Greek? |
40967 | The Jews say to him: How hast thou come into the synagogue? |
40967 | The Jews say to him:_ Hosanna membrome baruchamma adonai._ Pilate says to them: And this hosanna, etc., how is it interpreted? |
40967 | The Jews say: And wherefore did you not lay hold of them? |
40967 | The Jews say: At what time was this? |
40967 | The Jews say: Is not this the very thing we said, that on a Sabbath he cures and casts out demons? |
40967 | The Jews say: To what women did he speak? |
40967 | The Jews say: What benefactors? |
40967 | The Sanhedrin says to Rabbi Levi: Is the word that you have said true? |
40967 | The elders and the priests and the Levites say to them: Have you come to give us this announcement, or to offer prayer to God? |
40967 | The elders and the priests and the Levites say: If anyone speak evil against Cæsar, is he worthy of death or not? |
40967 | The governor answered and said unto them, Whether of the twain will ye that I release unto you? |
40967 | The men of the guard say to the Jews: You have seen so great miracles in the case of this man, and have not believed; and how can you believe us? |
40967 | The men of the guard say: We were like dead men from fear, not expecting to see the light of day, and how could we lay hold of them? |
40967 | The question still arises: Who were the morally guilty parties? |
40967 | The runner says to them: I asked one of the Jews, and said: What is it they are shouting in Hebrew? |
40967 | Therefore when they were gathered together, Pilate said unto them, Whom will ye that I release unto you? |
40967 | They say to Pilate: We are Greeks and temple slaves, and how could we adore him? |
40967 | They say to the teacher Levi: How knowest thou these things? |
40967 | Thine own nation and the chief priests have delivered thee unto me: What hast thou done?" |
40967 | This act brought down upon him the disdainful retort from the others,"Art thou also a Galilean?" |
40967 | This challenge was boldly accepted by Mr. Stephen, who says:"Was Pilate right in crucifying Christ? |
40967 | This raises the question: Who were the real crucifiers of the Christ, the Jews or the Romans? |
40967 | Three times, in reply, Conscience sent to Pilate''s trembling lips the searching question:"Why, what evil hath he done?" |
40967 | Triceps apud inferos Cerberus? |
40967 | Upon what charge was He finally condemned and crucified? |
40967 | Upon whom should the greater blame rest, if both were guilty? |
40967 | Was any Roman or Punic god interested in this event? |
40967 | Was any deity concerned about these things? |
40967 | Was there an attempt by Pilate to attain substantial justice, either with or without the due observance of forms of law? |
40967 | Were the Jews wholly blameless? |
40967 | Were the two trials separate and independent? |
40967 | Were these charges the same as those preferred against Him at the trial before the Sanhedrin? |
40967 | Were we not justified in forming of them an unfavorable opinion?... |
40967 | What could have rendered his condemnation surer than such manifestations of contempt for the pride and voluptuousness of these men? |
40967 | What course would be taken towards him? |
40967 | What did Pilate think of Jesus? |
40967 | What forms of criminal procedure, if any, were employed by Pilate in conducting the Roman trial of Jesus? |
40967 | What forms of criminal procedure, if any, were employed by him in conducting the Roman trial of Jesus? |
40967 | What hast thou done? |
40967 | What nation ever contended more manfully against overwhelming odds for its independence and religion? |
40967 | What nation ever, in its last agonies, gave such signal proofs of what may be accomplished by a brave despair? |
40967 | What passage of Scripture, it may be asked, justifies this parallel with the case of Jesus before Pilate? |
40967 | What then was the law of Rome in relation to the crime of high treason? |
40967 | What were these rules? |
40967 | What, indeed, could have been the issue of a trial before the first chamber, composed as it was of demoralized, ambitious, and scheming priests? |
40967 | When Pilate had mounted the_ bema_, and order had been restored, he asked:"What accusation bring ye against this man?" |
40967 | Where is it anywhere stated, or by reasonable inference implied, that Pilate considered whether he ought not to become a disciple of Jesus? |
40967 | Where shall created beings find rest if you suppose that shades in hell and souls in heaven continue to have any feeling? |
40967 | Where were they, what thinking and why silent? |
40967 | Which of them do you wish me to release to you? |
40967 | Who were the directly responsible agents of the crucifixion, the Jews or the Romans? |
40967 | Who, then, could think of excluding him from the people of Israel? |
40967 | Why did Pilate do this? |
40967 | Why did he not examine the prisoner in the presence of His accusers in the open air? |
40967 | Why did he not release Him, and, if need be, protect Him with his cohort from the assaults of the Jews? |
40967 | Why did the Etruscan, the Elan, the Egyptian, and the Punic inspectors of sacrifice interpret the entrails in an entirely different manner? |
40967 | Why did they not do this? |
40967 | Why did they seek the aid of Pilate and invoke the sanction of Roman authority? |
40967 | Why do you weep? |
40967 | Why not persecute all the Greeks of the earth, wherever found, because of the injustice of the Areopagus? |
40967 | Why were there two trials of Jesus? |
40967 | Why? |
40967 | Why? |
40967 | Would it not stamp with indelible shame the administration that should sanction or tolerate it? |
40967 | Would the Governor General retain his office by such a course of conduct? |
40967 | You do n''t believe in them? |
40967 | You wish this man, then, to be a king, and not Cæsar? |
40967 | [ 150] M. Dic, quæso, num te illa terrent? |
40967 | [ 185] But we may ask, Why is this pompous name given to this chamber by the Evangelists? |
40967 | [ 186] But how, then, can we account for the presence of several high priests at the same time in the Sanhedrin? |
40967 | did you not know that Lucullus would dine with Lucullus?" |
40967 | travectio Acherontis? |
43794 | And do you remember the words,''If thine enemy hunger, feed him...''? |
43794 | And the military regulation, do you know anything about that? |
43794 | Have you read the New Testament? |
43794 | Is it a sin to punish a criminal with death according to the law, or to kill an enemy in war? 43794 No,"he replied,"there is nothing like it; but tell me, do the Christians obey this law?" |
43794 | What does God forbid by this commandment? 43794 What would become of commerce?" |
43794 | Why, then, do they print untrue explanations contrary to the law? |
43794 | Yes; why do you ask? |
43794 | _ For which of you intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first, and counteth the cost whether he have sufficient to finish it? 43794 _ Judge not_;"does not this mean, Institute no tribunals for the judgment of your neighbor? |
43794 | _ Question._--Is all manslaughter a transgression of the law? 43794 _ Question._--What does the sixth commandment forbid? |
43794 | _ What doth it profit, my brethren, if a man believe he hath faith, but hath not works? 43794 _ Which of you convicteth me of sin? |
43794 | ( If no one but the boy had brought anything, how could so much have been left after so many were fed?) |
43794 | 29),"_ And who is my neighbor?_"it is plain that he did not regard the Samaritan as such. |
43794 | After this clear interpretation, what was I to understand by the comment,"be reconciled in idea"? |
43794 | Ah, yes; but did not Jesus and his disciples practise just such fanaticism as this? |
43794 | All the theologians discuss the commandments of Jesus; but what are these commandments? |
43794 | And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others? |
43794 | And now is not the question settled as to whether a Christian may or may not go to war? |
43794 | And what if these others were themselves wicked and cast the innocent into prison? |
43794 | And which of you with taking thought can add to his stature one cubit? |
43794 | And yet did this same Jesus formally teach men not to be angry"without a cause,"and thereby sanction anger for a cause? |
43794 | As the words came to be understood exclusively in this sense, a difficulty arose,--How to refrain from judgment? |
43794 | Asked,"Who is this son of man?" |
43794 | Be not angry without cause? |
43794 | But God said unto him, Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall those things be, which thou hast provided? |
43794 | But in what way? |
43794 | But is it so in reality? |
43794 | But is the disciple of the world in a more desirable situation? |
43794 | But perhaps these two words are used as synonyms in the Gospels? |
43794 | But possibly this existence is in itself attractive? |
43794 | But was his teaching in this respect true? |
43794 | But what is the condition of those men who live according to the doctrine of the world? |
43794 | But where were the righteous? |
43794 | But who is to decide when anger is expedient and when it is not expedient? |
43794 | But who will give me the strength to practise it, to follow it without ceasing, and never to fail? |
43794 | But why is life so full of evil? |
43794 | But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith without works is dead? |
43794 | Could anything be more clear, more definite, more intelligible than that? |
43794 | Could the idea be expressed in terms more clear and precise? |
43794 | Did Jesus sanction courts of justice, or did he not? |
43794 | Do they turn the other cheek?" |
43794 | Do you say that the doctrine of Jesus,"_ Resist not evil_,"is vain? |
43794 | Does it not forbid us to take the oath indispensable to the assembling of men into political groups and the formation of a military caste? |
43794 | Even a dog, if he be useful, is fed and cared for; and shall not a man be fed and cared for whose service is necessary to the whole world? |
43794 | Fanaticism, do you say? |
43794 | For a solution of the questions, What am I? |
43794 | For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye? |
43794 | For what, according to the general estimate, are the principal conditions of earthly happiness? |
43794 | Further on we read:--"_ Question._--With regard to manslaughter, when is the law transgressed? |
43794 | Have we never heard that it is far more to our advantage to endure difficulties and privations than to satisfy all our desires? |
43794 | He asked his disciples whom men said that he was-- the son of man? |
43794 | How could Jesus avoid denouncing that law? |
43794 | How could it be said that Jesus did not perceive this evil when he forbade it in clear, direct, and circumstantial terms? |
43794 | How could we express more clearly the saying of Jesus and his apostle? |
43794 | How is it possible that the law of Jesus should harmonize with the law of Moses? |
43794 | How shall I persuade a man to toil in return for food and clothing if this man is persuaded that he already possesses great riches? |
43794 | How then shall I, who can not save, become a judge and punish? |
43794 | How was it then, that believing or trying to believe these to be the words of God, I still maintained the impossibility of obeying them? |
43794 | How, then, can we object to the doctrine of Jesus, that those who practise it by working for others will perish for want of food? |
43794 | How, then, can we understand the doctrine of Jesus? |
43794 | How, then, could a man judge and condemn when his religion commanded him to forgive all trespasses, without limit? |
43794 | I knew all that from my childhood; but why had I failed to understand aright these simple words? |
43794 | If Chrysostom had understood the law of Jesus, he would have said, Who is it that strikes out another''s eyes? |
43794 | If I say truth, why do ye not believe me?_"( John viii. |
43794 | If ye then be not able to do that thing which is least, why take ye thought for the rest? |
43794 | In what, then, does the rest of Jesus''doctrine consist? |
43794 | Is it impossible to lighten this heavy load that weighs me down? |
43794 | Is it not the act of a madman to labor at what, under any circumstances, one can never finish? |
43794 | Is it possible that there was not one such? |
43794 | Is my conclusion a foolish one? |
43794 | Is not the whole system like a great prison where each inmate is restricted to association with a few fellow- convicts? |
43794 | It being impossible not to condemn evil, all the commentators discussed the question, What is blamable and what is not blamable? |
43794 | It seemed to me that there must be a defect in the translation, and an erroneous exegesis; but where was the source of the error? |
43794 | Let each man endowed with reason ask himself, What is life? |
43794 | May I not abstain from taking part therein? |
43794 | No civilized man in the vanguard of progress is able to give any reply now to the direct questions,"Why do you lead the life that you do lead? |
43794 | On page 163 of this book I read:--"What is the sixth commandment of God? |
43794 | Or is it to be certain that my piece of bread only belongs to me when I know that every one else has a share, and that no one starves while I eat? |
43794 | Or those eighteen upon whom the tower in Siloam fell, and slew them, think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwelt in Jerusalem? |
43794 | Recall to mind the rich men and women whom you have known; are not most of them invalids? |
43794 | Shall not men care for those whose labor they find necessary? |
43794 | Should I die in following the doctrine of Jesus? |
43794 | Should I say this without having made the slightest effort of my own to obey? |
43794 | Should I then say of God''s commandment that I could not obey it without the aid of a supernatural power? |
43794 | Since life is given to me, why should I deprive myself of it? |
43794 | The Church retains its dogmas, but what are its dogmas worth? |
43794 | The Jews said to Jesus:"_ What signs shewest thou then, that we may see, and believe thee? |
43794 | The Pharisees, we are told, constituted a sect; where, then, were the righteous? |
43794 | There remained one more resource-- was the word to be found in all the manuscripts? |
43794 | This method was many times referred to by Jesus; thus he said,"_ What is written in the law? |
43794 | Thus, the question, What must I do to believe? |
43794 | To Peter''s question,"_ What shall we receive?_"Jesus replies with the parable of the laborers in the vineyard( Matt. |
43794 | To be able to reply to the question, Which of these two conditions is the happier? |
43794 | Up to this time( I said), what have been the practical results of the doctrine of Jesus as I understand it? |
43794 | Upon what, then, is based the opinion that divorce is permissible in case of infidelity on the part of the woman? |
43794 | Was Nicodemus the only one? |
43794 | Was it possible that the doctrine of Jesus admitted of such contradiction? |
43794 | Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up Isaac his son upon the altar? |
43794 | Was not this fire kindled that men might have the felicity of salvation? |
43794 | Was the revelation from God really so simple-- nothing but that? |
43794 | Was this the intention of Jesus? |
43794 | We are moving onward, but to what goal? |
43794 | We know how to interpret the signs of the weather; why, then, do we not see what is before us? |
43794 | We read, and are thrilled with a divine emotion; but which of us is willing to accept the truth here unfolded as the veritable secret of life? |
43794 | What does it all mean? |
43794 | What is the law of nature? |
43794 | What is the meaning of this? |
43794 | What ought I to do, to live like the rest of the world, or to live according to the doctrine of Jesus? |
43794 | What ought I to do? |
43794 | What would be the result if the faith of men in these commandments were as strong as their faith in the requirements of the Church? |
43794 | What, then, are we to do? |
43794 | What, then, are we to say to all this? |
43794 | What, then, is the purport of this phrase? |
43794 | What, then, must I do if I alone understand the doctrine of Jesus, and I alone have trust in it among a people who neither understand it nor obey it? |
43794 | Who were they that rejected the doctrine of Jesus and, their High Priests at their head, crucified him? |
43794 | Why do you abandon agriculture, which you love, for work in factories and mills, which you despise? |
43794 | Why do you bring up your children in a way that will force them to lead an existence which you find worthless? |
43794 | Why do you do this?" |
43794 | Why do you establish the conditions that you do establish?" |
43794 | Why had I always sought for some ulterior meaning? |
43794 | Why have you expended, and why do you still expend, an enormous sum of human energy in the construction of useless and unhealthful cities? |
43794 | Why should I toil for bread when I can be rich without labor? |
43794 | Why should I trouble myself to live this life according to the will of God when I am sure of a personal life for all eternity? |
43794 | Why should not a doctrine seem impracticable, when we have suppressed its fundamental proposition? |
43794 | Why so much wrong- doing? |
43794 | Why so? |
43794 | Why so? |
43794 | Why? |
43794 | Will any one, then, be offended if I tell the story of how all this came about? |
43794 | Would there be great trials to endure? |
43794 | Ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky and of the earth; but how is it that ye do not discern this time? |
43794 | Yea, and why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?_"( Luke xii. |
43794 | [ 14] Is it not folly to trouble ourselves about a thing that we can not possibly accomplish? |
43794 | and What is death? |
43794 | and what degree of mischief would not then come revelling upon the whole of human life? |
43794 | can that faith save him? |
43794 | do not even the publicans so? |
43794 | do not even the publicans the same? |
43794 | how readest thou?_"( Luke x. |
43794 | is his demand if he be a merchant;"What of civilization, if I cease to work for it, and seek only to better my own condition?" |
43794 | what dost thou work?_"( John vi. |
43794 | what ought I to do? |
43794 | who is it that casts men into prison? |
43794 | would not cities, market- places and houses, sea and land, and the whole world have been filled with unnumbered pollutions and murders? |
3052 | Why,says he,"do we tire ourselves in taking such care of ourselves, in desiring and longing after certain things, and shunning and avoiding others? |
3052 | ( See"Phaedrus,"p. 246 D.) Is it because the discourse is of love, and love is of beauty inherent in a body? |
3052 | 128):-- How long, my son, wilt thou thy soul consume with grief an mourning? |
3052 | 128):-- How long, my son, wilt thou thy soul consume with grief and mourning? |
3052 | 171):-- What doom overcame thee of death that lays men at their length? |
3052 | 193):-- Up to this time he revolved these things in his mind and heart, that is, the intelligent part and what is opposed to it? |
3052 | 243):-- Why stand ye thus like timid fawns? |
3052 | 298):--- Or hast thou not heard what renown the goodly Orestes got among all men in that he slew the slayer of his father? |
3052 | 40):-- How canst thou hope the sons of Greece shall prove Such heartless cowards as thy words suppose? |
3052 | 7):-- Why weep over Patroclus as a girl? |
3052 | 7):-- Why weeps Patroelus like an infant girl? |
3052 | ============= And what meal is not expensive? |
3052 | AND ALSO, WHY DO THE ATHENIANS OMIT THE SECOND DAY OF THE MONTH BOEDROMION? |
3052 | AND ALSO, WHY, WHEN TWO ACCORDANT STRINGS ARE TOUCHED TOGETHER, IS THE MELODY ASCRIBED TO THE BASE? |
3052 | AND WHICH OF THE SECTIONS, THE INTELLIGIBLE OR THE SENSIBLE, IS THE GREATER? |
3052 | AND WHY DO THOSE SEEDS THAT FALL ON THE OXEN''S HORNS BECOME[ Greek omitted]? |
3052 | Again, Euripides saith, How can that man be called a slave, who slights Ev''n death itself, which servile spirits frights? |
3052 | And Aristo presently cried out: What then, for heaven''s sake, are there any that banish philosophy from company and wine? |
3052 | And Bias said: For where or in what company would a man more joyfully adventure to give his opinion than here in this? |
3052 | And are not then the evening, dawning, and midnight bodies? |
3052 | And are these things according to Nature chosen as good, or as having some fitness or preferences... either for this end or for something else? |
3052 | And at private entertainments among friends, for whom doth the table more justly make room or Bacchus give place than for Menander? |
3052 | And being deprived of some of his senses, does he not become weary even of life? |
3052 | And can we produce nothing from history to club to this discourse? |
3052 | And can you( looking upon me) offer any better reason? |
3052 | And could not Jupiter have found a means to bring into the world Hercules and Lycurgus, if he had not also made for us Sardanapalus and Phalaris? |
3052 | And do not you take away that which is apparent to all the world, that the young are contained in the nature of their parents? |
3052 | And do they not also determine the substance and generation of conception itself, even against the common conceptions? |
3052 | And do they not also profess themselves to stand at an implacable and irreconcilable defiance with whatever is generous and becoming? |
3052 | And for what other reason in truth should a man of parts and erudition be at the pains to frequent the theatre, but for the sake of Menander only? |
3052 | And he as smartly replied: Do you think that Agamemnon did so many famous exploits when he was inquiring who dressed congers in the camp? |
3052 | And how can the motion of the universe, extending as it does to particular ones, be undisturbed and unimpeached, if these are stopped and hindered? |
3052 | And how is it possible for him who is at Megara to come to Athens, if he is prohibited by Fate? |
3052 | And if any one should thus question him; What sayst thou, Epicurus, that this is voidness, and that the nature of voidness? |
3052 | And if circles, why may not also their diameters be neither equal nor unequal? |
3052 | And if so, why not also angles, triangles, parallelograms, parallelopipeds, and bodies? |
3052 | And if they are transgressors of the law, why is it not just they should be punished? |
3052 | And if they do not quadrate, how can it be but the one must exceed and the other fall short? |
3052 | And if they neither live nor can live who place generation in union and death in disunion, what else do these Epicureans? |
3052 | And in which of Plato''s commentaries has he found this hidden? |
3052 | And indeed what do they ever embrace or affect that is either genteel or regardable, when it hath nothing of pleasure to accompany it? |
3052 | And is not this discourse of Aristotle very probable? |
3052 | And must we be angry with our delight, unless hired to endure it? |
3052 | And one of the company saying, It is the Persian fashion, sir, to debate midst your cups; And why, said Glaucias rejoining, not the Grecian fashion? |
3052 | And should I not in hell tormented be, Could I be guilty of such sacrilege? |
3052 | And the tenth, the fifteenth, and the thirtieth, are they not bodies? |
3052 | And therefore why should any one, that believes men can be affected and prejudiced by the sight, imagine that they can not act and hurt is well? |
3052 | And was not the crown anciently of twined parsley? |
3052 | And what did he mean, do you think, who made this verse, You capers gnaw, when you may sturgeon eat? |
3052 | And what great difference is there between this and that? |
3052 | And what is prudence? |
3052 | And what shall I take for the principle of duty and matter of virtue, leaving Nature and that which is according to Nature? |
3052 | And what the pleasures of Aristotle, when he rebuilt his native city Stagira, then levelled with the ground, and brought back its exiled inhabitants? |
3052 | And what the pleasures of Theophrastus and of Phidias, when they cut off the tyrants of their respective countries? |
3052 | And what, Phaedo, might be the cause of it? |
3052 | And what, for God''s sake, do those men mean who, inviting one another to sumptuous collations, usually say: To- day we will dine upon the shore? |
3052 | And when are the playhouses better filled with men of letters, than when his comic mask is exhibited? |
3052 | And when in exhortations made to encourage soldiers to fight, he speaks in this manner:-- What mean you, Lycians? |
3052 | And yet he frequently even tires us with his praises of this saying:-- What need have men of more than these two things? |
3052 | And yet is it not evident that a man consists of more parts than a finger, and the world of more than a man? |
3052 | And yet who might better have them than he? |
3052 | Are they not those who declare that reigning and being a king is a mistaking the path and straying from the right way of felicity? |
3052 | Are they not those who withdraw themselves and their followers from all part in the government? |
3052 | Are we more healthy for being vicious, or do we more abound with necessaries? |
3052 | Are you not ashamed to mix tame fruits with blood and slaughter? |
3052 | Aristarchus placeth the sun amongst the fixed stars, and believeth that the earth[ the moon?] |
3052 | As first, you may say, why is it plastered? |
3052 | As soon as he had said this, Trypho the physician subjoined: How hath our art offended you, that you have shut the Museum against us? |
3052 | As-- to take that which comes next neither had heat when they came, nor are become hot after their being joined together? |
3052 | Aye; but how comes it then, my good friend, that you bid me eat and be merry? |
3052 | BUT WHAT DOES HE MEAN BY DIVIDING THE UNIVERSE INTO UNEQUAL PARTS? |
3052 | Be like to courteous guests, and him Who asks only fire and shelter: does this man now not need entertainment? |
3052 | Besides all this, what should hinder but there may be an understanding of evil, and an existence of good? |
3052 | Besides, if there are superficies neither equal nor unequal, what hinders but there may be also circles neither equal nor unequal? |
3052 | Bird or egg, which was first? |
3052 | But Aesop in her vindication asked: Is it not much more ridiculous that all present can not resolve the riddle she propounded to us before supper? |
3052 | But here Erato putting in said: What, is it decreed that no pleasure must be admitted without profit? |
3052 | But how do you prove that wine is cold? |
3052 | But how full of trouble and contradictions in respect of one another these things are, what need is there to say at present? |
3052 | But if he allows these a place in his city, why does he drive away his citizens from things that are pleasing and delight the ear? |
3052 | But if wise men command wicked ones indifferent things, what hinders but the commands of the law may be also such? |
3052 | But if, being mixed with these, it is altered and made like to them, how is it a habit or power or cause of these things by which it is subdued? |
3052 | But is it in this alone, that this excellent man shows himself-- To others a physician, whilst himself Is full of ulcers? |
3052 | But pray, continues he, wherefore is it that she shows such affection to Anacharsis? |
3052 | But pray, sirs, what is your opinion in these matters? |
3052 | But to pass by these considerations, is not accustoming one''s self to mildness and a human temper of mind an admirable thing? |
3052 | But to persist still in this matter, what is more repugnant to sense than the imagining of such things? |
3052 | But what hurt, I pray, have I done to the wine, by taking from it a turbulent and noisome quality, and giving it a better taste, though a paler color? |
3052 | But what is the cause of the rainbow? |
3052 | But what is the reason the air never draws a stone, nor wood, but iron only, to the loadstone? |
3052 | But what is this you say? |
3052 | But what need I instance in those that are consummately good? |
3052 | But where on earth is virtue to be met with? |
3052 | But who are they that utterly confound and abolish this? |
3052 | But who is ignorant that he who can not do a good deed can not also sin? |
3052 | But why should any one be angry with him about the Naxians? |
3052 | But why should this belong to the Muses more than any other of the gods? |
3052 | But why, sir, are you concerned at this? |
3052 | But will you speak a paradox indeed, both extravagant and singular? |
3052 | But yet how did the Thebans escape, the Thessalians helping them with their testimonies? |
3052 | But yet since you command me to make the election, How can I think a better choice to make Than the divine Ulysses? |
3052 | But, I pray, what kind of transfiguration of the passages is this which causes hunger and thirst? |
3052 | CHAPTER V. WHENCE DOES THE WORLD RECEIVE ITS NUTRIMENT? |
3052 | Can you tell me, said he, how to construe this, and what the sense of it may be? |
3052 | Could I Sleep, or live, if thee I should neglect? |
3052 | Did Argos hold him when the hero fell? |
3052 | Did Cleadas, O Herodotus, or some other, write this also, to oblige the cities by flattery? |
3052 | Did he resolve and answer every one of these questions? |
3052 | Do not the Stoics act in the very same manner? |
3052 | Do you ask this, who hold all the senses to be infallible, and the apprehensions of the imagination certain and true? |
3052 | Does he not show that not only oxen but all other living creatures, as sharers of the same common nature, are beloved by the gods? |
3052 | Does not also Zeno follow these, who hold Nature and that which is according to Nature to be the elements of happiness? |
3052 | Does the earth move like the sun, moon, and five planets, which for their motions he calls organs or instruments of time? |
3052 | Does the stretching out a finger prudently produce this joy? |
3052 | Dost thou fancy something better after this life than what thou hast here? |
3052 | Dost thou hope for any good from the gods for thy piety? |
3052 | FROM WHENCE IS IT THAT THE MOON RECEIVES HER LIGHT? |
3052 | Florus, when we were entertained at his house, put this question, What are those in the proverb who are said to be about the salt and cummin? |
3052 | For are not these things beseeming and answerable to the doctrine of Socrates? |
3052 | For did Alexander, think you,( or indeed could he possibly) forget the fight at Arbela? |
3052 | For how can it but be absurd to blame those who nourish these creatures, if he commends Providence which created them? |
3052 | For how can it possibly be frigid in others to praise any for such things, and not ridiculous for him to rejoice and glory in them? |
3052 | For how could he expect to gain the knowledge of other things, who has not been able to comprehend the principal element even of himself? |
3052 | For how is it possible that he should be susceptible of dying on the land, who is destined to die at sea? |
3052 | For if he thought that those who were not brisk would be useless, to what purpose was it to mix among his soldiers those that were suspected? |
3052 | For if it be divine and holy, why should they avoid it? |
3052 | For if the air wherein the vessel hangs be cold, how, I pray, does it heat the water? |
3052 | For if they quadrate, how is either the greater? |
3052 | For this being granted, how will the gods be rather givers of good than evil? |
3052 | For to whom shall we offer the sacrifices preceding the tilling of the ground? |
3052 | For what else has he done in these places, but shown the great diversity there is between these things? |
3052 | For what is it that Democritus says? |
3052 | For what is more principal than the permanency of the world, or that its essence, united in its parts, is contained in itself? |
3052 | For what is wanting to bring them to the highest degree of speaking paradoxes, but the saying of such things? |
3052 | For what man is there or ever was, except these, who does not believe the Divinity to be immortal and eternal? |
3052 | For what pain, what want, what poison so quickly and so easily cures a disease as seasonable bathing? |
3052 | For what should hinder him from erecting a tragical machine, who by his boasting excelled the tragedians in all other things? |
3052 | For when he asked,"Do you, Epicurus, say, that wine does not heat?" |
3052 | For who do more subvert the common conceptions than the Stoic school? |
3052 | For who ever drank so long as those that are in a fever are a- dry? |
3052 | For who is there that is not already full of the arguments brought against those paradoxes? |
3052 | For who would wrong or injure a man that is so sweetly and humanly disposed with respect to the ills of strangers that are not of his kind? |
3052 | For who, said he, doth not know, that the middle of wine, the top of oil, and the bottom of honey is the best? |
3052 | For why art thou so eager to catch him, if thou wilt let him go when he is caught? |
3052 | From what other place than here did originate that doctrine of the Stoics? |
3052 | God, the tutelary, of Rome; existence and essence of a; what is? |
3052 | HOW MANY SENSES ARE THERE? |
3052 | HOW WAS THIS WORLD COMPOSED IN THAT ORDER AND AFTER THAT MANNER IT IS? |
3052 | Had it not been allowable, if Apollo himself had come in with his harp ready to desire the god to forbear till the argument was out? |
3052 | Has Nature also made health for the sake of hellebore, instead of producing hellebore for the sake of health? |
3052 | Have you not heard how and in what manner the judgment passed? |
3052 | His answers to the foresaid questions I will read to you.--What is most ancient? |
3052 | How comes it to pass then, said he, Theognis that thou thyself being so poor pratest and gratest our ears in this manner? |
3052 | How did Homer appraise each of these? |
3052 | How then did there go forth from Sparta to Plataea a thousand and five men, having every one of them with him seven Helots? |
3052 | How then do they extricate themselves out of these difficulties? |
3052 | How then is it, that they admit and allow Nature, soul, and living creature? |
3052 | How then is vice useful, with which neither health nor abundance of riches nor advancement in virtue is profitable? |
3052 | How then? |
3052 | How will wickedness be displeasing to them, and hated by them? |
3052 | INTO HOW MANY ZONES IS THE EARTH DIVIDED? |
3052 | IS IT MORE PROBABLE THAT THE NUMBER OF THE STARS IS EVEN OR ODD? |
3052 | If Rhetoric is the power of persuasive speaking, who more than Homer depended on this power? |
3052 | If hot, how does it afterwards make it cold? |
3052 | If then it is so pleasant to do good to a few, how are their hearts dilated with joy who are benefactors to whole cities, provinces, and kingdoms? |
3052 | If we find out Homer supplying the beginnings and the seeds of all these, is he not, beyond all others, worthy of admiration? |
3052 | In what then is this to be preferred to indifferent things? |
3052 | Indeed what wonder is it if, when the foundation shakes, the superstructure totter? |
3052 | Is a prudent torture a thing desirable? |
3052 | Is he happy, who with reason breaks his neck? |
3052 | Is he more inclined to male or female love? |
3052 | Is it not that they suppose, what is certainly true, that a dinner upon the shore is of all others most delicious? |
3052 | Is it not therefore against sense to say that the seed is more and greater than that which is produced of it? |
3052 | Is not a month a body? |
3052 | Is not the end, according to them, to reason rightly in the election of things according to Nature? |
3052 | Is not then the first day of the month a body? |
3052 | Is not therefore also the aversion( called[ Greek omitted]) a prohibiting reason, and a disinclination, a disinclination agreeable to reason? |
3052 | Is that of the greatest dignity, which reason often chooses to let go for that which is not good? |
3052 | Is that perfect and self- sufficient, by enjoying which, if they possess not too indifferent things, they neither can nor will endure to live? |
3052 | Is their opinion true who think that he ascribed a dodecahedron to the globe, when he says that God made use of it in delineating the universe? |
3052 | Is there an election of magistrates? |
3052 | Is there then no good among the gods, because there is no evil? |
3052 | Let me know; And to your dear old Priam shall I go? |
3052 | May some say, do the rest of the parts conduce nothing to speech? |
3052 | Nature, sentiments concerning; what is? |
3052 | Nay then, said Theon, if you approve so highly of this subject, why do you not set in hand to it? |
3052 | Nay, what shall a man say, when he sees the dull unlearned fellows after supper minding such pleasures as have not the least relation to the body? |
3052 | Now I would gladly ask him, what he thinks of bees and honey? |
3052 | Now how can they make a body without quality, who understand no quality without a body? |
3052 | Now if a cup ought to have nothing that is nasty or loathsome in it, ought that which is drunk out of the cup to be full of dregs and filth? |
3052 | Now if these are the things that disturb and subvert human life, who are there that more offend in speech than you? |
3052 | Now what a kind of punishment was it the Corinthians would have inflicted on them? |
3052 | Now what can be more against sense than that, when Jupiter governs exceedingly well, we should be exceedingly miserable? |
3052 | Now what does Herodotus, when he comes to this? |
3052 | Now what else is there that makes a kind office a benefit, but that the bestower of it is, in some respect, useful to the needy receiver? |
3052 | Now what else will this show, but that to wicked men and fools not to live is more profitable than to live? |
3052 | Now what has Empedocles done else, but taught that Nature is nothing else save that which is born, and death no other thing but that which dies? |
3052 | Now what is more contrary to kindling than refrigeration, or to rarefaction than condensation? |
3052 | Now what man ever was there that lived the worse for this? |
3052 | Now, as for his doctrine of possibles, how can it but be repugnant to his doctrine of Fate? |
3052 | Now, pray sir, what reason can you find for these wonderful effects? |
3052 | Of the second, Why lovers are inclined to poetry? |
3052 | Or Pelopidas the tyrant Leontiadas? |
3052 | Or Phormio, when he thought he had treated Castor and Pollux at his house? |
3052 | Or Themistocles the engagement at Salamis? |
3052 | Or as Theophrastus, who twice delivered his city, when possessed and held by tyrants? |
3052 | Or between procreation and making? |
3052 | Or do you desire to understand the greatest sweetness of his eloquence and persuasion? |
3052 | Or does vice contribute anything to our beauty and strength? |
3052 | Or has Plato figuratively called the maker of the world the father of it? |
3052 | Or how came it that, exposing themselves to so many dangers, they vanquished and overthrew so many thousand barbarians? |
3052 | Or how can Bacchus be any longer termed the donor of all good things, if men make no further use of the good things he gives? |
3052 | Or how can God be spherical, and be inferior to man? |
3052 | Or how is he above being endamaged, when he is so cautious lest he be wronged of his recompense? |
3052 | Or is a right line in Nature prior to circumference; or is circumference but an accident of rectilinear? |
3052 | Or is not a day a body? |
3052 | Or is there any difference between a father and a maker? |
3052 | Or is there any solid reason that can be given to prove Adonis to be the same with Bacchus? |
3052 | Or may such discourse be otherwise allowed, and must they be thought unseemly problems to be proposed at table? |
3052 | Or rather, since the palm is common to both, may it be, as if lots had been cast, given to either, according to the inclination he chances to have? |
3052 | Or shall we be afraid to oppose that divine oracle to Epicurus? |
3052 | Or that, rising up to go forth into the market- place, he runs not his head against the wall, but takes his way directly to the door?" |
3052 | Or where are there any that are so long solaced with the conversation of friends as tyrants are racking and tormenting? |
3052 | Or who was ever so long eating as those that are besieged suffer hunger? |
3052 | Ought we not to time it well, and direct our embrace by reason? |
3052 | QUESTION I WHAT, AS XENOPHON INTIMATES, ARE THE MOST AGREEABLE QUESTIONS AND MOST PLEASANT RAILLERY AT AN ENTERTAINMENT? |
3052 | QUESTION V. WHAT IS THE REASON THAT PEBBLE STONES AND LEADEN BULLETS THROWN INTO THE WATER MAKE IT MORE COLD? |
3052 | QUESTION VI WHAT IS THE REASON THAT MEN PRESERVE SNOW BY COVERING IT WITH CHAFF AND CLOTHS? |
3052 | Racing, as at the Olympian games? |
3052 | Right, said Diogenianus, but what is this to the present question? |
3052 | Say you so? |
3052 | Shall we reckon a soul to be a small expense? |
3052 | Silence following upon this, What application, said I, shall reason make, or how shall it assist? |
3052 | Sir, I replied, do not you consider that the soul, when affected, works upon the body? |
3052 | Soon after he proposed that perplexed question, that plague of the inquisitive, Which was first, the bird or the egg? |
3052 | Such was the flatterer''s to Philip, who chided him: Sir, do n''t I keep you? |
3052 | Summer, autumn, and the year, are they not bodies?" |
3052 | That is, is it convenient to do things that are not convenient, and a duty to live even against duty? |
3052 | That they fled as conquered, whom the enemies after the fight could not believe to have fled, as having got much the better? |
3052 | The exactness of motions and harmony are definite, but the errors either in playing upon the harp, singing, or dancing, who can comprehend? |
3052 | The first question is, Whether at table it is allowable to philosophize? |
3052 | The stimulus to this came from Homer,--why should any one insist on the providence of the gods? |
3052 | Then said my brother cunningly: And do you imagine that any, upon a sudden, can produce any probable reasons? |
3052 | Then, said I, do you believe this to be my opinion? |
3052 | These things being thus in a manner said and delivered, what would these defenders of evidence and canonical masters of common conceptions have? |
3052 | Thirdly, how is the world perfect, if anything beyond it is possible to be moved about it? |
3052 | This discourse being ended, and Philinus hummed, Lysimachus began again, What sort of exercise then shall we imagine to be first? |
3052 | Thus Tigranes, when Cyrus asked him, What will your wife say when she hears that you are put to servile offices? |
3052 | Till Hector''s arm involve the ships in flame? |
3052 | To what purpose, said Solon, should I trouble him or myself to make inquiry in a matter so plain? |
3052 | To whom those for the obtaining of preservation? |
3052 | Upon this, all being silent, Florus began thus: What, shall we tamely suffer Plato to be run down? |
3052 | WHAT ARE PRINCIPLES? |
3052 | WHAT ARE THE CAUSES OF SLEEP AND DEATH? |
3052 | WHAT ARE THOSE STARS WHICH ARE CALLED THE DIOSCURI, THE TWINS, OR CASTOR AND POLLUX? |
3052 | WHAT ARE THOSE THAT ARE SAID TO BE[ GREEK OMITTED], AND WHY HOMER CALLS SALT DIVINE? |
3052 | WHAT HUMORED MAN IS HE THAT PLATO CALLS[ Greek omitted]? |
3052 | WHAT IS GOD? |
3052 | WHAT IS IT THAT THE GIVES ECHO? |
3052 | WHAT IS NATURE? |
3052 | WHAT IS PLATO''S MEANING, WHEN HE SAYS THAT GOD ALWAYS PLAYS THE GEOMETER? |
3052 | WHAT IS SIGNIFIED BY THE FABLE ABOUT THE DEFEAT OF NEPTUNE? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE CAUSE OF ACCORD? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE CAUSE OF BULIMY OR THE GREEDY DISEASE? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A PRINCIPLE AND AN ELEMENT? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN IMAGINATION[ GREEK OMITTED], THE IMAGINABLE[ GREEK OMITTED], FANCY[ GREEK OMITTED], AND PHANTOM[ GREEK OMITTED]? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE MEANING OF THE SAYING: DRINK EITHER FIVE OR THREE, BUT NOT FOUR? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE REASON THAT ALPHA IS PLACED FIRST IN THE ALPHABET, AND WHAT IS THE PROPORTION BETWEEN THE NUMBER OF VOWELS AND SEMI- VOWELS? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE REASON THAT FLESH OF SACRIFICED BEASTS, AFTER BEING HUNG A WHILE UPON A FIG- TREE IS MORE TENDER THAN BEFORE? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE REASON THAT HUNGER IS ALLAYED BY DRINKING, BUT THIRST INCREASED BY EATING? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE REASON THAT THE FIG- TREE, BEING ITSELF OF A VERY SHARP AND BITTER TASTE, BEARS SO SWEET FRUIT? |
3052 | WHAT IS THE REASON THAT THOSE THAT ARE FASTING ARE MORE THIRSTY THAN HUNGRY? |
3052 | WHAT MANNER OF MAN SHOULD A DIRECTOR OF A FEAST BE? |
3052 | WHAT MEANS TIMAEUS( See"Timaeus,"p. 42 D.) WHEN HE SAYS THAT SOULS ARE DISPERSED INTO THE EARTH, THE MOON, AND INTO OTHER INSTRUMENTS OF TIME? |
3052 | WHAT SORT OF MUSIC IS FITTEST FOR AN ENTERTAINMENT? |
3052 | WHAT WAS, THE REASON OF THAT CUSTOM OF THE ANCIENT ROMANS TO REMOVE THE TABLE BEFORE ALL THE MEAT WAS EATEN, AND NOT TO PUT OUT THE LAMP? |
3052 | WHENCE ARISETH BARRENNESS IN WOMEN, AND IMPOTENCY IN MEN? |
3052 | WHENCE DID MEN OBTAIN THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE EXISTENCE AND ESSENCE OF A DEITY? |
3052 | WHENCE DO THE STARS RECEIVE THEIR LIGHT? |
3052 | WHETHER AT TABLE IT IS ALLOWABLE TO PHILOSOPHIZE? |
3052 | WHETHER FLUTE- GIRLS ARE TO BE ALLOWED AT A FEAST? |
3052 | WHICH IS THE FITTEST TIME FOR A MAN TO KNOW HIS WIFE? |
3052 | WHICH WAS FIRST THE BIRD OR THE EGG? |
3052 | WHY DID GOD COMMAND SOCRATES TO ACT THE MIDWIFE''S PART TO OTHERS, BUT CHARGED HIMSELF NOT TO GENERATE; AS HE AFFIRMS IN THEAETETUS? |
3052 | WHY DO THOSE THAT ARE STARK DRUNK SEEM NOT SO MUCH DEBAUCHED AS THOSE THAT ARE BUT HALF FOXED? |
3052 | WHY DOES HE CALL THE SUPREME GOD FATHER AND MAKER OF ALL THINGS? |
3052 | WHY DOES HOMER APPROPRIATE A CERTAIN PECULIAR EPITHET TO EACH PARTICULAR LIQUID, AND CALL OIL ONLY LIQUID? |
3052 | WHY SAID PLATO, THAT SPEECH WAS COMPOSED OF NOUNS AND VERBS? |
3052 | WHY WAS THE PINE COUNTED SACRED TO NEPTUNE AND BACCHUS? |
3052 | Was it a slow disease, or did Artemis the archer slay them with the visitation of her gentle shafts? |
3052 | What beginnings do Xenocrates and Polemo take? |
3052 | What consent does it not turn upside down? |
3052 | What difficulty is there in that? |
3052 | What does this mean except that the world is conducted by civilized laws and the gods consult under the presidency of the father of gods and men? |
3052 | What first- fruits shall they offer? |
3052 | What is greatest? |
3052 | What is greatest? |
3052 | What is most Pernicious? |
3052 | What is most beautiful? |
3052 | What is most beautiful? |
3052 | What is most common? |
3052 | What is most easy? |
3052 | What is most easy? |
3052 | What is most pernicious? |
3052 | What is most profitable? |
3052 | What is most profitable? |
3052 | What is most strong? |
3052 | What is most wise? |
3052 | What is strongest? |
3052 | What is the reason that our cups are washed and made so clean that they shine and look bright? |
3052 | What is this? |
3052 | What is wisest? |
3052 | What kind of thing then is it in its own form? |
3052 | What manner of god then is Jupiter,--I mean Chrysippus''s Jupiter,--who punishes an act done neither willingly nor unprofitably? |
3052 | What natural or scientific art is left untouched? |
3052 | What need is there for mentioning anything else? |
3052 | What need of many instances? |
3052 | What other reprehender of his doctrines does this man then expect? |
3052 | What other thing is he establishing but a community of speech and a relation of soul between men and beasts? |
3052 | What problem was that? |
3052 | What question will you put them, said Protogenes? |
3052 | What record is there extant of one civil action in matter of government, performed by any of you? |
3052 | What sayest thou now, Epicurus? |
3052 | What shall men sacrifice? |
3052 | What then ails them, that they will not confess that to be evil which is worse than evil? |
3052 | What then follows from this, that the World alone is self- sufficient? |
3052 | What then is good? |
3052 | What then shall we say for Plato? |
3052 | What then, said Florus, shall we say that salt is termed divine for that reason? |
3052 | What then, shall we suffer those rhetoricians to be thought to have hit the mark when they bring arguments only from probabilities and conjectures? |
3052 | What then? |
3052 | What then?" |
3052 | What thing then is there so impossible in Nature as to be doubted of, if it is possible to believe such reveries as these? |
3052 | What would it have benefited Lichas, if being thrown by Hercules, as from a sling into the sea, he had been on a sudden changed from vice to virtue?" |
3052 | What, then, are these habits and motions of the parts? |
3052 | What, then, is the only thing that they shun? |
3052 | What, then, is this end? |
3052 | When I had said this, Lamprias, sitting( as he always doth) upon a low bed, cried out: Sirs, will you give me leave to correct this sottish judge? |
3052 | When I was curious to inquire who this lady was, he said, Do you not yet know the wise and famous Eumetis? |
3052 | When then will our life become savage, uncivilized, and bestial? |
3052 | Whether then shall we say, that neither consents nor virtues nor vices nor doing well nor doing ill is in our power? |
3052 | Who can therefore appear to speak things more contradictory to himself than he who says that the same god is now nourished and again not nourished? |
3052 | Who first determined this? |
3052 | Who has more skill than the artificer of such an art? |
3052 | Who is this that hath so many mouths for his belly and the kitchen? |
3052 | Who then are they that call in question things believed, and contend against things that are evident? |
3052 | Who then are they, O Colotes, that are endued with this privilege never to be wounded, never to be sick? |
3052 | Who would not have blamed another that should have omitted these things? |
3052 | Who, then, were the first authors of this opinion, that we owe no justice to dumb animals? |
3052 | Why do you belie the earth as unable to maintain you? |
3052 | Why do you profane the lawgiver Ceres, and shame the mild and gentle Bacchus, as not furnishing you with sufficiency? |
3052 | Why does it open especially on that side where it may have the best convenience for receiving the purest air, and the benefit of the evening sun? |
3052 | Why does the body rest? |
3052 | Why is it necessary to speak of the heroes in battle? |
3052 | Why not, quoth Anacharsis, when there is a reward promised to the hardest drinker? |
3052 | Why not? |
3052 | Why pray, is the number nine the most perfect? |
3052 | Why should we not ascribe to Homer every excellence? |
3052 | Why so, my friend? |
3052 | Why then, instead of fine flour, do not we thicken our broth with coarse bran? |
3052 | Why therefore should we rather say the clothes are hot, because they cause heat, than cold, because they cause cold? |
3052 | Why, Lord of lightning, hast thou summoned here The gods of council, dost thou aught desire Touching the Greeks and Trojans? |
3052 | Wilt thou get thee up betimes in the morning, and go to the theatre to hear the harpers and flutists play? |
3052 | With what, O good sir, do Aristotle and Theophrastus begin? |
3052 | With what, then, says he, shall I begin? |
3052 | Would not the river Nile sooner have given over to bear the paper- reed, than they have been weary of writing their brave exploits? |
3052 | Yea, why rather should he not struggle against Fortune, and raise himself above the pressures of his low circumstances? |
3052 | Yes, said he, whose else? |
3052 | Your words are great, but what''s this to your bride? |
3052 | Zeuxippus therefore subjoined and said: And must our present debate be left then unfinished because of that? |
3052 | and again, Exempt from sickness and old age are they, And free from toil, and have escaped the stream Of roaring Acheron? |
3052 | and again, What God those seeds of strife''twixt them did sow? |
3052 | and thus:-- What''s your command to Hector? |
3052 | and why, of the several kinds of music, will the chromatic diffuse and the harmonic compose the mind? |
3052 | corruption, are animals obnoxious to? |
3052 | if, when these are taken away, virtue will also vanish and be lost? |
3052 | is there the like danger if I refuse to eat flesh, as if I for want of faith murder my child or some other friend? |
3052 | of virtue, for which we were created? |
3052 | or deal in adulterate wares or griping usury, not minding anything that is great and worthy thy noble extraction? |
3052 | said I, and shall not Aristodemus then succeed me, if you are tired out yourself? |
3052 | some men may properly inquire:-- DID PLATO PLACE THE RATIONAL OR THE IRASCIBLE FACULTY IN THE MIDDLE? |
3052 | was it not but the other day that the Isthmian garland began to be made of pine? |
3052 | wherein differ they from what Plato says, that the divine nature is remote from both joy and grief? |
47143 | Desire we past illusions to recal? |
47143 | Have you forgot--and here she smiled--"The babbling flatteries You lavished on me when a child Disporting round your knees? |
47143 | Rich robes are fretted by the moth; Towers, temples, fall by stroke of thunder; Will that, or deeper thoughts, abate A Father''s sorrow for her fate? 47143 Still is he my devoted Knight?" |
47143 | What boots,continued she,"to mourn? |
47143 | What flower in meadow- ground or garden growsThat to the towering lily doth not yield? |
47143 | Whence the undeserved mistrust? 47143 Who, exclaimed the King, when the Council was ended, shall first desecrate the altars and the temples? |
47143 | Why, Minstrel, these untuneful murmurings-- Dull, flagging notes that with each other jar? |
47143 | [ 742] Where will they stop, those breathing Powers, The Spirits of the new- born flowers? 47143 ... it give? 47143 ... to Croglin Dell? 47143 10 Did wanton fawn and kid forbear The half- blown rose, the lily spare? 47143 10 The Sage''s theory? 47143 10 What need, then, of these finished Strains? 47143 110 Is it not a brow inviting Choicest flowers[534] that ever breathed, Which the myrtle would delight in With Idalian rose enwreathed? 47143 130 He touched; what followed who shall tell? 47143 140 What more changeful than the sea? 47143 15 But who_ is_ innocent? 47143 30 Where, for the love- lorn maiden''s wound, Will now so readily be found A balm of expectation? 47143 70 Or hast thou put off wings which thou in heaven dost wear? 47143 80 And what, for this frail world, were all That mortals do or suffer, Did no responsive harp, no pen, Memorial tribute offer? 47143 80But whither would you, could you, flee? |
47143 | 85 Her features, could they win us, Unhelped by the poetic voice That hourly speaks within us? |
47143 | Alms may be needed) which that House bestowed? |
47143 | Am I deceived? |
47143 | And Wisdom, as she holds[819] a Christian place 30 In man''s intelligence sublimed by grace? |
47143 | And was power given Part of her lost One''s glory back to trace Even to this Rite? |
47143 | Anxious for far- off children, where Shall mothers breathe a like sweet air 35 Of home- felt consolation? |
47143 | Black and dense The cloud is; but brings_ that_ a day of doom To Liberty? |
47143 | But what is colour, if upon the rack Of conscience souls are placed by deeds that lack 5 Concord with oaths? |
47143 | But where attends thy chariot-- where?" |
47143 | But who can fathom your intents, Number their signs or instruments? |
47143 | But why complain? |
47143 | By whom in that lone place espied? |
47143 | Can its eyes beseech?--no more Than the hands are free to implore: Voice but serves for one brief cry; Plaint was it? |
47143 | Can they, in faith and worship, train the mind To keep this new and questionable road? |
47143 | Can this be Piety? |
47143 | Can written book Teach what_ they_ learn? |
47143 | Can, I ask, This face of rural beauty be a mask 10 For discontent, and poverty, and crime; These spreading towns a cloak for lawless will? |
47143 | Did gleams appear? |
47143 | Do they stir''Mid your fierce shock like men afraid to die? |
47143 | Dost thou despise the earth where cares abound? |
47143 | Effigy[888] of the Vanished[889]--(shall I dare To call thee so?) |
47143 | FOOTNOTES:[ 377] Such if thou wert in all men''s view, A universal show, What would my Fancy have to do, My Feelings to bestow? |
47143 | For are we not all His without whose care Vouchsafed no sparrow falleth to the ground? |
47143 | From what bank Came those live herbs? |
47143 | Had mortal action e''er a nobler scope? |
47143 | Haughty the Bard: can these meek doctrines blight His transports? |
47143 | Heaven out of view, our wishes what are they? |
47143 | Help to virtue does she give? |
47143 | How art thou named? |
47143 | How venture then to hope that Time will spare[432] This humble Walk? |
47143 | How will her Sire be reconciled 15 To the refined indignity? |
47143 | I see the places where they once were known, And ask, surrounded even by kneeling crowds, 10 Is ancient Piety for ever flown? |
47143 | III CHARLES THE SECOND Who comes-- with rapture greeted, and caress''d With frantic love-- his kingdom to regain? |
47143 | If thou persist, and, scorning moderation, Spread for thyself the snares of tribulation, Whom, then, shall meekness guard? |
47143 | In search of what strange land, From what huge height, descending? |
47143 | In sunny glade, Or under leaves of thickest shade, Was such a stillness e''er diffused Since earth grew calm while angels mused? |
47143 | Is it that ye with conscious skill For mutual pleasure glide; 30 And sometimes, not without your will, Are dwarfed, or magnified? |
47143 | Is tender pity then of no avail? |
47143 | Is this her piety''s reward? |
47143 | Lay on the moral will a withering ban? |
47143 | May not the latter syllable come from the word Dean,_ a valley_? |
47143 | One day the landlady of a public- house, a field''s length from the well, on the roadside, said to me--"You have been to see the Nun''s Well, Sir?" |
47143 | Opened a vision of that blissful place 10 Where dwells a Sister- child? |
47143 | Or He, whose bonds dropped off, whose prison doors Flew open, by an Angel''s voice unbarred? |
47143 | Or come the incessant shocks From that young Stream,[401] that smites the throbbing rocks Of Viamala? |
47143 | Or peeped they often from their beds And prematurely disappeared, Devoured like pleasure ere it spreads 15 A bosom to the sun endeared? |
47143 | Or, while the[419] wings aspire, are heart and eye Both with thy nest upon the dewy ground? |
47143 | Our fond regrets tenacious[735] in their grasp? |
47143 | Saw we not Henry scourged at Becket''s shrine? |
47143 | Say, when the_ moving_ creatures saw All kinds commingled without fear, Prevailed a like indulgent law For the still growths that prosper here? |
47143 | Scorning their wants because her arm is strong? |
47143 | Sylph was it? |
47143 | The Flower, the Form within it, What served they in her need? |
47143 | Then why should conscious Spirits fear The mystic stirrings that are here, The ancient faith disclaim? |
47143 | Thinned the rank woods; and for the cheerful grange Made room where wolf and boar were used to range? |
47143 | To behold thy captive state; Women, in your land, may pity 15( May they not?) |
47143 | To reinstate wild Fancy, would we hide Truth whose thick veil Science has drawn aside? |
47143 | W."How disappeared he?" |
47143 | Was ever Spirit that could bend: 25 So graciously? |
47143 | Was ever such a sweet confusion, Sustained by delicate illusion? |
47143 | Was it right not to regret this? |
47143 | We rejoice:"O Death Where is thy Sting?--O Grave where is thy Victory?" |
47143 | What change shall happen next to Nunnery Dell? |
47143 | What hand suffice to govern the state- helm? |
47143 | What have I seen, and heard or dreamt? |
47143 | What means the Spectre? |
47143 | What saving skill Lie in forbearance, strength in standing still? |
47143 | What wonder? |
47143 | What would''st thou more? |
47143 | Where now the haughty Empire that was spread 65 With such fond hope? |
47143 | While here sits One whose brightness owes its hues To flesh and blood; no Goddess from above, No fleeting Spirit, but my own true Love? |
47143 | Who can divine what impulses from God Reach the caged lark, within a town- abode, From his poor inch or two of daisied sod? |
47143 | Who shall preserve or prop the tottering Realm? |
47143 | Who taught, and showed by deeds, that gentler chains 140 Should bind the vassal to his lord''s domains? |
47143 | Who that hath loved thee, but would lay His strong hand on the wind, if it were bent To take thee in thy majesty away? |
47143 | Who trembles now at thy capricious mood? |
47143 | Who tripping lisps a merry song Amid his playful peers? |
47143 | Why bedeck her temples less Than the simplest shepherdess? |
47143 | Why intent To violate the Tree, 110 Thought Eglamore, by which I swore Unfading constancy? |
47143 | Why should we crave a hallowed spot? |
47143 | Why tarries then thy chariot? |
47143 | XIV"DESIRE WE PAST ILLUSIONS TO RECAL"Desire we past illusions to recal? |
47143 | XLVII CONCLUSION Why sleeps the future, as a snake enrolled, Coil within coil, at noon- tide? |
47143 | XX OTHER INFLUENCES Ah, when the Body,[58] round which in love we clung, Is chilled by death, does mutual service fail? |
47143 | XXVIII CAVE OF STAFFA[900] We saw, but surely, in the motley crowd, Not one of us has felt the far- famed sight; How_ could_ we feel it? |
47143 | XXX CAVE OF STAFFA Ye shadowy Beings, that have rights and claims In every cell of Fingal''s mystic Grot, Where are ye? |
47143 | XXXII IONA On to Iona!--What can she afford To_ us_ save matter for a thoughtful sigh, Heaved over ruin with stability In urgent contrast? |
47143 | XXXIX PAPAL DOMINION Unless to Peter''s Chair the viewless wind[114] Must come and ask permission when to blow, What further empire would it have? |
47143 | XXXVIII NEW CHURCHES But liberty, and triumphs on the Main, And laurelled armies, not to be withstood-- What serve they? |
47143 | Yea, what were mighty Nature''s self? |
47143 | Yet, while each useful Art augments her store, What boots the gain if Nature should lose more? |
47143 | [ 251] But for what gain? |
47143 | [ 320] 10 Perversely curious, then, for hidden ill Why should we break Time''s charitable seals? |
47143 | [ 533] But the ringlets of that head Why are they ungarlanded? |
47143 | [ 629] Shall man assume a property in man? |
47143 | [ 834] 135 Who with the ploughshare clove the barren moors, And to green meadows changed the swampy shores? |
47143 | are Man''s noisy years No more than moments of thy life? |
47143 | but why repine, Now when the star of eve comes forth to shine On British waters with that look benign? |
47143 | by what hand were they sown Where dew falls not, where rain- drops seem unknown? |
47143 | farewell!-- Remote St. Kilda, art thou visible? |
47143 | or a Bird more bright Than those of fabulous stock? |
47143 | or prophecy 10 Of sorrow that will surely come? |
47143 | pardon youthful fancies; 55 Wedded? |
47143 | should a Child of royal line Die through the blindness of thy malice?" |
47143 | what avails that she was fair, Luminous, blithe, and debonair? |
47143 | what is beauty, what is love, And opening life to thee? |
47143 | what is that?" |
47143 | where am I? |
47143 | where art thou? |
47143 | where?" |
47143 | wherefore yields it to a foul constraint[214] Black as the clouds its beams dispersed, while shone, By men and angels blest, the glorious light? |
47143 | who can?) |
47143 | wither his heroic strains? |
46063 | Am I now free? |
46063 | Art thou Siegmund? |
46063 | But at the cost of love? |
46063 | But should suspense permit the foe to cry,''Behold they tremble!--haughty their array, Yet of their number no one dares to die''? 46063 But who will guide us?" |
46063 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
46063 | Dost thou come at last,said he,"long expected, and do I behold thee after such perils past? |
46063 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for thee worthy of thy praise? |
46063 | Know ye the weight of my hammer''s blow? |
46063 | Knowest thou what''tis to me? 46063 Milk the ewe that thou hast; why pursue the thing that shuns thee? |
46063 | O, Pyramus,she cried,"what has done this? |
46063 | Oh, Cyclops, Cyclops, whither are thy wits wandering? 46063 The Ring?" |
46063 | The world''s wealth,he mutters;"might I win that by the spell of the gold? |
46063 | Then takest thou from Siegmund thy shield? |
46063 | Thy name and fortune? |
46063 | What is it, ye sleek ones, That there doth gleam and glow? 46063 What meaneth the name, then?" |
46063 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
46063 | What seek ye here? |
46063 | What woman warneth me thus? |
46063 | What''s he whose arms lie scattered on the plain? 46063 What, then, aileth the immortals?" |
46063 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Balder?" |
46063 | Who pursues thee? |
46063 | Who was it,she asks,"that brought him his conquering sword? |
46063 | Why do you refuse me water? |
46063 | [ 374] Has he never heard of the Rhine- gold? 46063 ''Comfort my heart, mayhap, with the loyal love of my husband?'' 46063 ''Haste to the Gnossian hills?'' 46063 ),_ 34, 83_; The Cuckow and Nightingale, or Boke of Cupid(? 46063 ),_ 38_( 1); The Romaunt of the Rose(? 46063 ***** Lovely world, where art thou? 46063 ***** Oh, whence has silence stolen on all things here, Where every sight makes music to the eye? 46063 =_ Poems._= Chaucer, The Cuckow and Nightingale, or Boke of Cupid(? 46063 A voice followed her,Why flyest thou, Arethusa? |
46063 | Again-- thou hearest? |
46063 | And Hermod gazed into the night, and said:"Who is it utters through the dark his hest So quickly, and will wait for no reply? |
46063 | And all who saw them trembled, And pale grew every cheek; And Aulus the Dictator Scarce gathered voice to speak:"Say by what name men call you? |
46063 | And before my time If I shall die, I reckon this a gain; For whoso lives, as I, in many woes, How can it be but he shall gain by death? |
46063 | And shall I let thee go into such danger alone? |
46063 | And were they ever believed? |
46063 | And wherefore ride ye in such guise Before the ranks of Rome?" |
46063 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
46063 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
46063 | Because he wears his years so lightly must he seem to thee ever to be a child? |
46063 | Both are goddesses of the moon(? |
46063 | But Brünnhilde? |
46063 | But what are the characteristics of the mental state of our contemporary savages? |
46063 | But what has become of my glove?" |
46063 | But why this mortal guise, Wooing as if he were a milk- faced boy? |
46063 | Chaucer, Legende of Good Women, 208_ et seq._; Court of Love(? |
46063 | Couldst thou keep thy course while the sphere revolved beneath thee? |
46063 | Demeter(?) |
46063 | Deserv''d they death because thy grace appear''d In ever modest motion? |
46063 | Did I lack lovers? |
46063 | Did marigolds bright as these, gilding the mist, Drop from her maiden zone? |
46063 | Die Edda, 458_ n_ Lydgate, John, 1370(?)-1451(?). |
46063 | Dost thou again peruse, With hot cheeks and sear''d eyes, The too clear web, and thy dumb sister''s shame? |
46063 | Dost thou not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
46063 | Dost thou to- night behold, Here, through the moonlight on this English grass, The unfriendly palace in the Thracian wild? |
46063 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied:"Wouldst thou then, Nisus, refuse to share thy enterprise with me? |
46063 | For why, ah, overbold, didst thou follow the chase, and being so fair, why wert thou thus overhardy to fight with beasts?" |
46063 | Forlorn, what succor rely on? |
46063 | Had he lost there a father, or brother, or any dear friend? |
46063 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
46063 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
46063 | He spake; and the fleet Hermod thus replied:--"Brother, what seats are these, what happier day? |
46063 | He was loath to surrender his sweetheart to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a heifer? |
46063 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixed his eyes on the virgin and said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
46063 | How dost thou fare on thy feet through the path of the sea beasts, nor fearest the sea? |
46063 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
46063 | How, then, did the senseless and cruel stories come into existence? |
46063 | I have done and I may not undo, I have given and I take not again; Art thou other than I, Allfather, wilt thou gather my glory in vain?" |
46063 | I, what were I, when these can nought avail? |
46063 | If strength might save them, could not Odin save, My father, and his pride, the warrior Thor, Vidar the silent, the impetuous Tyr? |
46063 | Knowest thou not that he is now of age? |
46063 | Max Müller derives Athene from the root_ ah_, which yields the Sanskrit Ahanâ and the Greek Daphne, the Dawn(?). |
46063 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
46063 | Might Hela perchance surrender Balder if Höder himself should take his place among the shades? |
46063 | NEREÏDS ON SEA BEASTS]"Whither bearest thou me, bull god? |
46063 | Never a pity entreat thy bosom for shelter?... |
46063 | Never, could never a plea forfend thy cruelly minded Counsel? |
46063 | Nisus said to his friend:"Dost thou perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
46063 | Of the wondrous star whose glory lightens the waves? |
46063 | On the authorship of the Younger Edda, 459 Johnston, T. C. Did the Ph[oe]nicians discover America? |
46063 | Or shall I offer to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
46063 | Or what pale promise make? |
46063 | Say, does the seed scorn earth and seek the sun? |
46063 | See Byron, Don Juan, 3, 86,"You have the letters Cadmus gave-- Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
46063 | Shall I trust Æneas to the chances of the weather and the winds?" |
46063 | Shall it, then, be unavailing, All this toil for human culture? |
46063 | She brushes aside the plea of Wotan and his subterfuge,--who has ever heard that heroes can accomplish what the gods can not? |
46063 | She would have wept to see her father weep; But some God pitied her, and purple wings( What God''s were they?) |
46063 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Freyr exclaimed:"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
46063 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out:"What''s the matter? |
46063 | So having paus''d awhile, at last she said,"Who taught thee rhetoric to deceive a maid? |
46063 | Starting from his sleep, the old man cried out,"My daughters, would you kill your father?" |
46063 | THE THREE FATES From the painting by Michelangelo(?)] |
46063 | That I should die I knew( how should I not? |
46063 | That friend looked rough with fighting: had he strained Worst brute to breast was ever strangled yet? |
46063 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is it that in the morning goes on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
46063 | The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
46063 | The day will come, when fall shall Asgard''s towers, And Odin, and his sons, the seed of Heaven; But what were I, to save them in that hour? |
46063 | The death of= Creüsa=, also called Glauce, suggests that of Hercules( in the flaming sunset?). |
46063 | The deathless longings tamed, that I should seethe My soul in love like any shepherd girl? |
46063 | The gods pretend dismay:--he can make himself great; can he make himself small, likewise? |
46063 | Then Idas, humbly,--"After such argument what can I plead? |
46063 | Then one cried,"Lo now, Shall not the Arcadian shoot out lips at us, Saying all we were despoiled by this one girl?" |
46063 | Then, with a louder laugh, the hag replied:"Is Balder dead? |
46063 | There are certain questions that nearly every child and every savage asks: What is the world and what is man? |
46063 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
46063 | They seize Freia, and bear her away as pledge till that ransom be paid...."Alack, what aileth the gods?" |
46063 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
46063 | Through the cloud- rack, dark and trailing, Must they see above them sailing O''er life''s barren crags the vulture? |
46063 | Thus is it thou dost flout our vow, dost flout the Immortals,-- Carelessly homeward bearest, with baleful ballast of curses? |
46063 | True, I did boldly say they might compare Even with thyself in virgin purity: May not a mother in her pride repeat What every mortal said? |
46063 | Was my beauty dulled, The golden hair turned dross, the lithe limbs shrunk? |
46063 | Wert thou last kissed, Pale hyacinth, last seen, before his face? |
46063 | What art thou? |
46063 | What cared I for their dances and their feasts, Whose heart awaited an immortal doom? |
46063 | What chant, what wailing, move the Powers of Hell? |
46063 | What city is your home? |
46063 | What could the king of gods and men do? |
46063 | What drink is sweet to thee, what food shalt thou find from the deep? |
46063 | What else did the maker do? |
46063 | What favor have you to ask of us?" |
46063 | What folk inhabit?--cruel unto strangers, Or hospitable? |
46063 | What form is this of more than mortal height? |
46063 | What if I the fact confess? |
46063 | What is death, and what becomes of us after death? |
46063 | What king ruleth here? |
46063 | What other outcome can be expected when mere physical or brute force joins issue with the enlightened and embattled hosts of heaven? |
46063 | What romance would be left?--who can flatter or kiss trees? |
46063 | What should he do; how extricate the youth; or would it be better to die with him? |
46063 | What should he do?--go home to the palace or lie hid in the woods? |
46063 | When-- but can it be? |
46063 | Whence came the commodities of life? |
46063 | Where both deliberate, the love is slight: Who ever lov''d, that lov''d not at first sight? |
46063 | Who art thou, then, that here withstandest?" |
46063 | Who made them? |
46063 | Who of Thessalians, more than this man, loves The stranger? |
46063 | Who that now inhabits Greece? |
46063 | Why do we celebrate certain festivals, practice certain ceremonials, observe solemnities, and partake of sacraments, and bow to this or the other god? |
46063 | Why not confer upon them human and superhuman passions and powers? |
46063 | Why slay each other? |
46063 | Why wilt them ever scare me with thy tears, And make me tremble lest a saying learnt In days far- off, on that dark earth, be true? |
46063 | Why, then, should not the savage believe, of beings worthy of worship and fear and gratitude, all and more than all that is accredited to man? |
46063 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
46063 | Wouldst thou stay me? |
46063 | Yea, but where shall I turn? |
46063 | Yet hold me not forever in thine East: How can my nature longer mix with thine? |
46063 | Yet where is thy triumph? |
46063 | You will be free? |
46063 | [ 392] See T. C. Johnston''s Did the Ph[oe]nicians Discover America? |
46063 | and do ye come for tears? |
46063 | and what the first men? |
46063 | and whose shield is ordained to cover him in the fight?" |
46063 | and will ye stop your ears, In vain desire to do aught, And wish to live''mid cares and fears, Until the last fear makes you nought? |
46063 | art thou forever blind? |
46063 | become of mee? |
46063 | cries he,"free in sooth? |
46063 | has shee done this to thee? |
46063 | my soul''s far better part, Why with untimely sorrows heaves thy heart? |
46063 | p. 226, in text; Heracles in the eastern pediment of the Parthenon(? |
46063 | said Æneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
46063 | the cause? |
46063 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise, What was thy pity''s recompense? |
46063 | was then the rumor true that thou hadst perished? |
46063 | what desolate cavern? |
46063 | what land? |
46063 | what lioness whelped thee? |
46063 | whither go? |
46063 | who was the alien woman that I beheld in my sleep? |
46063 | within the heart of this great flight, Whose ivory arms hold up the golden lyre? |
46063 | Æneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination?" |
27980 | A bay horse? 27980 A man does not so readily refuse a treasure that he has only to pick up from the ground?" |
27980 | A second question:--Were they really_ Indians_ who murdered your companion? |
27980 | A stranger? |
27980 | All? |
27980 | Am I straight in my stirrups? |
27980 | And Pedro Diaz-- that man of such noble and disinterested feeling? |
27980 | And did the lawyer agree to your conditions? |
27980 | And did you love him? 27980 And do you know what is below that mass of fog which crowns their top?" |
27980 | And his friends Cuchillo, Oroche, and Baraja? |
27980 | And how have you arrived at this conjecture? |
27980 | And if she did, where would she find a man possessing higher physical or moral qualities than this same Tiburcio? 27980 And now, amigo,"continued the ex- herdsman, turning to the man who had first spoken,"do you still think that the jaguar attacks only foals?" |
27980 | And of course you lost-- being so nervous in presence of company? |
27980 | And this Arellanos-- do you think, he has not revealed this secret to any one besides yourself? |
27980 | And those men who are with him-- who are they? |
27980 | And to what do you attribute this strange absence? |
27980 | And what about this ragged young fellow, this Tiburcio Arellanos, whom you appear to know? 27980 And what do you intend to do with the child?" |
27980 | And what is your calling? |
27980 | And why not? 27980 And why?" |
27980 | And yet,continued he,"what of this treasure shall I keep for myself? |
27980 | And you are right, Diaz,replied Don Estevan;"but can you guess what fate these fellows have reserved for me?" |
27980 | And you could never learn the names of these brave, generous, and devoted men? |
27980 | And you despatched the uncle as well? |
27980 | And you have let him escape? |
27980 | And you know him? |
27980 | And you were forced to his terms? |
27980 | And your comrade? |
27980 | Are the Apaches like vultures who only attack the dead? 27980 Are the Indians numerous?" |
27980 | Are there any Indians to be exterminated, since I find you coming into these solitudes of ours? |
27980 | Are there many men of your size and strength where you come from? |
27980 | Are these the assistants you count upon? |
27980 | Are these white men or Indians? |
27980 | Are you going to sing your death- song like them, who, when tied to the stake, recall the number of scalps they have taken? |
27980 | Are you in earnest? |
27980 | Are you mad, Bois- Rose? |
27980 | Are you sure of this? |
27980 | Arellanos also craved for mercy; did you listen to him? |
27980 | Arellanos had a son then? |
27980 | Before my mother''s murderer? 27980 Besides, it is just the sort of life I have been accustomed to; have I not always been exposed to privations and the solitude of the desert plains? |
27980 | Besides,said Pepe,"do you count for nothing, Don Fabian, heaps of gold, and a whole life of abundance for an imaginary peril? |
27980 | But I have heard it said,rejoined Tiburcio,"that it is the habit of the prairie wolf to follow the jaguar when the latter is in search of prey?" |
27980 | But did you not learn their names? |
27980 | But had we better not make some effort in favour of the unlucky man? |
27980 | But have you not heard the rumour of the camp? |
27980 | But how do you intend to act? |
27980 | But how? |
27980 | But if that could be outraged which does not exist, may I ask what attempt this young man made upon your honour? |
27980 | But intrenched as we are? |
27980 | But is the time so pressing? |
27980 | But is there such a man? |
27980 | But of whom do you speak? |
27980 | But supposing her heart is not free? |
27980 | But surely,said he,"you at least know in what country you were born?" |
27980 | But there were then a score on this little island? |
27980 | But what chance have I to recognise in a grown man the features of an infant scarce four years old? |
27980 | But what resources do you count upon? |
27980 | But what services are to gain them, senor alcalde? |
27980 | But where to go on? |
27980 | But who can be amusing himself by hunting at this time of night, and in the middle of such a desert? |
27980 | But who do you think I am, Don Vicente Tragaduros? |
27980 | But who is he? |
27980 | But who is this man? |
27980 | But why do you ask me? 27980 But why is it,"answered Don Juan,"that the broken pane is precisely the one adjacent to the fastening? |
27980 | But why, Don Estevan? |
27980 | But why, senor, did you not make the demand on your own account? |
27980 | But you are not both from the same country? |
27980 | But you have not yet told me your name? |
27980 | But you, what will become of you? |
27980 | But, when you saw it four years ago, did it not recall anything to your memory? |
27980 | But,interposed Baraja,"why may he not lose it?--to- morrow in this hunt of wild horses there will be a thousand opportunities of his losing it?" |
27980 | But,said Fabian,"if we can save a Christian, shall we let him be murdered before our eyes?" |
27980 | By what miracle of heaven do I find you here? |
27980 | Can he have any suspicion? |
27980 | Can the red warriors only scalp dead bodies? |
27980 | Can this wretch,whispered he to Pepe,"smell flesh like the ogres in the fairy tales?" |
27980 | Can we light a fire? |
27980 | Can you not remember what sort of place it was in? 27980 Child, who implores pardon, when it is I who should ask it?" |
27980 | Child,cried Bois- Rose,"do you not see that every one is here for himself, and yet that our three interests are but one? |
27980 | Come, Benito,said Don Estevan,"these are nothing but hunter''s stories you have been telling, and you wish to frighten these novices? |
27980 | Curses upon him, if he has betrayed me? |
27980 | Dare I tell you, Senor Cuchillo, the favourable impression I had of you at first sight? |
27980 | Did I not tell you? 27980 Did he accept this proposal?" |
27980 | Did n''t you indeed? 27980 Did you hear anything?" |
27980 | Do I appear firm? |
27980 | Do you come as an enemy, or a friend, Diaz? |
27980 | Do you hear it? |
27980 | Do you know him then? |
27980 | Do you know the daughter of the rich landowner Augusta Pena-- at whose hacienda, please God, we shall sleep to- morrow night? |
27980 | Do you not see,cried Fabian, impatiently,"that he is not_ branded_, which shows that he has never yet been mounted? |
27980 | Do you observe any others behind? |
27980 | Do you release me from my oath? |
27980 | Do you remember nothing of your young days, more than you have just related to the Canadian? |
27980 | Do you see a light yonder shining through the trees? |
27980 | Do you think I have a crowd of alguazils? 27980 Do you think so?" |
27980 | Do you think,said Baraja, addressing himself to Benito,"that the jaguar is likely to return again? |
27980 | Do you trace upon this moss which covers the ground the print of my horse''s hoofs when I pursued Don Estevan and his troop? |
27980 | Does Tiburcio know all this? |
27980 | Does he think it beneath him? |
27980 | Does the vile wretch, who cut your father''s throat, deserve more consideration than the noble gentleman, who murdered your mother, my son? |
27980 | Don Antonio de Mediana? |
27980 | Don Estevan, then, has received the message which I sent him? |
27980 | Don Fabian? 27980 Doubtless-- did I not tell you so?" |
27980 | For what purpose were you going there? |
27980 | From what motive? |
27980 | Good logic,exclaimed Don Estevan, in a tone of raillery,"but am I really mistaken about you, my dear Senator? |
27980 | Has he seen us? |
27980 | Has the horse been stolen from_ you_? |
27980 | Have I not said so? |
27980 | Have we not said that we wish to take you alive? |
27980 | Have you found him? |
27980 | Have you killed him? |
27980 | Have you parted with the gentlemen in whose company we saw you? |
27980 | He is Don Augustin Pena; you are not without some knowledge of his name? |
27980 | How could I be otherwise? |
27980 | How could I hinder him? 27980 How do we intend to act?" |
27980 | How long since this happened? |
27980 | How should I know? |
27980 | How sir? |
27980 | How so? |
27980 | How then can you affirm that it is impossible I should recognise him? 27980 How when they have drunk?" |
27980 | How? |
27980 | How? |
27980 | Howl at your ease,cried he,"you have not captured as yet; but,"he added, in a more serious tone,"shall we be always as lucky?" |
27980 | Hunter, of what? |
27980 | I have never forgotten the service you rendered us,said the young girl;"but why recall those times? |
27980 | I hope so,said Pepe;"and in what place have you reserved me my portion?" |
27980 | I presume you never saw him before? |
27980 | I should be noble and rich then? |
27980 | I think like Pepe,said he, after a pause,"what could I do with this gold that the world covets? |
27980 | If it please you, we shall question him? |
27980 | If it were a human voice,asked Fabian,"where did it come from? |
27980 | If that man, to destroy the last souvenir of your birth, had murdered your mother, what would he deserve from you? |
27980 | If, after a long and difficult pursuit, fate had at last delivered the spoiler into your hands, what would you do? |
27980 | In all likelihood you have scarce heard of our political troubles, Don Vicente? 27980 In the former case, I shall die with you,"said Diaz, simply,"in the latter-- but of what use is it to speak of that which can not be? |
27980 | In what? |
27980 | Is any one wounded? |
27980 | Is he not grand? 27980 Is it not fine?" |
27980 | Is it of me your excellency is speaking? |
27980 | Is it really the voice of a man? |
27980 | Is it true, then, Don Estevan,inquired the Senator, as he wiped the perspiration from his brow,"that you have been through this country before?" |
27980 | Is it you, Rosarita? |
27980 | Is it you, Tiburcio? 27980 Is not that an Indian mounting the willow?" |
27980 | Is not the poor wretch calling for aid? |
27980 | Is not the stag the emblem of independence? |
27980 | Is not this meeting a somewhat strange coincidence? |
27980 | Is not this your desire, Fabian? |
27980 | Is that all? 27980 Is that also the object of our present journey?" |
27980 | Is that really your idea? |
27980 | Is that the advice of all of you? |
27980 | Is that what I am to understand; you estimate the price of your secret and services a tenth part of the whole? |
27980 | Is that what you mean to say? 27980 Is the hour late? |
27980 | It is strange that the Indians should have found our trail again? |
27980 | It is the body of some dead mule? |
27980 | It matters little to me,replied the young man;"here or yonder, are we not always agreed?" |
27980 | It was a rich man then-- some powerful person-- whom you denounced? |
27980 | Listen there!--what did I tell you? |
27980 | Listen, Fabian,said he;"can I speak to you the language of a man? |
27980 | Mediana, did you say, my father? |
27980 | Must we sustain a new siege here? |
27980 | No; did you? |
27980 | Nothing? |
27980 | Of the Count Mediana? |
27980 | Of the money? |
27980 | Of whom do you speak? |
27980 | Of whom do you speak? |
27980 | Oh, Count Mediana, why did you kill my mother? |
27980 | One more question:--Was it for this you flung the dead body into the neighbouring river-- not quite dead, it may be? |
27980 | Pardon, Don Tiburcio? |
27980 | Pepe,whispered Bois- Rose, pointing to a tuft of osiers,"does it not seem to you that that bush has changed its form and grown larger?" |
27980 | Perfectly,replied several voices,"and first, may we know who your master is?" |
27980 | Perhaps it was me? |
27980 | Perhaps some rivalry in love? |
27980 | Perhaps you knew my father, Marcos Arellanos? 27980 Perhaps,"he added,"it is to the hacienda of Venado that you make those periodical and mysterious journeys, so much talked about at Arispe?" |
27980 | Ruined you? 27980 Senor Senator,"said Arechiza, turning toward his_ compagnon de voyage_,"this place does not appear very suitable for our noon siesta?" |
27980 | Shall I wake Fabian now? |
27980 | Shall we allow him to come on? 27980 Shall we leave one of the servants to assist you?" |
27980 | She loves him, then? |
27980 | So then, you did me the honour to speak of me, and to what purpose? |
27980 | So then,resumed Fabian,"you know nothing more of me? |
27980 | Surely this is not your final answer? |
27980 | That is true; but who knows that their eyes can not distinguish a man from a piece of wood? |
27980 | That surprises you? |
27980 | The fault of stumbling in the left fore- leg? |
27980 | The heart of Rosarita is free, Senor Don Estevan; how could it be otherwise-- she whose life has been spent in the midst of these deserts? |
27980 | The thirst of gold has caught you also, Pedro Diaz? |
27980 | The way will be easily found? |
27980 | There is a real danger, then? |
27980 | These dangers are of all kinds,replied Fabian,"why deceive oneself longer? |
27980 | Third question:--Did you not receive, in a deadly struggle, a wound in the leg? 27980 This Don Estevan de Arechiza, of whom you speak,"resumed the Canadian;"he is the same we saw at La Poza is he not-- the chief of the expedition?" |
27980 | This young fellow is, no doubt, the son of some poor devil of this province? |
27980 | This young man will be easily watched so long as he is near us; and I presume he is decided to be one of our expedition? |
27980 | To sell to me:--and who is to answer for your fidelity? |
27980 | To the Indian, the enemy he seeks? 27980 To the gold- seeker the ore, concealed by God? |
27980 | To whom then? |
27980 | Trappers do you mean? |
27980 | Unless you drew the Indians on to our track, how could they have discovered us? |
27980 | Up yonder, near the pine trees? 27980 Was if in order to precede us here that you came to take leave of us near Tubac?" |
27980 | Was not my dream a warning from God? 27980 We are going wrong, Bois- Rose,"said he,"are not those the tops of the willows on the bank?" |
27980 | Well, and the young man,interrupted the haciendado, who was almost as much moved as the daughter, on hearing these sad events,"what became of him?" |
27980 | Well, and what do you conclude from that? |
27980 | Well, but has this young man not confided to you any other secret? 27980 Well, senor, suppose we change places? |
27980 | Well, what do you think of your future son- in- law? |
27980 | Well,continued Don Estevan,"what have you learnt?" |
27980 | Well,cried Pepe, whose rage blinded his judgment,"it is useless to look at the fire; have you any method of making it deviate from its course?" |
27980 | Well,said Pepe, when Bois- Rose came to the surface to take breath,"are we firmly fixed?" |
27980 | Well,said the haciendado, smiling,"this is another proof of happiness, is it not?" |
27980 | What age do you think he is? |
27980 | What are these dangers that we three together can not brave? 27980 What are you going to do?" |
27980 | What at your words? |
27980 | What business of yours, where I got him? |
27980 | What can I do? |
27980 | What can be done then? |
27980 | What can it mean? 27980 What care I for the Medianas and their powerful race?" |
27980 | What creatures? |
27980 | What did I tell you? |
27980 | What did you do then? |
27980 | What do you know of Don Estevan? |
27980 | What do you mean to say? |
27980 | What do you mean, senor? |
27980 | What do you mean? |
27980 | What do you mean? |
27980 | What do you say to our staking, on word of honour, a little of that gold we are going to find? |
27980 | What do you say? |
27980 | What do you think, Senorita? |
27980 | What do you want of him? |
27980 | What do you want, fellow? 27980 What fashion?" |
27980 | What have you done, Pepe? |
27980 | What if the jaguars come our way? |
27980 | What is it, Don Estevan? |
27980 | What is it, your grace? |
27980 | What is it? 27980 What is it?" |
27980 | What is that? |
27980 | What is the name of your guide? |
27980 | What matter? |
27980 | What matters it? |
27980 | What mean you, Senor Arechiza? |
27980 | What need? 27980 What on earth can have brought you here at this hour, Don Juan de Dios Canelo?" |
27980 | What ought I do with this man? 27980 What rumour? |
27980 | What say you, Canadian? |
27980 | What shall we reply? |
27980 | What signifies human destiny; for twenty years past you say you have owed your life to the absence of a tree? |
27980 | What signifies that, so long as my daughter does not love him? |
27980 | What sort of figure? |
27980 | What the deuce have you got there, Bois- Rose? |
27980 | What was bringing him to the hacienda, then-- for that is upon the route? 27980 What will I do with it? |
27980 | What will I do with it? |
27980 | What will you do with it? |
27980 | What, dead? |
27980 | Where are you going, Tiburcio? |
27980 | Where are you taking me? |
27980 | Where is he? |
27980 | Where? |
27980 | Who are you then? |
27980 | Who are you, and what do you want? |
27980 | Who are you, sir? |
27980 | Who are you? |
27980 | Who believes that? |
27980 | Who can prove that Tiburcio Arellanos is the son of the murdered lady? 27980 Who dare knock in that fashion?" |
27980 | Who else could I mean, you sot? 27980 Who gave you this information?" |
27980 | Who goes there? |
27980 | Who killed him? |
27980 | Who knows that better than I? |
27980 | Who knows? |
27980 | Who knows? |
27980 | Who sold you this horse six weeks ago? |
27980 | Who talks of being compelled? |
27980 | Who tells the shepherd,he cried,"where the den of the jaguar is to be found that devours his sheep? |
27980 | Who tells the vaquero where the horse that he pursues has taken refuge? 27980 Who the devil can they be?" |
27980 | Who the devil wants your music? |
27980 | Who would have expected to find, in the middle of the desert, such an accomplished beauty? 27980 Who would love me when you were gone?" |
27980 | Who would not have been, in your place, my beloved Fabian? |
27980 | Who-- of whom do you speak? |
27980 | Whom? |
27980 | Why doubt my courage? |
27980 | Why not? |
27980 | Why should I conceal it from you longer? |
27980 | Why should they open their ears? |
27980 | Why so frequently allude to this subject, my father? |
27980 | Why that? |
27980 | Why then so soon pollute a life which is scarcely begun? 27980 Why this halt, Diaz?" |
27980 | Why this question? 27980 Why trouble yourself about it?" |
27980 | Why? 27980 Why?" |
27980 | Will that do? |
27980 | Will you allow me to put the fire out? |
27980 | Will you tell me how Tiburcio Arellanos can be Fabian de Mediana? |
27980 | Yes, but your daughter loves him-- perhaps you were not aware of that fact? |
27980 | Yes,replied the latter,"what of it?" |
27980 | Yes; and by what chance are you so far from the camp? |
27980 | You already knew, then, that we were here? |
27980 | You are a hunter by profession-- I think I have heard you say? |
27980 | You are sure you are not wounded? |
27980 | You can remember no more? |
27980 | You could hardly guess, Senor Don Estevan, who is the man your generosity has saved-- for I have brought him with me safe and sound, as you see? |
27980 | You could not have imagined, could you, Pepe? |
27980 | You have heard the name before? |
27980 | You have seen it, and not possessed yourself of it? |
27980 | You have sent for me? |
27980 | You hear him? |
27980 | You heard, did you say? |
27980 | You knew him then? |
27980 | You know her, then? |
27980 | You know him, then? |
27980 | You say you have never been beyond Tubac? 27980 You see what is going on?" |
27980 | You will not say it? 27980 You wish for a more precise explanation?" |
27980 | You, who? |
27980 | Your father and mother-- are they dead? |
27980 | Your honour will dismount? |
27980 | _ Quien sabe_--who knows? |
27980 | ` Did you hear nothing?'' 27980 A hundred times, in the silence of the night, I recalled that suppliant voice, and asked myself in anguish, What did he then hear? 27980 Accuser, witness, and judge were all before him, but who was to be the executioner? 27980 After a minute''s silence, another spoke:The whites have doubtless a thousand stratagems at their service, but can they increase their stature? |
27980 | After four days in which we took a different path, do we not find them near these mountains? |
27980 | Afterwards, too, at the festivals of the neighbouring villages, a hundred times had he gazed upon her; but what of that? |
27980 | And his father, also, he must have trembled for the life of a beloved son?" |
27980 | And if it please Pepe and I to incur them for you, what then?" |
27980 | And which of us is it, friend,"continued he, with an ironical air,"to whom you wish to teach this law?" |
27980 | And you have seen this Golden Valley you say with your own eyes?" |
27980 | Are there not in Spain tribunals which dispense justice to all? |
27980 | Are you in truth,"he continued,"that Don Antonio, whom men here call the Count de Mediana?" |
27980 | Are you not three to one? |
27980 | Are you satisfied with this assurance?" |
27980 | Are you sure they are alone, Bois- Rose?" |
27980 | Are you sure?" |
27980 | Are you that man, senor Senator?" |
27980 | At length the latter said gently,"Fabian bore another name, Senorita; do you wish to hear it, while we are alone and without witnesses?" |
27980 | At this moment Pedro Diaz raised the door of the tent, and said,"You sent for me, Senor Don Estevan?" |
27980 | But are you quite safe?" |
27980 | But first tell me what you think of this distant firing?" |
27980 | But how did_ you_ discover this_ placer_?" |
27980 | But let me return to the expedition; about how many men composed it, do you guess?" |
27980 | But they will say it of me now, and is not that enough?" |
27980 | But was this really the position of Tiburcio with Rosarita? |
27980 | But what has happened? |
27980 | But what is to be done now? |
27980 | But why dwell longer upon such scenes? |
27980 | But why, then, had not Tiburcio, as she always called him, returned to the hacienda? |
27980 | But you say you wish to speak to me about some business-- what is it, Friar Jose Maria?" |
27980 | But you will carry on my work? |
27980 | But, pray what is the name of the master of whom you speak?" |
27980 | By this time everything will be cold, and Nicolasa-- What do these bits of glass prove?" |
27980 | Can I rely upon you, gentlemen?" |
27980 | Can they be greater than what we have just passed through? |
27980 | Cuchillo was yet smiling, when Fabian exclaimed--"Were you paid for assassinating Marcos Arellanos?" |
27980 | Did he dread his approaching defeat? |
27980 | Did you count how many rifles the Indians had?" |
27980 | Did you not agree that it should be consummated when we knew that Don Estevan could not return? |
27980 | Do not therefore be ungrateful; for, why not admit it? |
27980 | Do you begin to understand me?" |
27980 | Do you believe that one could die of love?" |
27980 | Do you call this frail rampart of osiers and reeds an intrenchment? |
27980 | Do you know any prayers for the dying, Senor Baraja?" |
27980 | Do you know whether or not we have the right to demand from him, whom you doubtless know only as Don Estevan, a terrible account of the past? |
27980 | Do you know who is the man for whom you wish to expose your life? |
27980 | Do you not know something?" |
27980 | Do you not remember that this man was suddenly separated from you in the midst of a terrible affray--?" |
27980 | Do you not think so, Pepe?" |
27980 | Do you perceive a single star farther down, which scarce shines through the vapour? |
27980 | Do you remember the place?" |
27980 | Do you see any obstacle to it, Rosarita?" |
27980 | Do you think these leaves are ball proof? |
27980 | Do you think, Don Fabian, that the Golden Valley is far off?" |
27980 | Do you understand? |
27980 | Does not everything prove that Don Estevan knows also of the existence of the Golden Valley?" |
27980 | Does not infinity surround me here? |
27980 | Does your heart agree to it? |
27980 | Don Estevan? |
27980 | Either he was dead, or he no longer loved her? |
27980 | Even should all the riches of the Golden Valley remain forever buried in these deserts, what would it avail me now? |
27980 | Fabian lived, and loved her still, what more could she desire? |
27980 | For instance, has he said nothing to you about an affair of the heart?--has he not told you he was in love?" |
27980 | Had he not in prospect the possession of a rich placer? |
27980 | Had he the stoical resignation of which he himself had given so many proofs? |
27980 | Had the desert claimed these three noble spirits, as it has done so many others? |
27980 | Has Cuchillo returned?" |
27980 | Have I not understood you to say, Senor Cuchillo, that you were to be the guide of our expedition? |
27980 | Have you by chance heard anything of this grand expedition that is being organised at Tubac?" |
27980 | Have you noticed the young man whom chance brought into our company? |
27980 | Have_ you_ nothing better to propose, Bois- Rose?" |
27980 | He has heard a noise, he raises his head; do not the drops that fall from his mouth look like liquid gold? |
27980 | He is dead; what then do you wish?" |
27980 | How many days''journey is it from hence to the hacienda?" |
27980 | How many men has Don Estevan with him?" |
27980 | How many will remain to partake with me? |
27980 | How was he( Tiburcio) to arrive at a complete understanding? |
27980 | However I bring you a prisoner; do you wish to interrogate him?" |
27980 | However, he restrained himself, and replied gravely, though with trembling lips--"Who, then, sends you to me, messenger of ill?" |
27980 | I am nothing more to you than what I seem?" |
27980 | I have escaped from the Salto de Agua?" |
27980 | I have followed their example in regard to you; and now may I ask you who you are, and what happened at the hacienda to drive you forth from it?" |
27980 | I heard your piece speak-- have you throwed him, Pepe?" |
27980 | I understand you,"said the Senator, turning a sly look upon his companion,"it was the beautiful eyes of the daughter that attracted you, the--?" |
27980 | I was almost sure of it-- but are you also certain?" |
27980 | If not, what shall we do with you?" |
27980 | In fact, since I have not been able to recognise you, I do not see how_ he_ can?" |
27980 | In his belief some crime had been committed, but how was it to be explained-- since the assassin had left no traces of his guilt? |
27980 | Into what new course might I precipitate this torrent of ambition that was boiling within me? |
27980 | Is Baraja living?" |
27980 | Is he not beautiful? |
27980 | Is it not for movement, for fighting, and for the powerful emotions of the desert that man is born?" |
27980 | Is it not gold that gives glory, pleasure, and every good of this world? |
27980 | Is it not so?" |
27980 | Is it possible to be too quick in obtaining happiness?" |
27980 | Is it possible, Rosarita, that you have forgotten those sweet souvenirs upon which I have lived from that day up to the present hour?" |
27980 | Is it possible? |
27980 | Is it that you mean?" |
27980 | Is n''t he the most splendid quadruped that ever galloped through these woods?" |
27980 | Is the night not better for your purpose? |
27980 | Is there not in truth a law which assimilates the criminal with the upright though insolvent debtor, and compels him to the same fate in prison? |
27980 | Is this Golden Valley in that part of the country where I intended to have taken my expedition?" |
27980 | It does not surprise you?" |
27980 | It was therefore in a less severe tone that he asked--"Of what crime am I then accused?" |
27980 | It would be a sad affair if you were to lose your place?" |
27980 | Might he not, by the puissance of gold, discover who were his real parents? |
27980 | Misfortunes did we not say? |
27980 | Must he again fly from that Golden Valley, from which fate seemed always to drive him? |
27980 | Must that be accomplished in death? |
27980 | Nothing? |
27980 | Now I restore it all for my life-- what can you want more?" |
27980 | Now what say you?" |
27980 | Now, Fabian, shall we wait for the enemy here, or shall we fill our pockets with gold and return?" |
27980 | Now,"continued he, once more raising his voice,"where can he have gone, unless to yonder fire in the woods?" |
27980 | On the other hand, so near the object of his ambition, was he to permit this barrier to stand in his way? |
27980 | One fear tormented him; he had seen Fabian in danger when his blood was boiling with passion, but had he the calm courage which meets death coolly? |
27980 | Pepe!--where are you?" |
27980 | Pepe, the Sleeper?" |
27980 | Pepe-- you know well enough? |
27980 | Perhaps,"continued he, observing that Tiburcio made no reply,"you have been up to the house already?" |
27980 | Senor Cuchillo? |
27980 | Should he, then, after having passed the middle of his career, again embitter the remainder of his days by another deed of blood? |
27980 | So young, so brave, so handsome, must you meet the same fate as a man who would soon be useless in the world?" |
27980 | Such charms were created to shine in afar higher sphere?" |
27980 | Suddenly aroused, the coast- guard was asked if he had seen or heard anything? |
27980 | Suppose you miss them?" |
27980 | Suppose you mount behind me, and let us be off?" |
27980 | Supposing I could give you all that has been promised you? |
27980 | Supposing, then, that one of the actors should fail in performing his part, and the spectators have to take his place? |
27980 | Swear, then, to pursue to the death the murderer of Arellanos?'' |
27980 | That Don Estevan is not going by mere hazard to search for a mine of gold; but that he already knows of the existence of a rich placer? |
27980 | The first is:--In your expedition with Arellanos, had you not a horse that stumbled in the left leg?" |
27980 | The white men of the south are being attacked now; why are the men of the north not against them?" |
27980 | The window was hanging open, and the wind clashing it violently against the frame, would readily cause the breaking of a pane?" |
27980 | Then aloud:"A philosophical maxim?" |
27980 | Then once more facing round to the fire, he hazarded a last question:"Do you not remember one circumstance above all? |
27980 | There are two bullets in my gun, and with these and a sure eye, what care I for a jaguar? |
27980 | They have certainly some reason for keeping themselves at a distance? |
27980 | Was it in a house? |
27980 | Was it not I who first apprised his widow of the unfortunate occurrence, having myself heard of it by chance?" |
27980 | Was it not here that, by the intervention of a miracle, I again found you in the heart of this forest, after having lost you upon the wide ocean? |
27980 | Was it not so?" |
27980 | Was it so with Rosarita? |
27980 | Was the deed already done? |
27980 | Was there no woman whom he may perchance have had in his confidence?" |
27980 | Well, Fabian, do you see the advantage of firing in file? |
27980 | Well, have you saved the man? |
27980 | Well,_ quien sabe_? |
27980 | Were they as rich and powerful as they might have been? |
27980 | What became of Fabian? |
27980 | What can we do?" |
27980 | What can you mean?" |
27980 | What can you offer to me-- to my father?" |
27980 | What do you know of Don Estevan de Arechiza?" |
27980 | What do you say, Bois- Rose? |
27980 | What do you say, Bois- Rose?" |
27980 | What had become of these intrepid hunters who had willingly encountered fatigues, privations and dangers, instead of returning to civilised life? |
27980 | What have I to regret in this world?" |
27980 | What matters? |
27980 | What reception would he meet with from Dona Rosarita? |
27980 | What say you? |
27980 | What say you?" |
27980 | What should I do with such riches?" |
27980 | What then do the laws of the desert decree?" |
27980 | What think you, Bois- Rose? |
27980 | What was to be done with this droll fellow? |
27980 | What were they to her? |
27980 | What would gold be to me? |
27980 | When I saved him, and attached myself to him as though he had been my own, did I ask about his ancestors?" |
27980 | When the Indians come to steal his cattle from the vaquero, does he sit still and say:_ God only can prevent them_? |
27980 | Who can guess how many conflicting thoughts crowded upon the mind of the Spanish nobleman, as he lay upon the ground? |
27980 | Who could Tiburcio be in love with in these deserts? |
27980 | Who could foresee what new stratagems the Indians might employ against them? |
27980 | Who do you think he was?" |
27980 | Who does not know him?" |
27980 | Who does not love it at times?" |
27980 | Who is to assure you that to- morrow I may not change my mind?" |
27980 | Who is to prevent me presently, when daylight appears, from picking up as much as I can carry without betraying my secret? |
27980 | Who knows how many enemies we have around us now?" |
27980 | Who persuaded you to make this last trial? |
27980 | Who sent him to seek this beautiful and gracious lady, and learn if in her heart, she still treasured your memory? |
27980 | Who watched over your slumbers during long nights, to hear from your lips the secret wishes of your heart? |
27980 | Why did I indulge in such a foolish hope? |
27980 | Why do you ask my pardon, when I tell you it is I, who should ask yours?" |
27980 | Why do you not take some rest, like our companions?" |
27980 | Why have these travellers not come here to demand hospitality? |
27980 | Why might not the same hand restore him to me in the midst of the desert? |
27980 | Why refuse to follow a course which the unlooked- for favour of Providence opens to you? |
27980 | Why should I consider this a miracle? |
27980 | Why should I, who do not know what to do with this gold, risk my life to obtain it? |
27980 | Why then are not human laws a counterpart of these divine decrees? |
27980 | Why?" |
27980 | Will that be agreeable to you?" |
27980 | Will the words which your ears will transmit to your heart not freeze it with terror?" |
27980 | Would it not tell of dangers overcome, and surround itself with a double halo of sacrifice and suffering? |
27980 | Would not that countenance, ennobled by toil and travel, remind Dona Rosarita of the love for which she had every reason to feel proud and happy? |
27980 | Would not that enable him to overcome all obstacles both of the past and the future? |
27980 | Would you have the kindness, my dear friend, to give me a light for my cigar?" |
27980 | You are not acquainted either with my name or rank? |
27980 | You are old-- weak in consequence-- and without resources?" |
27980 | You can swim, Fabian?" |
27980 | You have given to my captain forty_ onzas_?" |
27980 | You hear how silent all is after so much noise?" |
27980 | You promise, then, that all the gold of this valley shall be mine?" |
27980 | You were perhaps more fortunate than I? |
27980 | You will return to the Senator Tragaduros-- he knows what he has to do, and you will support him?" |
27980 | You yourself, Pepe-- would_ you_ wish to return to your own country, since you have known the charms of a wandering life?" |
27980 | ` Is this the language of a man? |
27980 | added he more slowly and significantly,"the times are pretty hard with us-- are they not?" |
27980 | all this gold?" |
27980 | and by the same means, might he not realise that sweeter dream that had now for two years held possession of his heart? |
27980 | and fourth: Did you not carry upon your shoulder the dead body of Arellanos?" |
27980 | and has he gold lace on his hat, and a fine face?" |
27980 | and who are those who have spared it? |
27980 | and who are you then, senor, may I ask in my turn?" |
27980 | another suspicion?" |
27980 | answered Fabian,"but you do not perhaps know what a terrible duty I have to fulfil?" |
27980 | began Arechiza, who appeared to make light of the impatience of his_ protege_,"what do you think of the daughter of our host? |
27980 | can you remember that?" |
27980 | continued Fabian,"that so much gold could be collected in one place? |
27980 | continued the speaker;"what object to follow next? |
27980 | cried Diaz,"shall I commit such a cowardice? |
27980 | cried Fabian sadly;"do you forgive me for suffering myself to be vanquished?" |
27980 | cried Fabian, in a scarcely perceptible voice,"or a delusive vision which will quickly disappear?" |
27980 | cried Fabian,"has Cuchillo long possessed this grey horse, which, as you may be aware, has a habit of stumbling?" |
27980 | cried Fabian;"but what have you heard?" |
27980 | cried Fabian;"is it Cuchillo of whom you speak?" |
27980 | cried Pepe;"what causes this sudden panic?" |
27980 | cried he,"Don Estevan knows of the Golden Valley? |
27980 | cried he,"I see a man approaching at full gallop: it is Gayferos or Cuchillo?" |
27980 | cried she,"are you wounded? |
27980 | cried the_ femme de chambre_, with a hypocritical whine,"my poor mistress!--who then is to help her?" |
27980 | do not leave us so; do you wish to bring upon our house the malediction of heaven?" |
27980 | do you hear that?" |
27980 | do you know anything of Elanchovi?" |
27980 | do you not fall on your knees to thank God for being one of those called to share in these treasures?" |
27980 | do you not rejoice to become in your old age rich and powerful?" |
27980 | do you see anything?" |
27980 | does he not suspect the existence of the Golden Valley?" |
27980 | does not the neighbourhood of those places, so fertile in gold, give new vigour to your limbs?" |
27980 | exclaimed Don Estevan,"jealous of this ragged rustic?" |
27980 | exclaimed Don Estevan;"and who knows but that to- morrow may be too late? |
27980 | exclaimed Pepe, appearing to become more interested;"has anything happened to you?" |
27980 | exclaimed Pepe;"you have accepted the offer, of course?" |
27980 | exclaimed the Senator,"the proprietor of the Hacienda del Venado? |
27980 | have I exaggerated her beauty?" |
27980 | have I not still, if I should become ambitious, the name and fortunes of my forefathers to reclaim? |
27980 | he continued, raising his voice;"do n''t you think that the breeze which was blowing roughly last night might have caused this? |
27980 | he cried with some warmth,"did you not yourself consent to this marriage only a month ago? |
27980 | he cried,"in the name of your mother-- for Dona Rosarita''s sake, who loves you, for I know that she loves you-- I heard--""What?" |
27980 | he died a conqueror? |
27980 | he is in love with your daughter?" |
27980 | he must then be his son?" |
27980 | he saw, before he died, the white dogs dispersed over the plain?" |
27980 | he stammered out in a weak voice,"who told you that? |
27980 | how?" |
27980 | independent of the chagrin which this affair has caused you, are you not also affected by some fears about your own future? |
27980 | inquired Diaz,"and who may he be?" |
27980 | interrupted Bois- Rose, in a soft, appealing tone, as if he was speaking to an infant--"what has become of you?" |
27980 | interrupted Don Augustin,"surely you did not permit this infraction of God''s law, who says,_ vengeance belongs only to Him_?" |
27980 | is it time to set forth upon the chase? |
27980 | is it you, Pedro Diaz?" |
27980 | is it you, Senor Benito?" |
27980 | is it you, Senor Cuchillo?" |
27980 | is not the desert preferable to cities?" |
27980 | is that the name he goes by here?" |
27980 | is this will in consonance with your own? |
27980 | it is you, my poor Benito?" |
27980 | it is you,_ Don_ Gregorio?" |
27980 | must we kill you, then? |
27980 | my master; will you afford hospitality to two strangers for a day and a night?" |
27980 | no doubt you have penetrated to the bottom and know all-- you, whose perspicacity is only equalled by the tenderness of your conscience?" |
27980 | no doubt your friend was in the wrong, and you received great provocation?" |
27980 | oh, speak it?" |
27980 | one more question?" |
27980 | or beg him to continue his journey?" |
27980 | or do you not remember whether the sea was around you? |
27980 | or have I been three days asleep?" |
27980 | or with a bold effort to rid himself of the obstacle? |
27980 | rejoined Don Lucas, with a laugh,"you do n''t appear to suffer much of the misery-- you are always asleep I understand?" |
27980 | said Baraja, as he did not go on,"what more terrifying things have you to say?" |
27980 | said Baraja,"have you ever been present at such a thing?" |
27980 | said Bois- Rose,"and why not?" |
27980 | said Bois- Rose,"for what perfidy has he need of us?" |
27980 | said Bois- Rose,"or only one of those singular echoes which resound in these mountains?" |
27980 | said Bois- Rose,"what do you mean?" |
27980 | said Bois- Rose;"is his life worth that of the last of the Medianas?" |
27980 | said Fabian,"can not we three uproot the island, as Pepe said?" |
27980 | said Fabian,"what have you to say in your defence?" |
27980 | said he to Gayferos,"you probably belong to the camp of Don Estevan?" |
27980 | said he,"for this rudeness; but allow me to ask you another question?" |
27980 | said the young girl,"did you not hear a noise?" |
27980 | shall I again hear those frightful howls which troubled my sleep?" |
27980 | she murmured, softly,"do I not visit it every evening?" |
27980 | such youthful freshness? |
27980 | we killed first five Indians, then three, that makes eight; there should have been twelve left; why did we only count ten in the water? |
27980 | what did I tell you?" |
27980 | what''s that to me? |
27980 | what?" |
27980 | where did you get this horse, Cuchillo?" |
27980 | who are you talking of?" |
27980 | who is this Fabian of whom you speak?" |
27980 | why did they not leave me to die upon the road?" |
27980 | why might not these travellers, who appear to shun it for that very reason prove friends to me?" |
27980 | why was not I killed instead of him? |
27980 | would it not be the time to attempt a descent on the bank?" |
27980 | you are innocent of the crime of which they accuse you?" |
27980 | you do not make answer-- you love him, Rosarita? |
27980 | you expected me then?" |
27980 | you have been rich then?" |
10920 | A viscountess? 10920 AM I NOT A WOMAN AND A SISTER?" |
10920 | About the belt-- the money which he lost? 10920 About what? |
10920 | Ah? 10920 Ah? |
10920 | Ah? 10920 Ah? |
10920 | Ai n''t I good now? |
10920 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourselves, lads? |
10920 | All the while? 10920 All!--isn''t it pretty? |
10920 | An old friend of yours? |
10920 | And as beautiful as ever? |
10920 | And because you have no patience, you think Marie will have none? |
10920 | And does it count for nothing that they felt it the finest thing in the world to have gone on it, had it been possible? 10920 And fared, how?" |
10920 | And he did not die? |
10920 | And how do you know that, sir? 10920 And is not murder a moral offence-- what you call a sin?" |
10920 | And liked it a great deal better than the review? |
10920 | And listen to the Gospel? |
10920 | And now you are going to stay at home? |
10920 | And the lady?--is that she? |
10920 | And the second? |
10920 | And this, after all--"After what? 10920 And what be you thinking of, sir, to expect me to offend all my best patients? |
10920 | And what good will the magnifying glass do to us? |
10920 | And what if I did? 10920 And what if it be?" |
10920 | And what shall we be changed to when we die? |
10920 | And who took her home? |
10920 | And why not? |
10920 | And why should it not be? |
10920 | And you are sure He will accept me, after all? |
10920 | And you mean to make me your tool? 10920 And,"said Prank, utterly taken aback by Tom''s business- like levity,"you would actually have stood to shoot, and be shot at, across a handkerchief?" |
10920 | Are you not going to Lady M----''s, too? |
10920 | Are you, too, going to quote Scripture against me? 10920 Ashamed of you? |
10920 | Be you man enough? |
10920 | Because all the features can not be in focus at once? |
10920 | Because he adores me, and so forth? 10920 Belt, what''s a belt? |
10920 | Belt-- money? 10920 Boord, sir? |
10920 | Broomsquires? |
10920 | Buffalo bulls? |
10920 | But are not doctors men? |
10920 | But can nothing be done to keep it off now? 10920 But indeed, ma''am, if you thought you could trust him, there is that new assistant--""The man who was saved from the wreck? |
10920 | But is he not fond of his children? |
10920 | But public opinion, my lord? |
10920 | But suppose he had accepted-- or suppose Trebooze accepts still? |
10920 | But the child you held? |
10920 | But who has eyes to see it? |
10920 | But would you forbid them to paint passion? |
10920 | But, Grace-- Miss Harvey-- You will not be angry with me if I ask?--Why speak so often, as if finding this money depended on you alone? 10920 But-- excuse my boldness; what plainer way of getting it back from the rascal, whoever he is?" |
10920 | But-- sir?--Why-- sir? |
10920 | By each other''s potions? 10920 By you?" |
10920 | Can I prescribe for you this morning? |
10920 | Clever? |
10920 | Could n''t you just go yourself, my dear sir? 10920 Cure?" |
10920 | Cut you? |
10920 | DEAR MRS. MELLOT-- Whom should I find when I went home, but Campbell? 10920 Decay be hanged? |
10920 | Did n''t desert the poor things? |
10920 | Did you ever find me angry at anything you said? |
10920 | Did you ever hear a poor old man so tyrannised over? |
10920 | Did you ever,said Tom,"hear the story of the two Sandhurst broom- squires?" |
10920 | Did you go? |
10920 | Do n''t you know already that this is a house of mystery, full of mysterious people? 10920 Do n''t you wish yours was, Doctor?" |
10920 | Do you fancy they acted up to their ideals? 10920 Do you know him?" |
10920 | Do you know that it is getting very late? |
10920 | Do you know the name? 10920 Do you know, then, what this same obligation may be?" |
10920 | Do you mean to frighten us by boasting? 10920 Do you remember the devil''s temptation of our Lord--''Cast thyself down from hence; for, it is written, He shall give His angels charge over thee?" |
10920 | Do you take me for a sordid schemer, like yourself? 10920 Do you think so? |
10920 | Do you? |
10920 | Do you? |
10920 | Does he bully her? |
10920 | Does he drink? |
10920 | Does he think we was all fools afore he came here? |
10920 | Does not this fact put the question at rest for ever? |
10920 | Eh, Captain Willis? |
10920 | Eh? 10920 Eh? |
10920 | Eh? 10920 Eh?" |
10920 | Eighty thousand nonsense? 10920 Engaged to her?" |
10920 | Every word of what? |
10920 | Explained what? |
10920 | Father, sir? 10920 Fond? |
10920 | For me? 10920 For my sake? |
10920 | Found? |
10920 | Go home? 10920 Hanged?" |
10920 | Has he vampoosed with the contents of a till, that he wishes so for solitude? |
10920 | Have I played my ace ill after all? |
10920 | Have you not a key to Uncle Tom''s Cabin, more pathetic than any word of man''s or woman''s? |
10920 | Have_ you_ heard anything of it, Miss Harvey? 10920 He will not trouble you any more; and you will not surely throw up your engagement?" |
10920 | Hillo!--who''s that? 10920 Hope? |
10920 | How can I doubt that I shall? |
10920 | How can you expect him to believe, if he has no proof? |
10920 | How d''e do, darling? 10920 How did he get hold of all the specimens, as he calls them? |
10920 | How much more do you think you''ll want? |
10920 | How should you know anything? 10920 How then?" |
10920 | Hum? |
10920 | I a hero in her eyes? 10920 I do; but what has that to do with me?" |
10920 | I get ashore? 10920 I hear you have thoughts of taking the school from her, sir?" |
10920 | I hope I am not taking a liberty, sir; but I think I am bound to--"What in heaven is he going to say? |
10920 | I mean-- what has he to do with her? |
10920 | I saw a white thing flash by to leeward,--what''s the use of asking? |
10920 | I say,yawned the young gentleman,"where''s old Heale?" |
10920 | I say-- what have you got there? |
10920 | I, sir? |
10920 | I, sir? |
10920 | I-- I, sir? 10920 I? |
10920 | I? 10920 I?--No-- why?--what?" |
10920 | If he is mistaken? |
10920 | If it is all true, mother, what else is there worth thinking of in heaven or earth? |
10920 | In plain words, you have quarrelled with him? |
10920 | Insulted your nation? 10920 Is it possible,"said Tom to himself,"that Trebooze has sent me a challenge? |
10920 | Is this Whitbury? |
10920 | Is this, then, your Sir Galahad? |
10920 | Know it? |
10920 | Knowledge is power: but how to use it? 10920 Laudanum, sir?" |
10920 | Lie? |
10920 | Madam? 10920 Marie, what do you mean?" |
10920 | May I ask one question, sir? |
10920 | May I ask, is she your niece? 10920 May I take the liberty of asking your name?" |
10920 | Medicine? |
10920 | Miss Harvey, will you forgive me? |
10920 | Money? |
10920 | Mr. Heale,said Tom next,"are we Whigs or Tories here?" |
10920 | My heart? |
10920 | My influence? |
10920 | Never indulge? 10920 No children?" |
10920 | No hope? |
10920 | No; but what do you mean? |
10920 | None? 10920 Not paint what is there? |
10920 | Not so badly put; but what should I do in that case? 10920 Nothing more? |
10920 | Obligation to me, my dear sir? |
10920 | Oh, Clara, what shall I do? 10920 Oh, Mr. Thurnall: but is it not God''s doing? |
10920 | Oh, do n''t you know, sir? 10920 Oh, is it not giving them time to repent? |
10920 | Oh, want to go first- class with me, eh? 10920 On me?" |
10920 | Or buy any of Claude''s pictures? |
10920 | Own some houses? 10920 Pretty creature, am I? |
10920 | Public opinion? 10920 Recovering? |
10920 | Rome? |
10920 | Sha n''t? |
10920 | Shall I come in to- morrow morning? 10920 Shalott? |
10920 | She takes the children to church twice a Sunday, do n''t she? 10920 She would sell her soul for me? |
10920 | Sir, be you an infidel? |
10920 | Snakes? |
10920 | So I am not an understanding body, Bowie? |
10920 | So he, then, has achieved the Quest of the Sangreal? |
10920 | So you mingle business with science? |
10920 | So,said Tom, as he went home,"he has found his way to the elevation- bottle, has he, as well as Mrs. Heale? |
10920 | Someone? 10920 Steady?" |
10920 | Strange, is it not, that it was a duty to pray for all these poor things last night, and a sin to pray for them this morning? |
10920 | Stupid, this reciting? 10920 Tell you, sir? |
10920 | That''s what Campbell is always saying: but what more can I do than I do? 10920 The Government? |
10920 | The belt? 10920 The cholera?" |
10920 | The cholera? |
10920 | The only friend, Marie? |
10920 | Then he, I am to suppose, is your phantom- husband, for as long, at least, as your present dream lasts? |
10920 | Then she was not angry? |
10920 | Then why do you encourage him in it, sir? 10920 Then why does she call him an idler?" |
10920 | Then why go bothering me this way? |
10920 | Then why not comfort yourself by trying to find a little fresh good wherever you go? |
10920 | Then would you have a clergyman never warn his people of their sins? |
10920 | Then you really are a professional practitioner, sir, as Mr. Headley informs me: though, of course, I do n''t doubt the fact? |
10920 | Then you were by all the while? |
10920 | This once? 10920 Thurnall? |
10920 | Thurnall? |
10920 | To Germany? 10920 To the Rhine? |
10920 | Very ill."Did you ever try opiates? |
10920 | Very true, very true; but how did you get ashore? |
10920 | Very well- spoken young person, though his beard is a bit wild.--How did you know, then, that I was a doctor? |
10920 | Was any one else close to her when we were brought ashore? |
10920 | Was her mother by her when she was lying on the rock? |
10920 | Was she the person to accuse a poor widowed mother, struggling to leave her child something to keep her out of the workhouse? 10920 We will go, then: to the Rhine, shall it be? |
10920 | Well, Captain Willis? |
10920 | Well, Mr. Armsworth, what am I to do? |
10920 | Well, Mr. Beer, and is n''t that better than quarrelling with you? 10920 Well, but who could? |
10920 | Well, do n''t you put up the Ten Commandments in your Church? |
10920 | Well, madam? |
10920 | Well, my lord? |
10920 | Well, sir? |
10920 | Well, then, ca n''t we find another householder-- some cantankerous dog who do n''t mind a row? |
10920 | Well, then, sir,said Tom,"you will answer for none of the four sailors having robbed me?" |
10920 | Well, what of that? 10920 Well; and what did she say?" |
10920 | Well? 10920 Well?" |
10920 | Well? |
10920 | Well? |
10920 | Well? |
10920 | What about it? |
10920 | What are you doing, my poor child, here in the cold night air? |
10920 | What became of the lady? |
10920 | What d''ye think he says to me last week? 10920 What d''ye think he served me last week? |
10920 | What do you know about women''s hearts? 10920 What do you mean now?" |
10920 | What do you mean, frightening a lady in that way? 10920 What do you mean, sir? |
10920 | What do you mean, sir? |
10920 | What do you mean? 10920 What do you mean?" |
10920 | What do you mean? |
10920 | What do you want here, with your mummery and medicine, when you know the cause of my malady well enough already? 10920 What does the fellow mean? |
10920 | What for, then? |
10920 | What gulfs are these you dream of? 10920 What have you done?" |
10920 | What is it? 10920 What is it?" |
10920 | What is it? |
10920 | What is it?--what are the guns? |
10920 | What is that to you, sir? |
10920 | What is that? |
10920 | What is this Mr. Thurnall has been saying to me about his belt and money which he lost? |
10920 | What of that? 10920 What use? |
10920 | What was that, then? |
10920 | What were the guns from, then, Brown? |
10920 | What would she say of me, then? |
10920 | What''s become of a Lord Vieuxbois, who used to live somewhere hereabouts? 10920 What''s that collier- lad hollering about, Captain Willis?" |
10920 | What''s that? |
10920 | What''s that? |
10920 | What, do you wish to quarrel with me, sir? 10920 What, my dear Grace?" |
10920 | What,asks the satellite,"after you upset he that fashion yesterday?" |
10920 | What? 10920 When will come the end of this accursed coil which I have wound round my life?" |
10920 | Where have you been, child? 10920 Where you are now?" |
10920 | Where? 10920 Which he needs, or which he likes? |
10920 | Which name were you speaking of? |
10920 | Which of the two could you best do without? |
10920 | Who are you, now? 10920 Who be you?" |
10920 | Who else could have done so, on your own showing? |
10920 | Who is Grace? |
10920 | Who so cruel at times as your too benevolent philanthropist? 10920 Who then can be saved?" |
10920 | Who was this man? 10920 Why did you begin at all, then?" |
10920 | Why do n''t you get up, Tom? |
10920 | Why do you torment me so? 10920 Why do you want to know where he is?" |
10920 | Why keep it? 10920 Why not indeed?" |
10920 | Why not laughing at him? |
10920 | Why not, again, if he diminished the marks in proportion? |
10920 | Why not, if they were there? |
10920 | Why not, indeed, sir? 10920 Why not? |
10920 | Why not? 10920 Why should not Lord Scoutbush emulate his illustrious countryman, conquer at a second Waterloo, and die a duke?" |
10920 | Why should you? |
10920 | Why talk in these parables? |
10920 | Why then, sir? |
10920 | Why, in Heaven''s name? |
10920 | Why, then, my good friend? |
10920 | Why, then? |
10920 | Why, there are none such to be found now- a- days, I thought? |
10920 | Why, what did you ask me here for? |
10920 | Why, what is this? |
10920 | Why,roared Mark again,"ai n''t you Mrs. Grove, of Drytown Dirtywater?" |
10920 | Why? 10920 Will the gentleman see the corpses?" |
10920 | Will you be angry if I tell you honestly? |
10920 | Will you be so kind as to let me pass? |
10920 | Will you do it? |
10920 | Will you forget? |
10920 | Will you insult me beyond endurance? |
10920 | Willy dead? 10920 Wins? |
10920 | Wo n''t you read it at once, Mr. Thurnall? 10920 Wo n''t you walk up?" |
10920 | Would Mrs. Vavasour write, then? |
10920 | Would he write, then, and represent matters to Lord Scoutbush? |
10920 | Would he( so he asked the lieutenant privately)"get some one to join him, and present a few of these nuisances?" |
10920 | Would you have him shut himself up in his hotel, and write poetry; or walk the streets all night, sighing at the moon? |
10920 | Would you like to go to the same school to which I went? |
10920 | Yes; why do you ask? |
10920 | You are getting beyond me: but why do you not apply a little of the worldly wisdom which these same casuists taught you? |
10920 | You believe then, in the development theory of the''Vestiges''? |
10920 | You doctors? 10920 You great silly creature? |
10920 | You heard from me at Bombay; after I''d been up to the Himalaya with an old Mumpsimus friend? |
10920 | You sleep ill, I suppose? |
10920 | You split my head open? |
10920 | You will keep my secret? |
10920 | You will let him go, Doctor Thurnall, and see the poor girl free? 10920 You will rest? |
10920 | You would n''t stop her doing that? 10920 You? |
10920 | You? |
10920 | Your maid? |
10920 | _ Cui bono?_"Power. 10920 _ Why_ did n''t you make sure?" |
10920 | ''Poor dear gentleman,''says she,''if he thinks chapel- going so wrong, why does he dare drive folks to chapel? |
10920 | A gentleman? |
10920 | A little too much claret last night? |
10920 | A slave? |
10920 | A wreck at sea? |
10920 | Across a handkerchief, I say, do you hear that?" |
10920 | After all, why pull down anything, before it''s tumbling on your head? |
10920 | All porters and guards touch their hats to him; the station- master rushes up and down frantically, shouting,"Where are those horse- boxes? |
10920 | And even the fire?--Have not women been martyrs already? |
10920 | And he said,''Dorothea sends you these, out of the heavenly garden which she told you of-- will you believe her now?'' |
10920 | And he spoke more tenderly than usual( though he was never untender), as he said,--"And you feel better to- day? |
10920 | And how he had been preserved-- for her? |
10920 | And how the---- was I to save them, sir?" |
10920 | And if one has not time to find out the true connection, what is left but to invent the best one can for oneself? |
10920 | And is not that dark place full enough, O Lord, of poor souls cut off in a moment, as my two were? |
10920 | And on what grounds, pray?" |
10920 | And she? |
10920 | And what blame to them if they love a white man, tyrant though he be, rather than a fellow- slave? |
10920 | And what more likely, in that case, that, sinking by its weight, it is wedged away in some cranny of the rocks? |
10920 | And why should I wish to do so? |
10920 | And why should not I?" |
10920 | And yet, was it vanity which was expressed in that face? |
10920 | And you never saw the belt after she had her hands in it?" |
10920 | And you spoke of the Lavingtons? |
10920 | Are not its walls hung with many a famous countenance? |
10920 | Are poets to"be made of nothing but tinder and gall?" |
10920 | Are you not about twenty- three years old?" |
10920 | As for the dirt, that can not harm them; poor people''s children must be dirty-- why not? |
10920 | As he says, his grandfather married an actress, and why should not he?" |
10920 | As you are here alive you must have killed your man?" |
10920 | Beer?" |
10920 | Beer?" |
10920 | Besides, he''s shipwrecked, as you and I may be any day; and what''s like brandy- and- water?" |
10920 | But I wish sometimes I could be of use, Mrs. Mellot: but what can a fellow do?" |
10920 | But did I play ill? |
10920 | But do you not see that you must thank Heaven for the sufferer''s sake also? |
10920 | But how had she contrived to marry at all without his leave? |
10920 | But what is the use of wishing for what can not be? |
10920 | But what matter what he says? |
10920 | But what was Grace saying? |
10920 | But what? |
10920 | But who is this friend? |
10920 | But why not try a companion; and persuade that curate, who needs just the same medicine as you, to accompany you? |
10920 | But why, when the boys wanted to be begged off, was the schoolmistress to be their advocate? |
10920 | But, Stangrave, can any moderation on your part ward it off? |
10920 | But, as you say, what if she had Quadroon blood?" |
10920 | By law, or by force? |
10920 | By what means? |
10920 | Can I do anything for you?" |
10920 | Can you guess who my last is? |
10920 | Can you make out the philosophy of that?" |
10920 | Can you solve that paradox from your books?" |
10920 | Can you tell me the reason of that, as you seem a bit of a philosopher?" |
10920 | Cholera coming, eh? |
10920 | Claude went on unconscious:--"But who sees them in the light of that beauty? |
10920 | Could n''t he have had it in the trap, the blessed old chimney that he is?" |
10920 | Could she be blamed, if she shuddered at going forth into the unknown blank, she knew not whither? |
10920 | D''ye think it will he there before Michaelmas?" |
10920 | D''ye understand my Irish reasoning?" |
10920 | Did I gain or lose by telling my Claude all?" |
10920 | Did I not say well, then, that there was as much meekness and humility under Scoutbush''s white cravat as under others? |
10920 | Did her mother know anything about it? |
10920 | Did her mother know anything? |
10920 | Did n''t lose it when you were taken by those Tartars?" |
10920 | Did not the club present the Town- hall with a portrait of the renowned fishing Sculptor? |
10920 | Did their grandfathers meekly turn the other cheek when your English taxed them somewhat too heavily? |
10920 | Did you ever count the meaning of those words? |
10920 | Did you ever read the Mort d''Arthur?" |
10920 | Did you ever see a man hanged, Lieutenant?--No? |
10920 | Did you ever smoke it?" |
10920 | Did you leave the child to perish?" |
10920 | Did you never hear a locomotive puffing and roaring before it gets under way? |
10920 | Did you not promise me that you would not make love to her yourself?" |
10920 | Did you see a belt?" |
10920 | Die? |
10920 | Do I not bear its scars even now, and glory in them; for they were won by speaking as a woman should speak? |
10920 | Do I not know it? |
10920 | Do n''t you see how I want rest?" |
10920 | Do n''t you think it''s likely, now?" |
10920 | Do n''t you think you could use your influence in this matter?" |
10920 | Do n''t you understand me? |
10920 | Do they keep up the real sport there, eh? |
10920 | Do you fancy that he is gone so very far? |
10920 | Do you give it up? |
10920 | Do you intend to marry by my assistance this time, and by your own the next? |
10920 | Do you know him?" |
10920 | Do you know that I might be a viscountess to- morrow, so Sabina informs me, if I but chose?" |
10920 | Do you know, though, where she came from?" |
10920 | Do you not know to whom you speak? |
10920 | Do you recollect seeing me with the belt?" |
10920 | Do you think he lives by gold? |
10920 | Do you think she''ll ever walk, Doctor?" |
10920 | Do you think that Sabina Mellot can see a young viscount loose upon the universe, without trying to make up a match for him? |
10920 | Do you wish me to see your son, or do you not?" |
10920 | Does the lioness, or the lion, rejoice in the grandeur of a mane; the hind, or the stag, in antlered pride? |
10920 | Editor of a newspaper? |
10920 | Elsley had looked eagerly at the honeyed columns;( as who would not have done?) |
10920 | Ever in these parts before?" |
10920 | For art thou not a sacred house? |
10920 | For if association is the cardinal principle of the age, will it not work as well in book- making as in clothes- making? |
10920 | Forgive injustice, oppression, baseness, cruelty? |
10920 | Forgive the devil, and bid him go in peace, and work his wicked will? |
10920 | Forgive? |
10920 | Gay young man, sir-- careless of his health; so you see as a medical man, sir--""Which is the liberal paper? |
10920 | Given, too, as it were, into her hands; tossed at her feet out of the very mouth of the pit,--why but that she might save him? |
10920 | Go home, and pray that God may have mercy on all drowning souls? |
10920 | Good heavens? |
10920 | Had much sporting, boy?" |
10920 | Harm come to him, sir? |
10920 | Has he been rude to you, the bad man?" |
10920 | Has he not the analogy of all nature on his side? |
10920 | Have I not felt it already? |
10920 | Have I not had my dream-- too beautiful for earth? |
10920 | Have I wandered half round the world alone for nothing?" |
10920 | Have n''t I told you not to think of it? |
10920 | Have not the male birds and the male moths, the fine feathers, while the females go soberly about in drab and brown? |
10920 | Have you heard anything more?--anything more?" |
10920 | He is a splendid fellow; and he was made splendid for some purpose surely? |
10920 | He is continually appealing to his power; and what can he mean by that, but that he could do, and had done, what he professed to do? |
10920 | He turned to Claude, and said, in a low voice, but loud enough for Mark to hear,--"Lavington? |
10920 | He would right her if He thought fit; and if not, what matter? |
10920 | Heale?" |
10920 | How am I to instil Church principles into them, if he is counteracting me the moment my back is turned? |
10920 | How came you to be?'' |
10920 | How could I cure a man without first examining what was the matter with him?" |
10920 | How could he? |
10920 | How could she better please Lucia? |
10920 | How dare you taunt me with being a pensioner on your brother''s bounty? |
10920 | How did you guess that?" |
10920 | How do you know that you are not philosophically correct, and that the river has a spirit as well as you?" |
10920 | How else on earth do you fancy that Paul cured those Corinthians about whom I have been reading lately?" |
10920 | How many viscountesses are there to be?" |
10920 | How would you have known of its existence if I had not confessed it to you as a sin of old years? |
10920 | How''s your father? |
10920 | However--"And he walked up and offered his hand, with"How d''e do, Briggs? |
10920 | I am more patient now; am I not, Grace?" |
10920 | I could kill the fellow;--who is he?" |
10920 | I do n''t believe you; and if you have been hanged, what have you been doing to get hanged?" |
10920 | I hope she wo n''t expect me to marry her as payment.--Handsome?" |
10920 | I hope you did not find them seriously indisposed?" |
10920 | I know you as well as the town clock""Me? |
10920 | I need all my strength, all my reason, at times to say to myself, as I say to others--''Are not these slaveholders men of like passions with yourself? |
10920 | I need not tell you that we are there every day, and that I am trying to make him as happy as I can-- but what can I do? |
10920 | I presume you are the clergyman?" |
10920 | I suspect? |
10920 | I''d sooner have that divine creature without a penny, than--""And would my lord viscount so far debase himself as to marry an actress?" |
10920 | I''ll go--""To Lady M----''s ball?" |
10920 | If nature kindly took off the edge of sorrow, by blunting the nervous system, what right had man to interfere with so merciful an arrangement? |
10920 | If not, was it not a mistake and an injustice, that she should ever have come into the world at all? |
10920 | If not, who can prove to you that it is noble?" |
10920 | If that does not come down straight from heaven, a"good and perfect gift,"then what is heaven, and what the gifts which it sends down? |
10920 | If the negro asks,''Am I not a man and a brother?'' |
10920 | If the parsons have the authority of which they boast, why do n''t they use it? |
10920 | If they crouch before the white like brutes, what wonder if we look up to him as to a god? |
10920 | If they do n''t know the fact, is not that all the more reason for your telling them of it? |
10920 | If you be innocent, as I do n''t doubt, what more do you need-- or I?" |
10920 | If your immortal soul requires it, what matter what it costs her carnal heart? |
10920 | In vain he answered,"Very well; and is not that a proof that the causes of cholera are increasing here? |
10920 | Instinctively she had looked round at the mirror-- for might he not, if he had eyes, discover that secret for himself? |
10920 | Is a boy''s digestion improved by turning him loose into a confectioner''s shop? |
10920 | Is he her husband?" |
10920 | Is it not fighting against God?" |
10920 | Is it over her? |
10920 | Is it that, as every beautiful thing has its hideous antitype, this mutual shamelessness is the devil''s ape of mutual confidence? |
10920 | Is not that cruel, man- devouring sea full enough, Lord; and brave men''s bones enough, strewn up and down all rocks and sands? |
10920 | Is not the wainscot of that long low parlour inscribed with many a famous name? |
10920 | Is this their country also? |
10920 | Is your heart iron?" |
10920 | It may be but a collection of ever- changing atoms of water;--what is your body but a similar collection of atoms, decaying and renewing every moment? |
10920 | It suits my purpose to become the principal medical man in this neighbourhood--""And I am to tout for introductions for you?" |
10920 | It was ungrateful of him; but was he not human? |
10920 | Jones?" |
10920 | Let them go on rejoicing, in spite of the cynical pedants in the Saturday Review, who dare to accuse( will it be believed?) |
10920 | Marie was silent, reproved; and then passionately--"Why does He not right my people?" |
10920 | May I mix it?" |
10920 | May I see what it is for which you have taken so much trouble?" |
10920 | Might not my torments madden a people into manhood, and my name become a war- cry in the sacred fight? |
10920 | Mr. Bowie, do you know that I am almost as old as you?" |
10920 | Mr. Mellot, you do n''t hunt?" |
10920 | Must it come?" |
10920 | Next, I knew that he dared not fly out at me, for fear I should tell Mrs. Trebooze what he had been after-- you see? |
10920 | No one told me what was going to happen; and no one could know: so again,--why grieve over what ca n''t be helped?" |
10920 | No; that was impossible; she must hear of him, if not see him, day by day: besides, was not her fate linked up with his? |
10920 | Now what is it?" |
10920 | Now why did Tom say that, to whom the legend of St. Dorothea, and, indeed, that whole belief in a better land, was as a dream fit only for girls? |
10920 | Now, I ask you, what possible interest can I have in this matter? |
10920 | Now, will you tell me that there was nothing in that man but what the devil put there?" |
10920 | Now?" |
10920 | Oh, Claude, do you fancy that I, of all men, do not feel at moments the thirst for brute vengeance?" |
10920 | Oh, what could I do?" |
10920 | Oh, what will become of the poor children?" |
10920 | Only, my dear madam, how shall I get the laudanum- bottle refilled without the doctor''s-- you understand?" |
10920 | Ought I to have twitted him about his wife? |
10920 | Perhaps the cholera wo n''t come; and if it does, what''s the odds so long as you''re happy, eh?" |
10920 | Possibly Clara might do the greater part of what she does, and do it better: but still, are they not her children? |
10920 | Pulling him out would it not be, without more ado?" |
10920 | Queer business, sir, is n''t it?" |
10920 | Sacrifices to be made-- are there none now? |
10920 | Scoutbush is much inclined to walk out of the room;--was he brought there to see that? |
10920 | She could not exculpate herself, save by blank denial-- and what would that avail? |
10920 | She looked hastily and sidelong round,--"That I am in your power?" |
10920 | She stopped short--"Suspect? |
10920 | Should she complain if another drop, and that the bitterest of all, was added to the cup? |
10920 | Signora?" |
10920 | Singing- master, scribbler, or political refugee? |
10920 | Sir, do you belong to these parts?" |
10920 | So the wise New Yorkers have been feting, as Maria Cordifiamma, the white woman( for am I not fairer than many an Italian signora? |
10920 | Stangrave spoke bitterly, and with an emphasis upon the"he;"and--"What if he have? |
10920 | Steady? |
10920 | Still, you would n''t say that what was the matter with old Heale was the matter also with Vavasour?" |
10920 | Tardrew?" |
10920 | Tell his lordship that we are coming; and trust us, Mr. Bowie: we do not look very villainous, do we?" |
10920 | That youthful rashness, however, was now well- nigh subdued, and Tom could flatter and bully also, when it served his turn-- as who can not? |
10920 | The belt? |
10920 | The cholera come there? |
10920 | The gentleman has lost a belt?" |
10920 | The question was, how had she lost it? |
10920 | The style takes; the style pays; and what more would you have? |
10920 | The vast majority, good or bad, died in peace: why not let them die so? |
10920 | Then how did you come hither?" |
10920 | Then you know the symptoms of his complaint?" |
10920 | There are your parishioners about to commit wholesale murder and suicide, and is that a secular question? |
10920 | There is, of course, some connection or other between all things in heaven and earth, or how would the universe hold together? |
10920 | There was nothing to be earned by staying: but still, who knew but they might be wanted? |
10920 | There were daring deeds to be done then-- are there none now? |
10920 | There were many qualities in him which Frank could not but admire, and long to imitate; and,"Whence had they come?" |
10920 | They dreamed of the Quest of the Sangreal: but which of them ever went upon it?" |
10920 | They may be close men of business;--how else could one live? |
10920 | They will free us, forsooth, in good time( is it to be in God''s good time, or in their own?) |
10920 | This one? |
10920 | Thurnall?" |
10920 | Thurnall?" |
10920 | To get into Mrs. Vavasour''s confidence, and show an inclination to take her part against her husband? |
10920 | Tom nodded assent;"I say-- How do you sell that honey- dew?" |
10920 | Tom stepped up to Treluddra instantly,"What were you so kind as to say, sir?" |
10920 | Tom, have you got the poor fellow''s money? |
10920 | True, he felt, on the whole, about the future state as Goethe did--"To the able man this world is not dumb: why should he ramble off into eternity? |
10920 | True, there were excuses for him; for whom are there none? |
10920 | Two of them met in Reading market once, and fell out:--"''How ever do you manage to sell your brooms for three halfpence? |
10920 | Vavasour dropped his eyes, for was it not true? |
10920 | Vavasour was delighted to do anything--"Where would she walk?" |
10920 | Vavasour?" |
10920 | Vavasour?" |
10920 | Was Marie Thurnall''s wife? |
10920 | Was anybody else saved from the wreck last night?" |
10920 | Was it as a reward for her faith that Tom began to talk to her? |
10920 | Was it not falling on him already? |
10920 | Was she fond of the other lad, then?" |
10920 | Was she guilty, then, after all? |
10920 | Was she mad? |
10920 | Was she not born to sorrow? |
10920 | Was she--? |
10920 | Was there one among them all who cared for him? |
10920 | Well, what matter just then? |
10920 | Well; I ask myself at times, and what were women meant for but to be slaves? |
10920 | Well?" |
10920 | Were there not in her features traces of that taint? |
10920 | Were you blind?" |
10920 | What business has he poking his nose down people''s wells and waterbutts?" |
10920 | What business has he to spy out what nature has taken such charming trouble to conceal?" |
10920 | What business is it of your''n, sir, to go hollering in ladies''faces at your age?" |
10920 | What can I gain by being impertinent, sir? |
10920 | What can you mean? |
10920 | What care I for pedigree? |
10920 | What comfort, save in being wise and strong? |
10920 | What did she mean by"her two?" |
10920 | What did that gimcrack cost, pray, sir?" |
10920 | What did you mean by saying, that saving lives is saving immortal souls?" |
10920 | What do I know about slaves? |
10920 | What do I know of disagreements between man and wife? |
10920 | What do they want with better cottages than their fathers had? |
10920 | What do we want with popes''tunes here, instead of the Old Hundredth and Martyrdom? |
10920 | What do you do more to me than I do to myself?" |
10920 | What do you do more to me than you do to yourself?" |
10920 | What do you mean in turn? |
10920 | What do you want here, interfering with my honest business?" |
10920 | What else should one do but tell you? |
10920 | What guarantee had he in earth or heaven that he might not be"snuffed out silently,"as he had seen hundreds already, and die and leave no sign? |
10920 | What had that to do with cholera? |
10920 | What have they done which you would not have done in their place?'' |
10920 | What if Lucia should make a confidant of Thurnall? |
10920 | What if Lucia were to ask its cause, even to guess it? |
10920 | What if Marie had African blood in her veins? |
10920 | What if Thurnall should tell Lucia? |
10920 | What if it were no fancy? |
10920 | What if she have sold it, and stopped short just now, because she had not the heart to tell me that love for me had been the cause? |
10920 | What is this,"asked Stangrave,--"one of your noblemen''s parks?" |
10920 | What is this? |
10920 | What makes them ready just now to risk honour, justice, even the common law of nations and humanity, in the struggle for new slave territory? |
10920 | What matter how intimate? |
10920 | What matter whether I do show it or not? |
10920 | What matter? |
10920 | What matter? |
10920 | What more likely? |
10920 | What nation was ever freed by others''help? |
10920 | What need to justify myself to them? |
10920 | What possible attraction in that bit of dirt can make men spend their money on it?" |
10920 | What right had he to cram into that small space all the marks which nature had spread over a far larger one?" |
10920 | What shall I do? |
10920 | What shall we do now? |
10920 | What sort of a character is her mother?" |
10920 | What thanks do I owe you for finding out so patent a fact? |
10920 | What thanks to you for that, again? |
10920 | What though the Lieutenant be somewhat given to strong liquors, and stronger language? |
10920 | What trade on earth does he live by, though? |
10920 | What was he thinking of? |
10920 | What was that sound above the roar of the gale? |
10920 | What was the Nemesis, then? |
10920 | What was to be answered? |
10920 | What were the burdens, heavier even than unjust suspicion, of which she had spoken? |
10920 | What will become of them, if they are cut off in the midst of their sins?" |
10920 | What will you bet me that I am not received as usual?" |
10920 | What''s she after?" |
10920 | What''s the meaning of this?" |
10920 | What''s the use of my being a peer, if I ca n''t do what I like, and make public opinion go my way, and not I its? |
10920 | What-- what is the meaning of this insolence, this intrusion?" |
10920 | When did you see him last?" |
10920 | When will it end? |
10920 | Where are the''Four grey walls, and four grey towers,''which overlook a space of flowers?" |
10920 | Where did you pick it up?" |
10920 | Where had he not been? |
10920 | Where on earth is old Mark? |
10920 | Which Thurnall?" |
10920 | Who can blame her? |
10920 | Who can help writing, sir, while Nature is so glorious, and man so wretched? |
10920 | Who can see wrinkles in the light of those eyes, that smile, that complexion?" |
10920 | Who cares to hear how it went on,--the stupid, aimless skirmish of bitter words, between two people who had forgotten themselves? |
10920 | Who cares to know how it began? |
10920 | Who dared make you a slave?" |
10920 | Who knows not the woes of ancient coast- guard lieutenants? |
10920 | Who more? |
10920 | Who took it? |
10920 | Who would have thought of our falling from the skies against each other in this fashion?" |
10920 | Who, indeed, if not the rich? |
10920 | Who?" |
10920 | Why are you always making me your butt,--insulting me, sir, even in your father''s house? |
10920 | Why can not I die-- and the world be rid of me?" |
10920 | Why can not the act against cruelty to women, corporal punishment included, be brought to bear on such as you? |
10920 | Why did he call her Grace? |
10920 | Why did she not take a book and occupy her mind? |
10920 | Why do n''t you speak, mother?" |
10920 | Why does her mother let her out at this time of night? |
10920 | Why else did I marry you at all? |
10920 | Why had Frank dared, upon a month''s acquaintance, to lay bare his own heart thus to a man of no creed at all? |
10920 | Why had she put away the subject, carelessly, and yet peevishly, when it was mentioned? |
10920 | Why must he wait to smoke his cigar after breakfast? |
10920 | Why not forgive him, as One greater than she had forgiven? |
10920 | Why not grumble at Lucia? |
10920 | Why not let the blessed place tell him what it means, instead of telling it what he thinks? |
10920 | Why not preach to them on it next Sunday?" |
10920 | Why not sustain it? |
10920 | Why not tell me whom you suspect?" |
10920 | Why not try sailing? |
10920 | Why not try walks?" |
10920 | Why not, I ask, at least in the case of little Scoutbush? |
10920 | Why not? |
10920 | Why not? |
10920 | Why not?" |
10920 | Why not?" |
10920 | Why on earth to Germany?" |
10920 | Why should I give way to what I know will pass, and is meant to pass? |
10920 | Why should he bear it for me? |
10920 | Why should he not grow sick to- morrow, break his leg, his neck-- why not? |
10920 | Why should it? |
10920 | Why should it? |
10920 | Why should not calamity fall on him, wave after wave? |
10920 | Why should not his white cravat, like theirs, be held symbolic of that fact? |
10920 | Why should she expect his heart to be better than hers? |
10920 | Why should they? |
10920 | Why spurn the pure, quiet, country life, in which such men as Wordsworth have been content to live and grow old?" |
10920 | Why there, dear?" |
10920 | Why was I ever born? |
10920 | Why were sweet things made, but to be eaten? |
10920 | Why were you asleep in your liquors, instead of looking out for poor wratches, like a Christian? |
10920 | Why will he go on analysing and figuring in this way? |
10920 | Why, then, did not Tom, if he were so very sure of Grace''s having the belt, charge her with the theft? |
10920 | Why, what now, Mary?" |
10920 | Why, where''s that old thief of a Goodman?" |
10920 | Why? |
10920 | Will you promise me one thing in return?" |
10920 | Would he help? |
10920 | Would he join, as one of two householders, in making a representation to the proper authorities? |
10920 | Wrongs to be redressed-- are there none now? |
10920 | Yet you are a person; and is not the river, too, a person-- a live thing? |
10920 | You all take too much trouble about me; why do you want to keep me here?" |
10920 | You fish?" |
10920 | You heard him?" |
10920 | You know, I suppose, that as the challenged, I have the choice of weapons?" |
10920 | You may say what you will of me; but--""And what have your family done for me, pray?" |
10920 | You recollect old Goodman, son of Galloper, that the old squire gave our old squire?" |
10920 | You said the children were not well?" |
10920 | You shoot?" |
10920 | You understand?" |
10920 | You will not see people as they seem, and as they have become, no doubt: but why? |
10920 | You wish me to recover it, I know; and if you can counsel me, why not do so? |
10920 | You would not like to see me commence that practice, would you?" |
10920 | a cannon? |
10920 | and can we stop His hand?" |
10920 | and could not I be one? |
10920 | and do you know so little of Boords as that? |
10920 | and so many beautiful men in them, and so few of them ready to die; and all those gallant soldiers going to the war;--Lord, wilt thou not have mercy? |
10920 | and stands something hot all round, what''s more, in at the Mariner''s Rest.--I say, Doctor, where''s he as we hauled ashore? |
10920 | and what had he not seen? |
10920 | but can you sing this, my fine fellow on the down above?" |
10920 | can I see the fellow who was saved last night?" |
10920 | could he suspect her too? |
10920 | cried Grace, in so high a key, that Tom entreated her to calm herself, and not make the matter public.--"Found? |
10920 | cried the Lieutenant, facing round upon his strange companion with a visage which asked plainly enough--"You hanged? |
10920 | do you hear that Mr. Trebooze has asked him to dinner?" |
10920 | do you think I would have come, if I had known that I was to see another man making love to her before my very eyes? |
10920 | have they no right to ask it also? |
10920 | his own praise, or his wife''s love? |
10920 | if there ai n''t the signs of the end of the world, which is? |
10920 | interposed her mother,"do n''t you hear the gentleman thanking you?" |
10920 | my dearest friend, and fortune still frowns upon you? |
10920 | my old lady, is that the way the fox is gone?" |
10920 | only have patience; have patience with me a little, and I know I shall bring it you; and then-- and then you will forgive?--forgive?" |
10920 | or keeper of a gambling- table? |
10920 | or perhaps all three together? |
10920 | or that if he were, I could not hunt him out? |
10920 | quotha? |
10920 | said Claude:"and is she with you?" |
10920 | said Sabina, laughing;"what is he doing but hinting that La Signora''s conception of Lady Macbeth is a very partial and imperfect one?" |
10920 | said he, half contemptuously;"what do you know about buffalo bulls?" |
10920 | something about duty I know it was, and always thought it uncommon fine.--Now, then, what can you tell me about this business?" |
10920 | then Briggs knew that he was ill? |
10920 | thought Tom,"or is he hen- pecked, and wants to hide it? |
10920 | to find all men alike at heart? |
10920 | what is the matter?" |
10920 | what right had he to command her?" |
10920 | where would you have been at this moment if God had dealt with you as with them?" |
10920 | who would not forget him in a week with--"Well, he was pleasant company, poor fellow,"and go on digging without a sigh? |
10920 | wholesome, but unpleasant: you are fond of gardening?" |
10920 | why should not Mr. Vavasour write a poem about it?" |
10920 | worthy of Nelson; said pretty much the same, did n''t he? |
10920 | you do not talk of that frightful scourge-- so disgusting, too, in its character-- as a matter of profit and loss? |
10920 | you wo n''t?" |
6763 | ''Walked?'' |
6763 | 13 The next points after what we have said above will be these:( 1) What is the poet to aim at, and what is he to avoid, in constructing his Plots? |
6763 | Are they, as our translator takes them,( 1) that man is imitative, and( 2) that people delight in imitations? |
6763 | Is it a''creature''a thousand miles long, or a''picture''a thousand miles long which raises some trouble in Chapter VII? |
6763 | Or are they( 1) that man is imitative and people delight in imitations, and( 2) the instinct for rhythm, as Professor Butcher prefers? |
6763 | Reversals of Fortune of some sort are perhaps usual in any varied plot, but surely not Recognitions? |
6763 | What, for instance, are the''two natural causes''in Chapter IV which have given birth to Poetry? |
6763 | What, indeed, would be the good of the speaker, if things appeared in the required light even apart from anything he says? |
6763 | and( 2) What are the conditions on which the tragic effect depends? |
43089 | ''After, a thought shal take thee so, That thy love is to fer thee fro: 2420 Thou shalt say,"God, what may this be, That I ne may my lady see? |
43089 | ''And must I pray( to you), and so cast aside womanhood?'' |
43089 | ''And shulde I repent? |
43089 | ''And where is more wood folye, 7245 Than to enhaunce chivalrye, And love noble men and gay, That Ioly clothis weren alway? |
43089 | ''Bet? |
43089 | ''But wherfor that I telle my tale? |
43089 | ''But wherfor that I telle thee Whan I first my lady sey? |
43089 | ''But why do I tell you my story?'' |
43089 | ''Et por ce au dieu qui moult sout(?) |
43089 | ''How shall we blowe whan ye han sen the hert? |
43089 | ''Is that your los? |
43089 | ''Lo,[ sir,] how may that be?'' |
43089 | ''Ought I to shew him ill- will for it?'' |
43089 | ''Sir,''quod I,''wher is she now?'' |
43089 | ''What is truth?'' |
43089 | ''What los is that,[ sir]?'' |
43089 | ''What? |
43089 | ''Who was to blame?'' |
43089 | ''Who- so toke a wethers skin, And wrapped a gredy wolf therin, 6260 For he shulde go with lambis whyte, Wenest thou not he wolde hem byte? |
43089 | ''Why does my blood thus muster to my heart?'' |
43089 | ''Why so?'' |
43089 | ''With myn? |
43089 | ''Wost thou nought where Youthe abit, That men so preisen in her wit? |
43089 | ''what eek yif my mutabilitee yiveth thee rightful cause of hope to han yit beter thinges?'' |
43089 | ( say= assay?) |
43089 | );_ read_ Wys(?). |
43089 | 105 What nedeth to shewe parcel of my peyne? |
43089 | 1114, 1115:--''Who can the pitous Ioye tellen al Betwix hem three, sin they ben thus y- mette?'' |
43089 | 1140 Or have ye oght[ y-]doon amis, That she hath left yow? |
43089 | 125 Who, but thy- self, that art of pitee welle? |
43089 | 1532) Valanus(_ for_ Valauns? |
43089 | 190_ A Lady in fear and woe._ ¶ To whom shal I than pleyne of my distresse? |
43089 | 2430 Shul they abyde thanne? |
43089 | 25 Now Crueltee hath cast to sleen us alle, In ydel hope, folk redelees of peyne-- Sith she is deed-- to whom shul we compleyne? |
43089 | 27. fo(? |
43089 | 2720 Whan Love al this had boden me, I seide him:--''Sire, how may it be That lovers may in such manere Endure the peyne ye have seid here? |
43089 | 30 But shal I thus[ to] yow my deeth for- give, That causeles doth me this sorow drye? |
43089 | 30 What wostow yit, how I thee wol avaunce? |
43089 | 310 Almighty god, of trouthe sovereyn, Wher is the trouthe of man? |
43089 | 3115 What? |
43089 | 330:''Where might I loue euer better beset Then in this Lilie, likyng to beholde? |
43089 | 4020 Art thou now late? |
43089 | 4440 But what and she my balis bete, And be to me curteis and swete? |
43089 | 4470 But what avayleth hir good wille, Whan she ne may staunche my stounde ille? |
43089 | 4515 For how shuld I evermore him seen? |
43089 | 4635 Is it swete or bitter thing? |
43089 | 495 How shulde a Iuge eyther party leve, For yee or nay, with- outen any preve?'' |
43089 | 5 Allas, fro whennes may this thing procede? |
43089 | 545 But, sir, oo thing wol ye here? |
43089 | 6370 But, were my sleightis aperceyved,[ Ne shulde I more been receyved] As I was wo nt; and wostow why? |
43089 | 6835 Make I not wel tumble myn apes? |
43089 | 720''Why so? |
43089 | 7240 Whom shulden folk worshipen so But us, that stinten never mo To patren whyl that folk us see, Though it not so bihinde hem be? |
43089 | 7535 What meveth you to hate him so But properly your wikked thought, That many a fals lesing hath thought? |
43089 | 7580 What? |
43089 | 7590 Is this the sermoun that ye make? |
43089 | 7600 Why shulde men sey me such a thing, If it hadde been gabbing? |
43089 | 820 Fetys he was and wel beseye, With metely mouth and yën greye;>> Cortoisie lors m''apela: Biaus amis, que faites- vous là?'' |
43089 | 90 And wher my lord, my love, be deed? |
43089 | << And wite ye who was his leef? |
43089 | << Ful curteisly she called me,''What do ye there, beau sire?'' |
43089 | >> Savés- vous qui estoit s''amie? |
43089 | ? |
43089 | Allas, what may it you avaunce To doon to him so greet grevaunce? |
43089 | And again, with respect to marriage--''Quel forsenerie[_ witlessness_] te maine A cest torment, a ceste paine?'' |
43089 | And how could Chaucer come to hear of this remote chain of mountains? |
43089 | And if ther any reprove me, Why that I lete the pore be, Wostow how I[ mot] ascape? |
43089 | And if ye finde no trewer[ man than me], 120[ Why] will ye suffre than that I thus spille, And for no maner gilt but my good wille? |
43089 | And sholde I preye, and weyve womanhede? |
43089 | And thenke ye that furthered be your name, To love a newe, and been untrewe? |
43089 | Anelida, 272--''My swete fo, why do ye so for shame?'' |
43089 | Anoon me telle; Hast thou not yit of love thy fille? |
43089 | Art thou not wery of thy servyse That thee hath[ pyned] in sich wyse? |
43089 | B. I sey for me I haue nou_n_[ neu_er_?] |
43089 | Ben than suche marchaunts wyse? |
43089 | But how came it there? |
43089 | But men mighte axe me, why so 30 I may not slepe, and what me is? |
43089 | But what availeth suche a long sermoun Of aventures of love, up and doun? |
43089 | But wherfor that I speke al this? |
43089 | But, natheles, in our hering, To putte our folk out of douting, I bid thee teche hem, wostow how? |
43089 | But[ why] than is hir gladnesse at my wo? |
43089 | Canst thou yit chese, lat me see, What best thy socour mighte be? |
43089 | Comfort or helthe how shuld I have, Sith ye me hurte, but ye me save? |
43089 | Daunceth he mury that is mirtheles? |
43089 | Explicit Pyte: dan Chaucer Lauteire(?). |
43089 | Fleshly delyt is so present 5095 With thee, that sette al thyn entent, Withoute more( what shulde I glose?) |
43089 | For evermore, I trowe trewly, For al my wil, my lust hoolly Is turned; but yet, what to done? |
43089 | For how shulde he ashamed be 5255 Of sich oon as I tolde thee? |
43089 | For wostow why? |
43089 | Hast thou not seyd, in blaspheme of this goddes, 15 Through pryde, or through thy grete rakelnesse, Swich thing as in the lawe of love forbode is? |
43089 | Have I therfore herbered you To seye me shame, and eek reprove? |
43089 | How is this quarel yit acheved 4630 Of Loves syde? |
43089 | How shulde he out? |
43089 | How shulde love within him be, Whan in his herte is no pite? |
43089 | I am unbounde; what mayst thou finde More of my sinnes me to unbinde? |
43089 | I insert_ pyned_, punished; F.''N''as tu mie éu mal assés?'' |
43089 | I norisshede thee with my richesses.... Now it lyketh me to with- drawen my hand... shal I than only ben defended to usen my right?... |
43089 | I shulde have pleyd the bet at ches, And kept my fers the bet therby; And thogh wherto? |
43089 | If Love hath caught him in his lace, You for tobeye in every caas, And been your suget at your wille, 3535 Shulde ye therfore willen him ille? |
43089 | If they enforce[ hem] it to winne, 6275 That shulde defende it fro withinne, Who might defence ayens hem make? |
43089 | Is that a tame best that is ay feyn 315 To renne away, when he is leest agast? |
43089 | Knowest him ought?'' |
43089 | Lord,''thoghte I,''who may that be? |
43089 | Love wher thee list; what recchith me, So[ thou] fer fro my roses be? |
43089 | M. Sandras points out the resemblance to a passage in G. de Machault''s Remède de Fortune:--''Car le droit estat d''innocence Ressemblent(?) |
43089 | May men finde religioun 6225 In worldly habitacioun?'' |
43089 | My swete foo, why do ye so, for shame? |
43089 | Now hath nat Lovë me bestowed weel To lovë, ther I never shal have part? |
43089 | Now is not this a propre thing? |
43089 | Now mercy, swete, if I misseye, Have I seyd oght amis, I preye? |
43089 | Now, swete sir, is it your ese 3525 Him for to angre or disese? |
43089 | Or what man hath the cunning or the wit? |
43089 | Ow I not wel to have distresse, Whan false, thurgh hir wikkednesse, And traitours, that arn envyous, 4415 To noyen me be so coragious? |
43089 | Que vous iroie- je disant? |
43089 | Que vous iroie- je notant? |
43089 | Quod Love,''What devel is this I here? |
43089 | Read--_Trow''st thou? |
43089 | Sem._''What, sir?'' |
43089 | Sem._''Why? |
43089 | Shal Crueltee be your governeresse? |
43089 | Shal I clepe hit hap other grace 810 That broghte me ther? |
43089 | Shal I compleyne unto my lady free? |
43089 | Shall I complain to my lady? |
43089 | Shulde I at mischeef hate him? |
43089 | Than shalt thou sighe and wepe faste, 2580 And say,"Dere god, what thing is this? |
43089 | That men shulde alwey loven, causeles, 590 Who can a reson finde or wit in that? |
43089 | The force of love makith him do this; Who wolde him blame he dide amis? |
43089 | The wise I- knyt(_ corrupt?_) 33. |
43089 | The yeer hath eek leve... to confounden hem[_ the flowers_] somtyme with reynes... shal it[_ men''s covetousness_] binde me to ben stedefast?'' |
43089 | These allusions place it beyond doubt[?] |
43089 | This god of slepe, with his oon yë Cast up, axed,''who clepeth there?'' |
43089 | To whom shal any sorwful herte calle? |
43089 | Whan shal your cursed pleding have an ende? |
43089 | What Ioye hast thou in thy loving? |
43089 | What ayleth him to sitten here?'' |
43089 | What causeth this, but wilful wrecchednesse, That al is lost, for lak of stedfastnesse? |
43089 | What counceil wole ye to me yeven?'' |
43089 | What folk hast thou us nempned here? |
43089 | What maketh this world to be so variable But lust that folk have in dissensioun? |
43089 | What maner man dar now holde up his heed? |
43089 | What meneth this? |
43089 | What sholde I telle you more of it? |
43089 | What sholde I tellen hem, sin they ben tolde? |
43089 | What sholde it han avayled to werreye? |
43089 | What shuld I seyn? |
43089 | What shulde I seyn? |
43089 | What wol ye more? |
43089 | What wolde he than ha[ yeve] to ha bought To knowen openly her thought, 5570 That he now hath so clerly seen? |
43089 | What wonder is then, thogh that I besette My servise on suche oon, that may me knette To wele or wo, sith hit lyth in hir might? |
43089 | What wordis tellest thou me here?'' |
43089 | What worship is it agayn him take, Or on your man a werre make, 3530 Sith he so lowly every wyse Is redy, as ye lust devyse? |
43089 | What? |
43089 | Wher is now al your wommanly pitee, Your gentilesse and your debonairtee, Wil ye no thing ther- of upon me spende? |
43089 | Where fyndest thou a swinker of labour Have me unto his confessour? |
43089 | Wherof shulde I abasshen so? |
43089 | Wherto constreyneth he his folk so faste 225 Thing to desyre, but hit shulde laste? |
43089 | Whiche is the wey to doon yow to be trewe? |
43089 | Who may me helpe, who may my harm redresse? |
43089 | Who regneth now in blisse but Venus, That hath this worthy knight in governaunce? |
43089 | Who shulde recche of that is reccheles? |
43089 | Who singeth now but Mars, that serveth thus 45 The faire Venus, causer of plesaunce? |
43089 | Who was in cause, in sothfastnesse, 4525 But hir- silf, dame Idelnesse, Which me conveyed, thurgh fair prayere, To entre into that fair vergere? |
43089 | Why did the Creator institute love? |
43089 | Why seystow thanne I am to thee so kene, That hast thy- self out of my governaunce? |
43089 | Why sholdestow my realtee oppresse? |
43089 | Why slepist thou whan thou shulde wake?'' |
43089 | Why wolt thou stryve? |
43089 | Woltow than make a statut on thy quene That I shal been ay at thyn ordinaunce? |
43089 | Your wordes ful of plesaunce and humblesse? |
43089 | [ 189] As to_ awry_( or_ awry- e_? |
43089 | _ All_ For- why;_ read_ For? |
43089 | _ All_ for why;_ read_ for? |
43089 | _ Amour._''And how?'' |
43089 | _ Amour._''And why is it?'' |
43089 | _ Amour._''And why wol they not touche it?'' |
43089 | _ Amour._''Falsnesse, that apert is; Than dredist thou not god?'' |
43089 | _ Amour._''Thou gost and prechest povertee?'' |
43089 | _ Amour._''Thou prechest abstinence also?'' |
43089 | _ Both_ hath;_ om._ wel? |
43089 | _ Both_ symply;_ read_ simpilly? |
43089 | _ Corrupt? |
43089 | _ For_ Quod_ read_ Seyde? |
43089 | _ For_ Thought_ read_ That swete? |
43089 | _ For_ not_ read_ nist? |
43089 | _ For_ of_ read_ to? |
43089 | _ For_ that_ read_ yet? |
43089 | _ For_ wolt_ read_ nilt? |
43089 | _ Om._ But? |
43089 | _ Om._ eek? |
43089 | _ Om._ ne? |
43089 | _ Om._ of? |
43089 | _ Omit_ But for? |
43089 | _ Raisoun._''Knowist him no more?'' |
43089 | _ Raisoun._''Wherof, lat see?'' |
43089 | _ Read_ Throughout the yerd? |
43089 | _ Read_ al- only? |
43089 | _ Read_ brighte, mighte? |
43089 | _ Read_ gree? |
43089 | _ Read_ of alle his? |
43089 | _ So all.__ Read_ whan that she? |
43089 | _ Some lines lost?_ 567. |
43089 | _ Transpose_ 1913, 4? |
43089 | alway? |
43089 | and is ther nother word ne chere Ye vouchesauf upon myn hevinesse? |
43089 | by who s prowesse, Out of so strong a forteresse? |
43089 | ended; G. eended(= y- ended?). |
43089 | herte myn, al this is for to seyne, As whether shal I preye or elles pleyne? |
43089 | how mighte I fare werre? |
43089 | is hit so? |
43089 | is hit this? |
43089 | nay fy,''quod he; 1115 Shulde I now repente me To love? |
43089 | quod I tho;''Nil she not love yow? |
43089 | quod he,''who is, lyth there?'' |
43089 | sir, how? |
43089 | the harde stounde-- Un- to my foo that yaf my herte a wounde, And yet desyreth that myn harm be more? |
43089 | wene ye Love wol consent, That me assailith with bowe bent, To draw myn herte out of his honde, Which is so quikly in his bonde? |
43089 | wene ye that I wole bigyle? |
43089 | wened he that I were wood? |
43089 | whan shal that harde wit amende? |
43089 | whan shal the dawning spring? |
43089 | what ayleth thee, 481 That thou noldest have taken me, Whan that thou toke my lady swete? |
43089 | what hath she do, 650 Trowest thou? |
43089 | what herte may hit longe endure? |
43089 | what herte may hit longe endure?'' |
43089 | what herte might enduren hit, For routhe or wo, hir sorow for to telle? |
43089 | what is this mistihede? |
43089 | what may that be?'' |
43089 | what mayst thou seyn, That in the paleys of thy disturbaunce Art left behinde, in peril to be sleyn? |
43089 | what nede? |
43089 | what shal I thanne do?" |
43089 | what was he that first dalf[270] up the gobetes[271] or the weightes of gold covered under erthe, and the precious stones that wolden han ben hid? |
43089 | wher I shal byde the day That ever she shal my lady be? |
43089 | who hath hit sleyn? |
43089 | whom may they plese? |
43089 | why nil ye me socoure, The Ioye, I trowe, that I langoure? |
43089 | wolde ye shende me in this wyse? |
43089 | ¶''Eek what availeth Maner and Gentilesse Withoute you, benigne creature? |
36483 | And I must go empty? |
36483 | And as to what concerns the individual man,pursued the other,"is it not so with this likewise? |
36483 | And couldst not thou,cried Wilhelm, in an angry tone,"have saved her?" |
36483 | And do you know to what I am indebted for my feelings? |
36483 | And it is? |
36483 | And recognized you? |
36483 | And she is Lothario''s sister? |
36483 | And the sorrows of our friends we are not to take into account? |
36483 | And this? |
36483 | And with a soul so tender, why does he never venture on the stage? |
36483 | And you think Shakspeare had this in view? |
36483 | And, when the ghost has vanished, who is it that stands before us? 36483 Are you mad, Philina?" |
36483 | Are you not a grandson of the old Meister, who possessed that beautiful collection of pictures and statues? |
36483 | Are you, then, inexorably bent on Hamlet''s dying at the end? |
36483 | Art thou speaking truth? |
36483 | Art thou the person,said he to her with an earnest voice,"from whom Aurelia received this child?" |
36483 | Ay, Herr Stallmeister,cried he,"have we the pleasure to see you again?" |
36483 | But ere now thou art saying,''And, pray, what is to be done with me in this sage plan of yours? 36483 But have you not discovered any trace of what he calls his crime?" |
36483 | But how was it with the ballet? |
36483 | But was there never,she continued, placing her hand on the countess''s heart,"never any other image that found its way in secret hither?" |
36483 | But,said Wilhelm,"will not genius save itself, not heal the wounds which itself has inflicted?" |
36483 | Can it be imputed as a fault,said he,"to one who has so long and vainly labored on them and about them? |
36483 | Continue mine? |
36483 | Did you not find it in the pocket- book? |
36483 | Do not we, too, look like men? |
36483 | Do you know that too? |
36483 | Do you think you will be fit to act to- morrow? |
36483 | Do you think, then,said our friend, who staid behind,"that Serlo will determine to retain our comrades?" |
36483 | Do you think,he exclaimed at last,"that I shall keep any thing apart while you are starving? |
36483 | Dost thou think that one crime can be the excuse of another? 36483 Especially,"said she,"it grieves me that the poor soul now hates women; for, hating women, how can one keep living?" |
36483 | For Heaven''s sake, what is the matter? 36483 Has not Germany been travelled over, cruised over, walked, crept, and flown over, repeatedly from end to end? |
36483 | Hast thou toothache still? |
36483 | Have I, then,he modestly inquired,"your own hair in this precious ring?" |
36483 | Have you never,said Jarno, taking him aside,"read one of Shakspeare''s plays?" |
36483 | Henrietta? |
36483 | How can I keep him alive,said Wilhelm,"when the whole play is pressing him to death? |
36483 | How can you, with all your taste, show so much levity? |
36483 | How could this happen, with the man''s attentiveness? |
36483 | How do you demonstrate that? |
36483 | How do you infer that? |
36483 | How has it fared with him? 36483 How is it possible?" |
36483 | How shall I appear before him? 36483 How so?" |
36483 | How? |
36483 | I would not assist at such a reading,said she,"for how could I hear and judge, when my heart was torn in pieces? |
36483 | In these solitary hills, among these impenetrable forests, has theatric art sought out a place, and built herself a temple? 36483 Is he your husband?" |
36483 | Is it not the same with all points of honor? |
36483 | Is this his lordship, then? |
36483 | Is this the whole company? |
36483 | Mariana? |
36483 | May I hope to cast a look into these rolls? |
36483 | May I put a question? |
36483 | My friend, can you suspect me? |
36483 | No one of my letters has yet penetrated to thee; my entreaties, my prayers, have not reached thee; was it thyself that gave these cruel orders? 36483 Now, what say you?" |
36483 | Now,said the count, turning to Wilhelm,"one chief point is,--which goddess do you mean? |
36483 | Old man,said Philina,"dost thou know the tune,''The shepherd decked him for the dance''? |
36483 | Shall we have a walk? |
36483 | Tell me, how hast thou within a few weeks become so skilled in every useful, interesting object? 36483 The finest?" |
36483 | The old man with the gout? |
36483 | This ride, then, was not altogether accidental? |
36483 | Thou wilt not hear me? 36483 To whom did it belong before you? |
36483 | To whom dost thou belong? 36483 Was he, then, so young?" |
36483 | We must lose no time,said she:"who knows how short a while we may all be together?" |
36483 | Well, then,said the latter finally,"suppose we grant you all this, what will you explain by it?" |
36483 | What ails thee, Mignon? |
36483 | What ails thee, my darling? |
36483 | What business she with sharp steel? 36483 What can I wish?" |
36483 | What count is it that means to join the Herrnhuters? |
36483 | What did the sheet contain? |
36483 | What fellow is that in the corner? |
36483 | What good news have you for me? |
36483 | What have I to do with the useless brat? |
36483 | What hopes have you of his recovery? |
36483 | What is it that keeps men in continual discontent and agitation? 36483 What is it that suddenly so changes the current of your feelings? |
36483 | What is the matter with you? |
36483 | What is the use of all this studying? |
36483 | What is this you bring? |
36483 | What is this? |
36483 | What is this? |
36483 | What is thy name? |
36483 | What letter? |
36483 | What luckless error,cried she,"leaves you still a moment''s hope? |
36483 | What makes you think of puppet- shows? |
36483 | What means this mystic word? 36483 What new phenomenon is this?" |
36483 | What shall we take to now? |
36483 | Whence? |
36483 | Where are you? |
36483 | Where did you get that pouch? |
36483 | Where hast thou been hid? |
36483 | Where is Mamsell? 36483 Where is Mariana?" |
36483 | Where is your company gone? 36483 Where? |
36483 | Which of them tastes best? |
36483 | Who are you? |
36483 | Who_ is_ so? |
36483 | Whom do you speak of? |
36483 | Why care for me,said she,"when there are so many things to care for?" |
36483 | Why does he not appear? |
36483 | Why must these labors, because they are not excellent, be annihilated? |
36483 | Why not compress them into one? |
36483 | Why would you go away? |
36483 | With his lady? |
36483 | You have not heard,said Frau Melina,"that a marriage has already taken place among ourselves? |
36483 | You know of it, then? |
36483 | You that know so many things,said he,"can you not discover this?" |
36483 | You, then, do not believe in destiny? 36483 _ Who_ called to thee?" |
36483 | ''Are not you the farmer''s daughter?'' |
36483 | ''Do I not deserve,''said she,''to appear to- night in man''s apparel? |
36483 | ''How can that be?'' |
36483 | --"For how much?" |
36483 | --"Hast thou been there already, little dear?" |
36483 | --"How old art thou?" |
36483 | --"I bought it at an auction,"said the other:"what is it to me whom it belonged to?" |
36483 | --"Is that very much?" |
36483 | --"Then, he did not buy the pouch?" |
36483 | --"Who was thy father?" |
36483 | --"Why so?" |
36483 | A man stepped forward at it, in a common dress, saluted the astonished looker- on, and said to him,"Do you not recognize me? |
36483 | A prince by birth, rejoicing to be called to punish the usurper of his crown? |
36483 | A young hero panting for vengeance? |
36483 | And am I to be the instrument of injuring it? |
36483 | And does not Norberg''s letter put the story altogether out of doubt?" |
36483 | And does not his wavering melancholy, his soft lamenting, his irresolute activity, accord with such a figure? |
36483 | And is it not on our account that he is suffering?" |
36483 | And is this the first time I have honestly shared with you in a season of need? |
36483 | And must drops fall, if we are to be enraptured? |
36483 | And ought I not to honor Fate, which, without furtherance of mine, has led me hither to the goal of all my wishes? |
36483 | And shall I alone enjoy this growing benefit? |
36483 | And what is faith? |
36483 | And where is there any station higher than the ordering of the house? |
36483 | And where should or can our nearest aims be, but in the interior of our home? |
36483 | And who could have sent it but thy kindest of friends? |
36483 | And why should we repine? |
36483 | And, with the best will, is there nothing left for us but to abhor the fault we have committed, and on the like occasion to commit it again? |
36483 | Are these silk carpets, this English furniture, likewise of no use? |
36483 | Are we to be the speech of the house to- morrow?" |
36483 | Are your youth, your form, your health, your talents, nothing? |
36483 | At length she turned to the old gentleman, and said,"Dear uncle, may I be generous at your expense?" |
36483 | But did she ever give you to believe that the boy was hers, was mine?" |
36483 | But how has Shakspeare drawn his Hamlet? |
36483 | But how shall we obtain a share in this priceless benefit? |
36483 | But how was this to be attained? |
36483 | But tell me, should not the poet have furnished the insane maiden with another sort of songs? |
36483 | But what on earth have we to do with wells and brooks, and old rotten lindens?" |
36483 | But what work, from the translating of a German novel to the writing of an epic, was ever as the workman wished and meant it? |
36483 | But where is the supper you promised us? |
36483 | But where, indeed, was ever one so slighted as ours? |
36483 | But which of us arrives early at the happiness of being conscious of his individual self, in its own pure combination, without extraneous forms? |
36483 | But who would think a moment on the music or the weather? |
36483 | Can I in her arms conceive the possibility of parting from her? |
36483 | Can any thing be more shocking than to slur over our rehearsal, and in our acting to depend on good luck, or the capricious choice of the moment? |
36483 | Can you joy in bustling daytime, Day when none can get his will? |
36483 | Consider and determine: whom shall I forsake? |
36483 | Could an actor be better furnished? |
36483 | Could he treat Philina with unkindness or ill- nature? |
36483 | Could not some fragments out of melancholy ballads be selected for this purpose? |
36483 | Could you mistake my intention? |
36483 | Did I not send the white night- gown, that I might have a snowy little lambkin in my arms? |
36483 | Did you not, the last night you were with us, find a letter in the room, and take it with you?" |
36483 | Did you notice how correctly the dramatic part of his ballads was expressed? |
36483 | Did you read Mariana''s letters? |
36483 | Did you stay long with them?" |
36483 | Didst thou notice that wabbling fold of her shortened petticoat, which always travels out before her when she moves? |
36483 | Do I not profit by my lands far better than my father did? |
36483 | Do I see you again? |
36483 | Do not I deserve for my care, for the labor I have had with him, a little pension for the small remainder of my life? |
36483 | Do not many incidents at their commencement show some mighty purport, and generally terminate in something paltry?" |
36483 | Do we not understand from the very first what the mind of the good, soft- hearted girl was busied with? |
36483 | Do you know, then, what you promise?" |
36483 | Does not every thing agree with what I told you? |
36483 | Does not my father every year expend a large part of his profit in ornamenting his chambers? |
36483 | Does nothing, then, remain for you? |
36483 | Dost know that house? |
36483 | Dost know the house, its roofs do columns bear, The hall with splendor bright, the chambers glare? |
36483 | Dost thou still doubt of my love? |
36483 | Fine printing pleases well, but who would read a book for the beauty of the printing? |
36483 | For example,"he continued,"the weather is delightful to- day: what if we should take a drive into the country, and eat our dinner at the Mill?" |
36483 | For his loss he was already in a great degree consoled: he helped himself with his customary,"What does it signify?" |
36483 | Good minds delight to trace the finger of the Deity in nature: why not likewise pay some small regard to the hand of his imitator?" |
36483 | Had not I, too, by long- continued innocent exercisings of that sort, been prepared for something better? |
36483 | Had we not, for instance, room enough in the old house? |
36483 | Has not all that I, in old times, meditated and forecast, now happened accidentally, and without my co- operation? |
36483 | Hast thou never marked it in the circle of our friends? |
36483 | Hast thou not hitherto, even without knowing it, pursued thy plan? |
36483 | Have I not struggled bravely? |
36483 | Have not I given thee gifts according to my power? |
36483 | Have we any right to hope, that, in this late season of the year, we shall get on at all? |
36483 | Have you forgot the painting which you once so much delighted in? |
36483 | Have you forgotten that on all occasions I have cared for you more than for myself? |
36483 | Have you not observed it on the stage? |
36483 | Having lost one blessing, without blame of yours, must you throw all the others after it? |
36483 | He asked, once or twice,"Aurelia, how could you hurt your friend?" |
36483 | He can only ask,''What hast thou? |
36483 | How came it, on the other hand, that these two boys distinguished me from all the rest? |
36483 | How can any one waste his time so?''" |
36483 | How can it fail to have a heavenly origin, an actual object, when in practice it is so effectual? |
36483 | How can it flatter any reasonable man to see himself set up in effigy, and his name glimmering on oiled paper? |
36483 | How could Serlo be in league with any one whose aim it was to take away the finest actor of his troop? |
36483 | How is it to be? |
36483 | How is it with your ancient maggot of producing something beautiful and good in the society of gypsies?" |
36483 | How long will it run? |
36483 | How often think you it may be played? |
36483 | How shall I thank you for deliverance from such torment? |
36483 | I felt unspeakably affected, altered; or how shall I express it? |
36483 | I have never counted on the gratitude of men, and therefore not on thine; and, if I have a touch of kindness for thee, what hast thou to do with it?" |
36483 | I pray you, mother, tell me what has now become of those puppets? |
36483 | I will not surrender, not surrender to necessity: why should that be necessary which crushes me to the dust? |
36483 | If I had share in this false step, am not I suffering my share? |
36483 | If so, what moved thee to alter the persuasions of that period? |
36483 | Is conduct like this aught else than to renounce one''s understanding, and give unrestricted scope to one''s inclinations? |
36483 | Is he not worthy your acceptance? |
36483 | Is he so utterly unlike you?" |
36483 | Is it a stock- piece? |
36483 | Is it fair that I should spend the night with old Barbara, sitting on a trunk, and but two doors between me and my pretty Mariana? |
36483 | Is it necessary, is it possible, that individual men should generally interest us much? |
36483 | Is it not by practice alone that we prove our own existence? |
36483 | Is it, then, so terrible a thing to have two lovers? |
36483 | Is not my income still increasing? |
36483 | Is not the one there with the others, and by means of them?" |
36483 | Is that also necessary?" |
36483 | Is the baron badly wounded?" |
36483 | Is there in the world any creature whose morsel of bread is attended with such vexation, uncertainty, and toil? |
36483 | Is what we call Destiny but Chance? |
36483 | Is your love for that noblest of arts still as lively and strong? |
36483 | Let me hear, Mariana, under what circumstances you were reared: what are the first lively impressions which you still remember?" |
36483 | May I here overstep the province of a mere historical detail, and offer one or two remarks on what was then taking place within me? |
36483 | May I?" |
36483 | May not the seeds of what is to betide us be already scattered by the hand of Fate? |
36483 | Might it not be otherwise? |
36483 | Might they not have broken out with me, as they did with David when he looked on Bathsheba? |
36483 | Might we not content ourselves with worse? |
36483 | Mignon came before Wilhelm, and asked in her laconic way,"Shall I? |
36483 | Minerva, or Pallas? |
36483 | Must all be hurtful that looks dangerous?" |
36483 | Must every thing that is continue? |
36483 | Must we just content ourselves in feeling and acknowledging the sovereignty of inclination? |
36483 | Nay, if thou wilt have it, who but the poet was it that first formed gods for us, that exalted us to them, and brought them down to us?" |
36483 | Need I repeat what I desire? |
36483 | No power that rules over us and directs all for our ultimate advantage?" |
36483 | On finishing her song for the second time, she stood silent for a moment, looked keenly at Wilhelm, and asked him,"_ Know''st_ thou the land?" |
36483 | Or love to art that bound me to her? |
36483 | Or was all this different, worthier, purer? |
36483 | Ought we not to profit by our privilege, then, since we accomplish just as much by mutilated works as by entire ones? |
36483 | Serlo looked at his sister, and said,"Did I give thee a false picture of our friend? |
36483 | Serlo received him with open arms, crying as he met him,"Is it you? |
36483 | Shall I never see thee more? |
36483 | Shall I shrink at departing? |
36483 | Shall they perhaps one day serve the world for a jest, instead of awakening sympathy and horror? |
36483 | Shall they remain behind to vex me to the end of my life? |
36483 | Shall we, in so important a matter, allow a vague report to determine our proceedings? |
36483 | She made right to the abbà ©, and seized him by the arm: her tears and sobs would hardly let her speak these words:"Where is he? |
36483 | Should not lessons of this kind teach us obedience to destiny, confidence in some such guide?" |
36483 | So many healthy people had been called away before poor, sickly me; might I not also have blights to witness among these fair and hopeful blossoms? |
36483 | So occupied, was it not to be expected that each emotion which he thought long since quite dead, should again begin to move? |
36483 | Suppose Fate had appointed one to be a good player; and why should it not provide us with good players as well as other good things? |
36483 | Tell me, is there danger? |
36483 | The burgher may not ask himself,''What art thou?'' |
36483 | The goddess of war, or of the arts?" |
36483 | The lover glides with footstep light: His love, is she not waiting there? |
36483 | The old man wiped his eyes, and asked, with a friendly smile,"How came you hither? |
36483 | The practice of virtue? |
36483 | The questions, What does it mean? |
36483 | The second question was,"What hinders this direction?" |
36483 | The sole question was, What medicine will cure this malady? |
36483 | Their wishes, their toil, their gold, are ever hunting restlessly,--and after what? |
36483 | Therein stand marble forms, and look at me: What is''t, poor child, that they have done to thee? |
36483 | They all stood wonder- struck, asking, What was to come first? |
36483 | They walked along: among some general remarks, Theresa asked him,"Are you free?" |
36483 | Thou dost well to wish thyself within the limits of a common station, for what station that required soul and resolution couldst thou rightly fill? |
36483 | To consider the account of an event as true, what help can this afford me? |
36483 | Turning towards Wilhelm,"Shall we not hear the man?" |
36483 | Was it not possible that she might clear herself? |
36483 | Was it not possible? |
36483 | Was it, then, an unavoidable infirmity of human nature? |
36483 | Was it, then, mere love to Mariana that bound me to the stage? |
36483 | Were we not, altogether unexpectedly, and when our prospects were the very worst, taken kindly by the hand, and substantially entertained? |
36483 | Werner entered the room; and, seeing his friend busied with the well- known sheets, he exclaimed,"Again among your papers? |
36483 | What am I to flee, or whither? |
36483 | What can he say to me?" |
36483 | What discernment, knowledge, talent, wealth?'' |
36483 | What do you mean by this? |
36483 | What good were it for me to manufacture perfect iron while my own breast is full of dross? |
36483 | What good''s the farce? |
36483 | What is more spirit- stirring than the aspect of a ship arriving from a lucky voyage, or soon returning with a rich capture? |
36483 | What is the highest happiness of mortals, if not to execute what we consider right and good,--to be really masters of the means conducive to our aims? |
36483 | What mortal in the world, if without inward calling he take up a trade, an art, or any mode of life, will not feel his situation miserable? |
36483 | What shall I yet learn of thee? |
36483 | What singular warning of chance or of destiny tore them asunder? |
36483 | What street had the man taken, if it were a man? |
36483 | What touching examples of faithful servants giving themselves up to danger and death for their masters? |
36483 | What wilt thou have? |
36483 | What would it stead me to put properties of land in order, while I am at variance with myself? |
36483 | What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, That he should weep for her?''" |
36483 | When I become acquainted with a man, my first inquiry is, With what does he employ himself, and how, and with what degree of perseverance? |
36483 | Whence or how comest thou, my child, at this important moment?" |
36483 | Where hast thou concealed her? |
36483 | Where hast thou hidden her? |
36483 | Where hast thou hidden her? |
36483 | Where have you put him? |
36483 | Where is she? |
36483 | Where is the steward?" |
36483 | Where is there in his eyes aught high or deep, aught dark or clear? |
36483 | Where is your sense, your modesty? |
36483 | Where shall I find shelter when you have sold my own house, and not the smallest room remains in yours?'' |
36483 | Where shall we get a horse for him to suit this business?" |
36483 | Where, then, will you find more honest acquisitions, juster conquests, than those of trade? |
36483 | Where, think you, is the sick king''s son now languishing?" |
36483 | Where?" |
36483 | Where_ is_ my grandfather''s collection? |
36483 | Whither should he pursue it? |
36483 | Who can better know the worth and worthlessness of earthly things, than he that has had within his choice the enjoyment of them from youth upwards? |
36483 | Who can exert such a power on thee?" |
36483 | Who can hinder you from thinking of the one in the arms of the other? |
36483 | Who could be placed in a more painful situation? |
36483 | Who could have formed a hell to make their situation worse? |
36483 | Who knows how long we might have lived in this way, had not a curious accident altered our relations all at once? |
36483 | Who knows what circumstances may arise to help us? |
36483 | Who the deuce is it he has with him?" |
36483 | Who will receive the engagement of me in the name of all?" |
36483 | Who would have thought that a letter of Werner''s, written with quite different views, should have forced him on resolving? |
36483 | Why are we so wise when young,--so wise, and ever growing less so?" |
36483 | Why can no one ever reach the central tower? |
36483 | Why did they banish me, whenever they could, to my own chamber? |
36483 | Why did they favor thy silly sports, instead of drawing thee away from them?" |
36483 | Why didst thou go to such a churl? |
36483 | Why is the master of the band more secure about his music than the manager about his play? |
36483 | Why put double meanings and lascivious insipidities in the mouth of this noble- minded girl?" |
36483 | Why should I keep talking how I myself took charge of her, what I did for her, what I spent on her, how in absence I provided for her? |
36483 | Why these bolted rooms, these strange passages? |
36483 | Why was it that I contracted debts, that I quarrelled with my uncle, that I left my sisters to themselves so long? |
36483 | Why were they not harmless for me? |
36483 | Why, then, did he not do it? |
36483 | Why, then, may we not, by a like mode, prove to ourselves the influence of that Power who gives us all good things? |
36483 | Wilt be my father? |
36483 | With a cheerfulness which he never used to show, and which now mounted to a lively joy, he said to me,"Where is the fear of death which I once felt? |
36483 | With what face shall I appear before him, then, if I can not say that his acknowledgment has given you satisfaction?" |
36483 | With your pure and tender nature, how can you altogether cast away the instinct of a parent? |
36483 | Within a fortnight, what may not happen, what may not alter?" |
36483 | Would they not dread disturbing the delightful impression that so naturally and spontaneously meets us here? |
36483 | Ye marvellous sages, whose sight has pierced so many secrets, can you tell me whether Felix is in truth my son?" |
36483 | Yet by what means could I help myself, or extricate my mind from the calls of a world where every thing was either cold indifference or hot insanity? |
36483 | Yet what now remains for me, wretched as I am? |
36483 | You know, perhaps, what used of old so frequently to lead me that way?" |
36483 | Your father is ever repeating,''What is the use of it? |
36483 | and how far must the former be included in the latter, though the latter is not in the former? |
36483 | and was it indispensable to build a new one? |
36483 | and was not I assured, in my inmost heart, that God was my friend? |
36483 | and where were the lights, and the people that managed the deception? |
36483 | and why am I reminded of it in these solemn moments?" |
36483 | but what procures us some property that we can lay our hands on? |
36483 | cried Wilhelm in astonishment:"are you here?" |
36483 | cried Wilhelm, springing up, and striking the table with his fist,"what evil spirit possesses thee and drives thee? |
36483 | cried Wilhelm:"what fable dost thou mean to tell me?" |
36483 | cried Wilhelm:"what should these miserable leaves do here? |
36483 | cried Wilhelm;"but_ must_ it ever be so? |
36483 | cried he, raising her up, and clasping her fast,"my child, what ails thee?" |
36483 | cried he:"What ails thee?" |
36483 | cried he:"still in bed? |
36483 | cried she,"thou wilt not forsake me? |
36483 | exclaimed Aurelia;"and do you think such a creature has a character? |
36483 | how shall I describe the state of watching and of hope? |
36483 | may not a foretaste of the fruits we yet hope to gather possibly be given us?" |
36483 | rejoined Barbara:"you surely do not look for Meister, the young, soft- hearted, callow merchant''s son?" |
36483 | said Wilhelm to himself:"can chance occurrences have a connection? |
36483 | said Wilhelm:"Cecilia, then?" |
36483 | said he within himself,"must it be that the fairest hues of life appear to us only on a ground of black? |
36483 | said she:"shall we do nothing to save ourselves from this miserable_ ennui_?" |
36483 | she cried,"if thou art unhappy, what will become of Mignon?" |
36483 | stammered he at last,"Mariana?" |
36483 | to what other man has it been given to unite all his wishes, as it is to me? |
36483 | what happened? |
36483 | what hast thou brought for me?" |
36483 | what is this about the count?" |
36483 | what is this?" |
36483 | whom shall I follow?" |
36483 | why can not I present it to you in a mirror,--why not command some one to tell it you? |
36483 | why must we, in speaking of such things, make use of figures which can only indicate external situations? |
5432 | ''Twixt worth and baseness, lapp''d in death, What difference? |
5432 | ''Twixt worth and baseness, lapp''d in death, What difference? |
5432 | And sleeps he then the heavy sleep of death, Quintilius? |
5432 | Are Bacchants sane? |
5432 | Break but her meshes, will the deer Assail you? |
5432 | But why, you ask, this special cheer? |
5432 | But, lady fair, What if Enipeus please Your listless eye? |
5432 | Can Hope assure you one more day to live From powers above? |
5432 | Can painted timbers quell a seaman''s fear? |
5432 | Can suppliance overbear The ear of Vesta, turn''d away From chant and prayer? |
5432 | Come, tell me truth, And trust my honour.--That the name? |
5432 | Come, tell me what barbarian fair Will serve you now, her bridegroom slain? |
5432 | Do I wake to weep My sin? |
5432 | Earning his foemen- kinsmen''s pay, His king, forsooth, a Mede, his sire A Marsian? |
5432 | Has conscience shrunk from aught of crime? |
5432 | He hesitates? |
5432 | How should a mortal''s hopes be long, when short his being''s date? |
5432 | Is Teucer called auspex, as taking the auspices, like an augur, or as giving the auspices, like a god? |
5432 | Life that is not whole, Is THAT as sweet? |
5432 | Lydia, by all above, Why bear so hard on Sybaris, to ruin him with love? |
5432 | NE SIT ANCILLAE Why, Xanthias, blush to own you love Your slave? |
5432 | O, what can match the green recess, Whose honey not to Hybla yields, Whose olives vie with those that bless Venafrum''s fields? |
5432 | Shall now Quirinus take his turn, Or quiet Numa, or the state Proud Tarquin held, or Cato stern, By death made great? |
5432 | Strain your wine and prove your wisdom; life is short; should hope be more? |
5432 | That wild Charybdis yours? |
5432 | Those who with Orelli prefer"Quo pinus... quid obliquo,"may substitute-- Know you why pine and poplar high Their hospitable shadows spread Entwined? |
5432 | Varus, are your trees in planting? |
5432 | Was stranger contrast ever seen? |
5432 | Well, shall I take a toper''s part Of fierce Falernian? |
5432 | What altar spared? |
5432 | What are great or small? |
5432 | What blessing shall the bard entreat The god he hallows, as he pours The winecup? |
5432 | What can sad laments avail Unless sharp justice kill the taint of sin? |
5432 | What can these flowers, this censer mean Or what these embers, glowing red On sods of green? |
5432 | What cave shall hearken to my melodies, Tuned to tell of Caesar''s praise And throne him high the heavenly ranks among? |
5432 | What change has made him shun The playing- ground, who once so well could bear the dust and sun? |
5432 | What coast from Roman blood is free? |
5432 | What dens, what forests these, Thus in wildering race I see? |
5432 | What exiled man From self can sunder? |
5432 | What field, by Latian blood- drops fed, Proclaims not the unnatural deeds It buries, and the earthquake dread Whose distant thunder shook the Medes? |
5432 | What god shall Rome invoke to stay Her fall? |
5432 | What gulf, what river has not seen Those sights of sorrow? |
5432 | What has dull''d the fire Of the Berecyntian fife? |
5432 | What has not cankering Time made worse? |
5432 | What horror have we left undone? |
5432 | What if, as auburn Phyllis''mate, You graft yourself on regal stem? |
5432 | What man, what hero, Clio sweet, On harp or flute wilt thou proclaim? |
5432 | What page from court with essenced hair Will tender you the bowl you drain, Well skill''d to bend the Serian bow His father carried? |
5432 | What shrine has rapine held in awe? |
5432 | What slender youth, besprinkled with perfume, Courts you on roses in some grotto''s shade? |
5432 | What will not Claudian hands achieve? |
5432 | What wizard, what Thessalian spell, What god can save you, hamper''d thus? |
5432 | What, fight with cups that should give joy? |
5432 | What, yet alive? |
5432 | When will ye find his peer? |
5432 | Whence came I? |
5432 | Where now that beauty? |
5432 | Where''s the slave To quench the fierce Falernian''s flame With water from the passing wave? |
5432 | Wherefore halts this tongue of mine, So eloquent once, so faltering now and weak? |
5432 | Which was best? |
5432 | Whither, Bacchus, tear''st thou me, Fill''d with thy strength? |
5432 | Who can talk of want or warfare when the wine is in his head, Not of thee, good father Bacchus, and of Venus fair and bright? |
5432 | Who comes, commission''d to atone For crime like ours? |
5432 | Who fears the Parthian or the Scythian horde, Or the rank growth that German forests yield, While Caesar lives? |
5432 | Who will twine The hasty wreath from myrtle- tree Or parsley? |
5432 | Who''ll coax coy Lyde from her home? |
5432 | Whom praise we first? |
5432 | Whom will Venus seat Chairman of cups? |
5432 | Why bend our bows of little span? |
5432 | Why blush to let our tears unmeasured fall For one so dear? |
5432 | Why change our homes for regions under Another sun? |
5432 | Why does he never sit On horseback in his company, nor with uneven bit His Gallic courser tame? |
5432 | Why dreads he yellow Tiber, as''twould sully that fair frame? |
5432 | Why hangs the flute in silence with the lyre? |
5432 | Why rend my heart with that sad sigh? |
5432 | Why should rain to- day Bring rain to- morrow? |
5432 | Why strain so far? |
5432 | Why weep for him whom sweet Favonian airs Will waft next spring, Asteria, back to you, Rich with Bithynia''s wares, A lover fond and true, Your Gyges? |
5432 | Why with thoughts too deep O''ertask a mind of mortal frame? |
5432 | Would you like The bondmaid''s task, You, child of kings, a master''s toy, A mistress''slave?''" |
5432 | Yet the swift moons repair Heaven''s detriment: We, soon as thrust Where good Aeneas, Tullus, Ancus went, What are we? |
5432 | You hear her? |
5432 | You take the bait? |
5432 | but why, my Ligurine, Steal trickling tear- drops down my wasted cheek? |
5432 | can he name forget, Gown, sacred shield, undying fire, And Jove and Rome are standing yet? |
5432 | nay, what sea Has Daunian carnage yet left green? |
5432 | or am I pure of blame, And is it sleep From dreamland brings a form to trick My senses? |
5432 | or is this the play Of fond illusion? |
5432 | should I lose one half my soul Untimely, can the other stay Behind it? |
5432 | shrink you not from crime whose punishment Falls on your innocent children? |
5432 | to go Over the long, long waves, or pick The flowers in blow? |
5432 | was Bellerophon''s as good? |
5432 | what should man Think first of doing? |
5432 | where That colour? |
5432 | where those movements? |
5432 | who trembles at the sword The fierce Iberians wield? |
5432 | why melt your voice In dolorous strains, because the perjured fair Has made a younger choice? |
5432 | why panting waters try To hurry down their zigzag bed? |
5432 | why this passionate despair For cruel Glycera? |
20462 | ''And where will you go?'' 20462 ''And why do you let so many fall, mother?'' |
20462 | ''Do you mean to obey?'' 20462 ''Do you recognize this?'' |
20462 | ''I am gone; but tell me one thing,--you are not a prisoner?'' 20462 ''Is that mignonette which is so oppressively fragrant?'' |
20462 | ''What is that to you, sirrah?'' 20462 ''Why are you so cruel as to refuse to see me, after showing such knightly devotion to your cause?'' |
20462 | ''_ I_ forgive_ you_?'' 20462 A happier lot than to be the wife of Ernest? |
20462 | Am I asleep, and are these images but the visions of a feverish imagination? |
20462 | Am I indebted to you for the beautiful flowers in my own apartment? |
20462 | Am I telling tales out of school? |
20462 | And Gabriella? |
20462 | And Julian, my beloved Edith? 20462 And did you see him, Ernest?" |
20462 | And did you? |
20462 | And do you possess all these now? |
20462 | And do you remember these trifles? |
20462 | And do you think he is not here? |
20462 | And does it not make you sad to see them wither away, in spite of your passionate love? |
20462 | And have I found thee again, my son, my Ernest, my beloved, my only one? |
20462 | And have you ever desired to partake of pleasures, without telling me of your wishes? |
20462 | And he went without one farewell look of her whom he deemed so vile,--so lost? |
20462 | And he, the inmate of yon dismal cell? |
20462 | And in his love,he added;"why not finish the sentence?" |
20462 | And is this all? |
20462 | And music? |
20462 | And must we be separated from your mother and Edith? |
20462 | And should we ever meet again, may I tell him so? |
20462 | And what are these beautiful clusters laid aside for? |
20462 | And what will become of all our beautiful flowers, and our rich, ripening fruit? |
20462 | And why, my darling sister? 20462 And will you not tell me the cause of your grief? |
20462 | And you are married, my Gabriella? |
20462 | And you have heard no invidious remarks? |
20462 | Are you angry with me, Ernest? |
20462 | Are you asleep? 20462 Are you cold, Gabriella?" |
20462 | Are you entirely recovered? |
20462 | Are you ill, Gabriella? |
20462 | Are you indeed my son? |
20462 | Are you not familiar enough with my light, mocking way, Gabriella? |
20462 | Are you pleased with them? |
20462 | As an assistant teacher? |
20462 | But at school? |
20462 | But what am I doing, Gabriella? 20462 But what are you doing, Gabriella?" |
20462 | But when all these characters are combined in one, what language can we use to express the full, abounding heart? 20462 But why do n''t you sing and play? |
20462 | But why, my dear young friend, do you close your heart to earthly hope? 20462 But you are happy here, my child?" |
20462 | But you have written and explained every thing? |
20462 | By the way, Gabriella,he asked, changing from subject to subject with marvellous rapidity,"do you ever write poetry now?" |
20462 | Can I send you any thing to do you good? 20462 Can it be that I have found a daughter? |
20462 | Can not I excuse myself? |
20462 | Can you play''_ Come, haste to the wedding_?'' |
20462 | Did I not come to share your duties, Richard? 20462 Did he not threaten your life and his own? |
20462 | Did she say that? 20462 Did you come here to mock and upbraid me?" |
20462 | Did you ever see me weep, Madge? |
20462 | Did you ever tell me your teacher was your lover,--he with whom you were so intimately associated when I first knew you? 20462 Did you see him? |
20462 | Did you speak to me, cousin Ernest? |
20462 | Do not the purple and the fine linen of luxury enervate the limbs which they clothe? 20462 Do not you know me well enough to understand when I am serious and when jesting? |
20462 | Do not your coffers need replenishing, fair Lady Bountiful? |
20462 | Do tell me the object of his romantic passion? |
20462 | Do we ever weary of moonlight, or the sweet, fresh air of heaven? 20462 Do you admire the picture?" |
20462 | Do you distrust yourself, or me? |
20462 | Do you expect to revolutionize society? |
20462 | Do you imply that she needs a restraining influence to keep her from excess? |
20462 | Do you imply that_ my_ playing is too loud for delicate nerves? 20462 Do you know all that has happened, dear Mrs. Brahan, since I left your city?" |
20462 | Do you know, Gabriella, she once wished me to think of her as a wife? 20462 Do you know, I think there is a resemblance to herself?" |
20462 | Do you not mock me? 20462 Do you not recognize a similitude to the flower- girl of the library? |
20462 | Do you not recollect that I left you at the hotel for a short time, after our arrival? 20462 Do you not remember Madge Wildfire, or Meg the Dauntless, as the students used to call me? |
20462 | Do you not see the shadow on my brow? 20462 Do you play?" |
20462 | Do you remember that? |
20462 | Do you think I would take his gold clandestinely? |
20462 | Do you think he suffers alone? 20462 Do you think there is any thing peculiar in my dress?" |
20462 | Do_ you_ ever think of such a day, Margaret? |
20462 | Does Gabriella play? |
20462 | Does Mr. Ernest Linwood forget his old friend so easily? |
20462 | Does he call me the wild- cat, still? |
20462 | Does he mind these things much? |
20462 | Does not Miss Lynn play? |
20462 | Dost thou like the picture? |
20462 | Edith can,--why not you? |
20462 | Gabriella, has any thing alarmed you during my absence? |
20462 | Gabriella,--is it you? 20462 Glad to see me? |
20462 | Has God heard thy prayers? 20462 Has the ship been heard from? |
20462 | Have I not lectured you a hundred times on this preposterous shame- facedness of yours? 20462 Have we not had a charming evening?" |
20462 | Have you given up entirely the idea of being a teacher yourself? |
20462 | Have you never been told so? |
20462 | Have you_ her_ Bible? |
20462 | Have_ you_, who have seen so much more of life, experienced the chilling influences which you deprecate for me? |
20462 | He has not expelled you, Richard? |
20462 | How came you so familiar with the mysteries of this enchanted palace? 20462 How can I write,--when I know not where to direct, when I know not to what region he has wandered, or what resting- place he has found?" |
20462 | How can she help being happy? |
20462 | How can you say any thing so absurd and ridiculous? |
20462 | How did Ernest know that Richard was with me, when we left him alone in the library? |
20462 | How do you know it is accident, Gabriella? 20462 How know you this?" |
20462 | How long have I been ill, Doctor? |
20462 | How long will you remain in that uncomfortable position? |
20462 | How so? 20462 How so?" |
20462 | How so? |
20462 | How would you like to be supplanted by her? |
20462 | How would you like to travel as the doctor has suggested, Gabriella? |
20462 | I am not afraid of the water; but who will protect my mother, if I go away with you? |
20462 | I thought you had not risen,--I thought,--I came--"And why did you come at this hour, Gabriella? |
20462 | I will not betray you; what sum will suffice for your emergency? 20462 If it be indeed so,"I answered,"should not the revelation come from him, rather than me?" |
20462 | If it is a child''s story, will you not relate it? |
20462 | If my nerves are all unstrung, how will yours sustain the shock? 20462 In what do they consist? |
20462 | In what do they consist? |
20462 | In what do they consist? |
20462 | In whom should I confide, then? 20462 Is he going to punish me?" |
20462 | Is he indeed so kind? |
20462 | Is he not with you? |
20462 | Is it I, your wife, whom you accuse of falsehood? |
20462 | Is it certain that he is gone? |
20462 | Is it not too damp for you here? |
20462 | Is it not, my child? |
20462 | Is it of Ernest you have come to tell me? |
20462 | Is love so strong as to endure every thing? |
20462 | Is she,thought I,"a young man in disguise?" |
20462 | Is that all? |
20462 | Is there any thing I can do for your comfort? |
20462 | Is this Grandison Place? 20462 Is this a daughter of Danaus?" |
20462 | Is this the gentle and tender Gabriella, who speaks in such a tone of bitterness and scorn? |
20462 | Is this you? |
20462 | Margaret,said Mrs. Linwood, in a tone of serious displeasure,"what have you been doing? |
20462 | May I ask him to pardon Richard Clyde, mother? |
20462 | May I see you to- morrow? |
20462 | Mother, is the day dawning? |
20462 | Must I ask him to forgive me? 20462 Must they waste their sweetness and value on the unappreciating air?" |
20462 | My dear creature,she exclaimed, with one of her inimitable ringing laughs,"how_ do_ you_ do_? |
20462 | Nor sing? |
20462 | O Ernest, can not you spare even him? |
20462 | O my Saviour I could thy murderers feel pangs of deeper remorse at the sight of thy scarred hands and wounded side? |
20462 | Of what are you thinking so deeply, sweet wife? |
20462 | Oh, Mr. Regulus, how could I forget it? |
20462 | Oh, madam, what have I said? |
20462 | Perhaps you like some one else better? |
20462 | Poetry, is it?--or something you meant to be called by that name? 20462 Richard, did you not perceive a resemblance to our father in this gentleman, noble and distinguished as he appears? |
20462 | Richard, why will you persist in talking of what can not be explained here? 20462 Should not Ernest know of this?" |
20462 | So soon, Mr. Regulus? 20462 Surely, young Clyde will not be so inconsiderate, so officious, as to induce those ladies to visit us?" |
20462 | Tell me, Ernest, in what have I deceived? 20462 Tell me, Gabriella, are his words true?" |
20462 | The most interesting person you ever saw? |
20462 | The thoughts that breathe, the thoughts that burn,how can they be expressed? |
20462 | Then it is only to please Edith you place them there, not to please yourself? |
20462 | Then you did not know that he had gone to India? 20462 To what temptations do you allude?" |
20462 | Warn_ me_, madam? 20462 We are perfectly satisfied with the specimen we have heard,"said he, smiling; how could he help it? |
20462 | We doctors ought not to have jealous wives, my dear, ought we? 20462 Well, let them make them,--who cares?" |
20462 | Well, who is it? 20462 What can I do?" |
20462 | What do I care for the past? |
20462 | What do you think she will say about our-- our engagement? |
20462 | What does this represent? |
20462 | What else can you do, my child? |
20462 | What great subject knits so severely that fair young brow? |
20462 | What has happened, Richard? 20462 What have I done to displease you, dear Ernest?" |
20462 | What have I done, that this curse should be entailed upon me? 20462 What have I done?" |
20462 | What in the world did you bring her here for? |
20462 | What in the world is this, Gabriella? 20462 What is he like?" |
20462 | What is that you say about going home? |
20462 | What is the matter? |
20462 | What is the matter? |
20462 | What is the meaning of what I have just heard? 20462 What is the use of reading what one can not understand?" |
20462 | What makes you say that? |
20462 | What shall we do? 20462 What started so horrible a theme?" |
20462 | What would Mrs. Linwood say, if she saw me here at this early hour alone with her son? |
20462 | What would mamma say? |
20462 | What would you do? |
20462 | What wrong have I done you? 20462 What, Margaret? |
20462 | When does Mrs. Linwood expect her son? |
20462 | When shall we go to Grandison Place? |
20462 | When would this shadowy, flashing being appear, who kept one always thinking of him? |
20462 | Where is the note? |
20462 | Who could help loving you and wishing to caress you? |
20462 | Who ever saw an invalid with such a color as that? |
20462 | Who is Miss Lynn? |
20462 | Who knows? 20462 Who put this idea in your head, Gabriella? |
20462 | Who told you? |
20462 | Why am I more foolish in admiring one beautiful prospect than you another, Gabriella? 20462 Why art thou cast down, O my soul? |
20462 | Why do n''t you look? |
20462 | Why do you care about my soul? |
20462 | Why do you come here to nurse a grief so far beyond the limits of reason and religion? 20462 Why else do you shrink, as if I were leading you to a path of thorns instead of one margined with flowers?" |
20462 | Why not? |
20462 | Why should we wait? 20462 Why will they make such a ridiculous attempt? |
20462 | Why will you wring this confession from me, when you only know it too well? |
20462 | Why, how do you do, darling? 20462 Why,"thought I,"should Richard make me dread his return, when I would gladly welcome him with joy? |
20462 | Why? |
20462 | Will it make you unhappy, my darling Gabriella, to know that Richard is your cousin, instead of your brother? |
20462 | Will they not suppose the jewels were stolen? |
20462 | Will you ask Edith, if she will be ready? |
20462 | Will you give me a few moments''conversation, Miss Gabriella? |
20462 | Will you not speak to me and tell me, at least, in what I have offended? |
20462 | Will you object to calling here? |
20462 | Will you really like to go, Gabriella? |
20462 | Will you release me one week before the session closes? |
20462 | Will you walk in? |
20462 | Would you advise me, then, to be a hewer of wood and a drawer of water, in preference? |
20462 | Would you have had me make the theatre a scene of strife and bloodshed? |
20462 | Would you indeed counsel me to break a solemn vow, Gabriella? 20462 Yes,--yes, you have her brow and smile; but why have you come to me again, when I commanded you to stay away? |
20462 | You are not angry with me, my mother? |
20462 | You dare not look me in the face and say that you do not wish to go, Gabriella? 20462 You do not like to hear people express_ all_ their thoughts, good, bad, or indifferent?" |
20462 | You do not think me angry, Richard? |
20462 | You encourage so excellent a habit, do you not, my mother? |
20462 | You have been thinking,he said, in his peculiarly grave, melodious accents,"that I am leading a self- indulging, too luxurious life?" |
20462 | You have seen your mother? |
20462 | You love flowers, then? |
20462 | You love him, then? 20462 You love my son, Gabriella?" |
20462 | You might learn through him? |
20462 | You must have heard of them? |
20462 | You will not come in? |
20462 | You, Richard? |
20462 | ''Do you not see a likeness?'' |
20462 | ''I do not spurn you; but why should I live, with a brand blacker than Cain''s on my heart and soul,--crushed, smitten, dishonored, and undone?'' |
20462 | ''To whom?'' |
20462 | ''Where do they all come from?'' |
20462 | Again I asked myself,"What had I done, that he should look coldly on me, pass me with averted eye, and seek consolation from another?" |
20462 | Am I a Draco, with laws written in blood, a tyrant, scourging with an iron rod, that you thus shrink and tremble before me? |
20462 | Am I, or am I not, acquitted?" |
20462 | Am not I a cripple? |
20462 | Am not I worthy to be trusted, as a friend,--a protector,--a redresser; and if need be, an avenger of wrongs?" |
20462 | And had she not adjured me by every precious and every solemn consideration,"to forgive the_ living_, if living_ he_ indeed was?" |
20462 | And how could I tell her that I had interceded for her in vain? |
20462 | And is it not well? |
20462 | And this house belonged to the artist? |
20462 | And was it possible that no note was taken of the strange absence of the master of the table? |
20462 | And what was there beyond? |
20462 | And what will life be then, supposing I drag out its hated length through imprisonment, and horror, and despair? |
20462 | And who was Peggy? |
20462 | And why could I not keep down the rising crimson, which might be attributed to another source than embarrassment? |
20462 | And why do you come to this lone place of graves to weep, as if human sympathy were denied to your sorrows? |
20462 | And why have you brought this pale girl here, when she loathes me as an incarnate fiend?" |
20462 | And why should I? |
20462 | And would she indeed suffer her"wild heart to be tamed by a loving hand?" |
20462 | And would you believe it, Gabriella? |
20462 | And you are to go with me, my dear,--for am I not your guest, and are you not bound to minister to my gratification? |
20462 | Are you dead? |
20462 | Are you frank, Miss Gabriella? |
20462 | Are you not delighted?" |
20462 | Are you not trusted with the key to your household treasures?" |
20462 | Are you ready to ride? |
20462 | Are you sure you are quite well, my child?" |
20462 | Are you willing, Gabriella, to quit these sublime Falls to- morrow?" |
20462 | Art thou no longer a child? |
20462 | Basil; or, The Crossed Path The Dead Secret Hide and Seek After Dark Miss or Mrs? |
20462 | Believing him your brother, you have loved him as such?" |
20462 | Betrayer of her mother, robber of her husband, coward as well as villain, how dare you blast her with your impious curse?" |
20462 | Bid he ever again treat me with harshness and severity? |
20462 | Book!--am I writing a book? |
20462 | But did not God once hide his face of love from his own begotten Son? |
20462 | But do you really think that I ought to indulge such dreams? |
20462 | But how can I help feeling the dearth, the coldness, the weariness following such passionate emotions? |
20462 | But how did he welcome you, Richard? |
20462 | But is he so disinterested as to claim no recompense, or does he find that chivalry, like goodness, is its own exceeding great reward?" |
20462 | But is it not said that they who go forth weeping, bearing precious seed, shall come again rejoicing, bending under the weight of golden sheaves? |
20462 | But tell me one thing, dear Richard, before we part; do you forgive Ernest the wrong he has done you, freely and fully?" |
20462 | But tell me one thing,--must we all pass through tribulation before entering the kingdom of heaven? |
20462 | But tell me, Mr. Regulus, who is the very dignified and excellent gentleman whom mamma says is coming to escort me home? |
20462 | But what difference did it make? |
20462 | But what mattered it? |
20462 | But what would my mother say? |
20462 | But where is Ernest? |
20462 | But whither had they gone? |
20462 | But who was he, and why had he come? |
20462 | But why do I speak of Ernest Linwood here? |
20462 | But why do I speak thus? |
20462 | But why this deep confusion,--that averted face and downcast eye? |
20462 | But, Richard, is it too painful to speak of the interview you so much dreaded? |
20462 | Can not you guess the donor?" |
20462 | Can not you judge, by the shadow, of the form that casts it? |
20462 | Can the bird help singing and warbling upward into the deep blue sky, sending down a silver shower of melody as it flies? |
20462 | Can the stream help gliding and rippling through its flowery margins? |
20462 | Can you cherish and protect me still?" |
20462 | Can you take in the grandeur of the idea,--_a weight of glory_? |
20462 | Can you walk? |
20462 | Could I expect those tender cares which the yearning heart of childhood craves, as its daily sustenance? |
20462 | Could I trifle even for a moment with an affection so true and constant? |
20462 | Could a long career of guilt and shame thus deface and obliterate that divine and godlike image, in which man was formed? |
20462 | Could any thing prove more strikingly my isolated position in the world than this single fact? |
20462 | Could they not have spared me one day,_ me_, who had never injured them? |
20462 | Could we see this hidden war field, would it not be grand? |
20462 | Dare I ask myself this question? |
20462 | Dear mother!--would she will me to go back where the giant pen dipped its glittering nib into the deep blue ether? |
20462 | Did I exult, as the billows swelled beneath me and bore me up on their foaming crests, in the power of raising the whirlwind and the tempest? |
20462 | Did I not tremble at the thought of passing my whole life in the midst of the tropic storms, the thunders and lightnings of passions? |
20462 | Did I now say, as I did a few months after my marriage, that I preferred the stormy elements in which I moved, to the usual calm of domestic life? |
20462 | Did Mr. Brahan? |
20462 | Did he mean to imply that"artificial ornaments would be superfluous"to me? |
20462 | Did he not appeal to me in the most solemn and awful manner not to betray him?" |
20462 | Did he not strike you?" |
20462 | Did it not spring spontaneously forth from the warmth and purity of your own heart, without waiting the avowal of mine? |
20462 | Did my spirit animate the motionless body extended on that snowy bed, or was it hovering, faint and invisible, above the confines of mortality? |
20462 | Did she know the circumstances of the discovery of my brother, and my husband''s flight? |
20462 | Did you ever imagine how a tender loaf of bread must feel when cut into slices by the sharpened knife? |
20462 | Did you not promise, solemnly promise never to deceive me again, after having caused me such agony by the deception I yet freely forgave?" |
20462 | Did you tell him that I was with you, that I came to comfort and to do him good?" |
20462 | Do I deserve quite so severe a punishment?" |
20462 | Do joy and sorrow always thus go hand in hand? |
20462 | Do n''t you recollect how all the pupils once laughed at a mistake in punctuation of mine? |
20462 | Do you ask if I felt no curiosity then, about the mystery of my parentage? |
20462 | Do you expect me to believe that that bold libertine, who made you the object of his unrepressed admiration, was your father? |
20462 | Do you hear me?'' |
20462 | Do you know I am going home with you? |
20462 | Do you know I have a father, whom I glory in acknowledging? |
20462 | Do you know him?" |
20462 | Do you know that the cloud is removed from my birth, the stigma from my name? |
20462 | Do you know you are getting very like your mother?" |
20462 | Do you know you are the envy of all the young ladies of the city?" |
20462 | Do you like him?" |
20462 | Do you not already inhale the fragrance of the opening flowers of joy?" |
20462 | Do you not hear me?" |
20462 | Do you not look forward with eager anticipations and bright hopes to the realization of youth''s golden dreams?" |
20462 | Do you not perceive a change in that once dark, though splendid countenance? |
20462 | Do you not recognize my quondam tutor and the once dauntless Meg? |
20462 | Do you not think so?" |
20462 | Do you not trace a resemblance to yourself in those pure and graceful features, which, even in marble, breathe the eloquence of love? |
20462 | Do you not?" |
20462 | Do you realize that you are making our home dark and gloomy as the dungeons of the Inquisition?" |
20462 | Do you realize to what sufferings you are dooming the hearts that love you, and whose happiness is bound up in yours? |
20462 | Do you really feel better? |
20462 | Do you remember my asking Richard Clyde to plant a white rose by my mother''s grave? |
20462 | Do you remember that opportunities of improvement are given you to enable you hereafter to secure an honorable independence? |
20462 | Do you remember, in the apocalyptic vision, when it was asked,''What are these, which are arrayed in white robes? |
20462 | Do you think I have left him, but for his good? |
20462 | Do you think I was resigned? |
20462 | Do you think I would hang a dead, dull weight on the wings of his young ambition? |
20462 | Do you think I would not now gladly fold him in my arms and bathe his soul in the overflowing tenderness of maternal love? |
20462 | Do you think her beautiful?" |
20462 | Do you wish me to withdraw, and yield to you the privilege of solitary admiration?" |
20462 | Do you wish to hear me now?" |
20462 | Does Miss Gabriella play?" |
20462 | Does_ he_ look more wretched than you feared?" |
20462 | For circumstances to divide,--for time to chill,--or death to destroy? |
20462 | For had I not robbed her of that first place in her brother''s heart, which she had so long claimed as her inalienable right? |
20462 | For when did youth ever believe the cautions of age, or passion listen to the voice of truth?" |
20462 | For, are you not my sister? |
20462 | From what menagerie has she broken loose?" |
20462 | Had I awakened to the knowledge of woman''s destiny to love and suffer? |
20462 | Had I been guilty of any omitted duty or committed offence? |
20462 | Had I done wrong? |
20462 | Had I lingered abroad so late? |
20462 | Had I suffered an error on the blackboard to pass unnoticed, or allowed a mistake in grammar to be unconnected? |
20462 | Had Margaret wrought this improvement? |
20462 | Had he commenced his mission, and gone to the gloomy cell where his father was imprisoned? |
20462 | Had he gone to ask the dauntless Meg to be the companion of his life, in the more exalted sphere in which he was about to move? |
20462 | Had her son spoken of the cause of my emotion? |
20462 | Had it not been for the mother,--whose dying words"--"And is she dead,--the wronged,--the angel Rosalie? |
20462 | Had my spirit been nearer to God during its unconscious wanderings, and brought back with it impressions of celestial glory never conceived before? |
20462 | Had she indeed supplanted me in my tutor''s guileless heart? |
20462 | Had she not herself told me that grief did not kill? |
20462 | Had she not told me that_ her_ love had died? |
20462 | Had the absence of Ernest been observed? |
20462 | Had the time arrived when I might claim the manuscript, left as a hallowed legacy to the orphan, who had no other inheritance? |
20462 | Has any one dared to slander me,--and for what?" |
20462 | Has he all the peculiarities and fascinations it ascribes to him?" |
20462 | Has he changed since you saw him last?" |
20462 | Has it no home on earth?" |
20462 | Has not God set a mark upon me?" |
20462 | Has not Providence led you by a way you little dreamed of? |
20462 | Has not blood quenched your maniac passion?'' |
20462 | Has not your filial mission been blest? |
20462 | Have I made friends of my readers? |
20462 | Have I offended by my intrusion? |
20462 | Have you forgotten my love for music, Edith?" |
20462 | Have you not heard of heaven,--''the more angels the more room?'' |
20462 | Have you read many of these books?" |
20462 | He confides in no one,--so the world describes him,--is jealous and suspicious even in friendship;--what would he be in love?" |
20462 | How can I be, with you and Peggy?" |
20462 | How can I help feeling at times, that the sun of my existence is set, and a long, dark night before me?" |
20462 | How can she sympathize with me? |
20462 | How can you be excited by any remarks of hers?" |
20462 | How could I be so careless of the feelings of one so gentle and so kind? |
20462 | How could I feel at ease, or do justice to those powers of pleasing with which nature may have gifted me? |
20462 | How could I help answering, in the words of the impassioned Pauline,--"Was ever young imaginative girl wooed in strains of sweeter romance?" |
20462 | How could I meet him, without incurring the displeasure of my husband? |
20462 | How could I plead for Edith, after being silenced by such arguments? |
20462 | How could I preserve outward composure, with such a secret burning in my heart? |
20462 | How could I refuse, when Mrs. Linwood said it would be a source of intellectual improvement as well as pleasure? |
20462 | How could I resist so solemn an appeal, without violating the commands of a dying mother? |
20462 | How could I unseal the sacred history of my mother''s sorrows within the sound of that loud, echoing ha, ha? |
20462 | How could he wound the spotless ears of Rosalie by the tale of his brother''s guilt and shame? |
20462 | How dare you come to me with slanders so vile, false, unprincipled woman?'' |
20462 | How did you learn, what we have vainly sought to know?" |
20462 | How do you do?" |
20462 | How many languages do you speak?" |
20462 | How shall I begin to describe it? |
20462 | How shall I convince you of my gratitude, and what return can I make for your even parental care?" |
20462 | How the young bark feels when the iron wedge is driven through it with cleaving force? |
20462 | How would you like to be perused so closely?" |
20462 | I am a stranger in name, but is there not something that tells you I was born to be your friend? |
20462 | I asked, trembling at the thought of being removed from Mrs. Linwood''s maternal counsels and cares;"will they not share our bridal home?" |
20462 | I did not deserve these caresses; and if my purpose were discovered, would they not be the last? |
20462 | I dreamed not of encountering him, and if I had, I should have felt secure, for how could he recognize_ me_? |
20462 | I exclaimed, laying my hand gently on her quivering shoulder,"what is the matter? |
20462 | I exclaimed;"dare you repeat an accusation so vile?" |
20462 | I feared you thought me guilty of writing another poem, Mr. Regulus; what else could make you look so formidable?" |
20462 | I had expected, dreaded his anger; and was it not partly just? |
20462 | I had seen its mild lineaments in another world; but when,--how long ago? |
20462 | I had thought Grandison Place luxuriously elegant; but what was it compared to this? |
20462 | I loathed the idea of deceiving any one,--but Ernest, my lover, my husband,--how could I beguile his new- born confidence? |
20462 | I suppose you are very learned-- very accomplished? |
20462 | I thought,--I believed,--is it possible that you are not aware"--"Of what?" |
20462 | I waited for him to say,--"Gabriella, would you like to go?" |
20462 | I was but a foolish child then,--what was I now? |
20462 | I will not say_ am_, for I think I have improved some, do n''t you?" |
20462 | I wonder what I shall do when you leave me?" |
20462 | I, who would willingly have laid down my life for his? |
20462 | If I could have prevented his loving;--but how could I, in the constant presence of an object so formed to inspire all the romance of love? |
20462 | If every one recorded their thoughts as I do, would they not, like me, pray for the blotting angel''s tears? |
20462 | If he repulsed me, I could but turn away and weep;--and was not my pillow wet with nightly tears? |
20462 | If the mere description of duties makes you turn pale with dread, what will the reality be? |
20462 | If you droop now, where will be the strength to sustain in a later, darker hour?" |
20462 | Is domestic happiness a houseless wanderer? |
20462 | Is he not different from any one you ever saw before?" |
20462 | Is he not handsome? |
20462 | Is he, Gabriella?" |
20462 | Is it a portrait, or an ideal picture?" |
20462 | Is it mine? |
20462 | Is it not novel to you, as well as to me?" |
20462 | Is it not sacrilegious to penetrate so deeply into the mysteries of nature?" |
20462 | Is it possible that you are such a little nun, that you have heard nothing of this?" |
20462 | Is it sacrilege? |
20462 | Is it strange that the cold, venomous tongue of slander, hissing at my very back, should make me shudder and recoil as if a serpent were there? |
20462 | Is not my love passing the love of man, and worth the sacrifice of earth''s fleeting joys?" |
20462 | Is not my mother kind,--is not Edith tender and affectionate? |
20462 | Is not sympathy in sorrow the wife''s holiest privilege?" |
20462 | Is that so very strange?" |
20462 | Is the gift of Ernest greeted with such indifference?" |
20462 | Is the world right in the character it has given? |
20462 | Is there no chord in your heart that vibrates in harmony with mine? |
20462 | Is there no starving Lazarus, who may rebuke us hereafter for the sumptuous fare over which we have revelled? |
20462 | Is there not more peace and softness, yet more dignity and depth of thought? |
20462 | Is there not something very striking, very attractive about him? |
20462 | Is this love mine?" |
20462 | Is this love only given in_ return_? |
20462 | Is this poetry? |
20462 | Is this the return you make for her filial devotion? |
20462 | Just heaven!--who knows?" |
20462 | Linwood?" |
20462 | Linwood?" |
20462 | Mamma and I were standing by your bed, with our backs to the door, when we heard a hoarse, low voice behind us, saying,--"''Is she dead?'' |
20462 | May I invite her home with me?" |
20462 | May they not be found everywhere in this great thoroughfare of humanity?" |
20462 | May we not be pardoned for want of implicit faith in her angelic nature, when such examples are recorded of her perfidy and heartlessness?" |
20462 | Mrs. Linwood,"I cried,"will your love and kindness survive the knowledge of all these pages will reveal? |
20462 | Must I bear the awful burden of authority, that unlovely appendage to youth? |
20462 | Must I forever be a slave to hours? |
20462 | Must I return?" |
20462 | Must I weave for others the chain whose daily restraint chafed and galled my free, impatient spirit? |
20462 | Must we all travel with bleeding feet the thorny path of suffering, before being admitted into the presence of God?" |
20462 | My motives are pure, indeed they are; you believe they are, do you not?" |
20462 | Oh, Ernest, surely this is a place to dream of, not a home to live in?" |
20462 | Oh, my child, what can we do? |
20462 | Only answer me one question,--Was it your_ own will_, or the will of another that governed your actions to- night?'' |
20462 | Or have I become so civilized and polished that you do not recognize me?" |
20462 | Or who witnessed our scenes of agony and reconciliation in the palace walls of our winter home? |
20462 | Ought they not to be sought? |
20462 | Perhaps-- who knows? |
20462 | Rather a romantic name, is it not? |
20462 | Regulus?" |
20462 | Regulus?" |
20462 | Richard will you not help me?" |
20462 | Shall I ever forget the moment when I stood on Termination Rock, beyond which no mortal foot has ever penetrated? |
20462 | Shall I find her,--shall I find my mother within?" |
20462 | Shall I tell how foolish I had been? |
20462 | Shall we not meet hereafter, and have abundant opportunities for conversation, free and uninterrupted? |
20462 | She does not look much like a bride of blood, does she, with that face of softly flowing contour, and eye of patient anguish? |
20462 | Slumbering, did I say? |
20462 | Take away my love for Ernest, and what would be left of life? |
20462 | Tell me not of opposing barriers; only tell me what your heart this moment dictates; forgetful of the past, regardless of the future? |
20462 | Tell me once more, are you Therà © sa''s child?" |
20462 | Tell me, without prevarication,--were you, or were you not in the Park, walking with a gentleman, on the morning you left for Mrs. Brahan''s? |
20462 | That because I was dumb, I lay like a lamb before the stroke of the shearer? |
20462 | That sad, though glorious reversion of our riper and darker years? |
20462 | The Hidden Sin The Dethroned Heiress The Gipsy''s Warning All For Love The Mysterious Guest Why Did He Marry Her? |
20462 | The bold gaze of the stranger would naturally excite his anger against him, but why should it estrange him from me? |
20462 | The bolt of indelible disgrace quivered in my heart; why should I wish to live? |
20462 | The empire of passion is veiled, and its battle ground is secret Who beheld the interview in the library, which I have just described? |
20462 | The fervor and steadfastness of your faith? |
20462 | The tone seemed intended to check her,--yet what had she said? |
20462 | There is a future for you, a happy one, is there not?" |
20462 | There, how does that look?" |
20462 | They did not know all that she was to us,--how could they? |
20462 | Through the morning twilight of my heart, was not a star trembling, whose silver rays would never be quenched, save in the nightshades of death? |
20462 | Was Providence opening a way in which my doubting feet should walk? |
20462 | Was he sincere, when with apparent enthusiasm he had applied to me the epithet,_ beautiful_? |
20462 | Was he the heir of his father''s vices, and was he conscious of his ignominious career? |
20462 | Was it no check to social joy and convivial pleasure? |
20462 | Was it not time to listen to the warning voice, whose accents, echoing from the tomb, must have the power and grandeur of prophecy? |
20462 | Was it possible that these young, innocent creatures would ever become hardened by worldliness, polluted by sin, or saddened by sorrow? |
20462 | Was it possible that this strange, wild girl, was attracted by the pure, unvarnished qualities of this"great grown boy,"as Dr. Harlowe called him? |
20462 | Was it possible that village gossip had reached these venerable walls? |
20462 | Was it the dawn of an eternal morning, or the lingering radiance of life''s departing day? |
20462 | Was she thinking of Julian, the young artist at the Falls, and wondering if the brief romance of their love were indeed a dream? |
20462 | Was there ever a fairer prospect of felicity, if love, pure, intense love, constitutes the happiness of wedded life? |
20462 | Was this my introduction to that world,--that great world, of which I had heard and thought and dreamed so much? |
20462 | Was this, indeed, the once gallant and long beloved St. James? |
20462 | We shall all lie in the churchyard together,--Peggy, my mother, and I,--and you will plant a white rose over my mother''s grave, will you not? |
20462 | Well, is not Ernest very interesting?" |
20462 | Well, we are friends again; are we not?" |
20462 | Were the outlines softened by the dark- flowing sable, classic and graceful? |
20462 | What am I writing? |
20462 | What can I do here but remind you by my presence of him, whom I have banished for ever from your arms? |
20462 | What can have excited you in this manner? |
20462 | What cared I, when he was with me, when his arms were round me, his heart answering to the throbs of mine? |
20462 | What could I say, in answer to such abounding kindness? |
20462 | What could I, should I do? |
20462 | What did I come here for, but to relieve your cares? |
20462 | What did he suspect? |
20462 | What do I live for, but you? |
20462 | What do you think she has done? |
20462 | What do you want to go back to your musty old bachelor''s room for, when there is such delightful company here?" |
20462 | What dreadful doom is impending over you?" |
20462 | What fearful scenes may hereafter dawn on my memory? |
20462 | What had I done to cause this deep displeasure? |
20462 | What has a little child to do with thought? |
20462 | What have I on earth but thee? |
20462 | What if_ I_ turn inquisitor?" |
20462 | What in the world do they banish_ me_ for? |
20462 | What invisible sword hung trembling over the future? |
20462 | What is it now? |
20462 | What is the meaning of a report, which I should have regarded as the idle wind, did not your overwhelming confusion establish its truth? |
20462 | What makes you think I like anybody better?" |
20462 | What matters now, my Gabriella, that I have trod a thorny path, if it lead to heaven at last? |
20462 | What meant that long green mound stretching at my side, that broken shaft, twined with the cypress vine? |
20462 | What mighty engine would she set in motion to benefit her species?" |
20462 | What must this noble father think of me?" |
20462 | What power had drawn up the rosy fluid from the Artesian well of her heart? |
20462 | What prophet hand had smitten the rock? |
20462 | What shaft of malice can pierce you, with my arm as a defence, and my bosom as a shield? |
20462 | What tidings have you to communicate? |
20462 | What to them were the storms they had weathered, the dangers they had overcome? |
20462 | What veteran_ intriguante_ ever arranged any thing more coolly, more deliberately? |
20462 | What was its name?" |
20462 | What was there about this stranger that haunted me long after the thunders of the cataract had ceased to reverberate on the ear? |
20462 | What were the plains of Marathon, the pass of Thermopylà ¦, or Cannà ¦ paved with golden rings, compared to it? |
20462 | What will you do in that great city without female friendship and sympathy? |
20462 | What words of mine could pierce through the cloud of infamy in which his remembrance wrapped me? |
20462 | What would he think of my despicable vanity, my more than childish foolishness? |
20462 | What would my mother, what would Dr. Harlowe say, if they knew of this?" |
20462 | What would the world say? |
20462 | What would you say, my own dear wife, who desire her departure even as I do myself?" |
20462 | What_ did_ you think of him? |
20462 | What_ do_ you think of him now? |
20462 | What_ had_ I done? |
20462 | What_ will_ your mother say? |
20462 | When can I see you alone? |
20462 | When will womanhood commence, on whose horizon the morning star of love is to rise in clouded lustre? |
20462 | Where can I meet you? |
20462 | Where did I come from? |
20462 | Where did you find her, Mrs. Linwood? |
20462 | Where else could I read it? |
20462 | Where had I seen a countenance and figure resembling his? |
20462 | Where had my spirit been while the waning year had rolled on? |
20462 | Where have you sought me? |
20462 | Where is she, my child? |
20462 | Where is the strength and vitality of your love? |
20462 | Where is your angel mother, whom I have sought sorrowing so many years? |
20462 | Where was Ernest? |
20462 | Where was I? |
20462 | Where was Richard? |
20462 | Where was he now? |
20462 | Where was my soul wandering? |
20462 | Where was she, that dreadful woman? |
20462 | Where was the fascination which had enthralled alike the youthful Rosalie and the impassioned Therà © sa? |
20462 | Where was the impenetrable reserve of which his mother had spoken? |
20462 | Where were the chains, whose prophetic clanking had chilled my misgiving heart? |
20462 | Whither am I wandering? |
20462 | Who are_ they_? |
20462 | Who are_ they_? |
20462 | Who are_ they_? |
20462 | Who can this be? |
20462 | Who ever dreamed of clothing them, in imagination, in dark or party- colored garments? |
20462 | Who knows but our weak, filial hands, may lift our unhappy father from the black abyss of sin and impenitence, Almighty God assisting us? |
20462 | Who knows but that the golden gates of the Eden of immortality might have opened to admit the wandering Peri to her long- lost home? |
20462 | Who saw him kneeling at his mother''s feet at the midnight hour? |
20462 | Who was I? |
20462 | Who was the artist?" |
20462 | Who was this man, whose presence caused you such overpowering emotion, and who exchanged with you glances of such mysterious meaning? |
20462 | Who would dream of any one sporting with such a man as Mr. Regulus? |
20462 | Who would have believed it? |
20462 | Who would not be happy in such a palace as this?" |
20462 | Who, indeed, did know what influence that book, embalmed in such sacred memories, might have on the sinner''s blasted heart? |
20462 | Why could I not appreciate the value of his frank, noble, and confiding nature? |
20462 | Why could I not return this love, which might have made me so happy? |
20462 | Why could not Ernest have welcomed him as such? |
20462 | Why did Dr. Harlowe send me away? |
20462 | Why did I not see this subject in the same clear, just light? |
20462 | Why did I stand trembling and irresolute, as if I had no right to penetrate that lonely apartment? |
20462 | Why did I think of him in reference to myself? |
20462 | Why did he repel with coldness and suspicion the honest, ingenuous heart that longed to meet his with fraternal warmth and confidence? |
20462 | Why did he wish to be more? |
20462 | Why did you not deny it at once?" |
20462 | Why do you check a vow which I dare to make in the very face of Omnipotence?" |
20462 | Why do you do this? |
20462 | Why do you give your friends such exquisite pain, yourself such unnecessary misery?" |
20462 | Why had Mrs. Linwood invited so strange a guest? |
20462 | Why had he left so soon? |
20462 | Why have not you done it, juxtaposited as you are? |
20462 | Why have you so cruelly awakened me? |
20462 | Why in wishing to be more than a friend, does he make me desire that he should be less? |
20462 | Why need Mrs. Linwood have said that? |
20462 | Why need she have associated him so intimately and significantly with me? |
20462 | Why should I intrude my vindication on him, when he cared not to hear it? |
20462 | Why should I think of the drudgery of life, pillowed on the downy couch of luxury and ease? |
20462 | Why should I? |
20462 | Why should he not believe? |
20462 | Why should we wait? |
20462 | Why was I forsaken and alone? |
20462 | Why was he always saying something to rouse the slumbering serpent in the bosom of Ernest? |
20462 | Why was there no spirit- echo to_ his_ voice; no quickened pulsations at the sound of_ his_ coming footsteps? |
20462 | Why will not some of the bystanders prevent them, instead of urging them with such exulting shouts?" |
20462 | Why will you not speak? |
20462 | Why, Gabriella, how many victims have your chariot wheels of conquest rolled over?" |
20462 | Why, tender and pitying Saviour, do we wait for the night time of sorrow to fathom the depths of thy love and compassion? |
20462 | Why, then, rash and blind, have you committed your happiness into my keeping? |
20462 | Will a mother''s virtues cancel the record of a father''s guilt? |
20462 | Will he have pity on my forsaken youth?" |
20462 | Will he hear the cries of the fatherless? |
20462 | Will not mine absorb it? |
20462 | Will you be ready?" |
20462 | Will you not be ingenuous enough to tell me?" |
20462 | Will you remember this?" |
20462 | Without father, brother, or protector, in whom should I confide, if ungrateful and untrusting I turn from you?" |
20462 | Would I lift it if I could? |
20462 | Would Mrs. Linwood introduce me,--and if she did, in what manner? |
20462 | Would there be any thing in her air or countenance to imply that I was a dependent on her bounty, rather than an adopted daughter of the household? |
20462 | Would you indeed consent that the world should know that it was your father who had committed so dark a crime? |
20462 | Would you know his virtues? |
20462 | Would you wait for the sultry summer, the dry autumn, to cultivate the morning flower of Paradise?" |
20462 | Would you, Gabriella?" |
20462 | Yet how could he sigh with Edith at his side? |
20462 | You believe me, Mrs. Linwood-- tell me, you believe me in this?" |
20462 | You did not think I would suffer you to remain among strangers, when my heart has been yearning to meet you for weary months?" |
20462 | You do not know how happy I am,--I mean how glad I am,--you did not expect me, did you?" |
20462 | You have destroyed my mother; must her child too be sacrificed?" |
20462 | You have never been in what is called the great world?" |
20462 | You will let me stay, will you not?" |
20462 | You will not wish to return?" |
20462 | _ Confidence_ did he say? |
20462 | _ If living_, where was he, and who was he? |
20462 | and he who walks by her side, with the romantic, beaming countenance, now flashing with the enthusiasm, now shaded by the sensibility of genius? |
20462 | and me, Ernest; does he refuse consolation from me?" |
20462 | and what has caused such excessive embarrassment? |
20462 | and whence come they?'' |
20462 | and why art thou disquieted within me? |
20462 | and will it not be easier to go hand in hand, though we do tread a thorny path? |
20462 | at length I said, feeling that I must no longer keep him from her,"and Edith? |
20462 | could they not spare thee even in thy grave, where the wicked are said to cease from troubling and the weary are at rest? |
20462 | cried Mr. Harland, rising too, with anger flashing from his eyes,"do you apply those remarks to me?" |
20462 | did I not then pass the agonies of death? |
20462 | do you know that this is an unpardonable waste of time? |
20462 | flatterer-- and yet, who would not prefer the beauty of earth, to the cold idealism of spirit loveliness? |
20462 | had he addressed me in indulgent words as these, who knows but that, like burning Sappho, I might have sang as well as loved? |
20462 | had not I seen him bleeding, insensible, the image of death? |
20462 | have you no power over the wealth that must be rusting in your coffers? |
20462 | have you seen my father? |
20462 | he asked, advancing to where I stood;"do you perceive the resemblance?" |
20462 | he asked, as he turned back and entered the house with me,"or was it Edith''s sisterly hand placed them there?" |
20462 | he asked, in a low voice,"or has the kindness of friends rendered it superfluous? |
20462 | he exclaimed;"who was she, that she should pray for me?" |
20462 | how could I tell him that I had not heard understandingly one sentence that he uttered? |
20462 | how dared you say that? |
20462 | is it not dreadful, Ernest, even to think of? |
20462 | is it not wicked to say that?" |
20462 | is it you who utter such a thought? |
20462 | must I add-- the falsest of human beings? |
20462 | my home?" |
20462 | or how could I explain the cause of my mental distraction? |
20462 | or shall I describe it at all? |
20462 | rebel that I was, did I not need the chastening discipline, never exerted but in wisdom and in love? |
20462 | said I;"may I, dear mother? |
20462 | she asked, laying her soft, white hand on my shoulders, and looking archly in my face;"is that all, Gabriella?" |
20462 | she exclaimed, catching me round the waist and turning me to the light,"what_ have_ you been doing? |
20462 | she exclaimed, suddenly resuming her old wild manner,"why did you not prize it yourself? |
20462 | she exclaimed, turning quickly round, her cheeks crimsoned and her eyes sparkling most luminously,--"who told you such nonsense?" |
20462 | thought I,"how many times have I thus listened; but has he ever thus read?" |
20462 | was this the man who had captivated the hearts of two lovely women, and then broken them? |
20462 | weeping still, my Gabriella?" |
20462 | what demon tempted you to such fatal imprudence?" |
20462 | what will be his doom?" |
20462 | what_ will_ she think has become of you?" |
20462 | where now are the''liveried angels''that will guard it from pollution?" |
20462 | where_ have_ you been staying? |
20462 | whose do you think that smiling cherub is, with such dark, velvet eyes, and pearly skin, and mouth of heavenly sweetness? |
4732 | How shall I do such great wrong and sin against God? |
4732 | If your sins are as scarlet, how should they be reckoned white as snow? 4732 Is it thou, O troubler of Israel?" |
4732 | Thou wilt build a house FOR ME? 4732 What is youth? |
4732 | Why hast thou disquieted me, to bring me up? 4732 Woe to them who long for the day of the Lord!--What to you is the day of the Lord,? |
4732 | ), what conscientious man can attach any weight to the opposite assertion of the Talmud? |
4732 | ):"Shall I come before Him with burnt- offerings with calves of a year old? |
4732 | 1- 9 go back before chap x. and join on to vi.-ix.? |
4732 | 10), if no mention is made of his wrestling with El, which was the occasion of his change of name? |
4732 | 11, Y+R for Y+RP? |
4732 | 13), which apprehends the antithesis thus:"THOU wilt build a house for me? |
4732 | 13:) OUTOI) EUXONTAI> UEIN( EKATOMBAS TOIS QEOIS KAI XRWNTAI TOIS( IEREIOIS PROS) EUWXIAN. |
4732 | 14 are even called officers of the host as in 2Kings xi 15, after their soldiers have been taken from them or metamorphosed? |
4732 | 14)? |
4732 | 1:"and Jehovah spake to him, How long wilt thou mourn for Saul, seeing I have rejected him?" |
4732 | 29? |
4732 | 2:) EN( HLLLA| TI LEGEI) H GRAFH i.e., How stands it written in the section relating to Elijah? |
4732 | 2Maccabees and a multitude of other compositions have also made use of"sources,"but how does this enhance the value of their statements? |
4732 | 30(? |
4732 | 4,"Remember ye the torah of Moses my servant;"but where shall we look for any second expression of this nature? |
4732 | 8? |
4732 | > xxvi. |
4732 | ?> CHAPTER X. |
4732 | A period from which no monuments are preserved to us? |
4732 | Above all, how could the scribes hope to retain their importance if temple and synagogue were cast into the shade by politics and clash of arms? |
4732 | And Pharaoh said to Jacob, How many are the days of the years of thy life? |
4732 | And finally as for the reference to Ezekiel(? |
4732 | And for what reason? |
4732 | And what could be the sense of representing Adam and Eve as so intent to know what was sin and what was virtue? |
4732 | And what of the ungodly? |
4732 | And when they ask: Why hath Jehovah done thus to this land and to this house? |
4732 | And which is the more original-- that the angels use a ladder as in Genesis, or that they have wings as in Isaiah? |
4732 | And why? |
4732 | Are we to suppose that Doeg, single- handed, could have made away with eighty- five men? |
4732 | Are we to take it then that he formed his own special private notion of the Torah? |
4732 | But a mist(?) |
4732 | But how did the difference arise? |
4732 | But in what manner was this done? |
4732 | But is it older or younger than Deuteronomy? |
4732 | But is the ark a guarantee of the existence of the tabernacle? |
4732 | But the most important question came at last to be, how individuals were to have part in the glory of the future? |
4732 | But the vengeance is to be executed on God, and in such a case who can be the avenger? |
4732 | But what is the inner relation of the one version to the other? |
4732 | But what is the state of the case as regards the_ pesah_? |
4732 | But what of the fact that a people of at least two millions has only 22,273 firstborn males, or say 50,000 firstborn of both sexes? |
4732 | But what would the objectors have? |
4732 | But where is this central authority in the period of the judges? |
4732 | But, even if Zerah were really a historical personage, of what avail would this be for the unhistorical connection? |
4732 | By the way is there anything in the similarity between Sene and Sinai? |
4732 | Can this have been the time when Noah''s family made up the whole population of the earth? |
4732 | Deuteronomy was really nothing more than a theory during the pre- exile period, but who would argue from this that it was not there at all? |
4732 | Did He in truth dwell behind the clouds, and did He not care about the doings of men? |
4732 | Did he find support in the Nebiim? |
4732 | Did ye offer unto me sacrifices and gifts in the wilderness the forty years, O house of Israel?" |
4732 | Do they expect to find positive statements of the non- existence of what had not yet come into being? |
4732 | Does this amount, in the circumstances, to a proof that such traits were derived from that source? |
4732 | Even critical analysis? |
4732 | For what reason does Chronicles stand in the canon at all, if not in order to teach us this? |
4732 | God hath delivered into your hand the princes of Midian, and what was I able to do in comparison of you?" |
4732 | Had the Levites a military organisation, and, divided into three companies, did they change places every week in the temple service? |
4732 | Hagar called the name of Jehovah who spoke with her, El Roi( God of Seeing), for she said,"Have I seen God, and am I kept in life after my seeing?" |
4732 | Have we anything like the true history of Joseph in the Priestly Code? |
4732 | Have ye not cast out the priests of Jehovah, the sons of Aaron and the Levites, and made for yourselves priests after the manner of the Gentiles? |
4732 | He can not allow anything to happen without Levites; and was the ark of the covenant to be fetched to Jerusalem without them? |
4732 | He is a second Moses? |
4732 | How are we to regard this fact? |
4732 | How can we explain this preponderance of priests over Levites, which is still surprising even if the individual figures are not to be taken as exact? |
4732 | How does it manage that? |
4732 | How in that case would it have been possible for him to make himself understood by the people, or to exercise influence over them? |
4732 | How much more must this be the case with narrators whose express business is with the tradition? |
4732 | How was it possible that Jehoiada should waive his divine right and suffer such a sacrilegious invasion of sacred privileges? |
4732 | How was it possible that in spite of this his rule had no continuance? |
4732 | How was it with the martyrs who had died in the expectation of the kingdom of God, before it came? |
4732 | How would the colourless God of abstraction fare in such a situation? |
4732 | If men do their part, how can Jehovah fail to do His? |
4732 | If the question, Whereon did Jehovah''s relation to Israel ultimately rest? |
4732 | If they are red like crimson, how should they be as wool? |
4732 | If we are to explain the_ omissions_ by reference to the"author''s plan,"why may we not apply the same principle to the_ additions_? |
4732 | In fact, the narrator speaks of a permanent house at Shiloh with doors and doorposts; that possibly may be an anachronism/1/( yet why?) |
4732 | Into the genealogy a wonderful account of the slaying of the children of Ephraim by the men of Gath( 1Samuel iv.?) |
4732 | Is it a humiliating thing that Israel should owe its freedom to a Persian? |
4732 | Is it supposes that the tabernacle tolerates other sanctuaries besides itself? |
4732 | Is not the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage of Abiezer? |
4732 | Is the Law the starting- point for the history of ancient Israel or for that of Judaism? |
4732 | Is the Lord pleased with thousands of rams, with ten thousands of rivers of oil? |
4732 | It was not removed from the earth after the fall; it is there still, else whence the need of cherubs to guard the access to it? |
4732 | Must not some regard in fairness be paid to the ensemble of the question? |
4732 | Nay, is it not rather a proof of the world- wide sway of the God of Jacob that He should thus summon His instruments from the ends of the earth? |
4732 | Now it is admitted that the three constituent elements are separated from each other by wide intervals; the question then arises, In what order? |
4732 | Only in< 2Kings?> xviii. |
4732 | Or was Samuel in conspiracy with the priests against Saul? |
4732 | Out of mere delight in Levitical pomp and high solemnities? |
4732 | Perhaps because now the Priestly Code has suddenly awakened to life after its long trance, and become the inspiration of Ezekiel? |
4732 | Serug is the name of a district which borders Haran on the North; how can the son of Serug all at once leap back to Ur Casdim? |
4732 | Shall we suppose that they all of them forget this subject by mere accident, or that they conspired to ignore it? |
4732 | Should we ask,_ how_ were things then? |
4732 | Surely not the false gods which he has destroyed? |
4732 | The prophet Elijah, always on the spot at the right moment, hurled the word at him,"Hast thou killed and also taken possession? |
4732 | The question is, which of the two writings stands nearest to the starting- point? |
4732 | The site of Sinai(= Horeb?) |
4732 | Then is the Torah to die with him, and truth itself to succumb to falsehood, to heathenism? |
4732 | There are no directions about the_ nervus ischiadicus_<** sciatic nerve?? |
4732 | There are no directions about the_ nervus ischiadicus_<** sciatic nerve?? |
4732 | Thus it is that the prophets are able to ask whether then Jehovah has commanded His people to tax their energies with such exertions? |
4732 | To the Chronicler the story so told is quite incomprehensible; what does he make of it? |
4732 | To what purpose( it was asked) all this religious strictness, which led to so much that was unpleasant? |
4732 | Was he the man in whom the Messianic prophecies had found their fulfilment? |
4732 | Was it such a difficult matter to find out forty definite stations in the wilderness for the forty years of the wanderings? |
4732 | Was there any other quarter in which help could yet be sought? |
4732 | Was there then, apart from this, strictly speaking, no material difference? |
4732 | We might draw conclusions with regard to the body from the head: but what sort of an idea can we form of the position of Samuel? |
4732 | Were the wicked right in saying that there was no God, i.e., that He did not rule and judge on earth? |
4732 | Were these then the Messianic times which, it had been foretold, were to dawn at the close of their captivity? |
4732 | Were they to escape from wrath because they died before the day of judgment? |
4732 | What can have become, in the meantime, of the golden altar of incense? |
4732 | What could the assertion mean that God would have no one but Himself know the difference between good and evil, and would deny to man this knowledge? |
4732 | What did they mean? |
4732 | What does Riehm mean by high antiquity? |
4732 | What follows from this for the question before us? |
4732 | What great genius was needed to transform the temple into a portable tent? |
4732 | What indeed will ye do in the time of the solemn assembly and in the day of the feast of Jehovah? |
4732 | What is the knowledge of good and evil? |
4732 | What plan was to be taken, what materials to be used for such a building as the times allowed? |
4732 | What power could then have been able in those days, when every man did what was right in his own eyes, to compel the individual to pay? |
4732 | What sort of creative power is that which brings forth nothing but numbers and names? |
4732 | What then are we to infer from this as to the historical place of the Priestly Code, if it be judged necessary to assign it such a place at all? |
4732 | What then does Ewald say to the narratives of Daniel or Jonah? |
4732 | What then? |
4732 | What will ye do in the day of festival and in the day of the feast of the Lord? |
4732 | Whence this concentration of all Israel into one great congregation[ QHL,( DH], without its like anywhere else in the Old Testament? |
4732 | Whence this sudden change? |
4732 | Where do they ever lean on any other authority than the truth of what they say; where do they rest on any other foundation than their own certainty? |
4732 | Where is the Mosaic altar of burnt- offering? |
4732 | Where is the whole wilderness- legislation as given from the tabernacle? |
4732 | Who else than Jehovah could have thus sent Cyrus? |
4732 | Why all this zeal for Jehovah, who refused to be mollified by it? |
4732 | Why does he limit his attention to the prophetic literature? |
4732 | Why not until now? |
4732 | Why the two altars and the two stories of their inauguration, both tracing their origin to the patron of Ophra? |
4732 | Why then did not Jehoiada make use of his own guard, the myriads of Levites who were at his command? |
4732 | Why, for example, are there none of them in the mass of laws of the middle books of the Hexateuch? |
4732 | Why? |
4732 | Will ye save him? |
4732 | [.1?] |
4732 | and not only so, but even after the ordinances relating to the adornment of the priests, and the inauguration of the divine service? |
4732 | and where be all His miracles, of which our fathers told us? |
4732 | and xxxii.? |
4732 | m(yl q+n ii.19? |
4732 | seq.? |
4732 | so that whosoever cometh to fill his hands with a young bullock and seven rams, even he may become a priest for the false gods? |
4732 | vanquished Goliath the giant, the shaft of whose spear was as thick as a weaver''s beam? |
4732 | was the Law to be even a second time broken under the pious king David? |
4732 | what was exactly the nature of the theocratic constitution? |
4732 | why thus separated from the other furnishings of the inner sanctuary? |
4705 | A merchant is desirous of knowing the sum total of his accounts with any person: Why? |
4705 | After what manner, therefore, do they belong to self; and how are they connected with it? |
4705 | An action, or sentiment, or character is virtuous or vicious; why? |
4705 | And how can the floor and roof ever meet, while they are separated by the four walls, that lie in a contrary position? |
4705 | And how can we justify to ourselves any belief we repose in them? |
4705 | And how distinguish that exactly from a probability? |
4705 | And if they were founded on original instincts, coued they have any greater stability? |
4705 | And to what end can it serve either for the service of mankind, or for my own private interest? |
4705 | And what creature departs more widely, not only from right reason, but from his own character and disposition? |
4705 | And why is it contrary, unless it be more shocking than any delicate satire? |
4705 | And, Whether this feeling be any thing but a firmer conception, or a faster hold, that we take of the object? |
4705 | Are the changes of our body from infancy to old age more regular and certain than those of our mind and conduct? |
4705 | Are they therefore, upon that account, immoral? |
4705 | But after what manner does it give pleasure? |
4705 | But can anything be imagined more absurd and contradictory than this reasoning? |
4705 | But can there be any difficulty in proving, that vice and virtue are not matters of fact, whose existence we can infer by reason? |
4705 | But can we doubt of this agreement in their influence on the judgment, when we consider the nature and effects Of EDUCATION? |
4705 | But farther, what must become of all our particular perceptions upon this hypothesis? |
4705 | But in what manner? |
4705 | But is property, or right, or obligation, intelligible, without an antecedent morality? |
4705 | But may not the sense of morality or duty produce an action, without any other motive? |
4705 | But shall we say upon that account, that the wine is harmonious, or the music of a good flavour? |
4705 | But then I ask, if the removal of design be able entirely to remove the passion of love and hatred? |
4705 | But what do we mean by impossible? |
4705 | But what have I here said, that reflections very refined and metaphysical have little or no influence upon us? |
4705 | But what makes the end agreeable? |
4705 | But what passion? |
4705 | But who will assert, that this is the only foundation of justice? |
4705 | Can he give any definition of it, that will not be the same with that of causation? |
4705 | Do the children arise from this copulation more uniformly, than does the parents care for their safety and preservation? |
4705 | Do you conceive any thing but merely that perception? |
4705 | Do you therefore mean that it takes not the points in the same order and by the same rule, as is peculiar and essential to a right line? |
4705 | Does it arise from an impression of sensation or of reflection? |
4705 | Does it discover a relation or a matter of fact? |
4705 | For can any one conceive a passion of a yard in length, a foot in breadth, and an inch in thickness? |
4705 | For from what impression coued this idea be derived? |
4705 | For how can an impression represent a substance, otherwise than by resembling it? |
4705 | For how few of our past actions are there, of which we have any memory? |
4705 | For how is it possible we can separate what is not distinguishable, or distinguish what is not different? |
4705 | For if they can not, what possibly can become of them? |
4705 | For is it more certain, that two flat pieces of marble will unite together, than that two young savages of different sexes will copulate? |
4705 | For supposing such a conjunction, would the indivisible thought exist on the left or on the right hand of this extended divisible body? |
4705 | For what does he mean by production? |
4705 | For what does reason discover, when it pronounces any action vicious? |
4705 | For what if he be my enemy, and has given me just cause to hate him? |
4705 | For what is more capricious than human actions? |
4705 | For what is the memory but a faculty, by which we raise up the images of past perceptions? |
4705 | For what reason? |
4705 | For whence should it be derived? |
4705 | For why do we blame all gross and injurious language, unless it be, because we esteem it contrary to good breeding and humanity? |
4705 | For, who ever thought of forbearing any action, because others might possibly draw false conclusions from it? |
4705 | From what causes do I derive my existence, and to what condition shall I return? |
4705 | From whence does this proceed, but that the memory in the first case assists the fancy and gives an additional force and vigour to its conceptions? |
4705 | Have you any notion of self or substance? |
4705 | Here therefore I must ask, What is our idea of a simple and indivisible point? |
4705 | How can he prove to me, for instance, that two right lines can not have one common segment? |
4705 | How do we separate this impossibility from an improbability? |
4705 | How else coued any thing exist without length, without breadth, or without depth? |
4705 | How is it possible they coued ever become objects of pride, except by means of that transition above- explained? |
4705 | How is this to be accounted for? |
4705 | How much more when aided by that circumstance? |
4705 | How then is it possible, that the same substance can at once be modifyed into that square table, and into this round one? |
4705 | How then shall we adjust those principles together? |
4705 | I Does it attend us at all times, or does it only return at intervals? |
4705 | I JUSTICE, WHETHER A NATURAL OR ARTIFICIAL VIRTUE? |
4705 | I JUSTICE, WHETHER A NATURAL OR ARTIFICIAL VIRTUE? |
4705 | I first ask mathematicians, what they mean when they say one line or surface is EQUAL to, or GREATER or LESS than another? |
4705 | I have declared my disapprobation of their systems; and can I be surprized, if they should express a hatred of mine and of my person? |
4705 | I therefore ask, Wherein consists the difference betwixt believing and disbelieving any proposition? |
4705 | If at intervals, at what times principally does it return, and by what causes is it produced? |
4705 | If it be conveyed to us by our senses, I ask, which of them; and after what manner? |
4705 | If it be, how can that question have place, concerning the subsistence of self, under a change of substance? |
4705 | If they be distinct, what is the difference betwixt them? |
4705 | Is it an impression of sensation or of reflection? |
4705 | Is it because it is his duty to be grateful? |
4705 | Is it in every part without being extended? |
4705 | Is it in this particular part, or in that other? |
4705 | Is it pleasant, or painful, or indifferent? |
4705 | Is it therefore nothing? |
4705 | Is self the same with substance? |
4705 | Is the indivisible subject, or immaterial substance, if you will, on the left or on the right hand of the perception? |
4705 | Now I ask, what idea do we form of these bodies or objects, to which we suppose solidity to belong? |
4705 | Now after what manner are they related to ourselves? |
4705 | Now it is certain we have an idea of extension; for otherwise why do we talk and reason concerning it? |
4705 | Now the question is, after what manner this utility and importance operate upon us? |
4705 | Now what idea have we of these bodies? |
4705 | Now what impression do oar senses here convey to us? |
4705 | Now what is our idea of the moving body, without which motion is incomprehensible? |
4705 | On the back or fore side of it? |
4705 | On the surface or in the middle? |
4705 | Or if it be possible to imagine, that such errors are the sources of all immorality? |
4705 | Or if it were, is an exception to a general rule in every case criminal, for no other reason than because it is an exception? |
4705 | Or if these colours unite into one, what new colour will they produce by their union? |
4705 | Or is it entire in any one part without deserting the rest? |
4705 | Or that it is impossible to draw more than one right line betwixt any two points? |
4705 | Or, who ever performed any, that he might give rise to true conclusions?] |
4705 | Ought the right of the elder to be regarded in a nation, where the eldest brother had no advantage in the succession to private families? |
4705 | Shall the despair of success make me assert, that I am here possest of an idea, which is not preceded by any similar impression? |
4705 | Shall we then rest contented with these two relations of contiguity and succession, as affording a complete idea of causation? |
4705 | Shall we, then, establish it for a general maxim, that no refined or elaborate reasoning is ever to be received? |
4705 | Should it be asked, what proportion these two species of morality bear to each other? |
4705 | The next question is, Of what nature are these impressions, and after what manner do they operate upon us? |
4705 | The next question, then, should naturally be, how experience gives rise to such a principle? |
4705 | The question is, whether these intervals do not afford us the idea of extension without body? |
4705 | Under what obligation do I lie of making such an abuse of time? |
4705 | WHETHER IT IS BY MEANS OF OUR IDEAS OR IMPRESSIONS WE DISTINGUISH BETWIXT VICE AND VIRTUE, AND PRONOUNCE AN ACTION BLAMEABLE OR PRAISEWORTHY? |
4705 | We may well ask, What causes induce us to believe in the existence of body? |
4705 | What beings surround me? |
4705 | What farther proof can be desired for the present system? |
4705 | What farther proof can we desire for the double relation of impressions and ideas? |
4705 | What follows? |
4705 | What if I be in necessity, and have urgent motives to acquire something to my family? |
4705 | What if he be a miser, and can make no use of what I would deprive him of? |
4705 | What if he be a profligate debauchee, and would rather receive harm than benefit from large possessions? |
4705 | What if he be a vicious man, and deserves the hatred of all mankind? |
4705 | What more inconstant than the desires of man? |
4705 | What party, then, shall we choose among these difficulties? |
4705 | What restraint, therefore, shall we impose on women, in order to counter- balance so strong a temptation as they have to infidelity? |
4705 | What then can we look for from this confusion of groundless and extraordinary opinions but error and falshood? |
4705 | When it is asked, whether a quick or a slow apprehension be most valuable? |
4705 | Where am I, or what? |
4705 | Whether shall the red or the blue be annihilated? |
4705 | Which of them shall we prefer? |
4705 | Who can tell me, for instance, what were his thoughts and actions on the 1st of January 1715, the 11th of March 1719, and the 3rd of August 1733? |
4705 | Whose favour shall I court, and whose anger must I dread? |
4705 | Why then look any farther, or multiply suppositions without necessity? |
4705 | Why? |
4705 | Why? |
4705 | and on whom have, I any influence, or who have any influence on me? |
4705 | but it is in vain to ask, Whether there be body or not? |
4705 | in short, what character, or peculiar understanding, is more excellent than another? |
4705 | whether a clear head, or a copious invention? |
4705 | whether a profound genius, or a sure judgment? |
4925 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
4925 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
4925 | Cruel wall,they said,"why do you keep two lovers apart? |
4925 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for you worthy of your praise? |
4925 | Have you come at last,said he,"long expected, and do I behold you after such perils past? |
4925 | Have you heard anything of Arion? |
4925 | How now, Thor? |
4925 | Is it thus I find you restored to me? |
4925 | Most undutiful and faithless of servants,said she,"do you at last remember that you really have a mistress? |
4925 | O Pyramus,she cried,"what has done this? |
4925 | Shall such wickedness triumph? |
4925 | Then Bacchus( for it was indeed he), as if shaking off his drowsiness, exclaimed,''What are you doing with me? 4925 What fault of mine, dearest husband, has turned your affection from me? |
4925 | What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? 4925 What heart had I left me, during all this, or what ought I to have had, except to hate life and wish to be with my dead subjects? |
4925 | What herb has such a power? |
4925 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
4925 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Baldur?" |
4925 | Whence came these stories? 4925 Who would not have been moved with these gentle words of the goddess? |
4925 | Why should you wish to behold me? |
4925 | Will nothing satisfy you but my life? |
4925 | ''Why do you refuse me water?'' |
4925 | Aeneas, horror- struck, inquired of his guide what crimes were those whose punishments produced the sounds he heard? |
4925 | Aeneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination?" |
4925 | After having disobeyed my mother''s commands and made you my wife, will you think me a monster and cut off my head? |
4925 | Alcinous says to Ulysses:"Say from what city, from what regions tossed, And what inhabitants those regions boast? |
4925 | And can any other woman dare more than I? |
4925 | And is Lorenzo''s salamander- heart Cold and untouched amid these sacred fires?" |
4925 | And shall I let you go into such danger alone? |
4925 | And share with him-- the unforgiven-- His vulture and his rock?" |
4925 | And what cowardice makes thee sink under this last danger who hast been so miraculously supported in all thy former?" |
4925 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
4925 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
4925 | As no one came, Narcissus called again,"Why do you shun me?" |
4925 | But Psyche said,"Why, my dear parents, do you now lament me? |
4925 | But a voice from the tower said to her,"Why, poor unlucky girl, dost thou design to put an end to thy days in so dreadful a manner? |
4925 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4925 | But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? |
4925 | But how? |
4925 | But if I am unworthy of regard, what has my brother Ocean done to deserve such a fate? |
4925 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4925 | But shall he then live, and triumph, and reign over Calydon, while you, my brothers, wander unavenged among the shades? |
4925 | But what has become of my glove?" |
4925 | But what if I offer him to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
4925 | But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feast? |
4925 | But what was to attack this terrible and unapproachable monster? |
4925 | But why ask the gods to do it? |
4925 | Byron also employs the same allusion, in his"Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte":"Or, like the thief of fire from heaven, Wilt thou withstand the shock? |
4925 | Can they be mortal women who compose that awful group, and can that vast concourse of silent forms be living beings? |
4925 | Could you keep your course while the sphere was revolving under you? |
4925 | Cupid, beholding her as she lay in the dust, stopped his flight for an instant and said,"O foolish Psyche, is it thus you repay my love? |
4925 | Did he fall by the hands of robbers or did some private enemy slay him? |
4925 | Do you ask me for a proof that you are sprung from my blood? |
4925 | Do you ask me why?" |
4925 | Do you not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
4925 | Dying now a second time, she yet can not reproach her husband, for how can she blame his impatience to behold her? |
4925 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied,"Would you, then, Nisus, refuse to share your enterprise with me? |
4925 | For how could Achilles require the aid of celestial armor if be were invulnerable?] |
4925 | Had he lost there a father, or brother, or any dear friend? |
4925 | Has earth no more Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?" |
4925 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
4925 | Have I not cause for pride? |
4925 | Have they a foundation in truth or are they simply dreams of the imagination?" |
4925 | Have you learned to feel easy in the absence of Halcyone? |
4925 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
4925 | He saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said,"If so charming in disorder, what would it be if arranged?" |
4925 | He talked with the supposed spirit:"Why, beautiful being, do you shun me? |
4925 | He was loath to give his mistress to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a simple heifer? |
4925 | He, starting from his sleep, cried out,"My daughters, what are you doing? |
4925 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
4925 | His father cried,"Icarus, Icarus, where are you?" |
4925 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
4925 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
4925 | I only wished I might have died With my poor father; wherefore should I ask For longer life? |
4925 | I think we shall be conquered; and if that must be the end of it, why should not love unbar the gates to him, instead of leaving it to be done by war? |
4925 | Is it for this that I have supplied herbage for cattle, and fruits for men, and frankincense for your altars? |
4925 | Is this the reward of my fertility, of my obedient service? |
4925 | Leaning over the bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said,"Do you recognize your Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too much changed my visage? |
4925 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
4925 | Nisus said to his friend,"Do you perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
4925 | One day the youth, being separated from his companions, shouted aloud,"Who''s here?" |
4925 | Or have you rather come to see your sick husband, yet laid up of the wound given him by his loving wife? |
4925 | Sadly needing help, how could he yet venture, naked as he was, to discover himself and make his wants known? |
4925 | Shaking her ambrosial locks with indignation, she exclaimed,"Am I then to be eclipsed in my honors by a mortal girl? |
4925 | Shall I trust Aeneas to the chances of the weather and the winds?" |
4925 | Shall OEneus rejoice in his victor son, while the house of Thestius is desolate? |
4925 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4925 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Frey exclaimed:"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
4925 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out,"What''s the matter? |
4925 | Stretching out her trembling hands towards it, she exclaims,"O dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?" |
4925 | Suppose I should lend you the chariot, what would you do? |
4925 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is that which in the morning gees on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
4925 | The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
4925 | The parents consent( how could they hesitate?) |
4925 | The voice said,''Why do you fly, Arethusa? |
4925 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
4925 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
4925 | This is alluded to by Byron, where, addressing the modern Greeks, he says:"You have the letters Cadmus gave, Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
4925 | To which question the river- god replied as follows:"Who likes to tell of his defeats? |
4925 | What could Jupiter do? |
4925 | What has become of them?" |
4925 | What have I done that you should treat me so? |
4925 | What have the cranes to do with him?" |
4925 | What is this fighting about? |
4925 | What shall he do? |
4925 | What shall he do?--go home to seek the palace, or lie hid in the woods? |
4925 | What should he do? |
4925 | Where are you going to carry me?'' |
4925 | Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? |
4925 | Where is that love of me that used to be uppermost in your thoughts? |
4925 | While they hesitate, Laocoon, the priest of Neptune exclaims,"What madness, citizens, is this? |
4925 | Who brought me here? |
4925 | Who lived when thou wast such? |
4925 | Why do you hang round my neck and still entreat me? |
4925 | Why should Latona be honored with worship, and none be paid to me? |
4925 | Why should any one hereafter tremble at the thought of offending Juno, when such rewards are the consequence of my displeasure? |
4925 | Why should he alone escape? |
4925 | Why will you not take a lesson from the tree and the vine, and consent to unite yourself with some one? |
4925 | Will any one deny this? |
4925 | Will you kill your father?" |
4925 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
4925 | Would you rather have me away?" |
4925 | Yet can ye relieve my grief? |
4925 | Yet where is your triumph? |
4925 | could not verse immortal save That breast imbued with such immortal fire? |
4925 | did he say?" |
4925 | haughty their array, Yet of their number no one dares to die?" |
4925 | have you any wish ungratified? |
4925 | he said;"have you any doubt of my love? |
4925 | said Aeneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
4925 | she cried;"whither do you fly? |
4925 | the cause? |
4925 | through a marble wilderness? |
4925 | to what deed am I borne along? |
4925 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise; What was thy pity''s recompense? |
4925 | was then the rumor true that you had perished? |
57732 | And are there no_ Doctors_( perhaps you exclaim) Distinguished by talents and virtues and merit? |
57732 | And what reward has he for my friend and ally? |
57732 | Have you, sir, considered the risk in taking a wife in this strange way? 57732 Pray how does she look, and what did she say? |
57732 | Well, sir, and how are you to conduct the negotiation with your native bashfulness? 57732 What stronger proof do we want,"says the journalist,"of that confusion of thought and mysticism with which he has been charged?" |
57732 | ''Mother,''said she, in faltering accents,''are you here?'' |
57732 | ''Yes, child: are you better?'' |
57732 | --And what were the subjects of these several species of poetry? |
57732 | And is there no cause to mitigate our anger when contemplating such scenes? |
57732 | And which from the artist came?" |
57732 | Because he was able to sustain the violated rights of property, would he have been also able to destroy them? |
57732 | Bryant?" |
57732 | But for this labor, does not the mother receive a rich reward? |
57732 | But what are the objects which now fill men''s minds with admiration and astonishment? |
57732 | But what heightened or adequate terms of censure can be found for the New York rule, which displaces every judge at sixty? |
57732 | But who shall describe the varied and terrific music of the steam engine? |
57732 | But, alas my child, what hope is there for me?'' |
57732 | Can it exist under a despotism? |
57732 | Can such a cast of mind do otherwise than open new fields for high action? |
57732 | Can such an influence develope the real beauty and sublimity of mind? |
57732 | Corrupt the source, and what will be the effect of its streams? |
57732 | Did they arouse the mind of Homer, the immortal bard of antiquity? |
57732 | Did they grow to their full power and greatness under the influence of monarchical institutions? |
57732 | Do they encourage the universal growth of mind? |
57732 | Do they hold out a common inducement to eloquent and lofty effort? |
57732 | Do we behold such an aspect under despotic institutions? |
57732 | Does it thereby sustain any loss? |
57732 | Does she still remember my wild pranks?" |
57732 | For if it be asked, how long should this state of things be kept up? |
57732 | How is it to be effected? |
57732 | How very liable you may be to gross imposition? |
57732 | I dreamed-- I speak my dream; and canst thou read it me? |
57732 | If the monstrous increase be not checked, what purse can buy, what head can read( much less remember,) nay what room can hold them, a century hence? |
57732 | Is it wonderful that despotic governments never attain a high degree of intellectual eminence? |
57732 | Its place of rest is not within this aching breast;-- Where does it dwell? |
57732 | Or the eloquence and moral sublimity of Cicero? |
57732 | Or the unrivalled philosophy of Socrates? |
57732 | Poison the fountain, and who can drink of its waters without death-- death, both in a figurative and literal sense? |
57732 | Shall I then say that I long''d with an earnest and consuming desire for the moment of Morella''s decease? |
57732 | That orators his fame have spoke, That bards his deeds have sung? |
57732 | That over Moscow''s battlements, His flag- folds he shook out-- That e''en the lofty pyramids Rang with his charging shout? |
57732 | WHERE IS MY HEART? |
57732 | What boots it that his own proud name In foreign lands has rung? |
57732 | What boots it that the hills of Spain Shook''neath his lordly tread-- That with the blood of her best sons, Her vallies''streams ran red? |
57732 | What is the history of eloquence? |
57732 | What is the nature of free institutions? |
57732 | What more could Providence bestow To yield CONTENT an added blessing? |
57732 | What prompted me then to disturb the memory of the buried dead? |
57732 | What singular emotions fill Their bosoms who have been induced to roam, With fluttering doubts if all be well or ill?" |
57732 | What then shall we take as the highest effort of Dutch genius? |
57732 | What would have been the transmutation for which the alchemist of former days consumed so many anxious days and sleepless nights, compared with these? |
57732 | Whence comes this tendency among them to imbibe this simple and saving faith, unless it be from the peculiarities of their education? |
57732 | Where is my heart? |
57732 | Where is my heart? |
57732 | Where is my heart? |
57732 | Where is my heart? |
57732 | Where was she? |
57732 | Who has not felt that the thought of a month''s separation from one we love, though conscious of its short duration, sickens the heart? |
57732 | Who has not lamented over the severe fate of modern genius? |
57732 | Who may tell the gladness of her heart, when the infant cherub first articulates her name? |
57732 | Who reads not this in every day''s experience? |
57732 | Who will compare the action of the mind thus stimulated with that of the mind, whose only stimulus is present selfish enjoyment? |
57732 | Why is the brimming cup of bliss dashed down just as it touches the opening lips? |
57732 | Will the mind whose only stimulant are the smiles and pecuniary emoluments of kings, exhibit its native strength and grandeur? |
57732 | and when the wisdom or the passions of maturity I found hourly gleaming from its full and speculative eye? |
57732 | how knowest thou this?'' |
57732 | love, why"With cypress branches hast thou wreathed thy bowers?" |
57732 | obeys the warning? |
57732 | or insure to superior genius an enduring fame? |
57732 | or produce other than wonderful and glorious results? |
57732 | or will the Muse that sings to please the whims and caprices of a court, soar on eagle wings and to mountain heights? |
57732 | then where is truth?" |
17301 | ''The Palisades at Dusk''--five hundred dollars? |
17301 | A ringer, eh? |
17301 | A waiter? 17301 A which?" |
17301 | After another one of them clubby lunches? |
17301 | Ah, you mean the Keep- Out sign? 17301 Ai n''t as chummy with him as you was, I take it?" |
17301 | Ai n''t drivin''him to sign work, is it? |
17301 | Ai n''t he the goods, then? |
17301 | Ai n''t that it? |
17301 | Ai n''t the bow lopsided? |
17301 | Ai n''t they the limit, these spotlight chasers? |
17301 | Algernon who? |
17301 | And I suppose you could find nothing out? |
17301 | And I? 17301 And Marjorie and Dudley?" |
17301 | And did you do that by the introdeductive process, may I ask? |
17301 | And do I understand that you brought those other flowers in the same way? |
17301 | And does n''t Henri have any more of those dainty little caviar canapes on hand? 17301 And her eyes?" |
17301 | And if it ai n''t? |
17301 | And is not dear Virgil perfectly charming tonight? |
17301 | And is she living up here? |
17301 | And leave me to take that long ride all alone? 17301 And locked the haughty maiden out in the cold, I suppose?" |
17301 | And the week before? |
17301 | And there is n''t any hurry, is there? |
17301 | And this? |
17301 | And was it you who just threw this thing on my desk? |
17301 | And what was it you hit last? |
17301 | And what''s the dope? 17301 And you are a Princess Charming; is n''t she, boys?" |
17301 | And you do know him, do n''t you, Vee? |
17301 | And you wa''n''t, was you? |
17301 | And you''ll meet me at the station, will you? |
17301 | And you''ve got him his old place at the club, eh? |
17301 | And, say,says I,"how about Miss Vee?" |
17301 | Another chosen one, is he? |
17301 | Another lobbyist been squealin''? |
17301 | Another lobbyist been squealin''? |
17301 | Any copy in it? |
17301 | Any particular Jones, Sir? |
17301 | Anything else, Sir? |
17301 | Are the dear young folks ready too? |
17301 | Are you Woodrow Wilson, or only the Secretary of the Navy? |
17301 | Are you boastin'', or complainin''? |
17301 | Are you? |
17301 | As First, or Second Vice President? |
17301 | As close as Skid did? |
17301 | Aunty thinks so too, do n''t she? |
17301 | Backin''him for the Armina handicap, eh? 17301 Been kind of rough about it, has he?" |
17301 | Before the holidays are over? |
17301 | Beg pardon? |
17301 | Behave, ca n''t you? |
17301 | Better have him barbered some too, had n''t I? |
17301 | Bladen''s stuff, I suppose? |
17301 | Boy,says Old Hickory, glarin''at me savage,"who is this T. Virgil Bunn?" |
17301 | Boy,says he,"do you know anything about these?" |
17301 | Boy,says she, glarin''at me through her gold lorgnette like I was some kind of insect specimen,"do I understand that you come here to see my niece?" |
17301 | Boy,says she,"are you employed here regularly?" |
17301 | But I thought they was travelin''abroad? |
17301 | But after sportin''around Europe so long,says I,"do n''t punchin''the time clock come kind of tough?" |
17301 | But ai n''t he tied up with Jones? |
17301 | But her complexion,insists Mabel,"dark or fair?" |
17301 | But how did you happen to come up today? |
17301 | But how did you happen to get here-- with Payne? |
17301 | But how do you know, Mr. Robert,says I next mornin'',"that he will?" |
17301 | But how does he make it pay? |
17301 | But how? 17301 But how?" |
17301 | But it wa''n''t a wish, was it? |
17301 | But it was n''t you playing the cornet so beautifully, was it? |
17301 | But perhaps-- er-- just where is she now, Torchy? |
17301 | But what about Pansy? |
17301 | But what in the name of Sardanapalus and Xenophon is a sculptor poet, anyway? |
17301 | But what is happening? |
17301 | But what kind, Sir? |
17301 | But what was his game? |
17301 | But what was it, a serenade? |
17301 | But what''s a bouillabaisse tea? |
17301 | But what''s this cue for? |
17301 | But who''s goin''to point that out to the boss? 17301 But why could n''t he have said as much to me yesterday? |
17301 | But why force me to that? 17301 But why not?" |
17301 | But why? |
17301 | But why? |
17301 | But you are not making the discovery for the first time, are you? 17301 But you do n''t suppose Vio-- I mean, the Misses Hibbs could hear, do you?" |
17301 | But you would n''t stand for invite the leftovers on your honeymoon, eh? |
17301 | But, say, ca n''t you do a duck by changing after you leave home? |
17301 | But-- but what will they think? |
17301 | But-- but where did it come from? |
17301 | But-- but, Mother,says Gladys,"you''re never going to let people see you like that, are you?" |
17301 | Buyer of what? |
17301 | Ca n''t I cut in? |
17301 | Ca n''t a person even look at you? |
17301 | Ca n''t it be fixed someway, Payne? |
17301 | Ca n''t you do something? |
17301 | Ca n''t you read? |
17301 | Ca n''t, eh? |
17301 | Can I get a trolley? |
17301 | Can you suggest anything? |
17301 | Candy? |
17301 | Chinked it, did you? |
17301 | Chucked what? |
17301 | Come down by train or boat? |
17301 | Come now, was it Pansy? |
17301 | Come, where is that quick- firing, automatic intellect of yours? 17301 Could n''t I, though?" |
17301 | Could n''t I? |
17301 | Could n''t scare him, eh? |
17301 | Could n''t you come out Sunday? |
17301 | Could n''t you spare a half,he urges,"just a half, to get me a little something to eat, and a drink, and pay for a bed?" |
17301 | Could you two keep a secret? |
17301 | Did Aunty capture it? |
17301 | Did he sting you that hard? |
17301 | Did n''t Groff come up? |
17301 | Did n''t Mother say I was to look after you? |
17301 | Did n''t Vee want you to go out''cause her aunty would see you? |
17301 | Did n''t you? |
17301 | Did you ever know of him remembering anything worth while? |
17301 | Did you order them, Robbie? |
17301 | Did you ring, Sir? |
17301 | Did, eh? |
17301 | Ditch the-- why, what can he mean by that? |
17301 | Do I understand,says he,"that you have been buying a picture-- here?" |
17301 | Do I-- yah, do n''t I speak plain English? |
17301 | Do I? |
17301 | Do n''t she need you to help her hook up? |
17301 | Do n''t what? |
17301 | Do n''t you remember me? 17301 Do you mean it? |
17301 | Do you mean that you do n''t like me at all? |
17301 | Do you mind running up and asking if they''re ready? |
17301 | Do you or do n''t you know anything about how those things happened to get on my desk? |
17301 | Do you, Jane? |
17301 | Does it come so hard? 17301 Does red hair throw Aunty into convulsions, or what?" |
17301 | Draped real sweet, ai n''t it? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Eh? |
17301 | Ellins,says Doc Hirshway,"do you mean to say that at your age you are going to play with such childish things?" |
17301 | Ellins,says he,"I''ve come fifteen hundred miles to ask what you mean by telling me----""Oh, that you, Groff?" |
17301 | Errands? |
17301 | Ever hear of an office- boy- de- luxe? |
17301 | Ever try smokin''formaldehyde? |
17301 | Feelin''frisky, eh? |
17301 | Feeling the need of a half holiday, are you? |
17301 | Fish what? |
17301 | For why? |
17301 | Full evenin''dress? |
17301 | Get that, Hirshway? 17301 Gone?" |
17301 | Got her fixed yet? |
17301 | Got your sailin''orders, ai n''t you, Martin? |
17301 | Guess I can wait around outside, ca n''t I? |
17301 | Guess he thinks the Corrugated gen''ral offices runs night and day shifts, do n''t he? |
17301 | Had n''t you better take a look around the offices,suggests Old Hickory,"examine the doors, and so on?" |
17301 | Had to brace him up with a drink, did you? |
17301 | Happen to know Ira? |
17301 | Has n''t he told you about his cheese factories? 17301 Have I?" |
17301 | Have n''t we, Torchy? |
17301 | Have some? |
17301 | Have you thought what your offering is to be? |
17301 | He does, eh? |
17301 | He says he''s not much for-- but see here, how did it end? |
17301 | He was the gray- eyed one, wa''n''t he? |
17301 | He will, eh? 17301 He''s a charmer, eh?" |
17301 | Hear that? |
17301 | Here, what''s the matter with you? |
17301 | Him? |
17301 | Holding a sale, is he? 17301 Honest, would you?" |
17301 | Honest? |
17301 | How about a ferry, then? |
17301 | How about when you hit one of them sharp ones? |
17301 | How could he,says I,"when he was soused to the ears?" |
17301 | How does that happen? |
17301 | How now, you of the Crimson Crest? 17301 How the blazes should I know?" |
17301 | How the slithering Sisyphus should I know what kind? |
17301 | How''d you dope it out? |
17301 | How''s she headin''? |
17301 | How''s that? |
17301 | How''s that? |
17301 | Howdo, young man? |
17301 | I found him that way too; but ai n''t he-- well, just a little stiff in the neck? |
17301 | I say,he begins,"show me that cheap luncheon place you spoke of, will you?" |
17301 | I say,says he,"you''re not really Melly Slater, are you?" |
17301 | I suppose you expect me to find you some sort of work? |
17301 | I suppose you''d like to have me look like Aunt Martha? |
17301 | I take it things ai n''t been goin''smooth gen''rally? |
17301 | I trust you approve? |
17301 | I was wonderin''if that was the natural tint? |
17301 | I wonder? |
17301 | I''d be chatterin''it to you, would n''t I? |
17301 | In Heaven''s name, Torchy,says Mr. Robert,"what do you mean? |
17301 | In disgrace, is he? |
17301 | In the name of all that''s good,says he,"where did you come from?" |
17301 | In what,says I,"table etiquette?" |
17301 | Indeed? |
17301 | Is he? |
17301 | Is it for a financial rating or a regular dragnet of past performances? |
17301 | Is it, really? |
17301 | Is n''t Cousin Eulalia too absurd? |
17301 | Is n''t so easy as it looks, eh, Hirshway? 17301 Is n''t this Torchy?" |
17301 | Is n''t this just too unique for words? |
17301 | Is old Barney still on the door? |
17301 | Is that a foreign country,says I,"or a nickname for some flag station?" |
17301 | Is that the prettiest you can say it? 17301 Is that the worst you can say of me?" |
17301 | Is that you, young man? |
17301 | Is this a case of philanthropy, or what? |
17301 | Is ut so, Mon? |
17301 | Is-- is she very nice, William? 17301 It''s good eatin''too, Ever chaw any?" |
17301 | It''s so, is n''t it? |
17301 | Just in from Lunnon? |
17301 | Just naturally put it all over that whole bunch of Turks, did n''t you? 17301 Just see if those forward oil cups are full, will you?" |
17301 | Kind of a dub beginner with no backing is he? |
17301 | Lemme have a try? |
17301 | Let''s see,says he, as we rolls onto the Fort Lee ferry,"just what is your official position with the Corrugated?" |
17301 | Let''s see,says he,"was n''t Squirrel off there a moment ago?" |
17301 | Little Miss Gladys ready? |
17301 | Look kind o''gay and festive, do n''t they? |
17301 | Maizie, eh? 17301 Makes it very nice, do n''t it?" |
17301 | May I ask your reasons? |
17301 | May n''t we be there to hear you do it? |
17301 | Maybe I am a dub, Hickory Ellins,says Peter K., peelin''off his coat,"but any game that you can play-- er---- Which is my ball?" |
17301 | Maybe you lost it? |
17301 | Me buy a picture? |
17301 | Me? 17301 Me?" |
17301 | Me? |
17301 | Me? |
17301 | Me? |
17301 | Me? |
17301 | Me? |
17301 | Me? |
17301 | Me? |
17301 | Mean to tell me he could n''t get along without puttering around with those fool paints and brushes? |
17301 | Meanin''me? |
17301 | Melly Slater, eh? |
17301 | Melly Slater, trying to borrow half a dollar from you? |
17301 | Might blow a gasket, eh? |
17301 | Might one inquire,says he,"is it distress, or only disposition?" |
17301 | Mike? |
17301 | Mind? 17301 Mr. Higgins, ai n''t it?" |
17301 | Mr. Robert,says I, spunkin''up sudden,"what''s the matter with me takin''a vacation?" |
17301 | Mr. Torchy,says Peggy, grabbin''me impulsive by one ear and swingin''my face around,"truly now, are n''t you awfully in love with Vee?" |
17301 | Nice, but stupid, eh? |
17301 | None of the aristocracy there, either? |
17301 | Not Merry? |
17301 | Not one of these nutty Futurist designs, like a scrambled rainbow shot full of pink polliwogs? |
17301 | Not the one who wore the Wild West lid and talked like he had a mouthful of hot oatmeal? |
17301 | Now that''s too bad, is n''t it, little one? |
17301 | Now what''s your honest opinion of that, Son? 17301 Now, ai n''t that cute of you? |
17301 | Now, was n''t that sweet in you? |
17301 | Ob, is he? |
17301 | Of course, I have n''t seen Melly recently; but I ca n''t imagine how---- Did you say he was still there? |
17301 | Oh, I say, though,he goes on,"it would be all right, would n''t it, if I sent a-- er-- a commissioner?" |
17301 | Oh, at the club, eh? |
17301 | Oh, dish juggler, eh? 17301 Oh, have we?" |
17301 | Oh, he has, has he? |
17301 | Oh, it''s you, is it, Torchy? 17301 Oh, may he?" |
17301 | Oh, that you, old Grumpy? |
17301 | Oh, what''s the difference? |
17301 | Oh, what''s the hurry? |
17301 | On the hill just beyond where the bridge was blown up? 17301 Pickled, was he? |
17301 | Playing stimies too, I suppose? |
17301 | Popover for short, eh? 17301 Postmarked Boothbay Harbor, is n''t it? |
17301 | Pull out? 17301 Queens?" |
17301 | Quite some concert, eh? |
17301 | Ready to scratch your entry now, are you? |
17301 | Really? |
17301 | Really? |
17301 | Remember my telling you about the fellow who wore the outing shirt? |
17301 | Reunion of somebody''s Sunday school class? |
17301 | Rivalry among our gallant knights? 17301 Roarin''Rocks, eh?" |
17301 | Rum? 17301 Said pins, dintcher?" |
17301 | Say, Marjorie,says I,"could n''t you get her to speed up the toilet motions a bit and shoo her downstairs? |
17301 | Say, Merry, who belongs to all this? |
17301 | Say, Son, ca n''t you fix it for me some way? 17301 Say, ai n''t you on yet, and you right in the house? |
17301 | Say, for the love of Pete,says I,"ai n''t it hard enough for me to press out all this wise dope without drawin''diagrams? |
17301 | Say, you two human question marks,says I,"beat it, wo n''t you?" |
17301 | Say,says I, followin''her in and shuttin''the door,"wa''n''t that kid Gladys the limit, though?" |
17301 | Say,says I, wigglin''away from the pair,"could n''t you go load up someone else with information, just for ten minutes or so?" |
17301 | See the big clock? |
17301 | See? 17301 Seems natural as life here; eh, Bob?" |
17301 | Shall we call them all in, one at a time, Sir, and----"And what? |
17301 | She ai n''t sewed you into it, has she? 17301 She was talking with you, was n''t she, Friend Whity? |
17301 | She''d be in a stained glass window somewhere, eh? |
17301 | She''s a little joker, eh? |
17301 | So I''m to take her by the hand and tow her up by train, am I? |
17301 | So there''s a picnic on the slate, eh? |
17301 | So you beat''em out in the end, did you? |
17301 | So you think I''m a good man, eh? |
17301 | So you''ll see her again soon? |
17301 | So you''re the one, eh? 17301 So you''ve been in that, have you?" |
17301 | So,he explodes, like openin''a bottle of root beer,"you''ve gone back to your paint daubing, have you? |
17301 | So- o- o? |
17301 | Some girl, eh? |
17301 | Some pep to that sister of yours, eh? |
17301 | Some scrapper, what? |
17301 | Something else Marjorie picked out? 17301 Soured on the club, have you?" |
17301 | Specially which one? |
17301 | Still carrying the burning bush under your hat, are n''t you? |
17301 | Suppose I do n''t tell that? |
17301 | Suppose I pick a lemon? |
17301 | Suppose I should send you, say, five dollars for every satisfactory report? |
17301 | Suppose I trail along a ways then? |
17301 | Suppose something happens to him? |
17301 | Suppose you finish out your vacation with us, then? |
17301 | Sure that''s all? |
17301 | T. Virgil? 17301 Thanks,"he puffs out as he shuffles along at my elbow;"but-- but was n''t that Bob Ellins you were just talking to?" |
17301 | That so? |
17301 | That''s for the common herd, ai n''t it? 17301 That''s rather abrupt, is n''t it?" |
17301 | That''s the night of our frat dance, and I want to ask Miss Vee if----"What''s this all about? |
17301 | The also rans? 17301 The bunch of flowers appeared then on Wednesday, did it not?" |
17301 | The game is to spring something on Miss Vee better''n what the others put over, is it? |
17301 | The wards, eh? 17301 Then I could change again on the way home, could n''t I? |
17301 | Then at last you''ve missed it, have you? |
17301 | Then it''s a disguise, is it? |
17301 | Then that wa''n''t any funny dream of yours, eh,says I,"this club business? |
17301 | Then why not have the picnic right here? |
17301 | Then why not? |
17301 | Then you have already tested Mr. Higgins''conversational powers? |
17301 | Then you would n''t care if I had? |
17301 | There you are, eh? 17301 There''s some swell mob collectin'', eh?" |
17301 | There, hold that, will you? |
17301 | There, you see? |
17301 | They''re pickled pigs''feet, ai n''t they? |
17301 | Think I''m going to ask all those young women if they''ve been leaving flowers on my desk? |
17301 | Think so, do you? |
17301 | Think so? |
17301 | Think so? |
17301 | This is a case of must-- see? 17301 Threats?" |
17301 | Tonight? |
17301 | Too bad,says Ferdy,"for we''re almost alone now,--only Peggy and Jane-- my little nieces, you know-- and Miss Hemmingway, who----""Vee?" |
17301 | Torchy,calls Old Hickory, recoverin''his nerve a little,"what is the meaning of this, and who have you there?" |
17301 | Torchy,says he,"how is your bump of diplomacy today?" |
17301 | Tupper,says the old man, glarin''at him shrewd,"you know where the top- floor studio is, do n''t you?" |
17301 | Twenty? 17301 Two women alone?" |
17301 | Two, then? |
17301 | Vee here? |
17301 | Vee which? |
17301 | Vee? |
17301 | Wa''n''t you sayin''how much you''d like to see the lone hero of the hill? |
17301 | Wants you to annex the adjoinin''real estate, does she? |
17301 | Was it? |
17301 | We never said a word, did we, Peggy? |
17301 | We? |
17301 | Well, I did n''t, that''s all,says Mortimer;"so what''s the use?" |
17301 | Well, I expect you told him to chase himself, eh? |
17301 | Well, anything else? |
17301 | Well, how about it? |
17301 | Well, is that all? |
17301 | Well, what about Percey? |
17301 | Well, what are you doing there? |
17301 | Well, what is it, Son? |
17301 | Well, what now? |
17301 | Well, what then? |
17301 | Well, what was the hitch? |
17301 | Well, what''s the result? |
17301 | Well, what? |
17301 | Well, who was driving? |
17301 | Well, why not you? |
17301 | Well, you found someone, did n''t you, girls? |
17301 | Well, young man,he raps out sharp and snappy,"who the particular blazes are you?" |
17301 | Well,says I encouragin'',"why not let it come?" |
17301 | Well,says I, as we steps back,"returns all in, ai n''t they?" |
17301 | Well,says I, turnin''to the thick guy,"what''s the name?" |
17301 | Well,says I,"what''s the joke? |
17301 | Well,says Old Hickory, squintin''sharp at me from under his bushy eyebrows,"what have you to offer?" |
17301 | Well? |
17301 | Well? |
17301 | Well? |
17301 | Well? |
17301 | Well? |
17301 | Well? |
17301 | Well? |
17301 | Were you there, young man? |
17301 | Wha- a- at? |
17301 | Wha-- what have you been doing? |
17301 | What I want to know, Jones,he''s sayin'',"is simply this: Are your folks going to drop that Palisades road scheme, or are n''t you?" |
17301 | What about this Miss Vee party, then? |
17301 | What about this sculptor poet business? |
17301 | What am I up against? 17301 What cute little village is this?" |
17301 | What do you know about him, if it was? |
17301 | What do you know? |
17301 | What does he want to do now? |
17301 | What else did Vee have to say about me? |
17301 | What else would you be doin'', out playin''the cornet by moonlight on the dock, if you wa''n''t serenadin''someone? |
17301 | What for? |
17301 | What happened? |
17301 | What have I ever done to you? 17301 What is it, Uncle Jeff?" |
17301 | What is it? 17301 What is it?" |
17301 | What is your name, young man? |
17301 | What name? |
17301 | What say? |
17301 | What was it he wanted to say? |
17301 | What was it let you in bad this time? |
17301 | What was she doin''there? |
17301 | What with? |
17301 | What''ll I do,says I,"call in a plumber to stop the leak?" |
17301 | What''s it about? |
17301 | What''s it got to do with you? 17301 What''s it like?" |
17301 | What''s that to you? |
17301 | What''s the charter worth, spot cash? |
17301 | What''s the good of an afternoon off? |
17301 | What''s the idea? |
17301 | What''s the matter with my form now, Hirshway? 17301 What''s the matter with our going to the same place?" |
17301 | What''s the matter with the Hymen proposition? |
17301 | What''s the matter? |
17301 | What''s the occasion? |
17301 | What''s the use? |
17301 | What''s this for? |
17301 | What''s to be done, call an ambulance? |
17301 | What''s up? |
17301 | What''s wrong? |
17301 | What''s your complaint, Spaghetti? |
17301 | What''s your guess? |
17301 | What,goes on Aunty,"does this mean?" |
17301 | What-- again? |
17301 | Whatever made you think I''d been on the stage? |
17301 | Whatever made you think that? |
17301 | When could you get a steamer? |
17301 | When did you get in? |
17301 | When? |
17301 | Where at, Tucky? |
17301 | Where did they come from? |
17301 | Where''s Aunty? |
17301 | Where''s Hubby? |
17301 | Where''s that fool float tender? |
17301 | Where? |
17301 | Which? |
17301 | Who from? |
17301 | Who says you''re a bother? |
17301 | Who suggested that? |
17301 | Who''s he? |
17301 | Who''s the party in the tennis outfit? |
17301 | Whose idea is this, anyway? 17301 Why do n''t you tackle him, then,"says I,"instead of botherin''a busy man like me? |
17301 | Why have n''t they sent up my coffee and rolls? |
17301 | Why not rustle another, then? |
17301 | Why not, my boy? 17301 Why not, my dear?" |
17301 | Why not? 17301 Why not?" |
17301 | Why not? |
17301 | Why not? |
17301 | Why the''Gee''? |
17301 | Why, I suppose we have met before? |
17301 | Why, no,says I;"but-- but who do I ask?" |
17301 | Why, who told you that? |
17301 | Why,says I,"maybe you''ve looked down into deep sea water on a still, gray day? |
17301 | Why-- say, what is this you''re tryin''to pull off on me, impeachment proceedings? 17301 Why?" |
17301 | Wirin''all right, is it? |
17301 | With so much else worth lookin''at,says I,"is it a wonder?" |
17301 | Ye- e- e- es? |
17301 | Ye- e- es? |
17301 | Ye- e- es? |
17301 | Yes, Sir? |
17301 | Yes; but when must I say which? |
17301 | Yes? |
17301 | You are? |
17301 | You do n''t mean it? |
17301 | You do n''t mean to say you got stewed? 17301 You do, eh?" |
17301 | You got a pair of livin''dictaphones in the house, ai n''t you? 17301 You hate me, too, do n''t you?" |
17301 | You know those hermit cookies you''re so fond of? 17301 You live around here, I suppose, William?" |
17301 | You mean you''re going to stake me? |
17301 | You rag, do n''t you? |
17301 | You remember Torchy, from Uncle Robert''s office, do n''t you? 17301 You threaten blackmail?" |
17301 | You wa''n''t lookin''for me to fade to an ash blond, was you? |
17301 | You will go doin''the little ray of sunshine act, will you? 17301 You''d like to have me dress like Cousin Tilly, I suppose?" |
17301 | You''d look nice, would n''t you? |
17301 | You''ll need a witness, wo n''t you? |
17301 | You''re sure it''s Melly Slater, are you? |
17301 | You''re the boy from Uncle Robert''s office-- Torchy, is n''t it? |
17301 | You''ve chucked it, eh? |
17301 | You''ve had breakfast, I suppose? |
17301 | You-- you''ve grown, have n''t you? |
17301 | Young man, at our last interview I thought I made it quite clear that I should not expect you to return? |
17301 | Young man,says the voice, smooth and persuadin'',"please tell us who-- that is-- which one of us was the serenade intended for?" |
17301 | Your Torchy? |
17301 | Your mother must be rather popular? |
17301 | ''''Ow do you know?'' |
17301 | ''''Ow?'' |
17301 | ''And you mean to say,''says I,''you''ve been here all night with the Turkish artillery hammering away at you?'' |
17301 | ''Do n''t I wash''is hoffice windows?'' |
17301 | ''Not all alone?'' |
17301 | ''Sonnets of the City,''was n''t it? |
17301 | ''What the deuce are you doing here?'' |
17301 | ''Where''s the rest of the advance, though?'' |
17301 | A fishbone?" |
17301 | A girl?" |
17301 | A lucky stroke, eh? |
17301 | A month of this? |
17301 | A queen? |
17301 | A young gentleman asking for Verona? |
17301 | Ah, another knight of the pencil?" |
17301 | Ai n''t his pictures been printed often enough lately? |
17301 | Ai n''t that right, eh, old sport?" |
17301 | All for what? |
17301 | Also who''s most likely to be monkeyin''around outside, fifteen stories up, but a window washer?" |
17301 | And I holds him off by main strength while I calls out,"Why, ai n''t you on yet? |
17301 | And do n''t they do some breezin''along on that Bar Harbor express while you sleep, though? |
17301 | And how does Vee stand with you?" |
17301 | And how has my little Peggy been enjoying herself today?" |
17301 | And in case any others like him turns up, Mr. Robert, have you got any more old dress suits?" |
17301 | And me? |
17301 | And me? |
17301 | And now she''s on the stage? |
17301 | And then, glancin''around cautious, he leans across the table and asks mysterious,"Say, where''s Maizie Latour actin''?" |
17301 | And who do you guess it is we finds arrangin''the flower vases? |
17301 | And you gettin''twelve?" |
17301 | And you will be right here, where you can see him every day, wo n''t you-- my son Mortimer, I mean?" |
17301 | And you''re actually trying to sell your namby- pamby stuff on my top floor? |
17301 | And, say, what a diff''rence a little outside upholstery can make, eh? |
17301 | Any choice?" |
17301 | Any figures, now?" |
17301 | Anything more?" |
17301 | Anything special you''d like to see?" |
17301 | Anything to offer?" |
17301 | Are n''t they sights?" |
17301 | Are you dressed, young man?" |
17301 | Are you going to stand in the way, Mr. Ross, of an enterprise such as that?" |
17301 | Are you on, or are you too much of a dub to try it?" |
17301 | Are you poor?" |
17301 | As I sails out and grabs my new fall derby off the peg Piddie asks breathless:"What''s the matter now, and where are you off to?" |
17301 | Aunty, what do you think? |
17301 | Awful bore, ai n''t it, specially right there on Broadway with so many folks to hear? |
17301 | Because the governor had n''t chucked me overboard then, because I could still keep up a front?" |
17301 | Been workin''at one of Mr. Robert''s clubs, have you?" |
17301 | Besides, wa''n''t he a swell one- stepper, a shark at tennis, and could n''t he sing any ragtime song that she could drum out? |
17301 | Bingstetter?" |
17301 | But ca n''t something or other be done about this job of his?" |
17301 | But how did it happen?" |
17301 | But how you goin''to manage it?" |
17301 | But is he hurt bad?" |
17301 | But now that he is thrown upon his own resources, and if you could once gain his confidence, he might allow you to-- well, you''ll try, wo n''t you? |
17301 | But what ails you?" |
17301 | But what if I''m caught at it-- am I peddlin''soap, or what?" |
17301 | But what of Crimson Crest? |
17301 | But what''s the rest of the scandal?" |
17301 | But what''s the use?" |
17301 | But why Wednesdays? |
17301 | But why do n''t you? |
17301 | But why the blue- belted blazes did you do it?" |
17301 | But why the painted posts stickin''up out of the water?" |
17301 | But work? |
17301 | But you did come, did n''t you? |
17301 | But you mentioned a Cousin Inez, did n''t you?" |
17301 | But, by the way, where is your distinguished friend, the scientific investigator?" |
17301 | But, honest now, Higgins, you do n''t mean to spring one of them mossy''Way Down East drammers on me as the true dope? |
17301 | But, honest, you do n''t find Miller such a fish, do you?" |
17301 | But, say, when they get too big to spank, what else can Father and Mother do? |
17301 | But, say, who do you guess wins out for Wednesday night? |
17301 | CHAPTER IX LATE RETURNS ON POPOVER"Well?" |
17301 | CHAPTER VI GLOOM SHUNTING FOR THE BOSS Trouble? |
17301 | CHAPTER XIII AUNTY FLAGS A ROSY ONE Lemme see, I was headed out of Boothbay Harbor, Maine, bound for Roarin''Rocks, wa''n''t I? |
17301 | Ca n''t you think of anything but sappy romance? |
17301 | Call him out, wo n''t you, Torchy?" |
17301 | Call it the last of the month, eh?" |
17301 | Can you beat that? |
17301 | Cheerful sort of an errand, wa''n''t it, bein''sent to butt in on a Keno curtain raiser? |
17301 | Come down to buy publicity space for the Corrugated, have you?" |
17301 | Come now, do n''t you guess your Aunt Marjorie''ll be wantin''you?" |
17301 | Come now, what you peddlin''--dollar safety- razors, bullpups, or what?" |
17301 | Come now, who enters the lists?" |
17301 | Come, do you promise?" |
17301 | Come, now-- aren''t they nice on me?" |
17301 | Come, you''re not going back tonight, are you?" |
17301 | Could n''t Tupper bring a couple of them down now?" |
17301 | Course, I frames this up for the friend; so I asks innocent,"Excuse me, but when is little Miss Gladys comin''?" |
17301 | Cute little strips of Treasury kale, them with the C''s in the corners, are n''t they? |
17301 | Did I say clerk? |
17301 | Did I smoke it back to the station house? |
17301 | Did n''t I get my commission from the Easy Mark Press for steering him in? |
17301 | Did n''t I go in a litter once, halfway across Africa, when a clumsy Zulu beater let a dying rhino gore me in the hip? |
17301 | Did n''t I take their''phone message to Mr. Robert only the day before, and send back the answer for''em to come on? |
17301 | Did n''t he mention it?" |
17301 | Did she? |
17301 | Did you come to consult me about anything in particular?" |
17301 | Did you ever see a pinhead but what just dotes on springin''a sensation? |
17301 | Do I dump these on the bed and make a slide for life, or so I take out accident insurance and then stick around for orders?" |
17301 | Do I take a flyin''start?" |
17301 | Do n''t happen to have any special dope on T. Virgil Bunn, the sculptor poet, do you?" |
17301 | Do n''t you, Edith?" |
17301 | Do you know of anything that will fill the bill?" |
17301 | Do you see that collection of bottles and pills and glasses on the table? |
17301 | Does it? |
17301 | Dress suit? |
17301 | Easy? |
17301 | Eh?" |
17301 | Ellins?" |
17301 | Ellins?" |
17301 | Ellins?" |
17301 | Ellins?" |
17301 | Encouragin''finish for an afternoon call that I''d been bracin''myself up to for weeks, wa''n''t it? |
17301 | Ever heard of Yangarook? |
17301 | Ever see anyone who could make a cute play of that? |
17301 | Fair imitation of a grouch, eh? |
17301 | Get the point, Son? |
17301 | Got all that?" |
17301 | Got many left in your garden, have you, Cubbins?" |
17301 | Got your yachtin''cap on, ai n''t you? |
17301 | Got yours with you?" |
17301 | Had n''t I told you?" |
17301 | Had n''t he lived through all sorts of warnin''s before? |
17301 | Had n''t she asked her not to wear those hideous ear jewels? |
17301 | Had n''t she forbid her to use so much rouge and powder? |
17301 | Having agreed on that, perhaps you will tell me what you''re doing in New York?" |
17301 | He and the governor having it hot and heavy, I suppose?" |
17301 | He''s put the spell on a rich widow, has he? |
17301 | He-- why, he is my joke, the biggest scream I ever put over-- my joke, understand? |
17301 | Here, Groff, you''re a golfer, are n''t you?" |
17301 | Here?" |
17301 | Higgins?" |
17301 | Hospital case, eh? |
17301 | How am I to know that you are not ill, or in trouble? |
17301 | How are you to stand it? |
17301 | How could they? |
17301 | How long do you suppose the few thousands I got from Aunt Eunice lasted? |
17301 | How would that be, eh? |
17301 | How you goin''to tell, anyway? |
17301 | How''s that, eh?" |
17301 | I could n''t play when I found I had n''t brought any tennis shoes, could I? |
17301 | I expect you used to belong to the same club too?" |
17301 | I know I do n''t deserve it from you; but-- but you would n''t want to see me go like this-- dirty and ragged? |
17301 | I suppose they''re well done too; but-- but see here, young man, could n''t you find anything better to paint?" |
17301 | I take it that affair of hers with the sculptor poet is all off??'' |
17301 | I take it that affair of hers with the sculptor poet is all off??'' |
17301 | I wonder how he''ll take it? |
17301 | I wonder if I couldn''t-- you''ll not care if I try, will you?" |
17301 | Is he color blind, or what ails him? |
17301 | Is it a go?" |
17301 | Is it all right to run''em in now?" |
17301 | Is it poetry? |
17301 | Is n''t that so?" |
17301 | Is she a showgirl, or one of the chicken ballet?" |
17301 | Is that quite clear?" |
17301 | Is that quite clear?" |
17301 | Is there, Dud?" |
17301 | It''s a perfectly cute proposition, ai n''t it? |
17301 | Just a common waiter?" |
17301 | Just explain, will you, Torchy?" |
17301 | Just punk enough to run a year on Broadway, ai n''t if? |
17301 | Just tell him you gave it to-- to----""Well?" |
17301 | K.?" |
17301 | Let''s see, are you on at the Winter Garden, or is it the Casino roof?" |
17301 | Let''s see, what was it you said you were going to do? |
17301 | Listens like one of the silky- haired kind that wears heliotrope silk socks, do n''t it? |
17301 | Maizie-- er-- what was that again?" |
17301 | Maybe you do n''t know about Peter K.? |
17301 | Maybe you remember,--Ira, who''d come on to see Mr. Robert about buildin''a new racin''yacht, the tall, freckled gink with a love affair on his mind? |
17301 | Most as tall as he is, ai n''t you, Peggy?" |
17301 | Mr. Groff trapped in the fireplace, father lying under the piano-- why----""Ah, did n''t Piddie tell you? |
17301 | Mr. Robert he thinks it''s comic, when he has the kiddin''fit on, to remark chuckly,"Oh, I say, Torchy, have you seen Miss Vee lately?" |
17301 | My act? |
17301 | No card? |
17301 | Not showing the white feather, are you?" |
17301 | Now keep out, will you?" |
17301 | Now was n''t that thrilling? |
17301 | Now what shall it be?" |
17301 | Now what the zebra- striped Zacharias do they send those things to me for? |
17301 | Now what''s this in the box, Torchy?" |
17301 | Now which will it be?" |
17301 | Now, are n''t you, Sir Knights?" |
17301 | Now, let me see-- there is a room connecting with this? |
17301 | Now, on what day of last week did you receive a-- er-- similar token?" |
17301 | Now, the others, Mr. Ellins, they were not precisely like this one, were they?" |
17301 | Now, what?" |
17301 | Now, who would have thought it? |
17301 | Oh, I know-- take a chance on something fresh, was n''t it? |
17301 | On one of the upper floors?" |
17301 | Ought to see that youngster of yours, had n''t I? |
17301 | Pictures? |
17301 | Piddie?" |
17301 | Playing eleven, are n''t you?" |
17301 | Please, Bob, for old time''s sake?" |
17301 | Read in the papers, did n''t you, how G. Wesley cables over his resignation from Baden Two Times? |
17301 | Really, what else could he do?" |
17301 | Remember Skid, the young college hick that I helped find his footin''when he first hit the Corrugated? |
17301 | Right there with the pep, ai n''t you? |
17301 | Roarin''Rocks?" |
17301 | Robert?" |
17301 | Rush''em right in, shall I?" |
17301 | Say, all of''em ai n''t such scum, are they?" |
17301 | Say, how was I goin''to know? |
17301 | Say, is this your first stab at real work?" |
17301 | Say, there''s some boss for you, eh? |
17301 | Say, where do they pick it up, youngsters of that age? |
17301 | Scared? |
17301 | See?" |
17301 | She-- she mentioned it, did she?" |
17301 | Shoo''em back, will you? |
17301 | So it''s Sturgis, eh? |
17301 | So that was some stroke, what? |
17301 | So what can I do?" |
17301 | So why should n''t he figure more or less when so many others was tryin''to straighten out her love affairs? |
17301 | So you''ve been visiting, eh? |
17301 | Soft? |
17301 | Some chap, that Popover, even if he was a waiter, eh? |
17301 | Some strategy to that-- what? |
17301 | Sounds foolish, do n''t it? |
17301 | Sounds imposing do n''t it? |
17301 | Sure it would n''t bore you?" |
17301 | Sweet of her, wa''n''t it?" |
17301 | Teddy, have you decided what to attempt?" |
17301 | Tell us about her, wo n''t you?" |
17301 | That was some prophecy, eh? |
17301 | Then one of''em goes on,"The young man who is visiting dear Meredith?" |
17301 | Then out from a second story window floats a voice:"Who is that, please?" |
17301 | Then voices,"Have you the coffee bottles?" |
17301 | Then you ai n''t goin''to linger round with a busted heart?" |
17301 | Think Mr. Robert would recognise you by that?" |
17301 | Think it''s me Aunty has the war club out for, do you?" |
17301 | Think you can pick out any name on the board and drift in for a chat, do you? |
17301 | This was Uncle Jeff, eh, the one with the bank account? |
17301 | To- day is Wednesday, is it not? |
17301 | Torchy, did n''t he say? |
17301 | Torchy?" |
17301 | Trying to pass yourself off for Melly, were you?" |
17301 | Uncle Jeff winces a little at these last jabs; but he only turns to Brooks and asks quiet,"And I suppose those are your sentiments too?" |
17301 | Understand?" |
17301 | Wa''n''t that rubbin''in the salt, though? |
17301 | Was it something you said about me?" |
17301 | Was n''t it, now?" |
17301 | We understand, do n''t we, Brooks? |
17301 | Well, as the Sunflowers come on, did you notice special the second one from the right end? |
17301 | Well, have I got to sub for you at a directors''meeting or what?" |
17301 | Well, what use are you putting it to? |
17301 | Well?" |
17301 | Westlake?" |
17301 | What are you afraid of, Boy?" |
17301 | What did I care if the old town was warmin''up as we pulls out until it felt like a Turkish bath? |
17301 | What do I work it on?" |
17301 | What do you do evenin''s?" |
17301 | What do you guess I drew? |
17301 | What do you guess? |
17301 | What do you say, you two?" |
17301 | What do you say?" |
17301 | What do you think, Vee?" |
17301 | What does that mean?" |
17301 | What else could you expect with Old Hickory Ellins on one side and George Wesley Jones on the other? |
17301 | What for?" |
17301 | What for?" |
17301 | What good am I, anyway, except as a common carrier for all the blinkety blinked aches and pains that ever existed? |
17301 | What if he did telegraph to have it laid out? |
17301 | What is the sum total of the reserve, anyway?" |
17301 | What kind of hair?" |
17301 | What other answer could there be, with Vee gazin''flushed and pouty at''em over the tea urn? |
17301 | What say you to that?" |
17301 | What sort of fake is it, anyway?" |
17301 | What time do the shows begin?" |
17301 | What was the trouble?" |
17301 | What will you do?" |
17301 | What would you do if you were shut up like this?" |
17301 | What would you expect? |
17301 | What''s a few minutes''chat with the only girl that ever was? |
17301 | What''s the dope?" |
17301 | What''s the matter with that?" |
17301 | What''s the sense in drifting around when you''re hungry?" |
17301 | What''s the use?" |
17301 | What? |
17301 | When would you wish to go?" |
17301 | Where''d he drift in from, anyway?" |
17301 | Where''s Robert?" |
17301 | Where?" |
17301 | Which is it, Lotos or the Union League?" |
17301 | Which one of you is Peggy?" |
17301 | Which was a sad jolt to give a rescuer, wa''n''t it? |
17301 | Which?" |
17301 | Whither away? |
17301 | Who are you with now?" |
17301 | Who cares? |
17301 | Who is he?" |
17301 | Who says that the age of chivalry has passed? |
17301 | Who the syncopated sculping is Sturgis?" |
17301 | Who''s after me now, though?" |
17301 | Who''s next in line for it?" |
17301 | Why do n''t Aunty travel with a bunch of gumshoe guards and be done with it?" |
17301 | Why not week after next?" |
17301 | Why, how could I? |
17301 | Why, there''s the shore, and-- and-- well, what do you think of that? |
17301 | Why, wa''n''t that the Rube spot this Ira Higgins hailed from? |
17301 | Why? |
17301 | Wonder if I''d be bored to death with a week or so up there? |
17301 | Would he? |
17301 | Would n''t that smear you, though? |
17301 | Would you prefer to have us go tonight or in the morning?" |
17301 | You do n''t mind, I hope?" |
17301 | You from Boston?" |
17301 | You know? |
17301 | You know? |
17301 | You see what I want?" |
17301 | You see, do n''t you?" |
17301 | You were on the door then,--tall, wide- shouldered freak, with aureole hair, and a close cropped Vandyke?" |
17301 | You will think horrid things of me, will you? |
17301 | You will, will you?'' |
17301 | You would n''t want me to arrive in South America dressed like this, would you?" |
17301 | You''re a bum bond clerk, on the ragged edge of bein''fired, ai n''t you?" |
17301 | You''re her steady, eh?" |
17301 | You''re waiting orders, you say?" |
17301 | You?" |
17301 | Young man, I suppose you do n''t take wine?" |
17301 | breaks in Old Hickory, gettin''a glimpse of what the porter''s unloading"What have we here? |
17301 | but you have been goin''the pace, ai n''t you? |
17301 | demands Ross husky,"Was it you give the lass the sweeties?" |
17301 | greeting?" |
17301 | would you?" |
1565 | Of what country? |
1565 | Think you,he cried,"that the Invisible is like your statues of gold and marble? |
1565 | ''AND you have the courage then, Julia, to seek the Witch of Vesuvius this evening; in company, too, with that fearful man?'' |
1565 | ''Ah, what delicacy hast thou in store for us now, my Glaucus?'' |
1565 | ''Ah,''he muttered, as he glared from one to the other,''what Fury hath sent ye hither?'' |
1565 | ''An dabis?'' |
1565 | ''An even ten sestertia on Eumolpus, then?'' |
1565 | ''And Ione?'' |
1565 | ''And Stratonice, the brave old lass, where is she?'' |
1565 | ''And has,''asked she aloud,''has she often visited him before?'' |
1565 | ''And hast thou no fear, then, of thy rivals? |
1565 | ''And how can I assist you?'' |
1565 | ''And how do you fight?'' |
1565 | ''And how find you the flowers in your viridarium?--are they thriving?'' |
1565 | ''And how have you spent the lustrum? |
1565 | ''And how is it sealed?'' |
1565 | ''And how?'' |
1565 | ''And if,''resumed Lydon--''if thy Deity( methinks thou wilt own but one?) |
1565 | ''And is he here?'' |
1565 | ''And my slanderer was the Egyptian?'' |
1565 | ''And pray,''said one of the party,''what has become of the poor girl whom Glaucus was to have married? |
1565 | ''And that one person?'' |
1565 | ''And the blasphemer-- the Christian, or Nazarene, or whatever else he be called?'' |
1565 | ''And the draught would be equally efficacious, whoever administers it?'' |
1565 | ''And thou believest that, according to the purity and courage with which he thus acts, shall be his portion of bliss beyond the grave?'' |
1565 | ''And thou hast entered his house since thou knewest so well that private entrance?'' |
1565 | ''And thou hast escaped the contagion from which thou hast saved Ione?'' |
1565 | ''And thou wilt give full evidence of what thou knowest?'' |
1565 | ''And thou wilt save him?'' |
1565 | ''And thou wilt serve me?'' |
1565 | ''And what connection hath thy love, witch, with my commands?'' |
1565 | ''And what do ye here?'' |
1565 | ''And what hast thou imagined Glaucus to resemble?'' |
1565 | ''And what is there in the loss or gain of those dull pieces of metal that should change our spirit, my Clodius? |
1565 | ''And what likeness hast thou ascribed to Ione?'' |
1565 | ''And what wilt thou teach me, O singular and fearful man? |
1565 | ''And what,''said the voice of Arbaces,''are these galleries, that strangely and fitfully illumined, stretch on either hand into the abyss of gloom?'' |
1565 | ''And wherefore wert thou hid behind the chapel at that hour?'' |
1565 | ''And wherefore, said the voice of Arbaces,''yon wandering lights, that so wildly break the darkness; but only break, not reveal?'' |
1565 | ''And who dare insult the rich daughter of Diomed?'' |
1565 | ''And why for ever?'' |
1565 | ''And why hast thou hitherto concealed from me this secret? |
1565 | ''And why is it to me thou art thus unconfidential?'' |
1565 | ''And why the wretched?'' |
1565 | ''And why, Nydia,''asked Ione, evasively,''Wouldst thou be the bearer of my letter?'' |
1565 | ''And why?'' |
1565 | ''And why?'' |
1565 | ''And will he thank the messenger who gives to him thy letter?'' |
1565 | ''And you are well? |
1565 | ''And you will speak to Pansa about the place of designator at the amphitheatre, noble Clodius? |
1565 | ''And, being unblest with fortune, wouldst thou allure some wealthy suitor?'' |
1565 | ''Arbaces, at this hour!--scarce recovered too, methinks!--Whither and for what can he leave the city?'' |
1565 | ''Are they in truth so delicious?'' |
1565 | ''Are ye married?'' |
1565 | ''Are you come to sacrifice to Fortune?'' |
1565 | ''Art thou sure?'' |
1565 | ''Art thou, then, soberly and honestly in love? |
1565 | ''As thou hast learned!--Can wisdom attain so far?'' |
1565 | ''Averting gods,''she exclaimed;''and have I been so long forgetful of him? |
1565 | ''Ay, so he is called; but what matters the name? |
1565 | ''Ay-- does she not sing prettily? |
1565 | ''Be quiet, wife,''said he, in a tone half- sullen, half- timid;''you want new girdles and fine clothes, do you? |
1565 | ''Besides,''added Calenus,''if the storm does come, and if it does overwhelm the accursed ships, have we not prophesied it? |
1565 | ''Blind flower- girl, whither goest thou? |
1565 | ''But I do n''t see Burbo; where is Burbo? |
1565 | ''But how camest thou, Nydia,''whispered Ione,''to surmise so faithfully the danger I was exposed to? |
1565 | ''But surely a net and a spear are poor arms against a shield and sword?'' |
1565 | ''But tell me, is it true that you admire the Neapolitan Ione?'' |
1565 | ''But tell me,''said Tetraides,''where is that pretty young slave of yours-- the blind girl, with bright eyes? |
1565 | ''But what harm is there in seeing Ione?'' |
1565 | ''But what of the trial?'' |
1565 | ''But what,''asked Nydia,''can induce the beautiful and wealthy Julia to ask that question of her servant? |
1565 | ''But which way go you now?'' |
1565 | ''But who is yon handsome gladiator, nearly naked-- is it not quite improper? |
1565 | ''But who shall tell the terrors of the night?'' |
1565 | ''But whom have we here? |
1565 | ''But you will not play any trick with the water, eh?'' |
1565 | ''But you, my Mentor, do you find it so easy to control yourself? |
1565 | ''But, hark ye, Stratonice,''said Lydon;''how didst thou come by so gentle and delicate a slave? |
1565 | ''But,''answered the Nazarene,''ask thy reason, can that religion be sound which outrages all morality? |
1565 | ''By the way,''said Sallust,''have you seen the new ode by Spuraena, in honour of our Egyptian Isis? |
1565 | ''Calenus, priest of Isis, thou accusest Arbaces of the murder of Apaecides?'' |
1565 | ''Can I not visit him?'' |
1565 | ''Can admiration to one woman make me unworthy the friendship of another? |
1565 | ''Can we not see her?'' |
1565 | ''Can you ask?'' |
1565 | ''Can you doubt it?'' |
1565 | ''Canst thou ask, O wise Arbaces? |
1565 | ''Could that mountain have any connection with the last night''s earthquake? |
1565 | ''Did I laugh?'' |
1565 | ''Did I not tell thee that thou shouldst be my sister and friend? |
1565 | ''Did you learn these pretty gallantries at Rome?'' |
1565 | ''Did you say she was Athenian?'' |
1565 | ''Do I believe in an evil demon?'' |
1565 | ''Do you think, fair Ione, that it is only at Pompeii that I have learned to value you?'' |
1565 | ''Do you wish Fulvius to sing?'' |
1565 | ''Does not beauty constrain our admiration?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou claim the body of a priest of Isis as one of the Nazarene or Christian sect?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou fear?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou feel that, for his sake, thou couldst renounce pride, brave dishonour, and incur death? |
1565 | ''Dost thou not fear thy companion?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou not imagine, according to thy belief, that the evil- doer is punished hereafter, and the good rewarded?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou not remember my voice?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou recognize the Romans, my Clodius; are they among the celebrated, or are they merely ordinary?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou remember the words, my sister?'' |
1565 | ''Dost thou think, then, that he who is truly good should sacrifice every selfish interest in his zeal for virtue?'' |
1565 | ''Egyptian,''said the praetor, frowning,''thou didst, then, dare to imprison a priest of the gods-- and wherefore?'' |
1565 | ''Exactly like this water in appearance?'' |
1565 | ''For what purpose, then, thy herbs and thy potions, vain Saga?'' |
1565 | ''For what?'' |
1565 | ''Glaucus, I am a slave; what business have I with grief or joy?'' |
1565 | ''Glaucus, wilt thou take my poor flowers? |
1565 | ''Had the earthquake but a few nights since no warning?'' |
1565 | ''Has he forgotten,''she added, in a half- whisper,''his friends of the last year?'' |
1565 | ''Has it not a voice? |
1565 | ''Hast thou dwelt here long?'' |
1565 | ''Hast thou ever heard much,''asked she,''of this new sect of the Nazarenes, of which my brother spoke?'' |
1565 | ''Hast thou heard the news, old Medon?'' |
1565 | ''Hast thou seen the lion? |
1565 | ''Hast thou told living ear what thou didst witness?'' |
1565 | ''He has been accused publicly, then?'' |
1565 | ''He is too wealthy to divine for money?'' |
1565 | ''Hem!--say they that she is tall?'' |
1565 | ''Ho, my child, wait you for me?'' |
1565 | ''Ho-- what art thou?'' |
1565 | ''How can I judge?'' |
1565 | ''How do you find the ladies of Pompeii generally?'' |
1565 | ''How is he?'' |
1565 | ''How is that possible? |
1565 | ''How is the murderer?'' |
1565 | ''How is this? |
1565 | ''How is this? |
1565 | ''How mean you, Sallust?'' |
1565 | ''How much? |
1565 | ''How much? |
1565 | ''How now? |
1565 | ''How shall I thank thee, fair Nydia?'' |
1565 | ''I have not seen her this morning,''answered Nydia,''but...''''But what? |
1565 | ''I heard that thou wert purchased by the beautiful Greek Glaucus; is that true, pretty slave?'' |
1565 | ''I trust,''said Sosia, tremulously,''that there is nothing very frightful in the operation? |
1565 | ''I will seek him this very day,''resumed Julia;''nay, why not this very hour?'' |
1565 | ''If this be true, what-- what can be done to save her? |
1565 | ''If thou knowest me, canst thou not recall my features?'' |
1565 | ''If( he reasoned) I have the genius to impose laws, have I not the right to command my own creations? |
1565 | ''If, O Nazarene, thou disbelievest in Cybele, which of our gods dost thou own?'' |
1565 | ''In what legion have you served?'' |
1565 | ''In what?'' |
1565 | ''Ione,''said he, as he pressed her hand,''should you hear my name blackened and maligned, will you credit the aspersion?'' |
1565 | ''Ione?'' |
1565 | ''Is Nature ordinarily so unattractive?'' |
1565 | ''Is he a citizen or a slave?'' |
1565 | ''Is he thy son?'' |
1565 | ''Is he, too, an impostor? |
1565 | ''Is it an Athenian virtue, Glaucus,''said the merchant''s daughter,''to shun those whom we once sought?'' |
1565 | ''Is it he? |
1565 | ''Is it indeed so? |
1565 | ''Is it so?'' |
1565 | ''Is it thy zeal that has brought thee to this? |
1565 | ''Is she as handsome as they say?'' |
1565 | ''Is she young?'' |
1565 | ''Is the effect instantaneous?'' |
1565 | ''Is there no hope, then?'' |
1565 | ''Is this Clodius? |
1565 | ''Is thy mistress Julia within?'' |
1565 | ''It was from that feeling that you chose your summer retreat at Pompeii?'' |
1565 | ''Kind son, what is there in this scrip to tempt the robber? |
1565 | ''Knowest thou, then, blind Thessalian, of any love- charms?'' |
1565 | ''Knowest thou,''said she,''if Ione has any relative, any intimate friend at Pompeii?'' |
1565 | ''Letter!--which letter?'' |
1565 | ''Lodges she near this?'' |
1565 | ''Magic!--who doubts it?'' |
1565 | ''Man,''said Nydia, rising,''wilt thou become free? |
1565 | ''May I enter?'' |
1565 | ''May I visit thee afterwards to learn the result?'' |
1565 | ''May Julia rank among the number of his friends?'' |
1565 | ''Methinks I know thy voice? |
1565 | ''Methought when we entered,''said Clodius,''there was another man present?'' |
1565 | ''My child,''said Ione, a little more reservedly than before,''thou speakest warmly-- Glaucus, then, is amiable in thine eyes?'' |
1565 | ''My good fellow,''said he to his companion, it was a most awful judgment-- heigho!--it is not bad that kid, eh? |
1565 | ''My son,''said the Egyptian,''what has chanced that you desire to shun me?'' |
1565 | ''Nay, would you have me relate to you all the comments of the insolent coxcombs with which the story has circled through the town? |
1565 | ''Never fear, we''ll fill the purse, my Hector,''said Clodius:''let me see-- you fight against Niger? |
1565 | ''No matter, no matter-- he has been kind to me: thou knowest not, then, what they will do? |
1565 | ''No, no; tell me, dear Sosia, what is the hour?'' |
1565 | ''No: is it handsome?'' |
1565 | ''Oh? |
1565 | ''On whom then?'' |
1565 | ''Or me, who have conquered in fifteen fights?'' |
1565 | ''Or me?'' |
1565 | ''Or of Sappho?'' |
1565 | ''Pardon me, noble sponsor mine,''said Lydon, in a low voice to Glaucus:''but how much think you the victor will gain?'' |
1565 | ''Pardon me-- your name?'' |
1565 | ''Perhaps he would let me kill a slave for my reservoir?'' |
1565 | ''Poor fellow!--he has good counsel?'' |
1565 | ''Sallust,''said the magistrate,''where found you Calenus?'' |
1565 | ''Say you so?'' |
1565 | ''Sayest thou so? |
1565 | ''Seest thou no one?'' |
1565 | ''Shall I guess the object?--Is it not Diomed''s daughter? |
1565 | ''Shall I speak then to thee only of Isis?'' |
1565 | ''Shall the shadow disclose itself?'' |
1565 | ''Shall we within to your chamber, Arbaces?'' |
1565 | ''Shall yon blind girl sing to thee of the days of childhood? |
1565 | ''She is not yours yet, then?'' |
1565 | ''Since thou leftst me so abruptly,''said Olinthus,''hast thou been happy? |
1565 | ''So Glaucus denies his crime to the last?'' |
1565 | ''So she is a sort of client of yours, this child?'' |
1565 | ''Some conference touching the murder, doubtless,''replied Diomed;''but what was supposed to be the inducement to the crime? |
1565 | ''Some little lore have I indeed, treasured up,''replied Arbaces:''but in what can such serious and sterile secrets benefit the ear of beauty?'' |
1565 | ''Sosia, how much dost thou require to make up the purchase of thy freedom?'' |
1565 | ''Speak, prisoner, what sayest thou to the charge?'' |
1565 | ''Sphinx, no!--why sphinx?'' |
1565 | ''Sure, pretty one: but what is that to thee or to us?'' |
1565 | ''Talking of that, Diomed gives a grand feast next week,''said Sallust:''are you invited, Glaucus?'' |
1565 | ''Tell me, Clodius,''said the Greek at last,''hast thou ever been in love?'' |
1565 | ''Tell me,''said Glaucus, abruptly,''did I not hear thy name coupled with that of Apaecides in my trial? |
1565 | ''Tell me,''said she, suddenly, and after a long pause,''are ye brother and sister?'' |
1565 | ''The gods be praised!--and you will not admit me? |
1565 | ''Then I may stay over the night, and return to- morrow?'' |
1565 | ''Then, then, I am to go with you-- with you? |
1565 | ''There-- thou canst not see?'' |
1565 | ''They accuse the Athenian of murder: canst thou disprove the accusation?'' |
1565 | ''They tell me that Glaucus is here,''said she;''may I come in?'' |
1565 | ''Thine?'' |
1565 | ''Thinkest thou so? |
1565 | ''Thinkest thou that the gods above us or below hear the impotent ravings of dotage? |
1565 | ''This is kind, Apaecides,''said Ione, joyfully;''and how eagerly have I wished to see thee!--what thanks do I not owe thee? |
1565 | ''This young profligate, this Glaucus, how didst thou know him? |
1565 | ''Thou art grateful, and deservedly so; why should I blush to say that Glaucus is worthy of thy gratitude? |
1565 | ''Thou art late abroad; has the goddess revealed herself to thee in visions?'' |
1565 | ''Thou art provided as for a journey, father,''said he:''wilt thou leave us yet?'' |
1565 | ''Thou comest to me for advice in unhappy love,''said he;''well, turn that face on the ungrateful one: what other love- charm can I give thee?'' |
1565 | ''Thou didst behold the deed?'' |
1565 | ''Thou hast looked, they tell me, on the face of Christ?'' |
1565 | ''Thou knowest the banquets of the dead, stranger-- it pleases thee, perhaps, to share them-- would it please thee to have thy sister a partaker? |
1565 | ''Thou wert to tell me,''said Glaucus,''why for so many days thy door was closed to me?'' |
1565 | ''Thou wilt go to Ione,''answered Glaucus, in a tone that said,''What more canst thou desire?'' |
1565 | ''Thou, then, hast shared his lessons?'' |
1565 | ''To a magistrate? |
1565 | ''To be sure; where have you been not to hear that?'' |
1565 | ''To happiness or to woe?'' |
1565 | ''To the house of Arbaces-- of the Egyptian? |
1565 | ''To what dost thou bear me?'' |
1565 | ''To whom?'' |
1565 | ''To- morrow eve, then, order thy litter-- thou hast one at thy command?'' |
1565 | ''To- morrow? |
1565 | ''Was I young once, think ye?'' |
1565 | ''Well, Clodius, shall I take compassion on you, and accept your own terms with these Romans?'' |
1565 | ''Well, Nazarene,''replied the priest, and his face grew paler;''what wouldst thou?'' |
1565 | ''Well, Sosia, and art thou prepared? |
1565 | ''Well, but tell me, Clodius, is he really to be tried by the senate?'' |
1565 | ''Well, man, what is your weapon?'' |
1565 | ''Well, then, Calenus, what wouldst thou have me pay thee?'' |
1565 | ''Well-- ten to eight?'' |
1565 | ''What Pompeian has not heard of Arbaces?'' |
1565 | ''What art thou?'' |
1565 | ''What avails thy liberty now, blind girl?'' |
1565 | ''What campaign have you served?'' |
1565 | ''What can be worse policy,''said Clodius, sententiously,''than to interfere with the manly amusements of the people?'' |
1565 | ''What can he want with me? |
1565 | ''What could have been his inducement?'' |
1565 | ''What could have been the cause?'' |
1565 | ''What dost thou want, or whom Knowest thou not that the priests do not live in the temple?'' |
1565 | ''What hast thou to say?'' |
1565 | ''What if the sublime faith of the Nazarene be true? |
1565 | ''What is that to thee?'' |
1565 | ''What is the design?'' |
1565 | ''What is this?'' |
1565 | ''What is your name, fair girl?'' |
1565 | ''What mean you, Arbaces?'' |
1565 | ''What means this raving?'' |
1565 | ''What news from Rome?'' |
1565 | ''What now?'' |
1565 | ''What say you, Glaucus?'' |
1565 | ''What story could he tell against me, vain Lydon?'' |
1565 | ''What think you of this new sect, which I am told has even a few proselytes in Pompeii, these followers of the Hebrew God-- Christus?'' |
1565 | ''What words are these?--Murder and Apaecides!--Did I not see him stretched on the ground bleeding and a corpse? |
1565 | ''What, Arbaces? |
1565 | ''What, parted in front, with the knot behind? |
1565 | ''What, you will not extinguish it?'' |
1565 | ''When is our next wild- beast fight?'' |
1565 | ''Where is my daughter Julia?'' |
1565 | ''Where is thy master? |
1565 | ''Which way lies Sallust''s mansion?'' |
1565 | ''Whither wouldst thou lead me, Arbaces?'' |
1565 | ''Who accuses him?'' |
1565 | ''Who are ye?'' |
1565 | ''Who art thou, whence comest thou, pale maiden?'' |
1565 | ''Who art thou? |
1565 | ''Who art thou? |
1565 | ''Who calls?'' |
1565 | ''Who calls?'' |
1565 | ''Who could be otherwise?'' |
1565 | ''Who is there?'' |
1565 | ''Who is yon cynic?'' |
1565 | ''Who is, when the object of them is so fair?'' |
1565 | ''Who sent to previse thee of it, my mistress?'' |
1565 | ''Who''s there?'' |
1565 | ''Who( it said) is my companion in this awful hour? |
1565 | ''Who,''said the Nazarene,''calls upon the son of God?'' |
1565 | ''Whom shall we get for him to eat?'' |
1565 | ''Why do I ever bet but at the dice?'' |
1565 | ''Why dost thou drink that unmixed water, Nydia? |
1565 | ''Why dost thou laugh, old crone?'' |
1565 | ''Why not take one of the new sect of Nazarenes?'' |
1565 | ''Why not?'' |
1565 | ''Why so?'' |
1565 | ''Why this delay? |
1565 | ''Why, Nydia?'' |
1565 | ''Why, Nydia?'' |
1565 | ''Why, thou seest, my slave Staphyla-- thou rememberest Staphyla, Niger?'' |
1565 | ''Will you not be avenged on your ill- fortune of yesterday? |
1565 | ''Will you read the letter, Sallust?'' |
1565 | ''Will you that I should sing of love?'' |
1565 | ''Wilt thou never have done?'' |
1565 | ''Wilt thou not wait the morrow?'' |
1565 | ''Wilt thou prove my knowledge, Ione, and behold the representation of thine own fate? |
1565 | ''Wilt thou save him?'' |
1565 | ''Wilt thou summon Davus? |
1565 | ''Wilt thou take me to her?'' |
1565 | ''With whom wouldst thou confer? |
1565 | ''Would you, indeed?'' |
1565 | ''Yes, wise Arbaces-- I trust my visit is not unseasonable?'' |
1565 | ''Yes; and placed some beautiful nuts and apples on a little table close by?'' |
1565 | ''Yet how canst thou contrive it? |
1565 | ''Yet more, fair maiden; wilt thou confide to me the name of thy lover? |
1565 | ''Yet,''he added, musingly to himself,''why confide more than is necessary, even in the blind-- Julia, canst thou trust thyself alone with me? |
1565 | ''You are early abroad?'' |
1565 | ''You are sure it will be as much?'' |
1565 | ''You have but lately returned?'' |
1565 | ''You have written to Glaucus?'' |
1565 | ''You often hint that he plays unfairly-- think you so really?'' |
1565 | ''You will see, my friend,''said he, with a wave of his hand,''that I am a little classical here-- a little Cecropian-- eh? |
1565 | ''Your cook is, of course, from Sicily?'' |
1565 | ''Your country?'' |
1565 | A voice from within returned,''Peace with whom?'' |
1565 | A weak voice answered--''Who calls on me? |
1565 | About evermore we bear thee; For who from the heart can tear thee? |
1565 | Against whom shall I contend? |
1565 | Ah, I need not ask-- for who that sees the earth, which they tell me is so beautiful, can be ill?'' |
1565 | Am I a man to think of--(hiccup)--pleasure, when-- when-- my friend is going to be eat up?'' |
1565 | Am I happy, ask you? |
1565 | Am I not the oracle of the amphitheatre and its heroes? |
1565 | Am I to believe with this man, that none whom for so many centuries my fathers worshipped have a being or a name? |
1565 | Am I to break down, as something blasphemous and profane, the very altars which I have deemed most sacred? |
1565 | Am I too bold? |
1565 | And Arbaces felt the voice leave his lips, without an impulse of his own; and the voice asked:''Who art thou, and what is thy task?'' |
1565 | And am I now to be lectured by a boy?'' |
1565 | And doth Glaucus visit her much?'' |
1565 | And for such a trifle wilt thou refuse liberty?'' |
1565 | And for what? |
1565 | And had she doubted his faith, and had she believed another? |
1565 | And hast thou left the garden- gate gently open?'' |
1565 | And have I not received the rod from the editor''s own hand as a sign of victory, and as a grace to retirement on my laurels? |
1565 | And having tarried so long, why revealest thou now that knowledge?'' |
1565 | And is not even thy bitterest tone sweeter to me than the music of the most artful lute? |
1565 | And now, what form steals yonder through the boughs? |
1565 | And tell me if there ever, even in the ages most favorable to glory, could be a triumph more exalted and elating than the conquest of one noble heart? |
1565 | And the gate is open now, so that the demon may pass through it?'' |
1565 | And this Egyptian, was he a priest himself? |
1565 | And thou lovest him who loves not thee?'' |
1565 | And thy name, stranger?'' |
1565 | And where a tyrant sterner? |
1565 | Arbaces felt himself tremble as he asked again,''Wherefore am I here?'' |
1565 | Arbaces is not one to be credulously trusted: can it be that he hath wronged me to thee? |
1565 | Arbaces shall be obeyed-- and his ward, Ione?'' |
1565 | Arbaces was the accuser of Glaucus; Arbaces had imprisoned her here; was not that a proof that her liberty might be serviceable to Glaucus? |
1565 | Arbaces-- thine? |
1565 | Are such things to be borne? |
1565 | Are they blue? |
1565 | Are they not all represented to you as the blackest of criminals? |
1565 | Are they not love- charms enough to dispense with magic?'' |
1565 | Are we thus torn asunder? |
1565 | Are you hurt? |
1565 | Are your faces then the same? |
1565 | Art thou happy?'' |
1565 | Art thou not the priest Apaecides?'' |
1565 | Art thou well advised of this?'' |
1565 | At length, with an inward groan, Glaucus turned away, drew his hand across his brow, sunk back, and muttered:''Am I still dreaming?'' |
1565 | Athenian Glaucus, it is thou?'' |
1565 | But I desire to confer with you relative to him and to other matters: you can admit me into one of your less sacred apartments?'' |
1565 | But does Sallust entertain to- night?'' |
1565 | But for the method of my vengeance? |
1565 | But for what can you seek Glaucus?'' |
1565 | But say, shall Julia be indeed your friend?'' |
1565 | But speak out-- what shall be the sum?'' |
1565 | But tell me, Arbaces, hast thou seen my brother of late? |
1565 | But think you, young man, that if they had not deceived their kind they could have served them? |
1565 | But what are the doubtful virtues of the Athenian, to the bright, the undisputed, the active, the unceasing, the devoted holiness of Christ? |
1565 | But what desirest thou to learn?'' |
1565 | But what fear of that? |
1565 | But what hath the fate of the Athenian to do with thine?'' |
1565 | But what matter? |
1565 | But what merit in courage, when that atheistical hound, Olinthus, manifested the same?'' |
1565 | But what words can paint the intolerable woe, the sinking of the whole heart, which was now visible on the features of the Thessalian? |
1565 | But who is Ione?'' |
1565 | But why, my child, wert thou so suddenly angry? |
1565 | But, pray what has become of the poor girl who was to have we d the Athenian-- the sister of the murdered priest?'' |
1565 | But, woman,''he added, lifting himself upon his arm, and gazing curiously on her face,''tell me, I pray thee, wherefore thou wishest to live? |
1565 | By- the- by, your son is a gladiator, a handsome man and a strong, can you not persuade him to fight the tiger? |
1565 | Calenus-- seekest thou me?'' |
1565 | Can I make to him the same confidences that he would repose in me-- of banquets and garlands-- of Parthian steeds, and the chances of the dice? |
1565 | Can he be Pompeian, and despise wealth, even if blind to beauty?'' |
1565 | Can thy gods, whosoever they be, look with wrath on a conflict with such as these, and in such a cause? |
1565 | Can we not get him amongst us, and teach him the charms of dice? |
1565 | Can you conceal, can you even regulate, your love for Ione?'' |
1565 | Canst thou confound me with them? |
1565 | Canst thou forgive thy friend, Ione?'' |
1565 | Canst thou not recognize something kindred to thine own energy-- thine own courage-- in this high and self- dependent soul? |
1565 | Canst thou save the Athenian Glaucus from the charge against his life?'' |
1565 | Come hither!--place your hand on his heart!--sure it beats yet?'' |
1565 | Could I hear thy groans, could I witness thy mysterious horrors, thy constant anguish, and remain inactive? |
1565 | Could it distress thee if she were away from thy side? |
1565 | Couldst thou feel when she was present? |
1565 | Dark haired?'' |
1565 | Daughter of Etruria, whither wendest thou?'' |
1565 | Did I hear aright? |
1565 | Did it not say to us all,"Prepare for death; the end of all things is at hand?"'' |
1565 | Did not Ariadne dote upon Bacchus?'' |
1565 | Did not the stars foretell the only crisis of imminent peril to which I was subjected?--Is not that peril past?'' |
1565 | Did thy parents love, or didst thou? |
1565 | Did thy slow blood circulate more gladly when thou didst creep to the side of thy wedded one? |
1565 | Did you not hear the trumpets and the trampling feet?'' |
1565 | Didst thou know aught of the Egyptian?'' |
1565 | Didst thou not complain to me that thou wert compelled to offices that were not odious to thee as a slave, but guilty as a Nazarene? |
1565 | Didst thou not feel the earth quake, Nydia, where thou wert seated last night? |
1565 | Didst thou not tell me this? |
1565 | Do I offend thee? |
1565 | Do I overrate thy skill? |
1565 | Do I say that on the tablet which my tongue has hesitated to breathe? |
1565 | Do they her beauty keep? |
1565 | Do thy fellow- slaves tell thee she is handsome? |
1565 | Do you imagine that they have eyes to see, or ears to hear, or hands to help ye? |
1565 | Do you sup with Glaucus to- night?'' |
1565 | Does any rich patron give away alms or viands to- night?'' |
1565 | Does he find her handsome?'' |
1565 | Does the veil of Vesta hide the vices of the prostitute?'' |
1565 | Does this man, so plain and simple in life, in garb, in mien-- does he too, like Arbaces, make austerity the robe of the sensualist? |
1565 | Dost thou believe me guilty?'' |
1565 | Dost thou hear them drag yon heavy body through the passage? |
1565 | Dost thou interest thyself for him? |
1565 | Dost thou remember how we went into the fields by Baiae, hand in hand together, to pluck the flowers of spring? |
1565 | Dost thou see the likeness-- or is it only to my fancy?'' |
1565 | Eh?'' |
1565 | Endymion, sleepest thou so soundly? |
1565 | Enjoy while ye may the present-- who can read the future? |
1565 | Enough!--Is the morning fair?'' |
1565 | FATE WRITES HER PROPHECY IN RED LETTERS, BUT WHO SHALL READ THEM? |
1565 | Fair Julia, look in the mirror; saw you ever anything so lovely as yourself?'' |
1565 | Fie!--is this seeming thy sex or years? |
1565 | Five-- six-- sixty years? |
1565 | For where a mien more gently sweet? |
1565 | For where is the charm expelling Thy thought from its sacred dwelling? |
1565 | Forget not this hour,--what are the pleasures and the pomps of life? |
1565 | Give it no name-- earth has no name for it-- it is not of earth-- why debase it with earthly epithets and earthly associations?'' |
1565 | Greek?'' |
1565 | Had not the great Dorian Apollo expiated a mystic sin by descending to the grave? |
1565 | Had they confined their researches to Nature-- what of knowledge might we not already have achieved? |
1565 | Happy should I be to receive his friendship; but what can I give him in return? |
1565 | Has he not convinced thee of the wisdom of deluding the people and enjoying ourselves? |
1565 | Has it begun-- the amphitheatre? |
1565 | Has she not money, and youth, and loveliness? |
1565 | Hast thou ever heard the name of Ione?'' |
1565 | Hast thou laid flowers at the feet of the dead? |
1565 | Hast thou seen him often?'' |
1565 | Hast thou that feeling which the poets describe-- a feeling that makes us neglect our suppers, forswear the theatre, and write elegies? |
1565 | Hast thou the bowl of pure water?'' |
1565 | Hath she been uttering foul magic to the moon, or culling( as her pauses betoken) foul herbs from the venomous marsh? |
1565 | Have I seemed to shun him? |
1565 | Have not events already proved it? |
1565 | Have not the Romans sworn never to obey a king? |
1565 | Have they detected thy noble purpose, and by death prevented their own shame?'' |
1565 | Have they slandered me to thee, Ione? |
1565 | Have they smiled on thee? |
1565 | Have you ever seen my wine- cellars, by- the- by?'' |
1565 | He paused a moment:''Why,''he muttered,''should I hesitate? |
1565 | He who had defied the grave for another-- what was the grave to him? |
1565 | He, too, was reprieved from the tiger by the hand of the gods; should he be left to a no less fatal death in the neighboring cell? |
1565 | Hear you that, Medon? |
1565 | Her heart beat: was it to be her proud destiny to preserve her idolized-- her adored? |
1565 | His friends-- the sister of his youth-- could he expect justice, though he might receive compassion, from them? |
1565 | His heart!--who, in our happier age, can even imagine its struggles-- its commotion? |
1565 | His vows of austerity and celibacy echoed in his ear; his thirst after holiness-- had it been quenched at so unhallowed a stream? |
1565 | How can I swear by Cybele then?'' |
1565 | How could he escape? |
1565 | How heard you this base slander?'' |
1565 | How is the fair Julia?'' |
1565 | How then came this evil? |
1565 | I am but a child, I am blind-- is not that punishment enough?'' |
1565 | I could not divine the cause?'' |
1565 | I have a pretty trade, else how could I live in these hard times? |
1565 | I have known him only within this last week or so: but why these questions?'' |
1565 | I have the Egyptian''s life in my power-- what will he value it at?'' |
1565 | I have thee-- eh?'' |
1565 | I may have erred-- but who amongst ye will not acknowledge the equity of self- preservation? |
1565 | I say, art thou ill or in pain? |
1565 | I spoke to her, though with a faltering voice--"Art thou not, too, Athenian?" |
1565 | I thought thou saidst a visitor?'' |
1565 | IV How its love can the Wind reveal? |
1565 | If I thus fulfilled my object with Apaecides, what was my design for Ione? |
1565 | In counting the girls that we kiss, eh? |
1565 | In the very hour when my mind could devise no clue to the goal of vengeance, have ye sent this fair fool for my guide?'' |
1565 | In this dilemma, what was to be done? |
1565 | In this state all wisdom consists necessarily in the solution of two questions:"What are we to believe? |
1565 | In wonder and sudden hope, Glaucus arose--''Nydia still? |
1565 | Ione here?'' |
1565 | Ione''s hair is dark, mine light; Ione''s eyes are-- what color, Ione? |
1565 | Ione, deign to see me; thou art gentle to strangers, wilt thou be less merciful to those of thine own land? |
1565 | Ione,''he continued rapidly,''dost thou not see that we are born for each other? |
1565 | Is Ione ill? |
1565 | Is he not handsome, Clodius?'' |
1565 | Is he so base a villain? |
1565 | Is it for a dream that thou wouldst wrong the innocent, and hazard thy sole chance of saving thy lover''s life?'' |
1565 | Is it not so?'' |
1565 | Is it the injustice of men that hath taught thee to deny the providence of the gods?'' |
1565 | Is it the voice of the Shades? |
1565 | Is not Burbo my kinsman Pansa''s client? |
1565 | Is not thy knowledge the very gossip theme of Pompeii?'' |
1565 | Is that fair? |
1565 | Is that like a gentleman and a gladiator? |
1565 | Is this a thing to worship?'' |
1565 | It was true that the request was remarkably silly; but what was that to him? |
1565 | It was you who taught me to disdain adulation: will you unteach your pupil?'' |
1565 | May I speak then as a friend, without reserve and without offence?'' |
1565 | May I withdraw?'' |
1565 | Mighty Hermes, have I ministered to thee cunningly?'' |
1565 | My brother''s blood is unavenged: who slew him? |
1565 | Nay, I will atone the insult-- I ask thy sister in marriage-- start not-- consider-- what is the alliance of yon holiday Greek compared to mine? |
1565 | Next, supposing that be true, shall I possess myself of that snug taberna among the Myropolia, which I have long had in my eye? |
1565 | Niger, how will you fight?'' |
1565 | No aperture? |
1565 | No vain chiromancer, no juggler of the market- place, but some more potent and mighty magician of India or of Egypt?'' |
1565 | No-- it is a dead man?'' |
1565 | None of my people have gone to the spectacle?'' |
1565 | Now, which way could they wend? |
1565 | Nydia sighed, and after a short pause, without answering the remark, said:''But do I weave too many roses in my wreath, Glaucus? |
1565 | Nydia, I have no sister-- wilt thou be one to me?'' |
1565 | O Nemesis, can I even sell, for the life of Glaucus, thy solemn trust? |
1565 | Of what peril?'' |
1565 | Oh, I am mad still?'' |
1565 | Oh, are they black? |
1565 | Oh, can these men love, my Clodius? |
1565 | Oh, is it in truth come to this? |
1565 | Oh, what can Rome give me equal to what I possess at Athens? |
1565 | Or loves not the sun? |
1565 | Or the cups that we empty at dinner? |
1565 | Our morality? |
1565 | Our religion? |
1565 | Pretty one, thou dost not grieve now?'' |
1565 | Seest thou these bracelets and this chain? |
1565 | Shall I be enabled to purchase my freedom next year? |
1565 | Shall justice be delayed now, that it may be frustrated hereafter? |
1565 | Shall the blood of Apaecides yet cry for vengeance? |
1565 | Shall the lion be cheated of his lawful prey? |
1565 | Shall the mirror live for ever, and the form itself be broken as the potter''s clay? |
1565 | Shall we be less free than your ancestors? |
1565 | Shall we within?'' |
1565 | She is rich, my friend; why dost thou not proffer thy suit to her?'' |
1565 | Sometimes she utters imprecations on the murderer-- then suddenly stops short-- then cries,"But why curse? |
1565 | Speak I frankly and as a friend?'' |
1565 | Still more, have I not the right to control-- to evade-- to scorn-- the fabrications of yet meaner intellects than my own?'' |
1565 | Tell me then, first, art thou unmarried, as thy dress betokens?'' |
1565 | Tell me, then, who is the fortunate virgin?'' |
1565 | The Neapolitan trembled; she thought of Glaucus, and sighed as well as trembled: were their destinies to be united? |
1565 | The Thessalian kissed the hand of Ione, and then said, with some embarrassment:''One favor, fair Ione-- may I dare to ask it?'' |
1565 | The dream lied not, then? |
1565 | Then she begins again, and again stops short, and mutters awfully to herself,"Yet if it were indeed he?"'' |
1565 | There is no pannier under thine arm; hast thou sold all thy flowers?'' |
1565 | There, Servilius, does it not become her?'' |
1565 | Think you that He needeth sacrifice from you: He who made heaven and earth?" |
1565 | Thinkest thou her chaste eyes are ripe for such scenes? |
1565 | Thou comprehendest, Nydia; thou art yet a child-- have I said more than thou canst understand?'' |
1565 | Thou knowest the long range of subterranean cellars beneath the basement-- that shelter, what shower can penetrate?'' |
1565 | Thou wouldst not have the bracelet yestermorn-- wilt thou take the bottle?'' |
1565 | To what question is it to vouchsafe a reply?'' |
1565 | Two years and a half-- three-- four? |
1565 | Unfeeling wretch!--do you not see my sorrows? |
1565 | WHITHER? |
1565 | WILL SHE ESCAPE AND SAVE THE ATHENIAN? |
1565 | Was it a sin to love her countryman? |
1565 | Was there no spot in which she could hide? |
1565 | We met first at the shrine of Pallas; shall we not meet before a softer and a more ancient altar? |
1565 | Weepest thou still, fond fool? |
1565 | Well, then, have not forgotten our conversation of to- day?'' |
1565 | Were I to embrace thy creed, and cast down my father''s gods, should I not be bribed by thy promise of heaven, or awed by thy threats of hell? |
1565 | Wert thou capable of affection? |
1565 | What ails my poor child?'' |
1565 | What are the meaner deities but imitators of his vices? |
1565 | What are those gods, even according to yourselves? |
1565 | What can the great Arbaces want with so poor a thing as I am?'' |
1565 | What chance hath he to claim them? |
1565 | What could he do? |
1565 | What does she do? |
1565 | What has Glaucus insinuated? |
1565 | What has the moon said to thee? |
1565 | What hast thou to reveal?'' |
1565 | What have I done? |
1565 | What if God be a monarch-- One-- Invisible-- Alone? |
1565 | What if these numerous, countless deities, whose altars fill the earth, be but evil demons, seeking to wean us from the true creed? |
1565 | What is it thou wouldst meditate? |
1565 | What is it you would say?'' |
1565 | What is that letter yonder on the table?'' |
1565 | What is the morality my religion teaches? |
1565 | What is to be done? |
1565 | What marvel that the earth heaved so fearfully last night, anxious to reject the atheist from her bosom?--An atheist, do I say? |
1565 | What more can he desire?'' |
1565 | What need had they of words to say they loved? |
1565 | What need to shrink, When the lambs alone can see us? |
1565 | What new dishes have you discovered?'' |
1565 | What say you, Lepidus?'' |
1565 | What say you, Lydon?'' |
1565 | What say you?'' |
1565 | What slave was ever destitute of cunning? |
1565 | What sweets dost thou discover in existence?'' |
1565 | What their actions, what their attributes? |
1565 | What was the travail of his own Alcmena''s son, whose altars now smoked with the incense of countless cities, but a toil for the human race? |
1565 | What would become of merchants, or jewellers either, if such notions were in fashion?'' |
1565 | What, Nydia, dost thou not like the bauble? |
1565 | What, is this the largest? |
1565 | What, then, with such destinies beyond the peril, shall I succumb to the peril? |
1565 | What, what can she say to thank thee, now thou art come at last?'' |
1565 | When do they suffer?'' |
1565 | When will Christ descend to protect his own?'' |
1565 | Where are all these good folks thronging?'' |
1565 | Where is the murderer? |
1565 | Wherefore should I dread?'' |
1565 | Whither fliest thou?'' |
1565 | Whither should they fly? |
1565 | Who are these?'' |
1565 | Who cares now-- who sees now-- whether thou art a priest or not? |
1565 | Who comes forth? |
1565 | Who could deny it? |
1565 | Who could sever the father from the son?'' |
1565 | Who could think of the babe in such an hour, but she who bore it? |
1565 | Who else will know they are in my possession?'' |
1565 | Who hath so fair a plea Our welcome Guest to be, As thou, whose solemn hall At last shall feast us all In the dim and dismal coast? |
1565 | Who in that hour spared one thought to his neighbor? |
1565 | Who shall disturb the brave, Or one leaf on their holy grave? |
1565 | Who will debase his name to save his life? |
1565 | Who will take the odds?'' |
1565 | Why did he not proclaim my guilt when I proclaimed that of Glaucus? |
1565 | Why do n''t they give him to the lion?'' |
1565 | Why hast thou waited till the eve of the Athenian''s condemnation before thou hast ventured to tell me that Arbaces is a murderer? |
1565 | Why not take refuge in my villa? |
1565 | Why should I suspect him? |
1565 | Why should the slavery that destroys you be considered the only method to preserve us? |
1565 | Why that term?'' |
1565 | Why thinkest thou so highly of yon dark Egyptian? |
1565 | Why, it was merrily done; when the old hag set her serpent at me, and Hecate stood by laughing from ear to ear-- what could I do? |
1565 | Why, my Apaecides, has not the Egyptian convinced thee of the necessity of our dwelling together in unity? |
1565 | Will he confess?--can he not be persuaded that in his delirium he struck the blow? |
1565 | Will he ever vouchsafe to be my friend?'' |
1565 | Will you sell her to me?'' |
1565 | Wilt thou not do for me this kindness?'' |
1565 | Wilt thou then come and behold thy doom, so that thou mayest enjoy it beforehand?'' |
1565 | Woman, how camest thou here, and wherefore?'' |
1565 | Would it please thee that Arbaces was her host?'' |
1565 | Yet how, when thou obtainest it, canst thou administer to him this potion?'' |
1565 | Yet if I could succeed-- if I could rescue and set him free-- wouldst thou be mine-- my bride?'' |
1565 | Yet this Ione is handsome, eh?'' |
1565 | Yet, hark you, Arbaces-- why so gloomy and unsocial? |
1565 | Yet, who will dare to touch a hair of his head?'' |
1565 | You are sure I shall not see the demon? |
1565 | You are sure of that?'' |
1565 | You are to we d Ione; is it not so?'' |
1565 | again, Lydon? |
1565 | and What are we to reject?" |
1565 | and how have you slept on your good fortune?'' |
1565 | and how is thy fair mistress?--recovered, I trust, from the effects of the storm?'' |
1565 | and not constantly with you? |
1565 | and was it not the fear that it occasioned thee that made thee weep?'' |
1565 | and what then shall I say? |
1565 | and what want you with him?'' |
1565 | and wherefore am I caged here? |
1565 | and why?'' |
1565 | and wouldst thou persuade me that I did the deed? |
1565 | answered Nydia, simply:''dost thou?'' |
1565 | answered the slave,''art thou silly enough to ask the question? |
1565 | are its rites commenced?'' |
1565 | are there gods? |
1565 | art thou offended?'' |
1565 | avails to thee now the discovery? |
1565 | can we believe it? |
1565 | canst thou tell me of Glaucus?'' |
1565 | continued the Christian, raising his voice:''can you believe in images of wood and stone? |
1565 | cried Arbaces, passionately;''why these mysterious words?--why dost thou couple my name with the thought of thy brother''s death?'' |
1565 | cried Calenus, almost weeping with joy,''canst thou thus forgive my injurious doubts of thy justice, thy generosity?'' |
1565 | cried Calenus, turning round to the people,''shall Isis be thus contemned? |
1565 | cried Glaucus:''are ye blind, then, even in the dark? |
1565 | cried Lydon,''art thou turned sphinx?'' |
1565 | cried the bystanders, with one accord;''is it even credible?'' |
1565 | cried the girl, wringing her hands;''and why am I thus imprisoned? |
1565 | cried the poor orphan, falling upon the couch;''thou whom the worm on thy path feared not-- what enemy couldst thou provoke? |
1565 | cried the widow Fulvia to the wife of Pansa, as they leaned down from their lofty bench,''do you see that gigantic gladiator? |
1565 | cried the young priest, striking his breast passionately,''from what regions shall my eyes open to the true Olympus, where thy gods really dwell? |
1565 | dark form, why risest thou like a cloud between me and mine? |
1565 | didst thou dream I should come to this?'' |
1565 | do all that are beautiful resemble each other? |
1565 | do you not hear the widow Fulvia clapping her hands? |
1565 | do you not know me? |
1565 | do you think he would prefer any of you to Niger?'' |
1565 | does the water bubble? |
1565 | doth she, too, as the credulous imagine-- doth she, too, learn the lore of the great stars? |
1565 | exclaimed Glaucus as he read the letter of Ione,''whitest robed messenger that ever passed between earth and heaven-- how, how shall I thank thee?'' |
1565 | exclaimed the goldsmith, in horror;''are there any of these wretches in Pompeii?'' |
1565 | gay as ever?'' |
1565 | girl, and how durst thou? |
1565 | groaned Clodius to himself;--or why can not one cog a gladiator?'' |
1565 | groaned the merchant, recovering with some difficulty his equilibrium;''have you no eyes? |
1565 | growled Niger, savagely:''many an honest gladiator has been compelled to a like combat by the emperor-- why not a wealthy murderer by the law?'' |
1565 | has thy heart found contentment under these priestly robes? |
1565 | hast thou looked at his teeth and fangs, and wilt thou call that a chance? |
1565 | hast thou, still yearning for the voice of God, heard it whisper comfort to thee from the oracles of Isis? |
1565 | have I not fought twenty years in the ring, and never lowered my arms once? |
1565 | have ye seen him?'' |
1565 | have you seen the new house of Fulvius, the dear poet?'' |
1565 | he asked of his nearest neighbor, a young artificer;''what now? |
1565 | he cried, in new alarm;''what spectre-- what dread larva, calls upon the lost Calenus?'' |
1565 | he cried, placing his hands before his eyes, as to shut out the grisly vision,''do I dream still?--Am I with the dead?'' |
1565 | he said, in a low voice,''what reverse is this? |
1565 | he whom they call the Atheist? |
1565 | his name?'' |
1565 | how are you? |
1565 | how can they quarrel so? |
1565 | how canst thou prove That bright love of thine? |
1565 | how could it be otherwise; who could be unkind to Glaucus?'' |
1565 | how shall I while the hours till then?'' |
1565 | how should I? |
1565 | how will ye meet the last day?'' |
1565 | is it indeed thou?'' |
1565 | is it not already destined to all things bright and fair? |
1565 | is it only to be among men that freedom and virtue are to be deemed united? |
1565 | is it you? |
1565 | is that you-- is that Glaucus?'' |
1565 | it is in our lives!--sinners we all have been; who now can accuse us of a crime? |
1565 | might he not be won by the bribe of freedom itself? |
1565 | muttered the disdainful,''Arbaces are ye less homicides than I am? |
1565 | no cavity? |
1565 | not more? |
1565 | of what color is the draught?'' |
1565 | or am I to think with Arbaces-- what?'' |
1565 | or do you think I have no feeling? |
1565 | or rather, in what do you suppose he has offended?'' |
1565 | or thinkest thou that we are dying of silence here, and only to be preserved, like the infant Jupiter, by a hullabaloo?'' |
1565 | or, if thou wilt speak, what hast thou heard of the state of Glaucus?'' |
1565 | pardon my interruption; and inform me, I pray you, which is the house of Sallust?'' |
1565 | repeated Ione, rising:''thine!--thy bride? |
1565 | replied Julia, timidly;''dost thou really think there is anything to dread? |
1565 | returned Sallust, in rather a melancholy tone,''what do we know more than this-- life is short-- beyond the grave all is dark? |
1565 | returned the hag, quickly;''and am I old, and hideous, and deathly now? |
1565 | said Arbaces,''can unrequited love be the lot of so fair a form, whose modelled proportions are visible even beneath the folds of thy graceful robe? |
1565 | said Burbo, rising reluctantly,''What turmoil is all this about a slave? |
1565 | said Fulvia, as the merchant''s daughter joined them;''have you seen the tiger yet?'' |
1565 | said Lepidus:''and with whom?'' |
1565 | said Olinthus, with bitter fervor; and art thou sad and weary, and wilt thou turn from the very springs that refresh and heal?'' |
1565 | said Pansa;''do you not know that Clodius is employed at the house of Diomed in blowing hard at the torch? |
1565 | said she, speaking quick and low;''art thou indeed Apaecides?'' |
1565 | said the grave praetor--''who is there?'' |
1565 | said the merchants:''what can be less equivocal than her prediction?'' |
1565 | said the slave in attendance, opening the door; art thou bit by a scorpion? |
1565 | said the slave, half aloud,''is it for things like this thou art to be butchered? |
1565 | saw you that? |
1565 | shall woman feel thus for man, and man feel less devotion to his God?'' |
1565 | she said, shrinking back;''it is only within the last two days that dull, deep light hath been visible-- what can it portend?'' |
1565 | shouted Arbaces, rising to his fullest height;''dare not tell me that-- dare not mock me-- it is impossible!--Whom hast thou seen-- whom known? |
1565 | shrieks? |
1565 | speak low-- bend near-- give me thy hand; knowest thou Arbaces? |
1565 | that love can defy custom, and be eternal? |
1565 | that thy soul was torn by a perpetual struggle? |
1565 | they can look upon his face-- who will be cruel to the Athenian!--Yet was not Love itself cruel to him?'' |
1565 | they have borne her off-- we will save her-- where is my stilus? |
1565 | think you the gods place their bliss-- eh?-- In playing the spy on a sinner? |
1565 | thinkest thou Arbaces will brook a rival such as this puny Greek? |
1565 | thou cheerest me: and wherefore?'' |
1565 | thou lookest pale-- thou hast kept late revels? |
1565 | thou mayest be overheard, and if other ears than mine had drunk those sounds-- why...''''Dost thou threaten?--what if the whole city had heard me?'' |
1565 | thy hand is cold-- hark yet!--hast thou taken the awful vow?'' |
1565 | to make up the deficiency in the course of this year? |
1565 | to the house of the Eastern stranger?'' |
1565 | torn from me in the first month of our nuptials,''shall I not see thee yet, and ere many days be past? |
1565 | was he interested in recruits to the sacred band? |
1565 | was she not nearly rich enough to purchase it? |
1565 | we know each other-- what are the gods to us?'' |
1565 | what are oaths to men like us?'' |
1565 | what can I do for thee?'' |
1565 | what danger threatens me?'' |
1565 | what dost thou here at this late hour? |
1565 | what fool is this? |
1565 | what hast thou been doing with my slave, brute?'' |
1565 | what have we done not to attend to this before? |
1565 | what is this but a mockery of the holiest part of man''s nature, which is faith? |
1565 | what is this?'' |
1565 | what mean you? |
1565 | what mean you?'' |
1565 | what message can he send?'' |
1565 | what news?'' |
1565 | what of her?'' |
1565 | what wickedness dost thou utter?'' |
1565 | when Nepimus is untried? |
1565 | when shall our toil be o''er? |
1565 | when shall we rest with thee? |
1565 | where?'' |
1565 | whither, can we direct ourselves through the gloom? |
1565 | whither? |
1565 | who can tell the tale in this hour? |
1565 | who could have guessed it?'' |
1565 | who could have supposed he was so dexterous or so lucky?'' |
1565 | who exchange clear thoughts for sullen days? |
1565 | who is here?'' |
1565 | who should shed his blood but one of those who feared his witness? |
1565 | who the murderer?'' |
1565 | who will belie himself to shame, and stand blackened in the eyes of love? |
1565 | whom hast thou here? |
1565 | why did he permit it-- nay, why invent, why perpetuate it? |
1565 | why had he left his far and sunny clime-- the olive- groves of his native hills-- the music of immemorial streams? |
1565 | why so rough?--tell me-- ugh-- ugh!--are the baths at Rome really so magnificent?'' |
1565 | why will she not admit me? |
1565 | wilt thou send me from thee?'' |
1565 | wouldst thou rob thy father?'' |
1565 | ye gods, yet Glaucus loves her?'' |
1565 | yet stay-- thou hast not spent all the moneys I gave thee for the marketing?'' |
53474 | A few drinking bouts, of course, and a love affair in the manner of Dubuque, Iowa-- but where are the wenches? |
53474 | Am I the first American to note the fundamental nonsensicality of the Gettysburg address? |
53474 | And Dr. Henry van Dyke? |
53474 | And Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis? |
53474 | And did he, in his criticism, pass facilely from the author to the man, and from the man to his wife, and to the wives of his friends? |
53474 | And how? |
53474 | And if mind, then why not also spirit? |
53474 | And the Columbia, Yale and Princeton professors? |
53474 | And the Methodist pulpit pornographers who switched so facilely from vice- crusading to German atrocities? |
53474 | And the Vigilantes? |
53474 | And the agitators against Beethoven, Bach, Brahms, Wagner, Richard Strauss, all the rest of the cacophonous Huns? |
53474 | And the authors of books describing how the Kaiser told them the whole plot in 1913, while they were pulling his teeth or shining his shoes? |
53474 | And the collectors for the Belgians, with their generous renunciation of all commissions above 80 per cent.? |
53474 | And the ex- ambassadors? |
53474 | And the four- minute men? |
53474 | And the master minds of the_ New Republic?_ And Tumulty? |
53474 | And the master minds of the_ New Republic?_ And Tumulty? |
53474 | And the pathologists who denounced Johannes Müller as a fraud, Karl Ludwig as an imbecile, and Ehrlich as a thief? |
53474 | And the result? |
53474 | And the specialists in the crimes of the German professors? |
53474 | And the_ Nietzschefresser?_ And the chautauqua orators? |
53474 | And the_ Nietzschefresser?_ And the chautauqua orators? |
53474 | And what does it consist of? |
53474 | And what of Huitzilopochtli? |
53474 | And why? |
53474 | Are rogues in offices? |
53474 | Are taxes onerous, wasteful, unjust? |
53474 | Are whole regiments and army corps of our fellow creatures doomed to hell? |
53474 | At six, when I had to go, the waiter was hauling in his tenth( or was it twentieth?) |
53474 | At what place, if any, is speculation pulled up by a rule that beyond lies treason, anarchy and disaster? |
53474 | But have you no redress whatever, no rights at all? |
53474 | But is a cataclysm conceivable? |
53474 | But suppose a garment- worker got nothing for his labor: would he go on working just the same? |
53474 | But this would mean exposing the children of the Republic to contact with monomaniacs, half- wits, defectives? |
53474 | But what did Harding say in 1920, and what did Cox reply? |
53474 | But what mood? |
53474 | But what of the vaudeville actors, the cheer leaders, the doughnut fryers, the camp librarians, the press agents? |
53474 | But what will the literary historians make of the man himself? |
53474 | But where in all the world is there a man who worships Jupiter to- day? |
53474 | But who were the five or six exceptions? |
53474 | Can one imagine him submitting voluntarily to hardship and sore want that he might express his soul in 200 more pairs of pantaloons? |
53474 | Could anything be more grotesque? |
53474 | Did Goethe, or Carlyle, or Matthew Arnold, or Sainte- Beuve, or Macaulay, or even, to come down a few pegs, Lewes, or Lowell, or Hazlitt? |
53474 | Did he believe in the Divinity of Christ? |
53474 | Do I advocate, then, the ceaseless, senseless hogging of money? |
53474 | Do I burlesque? |
53474 | Do the poor suffer in the midst of plenty? |
53474 | Do the professors make an autopsy of it? |
53474 | How could an inquisitive youth get beneath the surface of our politics if it were not for such anatomists as Bryce? |
53474 | How will they explain his possession, however fitfully, of the divine gift-- his genuine kinship with Wordsworth and Shelly? |
53474 | I wonder what he would have done with prose? |
53474 | In what forlorn and unheard- of hell do they await the resurrection morn? |
53474 | Is Carlyle''s"Frederick"true? |
53474 | Is it actually noble to cling to a religious idea so tenaciously? |
53474 | Is it equally notorious that there is no such thing as justice in the world-- that the good are tortured insanely and the evil go free and prosper? |
53474 | Is it possible to imagine a more improbable setting for a poet? |
53474 | Is it the desire to cure disease, to save life? |
53474 | Is n''t the United States the richest nation ever heard of in history, and is n''t it a fact that modern wars are won by money? |
53474 | Is such a fellow appreciably superior to the villein of the Middle Ages? |
53474 | Is that hope ever fulfilled? |
53474 | Is the bard talking about the inn- keeper''s wife at Oxford, or about a love affair of a pathological, Y. M. C. A. character? |
53474 | Is the contrary conception of criticism widely cherished? |
53474 | Lead me to his tomb: I would weep, and hang a_ couronne des perles._ But who knows where it is? |
53474 | MEMORIAL SERVICE Where is the grave- yard of dead gods? |
53474 | More accurately, why? |
53474 | Or Centeotl, that sweet one? |
53474 | Or Chalchihuitlicue? |
53474 | Or Ixtlilton? |
53474 | Or Mictlan? |
53474 | Or Mixcoatl? |
53474 | Or Omacatl? |
53474 | Or Tialoc? |
53474 | Or Tlazolteotl, the goddess of love? |
53474 | Or Xiehtecutli? |
53474 | Or Xipe? |
53474 | Or Yacatecutli? |
53474 | Or all the host of Tzitzimitles? |
53474 | Or that of Dis, whom Cæsar found to be the chief god of the Celts? |
53474 | Or that of Epona, the mare? |
53474 | Or that of Moccos, the pig? |
53474 | Or that of Mullo, the celestial jack- ass? |
53474 | Or that of Tarves, the bull? |
53474 | Or where the grave of Quitzalcoatl is? |
53474 | Political economy, that dismal science? |
53474 | Ricardo? |
53474 | Their reward is-- what? |
53474 | Then why practice such trades-- that is, as trades? |
53474 | This triple burglary was excessive, to be sure, but who will say that it was not prudent? |
53474 | Was Lincoln a Christian? |
53474 | Was the man allusive in his books-- so allusive that popular report credited him with the actual manufacture of authorities? |
53474 | Well, are the reverend professors of economics free? |
53474 | Well, how is it taught to- day? |
53474 | Well, then, why am I still here? |
53474 | Well, then, why did so many Jews refuse? |
53474 | Well, what are your remedies? |
53474 | Well, what is in him? |
53474 | Well, what of it? |
53474 | Well, who ever heard of a finer craftsman than William Shakespeare? |
53474 | Well, why not? |
53474 | Well, why not? |
53474 | What animates a great pathologist? |
53474 | What could be more absurd? |
53474 | What could be more comical than the efforts of critical talmudists to read a thesis into"When We Dead Awaken"? |
53474 | What could be more delightful than the endless struggle of the Puritan to make the joy of the minority unlawful and impossible? |
53474 | What does the mind suggest? |
53474 | What else is behind charity, philanthropy, pacifism, Socialism, the uplift, all the rest of the current sentimentalities? |
53474 | What has become of Sutekh, once the high god of the whole Nile Valley? |
53474 | What if it lacked all purpose to improve and lift up? |
53474 | What if it shocked all right- feeling men, and made them blush and tremble? |
53474 | What if it violated all the accepted canons? |
53474 | What is to be done for him? |
53474 | What is to be done to save the forward- looker from his torturing indignations, and set him in paths of happy dalliance? |
53474 | What lingering mourner waters their mounds? |
53474 | What was the practical effect of the battle of Gettysburg? |
53474 | What would become of a nation in which all of the men were, at heart, Sunday- school superintendents-- or Y. M. C. A. secretaries, or pedagogues? |
53474 | What would become of the average American scholar if he could not borrow wholesale from English scholars? |
53474 | What, after all, is one more lie? |
53474 | What, then, was my motive in writing about Mr. Dreiser so copiously? |
53474 | Where are their bones? |
53474 | Where is the willow on which they hung their harps? |
53474 | Where is your equal opportunity now? |
53474 | Which would be the stronger, and which would be the more intelligent, resourceful, enterprising and courageous? |
53474 | Who cares? |
53474 | Who could imagine a more charming poem than that of the Child in the manger? |
53474 | Who enjoys their residuary estates? |
53474 | Who knows, again, what the sonnets are about? |
53474 | Who was Harding, anyhow, and who was Cox? |
53474 | Who were these bawling professors, so pathetically poltroonish and idiotic? |
53474 | Who will say that the lesson of the Nearing_ débâcle_ has been lost upon them? |
53474 | Who will say that the potency of the wealthy men who command our universities-- or most of them-- has not stuck in their minds? |
53474 | Who would show our statesmen the dotted lines for their signatures if there were no Balfours and Lloyd- Georges? |
53474 | Who, indeed, will give them full credit, even when they are right, so long as they are hamstrung, nose- ringed and tied up in gilded pens? |
53474 | Why am I so complacent( perhaps even to the point of offensiveness), so free from bile, so little fretting and indignant, so curiously happy? |
53474 | Why did so many prefer to be robbed, exiled, and sometimes murdered? |
53474 | Why do n''t the anti- Marxians cite a spiritual quality that is genuinely universal? |
53474 | _ Quod est poetica?_ They all answer, and yet they all fail to answer. |
53474 | e._, of the people of the States? |
603 | ''For what purpose did you send for the_ soga_ this afternoon?'' |
603 | ''Who is that speaking?'' |
603 | ''Yes,''he replied;''but what do they represent?'' |
603 | ( Is this right?) |
603 | Above all, is Christ crucified spoken of or hinted at, as in the authenticated writings of the Prophets? |
603 | At the success of their own machinations? |
603 | Borrow been about?'' |
603 | But at what? |
603 | But is it possible for a plan to come within the limits of safe speculation, which has in view the conversion of the Tartar? |
603 | But pray inform me why the circulation has not been ten times greater? |
603 | Does it not cut off his own hands? |
603 | Few copies of the New Testament have been sold; yet what else could be rationally expected in these latter times? |
603 | How could I sleep? |
603 | I asked her to breakfast and introduced her to the friar whom she addressed in this manner;_ Anne Domine Reverendissime facis adhuc sacrificium_? |
603 | I frequently ask:''Is it possible that God, who is good, would sanction the sale of sin?'' |
603 | I have offered him some relief-- what else could I do? |
603 | I will tell you the ground of dispute; for why should I conceal it? |
603 | If not, what is their value in comparison with that of other books of Scripture, even could their authenticity be proved? |
603 | In the name of all that is singular, what does Mr. Rule mean, without the courtesy of asking my permission, by sending this man to me at Madrid? |
603 | Is it soap?'' |
603 | Is there not such a thing as_ A Royal Ordinance_ to the effect that the Scriptures be seized wherever they are found? |
603 | May I be permitted to enquire in what part of the sacred writings he found them recommended? |
603 | P.S.--What do you mean, my dear Sir, by the''_ grano salis_''? |
603 | Permit me in conclusion to ask you: Have you not to a certain extent been partial in this matter? |
603 | Quae est mater mea, et qui sunt fratres mei? |
603 | Shall I wait a little time longer in Madrid; or shall I proceed at once on a journey to Andalusia and other places? |
603 | They, replied,''What''s that to you? |
603 | To Gibraltar, or to England? |
603 | To whom shall I send them? |
603 | True it is that ordinance is an unlawful one: but what matters that, provided it be put into execution by the authorities civil and military? |
603 | Uves?'' |
603 | We halted, and cried out''Who goes there?'' |
603 | What availeth that solemn music, that noble chanting, that incense of sweet savour? |
603 | What could induce him to grasp that two- edged sword? |
603 | What could induce him to speak of Luther and his works? |
603 | What could persuade him to speak of the Vulgate? |
603 | What do you think of my project? |
603 | What does he, what do his abettors, know of Luther and his writings, or of the ideas which the heretics entertain respecting either? |
603 | What is the fact? |
603 | What is their state? |
603 | What is to be done with the transcript of Puerot''s translation of the Acts of the Apostles, which I made, and which is now in my possession? |
603 | What is to be done with the volumes when the work shall have passed through the press? |
603 | What name should I give mine but the true one? |
603 | What news from China? |
603 | What should induce me to stay in Spain, as you appear to suppose I intend? |
603 | What then? |
603 | What was his motive? |
603 | What was the cause of this last blow? |
603 | When shall we hear of an English rector instructing a beggar girl in the language of Cicero? |
603 | Why not? |
603 | Will he be willing to write to the Gypsy Committee concerning me? |
603 | Would that have been a communication suited to the public? |
603 | Would that have been a welcome communication to the Committee? |
603 | Yet-- what is their history? |
603 | _ apkai etchin ni porofiyat_,_ i.e._ the prophet of the Lord of heaven? |
603 | and is the modern infidel aught but a Sadducee of later date? |
603 | and,''Supposing certain things are sinful, do you think that God, for the sake of your money, would permit you to perform them?'' |
53791 | After what manner therefore do they belong to self, and how are they connected with it? |
53791 | And how can the floor and roof ever meet, while they are separated by the four walls that lie in a contrary position? |
53791 | And how can we justify to ourselves any belief we repose in them? |
53791 | And to what end can it serve, either for the service of mankind, or for my own private interest? |
53791 | And why is it contrary, unless it be more shocking than any delicate satire? |
53791 | Are not most studious men( and many of them more than I) subject to such reveries or fits of absence, without being exposed to such suspicions? |
53791 | But as we here not only_ feign_ but_ believe_ this continued existence, the question is,_ from whence arises such a belief_? |
53791 | But can any thing be imagined more absurd and contradictory than this reasoning? |
53791 | But can we doubt of this agreement in their influence on the judgment, when we consider the nature and effects of_ education_? |
53791 | But farther, what must become of all our particular perceptions upon this hypothesis? |
53791 | But what have I here said, that reflections very refined and metaphysical have little or no influence upon us? |
53791 | But what is the treachery? |
53791 | But what repose can be tasted in life, when the heart is agitated? |
53791 | Can I be sure that, in leaving all established opinions, I am following truth? |
53791 | Can any thing be supposed more extravagant? |
53791 | Can he give any definition of it, that will not be the same with that of causation? |
53791 | Could Mr Hume, after so many instances of disdain on my part, have still the astonishing generosity as to persevere sincerely to serve me? |
53791 | Do you fancy I will grant you a lease for so long a term? |
53791 | Do you therefore mean, that it takes not the points in the same order and by the same rule, as is peculiar and essential to a right line? |
53791 | Does it arise from an impression of sensation or of reflection? |
53791 | Does it attend us at all times, or does it only return at intervals? |
53791 | First, for what reason we pronounce it_ necessary_, that every thing whose existence has a beginning, should also have a cause? |
53791 | For can any one conceive a passion of a yard in length, a foot in breadth, and an inch in thickness? |
53791 | For how can an impression represent a substance, otherwise than by resembling it? |
53791 | For how can the two walls, that run from south to north, touch each other, while they touch the opposite ends of two walls that run from east to west? |
53791 | For how few of our past actions are there, of which we have any memory? |
53791 | For how is it possible we can separate what is not distinguishable, or distinguish what is not different? |
53791 | For if they can not, what possibly can become of them? |
53791 | For what does he mean by_ production_? |
53791 | For what is the memory but a faculty, by which we raise up the images of past perceptions? |
53791 | For whence should it be derived? |
53791 | For why do we blame all gross and injurious language, unless it be, because we esteem it contrary to good breeding and humanity? |
53791 | For why, indeed, should I have any other? |
53791 | For, from what impression could this idea be derived? |
53791 | For, supposing such a conjunction, would the indivisible thought exist on the left or on the right hand of this extended divisible body? |
53791 | From what causes do I derive my existence, and to what condition shall I return? |
53791 | Here, therefore, I must ask,_ What is our idea of a simple and indivisible point_? |
53791 | How can he prove to me, for instance, that two right lines can not have one common segment? |
53791 | How does he know this? |
53791 | How else could any thing exist without length, without breadth, or without depth? |
53791 | How is it possible to make a man easy or happy in a world, to whose customs and maxims he is determined to run retrograde? |
53791 | How then is it possible, that the same substance can at once be modified into that square table, and into this round one? |
53791 | How then shall we adjust those principles together? |
53791 | I first ask mathematicians what they mean when they say one line or surface is_ equal_ to, or_ greater_, or_ less_ than another? |
53791 | I have declared my disapprobation of their systems; and can I be surprised if they should express a hatred of mine and of my person? |
53791 | I therefore ask, wherein consists the difference betwixt believing and disbelieving any proposition? |
53791 | If at intervals, at what times principally does it return, and by what causes is it produced? |
53791 | If it be conveyed to us by our senses, I ask, which of them, and after what manner? |
53791 | Is it an impression of sensation or reflection? |
53791 | Is it in every part without being extended? |
53791 | Is it in this particular part, or in that other? |
53791 | Is it pleasant, or painful, or indifferent? |
53791 | Is it therefore nothing? |
53791 | Is the indivisible subject or immaterial substance, if you will, on the left or on the right hand of the perception? |
53791 | Now I ask, what idea do we form of these bodies or objects to which we suppose solidity to belong? |
53791 | Now''tis certain we have an idea of extension; for otherwise, why do we talk and reason concerning it? |
53791 | Now, what idea have we of these bodies? |
53791 | Now, what impression do our senses here convey to us? |
53791 | Now, what is our idea of the moving body, without which motion is incomprehensible? |
53791 | Numquid quæ consecravimus perdidisse nos dicimus? |
53791 | On the back or fore- side of it? |
53791 | On the supposition of my entering into a project to ruin him, how could I think to bring it about by the services I did him? |
53791 | On the surface or in the middle? |
53791 | Or if these colours unite into one, what new colour will they produce by their union? |
53791 | Or is it entire in any one part without deserting the rest? |
53791 | Or that''tis impossible to draw more than one right line betwixt any two points? |
53791 | Pray, who knows when my door was open or shut, except Mr Hume, with whom I lived, and by whom every body was introduced that I saw? |
53791 | Shall the despair of success make me assert, that I am here possessed of an idea, which is not preceded by any similar impression? |
53791 | Shall we then rest contented with these two relations of contiguity and succession, as affording a complete idea of causation? |
53791 | Shall we, then, establish it for a general maxim, that no refined or elaborate reasoning is ever to be received? |
53791 | The next question, then, should naturally be,_ how experience gives rise to such a principle_? |
53791 | Under what obligation do I lie of making such an abuse of time? |
53791 | We may well ask,_ What causes induce us to believe in the existence of body_? |
53791 | What beings surround me? |
53791 | What can he have said to them, for it is only through him they know any thing of me? |
53791 | What could I divine would be the consequence of such a beginning? |
53791 | What do they know of me, except that I am unhappy, and a friend to their friend Hume? |
53791 | What harm have I done, or could I do to Mr Rousseau? |
53791 | What have I done to Mr Walpole, whom I know full as little? |
53791 | What party, then, shall we choose among these difficulties? |
53791 | What then can we look for from this confusion of groundless and extraordinary opinions but error and falsehood? |
53791 | What then is meant by a distinction of reason, since it implies neither a difference nor separation? |
53791 | What was his design in it? |
53791 | Where am I, or what? |
53791 | Where did he see them? |
53791 | Whether shall the red or the blue be annihilated? |
53791 | Which of them shall we prefer? |
53791 | Who could have excited their enmity against me? |
53791 | Whose favour shall I court, and whose anger must I dread? |
53791 | Why are those enemies all the friends of Mr Hume? |
53791 | Why should I have even them? |
53791 | [ 34] What have I done to Lord Littleton,[35] whom I do n''t even know? |
53791 | [ 34] Why indeed? |
53791 | [ 38] How was it possible for me to guess at such chimerical suspicions? |
53791 | _ What is our idea of necessity, when we say that two objects are necessarily connected together_? |
53791 | and by what criterion shall I distinguish her, even if fortune should at last guide me on her footsteps? |
53791 | and on whom have I any influence, or who have any influence on me? |
53791 | but''tis in vain to ask,_ Whether there be body or not_? |
53791 | did this good man borrow those eyes he fixes so sternly and unaccountably on those of his friends? |
7147 | Had not the French a right both of prior discovery and prior settlement? |
7147 | Very much obliged? |
7147 | When did La Salle settle? |
7147 | And the future? |
7147 | And the product? |
7147 | Are there arts worthy freedom and a rich people? |
7147 | Are there athletes? |
7147 | Are there crops of fine youths and majestic old persons? |
7147 | Are there perfect women to match the generous material luxuriance? |
7147 | As to the proclamation, Parkman asks, what now remains of the sovereignty it so pompously announced? |
7147 | But who are the people who are to control? |
7147 | Is there a great moral and religious civilization-- the only justification of a great material one? |
7147 | Is there a pervading atmosphere of beautiful manners? |
7147 | Is this colorless, insipid"social consistency"the best wine that the valley can offer of its early vintages? |
7147 | Is this what democracy, undefiled of aristocratic conditions and traditions, has produced? |
7147 | Mistakes, disappointments, crudities, infidelities? |
7147 | Only those who are living and of electoral age and other qualification? |
7147 | Shall they be praised the more that they did not for a century venture beyond the sources of those streams? |
7147 | The first question of that western valley is,"Who is he?" |
7147 | Was its name indeed to be written only in the water which their canoes traversed? |
7147 | What claim has the past as against the needs of industry in the present? |
7147 | What shall I say of his wealth? |
57024 | At all which I am sorry, but it is the effect of idleness( who should it be but Pepys, making this deep elemental excuse?) |
57024 | Friend Charles, why hast taken off thy hat? |
57024 | If any one misconduct himself towards thee, what is that to thee? 57024 If you prick us, do we not bleed? |
57024 | Killigrew, whither goest thou, booted and spurred? |
57024 | Qu''as- tu fait, ô toi que voilà, De ta jeunesse? |
57024 | See you this skull? |
57024 | To be a philosopher? 57024 What had I on earth to do With the slothful, with the mawkish, the unmanly?" |
57024 | Where be thy gods, O Israel? |
57024 | Where, dreaming chemics, are your pain and cost? 57024 Who''s there?" |
57024 | ( Do you like to hear Clay talk? |
57024 | --"God, you will not go without forty or fifty horses?" |
57024 | A poet? |
57024 | An alchemist? |
57024 | And was it not a prettier pass yet, between the monarch and his impregnable Quaker who wanted a charter? |
57024 | Are there none for whom you are lonely through the ages? |
57024 | Are there not centuries of old delight in your memory, unequalled now? |
57024 | Are you not comely? |
57024 | At what four- to- six has one met her? |
57024 | Because he was weak? |
57024 | But who, except a tyrant, would not? |
57024 | By what means was the race of hens, for instance, preserved? |
57024 | CLAY Why do you think he must be excused? |
57024 | Can it be that any two or two thousand can wish to be preached at, in order that they may masticate a page correctly, in squads? |
57024 | Can you not tell us a tale of the Visigoth? |
57024 | Could any one man satisfy such greed? |
57024 | Could informality farther go? |
57024 | Could it be that her subjects had no loftier criterion in the memory of their own mothers? |
57024 | Derwentwater was grandson, indeed, to vagabonds; but was he not great- grandson to the sweetest of the fine arts? |
57024 | Do you miss the smoke of altars? |
57024 | Do you not spiritualize the darkness with one touch of your pale garment? |
57024 | Has n''t he told us how the country innkeeper, alone with him a moment, during his fugitive days, read him through his disguise? |
57024 | Have n''t you read Green? |
57024 | Have we not sung oft that strophe of Ben Jonson''s, full of inexpressible music to our ear? |
57024 | Have you forgotten the beginners of the"star- ypointing pyramid"? |
57024 | Have you no resident missionary? |
57024 | Holbein''s woman may have youth, goodness, capacity, even authority; but"_ Was_ the lady such a lady?" |
57024 | How DO you do? |
57024 | How are you going to excuse him? |
57024 | How brawny was Bajazet? |
57024 | How did he keep his patience through the incessant begging? |
57024 | How fair was Helen; Semiramis, how cruel? |
57024 | How sang Blondel against the prison door? |
57024 | How will you have me begin? |
57024 | I went home, a shorn lamb, conscious of my exalted financial standing; for had I not been robbed? |
57024 | In the roomy name of reciprocity, why not? |
57024 | Is it not evident that these fine dumb fellows can beat the world at a fight? |
57024 | Is not the phrase the cream of scorn, the catchword of insubordination, the blazing defiance of tongues unbroken as a one- year''s colt? |
57024 | Is there no fun left in Israel? |
57024 | It was but a childish means: and to what end? |
57024 | MRS. WETHERELL Are n''t you coming? |
57024 | MRS. WETHERELL Can it be possible that this lace all black with age, this beautiful lace--? |
57024 | MRS. WETHERELL Do you really mean to make people like him? |
57024 | MRS. WETHERELL Mr. Clay, have n''t you some more nice Charles- Secondy things to tell me? |
57024 | MRS. WETHERELL The effigy? |
57024 | MRS. WETHERELL What was she like? |
57024 | Meanwhile, ca n''t you give us a sort of rehearsal of that lecture? |
57024 | Mrs. Wetherell, have I not understood you and avenged you, too? |
57024 | Must he not keep a Dog? |
57024 | Of truth? |
57024 | Oh, is n''t this splendid to find you? |
57024 | Shall such be thy mission, reader? |
57024 | THE VERGER Oh, it''s wax, you know,_ is n''t_ it? |
57024 | The examination- papers, which, in a lustier age, began with--"Who dragged Which around the walls of What?" |
57024 | The soul meets its final opportunity, as at a masked ball; if it can not stand and salute, to what end were its fair faculties given? |
57024 | Then what are they to us, your dimensions and your distances? |
57024 | Truly, are n''t they perfectly appalling? |
57024 | WETHERELL How about the epigram,--Barrow''s, was n''t it? |
57024 | WETHERELL Of what, shepherdess? |
57024 | Was this the mirror of chivalry in his youth? |
57024 | Weak? |
57024 | What ghost is it which certain minds see upon the way, and which lessens their destined momentum? |
57024 | What had So- and- so done, that he should be removed? |
57024 | What has preserved us, under Providence, in the successive persons of our progenitors? |
57024 | What if by such touching demonstrations, rather than by his miserable stifling stoicism, his taint of drugged indifference, he were to be judged? |
57024 | What if there should be freedom again for them, beyond death? |
57024 | What is he doing that for? |
57024 | What were you saying about stepping over the slab? |
57024 | When do you thinke I can best spare that time?" |
57024 | Where did you hear that fiddle- faddle? |
57024 | Which, think you, died with her girlhood yet unconsumed within her, Madame Récamier or the Nut- brown Maid? |
57024 | Who are these? |
57024 | Who can feel it so keenly in the town? |
57024 | Who is a neater Pocket Compendium of all the vices? |
57024 | Who is to be blamed if he do indeed go"abroad,"or stay abroad, so strangely finding there, rather than here, the soul''s peace? |
57024 | Who will say but that the doe was about to give some sign? |
57024 | Who would not be such a city''s citizen? |
57024 | Who, indeed, that hath a mote in his eye, can not still discern a huge beam in yours? |
57024 | Why arraign the King? |
57024 | Why depose Such- a- one? |
57024 | Why wouldst thou grow up, sirrah? |
57024 | Will it do, Wetherell? |
57024 | Will they never leave robbing His Majesty? |
57024 | Will you come? |
57024 | Will you mind if we go directly into the Abbey? |
57024 | With genius in their blood, and beauty never far from their hand, what wonder if they continue to be careless about rapid transit? |
57024 | You are sure it wo n''t tire you? |
57024 | You remember that episode in_ Galloping Dick_? |
57024 | You say it was modelled on the death- mask? |
57024 | a Royalist, a White Rose man? |
57024 | all our bright, volatile, restless, tide- like days? |
57024 | an hour before bedtime? |
57024 | and, if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? |
57024 | faces fairer than the lilies, on whose repose you still yearn to shine? |
57024 | for why not do the sole thing one can do perfectly? |
57024 | he who wrote devotional essays, and composed winning music? |
57024 | if you poison us, do we not die? |
57024 | if you tickle us, do we not laugh? |
57024 | the handsome Henry of joust and debate, who walked by choice with thinking men, in an atmosphere of Christian statecraft and the fine arts? |
57024 | where be the treasures of the doughty Kidd? |
57024 | who is the Falstaffian, Toby Belchian, Kriss Kringlish person to be seen about your premises? |
57024 | without setting up for oracles of dark import, and posing romantically as"greater than we know"? |
47538 | Be it far from thee, Lord: this shall not be unto thee,were the apostle''s ardent and affectionate words; and how did the Saviour regard them? |
47538 | How may I know that I am become an heir of heaven? 47538 Recant,"that is, deny the Word of God, was in substance the demand made from Luther; and was the demand conceded? |
47538 | Say not thou, What is the cause that the former days were better than these? 47538 Shall neither man nor God,"he said to one,"hear from your lips,''O my sins, my sins, I fear they will ruin my soul for ever?'' |
47538 | What must I do to be saved? |
47538 | ''Whom have I in heaven but thee? |
47538 | --"O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me?" |
47538 | --When the standard- bearer falls, who will fight? |
47538 | A little child, then, was the Saviour''s model disciple; and what are the characteristics of childhood? |
47538 | After this, why wait for some costly apparatus for doing good? |
47538 | All, all are earnest, zealous, sanguine in the pursuit of evil-- and shall they who hold the truth be alone lethargic, listless, apathetic? |
47538 | Am I not sinning against my soul and my God, by such exhausting engrossments? |
47538 | An occasional glance at the Word of God? |
47538 | An occasional petition to his throne? |
47538 | An occasional visit to his house? |
47538 | And is not that a perfect model of the trust we should repose in the word of our Father who is in heaven? |
47538 | And what caused that disaster and these watery graves? |
47538 | And what is it that constitutes its beauty? |
47538 | And what is the antidote? |
47538 | And what was the result? |
47538 | And what will give that tempted youth the victory? |
47538 | And when was it otherwise? |
47538 | And who can doubt that confidence placed or preference given anywhere but to God, will blight and wither all at last? |
47538 | And who can ever compute the guilt of those who tamper with a servant''s truthfulness, and train her to falsehood, to screen them from intruders? |
47538 | And who has not seen this verified? |
47538 | And who will marvel, then, if not a few make shipwreck of the faith and a good conscience, just at the threshold of their marriage- chamber? |
47538 | And, what is it that has achieved these results? |
47538 | Are they benevolent or merciful, who assail the bodily disease, but neglect the divine antidote for the soul? |
47538 | Are they enduring no wicked thing before their eyes, according to the Word of the Eternal? |
47538 | Are they not doing all that they can to assure the worldly man that his views of religion are correct-- that it is a pretence, hypocrisy, and a name? |
47538 | Are they seeking the eternal good of those with whom they are connected? |
47538 | Are we not both reproved and instructed by such little children, as to implicitly confiding in the promises of the unchanging One? |
47538 | Are we not taught to esteem others better than ourselves, to love as brethren, to be pitiful and courteous? |
47538 | Are we not told that only the Gentiles are anxious and fretful? |
47538 | But did not He who wounded heal? |
47538 | But do we rush into danger unsent? |
47538 | But remorseless death comes: he strikes down the object to which affection clings; and where is the bereaved one now? |
47538 | But what/can/ yield joy, if not the favour of God? |
47538 | But, on the other hand, are the lines of that young convert cast only amid trials, and not actual sins? |
47538 | Can a form atone for guilt? |
47538 | Can a name, an echo, a phantom, a shadow, really avail that dying man''s soul? |
47538 | Can a pageant cleanse the conscience? |
47538 | Can some occasional observance of a religious rite operate like a charm, and either silence the demands or uphold the purity of the law of God? |
47538 | Can we be sane, and at the same time pretend to select a better standard, a better rule, a better aim, than that which God prescribes? |
47538 | Can we, in the nature of things, ever find a path more pleasant than that in which the Eternal leads us? |
47538 | Can we, in the nature of things, ever find a wiser guide than the only- wise God? |
47538 | Did he welcome them as a solace to his troubles? |
47538 | Do not worldly engrossments steal the heart from God? |
47538 | Do they not place the most unquestioning confidence in the information of those whom they love? |
47538 | Do we meet it while we are in pursuit of pleasure, and not in the path of duty? |
47538 | Does Christ reign in any soul now? |
47538 | Does sin become an offence? |
47538 | Does the Heart- searcher know that that man is perpetrating sin and regardless of his soul? |
47538 | Does the love of Christ constrain any heart and soul? |
47538 | Every family that calls on the name of the Lord should spread out his Word before them, and ask, What has God said? |
47538 | Godliness does not permit a man to ask, What will my fellow- mortals approve? |
47538 | Has God, then, left us without joy? |
47538 | Has any man discovered that, to live only for the present hour and its pleasures, is to sink to the level of the beasts which perish? |
47538 | Has any man felt that salvation must take precedence of all besides, in the mind of a rational being? |
47538 | Has any man felt that the high concerns of an infinite futurity demand instant attention, and adjustment on the earliest possible day? |
47538 | Has the truth been lodged in the heart? |
47538 | Has the truth of God taken possession of any man''s soul? |
47538 | Has the wisdom which comes from above been consulted? |
47538 | Have they not found a recess for communion with God, where no eye saw, and no ear heard, but his? |
47538 | He has seven nations to conquer, as well as a numerous people to guide, and amid the manifold engrossments of that position, how is Joshua employed? |
47538 | How did a passion so extraordinary affect those who had been impelled by its power? |
47538 | How does it happen that instead of the thorn the fir- tree has come up; instead of the brier, the myrtle? |
47538 | How may I assuredly retain my Christianity in the Market- place, in the haunts of Commerce, or among its busy men? |
47538 | How may I know that God is in me of a truth? |
47538 | How perceive, or feel, or rejoice? |
47538 | How shall we be prepared to do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, in our homes? |
47538 | How shall we be sustained? |
47538 | How shall we subdue the spirit of the world, which is ever seeking to insinuate its deadening influence? |
47538 | How, then, can it be time, the question again and again recurs, that such buffeted men have the promise of the present life? |
47538 | If for ten righteous men, the Almighty would have spared Sodom, shall not a thousand acts of goodness done by Dr. Dodd counterbalance one crime? |
47538 | Is Christ on earth showing us the Father? |
47538 | Is Christ stamping on us now the image of the Eternal, and restoring what the fall ruined or effaced? |
47538 | Is God''s revealed mind placed high above the highest of all authorities? |
47538 | Is a man living in a state of estrangement from God? |
47538 | Is he violating God''s law? |
47538 | Is he, for the sake of gold, or honour, or any selfish end, sojourning near some focus of sin? |
47538 | Is it not added,"I will not leave you orphans?" |
47538 | Is it not announced as a general maxim, to which there can be no exceptive case,"Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof?" |
47538 | Is it not like a wound to his immortal nature? |
47538 | Is it not true that unthinking men, in pursuit of the wages of sin, scatter firebrands, and arrows, and death, though they say, Am not I in sport? |
47538 | Is it thus that I can train my children in the way in which they ought to go?" |
47538 | Is not that man under some dire infatuation, who thinks that he can discover a safer? |
47538 | Is not this their promised lot--"In the world ye shall have tribulation;"or"The world shall laugh, but ye shall weep and lament?" |
47538 | Is the Word of God loved? |
47538 | Is the breath of spring a source of gladness to man''s fevered brow? |
47538 | Is the face of nature a source of pleasure to him who has long been immured amid the damps of a dungeon? |
47538 | Is the mind of God, the law of the Lord, our guide? |
47538 | Is the salvation of God sought? |
47538 | It is by His spirit that we are sanctified-- and are they the wise who ignore all this? |
47538 | It never pauses to inquire, What will men think? |
47538 | Its all- decisive question is, What has God said? |
47538 | Maintaining a daily conflict with pain, shall they ignore its origin? |
47538 | Might they not all exist in a world where the Son of God is unknown-- where no need of him is felt, and no reference to him made? |
47538 | Moreover, are not the men called godly often hated, and persecuted, and of all men the most miserable? |
47538 | Nay, does not an apostle himself confess, that, in certain conditions, Christians may be of all men the most miserable? |
47538 | Nay, is it not like taking fire to his bosom? |
47538 | Need anything be said to enforce the moral of such a case? |
47538 | Need we add, religion repudiates all these fetches? |
47538 | Now, amid such employments, what can be the topics but the common salvation? |
47538 | Now, are the engagements of that young convert really sinful? |
47538 | Now, by what process was this youth enabled to make such acquirements in godliness as that prayer betokens? |
47538 | Now, can it be rational for men to be daily cognisant with that connection, and do nothing to counteract it? |
47538 | Now, for what purpose should all that ascendency be employed? |
47538 | Now, how is this apparent contradiction to be explained? |
47538 | Now, is not that a model to be copied by all who know God''s name, and put their trust in Him? |
47538 | Now, is that the case? |
47538 | Now, when does that struggle cease? |
47538 | Now, would I introduce that blessed era as far as I am concerned? |
47538 | On the one hand, if these anxieties and cares drive us from our steadfastness, and if God be left out of sight, will that diminish our cares? |
47538 | On the other hand, however, does some child receive the truth into the heart? |
47538 | On the other hand, if we hold fast our integrity, is it to be feared that we shall be put to shame at last? |
47538 | One man seeks happiness in sin; but did he ever find it? |
47538 | Others are like the restless sea; and whence this difference? |
47538 | Shall no prayer,''God, be merciful to me a sinner,''break from your heart?" |
47538 | Shall we recognise in glory those whom we loved on earth?--or is the Alpha and the Omega of faith, the Alpha and the Omega of fruition? |
47538 | The question which we should ask in regard to our home religion is not, What is done by others? |
47538 | The truth of God may be no truth to us; His love in the Saviour may exercise no constraining power-- and what is the reason? |
47538 | Under that constraining power, do old things pass away, and all things become new? |
47538 | We have looked at it as it/should/ reign in the Heart:/Does/ it reign there? |
47538 | We have studied it as presiding in our Homes, and leading all who are there in the"way of the Lord:"To what extent has that been accomplished? |
47538 | What are to be our employments in heaven? |
47538 | What but the love of the Redeemer, and the mercies to which that love opened the way, can occupy such men''s souls? |
47538 | What can more perfectly pamper the selfishness of man than to be told that"spiritual dependence may lead to material destruction?" |
47538 | What can throw open the door for indulgence so widely as to be assured that we need not prepare for hereafter-- that earth is all? |
47538 | What do men think? |
47538 | What forms may not be impressed upon the molten lead? |
47538 | What is his mind at any given point? |
47538 | What is it that occasions war, and massacre, and devastation? |
47538 | What is it that produces the earthquake? |
47538 | What is it that produces thunder? |
47538 | What more congenial to man than to be told that he need not care much about his soul? |
47538 | What then? |
47538 | What though artificial standards have elevated a nominal wealth to the value of Potosi or Golconda? |
47538 | What though one, or two, or a few realized wealth, and withdrew in time from the ingulfing vortex? |
47538 | What though some might be charioted to- day, who yesterday lived by the sweat of their brows? |
47538 | What will be most conducive to present ease or peace? |
47538 | What will the world tolerate? |
47538 | What, then, is it that has sustained her spirit, amid trials which we almost shudder to see? |
47538 | What/can/ dry our tears or soothe our sorrows, if not He who came as a Comforter to earth, and who re- erects the kingdom of God in the soul? |
47538 | What/can/ give peace, if not the Prince of Peace? |
47538 | What/can/ impart true nobility, if not restoration to the image of God? |
47538 | What/can/ spread sunshine through the soul, if not the sense of sin forgiven? |
47538 | When is that soul really surrendered to the supremacy of God? |
47538 | When the Cross is torn down by those who should point to it, who will believe? |
47538 | When we became idolaters, did he leave us to our idols, to tears, and woe? |
47538 | Whence come persecutions? |
47538 | Where, on earth, can a scene so appropriate for religion as a dying man''s chamber be found? |
47538 | Who can doubt that the accumulated thousands of many who name Christ''s name are their god? |
47538 | Who ever tasted, touched, or handled what pollutes, and yet continued pure? |
47538 | Who ever threw in their lot with godless men, without incurring the risk of sharing their doom? |
47538 | Who has not seen the flushed cheek, the quivering lip, and the downcast eye of youth, when first beginning to deceive? |
47538 | Who would speak of them as the haunts of the happy? |
47538 | Why are God''s people often of all men the most miserable? |
47538 | Will they grasp at feigned reasons for violating the Sabbath law? |
47538 | Will they use their liberty, or will they abuse it? |
47538 | Withal, however, is there not reason to believe that there is still room for more precise and definite instructions than are sometimes conveyed? |
47538 | Would I see the kingdom of God set up in our groaning world; and would I like to fix a day for its commencement? |
47538 | Would men then be happy? |
47538 | Would you refuse to let the oppressor plant his foot on the happy island of your home? |
47538 | Would you repel the attack of a robber were he to invade the midnight silence of your home? |
47538 | Would you struggle for your life were you suddenly to fall into a stream or the sea? |
47538 | Yet who would regard these waste places as the abodes of living men? |
47538 | Yet, is there no pretext afforded to that worldly man for the opinions which he holds? |
47538 | You would: then will you calmly sink to rise no more for ever, as regards the soul? |
47538 | [ 17]--And is there no reason to fear that that spirit has been perpetuated to modern times? |
47538 | [ 8] And once again: Are not children proverbial for their dependence on a parent''s word? |
47538 | and how does the desert blossom as the rose? |
47538 | but, What has God said? |
47538 | or that to be a coward before man''s frown, and to have no fear of God''s, is to act an impious part? |
47538 | or,"hast thou come to torment us before the time?" |
47538 | what is current, or what is countenanced among them? |
7768 | But thou, O son of Thetis,said he,"why dost thou disparage the state of the dead? |
7768 | O Circe,he cried,"that is impossible: who shall steer my course to Pluto''s kingdom? |
7768 | What desperate adventure has brought Ulysses to these regions,said Achilles;"to see the end of dead men, and their foolish shades?" |
7768 | What washing does my daughter speak of? |
7768 | And Telemachus said,"Is this the man who can tell us tidings of the king my father?" |
7768 | And he said,"What chief or what ruler is this, that thou commendest so highly, and sayest that he perished at Troy? |
7768 | Are you so soon tired of your country; or did not our present please you? |
7768 | But his father permitted not, but said,"Look better at me; I am no deity; why put you upon me the reputation of godhead? |
7768 | But what says fame? |
7768 | He held Ulysses by the wrist, to stay his entrance; and"Whither wouldest thou go?" |
7768 | Indignation seized Aeolus to behold him in that manner returned; and he said,"Ulysses, what has brought you back? |
7768 | Merchants or wandering thieves?" |
7768 | Then said Ulysses,"Tell me who these suitors are, what are their numbers, and how stands the queen thy mother affected to them?" |
7768 | Thy meats, spiced with poison; or thy wines, drugged with death? |
7768 | What pleasure canst thou promise which may tempt the soul of a reasonable man? |
7768 | What should so poor and old a man as you do at the suitors''tables? |
7768 | What should the cause be? |
7768 | What, can not you quit your wiles and your subtleties, now that you are in a state of security? |
7768 | Where now are all their anxious thoughts of home? |
7768 | Who has not heard of Calypso? |
7768 | and think you that you are unknown?" |
7768 | and what cause he had for making such horrid clamours in the night- time to break their sleeps? |
7768 | art thou prepared to share their fate, from which nothing can ransom thee?" |
7768 | do you wilfully give way to their ill manners? |
7768 | guests, what are you? |
7768 | he said,"what madness from heaven has seized you, that you can laugh? |
7768 | if his fright proceeded from any mortal? |
7768 | if strength or craft had given him his death''s blow? |
7768 | is my son yet alive? |
7768 | lives he in Orchomen, or in Pylus, or is he resident in Sparta, in his uncle''s court? |
7768 | must the first word with which you salute your native earth be an untruth? |
7768 | or do you mistrust your kinsfolk and friends in such sort as without trial to decline their aid? |
7768 | or has your government been such as has procured ill- will towards you from your people? |
7768 | see you not that your meat drops blood? |
51077 | A-- what you call-- morganatic marriage? |
51077 | Am I indebted to your grace for the way in which I have been treated, for my detention as a prisoner in this house? |
51077 | And where is he taking us? |
51077 | And you-- you love me? |
51077 | Are n''t you kind of making that business of supporting the invalid a bit too realistic? 51077 Are such ideas common among the women of your own country?" |
51077 | Are we all here? |
51077 | Are we far from the lodge? |
51077 | But can a woman occupy the throne of Ironia? |
51077 | But how can I stay here when I know she is in danger-- that every minute counts? |
51077 | But how do you know they have carried her off? 51077 But how would killing this man help me? |
51077 | But is it not indiscreet? 51077 But what part can a pretty woman play in this rough- and- tumble business?" |
51077 | But where does he come in with the princess? |
51077 | But where''s Prince Peter? |
51077 | But,protested Fenton in angry amazement,"what purpose can be served? |
51077 | But-- but will Olga consent to a marriage with this murderer, for that''s all he is? |
51077 | By what right, Lieutenant Neviloff? |
51077 | Ca n''t we? |
51077 | Can you be of assistance, boy? 51077 Can you tell me what it''s all about? |
51077 | Come, do not look so-- so tragic, is it not? 51077 Could you not give me a few minutes now?" |
51077 | Did I really go to- night to that place where all those dreadful people were, or was it just a dream? |
51077 | Did n''t you perform any little trivial politeness such as breaking a rib or two, or leave him a souvenir in the way of a couple of black eyes? 51077 Do I understand,"he demanded, his voice hard and rasping,"that you intend to disregard the express command of His Majesty?" |
51077 | Do you love me? |
51077 | Do you mean that Mademoiselle Petrowa was in with them too? |
51077 | Do you mean that you intend to go yourself? |
51077 | Do you mean, then,he asked,"that the assassin has done his work?" |
51077 | Do you remember the thrill you get in a fight for a big news story? |
51077 | Do you want the marriage set aside? |
51077 | Does the King stand alone? |
51077 | Eh? |
51077 | Has the assassin been caught? |
51077 | Have I been dreaming? |
51077 | How are you, anyway? |
51077 | How do you happen to be living in Serajoz? |
51077 | How do you know? |
51077 | How is it that you are here? |
51077 | Hurt? |
51077 | I take it, Count Grobenski, that you can give him a week? 51077 If the honour of France is pledged by an accredited representative is any further guarantee necessary?" |
51077 | If they did depose Alexander, who would succeed him? |
51077 | In what way? |
51077 | Is that all? |
51077 | Is the-- what you call it?--prospect-- so dismal then that you must look so? |
51077 | Is there any doubt,asked Fenton slowly,"as to the accession of Olga to the throne?" |
51077 | Is there anything I can do? |
51077 | Look here, Percy,he demanded eagerly,"do n''t you think there would be a chance? |
51077 | Look here, what have you been doing? |
51077 | Married yet? |
51077 | May I ask on what it is based? |
51077 | May I ask,said Miridoff coldly,"the cause for this inexplicable repudiation of the King''s wishes? |
51077 | Monsieur perhaps speaks French? |
51077 | Mr Fenton has been strolling in the gardens? |
51077 | Mr Fenton is staying long in Ironia? |
51077 | Neviloff? |
51077 | Percy,he said,"you can fix me up with a post in the army? |
51077 | Say, Crane, ca n''t we travel faster than this? 51077 Say, Don,"protested Varden tragically,"what is it all about anyway? |
51077 | Shall I send him politely about his business or just drop him over the balcony? |
51077 | So that''s it? 51077 Still, they were happy days in Montreal, were n''t they?" |
51077 | Supposing the princess were already married, though? |
51077 | Tell me, Mr Fenton, did you by any chance recognise the men in the garden? |
51077 | Tell me, my lord and master, what you are going to do with me now? 51077 Tell me, what is the real sentiment of the people? |
51077 | The duke, where is he? |
51077 | The oil country? |
51077 | The princess will be Queen now? |
51077 | Then we are really being taken to the headquarters of this brigand chief? |
51077 | Then where is the Grand Duke? 51077 Then you do n''t love me after all? |
51077 | Then you have come to tell me that I am free? |
51077 | Then you have n''t heard of my good fortune? |
51077 | Then you''ve no one with you? 51077 Varden,"he said,"has it occurred to you that the general''s visit can be turned to great purpose in deciding the wobbling policy of Ironia?" |
51077 | Well, what''s the next move? |
51077 | Well, who''s to do it? |
51077 | Well,said Fenton when they had settled back comfortably,"where did the others go?" |
51077 | What do you mean? |
51077 | What do you mean? |
51077 | What ever can be wrong with you? |
51077 | What happened? |
51077 | What is it all about? |
51077 | What is the news? 51077 What is your price?" |
51077 | What length of time does that give me? |
51077 | What news is there? |
51077 | What object can he have in that? |
51077 | What of the King? |
51077 | What then? |
51077 | What will they do after your mad determination and their lust has flooded the country in blood-- and German Uhlans ride down the Lodz? 51077 Where are we going? |
51077 | Where exactly is the Ironian regiment ready to join yours? |
51077 | Where is she now? |
51077 | Where? |
51077 | Who is Miridoff and what''s his position with regard to the Princess Olga? |
51077 | Who is the extraordinary person of the very red hair? 51077 Why did you send for me?" |
51077 | Why maintain this pretence? |
51077 | Why not? 51077 Why?" |
51077 | You did not think to find anything of this kind up here in the hills? |
51077 | You know Ironia well then? |
51077 | You mean that Miridoff has instructed you to follow me and to work up a flirtation between us? |
51077 | You mean that we might be spied upon? |
51077 | You really think it could happen? |
51077 | Your friend? |
51077 | Your highness,he heard Varden say to the girl,"may I present Mr Fenton, my friend from Canada? |
51077 | Am I addressing Take Larescu?" |
51077 | And he heard her say:"If there is any question as to the legality of the marriage, had you not better find a priest?" |
51077 | And then came the astounding reply:"Hang it, Crane, ca n''t I hug my own wife?" |
51077 | And, by the way, what are your people in Ironia going to do? |
51077 | Any handy?" |
51077 | Are there not two streams branching south from the Bhura?" |
51077 | Are you agreed?" |
51077 | Are you badly hurt?" |
51077 | But look here, how in thunder does she happen to be in Serajoz?" |
51077 | But on which side? |
51077 | But, man, do you realise what it would mean to you? |
51077 | CHAPTER XVI THE RESCUING PARTY"I wonder how much farther we have to go?" |
51077 | Can you enjoy it, with all its dangers, its insincerities, its cruelties?" |
51077 | Can you not trust me that you will not regret it?" |
51077 | Can you sit up?" |
51077 | Could it be that what he had hinted at would actually come to pass? |
51077 | Could it be-- can they carry out their purpose-- before he can be warned of the danger?" |
51077 | Could this be the Prince Peter to whom Varden had referred? |
51077 | Could this great sorrow be permitted to come to her? |
51077 | Could you manage to be polite for a while?" |
51077 | Did I say it right?" |
51077 | Do I have the choice of weapons?" |
51077 | Fenton asked the question very quietly:"When?" |
51077 | Genuinely interested, he asked,"Tell me, mademoiselle, do you really like this life? |
51077 | Going to join us in this war? |
51077 | Has anything happened to her highness?" |
51077 | Has war been declared yet?" |
51077 | Have I your permission to proceed at once with the object of my visit?" |
51077 | How are you feeling now?" |
51077 | How did you come to get into such a mess?" |
51077 | I do n''t suppose you have anything of the kind handy?" |
51077 | I trust that monsieur is feeling much better?" |
51077 | If the province is occupied by Russian troops, without Ironian assistance, will this agreement hold?" |
51077 | In any case, who were there who knew of that romance of the hills? |
51077 | In what way can I be of service to you?" |
51077 | Is it English I hear?" |
51077 | Is it necessary to get your consent to the step?" |
51077 | Is it necessary to impress on all present the advisability of keeping this information as strictly confidential?" |
51077 | Is it not a most romantic marriage I am offering you?" |
51077 | Is it not so?" |
51077 | Is it safe for you to make it known that we-- er-- know each other?" |
51077 | Is the work my good Miridoff sets likely to be of the most difficult, mon ami?" |
51077 | Is this all froth or do they really want war?" |
51077 | May I plead that the divisions now existing be not allowed to influence your regard for me nor to stand in the way of my great good fortune?" |
51077 | No ties, no one whose wishes or whims you must consider?" |
51077 | Now how do you suppose he found where the princess was being kept?" |
51077 | Now what, on the word of a bald- headed friar, was she doing there?" |
51077 | Pausing a moment for breath, he hurried on:"A most extraordinary thing I''m doing, is n''t it? |
51077 | Percy, do n''t you realise the advertising value of Lebrun''s visit to Serajoz? |
51077 | Sire, your life might even be placed in jeopardy?" |
51077 | Suppose the floods rise so rapidly that it will be impossible to recross the river? |
51077 | Supposing she ever found the opportunity to face the realities of life, not as the princess but as Olga-- the woman-- what then? |
51077 | Surely the tall man seated at the end of the table was the great English diplomatist, Sir John Chester? |
51077 | Then perhaps I meet Mistaire Fenton again?" |
51077 | Then, after a pause,"Where am I?" |
51077 | There are n''t any more rhododendron patches to be visited, are there?" |
51077 | Was, then, Miridoff''s death of no avail? |
51077 | What did it matter to him whether Ironia became a republic or not? |
51077 | What did you find out?" |
51077 | What else have you got up your sleeve, anyway?" |
51077 | What in heaven''s name have you done to offend him?" |
51077 | What others? |
51077 | What part could he, an alien and a commoner, expect to play in that future? |
51077 | What''s happened?" |
51077 | What''s the meaning of all this glib talk of letters of credit and gold currency? |
51077 | What''s this?" |
51077 | Where are you?" |
51077 | Where had he seen her before? |
51077 | Who was he, an unknown foreigner, to lay such a serious charge against so illustrious a personage as the Grand Duke Miridoff? |
51077 | Why can you not become my wife?" |
51077 | Why should he want her to entangle me?" |
51077 | Will you perform like service for Mademoiselle Petrowa?" |
51077 | Will you permit me to reciprocate ever so little and advance the necessary means?" |
51077 | Will you permit me to speak, not as Donald Fenton, to Olga, princess of the royal house of Ironia, but as one man to one woman?" |
51077 | Will you place yourself in that position for just a few minutes now? |
51077 | Would it carry the pledge to the assassin who waits at an unknown point to take my father''s life? |
51077 | Your pledge will hold good for that length?" |
8405 | ''What is the use of you?'' 8405 Does a woman require more sleep than a man?" |
8405 | Is breakfast in bed enjoyable? |
8405 | Should the English breakfast be abolished? |
8405 | ***** And how to create interest where interest is not? |
8405 | ***** To find out, to uncover, one''s true style; to lay bare one''s self: how is this to be set about? |
8405 | Are you seriously addicted to reading newspapers and periodicals? |
8405 | Chapter V Style"How can I acquire a good style of writing?" |
8405 | Does the thought regularly occur to you, apropos of fact or incident personally observed:"Here is''copy''for a paper"? |
8405 | Has a woman then two throats? |
8405 | Have you the reputation among your friends of being a good letter- writer? |
8405 | Is it the article returned? |
8405 | Is there any sexual reason why a woman should be a less accomplished journalist than a man? |
8405 | Of what use to send stuff to editors until you have determined what sort of stuff they lack? |
8405 | The_ Daily Mail_ does not ask itself on receiving an unsolicited contribution:"Is it our custom to publish things of this kind"? |
8405 | What are these facts to him? |
8405 | What has induced them to forsake lunch and the domestic joys in order to frequent that draughty thoroughfare? |
8405 | he asked indignantly,''if you ca n''t do a simple thing like that?'' |
59383 | Ah Kate,said Tony,"you know how long and how ardently I have loved you; may I not, one day, drop that epithet of Cousin?" |
59383 | But why not purchase the sheepskin, now that you_ have_ added the moments together? |
59383 | Cousin Kate,said Tony,"Did you ever feel as if you would choke when you attempted to speak?" |
59383 | Did Miss---- accompany her, or did she remain? |
59383 | Did you hear Mr. Wilberforce was courting? |
59383 | How_ can_ you?--how--_can_--you? |
59383 | In the name of common sense,said the old lady,"good people what do you mean?" |
59383 | My dear son,said she,"what in the world has got into you? |
59383 | Tell us if he did get in, and how he contrived to? |
59383 | What has been the course of your moral and religious instruction? 59383 What is it child?" |
59383 | _ Must we sacrifice home and comfort, and real enjoyment, in order to_ sacrifice_ also to this heathen block[4] which sits upon the top of the dome? 59383 And does it not class emulations withidolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envyings,"& c.? |
59383 | And have we not reason to believe that here as in other cases, custom renders one indifferent to that which at first would make him miserable? |
59383 | And is it for this, I exclaimed within myself, that hundreds and thousands toil up craggy precipices and swelter under August suns? |
59383 | Are the poor girls to blame for all this? |
59383 | Are they favorable or not to domestic happiness? |
59383 | Are they to be supposed to have but_ one_ mind among them, as the Sirens had but one tooth? |
59383 | Besides-- has he not had his full share of the blessings of mortality? |
59383 | But how stands the fact? |
59383 | But when she ceas''d, with serious air The other made reply,"Shall he not also be my care? |
59383 | Can it not sooth the heart to rest As it hath done before? |
59383 | Canst thou forget, amidst the gay and heartless, One far away whom thou hast vowed to love? |
59383 | Did_ each_ beauty but tarry the while We met-- love, by moonlight alone? |
59383 | Do you mean to ruin yourself, Tim?" |
59383 | Do you take a gentleman of my size and respectability into a room not larger than a closet? |
59383 | Does any one doubt this fact? |
59383 | Does she need_ but one_ firm principle of action? |
59383 | Dost thou forget, or do thy blue eyes brighten Only with thoughts of his return to thee? |
59383 | Dost thou the pains of absence seek to lighten, In scenes like this of mirth and revelry? |
59383 | Doth not the virtuous soul still find in both a friend?" |
59383 | Enable whom? |
59383 | Feeling so doubly lone, Tim would again seek a partner to sympathize in his sorrows, and to whom could he go? |
59383 | Has he the tender sensibility, the warm hearted sympathy that is ever alive in a female''s bosom? |
59383 | Has it been both by precept and example, or by the first only; and what rank have your teachers assigned to such studies, in the scale of importance?" |
59383 | Has the grim savage rushed again from the distant wilderness? |
59383 | How many times a week or month have you received lessons on them? |
59383 | I met thee by moonlight alone, My heart trusting wholly to thee: Was it prudent? |
59383 | I replied fiercely,"do you take me for a strolling mendicant? |
59383 | If nothing has been read specially on these all- important topics, what has been the manner in which they have been recommended to your attention? |
59383 | In displaying anxiety for the breath of which he was at present so willing to get rid, might I not lay myself open to the exactions of his avarice? |
59383 | May not I his pleasures share? |
59383 | Might not this be the case with Mr. Windenough? |
59383 | Need Memory e''er with Hope contend? |
59383 | No fire either to warm my limbs in the chilly night air of these mountains? |
59383 | Say, fellow citizens, what dreadful thought now swells your heaving bosoms? |
59383 | She asked the carpenter what he was about? |
59383 | She asked the painter what he meant by all this preparation? |
59383 | She did''nt ask Tim, who he was to marry? |
59383 | She inquired of the bricklayer what he was doing? |
59383 | Some readers will say,"what difference would it make if aunt Tabby was present?" |
59383 | The Moon-- were her silver rays gone? |
59383 | Tim asked his mother if she was dissatisfied with the match? |
59383 | Tim indeed could cry out in the agony of woe,"Have I not had my brain sear''d, heart riven, Hopes sapp''d, name blighted, life''s life lied away?" |
59383 | Walking directly up to them, he calmly asked, which of them had thus addressed him? |
59383 | We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons? |
59383 | We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons? |
59383 | What books have you read, or have been read to you on these subjects? |
59383 | What do you know of the principles of Ethics and Christianity? |
59383 | What is man worth in sorrow? |
59383 | What is the aptitude of the means to the great purposes which parents should aim to accomplish? |
59383 | What occasion could that give for philosophy? |
59383 | What she was like? |
59383 | What was I to do? |
59383 | What was I to do? |
59383 | What, but the most inordinate selfishness and vanity can be the fruit of such training? |
59383 | Where is the balm to Israel blest, That Gilead gave of yore? |
59383 | Where the young lady lived? |
59383 | Whether she had a fortune or not? |
59383 | Who do you think could have thus intruded and taken such a liberty, other than cousin Tony? |
59383 | Who indeed would think of compassionating a shadow? |
59383 | Why then, may it not be equally true in relation to the mind? |
59383 | Why? |
59383 | Will not all such things rather be insupportably irksome, if not actually disgusting? |
59383 | _ Is it worth eight dollars per week to partake of this"villainous compound? |
59383 | again at your pen Leontine?" |
59383 | did the sky cease to smile? |
59383 | said one;"Did you know Miss Catherine was engaged?" |
59383 | tell me why? |
59383 | to man-- cold calculating man? |
59383 | what a morning? |
4836 | And what becomes, then, of their promises? |
4836 | And what do you mean to do in the matter? |
4836 | And what reason have we to hope,cried the Prince,"that your pledges, if made; will be redeemed? |
4836 | And what,asked a deputy, smoothly,"is the point which touches you most nearly? |
4836 | Are we to have a Paris massacre, a Paris blood- bath here in the Netherland capital? 4836 As for Don Charles,"he says,"was he not our future sovereign? |
4836 | But if,argued the Duke of Aerschot,"the King absolutely refuse to do what you demand of him; what then?" |
4836 | But,asked Schetz,"what security do you offer us that you will yourselves maintain the Pacification?" |
4836 | But,replied the Prince,"if we are already accomplishing the Pacification, what more do you wish?" |
4836 | Die, treacherous villain? |
4836 | Do you not love your wife and children? |
4836 | Do you think this can be put down? |
4836 | Expende Hannibalem: quot libras in duce summo Invenies?. |
4836 | I have tamed people of iron in my day,said he, contemptuously,"shall I not easily crush these men of butter?" |
4836 | Is he, or am I, to command in this campaign? 4836 Is the army of the Prince of Orange a flock of wild geese,"he asked,"that it can fly over rivers like the Meuse?" |
4836 | Is the word of a king,said the dowager to the commissioners, who were insisting upon guarantees,"is the word of a king not sufficient?" |
4836 | May she at least receive the sacrament of the Lord''s Supper in her own chamber, according to the Lutheran form? |
4836 | Of what particular point do you complain? |
4836 | Rather a desperate undertaking, however? |
4836 | Shall I be secure there? |
4836 | So that you do n''t mean,replied Schetz,"to accept the decision of the states?" |
4836 | Tell me,he cried,"by whose command Cardinal Granvelle administered poison to the Emperor Maximilian? |
4836 | War? |
4836 | What do you say to that, Don Francis? |
4836 | What is the man talking about? |
4836 | What is your own opinion on the whole affair? |
4836 | What, Madam,he is reported to have cried in a passion,"is it possible that your Highness can entertain fears of these beggars? |
4836 | Whence has the Duke of Alva the power of which he boasts, but from yourselves-- from Netherland cities? 4836 Where are my dead forefathers at present?" |
4836 | Wherein has the Pacification been violated? |
4836 | Will the Prince,asked the Landgrave,"permit my granddaughter to have an evangelical preacher in the house?" |
4836 | You do n''t mean, then,repeated Schetz,"to submit to the estates touching the exercise of religion?" |
4836 | --"Why does not your Most Christian master,"asked Alva,"order these Frenchmen in Mons to come to him under oath to make no disturbance? |
4836 | A little startled, the Duke rejoined,"Do you doubt that the cities will keep their promises? |
4836 | And how were they to be punished? |
4836 | And what was the"rigorous and exemplary justice"thus inflicted upon the"quidam?" |
4836 | And yet what was the Emperor Charles to the inhabitants of the Netherlands that they should weep for him? |
4836 | Are the sufferings of these obscure Christians beneath the dignity of history? |
4836 | Are the waves of the sea more inconstant-- is Euripus more uncertain than the counsels of such men?" |
4836 | Are these things related merely to excite superfluous horror? |
4836 | Are we to have Paris weddings in Brussels also?" |
4836 | But who were these"other"heretics? |
4836 | By what means will it be possible for the government fully to give you contentment?" |
4836 | Can you give me another? |
4836 | Compared to these, what were great moral and political ideas, the plans of statesmen, the hopes of nations? |
4836 | Could Philip or Alva have found in the wide world men to execute their decrees with more unhesitating docility, with more sympathizing eagerness? |
4836 | Did not Louis of Nassau nearly entrap the Grand Commander? |
4836 | Dost think thyself beyond the reach of mischief? |
4836 | For what purpose were these gatherings? |
4836 | For why have I exposed my property? |
4836 | From such a Regent, surrounded by such councillors, was the work of William de Nassau''s hands to gain applause? |
4836 | Governments given by royal commission, for example; what point could be clearer? |
4836 | Had he not discharged the Spaniards, placed the castles in the hands of natives, restored the privileges, submitted to insults and indecencies? |
4836 | Had he not done all he had ever promised? |
4836 | Had it not been weakness to spare the traitors who had thus stained the childhood of the national joy at liberty regained? |
4836 | Had not a handful of warriors of their own race rifled the golden Indies? |
4836 | Had not cannon thundered and beacons blazed to commemorate that auspicious event? |
4836 | Had not the Pope and his cardinals gone to church in solemn procession, to render thanks unto God for the massacre of Paris? |
4836 | Had not the heretics-- in the words of Inquisitor Titelmann-- allowed themselves, year after year, to be taken and slaughtered like lambs? |
4836 | Had not the redoubtable Alva been nearly made a captive? |
4836 | Had not their fathers, few in number, strong in courage and discipline, revelled in the plunder of a new world? |
4836 | Had not they fought within the bowels of the earth, beneath the depths of the sea, within blazing cities, and upon fields of ice? |
4836 | Had the city, indeed, been carried in the night; had the massacre already commenced; had all this labor and audacity been expended in vain? |
4836 | Had the creed of Luther been embraced only for such unworthy ends? |
4836 | Had they not done the work of demons for nine years long? |
4836 | Had they not eaten the flesh, and drank the hearts''blood of their enemies? |
4836 | Had they not slaughtered unarmed human beings by townfuls, at the word of command? |
4836 | Had they not stained the house of God with wholesale massacre? |
4836 | Has his Church therefore come to caught? |
4836 | Has the strong arm of the Lord thereby grown weaker? |
4836 | Hast flown to thy nest so early? |
4836 | He asked the Bishop, with many expressions of amazement, whether pardon was impossible; whether delay at least might not be obtained? |
4836 | He waved his broadleaved felt hat for silence, and then exclaimed, in language which has been almost literally preserved, What would ye, my friends? |
4836 | His name, and of what family? |
4836 | How could Don John refuse the wager of battle thus haughtily proffered? |
4836 | How could the nation now consent to the daily impositions which were practised? |
4836 | How else could these enormous successes be accounted for? |
4836 | How else could thousands fall before the Spanish swords, while hardly a single Spanish corpse told of effectual resistance? |
4836 | How large a part of the human race were the Batavians? |
4836 | How should Parma, seeing this obscures undersized, thin- bearded, runaway clerk before him, expect pith and energy from him? |
4836 | How were crimes like these to be visited upon the transgressor? |
4836 | How, indeed, could a different decision be expected? |
4836 | If William of Orange must seek a wife among the pagans, could no other bride be found for him than the daughter of such a man? |
4836 | If defeated, what would become of the King''s authority, with rebellious troops triumphant in rebellious provinces? |
4836 | If so much had been done by Holland and Zealand, how much more might be hoped when all the provinces were united? |
4836 | If so, was he willing to approve that treaty in all its articles? |
4836 | In whose- name and by what authority did they act against the sovereign? |
4836 | Is it not better to deal with murder and oppression in the abstract, without entering into trivial details? |
4836 | Is it not obvious what manner of men they are? |
4836 | O, have you been in Brabant, fighting for the states? |
4836 | O, have you brought back anything except your broken pates? |
4836 | Others asked him how long since he had sold himself to the Devil? |
4836 | Our enemies spare neither their money nor their labor; will ye be colder and duller than your foes? |
4836 | Shall all this be destroyed by the Spanish guns, or shall we rush to the rescue of our friends?" |
4836 | Should he go thence alive and unmolested? |
4836 | Should mercenary troops at this late hour be sent for? |
4836 | Should they assemble the captains of the Military associations? |
4836 | Should they call themselves the"Society of Concord,"the restorers of lost liberty, or by what other attractive title should the league be baptized? |
4836 | Should they issue a proclamation? |
4836 | Should they summon the ward- masters, and order the instant arming and mustering of their respective companies? |
4836 | The Prince asked his sanguine partisan if he were still determined to carry out his project, with no more definite support than he had indicated? |
4836 | The castle was carried, but what would become of the city? |
4836 | The proposition was hailed with acclamation, but who should invent the hieroglyphical costume? |
4836 | Thereupon he gave the Elector his hand.-- What now was the amount and meaning of this promise on the part of the Prince? |
4836 | They had, in reality, asked him but one question, and that a simple one-- Would he maintain the treaty of Ghent? |
4836 | They have not had wisdom enough to manage their own estates, and are they now to teach the King and your Highness how to govern the country? |
4836 | To this end had Columbus discovered a hemisphere for Castile and Aragon, and the new Indies revealed their hidden treasures? |
4836 | To whom, then, was the sacred debt of national and royal gratitude due but to Lamoral of Egmont? |
4836 | Upon this, Brederode, beside himself with rage, cried out vehemently,"Are we to tolerate such language from this priest?" |
4836 | Was William of Orange to receive absolute commands from the Duke of Alva? |
4836 | Was a people not justified in rising against authority when all their laws had been trodden under foot,"not once only, but a million of times?" |
4836 | Was he not himself the mark of obloquy among the Reformers, because of his leniency to Catholics? |
4836 | Was he ready to dismiss his troops at once, and by land, the sea voyage being liable to too many objections? |
4836 | Was he satisfied that the Ghent Pacification contained nothing conflicting with the Roman religion and the King''s authority? |
4836 | Was it astonishing that murder was more common than fidelity? |
4836 | Was it more severe and sudden than that which betrayed monarchs usually inflict? |
4836 | Was it not a diplomatic masterpiece, that from this frugal store they could contrive to eke out seven mortal months of negotiation? |
4836 | Was it possible, then, for William of Orange to sustain the Perpetual Edict, the compromise with Don John? |
4836 | Was it probable that the lethargy of provinces, which had reached so high a point of freedom only to be deprived of it at last, could endure forever? |
4836 | Was it strange that Orange should feel little affinity with such companions? |
4836 | Was it strange that a century or so of this kind of work should produce a Luther? |
4836 | Was it strange that hatred, incest, murder, should follow in the train of a wedding thus hideously solemnized? |
4836 | Was it that I might enrich myself? |
4836 | Was it that I might find new; ones? |
4836 | Was it to be tolerated that base, pacific burghers should monopolize the treasure by which a band of heroes might be enriched? |
4836 | Was it to be wondered at that many did not see the precipice towards which the bark which held their all was gliding under the same impulse? |
4836 | Was that hypocrisy? |
4836 | Were not all lovers of good government"erecting their heads like dromedaries?" |
4836 | Were not carnage and plunder the very elements in which they disported themselves? |
4836 | Were not these amusements of the Netherlanders as elevated and humanizing as the contemporary bull- fights and autos- da- fe of Spain? |
4836 | What altar and what hearthstone had they not profaned? |
4836 | What are oaths and hostages when prerogative, and the people are contending? |
4836 | What can be more consistent than laws of descent, regulated by right divine? |
4836 | What chance had the impetuous and impatient young hero in such an encounter with the foremost statesman of the age? |
4836 | What could a single province effect, when its sister states, even liberty- loving Holland, had basely abandoned the common cause? |
4836 | What could be more practical or more devout than the conception? |
4836 | What could half- armed artisans achieve in the open plain against such accomplished foes? |
4836 | What could such half- armed and wholly untrained partisans effect against the bravest and most experienced troops in the whole world? |
4836 | What could they comprehend of living fountains and of heavenly dews? |
4836 | What course was the Prince of Orange to adopt? |
4836 | What element had they not braved? |
4836 | What fatigue, what danger, what crime, had ever checked them for a moment? |
4836 | What have you to fear?" |
4836 | What holier triumph for the conqueror of the Saracens than the subjugation of these northern infidels? |
4836 | What is it that your Excellency most desires? |
4836 | What obstacle had ever given them pause in their career of duty? |
4836 | What precaution should: they take? |
4836 | What service had he to render in exchange? |
4836 | What vulpine kind of mercy was it on the part of the Cardinal, while making such deadly insinuations, to recommend the imprisoned victim to clemency? |
4836 | What was his position at the moment? |
4836 | What was it to them that carnage and plunder had been spared in one of the richest and most populous cities in Christendom? |
4836 | What was it to them that the imperial shuttle was thus industriously flying to and fro? |
4836 | What was to be done? |
4836 | What were debtors, robbers, murderers, compared to heretics? |
4836 | What were they in a contest with the whole Roman empire? |
4836 | What will the Duke of Alva and all the Spaniards say of such a precipitate flight? |
4836 | What, meanwhile, was the policy of the government? |
4836 | What, then, was the condition of the nation, after this great step had been taken? |
4836 | When did one man ever civilize a people? |
4836 | When was France ever slow to sweep upon Italy with such a hope? |
4836 | Whence all this Christian meekness in the author of the Ban against Orange and the eulogist of Alva? |
4836 | Whence his ships, supplies, money, weapons, soldiers? |
4836 | Where else upon earth, at that day, was there half so much liberty as was thus guaranteed? |
4836 | Where was the work which had been too dark and bloody for their performance? |
4836 | Where was this hereditary chief magistrate to be found? |
4836 | Whereupon cried Desiring Heart, Oh Common Comfort who is he? |
4836 | Which is the most wonderful manifestation in the history of this personage-- the audacity of the impostor, or the bestiality of his victims? |
4836 | Who could expect to contend with such a foe in the dark? |
4836 | Who else could look into the future, and into Philip''s heart so unerringly? |
4836 | Who now did reverence to a King so criminal and so fallen? |
4836 | Whom were they to trust? |
4836 | Whose arm should deal it? |
4836 | Why do ye murmur that we do not break our vows and surrender the city to the Spaniards? |
4836 | Why has poor Netherland thus become degenerate and bastard? |
4836 | Why has the Almighty suffered such crimes to be perpetrated in His sacred name? |
4836 | Why have I left my son so long a prisoner? |
4836 | Why have I lost my brothers? |
4836 | Why have I put my life so often in, danger? |
4836 | Why should Meghem''s loitering and mutinous troops, arriving at the eleventh hour, share in the triumph and the spoil? |
4836 | Why should not the Antwerp executioners claim equal commendation? |
4836 | Why should they do so? |
4836 | Why then was it not competent to other provinces, with equal allegiance to the treaty, to sanction the Reformed religion within their limits? |
4836 | Will they not say that your Excellency has fled from the consciousness of guilt? |
4836 | Would it not be better, then, that the poor man, to avoid starvation, should wait no longer, but accept bread wherever he might find it? |
4836 | Would not their appearance at this crisis rather inflame the rage than intimidate the insolence of the sectaries? |
4836 | You will ask why I am in Mons at the head of an armed force: are any of you ignorant of Alva''s cruelties? |
4836 | cried the Prince,"what are you afraid of? |
4836 | how the devil came you to send that courier to Rome about the English plot without giving me warning?" |
4836 | said the Prince, looking gravely at Ryhove;"but upon what force do you rely for your undertaking?" |
4836 | they cried;"art thou terrified so soon? |
4836 | who is this boy that is preaching to me?" |
4836 | you whom I esteem as my father, can you suspect me of such guilt? |
9313 | And why is he not here with you? |
9313 | Are we to live on this great earth all alone? |
9313 | But humbled as I am and worn with toil, how shall I ever please him? 9313 But what does he look like?" |
9313 | Is it your voice, Syrinx? |
9313 | Nay,said Pylades;"how can I swear? |
9313 | Shall we sing together? |
9313 | What are ye? |
9313 | What does she possess that I have not in greater abundance? 9313 Where is your husband?" |
9313 | Why do you worship Latona before me? |
9313 | And are you deceived by this show of kindliness? |
9313 | And what should her bones be but the rocks that are a foundation for the clay, and the pebbles that strew the path?" |
9313 | Are birds careful? |
9313 | Art thou slain? |
9313 | But now what remains to us? |
9313 | But where is your cockle- shell that brought you hither?" |
9313 | Have you forgotten what the Oracle decreed,--that you were destined for a dreadful creature, the fear of gods and men? |
9313 | Have you fought them for ten years without learning their devices? |
9313 | Then, seeing that even the old and wretched clung to their gift of life, who should offer herself but the young and lovely queen, Alcestis? |
9313 | What is it that you trust? |
9313 | What were hounds to such as he, or nets spread for a snare? |
9313 | Who could pass by such a marvel? |
9313 | Who could remember to be careful when he was to fly for the first time? |
9313 | Who has done thee any hurt?" |
9313 | he roared then,"robbers or rovers?" |
7620 | And who can read the noble and heart- speaking apology of Algernon Sidney, without entering into his consolation no less than his misfortunes? 7620 And, do you know,"added the statesman,"that you have quite made a conquest of Lord Guloseton? |
7620 | Are you certain of the cabinet? |
7620 | But you, my friend-- how can you possibly have been spending your time? 7620 By your emphasis on the word esteem,"said Lady Roseville,"I suppose you attach some peculiar importance to the word?" |
7620 | Can such things be? |
7620 | I love,said Clarendon,"the enthusiasm which places comfort in so noble a source; but, is vanity, think you, a less powerful agent than philanthropy? |
7620 | Is it true,said I;"that I am to congratulate you upon the certainty of your return for Lord Dawton''s borough of--?" |
7620 | Nay,said I,"in your absence would you have me glad? |
7620 | Oh, you were not-- wern''t you? 7620 Pray, Miss Glanville,"said Lord Vincent, taking up a thin volume,"do you greatly admire the poems of this lady?" |
7620 | Sir,said I, haughtily,"what do you mean?" |
7620 | Tell me, my friend, what has been the late subject of your reflections? 7620 Too candid by half,"thought I;"the man is certainly a rascal; but what''s that to me? |
7620 | We shall meet at the Duke of--''s to- night,said she,"shall we not?" |
7620 | What is the matter with you, my friend? |
7620 | What saloon will you dine in, my Lord Lucullus? |
7620 | What, the hero of Chester Park returned, without having once narrated his adventures tome? |
7620 | Who talks of discord? |
7620 | Willingly shall I repair to your bower, fayre ladie; but tell me, I beseech you, how many persons are signified in the world''alone?'' |
7620 | All our party insisted upon returning Mr. V-- in place of the late member: what could I do? |
7620 | And how could the Monsieur and Madame Jourdains help following the servile and debasing example of Monseigneur le Duc et Pair?" |
7620 | And who were those men? |
7620 | But whose pencil marks are these?" |
7620 | But why for others should I groan, When none will sigh for me? |
7620 | By the by, why have you not called upon Lord Dawton? |
7620 | Could he have said any thing more cutting? |
7620 | Do you mean to place me in Parliament as soon as you are in the cabinet? |
7620 | Do you think that he thought rather of the pleasure his work should afford to posterity, than of the praises posterity should extend to his work? |
7620 | Eh bien; listen to me-- are you not in no small degree lie with Lord Dawton?--do you not expect something from him worthy of your rank and merit?" |
7620 | From a saute de foie, what delicate subtleties of finesse might have their origin? |
7620 | Have you always followed your present idle profession, or were you brought up to any other?" |
7620 | Have you any wares in your box likely to suit me? |
7620 | Hemans?" |
7620 | How can you doubt it?" |
7620 | How did you like Lady Chester? |
7620 | I can ask those whom I like to my house-- why should I be forced into asking those whom I do not like? |
7620 | I eat well-- why should I lose my appetite? |
7620 | I heard you had been very ill. Pray have you been yet to that man who professes to cure consumption in the worst stages?" |
7620 | Meanwhile, how get on the noble Lords Lesborough and Lincoln? |
7620 | Mr.--, the member for your borough of--, has, I believe, accepted the Chiltern Hundreds? |
7620 | Now, Sir, may I not call myself a gentleman?" |
7620 | Pray, think you it is probable that I have ever had the happiness to meet you before? |
7620 | There was another pause-- at last Ellen said,"How do you think my brother looks?" |
7620 | Think you the ministry can be said to be fairly seated?" |
7620 | Vincent turned away; my eyes were rivetted on the ground; the beautiful Lady-- passed by me;"What, you in a reverie?" |
7620 | Was your lordship at the Duke of--''s last night?" |
7620 | Well, I always thought it unlikely; but every one says so--""My dear Sir,"I rejoined,"how long is it since you have minded what every body says? |
7620 | What have these to do with science?" |
7620 | What post do you design for me?" |
7620 | What was ambition henceforth to me? |
7620 | Where now was such a being to me? |
7620 | Who does not know what active citizens private misfortune makes us? |
7620 | Why the deuce, then, did he come and dine with me? |
7620 | Why?--for any dispute-- any disagreement in private-- any discovery of meanness-- treachery, unworthiness in the other? |
7620 | You remember, Lady Paulet, those delightful parties at D-- House? |
7620 | You, I dare say, are one of those gentlemen whom it is very difficult to take in, either passively or actively, by appearance, or in act? |
7620 | and if it can create, can it not also support? |
7620 | bound to me by a single tie-- meriting from my gratitude a single consideration? |
7620 | cried I,"are you so well acquainted with my favourite book?" |
7620 | from a ragout a la financiere, what godlike improvements in taxation? |
7620 | if so, I should like to purchase of so moralizing a vendor?" |
7620 | is it not the desire of shining before men that prompts us to whatever may effect it? |
7620 | it has long been my most familiar acquaintance; but--"''Tell us what hath chanced to- day, That Caesar looks so sad?''" |
7620 | where shall we ever find any thing like them? |
12587 | A blue spot? 12587 A proposal?" |
12587 | A republican? 12587 Among the offices to which thou art unsuited, which dost thou desire?" |
12587 | An ambitious man disappointed? |
12587 | An appointment? 12587 An offer for the caravan, an offer for the two horses, an offer for the two gipsy women, an offer--""From whom?" |
12587 | And Aristides? |
12587 | And Cato? |
12587 | And Thomas More? |
12587 | And do you know,said the tavern- keeper,"the most wonderful thing of all?" |
12587 | And for that way of doing nothing, how is one paid? |
12587 | And if he gets well? |
12587 | And if you resist? |
12587 | And must you follow? |
12587 | And that he had a lawful heir by that marriage? |
12587 | And that is what thou callest uncorking the bottles of the ocean? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And then? |
12587 | And thou wouldst trouble me for that much? |
12587 | And what is the_ proepositus hundredi_? |
12587 | And which carried six hundred soldiers, fifty sailors, and twenty- five guns? |
12587 | And wouldst thou like to be the jetsam officer? |
12587 | And you, Tom- Jim- Jack, what are you doing here? |
12587 | And you, too, Tom- Jim- Jack? |
12587 | And you? |
12587 | And--? |
12587 | Are many such bottles brought to the Admiralty? |
12587 | Are you sure that the sand has not worn the hole between the globes? |
12587 | As a devil? |
12587 | As beautiful as the queen? |
12587 | But he tells you where he is going to take you? |
12587 | But is it not always a question of many? |
12587 | But that is the difference merely of the vessel''s way and the rate at which the sea is running? |
12587 | But where? |
12587 | But where? |
12587 | But, Master Doctor, steer west? |
12587 | By what right? |
12587 | Can he see? |
12587 | Como dices que le llamas? |
12587 | Como le llamas? |
12587 | Did the sand run through the glass in exactly thirty seconds? |
12587 | Did you cross the bridge? |
12587 | Did you know Lord Linnæus Clancharlie? |
12587 | Did you take the trouble to look at the triangle? |
12587 | Do n''t you know the Laughing Man? |
12587 | Do you know something? |
12587 | Do you know that I have a great many things to say to you? |
12587 | Do you know what a snow- cloud is? |
12587 | Do you know, Lord Eure, that he married when in Switzerland? |
12587 | Do you own that the mandragora cries? |
12587 | Do you see that passer- by? |
12587 | Do you wish me to steer west? |
12587 | Done? |
12587 | El gefe? |
12587 | En vuestre tropa que esta? |
12587 | Etcheco jaüna, que es este hombre? |
12587 | Found? |
12587 | From whom? |
12587 | Gentlemen,said he,"whither are you taking me?" |
12587 | Gwynplaine, what does this gentleman''s dress mean? |
12587 | Gwynplaine,she resumed,"you will think of me, wo n''t you? |
12587 | Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Have you Hardquanonne''s flask? |
12587 | Have you a chart? |
12587 | Have you proved the sand- glass by the oscillations of a bullet? |
12587 | Have you taken into account the resistance of the rope supporting the shot to the waves? |
12587 | Have you tested the log? |
12587 | Have you tried how many knots she is running? |
12587 | Have you waxed the yarn lest it should stretch? |
12587 | He died in Switzerland? |
12587 | He was a republican under Cromwell, and remained a republican under Charles II.? |
12587 | Heavy enough? |
12587 | Here, and with swords? |
12587 | Hold,thought he;"can it be midnight already?" |
12587 | How can that be? |
12587 | How did you compute the resistance of the water to the shot? |
12587 | How do you compute the difference between the true and apparent course? |
12587 | How do you mean? 12587 How is that?" |
12587 | How is that? |
12587 | How is that? |
12587 | How is that? |
12587 | How long have you had that laugh? |
12587 | How should I know? |
12587 | How? |
12587 | I had not observed that gourd before; did it belong to Hardquanonne? |
12587 | I must enter the house,he said to himself;"but how?" |
12587 | I should like to know who is responsible for that woman''s death? 12587 If you did not exist, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | In the dungeon at Chatham? |
12587 | In what does the appointment consist? |
12587 | Is Gwynplaine coming back? 12587 Is any one there?" |
12587 | Is it about politics? |
12587 | Is it possible? |
12587 | Is it possible? |
12587 | Is it regular? |
12587 | Is it you, then, for certain? |
12587 | Is she young? |
12587 | Is that you, wolf? |
12587 | Is there anything else we can throw overboard? |
12587 | It is clear that he is not dead; but can he have gone mad? |
12587 | It is not your sister? |
12587 | It is you, is it? 12587 Living?" |
12587 | Lords exist, you trespasser, do you see? 12587 Man,"he cried,"do you hear me?" |
12587 | Master Nicless? |
12587 | Master Ursus? |
12587 | Must we leave England, he and I? |
12587 | My Lord Cholmondeley, what will be the rank of this young Lord Clancharlie in the House? |
12587 | My child,said Ursus in a voice of anguish,"what do you mean by that?" |
12587 | Of what size was the shot? |
12587 | Of what? |
12587 | Oh, you believe in Cato, do you? |
12587 | Oh; were I powerful, would I not aid the wretched? 12587 On living things?" |
12587 | Over the way? |
12587 | Pretty? |
12587 | Pues que esta? |
12587 | Quai païs? |
12587 | Qual dios? |
12587 | Que cosas sabe? |
12587 | Que lenguas habla? |
12587 | She has palaces? |
12587 | Skipper, do you know what is for us the word of death? |
12587 | Skipper, have you an English sextant? |
12587 | Skipper,began the doctor, without taking his eyes off the cloud,"have you often crossed the Channel?" |
12587 | Some one else to speak to you? |
12587 | Some one knocked at the door? |
12587 | Suspended by a rope yarn drawn out from the top of a coil of soaked hemp? 12587 The man in black?" |
12587 | The sun!--what was it? |
12587 | The wapentake touches you with the iron weapon? |
12587 | Then he must have gone out very early? |
12587 | Then that son will inherit the Clancharlie peerage? |
12587 | Then thou wishest? 12587 Then you sail by rule of thumb?" |
12587 | They say she is rich? |
12587 | To- day? |
12587 | Tom- Jim- Jack, what does that officer''s uniform mean? |
12587 | Ursus,said Dea,"where is Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | Well, what then? |
12587 | Well, who goes there? |
12587 | Well, will you eat? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | Well? |
12587 | What am I doing here? 12587 What are you doing here, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | What are you doing there? |
12587 | What are you murmuring there? |
12587 | What can this mean? |
12587 | What department? |
12587 | What did he say? |
12587 | What did you answer? |
12587 | What do you mean? |
12587 | What do you mean? |
12587 | What do you mean? |
12587 | What do you think of it all? |
12587 | What does all this mean? |
12587 | What does he do with that? |
12587 | What does she send me? 12587 What does that mean?" |
12587 | What dost thou want? |
12587 | What dost thou wish to be? 12587 What has he got in his hand?" |
12587 | What has it got to do with me? 12587 What is a wapentake?" |
12587 | What is his name? |
12587 | What is it? |
12587 | What is it? |
12587 | What is that to me? |
12587 | What is the bailiff of the hundred? |
12587 | What is the iron weapon? |
12587 | What is the matter? |
12587 | What is the matter? |
12587 | What is to be done? |
12587 | What is wrong with me? |
12587 | What meanest thou? 12587 What o''clock is it?" |
12587 | What then? |
12587 | What then? |
12587 | What was that? |
12587 | What was the result? |
12587 | What''s wrong with you now? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | When? |
12587 | When? |
12587 | Where am I? 12587 Where am I?" |
12587 | Where am I?--on the summit? 12587 Where are you? |
12587 | Where do you live? 12587 Where is he?" |
12587 | Where is the boat? 12587 Where is the land?" |
12587 | Where? 12587 Where?" |
12587 | Where? |
12587 | Where? |
12587 | Wherefore? |
12587 | Which was in the Armada? |
12587 | Whither are you steering? |
12587 | Whither? |
12587 | Who am I? 12587 Who are those fellows kneeling down?--What are you doing? |
12587 | Who has a kind of mace in his hand? |
12587 | Who has brought this man into the House? 12587 Who has sent me a fellow like this, who is hungry and cold, and who does not come in?" |
12587 | Who have you got there, my dear? 12587 Who is he?" |
12587 | Who is in prison? |
12587 | Who is it then? |
12587 | Who is it? 12587 Who is that?" |
12587 | Who is the Laughing Man? |
12587 | Who is this man? |
12587 | Who talked to me of the queen? 12587 Who was it that knocked?" |
12587 | Who will give me shelter? |
12587 | Who? 12587 Who?" |
12587 | Who? |
12587 | Whom will she marry? |
12587 | Why do you laugh? |
12587 | Why do you unhook that? |
12587 | Why dost thou wish for the last- named place in preference to both the others? |
12587 | Why not a king? 12587 Why not?" |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Will you be kind enough to eat it all up, you cub? 12587 Will you drink?" |
12587 | With what? |
12587 | You ask if I knew him? 12587 You hear?" |
12587 | You practise medicine? |
12587 | You speak in public? |
12587 | You? 12587 ( What does Neptune write me?) 12587 --That fellow a peer of England?" |
12587 | --"What does it all mean?" |
12587 | A boat would contain that; but--""But what?" |
12587 | A caprice? |
12587 | A chain? |
12587 | A disinherited heir? |
12587 | A gipsy? |
12587 | A king obeys-- what? |
12587 | A royalist, certainly; a republican-- who knows? |
12587 | A vision? |
12587 | Again the voice spoke,--"What is the use of searching the earth, when we can only find in heaven?" |
12587 | Against the torturer? |
12587 | Against whom were the lords angered? |
12587 | Am I a fairy? |
12587 | Am I a goddess? |
12587 | Am I a princess? |
12587 | Am I not with you? |
12587 | An ugly one? |
12587 | And Fibi and Vinos, where are they? |
12587 | And addressing Gwynplaine haughtily,--"Who are you? |
12587 | And did you remark the plumed cap of the page? |
12587 | And do you think that the mole himself crushes nothing? |
12587 | And from what had this arisen? |
12587 | And he put the question with a loud voice--"Where are you?" |
12587 | And himself? |
12587 | And how was he to help plunging into it headlong? |
12587 | And if I am asked,''Why do you laugh?'' |
12587 | And raising her sightless eyes on high, she added,--"When shall I follow?" |
12587 | And then?" |
12587 | And this child, of whom we have caught a glimpse in the shadow of the solitudes of Portland, by whom had he been cast away? |
12587 | And those men who had dragged Gwynplaine on the hurdle of sarcasm, were they wicked? |
12587 | And was he even one of the people? |
12587 | And what did they make of these children? |
12587 | And what do you say about Anne of Austria? |
12587 | And what had they laughed at? |
12587 | And what social system is this which has for its base disproportion and injustice? |
12587 | And what was there for him in the future? |
12587 | And where? |
12587 | And who shall hinder that sling from hurling the sun into the sky? |
12587 | And who was this woman? |
12587 | And you? |
12587 | And, after all, what was this Lord Clancharlie? |
12587 | And, now, what would become of him without them? |
12587 | Any one there?" |
12587 | Are there laws no longer? |
12587 | Are we an accomplice of the cup which deprives us of reason? |
12587 | Are we to change the laws? |
12587 | Are we, on our inflexible axis, a moving sphere, a star when seen from afar, mud when seen more closely, in which night alternates with day? |
12587 | Are you a lord, you idiot? |
12587 | Are you come already? |
12587 | Are you deaf? |
12587 | Are you men of the woods? |
12587 | Are you of any religion? |
12587 | Are you selfish? |
12587 | At the acme of his agony, his eyes still closed, he heard an exquisite voice saying,"Are you asleep, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | At what distance from the buoy? |
12587 | At what then? |
12587 | Awakened from what?--from sleep? |
12587 | Because you were cold one night, what was that to him? |
12587 | Besides, condemned and damned as Gwynplaine was, what was the good of further struggle? |
12587 | Besides, to sum up, are these perversities, these rugged notches, virtues? |
12587 | Besides, was he likely ever to see the lady again? |
12587 | Besides, was it not all due to him, who had waited so long on duty at the gate of chance? |
12587 | Besides, were they not already married? |
12587 | Besides, what could it matter? |
12587 | Besides, what did the service she rendered him cost her? |
12587 | Besides, what was the good of it? |
12587 | But can any one be enamoured of a flash of lightning? |
12587 | But her name? |
12587 | But how came all this about?" |
12587 | But how did you contrive to obtain access to me? |
12587 | But is laughter a synonym of joy? |
12587 | But tell me, how did it all happen? |
12587 | But the question was how to get rid of them? |
12587 | But then? |
12587 | But was it nature? |
12587 | But was there any preserved game? |
12587 | But were they of flesh and blood, like ourselves? |
12587 | But what am I? |
12587 | But what is history? |
12587 | But what is to be done next?" |
12587 | But what of the recoil? |
12587 | But what to eat, where to eat, how to eat? |
12587 | But where is the Green Box? |
12587 | But why are the people ignorant? |
12587 | But why are the waves of the Pacific four times higher near America than near Asia; that is to say, higher in the East than in the West? |
12587 | But why, then, had all this befallen him? |
12587 | By what measure did she weigh her love? |
12587 | Can anything more terrible be imagined? |
12587 | Can not you see the purple? |
12587 | Can you imagine a city ruled by its citizens? |
12587 | Can you prove it?" |
12587 | Can you read? |
12587 | Can you?" |
12587 | Caste? |
12587 | Change our direction, remain where we are, advance, go back? |
12587 | Come now, do I keep an inn, or do I not? |
12587 | Could he be sure that it contained Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Could he guess at it? |
12587 | Could it be said that a shadow had floated between Gwynplaine and Dea? |
12587 | Could it be that life had crumbled away behind him? |
12587 | Could the usurpation of the rich, the hateful elect of chance, go further? |
12587 | Cured of what? |
12587 | Dea had a thought--"What should I be without him?" |
12587 | Dea, what would you have me do? |
12587 | Destiny amazes us by a prolixity of unbearable suffering; who then can wonder that the old are garrulous? |
12587 | Did Gwynplaine love this woman? |
12587 | Did I foresee this? |
12587 | Did I tell you that the queen is my sister? |
12587 | Did any one read it to you? |
12587 | Did he drink, eat, sleep? |
12587 | Did he know why? |
12587 | Did he look at the water? |
12587 | Did he not know from whom that came? |
12587 | Did he not see an envelope, a seal, paper, and writing? |
12587 | Did he understand it? |
12587 | Did he, perchance, already exercise judgment? |
12587 | Did he, then, desire to extinguish their love, or to cool it even? |
12587 | Did it strike you that you failed a little in respect towards myself? |
12587 | Did she know that he was one? |
12587 | Did she wish her good or evil? |
12587 | Did the Pope twitter? |
12587 | Did the birds speak? |
12587 | Did they hate each other? |
12587 | Did they think they had unchained me for nothing? |
12587 | Did this court policy, invented by James I., succeed? |
12587 | Did this licence to shoot permit him to break the wing or the leg of one like the sister of her Majesty? |
12587 | Did you read it yourself? |
12587 | Did you see me naked? |
12587 | Die? |
12587 | Do I dare to be your mistress-- your concubine-- your slave-- your chattel? |
12587 | Do I dare to lose caste? |
12587 | Do n''t you know that without that cold, Dea would not have been blind, and if Dea were not blind she would not love you? |
12587 | Do n''t you see it is thirsty? |
12587 | Do souls require mortal eyes to see each other?" |
12587 | Do we inherit sin as a debt? |
12587 | Do we not cease to belong to our own circumscribed circle, and become part of the great family of all? |
12587 | Do you hear me? |
12587 | Do you hear? |
12587 | Do you know of these things? |
12587 | Do you know that I was domestic doctor to a lord, who was called Marmaduke, and who had thirty- six thousand a year? |
12587 | Do you know that the Archbishop of Canterbury has a revenue of £ 40,000 a year? |
12587 | Do you know that the herring fishers at Harlech eat grass when the fishery fails? |
12587 | Do you know that there is a duke in Scotland who can ride ninety miles without leaving his own estate? |
12587 | Do you know that, with rabbits only from the warrens of Earl Lindsay, they could feed all the riffraff of the Cinque Ports? |
12587 | Do you know what has happened, Dea? |
12587 | Do you know what there is outside? |
12587 | Do you not hear your mistress? |
12587 | Do you not see that you are in a balance, and that there is in one scale your power, and in the other your responsibility? |
12587 | Do you seriously consider that you are made for her? |
12587 | Do you think that occasion for tears has been wanting, had I felt disposed to weep?" |
12587 | Do you think that you can ever recapture a crowd once it has escaped your grasp? |
12587 | Do you understand that I am with you? |
12587 | Do you understand why I idolize you? |
12587 | Do you understand? |
12587 | Do you understand?" |
12587 | Do you wish this? |
12587 | Does he know that there is a dangerous pass, and that he can help his master to surmount it? |
12587 | Does it please you to answer to justice?" |
12587 | Does twilight fall fatally for all? |
12587 | Enter their order? |
12587 | Family? |
12587 | Fancy every one''s having a hand in the government? |
12587 | For instance, what has become of the may- pole, which the citizens of London erected on the 1st of May, when the peers went down to the House? |
12587 | For what end? |
12587 | For what was it? |
12587 | For what would he have to support Dea? |
12587 | From without, a voice, the voice of Ursus, said,--"You, boy, who have just eaten up my supper, are you already asleep?" |
12587 | Gwynplaine had a thought--"What should I be without her?" |
12587 | Gwynplaine, in a low voice, in which a tremor of fear was to be distinguished, murmured,--"What does it all mean?" |
12587 | Had Dea not been blind, would she have chosen Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Had Gwynplaine not been disfigured, would he have preferred Dea? |
12587 | Had Gwynplaine when a child been so worthy of attention that his face had been subjected to transmutation? |
12587 | Had he not a letter in his hand? |
12587 | Had he the right to withdraw his head from under the tongue of fire descending from on high to rest upon him? |
12587 | Had it ever occurred? |
12587 | Had she eaten a spoonful the less of turtle soup for it? |
12587 | Had she ever seen the sun? |
12587 | Had she not been assisted? |
12587 | Had they any pretext? |
12587 | Had this absence depended on him? |
12587 | Had this critical moment in Gwynplaine''s life arrived? |
12587 | Has any one ever had a beginning?" |
12587 | Has man, like the globe, two poles? |
12587 | Has not the blind man his dog? |
12587 | Has the heart two aspects-- one on which its love is poured forth in light; the other in darkness? |
12587 | Has the soul the wings of the bat? |
12587 | Have I committed crimes? |
12587 | Have we a queen-- yes or no? |
12587 | Have we not all our itch? |
12587 | Have you gnawed the bone-- yes or no? |
12587 | Have you remarked, in certain mechanisms, the smallness of the motive wheel? |
12587 | Have you seen"Chaos Vanquished?" |
12587 | Have you the plague, you thief? |
12587 | He continued,--"How much time have we still?" |
12587 | He had come out of it, having received a blow, and from whom? |
12587 | He knew that the police- officer summoned him to follow; but why? |
12587 | He said to him,--"Do you know how the Almighty lights the fire called love? |
12587 | He wished to tear himself away from this magnet; but how was he to carry out his wish? |
12587 | How am I going to manage to fit three into this caravan? |
12587 | How am I sure of what I know? |
12587 | How are you to resist, once flung? |
12587 | How arm himself against her-- or against himself? |
12587 | How came you by this child? |
12587 | How can any one be such a fool as to die and leave a child behind? |
12587 | How could I know the man? |
12587 | How could he escape? |
12587 | How could he resist? |
12587 | How could that be? |
12587 | How could they stand such nonsense? |
12587 | How could this be? |
12587 | How did the queen feel towards the Duchess Josiana? |
12587 | How do you get your living?" |
12587 | How far was it going to drag them? |
12587 | How long had they proceeded thus? |
12587 | How long have you been here? |
12587 | How render the thickets of foam, blendings of mountains and dreams? |
12587 | How should he set to work to drive them out? |
12587 | How to double that cape? |
12587 | How was he to combat that horrible anonyma, the law? |
12587 | How was he to set about it? |
12587 | How was it possible to refuse Anne admiration for taking the trouble of living at the period? |
12587 | How, then, could he have lost sight of her for a moment? |
12587 | How? |
12587 | How? |
12587 | I am a monster, do you say? |
12587 | I am an exception? |
12587 | I am beautiful, am I not? |
12587 | I am noble; what can be more tiresome? |
12587 | I forgive you; and do you know the reason? |
12587 | I will be there to conduct you--""Whither?" |
12587 | If he ever had a Me, where was the Me? |
12587 | If he looked forward to the morrow, what did he see? |
12587 | If our good king only knew it, would he not have you thrown into the bottom of a ditch, just to teach you better? |
12587 | If the indissoluble existed anywhere, was it not in their union? |
12587 | In all that had happened, had he been a free agent? |
12587 | In our own days do they not dye dogs blue and green? |
12587 | In tetanus who would feel a prick? |
12587 | In the great twilight world, open on all sides, what was there for the child? |
12587 | In the obscure and giddy debate of conscience, what had he said to himself? |
12587 | In this whirlwind, did he feel faintness and fatigue? |
12587 | In what measure is the moth responsible? |
12587 | In which direction?" |
12587 | Is all this to be borne? |
12587 | Is it a right? |
12587 | Is it man? |
12587 | Is it not so? |
12587 | Is it possible that demons are also essential? |
12587 | Is it possible that the bird and the moth should resist the attraction? |
12587 | Is it possible that the leaf should resist the wind? |
12587 | Is it possible that the stone should refuse obedience to the laws of gravitation? |
12587 | Is it possible? |
12587 | Is it that the justice of man works in twilight, and the judge gropes his way? |
12587 | Is it that the outpourings of our wishes flow naturally to the direction to which we most incline-- that of evil? |
12587 | Is it that you are afraid of tearing a hole in your rags? |
12587 | Is it their fault? |
12587 | Is it towards those nearest to ourselves, or is it towards mankind generally? |
12587 | Is n''t he a greedy scoundrel? |
12587 | Is she Fatality? |
12587 | Is she Providence? |
12587 | Is she an exception? |
12587 | Is she asleep? |
12587 | Is she in a swoon? |
12587 | Is sin an integral and inevitable part of our destiny? |
12587 | Is that you, Barkilphedro?" |
12587 | Is there a providence of demons as well as of God? |
12587 | Is there an appointment of that kind?" |
12587 | Is there any one in the bathroom? |
12587 | Is there any one there? |
12587 | Is there not in these excessive advertisements of self- abnegation and of honour a good deal of ostentation? |
12587 | Is there such an appointment?" |
12587 | Is this fair? |
12587 | Is this scaffolding of wild reasoning absolutely absurd? |
12587 | It charms, it terrifies; who knows which? |
12587 | It is Eternity saying,"What does it matter to me?" |
12587 | London Bridge, the page? |
12587 | Lord Clancharlie, does your lordship renounce transubstantiation, adoration of saints, and the mass?" |
12587 | Lord David? |
12587 | Lord Scarsdale translated the impression of the assembly in one exclamation,--"What is the monster doing here?" |
12587 | Made by whom? |
12587 | Marriage? |
12587 | Mischievous pick- pocket, evil- minded abortion, so you walk the streets after curfew? |
12587 | Montagu spoke with that accent, and sneering with his face close to that of Gwynplaine, shouted,--"What are you talking about?" |
12587 | Moreover, what are lords? |
12587 | Must we accept evil as part and portion of our whole? |
12587 | My lord, will you be a peer of England; yes or no? |
12587 | My lords, do you know who pays the taxes you vote? |
12587 | Needed there a greater motive than the speculation of his future exhibition? |
12587 | Nevertheless, we must remark that, strange as it may appear at first sight, he never once put himself the question,"Should he go?" |
12587 | Nevertheless-- and his conscience pressed him on this point-- had he merely submitted to what had been offered him? |
12587 | No? |
12587 | Now, who was this woman? |
12587 | Of course it was a woman, but was it not a chimera as well? |
12587 | Of what butterfly is, then, this earthly life the grub? |
12587 | Of what family was she? |
12587 | Of what good had been his early triumphs? |
12587 | Of what good is a king? |
12587 | Of what lion is this the lair? |
12587 | Of what providence? |
12587 | Of what use is the sun if not to reawaken that dark sleeper-- the conscience? |
12587 | Of what was he thinking? |
12587 | Of whom else should he dream? |
12587 | Of whom? |
12587 | Oh, you who are masters, do you know what you are? |
12587 | Oh, you would not make me desperate-- have me become a villain, a madman, drive me to perdition? |
12587 | One can only fight one''s equal; who is one''s equal if not one''s brother? |
12587 | One day Barkilphedro said to Josiana,--"Would your Grace like to make my fortune?". |
12587 | One question, Gwynplaine: do you believe in predestination? |
12587 | Over such serenity why cast his shadow? |
12587 | Peace, War, Legislation, Finance-- what have the people to do with such things? |
12587 | Perhaps in the barn, perhaps in the cellar; what does it matter? |
12587 | Pity for whom? |
12587 | Presence of what? |
12587 | Presently he asked himself, What could he do? |
12587 | Protector of whom? |
12587 | Providence acts advisedly, it crowns him who deserves the crown; do you pretend to know better than Providence? |
12587 | Reaching the side, he looked into space, and said, in a deep voice,--"Bist du bei mir? |
12587 | Really? |
12587 | Rising, and offering his chair to Gwynplaine, the sheriff added,--"My lord, will your lordship deign to seat yourself?" |
12587 | Shall I accept them? |
12587 | Shall we have the performance of''The Laughing Man''this evening?" |
12587 | She had asked,--"Are women admitted?" |
12587 | She laughed, a strange and childlike laugh; and, putting her mouth close to his ear, whispered,--"Do you want to see a mad woman? |
12587 | She murmured,--"You will think of me, wo n''t you? |
12587 | She replied,--"What for? |
12587 | She said to him,--"It is very fine, but--""But what?" |
12587 | She will say,''What am I to do in the world?'' |
12587 | Should he advance and re- enter the solitudes? |
12587 | Should he continue this journey? |
12587 | Should he go? |
12587 | Should he return and re- enter the streets? |
12587 | Sinister for whom? |
12587 | Situation? |
12587 | Society? |
12587 | Something wandering about something in chains-- can one imagine a more mournful lineament in the darkness? |
12587 | Still, what was the meaning of the bell? |
12587 | Suddenly Ursus cried out,--"What are you doing? |
12587 | Suddenly transformed into a lord, what ought he to have done? |
12587 | Take away the star, and what is the sky? |
12587 | Tapping the glass with her finger, she called,"Is any one there? |
12587 | Terrible to whom? |
12587 | That magical and malevolent abode, that strange and prison- like palace, was it also in the plot? |
12587 | That useful Colonel, one day, hung and rehung the same man, a republican, asking him each time,"Will you renounce the republic?" |
12587 | The chief cried out,--"What does that mean?" |
12587 | The child was near the voice; but where was it? |
12587 | The day came when Fabre d''Eglantine said to the Duchesse de Rohan,"N''est- tu pas la Chabot?" |
12587 | The doctor went on,--"To Hardquanonne, the Fleming of Flanders?" |
12587 | The doctor, having completely returned to the contemplation of the sea, pointed to this atmospheric arc, and said,--"Skipper, do you see?" |
12587 | The duchess asked,--"And who is Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | The duchess, turning her head, said,--"What does she want of me?" |
12587 | The first point to make clear was, did the queen love her sister? |
12587 | The head began again,--"Is any one there?" |
12587 | The lords are peers-- that is to say, equals-- of whom? |
12587 | The morrow, midnight? |
12587 | The skipper asked himself again this question,--"Is he a madman?" |
12587 | The skipper, remembering the two names given by the chief to this man, asked himself the question,--"Is he a madman, or is he a sage?" |
12587 | The vulgar ingrate is full of ashes; what was within Barkilphedro? |
12587 | The whole disturbance which the word used by Gwynplaine had produced in her ended in her saying one day,--"To be ugly-- what is it? |
12587 | Then he touched his satin clothes, and asked himself,--"Is it I? |
12587 | Then seizing the child with a grasp which would have been one of fury had it not been one of pity, he asked him: roughly,--"Who did that to you?" |
12587 | Then, under the form of interrogation so familiar to children and to the blind, she resumed,--"To see-- what is it that you call seeing? |
12587 | They have bought you-- and how? |
12587 | They may say to me,''But you give up politics, then?'' |
12587 | This being-- was it a being? |
12587 | This black witness was a remainder, and an awful remainder-- a remainder of what? |
12587 | This woman, how and why was she there? |
12587 | Thus ideal felicity was found, the perfect joy of life was realized, the mysterious problem of happiness was solved; and by whom? |
12587 | To adore each other in the shadows, to love in the plenitude of silence; who could not become reconciled to such an eternity? |
12587 | To be beloved, is not that everything? |
12587 | To be comic without and tragic within, what suffering can be more humiliating? |
12587 | To be liable to contribute, and to be liable to serve; is not that enough? |
12587 | To escape was now his whole thought-- to escape from what? |
12587 | To have_ le tour_--what does it mean? |
12587 | To heaven? |
12587 | To make his fortune? |
12587 | To protect the being who loves you, to give what she requires to her who shines on you as your star, can anything be sweeter? |
12587 | To see what? |
12587 | To serve and to defend the people? |
12587 | To unmake that of others? |
12587 | To what colossus did all this grandeur appertain? |
12587 | To whom has it not happened to be free in appearance, yet to feel that his wings are hampered? |
12587 | To whom? |
12587 | To- day, what was he? |
12587 | Towards whom is our first duty? |
12587 | Ursus addressed him abruptly,--"What are you laughing about?" |
12587 | Ursus raised his voice severely,--"Oh, you are happy, are you? |
12587 | WHY SHOULD A GOLD PIECE LOWER ITSELF BY MIXING WITH A HEAP OF PENNIES? |
12587 | Was London Bridge an illusion? |
12587 | Was ever anything so mad? |
12587 | Was he a lord? |
12587 | Was he about to fall without consciousness on the pavement? |
12587 | Was he about to succumb? |
12587 | Was he conscious of it? |
12587 | Was he going to commit the folly of dreaming about the unknown beauty? |
12587 | Was he going to knock at the gate of the jail? |
12587 | Was he made a peer of England expressly for this duchess? |
12587 | Was his temptation prearranged? |
12587 | Was it God who was being deceived? |
12587 | Was it ever anything? |
12587 | Was it not absurd? |
12587 | Was it off Ortach? |
12587 | Was it possible that it was all effaced? |
12587 | Was it possible? |
12587 | Was it possible? |
12587 | Was it the corpse? |
12587 | Was it the fault of ventriloquism? |
12587 | Was it the wind? |
12587 | Was it to come? |
12587 | Was it when they touched the Caskets? |
12587 | Was it when they were whirled about the shallows west of Aurigny? |
12587 | Was no one left? |
12587 | Was not he, the mountebank, below the lowest of the low? |
12587 | Was not his first duty towards her? |
12587 | Was not his name written on the letter--"_To Gwynplaine_?" |
12587 | Was not that entrance into a place where oppression could be discussed and resisted the realization of one of his deepest aspirations? |
12587 | Was she a maiden? |
12587 | Was she a woman? |
12587 | Was she free? |
12587 | Was she married, widow, maiden? |
12587 | Was there any excuse? |
12587 | Was this intentional or not? |
12587 | We will draw it, wo n''t we, Homo?" |
12587 | We will obey thee, what must we do? |
12587 | Well, and Homo? |
12587 | Well?" |
12587 | Were there snares, traps, dangers about her? |
12587 | Were they of brass or of silver- gilt? |
12587 | Were they softened by them? |
12587 | Were those fugitives Comprachicos? |
12587 | Were you born with that frightful laugh on your face? |
12587 | What advantage did it give him? |
12587 | What am I to do with them now? |
12587 | What amount of remorse was there in his despair? |
12587 | What are concessions? |
12587 | What are we sketching in these few preliminary pages? |
12587 | What are we to do? |
12587 | What availed it that he had commenced life by immediate victory over obstacle? |
12587 | What benefit, we ask again, would accrue to him in so doing? |
12587 | What business had I to follow Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | What can I do to prevent people walking about here? |
12587 | What can I do? |
12587 | What can be more savage than the gibbet? |
12587 | What can hinder it? |
12587 | What can there be to make us shudder in a fixed star? |
12587 | What could affect Dea, what could affect Gwynplaine, with such a fortress around them? |
12587 | What could be better? |
12587 | What could be more touching? |
12587 | What could have happened? |
12587 | What could he do against such a temptation? |
12587 | What could he do to harm the duchess? |
12587 | What could he do with all that was himself? |
12587 | What could he hope for more-- he so obscure against her so radiant? |
12587 | What could he not tell them? |
12587 | What did Gwynplaine feel? |
12587 | What did he know about her? |
12587 | What did he owe Josiana? |
12587 | What did he realize? |
12587 | What did he see around him? |
12587 | What did it all mean? |
12587 | What did this mean? |
12587 | What do I know of such things? |
12587 | What do they implore? |
12587 | What do they signify? |
12587 | What do they threaten? |
12587 | What do you desire? |
12587 | What do you mean by all that love- making nonsense? |
12587 | What do you set yourself up to be, I wonder? |
12587 | What do you think of all this scum, Gwynplaine? |
12587 | What do you want of me? |
12587 | What do you want that you have not already? |
12587 | What do you want?" |
12587 | What does it matter? |
12587 | What does the bell prove? |
12587 | What evil can I do him in return? |
12587 | What fearful thing is about to take place?" |
12587 | What for? |
12587 | What for? |
12587 | What good was a Josiana? |
12587 | What had been done to them? |
12587 | What had happened to them all? |
12587 | What had happened? |
12587 | What had he accepted? |
12587 | What had put it into her head to be born? |
12587 | What had she now before her? |
12587 | What had they to do in my caravan, the little blackguards? |
12587 | What harm did his deformity do Gwynplaine? |
12587 | What has the bird done at which you fire? |
12587 | What have I done to you? |
12587 | What intention possessed him? |
12587 | What is Chaos? |
12587 | What is a hurricane but a caprice? |
12587 | What is an envious man? |
12587 | What is his laugh? |
12587 | What is his son? |
12587 | What is it that this hammer, the bell, forges on the anvil of thought? |
12587 | What is it which is bearing down on us? |
12587 | What is moving? |
12587 | What is night? |
12587 | What is that great tower yonder? |
12587 | What is the father of Privilege? |
12587 | What is the queen to me? |
12587 | What is there in a king? |
12587 | What is this that they have done to me?" |
12587 | What kind of band was it which had left the child behind in its flight? |
12587 | What kind of scales could there be in the heart of this woman? |
12587 | What latent meaning have they? |
12587 | What mattered that? |
12587 | What matters? |
12587 | What means did his wretched appointment offer to attain so difficult an object? |
12587 | What merit had she? |
12587 | What more could he want? |
12587 | What more should they want? |
12587 | What part had that look in fate? |
12587 | What power could ever break that iron chain, bound with knots of flowers? |
12587 | What put it into my head to come to this Weymouth seven times devoted to the infernal deities? |
12587 | What sin can we have committed in the sight of God? |
12587 | What the devil has your bundle got to croak about?" |
12587 | What then? |
12587 | What time is it then? |
12587 | What to? |
12587 | What trumps has he? |
12587 | What was Barkilphedro''s age? |
12587 | What was Barkilphedro? |
12587 | What was I saying? |
12587 | What was destiny? |
12587 | What was he to do between those two silences-- the mute plain and the deaf city? |
12587 | What was he to do? |
12587 | What was he? |
12587 | What was it all about, and what could it all mean? |
12587 | What was she doing to be so? |
12587 | What was that shoal? |
12587 | What was that which had arrested and detained him-- a prison? |
12587 | What was the crime? |
12587 | What was the crime? |
12587 | What was the outrage? |
12587 | What was there behind that letter? |
12587 | What was this animal? |
12587 | What was this? |
12587 | What was to become of him? |
12587 | What were they going to do with him? |
12587 | What were those living creatures of which his wandering life showed him so many specimens, changed every day? |
12587 | What wind from the tomb had swept over them? |
12587 | What would become of him without Dea? |
12587 | What would become of the state if no one consented to serve it? |
12587 | What would have become of that poor child, the sweet blind girl who loved him? |
12587 | What would she have said could she have suddenly obtained her sight? |
12587 | What would the surf do with them? |
12587 | What would you have me do there? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | What? |
12587 | When Wolsey robbed the nation of Whitehall, and when Henry robbed Wolsey of it, who complained? |
12587 | When a man is made out of night, how is he to forgive so many beams of light? |
12587 | When did you arrive? |
12587 | When is this to end? |
12587 | When one comes to a fresh place, how is one to know anything about it? |
12587 | When people asked Democritus,''How do you know?'' |
12587 | When shall we see him again? |
12587 | Whence arise those strange, visible changes which occur in the soul of man? |
12587 | Whence came this improvement from the miserable hut to the Olympic caravan? |
12587 | Whence do you come?" |
12587 | Whence do you come?" |
12587 | Whence had come the succour? |
12587 | Where am I to begin? |
12587 | Where am I?" |
12587 | Where are the servants? |
12587 | Where can I find a stone to throw at him? |
12587 | Where is Dea? |
12587 | Where is Dea? |
12587 | Where is Gwynplaine? |
12587 | Where is he, I wonder? |
12587 | Where is he, that I may insult him? |
12587 | Where is he?" |
12587 | Where is it that I have just alighted?--on the highest peak? |
12587 | Where should we be if every one had his rights? |
12587 | Where was he? |
12587 | Where was he? |
12587 | Where was it gone? |
12587 | Where was she, the star? |
12587 | Where was the leak? |
12587 | Where was the use of depriving myself of everything for their sakes? |
12587 | Where were they? |
12587 | Where were they? |
12587 | Where? |
12587 | Wherefore the malevolent? |
12587 | Wherefore these deviations in the swell of the ocean? |
12587 | Wherefore? |
12587 | Which is, thenceforth, the straight line? |
12587 | Which of the two refusals should he choose? |
12587 | Which shall we take? |
12587 | Which way did you get in? |
12587 | Which way were they going to turn? |
12587 | Whither flew his thoughts? |
12587 | Who are you? |
12587 | Who are you? |
12587 | Who can paint the alternating hollows and promontories, the valleys, the melting bosoms, the sketches? |
12587 | Who can swim?" |
12587 | Who can tell? |
12587 | Who can tell? |
12587 | Who could be the inhabitant of this stately palace? |
12587 | Who could have hoped for this? |
12587 | Who could tell what sinister mysteries lurked behind this phantom? |
12587 | Who had brought them together? |
12587 | Who has dug this gulf? |
12587 | Who has not at some time felt this pendulum in his brain? |
12587 | Who has not heard the deep clamours of the soul? |
12587 | Who has turned over the leaves of the Doomsday Book? |
12587 | Who healed and nourished me? |
12587 | Who is in danger? |
12587 | Who is it who led me astray? |
12587 | Who is that man?" |
12587 | Who is there who has not remarked a kind of intelligent anxiety in animals? |
12587 | Who is there? |
12587 | Who knows all the mysterious forms assumed by God? |
12587 | Who knows? |
12587 | Who laughs at what? |
12587 | Who mutilated me? |
12587 | Who now knows the word Comprachicos, and who knows its meaning? |
12587 | Who of you have been to Newcastle- upon- Tyne? |
12587 | Who speaks of me? |
12587 | Who the victim? |
12587 | Who was Rodope but a queen loving Pteh, a man with a crocodile''s head? |
12587 | Who was he? |
12587 | Who was it brought you in? |
12587 | Who was it who was thus being hurried on-- a prince, a prisoner? |
12587 | Who was the dupe? |
12587 | Who was this intruder? |
12587 | Who was this man? |
12587 | Who would have believed it? |
12587 | Who? |
12587 | Whom? |
12587 | Whose simplicity was being abused? |
12587 | Whose the generosity? |
12587 | Whose the glory? |
12587 | Why Should a Gold Piece Lower Itself by Mixing with a Heap of Pennies? |
12587 | Why are you getting up? |
12587 | Why did he stop? |
12587 | Why did they come like that? |
12587 | Why do you cry?" |
12587 | Why had he been persecuted? |
12587 | Why has it all passed away? |
12587 | Why hasten the conclusion? |
12587 | Why have I been brought into this dungeon? |
12587 | Why her? |
12587 | Why him? |
12587 | Why is the contrary true of the Atlantic? |
12587 | Why monsters? |
12587 | Why not erect statues to him? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why not? |
12587 | Why object to such manners? |
12587 | Why redeemed? |
12587 | Why should I trade with these travellers? |
12587 | Why should James II., whose credit required the concealment of such acts, have allowed that to be written which endangered their success? |
12587 | Why should he want to speak and to reason? |
12587 | Why such exaggeration of solitude and exile? |
12587 | Why talk of a man in love? |
12587 | Why this Josiana? |
12587 | Why this stigma? |
12587 | Why was she a Protestant? |
12587 | Why, then, had he come there? |
12587 | Why, under the Equator, are they highest in the middle of the sea? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Why? |
12587 | Will you answer? |
12587 | Would not everything come to a standstill? |
12587 | Would they set Gwynplaine at liberty? |
12587 | Would you have states driven like clouds? |
12587 | Yesterday, what was he? |
12587 | You are masked for ever by your own flesh-- what can be more ingenious? |
12587 | You are not angry with me, are you? |
12587 | You disguised yourself in order to get here, Gwynplaine?" |
12587 | You doubt it? |
12587 | You imitate successfully the cries of beasts; but what would you say if, when you were making love to a lady, I passed my time in barking at you? |
12587 | You take notice of what I say, father, do you not? |
12587 | You will remember my song? |
12587 | You will remember the Green Box, wo n''t you, and poor blind little Dea? |
12587 | [ Footnote 8: Art thou near me?] |
12587 | _ That_ he? |
12587 | _ You_ die, my Dea? |
12587 | _ You_ die? |
12587 | a destiny so reptile? |
12587 | and we must think it good that they do; and even if we do not, what harm will it do them? |
12587 | be accepted by them? |
12587 | could he look thus askance at order reconstituted, a nation exalted, and a religion restored? |
12587 | could it be that Barkilphedro should miss his aim? |
12587 | did you pick her up?" |
12587 | do you know what the man is who is happy by right? |
12587 | do you see what you are doing? |
12587 | does it lack a certain justice? |
12587 | does such a thing exist? |
12587 | had she deprived herself of anything in the hateful overflowing of her superfluous luxuries? |
12587 | he cried, shuddering,"what is the matter?" |
12587 | he cried;"what are you about? |
12587 | how do the oaks fall? |
12587 | how many teeth have you in your jaws? |
12587 | how were they to prove that they held it from God? |
12587 | lost? |
12587 | or...."He raised his eyes, but looked beyond the ceiling, and his lips murmured,--"Is it Thou?" |
12587 | so this is your first time in these waters?" |
12587 | the same person?" |
12587 | to throw off his mask and have his former face restored; to be the creature he had perchance been created, handsome and charming? |
12587 | was the dangerous and desirable object of his dream lurking all the while behind these successive glimpses of heaven? |
12587 | what can I do? |
12587 | what had they done to them? |
12587 | what is to become of us? |
12587 | what of that? |
12587 | what pain deeper? |
12587 | what''s your name? |
12587 | what?" |
12587 | whence do you come?" |
12587 | where was she? |
12587 | where was the Green Box, poverty, joy, the sweet wandering life-- wandering together, like the swallows? |
12587 | who says it was n''t? |
12587 | why do you not enter?" |
12587 | why had he allowed himself to be separated from Dea? |
12587 | you believe that effrontery is confined to abandoned women? |
12587 | you do n''t know?" |
48405 | And,continued his Lordship, waxing eloquent,"if time hangs heavy on their hands----"Are there no beggars at the gate, Nor any poor about the lands? |
48405 | County Match? 48405 Have you_ Praed_?" |
48405 | How long,asks_ Punch à propos_ of"domiciliary"visits and raids,"are our Cabinet Ministers to be made the sport of clamorous women? |
48405 | Prayed, Miss? 48405 What business have you here?" |
48405 | What do you know about the Mediterranean? |
48405 | What of the night? |
48405 | ''Oo wrote it?" |
48405 | ( Query-- Is it the right way up? |
48405 | *** What will Britain''s verdict be? |
48405 | --"And that is?" |
48405 | And, if so,_ what_ is it?)] |
48405 | Apathetic alike when it''s raining And when it is warm? |
48405 | Are you bored by the leaders of Spender? |
48405 | Are you jaded with aeroplaning And sated with social reform? |
48405 | Are you sick of Sicilian grimaces? |
48405 | Are you tired of the profile of Ainley? |
48405 | Are you weary of Marathon races And careless in choosing your spats? |
48405 | As he argued,"If Bacon wrote Shakespeare''s Plays, why, in the name of all that is biliteral, should not Shakespeare have written Bacon''s Essays?" |
48405 | At the Flummerys'', when your partner asks,"What shall I get you?" |
48405 | Botha_ Premier_? |
48405 | Botha_ Premier_? |
48405 | But Where''s the sense-- unless we''re sure That we a conscience_ have_? |
48405 | But then why did you send me to a Public School? |
48405 | But when a Man lives upon his wife, and skulks around his diggings, Who is the"''Onest Worker"then? |
48405 | But where is now your ancient pomp? |
48405 | Ca n''t Maeterlinck make you applaud? |
48405 | Cattle- driving in Ireland, deplorable as a form of popular pastime, is a trifle compared with this new sport of Cabinet Minister- hunting?" |
48405 | Come, now, you do n''t mean to say you hate history?" |
48405 | County C., why stop our glee? |
48405 | Cricket? |
48405 | Das ist ein kolossaler Kerl, nicht wahr? |
48405 | Did not Ibsen contrive a drama of enthralling interest on the subject of the drainage of a watering- place? |
48405 | Do dancers no longer delight you, Who wriggle about_ Ã la_ Maud? |
48405 | Do those Fabian beasts of prey Wish to take my wife away? |
48405 | Do we turn out_ good_ girls and boys? |
48405 | Do you constantly hanker, when rinking, For draughts of sloe gin? |
48405 | Do you envy each bonnet insanely That harbours a bee? |
48405 | Do you find that the music of Auber And Elgar is equally tame? |
48405 | Do you find that"The Follies"engender A feeling of_ gêne_? |
48405 | Do you read without blushing or winking The novels of Elinor Glyn? |
48405 | Do you shy at the strains that are sober? |
48405 | Do you think it can be true That the death of competition Guarantees for me and you Sinless Edens-- new edition? |
48405 | Do you weep when you miss your short putts? |
48405 | Does Wagner no longer inflame? |
48405 | Does he toil through heavy sand Seeking how to keep his land Clean and prosperous and free? |
48405 | Does his wandering course reveal Only love of Britain''s weal? |
48405 | F.-M._ Punch_:"Going to give them any training?" |
48405 | FAIR AMERICAN:"But your brother''s going to be a_ Duke_, is n''t he?" |
48405 | FOREIGN SECRETARY:"What, and let my opponents see them too?"] |
48405 | FUTURE DUKE:"What are you goin''to do this mornin''eh?" |
48405 | FUTURE EARL:"Well, what else is there to do, you rotter?"] |
48405 | H. T.:"An''if yer''ad two pigs?" |
48405 | H. T.:"And if yer''ad two cows, yer''d give me one?" |
48405 | Hardacre?" |
48405 | Has Ibsen no power to excite you? |
48405 | Has she not ever loved and served us, Royal to us, loyal to us, gracious ever been? |
48405 | Hate all your lessons? |
48405 | Have you ceased with enjoyment to hail your Diurnal allowance of nuts? |
48405 | Have you ever seen any before?" |
48405 | Have you not noticed in their stage directions,"A solemn music"? |
48405 | Here an"important lady"addresses deep square- leg, standing near the boundary,"Would you kindly move away? |
48405 | Here, as in earlier years,_ Punch_ sided with the advanced Liberals, rejoiced in his well- known cartoon,"Who said''Atrocities''?" |
48405 | His"Sensible Woman"retorts on her"Shrieking Sister":"_ You_ help our cause? |
48405 | How are you, and how are your people, and all that sort of silly rot?" |
48405 | How does it end?" |
48405 | How should he write plays? |
48405 | If you meant mir any of your blooming cheek zu geben why did you make your grandmamma Colonel eines Deutschen Cavallerie Regiments? |
48405 | In 1912 an old lady is seen asking a policeman,"Is_ that_ what they call the Quadruped, officer?" |
48405 | In the cartoon"The Black Man''s Burden"in January, 1914,_ Punch_ drew two negroes singing as a duet"Why do de Christians rage?" |
48405 | In the middle''nineties the banjo was still fashionable, and the amateur singer a source of grief and wonderment to_ Punch_:-- WHY DOST THOU SING? |
48405 | Is Bismarck quite well? |
48405 | Is everything all right?" |
48405 | Is it because thou deemest We love to hear thy sorry quavers ring? |
48405 | Is it that he turns his eyes To a goal that needs disguise? |
48405 | Is it-- men have told me so-- Some preposterous abysm, Into which we all may drop-- With the criminals on top? |
48405 | Is n''t that imaginative?" |
48405 | Is the Metchnikoff treatment a failure? |
48405 | Is the raucous"Well hit, Johnny,"of the crowd a fitting, a reverent salutation? |
48405 | Is the vehement_ Express_ Justified in all it mentions; And are Wells and G. B. S. Worse than_ Sikes_ in their intentions? |
48405 | Is there to be no forgiveness, are we never to cancel old scores and begin our international book- keeping, if I may so term it, on a clean page? |
48405 | JOHN BULL( aroused from slumber and only half awake):"What''s wrong?" |
48405 | JOHN BULL( drowsily):"Am I? |
48405 | Jamais nus; même dans un bain Sont- ils tout habillà © s enfin? |
48405 | John Bull, aroused from slumber and only half- awake, asks"What''s wrong?" |
48405 | Just a paltry party score, Checked by some about him, more-- More particular than he? |
48405 | Little Czar, with soul so small, How are you a Czar at all? |
48405 | Musst Du deinen Finger in jeder Torte haben? |
48405 | Now sense is asking,"Who shall teach our teachers?" |
48405 | O Lady, have we ever In thought or action done thee any wrong? |
48405 | On July 29 the chief cartoon,"What of the Dawn?" |
48405 | Or cloyed by the pathos of Caine? |
48405 | Or continue to exist As an Individualist? |
48405 | Or is your cup habitually brimming With water from the Heliconian fount? |
48405 | Or was Stuart Mill correct-- Will there be some grave defect? |
48405 | Or will Hardie''s fatted friends Leave me only odds and ends? |
48405 | Or-- observe that I am quite Open- minded, gentle reader-- Are they sometimes nearly right In the shocking_ Labour Leader_? |
48405 | Or-- see_ Justice_--shall we share Perfect freedom with the air? |
48405 | Our"Uncrowned King"at last to stand''Midst the legitimate Lord''s anointed? |
48405 | Punch_: Excuse me a moment, but is this Act_ very_ bad? |
48405 | S.:"Wot yer talkin''about? |
48405 | S.?" |
48405 | Shall I boldly blossom out As a follower of Hyndman? |
48405 | Shall we all be servile wrecks With the brand of Marx imprinted On our miserable necks, As_ The Referee_ has hinted? |
48405 | So, dear reader, will you, please, Tell a poor, distracted Briton Whom, in troubled times like these, He should put his little bit on? |
48405 | The Conscience- Clause? |
48405 | The King must know best, and"while all the discontented loose their tongues and rave against him, shall the King be still?" |
48405 | The men were"doing splendidly,"but as Colonel_ Punch_ says in one cartoon,"Yes, they always do; but is this''forward policy''worth all this?" |
48405 | The organ- grinder says,"Eh? |
48405 | The tender falsetto of Tree? |
48405 | The_ parvenu_ Protector thrust Amidst the true Porphyrogeniti? |
48405 | Then I suppose Great Britain has no athletics at present? |
48405 | Then they''ll need to be pretty brave, wo n''t they?" |
48405 | Then wherefore should''st thou visit us for ever With thy one song? |
48405 | There is a pleasant story that when the Queen was informed that she had reigned longer than any of her predecessors, she said:"Have I done well?" |
48405 | This line of goods ought to make business a bit brisker, what?" |
48405 | To the question,"How is the Olympic spirit acquired?" |
48405 | Unattracted by Chantecler hats? |
48405 | Under the heading"The''Arden- ing Process,"Orlando addresses his companion:"Tired, Rosalind?" |
48405 | Warum kannst Du nie ruhig bleiben, why ca n''t you hold your blessed row? |
48405 | Was it for this that I made you an Admiral meiner Flotte and allowed you to rig yourself out in einer wunderschönen Uniform mit einem gekokten Hut? |
48405 | Was that well done? |
48405 | What do you think of it?" |
48405 | What game can take her grief away? |
48405 | What is it fascinates the Eatonian bonne so? |
48405 | What is it?" |
48405 | What matters it for whom you buy The ring of diamonds and pearls, A maid whose birth is none too high, Or daughter of a hundred earls? |
48405 | What puffs the plumage of the ducal swans so? |
48405 | What shall be said of a middle- aged and pompous party whose pleasure it is to play practical jokes that set two nations by the ears? |
48405 | What spectacle delights the footman John so? |
48405 | What you give me if I go?" |
48405 | What_ is_"Good"? |
48405 | When will he solace our sight, Panoplied, plumed and spurred? |
48405 | Whence hath he lore of law and medicine, of history and science? |
48405 | Where and how do you propose to end? |
48405 | Whereon Sir Edward Grey replies:"What, and let my opponents see them too?" |
48405 | Who hales before the judgment seat The vendor of unwholesome ices? |
48405 | Who spoors the burglar''s nimble feet, And spots the three- card man''s devices? |
48405 | Who that lived that Day in London could forget its echoing ring? |
48405 | Who''s apt at any time to have his Complexion spoiled by hob- nailed navvies? |
48405 | Whose house are you burning?" |
48405 | Why are the Kaiser''s courtiers jumped upon so? |
48405 | Why ca n''t you carry it between you? |
48405 | Why does the British Press keep on and on so? |
48405 | Why dost thou sing? |
48405 | Why dost thou sing? |
48405 | Why dost thou sing? |
48405 | Why dost thou sing? |
48405 | Why dost thou sing? |
48405 | Why is not Plum Warner( I knew him in long clothes) a Knight of the Garter? |
48405 | Why is not Ranji( exquisitely delicate Ranji-- the Walter Pater of the cricket field) Viceroy of India? |
48405 | Why not an equestrian statue of Carlyle, reading his own works?] |
48405 | Why not? |
48405 | Why was it that the sun last Wednesday shone so? |
48405 | Why wilt thou never weary? |
48405 | Why wilt thou warble half a note too flat? |
48405 | Will that entity, the State Of Collectivist Utopia, Actually operate Something like a cornucopia? |
48405 | Will the coming Commune be Paradise for you and me? |
48405 | Words are eaten; every day Broken pledges thrown away; Here the riddle-- where the key? |
48405 | You do n''t imagine I''ve time to play cricket nowadays, do you? |
48405 | Your little thingy- thing''s off colour too?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: A BORN LEGISLATOR"Do you often attend the sittings in the House of Lords, Duke?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: BOGEY OR BENEFACTOR? |
48405 | [ Illustration: BROTHER:"What did you say to that old chap just now?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: CONVERSATIONALIST:"Do you play Ping- Pong?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: CULTURE BY THE SEA"Have you Browning''s works?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: FASHION"Oh, Mummy, have you been vaccinated on_ both_ arms?"] |
48405 | [ Illustration: FOND WIFE:"What do you think of Bertie''s new hat, dear?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: HECKLING THOMAS:"D''yer mean ter say if yer''ad two''osses yer''d give me one?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: HOST:"How do you like the course?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: HOSTESS:"And do you really believe in Christian Science?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: MISS SMITH:"Now, Madge, tell me, which would you rather be-- pretty or good?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: MRS. MONTMORENCY- SMYTHE:"And what were you reading when I came in, my dear? |
48405 | [ Illustration: ON THE RHINE FIRST TOURIST:"Care to use these glasses?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: SHACON AND BAKESPEARE HOMER:"Look here, what_ does_ it matter which of you chaps wrote the other fellow''s books? |
48405 | [ Illustration: THE ONLY ALTERNATIVE JOHN BULL:"Recruits coming in nicely, Sergeant?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: THE RECTOR:"Now, Molly, would you rather be beautiful or good?" |
48405 | [ Illustration: THE''ARDEN- ING PROCESS ORLANDO:"Tired, Rosalind?" |
48405 | [ Illustration:"MUMMY, WHAT''S THAT MAN FOR?"] |
48405 | [ Illustration:"OLIVER ASKS FOR"LESS JOHN BULL( fed up):"Please, sir, need I have quite so many good things?" |
48405 | [ Illustration:"WHO SAID--''ATROCITIES''?" |
48405 | [ Sidenote:_ Argument and Ridicule_][ Illustration: THE SPLIT BUDDING SUFFRAGETTE:"I say, Pussy"( with intensity),"are you a Peth or a Pank?"] |
48405 | [ Sidenote:_ Punch and Tom Morris_][ Illustration: ONE OF THE BOYS FIRST CADDIE:"Who''re ye foor this morning, Angus?" |
48405 | _ Orange_? |
48405 | _ Punch_ contemptuously dismisses the piece with two lines and two villainous puns:"''''Ave a New Piece?'' |
48405 | _ Q._ And has not an amateur cricketer an advantage over other competitors for fashionable fame? |
48405 | _ Q._ And if trade is driven away from the country, will it come back? |
48405 | _ Q._ And what is the reward of such a time of misery? |
48405 | _ Q._ And what is the value of reason? |
48405 | _ Q._ Are the subscriptions coming in? |
48405 | _ Q._ But are not arguments better than bludgeons? |
48405 | _ Q._ But are not their interests yours? |
48405 | _ Q._ But does all the strike money go to the maintenance of the hearth and home? |
48405 | _ Q._ But have not the employers any interests? |
48405 | _ Q._ But how are the wives and children of strikers to live if their husbands and fathers earn no wages? |
48405 | _ Q._ But if somebody says he dislikes it? |
48405 | _ Q._ But if strikes continue will not trade suffer? |
48405 | _ Q._ But is not the future of equal importance to the present? |
48405 | _ Q._ But may not the use of revolvers produce the military? |
48405 | _ Q._ But surely it is the case of cutting off the nose to spite the mouth? |
48405 | _ Q._ But, the Riot Act read, does not the work become serious? |
48405 | _ Q._ Does everybody like the Olympic spirit? |
48405 | _ Q._ From the tone of your last answer it would seem that you do not consider the lot of a Society Lion a happy one? |
48405 | _ Q._ Is there any celebrity other than literary or exploratory capable of securing the attention of Mrs. Leo Hunter and her colleagues? |
48405 | _ Q._ Is there ever any other remedy? |
48405 | _ Q._ Is this sufficient? |
48405 | _ Q._ Then a strike represents either nothing or idleness? |
48405 | _ Q._ Then you stand by the opinions of the officials? |
48405 | _ Q._ What is a crank? |
48405 | _ Q._ What is the right sort? |
48405 | and_ Punch_ supplied the answer:--"Have I done well?" |
48405 | he merely adds,"_ Hot_ or_ cold_ water?" |
48405 | to the question,"Say, how did you get that el''gant little cross?" |
48405 | whereon John Bull rejoins drowsily:"Am I? |
4926 | Ah, Tristram''far away from me, Art thou from restless anguish free? 4926 Ah, lady,"said Geraint,"what hath befallen thee?" |
4926 | And art thou certain that if that knight knew all this, he would come to thy rescue? |
4926 | And how can I do that? |
4926 | And is it thus they have done with a maiden such as she, and moreover my sister, bestowing her without my consent? 4926 And what dost thou here?" |
4926 | And what may that be? |
4926 | And who is he? |
4926 | And who was it that slew them? |
4926 | And you, wherefore come you? |
4926 | By what means will that be? |
4926 | Damsel,said Sir Perceval,"who hath disinherited you? |
4926 | Did he meet with thee? |
4926 | Didst thou hear what Llywarch sung, The intrepid and brave old man? 4926 Didst thou inquire of them if they possessed any art?" |
4926 | Do you do this as one of the best knights? |
4926 | Dost thou know him? |
4926 | Dost thou know how much I owe thee? |
4926 | Fair brother, when came ye hither? |
4926 | Fair damsel,said Sir Launcelot,"know ye in this country any adventures?" |
4926 | Fair knight,said he,"how is it with you?" |
4926 | Geraint,said Guenever,"knowest thou the name of that tall knight yonder?" |
4926 | Has he not given it before the presence of these nobles? |
4926 | Hast thou heard what Avaon sung, The son of Taliesin, of the recording verse? 4926 Hast thou heard what Garselit sung, The Irishman whom it is safe to follow? |
4926 | Hast thou heard what Llenleawg sung, The noble chief wearing the golden torques? 4926 Hast thou hope of being released for gold or for silver, or for any gifts of wealth, or through battle and fighting?" |
4926 | Hast thou not received all thou didst ask? |
4926 | Have you any tidings? |
4926 | Heaven prosper thee, Geraint,said she;"and why didst thou not go with thy lord to hunt?" |
4926 | I come, lord, from singing in England; and wherefore dost thou inquire? |
4926 | I put the case,said Palamedes,"that you were well armed, and I naked as ye be; what would you do to me now, by your true knighthood?" |
4926 | I stand in need of counsel,he answered,"and what may that counsel be?" |
4926 | I will gladly,said he;"and in which direction dost thou intend to go?" |
4926 | In the name of Heaven,said Manawyddan,"where are they of the court, and all my host beside? |
4926 | Is it known,said Arthur,"where she is?" |
4926 | Is it time for us to go to meat? |
4926 | Is not that a mouse that I see in thy hand? |
4926 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair? 4926 Know ye,"said Arthur,"who is the knight with the long spear that stands by the brook up yonder?" |
4926 | Knowest thou his name? |
4926 | Lady,he said,"wilt thou tell me aught concerning thy purpose?" |
4926 | Lady,said he,"knowest thou where our horses are?" |
4926 | Lady,said they,"what thinkest thou that this is?" |
4926 | Lord,said Kicva,"wherefore should this be borne from these boors?" |
4926 | Lord,said she,"didst thou hear the words of those men concerning thee?" |
4926 | Lord,said she,"what craft wilt thou follow? |
4926 | My men,said Pwyll,"is there any among you who knows yonder lady?" |
4926 | My son,said she,"desirest thou to ride forth?" |
4926 | My soul,said Gawl,"will thy bag ever be full?" |
4926 | My soul,said Pwyll,"what is the boon thou askest?" |
4926 | Now where did he overtake thee? |
4926 | Now, fellow,said King Arthur,"canst thou bring me there where this giant haunteth?" |
4926 | Now,quoth Owain,"would it not be well to go and endeavor to discover that place?" |
4926 | Now,said Arthur,"where is the maiden for whom I heard thou didst give challenge?" |
4926 | O my lord,said she,"what dost thou here?" |
4926 | Say ye so? |
4926 | Seest thou yonder red tilled ground? |
4926 | Sir knight,said Arthur,"for what cause abidest thou here?" |
4926 | Sir, what penance shall I do? |
4926 | Sir,said Geraint,"what is thy counsel to me concerning this knight, on account of the insult which the maiden of Guenever received from the dwarf?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Bedivere,"what man is there buried that ye pray so near unto?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Bohort,"but how know ye that I shall sit there?" |
4926 | Sir,said Sir Galahad,"can you tell me the marvel of the shield?" |
4926 | Sir,said she,"when thinkest thou that Geraint will be here?" |
4926 | Sir,said the king,"is it your will to alight and partake of our cheer?" |
4926 | Sirs,said Sir Galahad,"what adventure brought you hither?" |
4926 | Tell me, good lad,said one of them,"sawest thou a knight pass this way either today or yesterday?" |
4926 | Tell me, tall man,said Perceval,"is that Arthur yonder?" |
4926 | Tell me,said Sir Bohort,"knowest thou of any adventure?" |
4926 | Tell me,said the knight,"didst thou see any one coming after me from the court?" |
4926 | That will I not, by Heaven,she said;"yonder man was the first to whom my faith was ever pledged; and shall I prove inconstant to him?" |
4926 | Then Perceval told him his name, and said,Who art thou?" |
4926 | There is; wherefore dost thou call? |
4926 | This is indeed a marvel,said he;"saw you aught else?" |
4926 | This will I do gladly; and who art thou? |
4926 | Traitor knight,said Queen Guenever,"what wilt thou do? |
4926 | Truly,said Pwyll,"this is to me the most pleasing quest on which thou couldst have come; and wilt thou tell me who thou art?" |
4926 | Verily,said she,"what thinkest thou to do?" |
4926 | What are ye? |
4926 | What discourse,said Guenever,"do I hear between you? |
4926 | What doth my knight the while? 4926 What harm is there in that, lady?" |
4926 | What has become,said they,"of Caradoc, the son of Bran, and the seven men who were left with him in this island?" |
4926 | What hast thou there, lord? |
4926 | What have ye seen? |
4926 | What is the forest that is seen upon the sea? |
4926 | What is the lofty ridge, with the lake on each side thereof? |
4926 | What is there about him,asked Arthur,"that thou never yet didst see his like?" |
4926 | What is this? |
4926 | What is thy craft? |
4926 | What is your lord''s name? |
4926 | What is your name? |
4926 | What is your name? |
4926 | What kind of a thief may it be, lord, that thou couldst put into thy glove? |
4926 | What knight is he that thou hatest so above others? |
4926 | What manner of thief is that? |
4926 | What manner of thief, lord? |
4926 | What sawest thou there? |
4926 | What sawest thou there? |
4926 | What say ye to this adventure,said Sir Gawain,"that one spear hath felled us all four?" |
4926 | What saying was that? |
4926 | What sort of meal? |
4926 | What then wouldst thou? |
4926 | What thinkest thou that we should do concerning this? |
4926 | What treatment is there for guests and strangers that alight in that castle? |
4926 | What was that? |
4926 | What wight art thou,the lady said,"that will not speak to me? |
4926 | What wilt thou more? |
4926 | What work art thou upon? |
4926 | What wouldst thou with Arthur? |
4926 | Where are my pages and my servants? 4926 Where is Cuchulain?" |
4926 | Where is he that seeks my daughter? 4926 Where is the Earl Ynywl,"said Geraint,"and his wife and his daughter?" |
4926 | Where,said she,"are thy companion and thy dogs?" |
4926 | Wherefore came she to me? |
4926 | Wherefore comes he? |
4926 | Wherefore not? |
4926 | Wherefore not? |
4926 | Wherefore wilt thou not? |
4926 | Wherefore,said Evnissyen,"comes not my nephew, the son of my sister, unto me? |
4926 | Which way went they hence? |
4926 | Who may he be? |
4926 | Whose are the sheep that thou dost keep, and to whom does yonder castle belong? |
4926 | Why dost thou ask my name? |
4926 | Why should I not prove adventures? |
4926 | Why withdrawest thou, false traitor? |
4926 | Why, who is he? |
4926 | Why,said Sir Lionel,"will ye stay me? |
4926 | Why? |
4926 | Will she come here if she is sent to? |
4926 | Will this please thee? |
4926 | Willest thou this, lord? |
4926 | Wilt thou follow my counsel,said the youth,"and take thy meal from me?" |
4926 | Wilt thou follow the counsel of another? |
4926 | Yes, in truth,said she;"and who art thou?" |
4926 | And Arthur said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4926 | And Gawain was much grieved to see Arthur in his state, and he questioned him, saying,"O my lord, what has befallen thee?" |
4926 | And Gwernach said to him,"O man, is it true that is reported of thee, that thou knowest how to burnish swords?" |
4926 | And Kilwich said to Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is thy daughter mine now?" |
4926 | And Sir Launcelot heard him say,"O sweet Lord, when shall this sorrow leave me, and when shall the holy vessel come by me whereby I shall be healed?" |
4926 | And after twenty- four days he opened his eyes; and when he saw folk he made great sorrow, and said,"Why have ye wakened me? |
4926 | And as they came in, every one of Pwyll''s knights struck a blow upon the bag, and asked,"What is here?" |
4926 | And his father inquired of him,"What has come over thee, my son, and what aileth thee?" |
4926 | And now, wilt thou come to guide me out of the town?" |
4926 | And the earl said to Enid,"Alas, lady, what hath befallen thee?" |
4926 | And the maiden bent down towards her, and said,"What aileth thee, that thou answereth no one to- day?" |
4926 | And the queen said,"Ah, dear brother, why have ye tarried so long? |
4926 | And the woman asked them,"Upon what errand come you here?" |
4926 | And then he said to the man,"Canst thou tell me the way to some chapel, where I may bury this body?" |
4926 | And they spoke unto him, and said,"O man, whose castle is that?" |
4926 | And they went up to the mound whereon the herdsman was, and they said to him,"How dost thou fare, herdsman?" |
4926 | And thinking that he knew him, he inquired of him,"Art thou Edeyrn, the son of Nudd?" |
4926 | And what work art thou upon, lord?" |
4926 | And what, lord, art thou doing?" |
4926 | And when meat was ended, Pwyll said,"Where are the hosts that went yesterday to the top of the mound?" |
4926 | And whence dost thou come, scholar?" |
4926 | And who will proceed with thee, since thou art not strong enough to traverse the land of Loegyr alone?" |
4926 | And with this they put questions one to another, Who had braver men? |
4926 | And ye also, who are ye?" |
4926 | Asked Gwyddno,"Art thou able to speak, and thou so little?" |
4926 | Bethink thee how thou art a king''s son, and a knight of the Table Round, and how thou art about to dishonor all knighthood and thyself?" |
4926 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4926 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4926 | But, O fair nephew, what be these ladies that hither be come with you?" |
4926 | Does she ever come hither, so that she may be seen?" |
4926 | Dost thou bring any new tidings?" |
4926 | Dost thou not know that the shower to- day has left in my dominions neither man nor beast alive that was exposed to it?'' |
4926 | He said to his mother,"Mother, what are those yonder?" |
4926 | How can we describe the conflict that agitated the heart of Tristram? |
4926 | Is it of those who are to conduct Geraint to his country?" |
4926 | Is it well for thee to mourn after that good man, or for anything else that thou canst not have?" |
4926 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair?" |
4926 | My lord,"he added,"will it be displeasing to thee if I ask whence thou comest also?" |
4926 | Next follow some moral triads:"Hast thou heard what Dremhidydd sung, An ancient watchman on the castle walls? |
4926 | Out upon the wharfs they came, Knight and burgher, lord and dame, And round the prow they read her name,''The Lady of Shalott''"Who is this? |
4926 | Said Gurhyr Gwalstat,"Is there a porter?" |
4926 | Said Gurhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
4926 | Said Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
4926 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon, the son of Modron, who was taken from his mother when three nights old?" |
4926 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4926 | So the porter went in, and Gwernach said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4926 | Spoke the youth:"Is there a porter?" |
4926 | Then Guenever said to Arthur,"Wilt thou permit me, lord, to go to- morrow to see and hear the hunt of the stag of which the young man spoke?" |
4926 | Then Sir Tristram cried out and said,"Thou coward knight, why wilt thou not do battle with me? |
4926 | Then at noon came a damsel unto him with his dinner, and asked him,"What cheer?" |
4926 | Then cried Sir Colgrevance,"Ah, Sir Bohort, why come ye not to bring me out of peril of death, wherein I have put me to succor you?" |
4926 | Then he asked of Geraint,"Have I thy permission to go and converse with yonder maiden, for I see that she is apart from thee?" |
4926 | Then he cried:"Ah, my lord Arthur, will ye leave me here alone among mine enemies?" |
4926 | Then he overtook a man clothed in a religious clothing, who said,"Sir Knight, what seek ye?" |
4926 | Then he said to the other,"And what is the cause of thy grief?" |
4926 | Then said Arthur,"Which of the marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4926 | Then said Perceval,"Tell me, is Sir Kay in Arthur''s court?" |
4926 | Then said the good man,"Now wottest thou who I am?" |
4926 | Then said the steward of the household,"Whither is it right, lord, to order the maiden?" |
4926 | Then the hoary- headed man said to him,"Young man, wherefore art thou thoughtful?" |
4926 | Then they took counsel, and said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4926 | To whom do these ships belong, and who is the chief amongst you?" |
4926 | Tristram believed it was certain death for him to return to Ireland; and how could he act as ambassador for his uncle in such a cause? |
4926 | What evil have I done to thee that thou shouldst act towards me and my possessions as thou hast this day? |
4926 | When Enid saw this, she cried out, saying,"O chieftain, whoever thou art, what renown wilt thou gain by slaying a dead man?" |
4926 | When wilt thou that I should present to thee the chieftain who has come with me hither?" |
4926 | Where are my attendants? |
4926 | Who had fairer or swifter horses or greyhounds? |
4926 | Who had more skilful or wiser bards than Maelgan? |
4926 | Why hast thou murdered this Duchess? |
4926 | Why hidest thou thyself within holes and walls like a coward? |
4926 | Will you insure me this, as ye be a true knight?" |
4926 | Will you now turn back, now you are so far advanced upon your journey? |
4926 | Wilt thou shame thyself? |
4926 | a chiding voice was heard of one approaching me and saying:''O knight, what has brought thee hither? |
4926 | and what is here? |
4926 | asked the king,"and will he come to the land?" |
4926 | couldst thou so one moment be, From her who so much loveth thee?" |
4926 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
4926 | hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts?" |
4926 | said Arthur,"what hast thou done, Merlin? |
4926 | said Arthur;"and whence do you come?" |
4926 | said Geraint,"how is it that thou hast lost them now?" |
4926 | said Geraint;"and whence dost thou come?" |
4926 | said Rhiannon,"wherefore didst thou give that answer?" |
4926 | said Sir Launcelot,"why have ye betrayed me?" |
4926 | said Sir Tristram,"what have I done? |
4926 | said Sir Tristram;"art thou not Sir Palamedes?" |
4926 | said he,"is it Geraint?" |
4926 | said he;"have you any news?" |
4926 | said they;"what is the mountain that is seen by the side of the ships?" |
4926 | what will he profit thee?" |
4926 | who hath proven him King Uther''s son? |
4926 | why hast thou slain my husband?" |
2988 | 23--and a lawyer? |
2988 | APPENDIX K A SUBSTITUTE FOR RULOFF HAVE WE A SIDNEY CARTON AMONG US? |
2988 | Am I right? |
2988 | Am I saying that the pulpit does not do its share toward disseminating the marrow, the meat of the gospel of Christ? |
2988 | Am I to go away and let them have peace and quiet for a year and a half, and then come back and only lecture them twice? |
2988 | America? |
2988 | And could we now? |
2988 | And do you think that you have added just the right smear of polish to the closing clause of the sentence? |
2988 | And ignorantly& unthinkingly? |
2988 | And shall we see Susy? |
2988 | And what is a man without energy? |
2988 | And what is the appendix for? |
2988 | And what the flavor can surpass Of sugar, spirit, lemons? |
2988 | And when the man draws them well why do they stir my admiration? |
2988 | And why should it be otherwise? |
2988 | And why should n''t I be? |
2988 | And will Mark Twain never write such another? |
2988 | Anything left of Hoffman? ” “ No, ” I said. |
2988 | Are the Blue and the Gray one to- day? |
2988 | Are the two things identical? |
2988 | Are there in Sir Walter''s novels passages done in good English--English which is neither slovenly nor involved? |
2988 | Are there passages which burn with real fire-- not punk, fox- fire, make- believe? |
2988 | Are there passages whose English is not poor& thin& commonplace, but is of a quality above that? |
2988 | Are you sure it was clams? |
2988 | Are you? ” I did not pursue the subject, and since then I have not traveled on my''nom de guerre''enough to hurt. |
2988 | Are you? ” That broke the ice. |
2988 | As concerns the man who has gone unpunished eleven million years, is it your belief that in life he did his duty by his microbes? |
2988 | At first he looked at the culprit thoughtfully, then he made some inquiries: “ Did you strike him first? ” Captain Klinefelter asked. |
2988 | At forty what do you do? |
2988 | B.--Look here, are you charging storage? |
2988 | Better lo''ed ye canna be, Will ye no come back again? |
2988 | Blasphemy? |
2988 | Bright? |
2988 | But I have n''t lost my temper, and I''ve made Livy lie down most of the time; could anybody make her lie down all the time? |
2988 | But ca n''t I get it in anywhere? |
2988 | But in the mean time what do you do? |
2988 | But to cease teaching and go back to the beginning again, was it not pitiable-- that spectacle? |
2988 | But what if it produce that in spite of you? |
2988 | But what is the use of remembering all these bitter details? |
2988 | But what of that? |
2988 | But what were you doing on the inside? |
2988 | By searching? |
2988 | By the way, third''s a lucky number for length of days, is n''t it? |
2988 | Ca n''t you tell her it always makes you sick to go home late at night or something like that? |
2988 | Can I support such grief as this? |
2988 | Can not the''Californian''afford to keep Mark all to itself? |
2988 | Can the curse of the Deity beautify a land? |
2988 | Can you conceive of a man''s getting himself into a sweat over so diminutive a provocation? |
2988 | Can you read him and keep your respect for him? |
2988 | Clara, dear, after the luncheon-- I hate to put this on you-- but could you do two or three little shopping- errands for me? |
2988 | Clemens said: “ Trowbridge, are you still alive? |
2988 | Clemens said: “ What is it? ” Wilberforce impressively answered: “ It is the Holy Grail. ” Clemens naturally started with surprise. |
2988 | Clemens, I am not embarrassed, are you? ” So he remembered that first, long- ago meeting. |
2988 | Clemens, will you tell me where Mr. Charles Dudley Warner lives? ” This was the chance! |
2988 | Continuing he said: Do you know the prettiest fancy and the neatest that ever shot through Harte''s brain? |
2988 | Could she feel the wrinkles in my hand through her hair? |
2988 | Could you lend an admirer$ 1.50 to buy a hymn- book with? |
2988 | Curious, but did n''t Florence want a Cromwell? |
2988 | DEAR CHAMP CLARK,--Is the new copyright law acceptable to me? |
2988 | DEAR PAMELA,--Will you take this$ 15& buy some candy or other trifle for yourself& Sam& his wife to remind you that we remember you? |
2988 | DOES THE RACE OF MAN LOVE A LORD? |
2988 | Did I ever tell you the plot of it? |
2988 | Did I know jean''s value? |
2988 | Did he know how to write English,& did n''t do it because he did n''t want to? |
2988 | Did it? |
2988 | Did n''t you know that? |
2988 | Did you get that key to- day?'' |
2988 | Did you get wet? |
2988 | Did you have any bets on us? |
2988 | Did you want to saddle that disaster upon us for life? ” He was blowing off steam, and I knew it and encouraged it. |
2988 | Do n''t you care more about the wretchedness of others than anything that happens to you?'' |
2988 | Do n''t you feel well? ” Jean said that she had a little stomack- ache, and so thought she would lie down. |
2988 | Do n''t you hear me? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that I have expended money in this country but have made none myself? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that I have never held in my hands a gold or silver bar that belonged to me? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that I have only talked, as yet, but proved nothing? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that it''s all talk and no cider so far? |
2988 | Do n''t you know that undemonstrated human calculations wo n''t do to bet on? |
2988 | Do n''t you know they are calling for you? ” They remained in Keokuk a week, and Susy starts to tell something of their visit there. |
2988 | Do n''t you realize that you ought not to intrude your help in a delicate art like that with your limitations? |
2988 | Do serenity and peace brood over you after you have done such a thing? |
2988 | Do they even resemble each other? |
2988 | Do they live in---- ” “ In this street? |
2988 | Do you admire the race(& consequently yourself)? |
2988 | Do you hear? ” The slim, youthful person trembled a good deal, and said: “ I would, Mr. Clemens, I would indeed, sir, if I could. |
2988 | Do you know any one who does know him? ” “ Yes, I know his most intimate friend. ” “ Then he is the man for you to approach. |
2988 | Do you know that shock? |
2988 | Do you know that shock? |
2988 | Do you remember? |
2988 | Do you see the big, plain house over there with the placard in the third floor window? |
2988 | Do you suppose you could get me a key that would fit my trunk?'' |
2988 | Do you think I wrote the second one to give that man pleasure? |
2988 | Do you think you could teach it arithmetic? ” Joy was uncertain. |
2988 | Do you want to bring the lightning? ” “ You know the lightning did come last week, mama, and struck the new church, and burnt it down. |
2988 | Does he ever chain the reader''s interest& make him reluctant to lay the book down? |
2988 | Does he keep boarders? ” “ What an idea! |
2988 | Does he keep him in mind years and years and go on contriving miseries for him? |
2988 | Does he take an oath or make a promise of any sort?--or does n''t he leave himself entirely free? |
2988 | Does man regard the difference? |
2988 | Does one build a boarding- house for the sake of the boarding- house itself or for the sake of the boarders? |
2988 | Does this sound like shouting? |
2988 | Does your wife give you rats, like that, when you go a little one- sided? |
2988 | Dreaming of what? |
2988 | Familiar? |
2988 | For 6 days now my story in the Christmas Harper''s “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | Further along he refers to one of his reforms: Smoke? |
2988 | Give him a good sound thrashing; do you hear? |
2988 | Goodness, who is there I have n''t known? |
2988 | Had we no moral duty to perform? |
2988 | Has he funny characters that are funny, and humorous passages that are humorous? |
2988 | Has he heroes& heroines who are not cads and cadesses? |
2988 | Has he heroes& heroines whom the reader admires-- admires and knows why? |
2988 | Has he paused& taken thought? |
2988 | Has he personages whose acts& talk correspond with their characters as described by him? |
2988 | Have I got to learn the shape of the river according to all these five hundred thousand different ways? |
2988 | Have n''t I told you so, over and over again? ” “ It''s awful cruel, mama! |
2988 | Have n''t you read anything at all about Joan of Arc? |
2988 | Have you a memorandum of the route we took, or the names of any of the stations we stopped at? |
2988 | Have you been secreted in the closet or lurking on the shed roof? |
2988 | Have you developed any novelties of conduct since you left Mr. Murray''s,& have they been of a character to move the concern of your friends? |
2988 | Have you ever been like that? |
2988 | Have you forgotten early twitterings of your own? |
2988 | He commended man to multiply& replenish- what? |
2988 | He did not suspect what had happened until he heard one of the daughters ask: “ Katie, is it true? |
2988 | He had never had a lesson, she said; if he could only have lessons what might he not accomplish? |
2988 | He probably referred to the Monday Evening Club essay, “ What Is Happiness? ”( February, 1883). |
2988 | He said to himself: “ Why did n''t I go now? |
2988 | He said, very gently: “ How beautiful it all is? |
2988 | He said: “''You thought you were playing a nice joke on me, did n''t you? |
2988 | He says: “ A billion, that is a million millions,[?? |
2988 | He says: “ A billion, that is a million millions,[?? |
2988 | He wished to receive the full value( who does not?) |
2988 | He wrote, asking Howells: Will the proposed treaty protect us( and effectually) against Canadian piracy? |
2988 | Helen Keller wrote: And you are seventy years old? |
2988 | Hereafter if you must write such things wo n''t you please be so kind as to label them? |
2988 | His friend asked: “ Who''s Mark Twain? ” “ God knows; I do n''t! ” The lecturer could not ride any more. |
2988 | How can you ask such a thing of me? |
2988 | How could he, with a fortune so plainly in view? |
2988 | How could that impress Adam? |
2988 | How could you do it? |
2988 | How did you ever think of it? ” It was a fearful ordeal for a boy like Jim Wolfe, but he stuck to his place in spite of what he must have suffered. |
2988 | How do I account for this change of view? |
2988 | How do you explain this? ” Clemens said: “ Oh, that is very simple to answer, your Excellency. |
2988 | How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that? ” “ My boy, you''ve got to remember it. |
2988 | How do you reckon he accomplished that miracle? |
2988 | How do you run Plum Point? ” He met Bixby at New Orleans. |
2988 | How in the world did you ever come to locate there? ” Then they began to notice what they had not at first seen. |
2988 | How much money does the devil give you for arraigning Christianity and missionary causes? ” But there were more of the better sort. |
2988 | Howells in his letter said: She hallowed what she touched far beyond priests.... What are you going to do, you poor soul? |
2988 | Howells, did you write me day- before- day- before yesterday or did I dream it? |
2988 | I asked him if he was well, and he said,''What the hell do you want?'' |
2988 | I gave her a conundrum, thus: “ My dear madam, why ought your hand to retain its present grace and beauty always? |
2988 | I said to the Duke: “ Your Grace, they''re just about finger- milers! ” “ How do you mean, m''lord? ” “ This. |
2988 | I said, “ I did n''t belong to any. ” Then he asked me what order of knighthood I belonged to? |
2988 | I said, “ None. ” Then he asked me what the red ribbon in my buttonhole stood for? |
2988 | I said,''Jean, is this you trying to let me know you have found the others?'' |
2988 | I sha''n''t say a word against it, but she will find it a difficult& disheartening job,& meanwhile what is to become of that miraculous girl? |
2988 | I suppose I ought to defend my character, but how can I defend it? |
2988 | I want somebody to light my pipe. ” “ Why do n''t you get up and light it yourself? ” Brownell asked. |
2988 | I was greatly pleased and asked: “ Who gets the extra one? ” “ Widows and orphans. ” “ A good idea, too. |
2988 | I was naturally astonished, and immediately wrote: I did fall and skin my shin at five o''clock yesterday afternoon, but how did you find it out? |
2988 | I wonder if it is? |
2988 | If I had my new lecture completed I would n''t hesitate a moment, but really is n''t “ Cussed Be Canaan ” too old? |
2988 | If a life be offered up on the gallows to atone for the murder Ruloff did, will that suffice? |
2988 | If base music gives me wings, why should I want any other? |
2988 | If he ca n''t get renewals of his bric- a- brac in the next world what will he look like? |
2988 | If so is she extinct and can never attend a third? |
2988 | If they want letters from here-- who''ll run from morning till night collecting material cheaper? |
2988 | If we are going to be gay in spirit, why be clad in funeral garments? |
2988 | If we made this colonel a grand fellow, and gave him a wife to suit-- hey? |
2988 | If you can play that way left- handed what could you do right- handed?'' |
2988 | If you should be passing this way to- morrow will you look in and change hats? |
2988 | In a dictation following his return, Mark Twain said: Who began it? |
2988 | In later years Mark Twain once said: “ How much of the nursing did I do? |
2988 | In one of her letters she says: The house has been full of company, and I have been “ whirled around. ” How can a body help it? |
2988 | In the accompanying note he said: Say, Boss, do you want this to lighten up your old freight- train with? |
2988 | Interest? |
2988 | Introducing him, President Frank Lawrence said: “ What name is there in literature that can be likened to his? |
2988 | Is it a regular army? |
2988 | Is it an army of volunteers who have enlisted for the war, and may righteously be shot if they leave before the war is finished? |
2988 | Is it less humiliating to dance to the lash of one master than another? |
2988 | Is it one prayer? |
2988 | Is it possible for human wickedness to invent a doctrine more infernal and poisonous than this? |
2988 | Is n''t it curious? |
2988 | Is n''t it interesting? |
2988 | Is n''t that a brewery? ” “ It is, Mark. |
2988 | Is n''t that a brewery? ” “ It is, Mark. |
2988 | Is n''t that valuable? |
2988 | Is that it? ” “ Yes, that is correct. ” “ By George, it beats the band! ” He liked the expression, and set it down in his tablets. |
2988 | Is the Rebellion ended and forgotten? |
2988 | Is there imaginable a baser servitude than it imposes? |
2988 | Is there some way, honest or otherwise, by which you can get a copy of Mayo''s play, “ Pudd''nhead Wilson, ” for me? |
2988 | It has always seemed natural and right to me, and wise and most kindly and merciful. ” “ Who first thought of it like that, mama? |
2988 | It is n''t Holcomb, it''s Blackmer. ” I was ashamed again, and confessed it; then: “ How old are you, dear? ” “ Twelve; New- Year''s. |
2988 | It may have materialized out of the unseen-- who knows? |
2988 | It only costs the people$ 1 apiece, and if they ca n''t stand it what do they stay here for?... |
2988 | It only costs the public a dollar apiece, and if they ca n''t stand it what do they stay here for? |
2988 | It was not wrong? |
2988 | It was you. ” “ But do you realize, ma''am, how tired and hungry we are? |
2988 | Italy? |
2988 | Klinefelter turned to Sam: “ Did n''t you hear him? ” “ Yes, sir. ” Brown said: “ Shut your mouth! |
2988 | L. Am I not, to a man, as is a billion solar systems to a grain of sand? |
2988 | L. And the air? |
2988 | L. C.''Which was? |
2988 | L. Do you know what a microbe is? |
2988 | L. Does he forget him? |
2988 | L. Employs himself with more important matters? |
2988 | L. Has she been out to- day? |
2988 | L. He commits depredations upon your blood? |
2988 | L. How many men are there? |
2988 | L. In ten days the aggregate reaches what? |
2988 | L. In that costume? |
2988 | L. Is it true the human race thinks the universe was created for its convenience? |
2988 | L. Now then, according to man''s own reasoning, what is man for? |
2988 | L. Then what? |
2988 | L. Then why punish him? |
2988 | L. To what intent are these uncountable microbes introduced into the human race? |
2988 | L. What am I to man? |
2988 | L. What is he for? |
2988 | L. What is the sea for? |
2988 | L. When was this? |
2988 | L. Who is it? |
2988 | L. Why? |
2988 | L. Why? |
2988 | L. You took a cab both ways? |
2988 | Land sakes, Livy, what can I do? ” “ Which way did he go, Youth? ” “ Why, I sent him to Charlie Warner''s. |
2988 | Land sakes, Livy, what can I do? ” “ Which way did he go, Youth? ” “ Why, I sent him to Charlie Warner''s. |
2988 | Later he wrote: “ Put''Is He Dead?'' |
2988 | Livy screamed, then said, “ Who is it? |
2988 | MR. MARK TWAIN-- DEAR SIR,--Will you start now, without any unnecessary delay? |
2988 | Maguire, why Will you thus skyugle? |
2988 | Mama said, “ Why do n''t you try''mind cure''? ” “ I am, ” Jean answered. |
2988 | Man kills the microbes when he can? |
2988 | Mark Twain''s own book on the subject--''Is Shakespeare Dead?'' |
2988 | May I send you the constitution& laws of the club? |
2988 | Must he prove that he is sound in any way, mind or body? |
2988 | Must he prove that he knows anything-- is capable of anything-- whatever? |
2988 | My friend said, “ I always admired it, even before I saw it in The Innocents Abroad. ” I naturally said, “ What do you mean? |
2988 | Next day he asked, “ Katie, did you see my pipe- cleaner? |
2988 | Not much of it all is left to me, but I remember Howells saying, “ Did it ever occur to you that the newspapers abolished hell? |
2988 | Now is n''t she the devil? |
2988 | Now then, with this common- sense light to aid your perceptions, what are the air, the land, and the ocean for? |
2988 | Now what is it? |
2988 | Now you all know all these things yourself, do n''t you? |
2988 | Now, do n''t you see what a world of confidence that must necessarily breed? |
2988 | Now, therefore, why should I withhold it? |
2988 | Now, therefore, why should I withhold it? |
2988 | Now, will that do you? ” Clemens said it would. |
2988 | Now, young men, if any of you were in command of such a fortress, how would you proceed?'' |
2988 | OR HELL? |
2988 | OR HELL? ” The Christmas number of Harper''s Magazine for 1902 contained the story, “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | OR HELL? ” The Christmas number of Harper''s Magazine for 1902 contained the story, “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | Of course. ” “ What for? ” “ Oh, to discipline us! |
2988 | Oh, Katie, is it true? ” He realized then that she was gone. |
2988 | On another: Have you seen any portion of the second volume? |
2988 | Once, half roused, he looked at me searchingly and asked: “ Is n''t there something I can resign and be out of all this? |
2988 | Once, writing to Jean, he asked: What is your favorite piece of music, dear? |
2988 | One day Clemens sand to him: “ Cable, why do you sit in here? |
2988 | One day she said: “ Mama, why is there so much pain and sorrow and suffering? |
2988 | One day, soon after, he said to me: “''Steve, do you know that I think that that bogus pipe smokes about as well as the good one? |
2988 | One paper celebrated him in verse: Who killed Croker? |
2988 | Or a gullet? |
2988 | Or at least why was n''t something creditable created in place of it?... |
2988 | Or is it a gull? |
2988 | Or is the report exaggerated, like that of your death? |
2988 | Ought we to allow this war to begin? |
2988 | Out of this grew the story, “ Was it Heaven? |
2988 | Presently, he asked me what order of nobility I belonged to? |
2988 | Put a trap like that into the midst of a tragical story? |
2988 | Redpath had besought him as usual, and even in midsummer had written: “ Will you? |
2988 | Reverence for what-- for whom? |
2988 | Rose Terry Cooke wrote: Horrid man, how did you know the way I behave in a thunderstorm? |
2988 | Sam said: “ What''s that, Steve? ” “ Why, ” I said, “ that''s Laud. |
2988 | Sam; ” he said, “ what do they mean by that? ” Clemens stepped to the wheel and brought the boat around. |
2988 | Says I,''Hold on there, Evangeline, what are you going to do with them?'' |
2988 | See? |
2988 | Shall I ever be cheerful again, happy again? |
2988 | Shall we ever laugh again? |
2988 | Shall we think this over, or drop it as being nonsense? |
2988 | Shall you also say that it demands that a man kick his truth and his conscience into the gutter and become a mouthing lunatic besides? |
2988 | Shall you say the best good of the country demands allegiance to party? |
2988 | She ran breathlessly to her aunt: “ Can I have it? |
2988 | She said, “ Why, Jean, what''s the matter? |
2988 | She was determined to go out again, but---- L. How did you know she was out? |
2988 | Shrunk how? |
2988 | Since I wrote my Bible--[The “ Gospel, ” What is Man?] |
2988 | So he sat down and stayed there until an executioner came. ” I said, “ How do you account for the changed attitude toward these things? |
2988 | Speaking as a member of it, what do you think the other animals are for? |
2988 | Suppose, after all, the school- teachers had declined to come? |
2988 | Take a man like Sir Oliver Lodge, and what secret of Nature can be hidden from him? |
2988 | Take it with you. ” “ Why? ” “ Because of that sketch of yours entitled''Luck.'' |
2988 | Telegram to Redpath: How in the name of God does a man find his way from here to Amherst, and when must he start? |
2988 | That is to say, is n''t she a right smart little woman? |
2988 | That they are in London, the metropolis of the world, Post- office District, N. W.? |
2988 | That''s closed in, is n''t it, for the winter? |
2988 | That''s his house. ” “ The placard that says''Furnished rooms to let''? |
2988 | The autumn splendors passed you by? |
2988 | The coachman sent in for him at 9, but he said, “ Oh, nonsense!--leave glories& grandeurs like these? |
2988 | The curtain hid her.... Do you comprehend? |
2988 | The humblest of us is cared for-- oh, believe it!--and this fleeting stay is not the end! ” You notice that? |
2988 | The inspector asks: “ Now what does this elephant eat, and how much? ” “ Well, as to what he eats-- he will eat anything. |
2988 | The letter itself consisted merely of a line, which said: Wo n''t you give your friends, the missionaries, a good mark for this? |
2988 | The property has got to fall to some heir, and why not the United States? |
2988 | The question is, if she attends two doe luncheons in succession is she a doe- doe? |
2988 | The two sums aggregate- what? |
2988 | Then he asked solemnly: “ And is he never serious? ” And Dr. Parker as solemnly answered: “ Mr. |
2988 | Then he broke out: “ Why ca n''t a man die when he''s had his tragedy? |
2988 | Then he says: Why do I offer him the play at all? |
2988 | Then he was likely to say: “ Why did n''t you stop me? |
2988 | Then if Satan should come, he would slap him on the shoulder and say,''Why, Satan, how do you do? |
2988 | Then who is it, what is it, that they worship? |
2988 | Then: “ What does he call it? ” he asked. |
2988 | There''s nothing “ to strike out ”; nothing “ to replace. ” What more could be said of any one? |
2988 | They cost ten dollars apiece. ” Clemens sand: “ Is that so? |
2988 | They give us pain, they make our lives miserable, they murder us-- and where is the use of it all, where the wisdom? |
2988 | This is my work, and I know that I do very wrong when I feel chafed by it, but how can I be right about it? |
2988 | Thomas Hardy said to Howells one night at dinner: “ Why do n''t people understand that Mark Twain is not merely a great humorist? |
2988 | To Howells, on the same day, he wrote: Wo n''t you& Mrs. Howells& Mildred come& give us as many days as you can spare& examine John''s triumph? |
2988 | To Twichell Clemens wrote: Joe, do you know the Irish gentleman& the Irish lady, the Scotch gentleman& the Scotch lady? |
2988 | To Twichell he wrote, playfully but sincerely: Am I honest? |
2988 | To a woman who wrote, asking for his opinion on dogs, he said, in part: By what right has the dog come to be regarded as a “ noble ” animal? |
2988 | To her sister she wrote: Do you think we can live through the first going into the house in Hartford? |
2988 | Twain expect the public to credit this narrative to his clever brain? |
2988 | U. E. WAS IT HEAVEN? |
2988 | U. E. WHY NOT ABOLISH IT? |
2988 | Upon my face She must not look until the day was done; For she was doing penance... She? |
2988 | Venice? |
2988 | Very well, then, what is the use of your stringing out your miserable lives to a clean and withered old age? |
2988 | Very well, then- what ought we to do? |
2988 | W- h- a- r- r''s my golden arm? |
2988 | WHAT IS MAN? |
2988 | WHICH WAS WHICH? |
2988 | Was hast du gesagt? ” But she said the same words over again, and in the same decided way. |
2988 | Was it Grady who killed himself trying to do all the dining and speeching? |
2988 | Was it R. U. Johnson? |
2988 | Was it an illusion? |
2988 | Was it both together? |
2988 | Was it not our duty to administer a rebuke to this selfish and heartless Family? |
2988 | Was it not our duty to stop it, in the name of right and righteousness? |
2988 | Was it the Authors''League? |
2988 | Was it to discipline the church? ”( Wearily.) |
2988 | Was it to discipline the hog, mama? ” “ Dear child, do n''t you want to run out and play a while? |
2988 | Was it to discipline the hog, mama? ” “ Dear child, do n''t you want to run out and play a while? |
2988 | Was it you? ” “ Oh no, child, I was taught it. ” “ Who taught you so, mama? ” “ Why, really, I do n''t know-- I ca n''t remember. |
2988 | Was it you? ” “ Oh no, child, I was taught it. ” “ Who taught you so, mama? ” “ Why, really, I do n''t know-- I ca n''t remember. |
2988 | Was n''t it a rattling good comedy situation? |
2988 | Was that right? ” “ Certainly, certainly. |
2988 | We know it was a good reason, whatever it was. ” “ What do you think it was, mama? ” “ Oh, you ask so many questions! |
2988 | Well, is it? |
2988 | Well, then, what is he to do? |
2988 | Well, they have invented a heaven, out of their own heads, all by themselves; guess what it is like? |
2988 | What a child he always was-- always, to the very end? |
2988 | What are deciduous flowers, and do they always “ bloom in the fall, tra la ”? |
2988 | What are his tonsils for? |
2988 | What are you going to do? ” “ I''m going to shoot those burglars, ” he said. |
2988 | What are your plans for getting left, or shall you trust to inspiration? |
2988 | What did it matter to him? |
2988 | What do you take me for? |
2988 | What do you think the General wanted to require of me?'' |
2988 | What does it mean, Susy? |
2988 | What is Jean doing? |
2988 | What is biography? |
2988 | What is his beard for? |
2988 | What is it all for? ” It was an easy question, and mama had no difficulty in answering it: “ It is for our good, my child. |
2988 | What is it that we want in a novel? |
2988 | What is it you want? ” But you and I are in the business ourselves. |
2988 | What is it? |
2988 | What is romance? |
2988 | What is the essential difference between a lifelong democrat and any other kind of lifelong slave? |
2988 | What is the matter? ” I said, “ There ai n''t anything the matter. |
2988 | What is the process when a voter joins a party? |
2988 | What is the use of your saving money that is so utterly worthless to you? |
2988 | What is there to say? |
2988 | What kind of a disease is that? |
2988 | What mother knows not that? |
2988 | What name do you want to use''Josh''? ” “ No, I want to sign them''Mark Twain.'' |
2988 | What nationalities would he prefer? ” “ He is indifferent about nationalities. |
2988 | What night will you come down& smoke? |
2988 | What noise? |
2988 | What other humorist could have refrained from hinting, at least, the inference suggested by the obvious “ Gas Works ”? |
2988 | What ship is that? |
2988 | What should we do and how should we feel if we had no bright prospects before us, and yet how many people are situated in that way? |
2988 | What slave is so degraded as the slave that is proud that he is a slave? |
2988 | What the devil does a man want with any more feet when he owns in the invincible bomb- proof “ Monitor ”? |
2988 | What they want---- ” “ The nobility? |
2988 | What use can you put it to? |
2988 | What was the greatest feature in Napoleon''s character? |
2988 | What would become of me if he should disintegrate? |
2988 | What would it be for the whole human population? |
2988 | What''s happened? ” “ Do n''t wait to talk. |
2988 | What, sir, would the people of this earth be without woman? |
2988 | When did larches begin to flame, and who set out the pomegranates in that canyon? |
2988 | When shall I come? |
2988 | When the Duke first moved in here he---- ” “ Does he live in this street? ” “ Him! |
2988 | When the children came for eggs he would say: “ Your hens wo n''t lay, eh? |
2988 | When the dictation ended he said: “ Have you any special place to lunch to- day? ” I replied that I had not. |
2988 | When we entered, and Mrs. Clemens read on Shakespeare''s grave,''Good friend, for Jesus''sake, forbear,''she started back, exclaiming,''where am I?'' |
2988 | When you get an exasperating letter what happens? |
2988 | Where are we going? ” “ Do n''t worry. |
2988 | Where is it Orion''s going to? |
2988 | Where was ever a sermon preached that could make filial ingratitude so hateful to men as the sinful play of “ King Lear ”? |
2988 | Where was your remedy? |
2988 | Who is his nearest friend? ” MacAlister knew a man on terms of social intimacy with the official. |
2988 | Who is it? ” His informant hesitated a moment, then named a name of world- wide military significance. |
2988 | Who is it? ” The courier said, “ Napoleon. ” Clemens assented. |
2988 | Who is to decide what ought to command my reverence-- my neighbor or I? |
2988 | Who knows? |
2988 | Who lit the lilacs, and which end up do they hang? |
2988 | Who might this late comer be? |
2988 | Who so poor in his ambitions as to consent to be God on those terms? |
2988 | Whose heart is broken by this murder? |
2988 | Why curse and swear, And rip and tear The innocent McDougal? |
2988 | Why did n''t I go with her now? ” She went from Clemens''s over to Warner''s. |
2988 | Why do I respect my own? |
2988 | Why do we respect the opinions of any man or any microbe that ever lived? |
2988 | Why does He give Himself the trouble? ” I suggested that it was a sentiment that probably gave comfort to the writer of it. |
2988 | Why does he affront me with the fancy that I interest Myself in trivialities-- like men and microbes? |
2988 | Why howl about his wrongs after said wrongs have been redressed? |
2988 | Why should Darwin have gone to them for rest and refreshment at midnight, when spent with scientific research? |
2988 | Why should his life be taken away for their sake, when he was n''t doing anything? ” “ Oh, I do n''t know! |
2988 | Why should not China be free from the foreigners, who are only making trouble on her soil? |
2988 | Why should they have declined? |
2988 | Why was the human race created? |
2988 | Why, Clara, are n''t you going to your lesson? |
2988 | Why, Tufts, do n''t you know that the soldiers in the theater are the same old soldiers marching around and around? |
2988 | Will Kanawha be sailing after that& can I go as Sunday- school superintendent at half rate? |
2988 | Will anybody contend that a man can say to such masterful anger as that, Go, and be obeyed? |
2988 | Will healing ever come, or life have value again? |
2988 | Will one of you boys buy that house? |
2988 | Will ye no come back again? |
2988 | Will you remember that? |
2988 | Will you return those proofs or revises to me, so that I can use the same on some future occasion? |
2988 | With a rent- roll of twelve hundred thousand marks a year? |
2988 | Wo n''t you please stop it? |
2988 | Wo n''t you talk awhile? |
2988 | Wo n''t you? |
2988 | Would you encourage in literature a man who the older he grows the worse he writes? |
2988 | Would you like a series of papers to run through three months or six or nine-- or about four months, say? |
2988 | Would you like me to come out there and cry? |
2988 | Writing to MacAlister, Clemens said: Florentine sunshine? |
2988 | Yes, he is here; and the question is not-- as it has been heretofore during a thousand ages-- What shall we do with him? |
2988 | Yes, you know that, and confess it-- but what were you to do? |
2988 | You can do your work just as well here as in Cambridge, ca n''t you? |
2988 | You could n''t possibly teach music with a company of raw recruits drilling overhead-- now, could you? |
2988 | You do not think me wrong? |
2988 | You hold her, will you, till I come back?'' |
2988 | You note that position? |
2988 | You notice the stately General standing there with his hand resting upon the muzzle of a cannon? |
2988 | You say, “ Is this it?--this? |
2988 | You think that picture looks old? |
2988 | You will continue upon the water for some time yet; you will not retire finally until ten years from now.... What is your brother''s age? |
2988 | after all this talk and fuss of a thousand generations of travelers who have crossed this frontier& looked about them& told what they saw& felt? |
2988 | and ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town? ” he asks in a critical moment-- a remark which stamps him as a philosopher of classic rank. |
2988 | and in pursuit of an office? |
2988 | can a body do it to- day? |
2988 | do you realize, Mark, what a symposium it is to be? |
2988 | have you noticed that? |
2988 | he telegraphed his tormentor: “ Why do n''t you congratulate me? |
2988 | how have you written this miracle? |
2988 | how''s that? ” A curious character was Cutter-- a Long Island farmer with the obsession of rhyme. |
2988 | impostors, were they? |
2988 | or Hell? ” a heartbreaking history which probes the very depths of the human soul. |
2988 | or Hell? ” and it immediately brought a flood of letters to its author from grateful readers on both sides of the ocean. |
2988 | or shall I send it to the hotel? |
2988 | the tropics? |
2988 | where is he? |
2988 | “ And how is Mrs. Clemens? ” asked the uninvited guest. |
2988 | “ But what in hell is an oesophagus? |
2988 | “ Could a man live on a world so small as that? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Did you do that? ” he asked, ominously. |
2988 | “ Did you ever hear of Mark Twain? ” asked Twichell. |
2988 | “ Do n''t I deserve one yet? ” Unhappy day! |
2988 | “ Do n''t you understand? |
2988 | “ Do you expect to pay extra fare? ” asked Sherman. |
2988 | “ Do you know the Bowen boys? ” he asked--“pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade? ” “ I know them well-- all three of them. |
2988 | “ Do you know the Bowen boys? ” he asked--“pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade? ” “ I know them well-- all three of them. |
2988 | “ Do you mean to say that you''re not going to vote for him? ” “ Yes, that is what I mean to say. |
2988 | “ Do you see it? ” Clemens looked carefully now and identified one of the books as a still- born novel which Keeler had published. |
2988 | “ Do you use terbacker? ” the big girl had asked, meaning did he chew it. |
2988 | “ Does it? ” he said, very deliberately. |
2988 | “ George, ” he said, “ what pictures are those that gentleman left? ” “ Why, Mr. Clemens, those are our own pictures. |
2988 | “ Great guns, what is the matter with it? ” wrote Clemens in November when he received a detailed account of its misconduct. |
2988 | “ Hain''t we all the fools in town on our side? |
2988 | “ Have n''t you any other friend that you could suggest? ” Langdon said. |
2988 | “ Here, where are you heading for now? ” he yelled. |
2988 | “ Here, why did n''t you tell me we had got to land at that plantation? ” he demanded. |
2988 | “ Here, ” he would shout, “ where are you going now? |
2988 | “ How are you, Mr. Clemens? ” he said. |
2988 | “ How far off was it? ” “ Oh, about thirty yards. ” “ Can he do it again? ” “ Of course, ” I said; “ every time. |
2988 | “ How far off was it? ” “ Oh, about thirty yards. ” “ Can he do it again? ” “ Of course, ” I said; “ every time. |
2988 | “ How many more are there? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ How many? ” he demanded. |
2988 | “ How much do you think it ought to be, Mark? ” James Anthony asked. |
2988 | “ How would you like a young man to learn the river? ” he said. |
2988 | “ I said,''Who the h-- l are you? |
2988 | “ IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD? ” I set out on my long journey with much reluctance. |
2988 | “ Is n''t that a guitar over there? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ Is there any evidence that he did n''t? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Livy, ” he said, “ did it sound like that? ” “ Of course it did, ” she said, “ only worse. |
2988 | “ M.--What does it mean? |
2988 | “ MAMA-- What did you say? |
2988 | “ Man adapted to the earth? ” he said. |
2988 | “ Nobody could have done it better; and did you see how those cats got out of there? |
2988 | “ Promise what? ” I said. |
2988 | “ Quick! ” “ What is it? |
2988 | “ Reporters? ” The butler feigned uncertainty. |
2988 | “ Sam said,''Dan, did you know, when you invited me to make that speech, that those fellows were going to give me a bogus pipe?'' |
2988 | “ Some one you know? ” “ No, ” he said. |
2988 | “ Steve, what is that d-- d noise? ” he would say. |
2988 | “ Still you-- are going to publish it, are you not? ” Clemens, pacing up and down the room in his dressing- gown and slippers, shook his head. |
2988 | “ Tell us, Mark, why are you like the Pacific Ocean? ” “ I do n''t know, ” he drawled. |
2988 | “ That-- rascal? ” he said, “ He has done me more injury than any other man in America. ”] LVI. |
2988 | “ WAS IT HEAVEN? |
2988 | “ Was he always really tranquil within, ” he says, “ or was he only externally so-- for effect? |
2988 | “ Was this rebuke studied and intentional? |
2988 | “ Well, he''s been here. ” “ Oh, Youth, have you done anything? ” “ Yes, of course I have. |
2988 | “ Well, ” he said, “ who told you you could go in this car? ” “ Nobody, ” said Clemens. |
2988 | “ Well, ” he sand, “ why am I like the Pacific Ocean? ” Several guesses were made, but none satisfied him. |
2988 | “ Well-- Mrs. Clemens is about as usual-- I believe. ” “ And the children-- Miss Susie and little Clara? ” This was a bit startling. |
2988 | “ What are you doing here? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ What are you reading, Sam? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ What in nation are you steerin''at, anyway? |
2988 | “ What is your name? ” The applicant told him, and the two stood looking at the sunlit water. |
2988 | “ What kind of a trip did you boys have? ” a friend asked of them. |
2988 | “ What makes you pull your words that way? ”( “ pulling ” being the river term for drawling), he asked. |
2988 | “ What will you have, Sam? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ What would you do? ” he asked me. |
2988 | “ What would you give for a copy? ” asked. |
2988 | “ What''s the matter, Sam? |
2988 | “ Where is it? |
2988 | “ Where is the elephant? ” he asked, as they drove along. |
2988 | “ Who did that? ” asked Laird''s second. |
2988 | “ Who is he, George? ” Clemens asked, without looking at the card. |
2988 | “ Who was it? ” asked his companion. |
2988 | “ Why did n''t you mention it before? |
2988 | “ Why do you think so? ” he asked. |
2988 | “ Why in nation did you offer him your cue? ” “ Was n''t that the courteous thing to do? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Why in nation did you offer him your cue? ” “ Was n''t that the courteous thing to do? ” I asked. |
2988 | “ Why not leave them all to me? ” My business brothers? |
2988 | “ Why not leave them all to me? ” My business brothers? |
2988 | “ Why, ” he said, “ have we met before? ” The Prince smiled happily. |
2988 | “ Yes, sir, it is; what of it? ” The culprit walked over, and taking it up, tuned the strings a little and struck the chords. |
2988 | “''What is it?'' |
6169 | What Simon? 6169 Will they_ transact_ with God?" |
6169 | ( There is, however, a disingenuous vagueness in the very word_ ekleloipenai_),_ ed''allote pote ex aionos_--and when? |
6169 | --By the way, whence comes this odd- looking word? |
6169 | Accordingly, he asked me,"What I had been lately reading?" |
6169 | And in what way could such a polemic interest be evoked except through political partisanship? |
6169 | And now, nearly a hundred years after Warburton, what is the opinion of scholars upon this point? |
6169 | And this idea, to what is it applied? |
6169 | And this lower scale, it will be said-- how do you account for that? |
6169 | And what is the choice of diction? |
6169 | And when these modes of pleasurable relaxation had been subtracted from ancient life, what could remain? |
6169 | And why is that? |
6169 | And yet, for a service of that nature, could she reasonably rely upon me? |
6169 | Another question, and a more interesting question to men in general, is this,--What is the motive to virtue? |
6169 | Are we, then, angry on behalf of Julian? |
6169 | Because a man attends to the darning of his horse''s stockings, why must he be meditating murder? |
6169 | But could these advantages anticipate a higher civilization? |
6169 | But how? |
6169 | But of what use is anger or argument in a duel with female criticism? |
6169 | But the question is still but one step removed; for, how came_ veterana_ by that acceptation in rural economy?] |
6169 | But was it not possible that even this sum might by economy be made to meet the necessities of the case? |
6169 | But was the Bible intelligible at the first glance? |
6169 | But what came of the London lady''s or of Mrs. Schreiber''s Spartan discipline? |
6169 | But what good purpose is attained by such caprices? |
6169 | But, then, might not all this blow over? |
6169 | By what impulse, law, or motive, am I impelled to be virtuous rather than vicious? |
6169 | By whom? |
6169 | Can this be affirmed of the continent, either generally, or, indeed, partially? |
6169 | Could_ that_ be reckoned an anodyne for the torment connected with a course of Schreiber? |
6169 | Cowper, in his"Task,"puts the question,--"Is India free? |
6169 | Do I mention this in disparagement of Oxford? |
6169 | For even in dreams would it have seemed reasonable, or natural, that Laxton, with its entire society, should transfer itself to Manchester? |
6169 | Had I, then, really all that originality on this subject which for many years I secretly claimed? |
6169 | Had the king, had her majesty, only one room? |
6169 | Honors, beauty of the first order, wealth, and the power which follows wealth as its shadow-- what could these do? |
6169 | How could that languor be due to Christianity, which far anticipated the very birth of Christianity? |
6169 | How much, then, shall we assume as the total charge on account of Oxford? |
6169 | How so? |
6169 | How was it any natural preparation for a vast spiritual revolution, that men should first of all acknowledge any special duty of repentance? |
6169 | How, in fact, does the university proceed? |
6169 | In both cases, this is conveyed by what is termed"lecturing;"--but what is the meaning of a lecture in Oxford and elsewhere? |
6169 | In what lay their inferiority? |
6169 | Is it Saxon exclusively, or is it Saxon by preference? |
6169 | Is it to some ideal, or to some existing and known reality? |
6169 | Is that footing peculiar_ to them_? |
6169 | Meantime my second remark was substantially this which follows: What is a religion? |
6169 | Meantime the question arises, Did he mean his Squire Western for a_ representative_ portrait? |
6169 | Meantime, what was it that made him an object of peculiar interest to Lady Carbery? |
6169 | Neither, in fact, does any other university in Europe; and why, then, notice the case? |
6169 | Now came the question of time,--_when_ was the revolt to begin? |
6169 | Now, these words, these"dictionary"words, what are they? |
6169 | Now, what is the common principle which ranks these several species under the same genus? |
6169 | Now, when such representations are made, to what standard of a just discipline is it that these writers would be understood as appealing? |
6169 | Simon Peter?" |
6169 | Some mighty caliph, or lamp- bearing Aladdin, might have worked such marvels: but else who, or by what machinery? |
6169 | Such is the opinion held of this great poet in 1835; but what were those of 1805- 15,--nay, of 1825? |
6169 | Thus far there was a reasonable foundation laid for suspicion; but suspicion of what? |
6169 | Thus, for instance, in the Eleusinian mysteries, what was the main business transacted? |
6169 | Thus, might a divine say: Will he arrest the judgments of God by a_ demurrer_? |
6169 | To satisfy them, the Oracle should resemble a modern coach- office-- where undoubtedly you would suspect fraud, if the question"How far to Derby?" |
6169 | Upon what ground did that suspicion arise? |
6169 | Upon what object is this idea of spiritual transfiguration made to bear? |
6169 | Upon which of these three did any judgment descend? |
6169 | Was it young or old, handsome or plain? |
6169 | Was the reader sensible, in the practical effect upon his ear, of any beauty attained? |
6169 | We read in French memoirs innumerable of_ the king''s apartment_, of_ the queen''s apartment_, etc., and for us English the question arises, How? |
6169 | What could people so circumstanced propose to themselves as a suitable resolution for their situation? |
6169 | What does_ that_ describe? |
6169 | What evasion could they imagine here? |
6169 | What followed? |
6169 | What is a university almost everywhere else? |
6169 | What is the_ lexis_? |
6169 | What other functions remain to a university? |
6169 | What remains? |
6169 | What was its relation to the public welfare of Greece? |
6169 | What was my uncle the captain like? |
6169 | What was the Priory like? |
6169 | What was the great practical inference from the new distinction which I offered? |
6169 | What was the relation of that same Oracle to the absolute truth? |
6169 | What was the relation of the Oracles( and we would wish to be understood as speaking particularly of the Delphic Oracle) to the credulity of Greece? |
6169 | What, then,_ was_ the fact? |
6169 | Whence is the motive derived which should impel me to one line of conduct in preference to the other? |
6169 | Wherefore, then, and to what end, are the vast systems of building, the palaces and towers of Oxford? |
6169 | Wherefore, then, is the_ visible_ Oxford? |
6169 | Who was Lady Carbery? |
6169 | Who was he? |
6169 | Why not allow of demoniac powers, excelling man in beauty, power, prescience, but otherwise neutral as to all purposes of man''s moral nature? |
6169 | Why should they? |
6169 | Why then, more than at any other time? |
6169 | Why"repentance"? |
6169 | Why, then, should_ he_ court danger and disreputability? |
6169 | With what fury would I often exclaim: He who loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how shall he love God whom he hath not seen? |
6169 | Without a succession of wars and martial glories in reserve for the army, what interest had_ they_ in Napoleon? |
6169 | Would I undertake an Oxford life upon such terms? |
6169 | Would it have been wise, or would it have been intellectually just, to quote this as the text of an eulogium on Lucian? |
6169 | Yet what is the fact? |
6169 | Young or old, handsome or plain? |
6169 | and does she wear her plumed And jewelled turban with a smile of peace, Or do we grind her still?" |
6169 | should he, the delegate of God, and the standard- bearer of the true religion, proclaim himself officially head of the false? |
6169 | what was her present position, and what had been her original position, in society? |
6169 | what_ had_ they done? |
35485 | A criminal case? |
35485 | A very early departure? 35485 Ah, do n''t you understand, Isabel,"he said,"that doubles our degradation? |
35485 | Ah, then, you will marry me, dearest Isabel? 35485 And did she recognize you?" |
35485 | And do you think my presence would enliven you? |
35485 | And how do you like my young kinsman? |
35485 | And how is your doom to be brought about, Roland? |
35485 | And so you like the people at Camberwell? |
35485 | And yet you love me? |
35485 | Are you mad, Roland? |
35485 | Be this Muster Gilbert''s the doctor''s? |
35485 | Better than Byron''s? |
35485 | Bread and marmalade and cold tea''s capital,he said;"you''ll try some, George, wo n''t you? |
35485 | But am I to send your name, or not, Isabel? |
35485 | But are you going that way? |
35485 | But where are you going? |
35485 | But why not, Izzie? |
35485 | But why not, Jeff? |
35485 | But why, in that case, should she meet the man secretly, at such an hour, while her husband is lying ill? |
35485 | But you like writing? |
35485 | But_ has_ she been seen to meet him? |
35485 | Can you suggest one? |
35485 | Dear Isabel, you will marry me, wo n''t you? 35485 Did I stare at her?" |
35485 | Did I? 35485 Did n''t I?'' |
35485 | Did you ever look in a British atlas for Graybridge- on- the- Wayverne? |
35485 | Did you really ask me to luncheon? |
35485 | Do you ever think of your mother, Roland? 35485 Do you know Mordred?" |
35485 | Do you know the value of such kindness as his? 35485 Do you think you shall be well enough to see him presently, poor lassie?" |
35485 | Does it matter much who painted it, if it is only beautiful? |
35485 | Does it wear well? 35485 For the penny public? |
35485 | For whom else should it be? 35485 George,"said Isabel, gently, when she had seen all the rooms,"did you never think of re- furnishing the house?" |
35485 | Had you any idea that Roland intended to leave his money in this manner? |
35485 | Have you seen anything of your friends lately- that Graybridge surgeon and his wife, whom we met one day last summer at Mordred? |
35485 | He is very ill-- your husband-- is ill? |
35485 | I am unhappy because I have lost her,he thought;"but should I have been happy with her, if I had married her? |
35485 | I dare say you are fond of pictures? |
35485 | I dare say your friend and his wife were very happy? |
35485 | I did not know until this morning that he was so very ill. Do you think he will die? |
35485 | I say, Sophronia, were n''t you surprised to see Mr. Lansdell in the gallery? |
35485 | I shall see you sometimes,she said, with timid hesitation,--"I shall see you sometimes, sha n''t I, when you come home from town? |
35485 | I should like to sit up- stairs,he whispered, dropping a half- crown into her hand;"can you put me somewhere up- stairs?" |
35485 | I suppose you often stroll as far as Thurston''s Crag? |
35485 | I think we shall be able to show him a thing or two before he goes back to Midlandshire, eh, Samuel? |
35485 | I think you know something of my friend Roland,Mr. Raymond repeated;"eh, my dear?" |
35485 | I''ve told her how I love her; and-- and you like her, Jeff, do n''t you? |
35485 | If this young man is so brilliant at one- and- twenty,people had said to one another,"what will he be by the time he is forty- five?" |
35485 | Is he a nice fellow? |
35485 | Is he very ill? |
35485 | Is it funny? |
35485 | Is n''t it a pity he do n''t marry his cousin, Lady Gwendoline, and settle down like his pa? |
35485 | Is tea ready? |
35485 | Is that the best teapot you''re a- having your teas out of? 35485 Is there any truth in it, Raymond?" |
35485 | Is this acting, Mrs. Gilbert? 35485 Is what true, Roland?" |
35485 | Is your father at home? |
35485 | Isabel,he said at last,"have you ever thought what your life is to be, always, after this parting to- day? |
35485 | It has been predicted to you? |
35485 | It is not for yourself, then, that you want this money? |
35485 | Izzie,cried George Gilbert suddenly,"what''s the matter?" |
35485 | Melancholy- looking objects, are they not? |
35485 | Miss Binks? |
35485 | My darling,he said,"I am very punctual, am I not? |
35485 | No,faltered the Doctor''s Wife,"it is not for my step- mother, but----""But it is for some member of your family?" |
35485 | Of course I did n''t know then that I loved you, Isabel-- oh, may I call you Isabel? 35485 Of what faith? |
35485 | Oh, do you think he will die? |
35485 | Oh, tell me the truth,she whispered, imploringly;"do they think that he will die?" |
35485 | Oh, the doctor? 35485 Oh, what, what can they think me?" |
35485 | Oh, why do you let me read to you, if you do n''t care for the poetry? |
35485 | Raymond, is this true? |
35485 | Shall I send for him? |
35485 | Shall I take them away? |
35485 | Shall we go into the garden? |
35485 | She was very fond of Mr. Gilbert, I suppose,--very much in love with him? |
35485 | There is a strange man staying in Nessborough Hollow-- well; what then? |
35485 | There''s a suicide, then, in your story? |
35485 | They''re not so interesting as Sterne''s donkey, are they, Mrs. Gilbert? 35485 Too many?" |
35485 | We''ll teach him a little life, eh, SAMUEL? |
35485 | Well, young''un,the boy answered, disdainfully,"how do_ you_ find yourself?" |
35485 | What am I to him? |
35485 | What can I discover that I do not already know? 35485 What can possibly have induced him to invite those people to Mordred? |
35485 | What can such a despicable wretch as I am ever be to him? 35485 What did Lansdell say? |
35485 | What do I care about new carpets? |
35485 | What do I think to who, Master Jarge? |
35485 | What do you call a combination story? |
35485 | What do you think of her, Jeff? |
35485 | What is it, Izzie? |
35485 | What is it? |
35485 | What reports? |
35485 | What should I wait for? 35485 What the deuce is the matter with you, Lansdell?" |
35485 | What wo n''t do? |
35485 | What''s it all about, Sigismund? |
35485 | What''s the matter? |
35485 | When are you going abroad again? |
35485 | When was this? |
35485 | Where? |
35485 | Why not? |
35485 | Why should I be so eager to see this man? |
35485 | Why should it not be discussed? |
35485 | Why should n''t I marry at once, Jeff? |
35485 | Why, Izzie,he said,"what_ have_ you been doing with yourself?" |
35485 | Will this parting be a new grief to her, a shadowy romantic sorrow, like her regret for drowned Shelley, or fever- stricken Byron? 35485 Will you come and gather some flowers, Izzie?" |
35485 | Will you come and see my pictures at once? 35485 With whom? |
35485 | Would I please to see any one? |
35485 | Would you please to see any one, sir? |
35485 | Yes; do you want him? |
35485 | You are coming with us, I suppose, Roland? |
35485 | You are going abroad, sir? |
35485 | You are going? |
35485 | You are not angry with me? |
35485 | You have been very much shocked by your husband''s death? |
35485 | You have come back with the intention of remaining, then, Roland? |
35485 | You knew him-- you knew Mr. Roland Lansdell when he was a boy? |
35485 | You mean that she does n''t love me? |
35485 | You seem very much at home with her? |
35485 | You were very fond of him, I suppose? |
35485 | You''d like to walk, I suppose, George? |
35485 | You''re going to marry her, Master Jarge? |
35485 | You''ve been worried, papa? |
35485 | Your daughter? |
35485 | Your husband-- does he know about this person who asks for money from you? |
35485 | ''And you''ll swear to him, if necessary?'' |
35485 | ''Do n''t they?'' |
35485 | ''You need n''t have pounced upon me so precious sharp,''he said, rather sulkily;''I was n''t going to bolt with it, was I?'' |
35485 | ''You think you could recognize this man with the black whiskers?'' |
35485 | Again, had she not known all along that Roland Lansdell would go away, and that all her bright dreams and fancies must go with him? |
35485 | Ah, how should those common people understand, when even you do not, Roland? |
35485 | Ah, if you knew how I have travelled night and day; if you knew how I have languished for this hour, and for the sight of----"For the sight of what? |
35485 | Ah, is there any kind of death that can ever make me forget you? |
35485 | Ah, what more likely, what more proper, if it came to that? |
35485 | Am I to accept my dismissal, and bid you good afternoon, and put up patiently with having been made the veriest fool that ever crossed this bridge?" |
35485 | Am I to find that it is only the old story after all-- falsehood, and trick, and delusion? |
35485 | Am I to send the envelopes or not?" |
35485 | An omen of what? |
35485 | And Beatrice Portinari, and Viola, and Leila, and Gulnare, and Zelica, what of them? |
35485 | And how much did she think of George Gilbert all this time? |
35485 | And is it any wonder, therefore, if to this romantic girl the calamity that had so suddenly befallen her seemed like a dream? |
35485 | And so you like all that dreamy, misty stuff?" |
35485 | And then in the next moment he thought how, if that look in her pale face were real, and she was really striving to be good,--how then? |
35485 | And then, again, why should she withdraw from the engagement? |
35485 | And was not the name of the knight Roland--_his_ name? |
35485 | And what do you think, Isabel?" |
35485 | And yet-- and yet--"And yet what? |
35485 | Are none of the wonderful things that happen to women ever to happen to you? |
35485 | Are not reformed drunkards the dullest and most miserable of mankind? |
35485 | Are you never to be Charlotte Corday, and die for your country? |
35485 | Are you only an innocent child, after all, or the wiliest coquette that ever lived? |
35485 | Be you she?" |
35485 | Besides, was there not some glory, some delight, in trying to be good? |
35485 | But did she forget Roland Lansdell all this time? |
35485 | But do you think he could ever be happy with that woman? |
35485 | But was her romantic attachment to Roland Lansdell laid down at the new altar she had found for herself? |
35485 | But what good could come of such a meeting? |
35485 | But why should I go abroad?" |
35485 | But why should he have written to her? |
35485 | But you call yourself Sigismund now?" |
35485 | But you have come home for good now? |
35485 | But you know something about my friend Roland, I think, do n''t you, Isabel?" |
35485 | By the bye, how do you mean to finish the day, Raymond?" |
35485 | Ca n''t you see the Vicar''s face, as he looks round at Burchell, and knows that his secret is discovered? |
35485 | Came back? |
35485 | Can you doubt the purity of my love-- the truth, the honesty of my intentions? |
35485 | Can you doubt what would have happened had I come home a year earlier than it was my ill fortune to come? |
35485 | Could he be dying? |
35485 | Could it be true? |
35485 | Could she do more for him than that? |
35485 | Did he despise her very much? |
35485 | Did her head still ache? |
35485 | Did n''t I see it from the first?" |
35485 | Did not D''Alembert retire from the world and all its troubles into the peaceful pleasures of geometry? |
35485 | Did not Fagin think about the broken rail when he stood in the dock, and wonder who would mend it? |
35485 | Did not Goethe seek relief from some great sorrow in the study of a new language? |
35485 | Did not Napoleon snub Madame de Staël? |
35485 | Did not Rousseau declare that the first man who enclosed a lot of ground and called it''mine''was the enemy of the human race? |
35485 | Did she wish to be like these people? |
35485 | Did such kindness ever bear any fruit but anguish and misery and mortification? |
35485 | Did you ever hear of any good coming of it? |
35485 | Did you observe her eyes?" |
35485 | Do I ever say anything new, or think anything new, or do anything for which any human creature has cause to say, Thank you? |
35485 | Do n''t you know the sort of thing? |
35485 | Do not the actors live after the play is done, and the curtain has fallen? |
35485 | Do you ever think of her as a living presence, conscious of your sorrows, compassionate of your sins? |
35485 | Do you imagine that you could keep any secret from Graybridge? |
35485 | Do you know that already that unhappy girl''s name is compromised? |
35485 | Do you know that he is an infidel, and outrages his friends by opinions which he does not even care to conceal? |
35485 | Do you know that his name has been involved with the names of married women before to- day? |
35485 | Do you know what my cousin''s life has been? |
35485 | Do you remember that day in the garden when you first saw her? |
35485 | Do you remember the garden- scene in''Romeo and Juliet,''Izzie? |
35485 | Do you think I was n''t fly, then? |
35485 | Do you think I would n''t rather be the author of the''Vicar of Wakefield''than of''Colonel Montefiasco?'' |
35485 | Do you think Saturday will suit you and the Doctor, Mrs. Gilbert? |
35485 | Do you think you can come?" |
35485 | Does she make puddings, and sew on buttons, and fill up the holes in your stockings with wonderful trellis- work? |
35485 | Does this kind of thing usually grow old, I wonder?" |
35485 | During all those solemn watches did any bad thoughts enter her mind? |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Give me the light, ca n''t you?" |
35485 | Had he any right to come into that holy place? |
35485 | Had he any right to come there and trouble this girl in the midst of her struggle to forget him? |
35485 | Had he done anything wicked? |
35485 | Had he fled his country, like Byron? |
35485 | Had he not been thinking of her and of her pleasure at the very moment when she had upbraided him for his lack of interest in the Alien? |
35485 | Had he not said something to that effect? |
35485 | Had he not witnessed the martyrdom of Stephen, and had yet been unmoved? |
35485 | Had her conduct been shameless and unwomanly, and would he remember her only to despise her? |
35485 | Had not her life been altogether one long fever since Roland Lansdell''s advent in Midlandshire? |
35485 | Had not her whole life been bounded by a magic circle, of which Roland Lansdell was the resplendent centre? |
35485 | Had not the enclosure of the cheque in that cruel letter been almost an insult? |
35485 | Had she not coolly and deliberately rejected his love-- his devotion, so earnestly and solemnly offered to her? |
35485 | Had she not counted upon his departure? |
35485 | Had she not gone there constantly, long ago, when Mr. Lansdell was lounging in Grecian Islands, and eating ices under, the colonnades of Venice? |
35485 | Had she not heard him tell Mr. Raymond that he should spend the winter in Paris? |
35485 | Had she not left him to his despair and desolation, with no better comfort than the stereotyped promise that she would"think of him?" |
35485 | Had she not lived her life, and was she not entitled to be a heroine for ever and ever by reason of her love and despair? |
35485 | Had she not seen the last of Mr. Sleaford in Nessborough Hollow, whence he was to depart for Wareham station at break of day? |
35485 | Had she not worn it in one of their meetings at Thurston''s Crag? |
35485 | Have I ever been happy in my life, or is there such a thing as happiness upon this unequally divided earth? |
35485 | Have some bread and marmalade?" |
35485 | Have you any consciousness of the mischief you''re doing? |
35485 | Have you no feeling for that poor honest- hearted fellow who has judged you by his own simple standard, and has trusted you implicitly? |
35485 | Have you no sense of truth or honour? |
35485 | Have you noticed Isabel''s eyes? |
35485 | He was in love, passionately, earnestly in love, with a foolish sentimental little woman, whose best charm was-- what? |
35485 | He''s a good fellow-- a very noble- hearted, high- minded young fellow; but--"But what? |
35485 | Her heart was perpetually beating out the four syllables of that simple sentence: Would he be there? |
35485 | His wasted life; the good things he might have done upon this earth? |
35485 | How can it matter what becomes of me, if you are happy?" |
35485 | How could these people read her heart, or understand her love for Roland Lansdell? |
35485 | How do you mean, Izzie?" |
35485 | How should she ever see such places? |
35485 | How was she to endure her existence? |
35485 | How was she to endure it? |
35485 | How would_ they_ spend the evening,--they who were not going to weep with Mr. Benjamin Webster, or Miss Sarah Woolgar? |
35485 | I have heard----""What? |
35485 | I mystify you, do n''t I, my darling, by all this rambling talk? |
35485 | I think the salad- dressing and the champagne- nippers are the legitimate things to forget, are they not? |
35485 | If Isabel Gilbert was the creature she was represented to be,--and he could not doubt his authority,--what could it matter to him how low she sank? |
35485 | If a man ca n''t have a niche in the Walhalla, is n''t it something to have his name in big letters in the play- bills on the boulevard? |
35485 | If he stooped from his high estate to smile upon her, was he not entitled to her deepest gratitude, her purest devotion? |
35485 | Is it any one from-- from Lowlands?" |
35485 | Is it inspiration or animal magnetism which gives this power to some special persons? |
35485 | Is it slow to be dangling from a housetop with a frayed rope slipping through your hands and seventy feet of empty space below you? |
35485 | Is it slow to go down into subterranean passages, with a dark lantern and half- a- dozen bloodhounds, in pursuit of a murderer? |
35485 | Is it true? |
35485 | Is it your step- mother? |
35485 | Is n''t it better for a man to do his best in the style that is natural to him than to do badly in another man''s line of business? |
35485 | Is there any woman in all the world capable of caring a little for such a worn- out wretch as I?" |
35485 | Is there anything wrong? |
35485 | Is this show of surprise and indignation a little comedy, which you play when you want to get rid of your lovers? |
35485 | It makes one feel as if one could never go back to the world again, does n''t it?" |
35485 | It said so plainly,"Do you think anything that can happen henceforward upon this earth could ever seem strange to me?" |
35485 | It sounds like a flower, does n''t it?" |
35485 | It sounds well; does n''t it? |
35485 | It was an eternal parting: for had he not told her to go away from him-- to leave him for ever? |
35485 | Joanna of Naples, is n''t it? |
35485 | Lansdell?" |
35485 | Lansdell?" |
35485 | Might he not learn the depth of her love, the strength of her regret, by that one look of recognition? |
35485 | Might not a walk across Mount Cenis cure him of his foolish love for Isabel Gilbert? |
35485 | Never mind your flowers now, Roland; it''s a very charming bouquet, but you do n''t suppose Mrs. Gilbert is going to carry it about all day? |
35485 | Of course I do n''t make Aureola,--I call my Jeannie''Aureola;''rather a fine name, is n''t it? |
35485 | Oh, had he been fooled by his own vanity? |
35485 | Oh, was there even the remotest chance that he would be there? |
35485 | Oh, what was it, Isabel? |
35485 | Oh, why, why did you come here?" |
35485 | Or had the cruel arrow shot home already; was my destiny sealed even then? |
35485 | Or was it a black cat, or a gentleman usher, or a skeleton; or all three?" |
35485 | Or would he read and not care? |
35485 | Poor little childish creature, who could wonder at her foolish sentimentality? |
35485 | Shall I bring you Lamartine''s''Girondists''as well? |
35485 | Shall I live to write gossiping old letters and collect china? |
35485 | Shall we have to put back the clock for an hour, in order to foil the designs of your impalpable foe? |
35485 | She forgot all about the interview at Graybridge; what_ could_ she remember in that room, except that_ he_ was ill? |
35485 | She thought of him, and she thought what her life might have been-- if---- If what? |
35485 | Should he go and stand by the gate, to make sure of seeing her as she came in? |
35485 | That she-- that Isabel has been seen with some stranger?" |
35485 | The blue- eyed heroes were out of fashion now, for was not_ he_ dark of aspect? |
35485 | Then, after a little pause, she said, shyly:"Thurston''s Crag is a pretty place; shall we go there?" |
35485 | There''s nothing so very queer about me, is there? |
35485 | These books do n''t make you happy, do they, Izzie?" |
35485 | They were Mr. Raymond''s nieces? |
35485 | They were very difficult: how was she to render even such a simple sentence as"My own Clotilde?" |
35485 | This is Thursday; shall we say Saturday for my picnic? |
35485 | Was Dante degraded by his love for Beatrice? |
35485 | Was Isabel alone, and going to walk back? |
35485 | Was November the winter? |
35485 | Was all this affectation, or was it only simple childish reality? |
35485 | Was he not a hero, and would he not inevitably have courted that or any other peril? |
35485 | Was he not there, talking to her and advising her? |
35485 | Was it all settled, then, so suddenly-- with so little consideration? |
35485 | Was it not a reopening of all the old wounds? |
35485 | Was it not a reversal of the story of Diana and Endymion? |
35485 | Was it not always so? |
35485 | Was it not an act of pure philanthropy to clear some of the sentimental mistiness out of that pretty little head? |
35485 | Was it not the condescension of a demigod, who smiles upon some earthly creature? |
35485 | Was it one of the servants? |
35485 | Was it only idle curiosity, as I believed, that took me there? |
35485 | Was it only prettiness, or was it something more, even in spite of the brown dress? |
35485 | Was it real, that exalted expression of the pale still face? |
35485 | Was it so very strange, this sudden conversion? |
35485 | Was it strange that, all at once, Isabel Gilbert should open her ears to the sublime story, which, in one shape or other, she had heard so often? |
35485 | Was it strange, then, that Isabel Gilbert, so dangerously susceptible of every influence, should be touched and melted by Mr. Colborne''s eloquence? |
35485 | Was it that he wished to occupy Mrs. Gilbert''s mind, and to force her to some slight exertion? |
35485 | Was it the same grove? |
35485 | Was it to be for ever and for ever like this? |
35485 | Was it true-- could it be true-- that all this inexpressible happiness was to be his? |
35485 | Was it wrong to think of him? |
35485 | Was n''t it a pity that he was drowned?" |
35485 | Was n''t she engaged to a Mr. Lansdell ever so long ago, and then to the Marquis of Heatherland? |
35485 | Was not Lady Gwendoline the very incarnation of all her own foolish dreams of the beautiful? |
35485 | Was not Mr. George Gilbert a rising man in Graybridge? |
35485 | Was not all the world before him, and all creation designed for his pleasure? |
35485 | Was not the first Mrs. Gilbert specially happy to have died young? |
35485 | Was not_ he_ by her side, talking to her every now and then? |
35485 | Was not_ he_ dead? |
35485 | Was she anything to him, or was that musical lowering of his voice common to him when he spoke to women? |
35485 | Was she at Graybridge still? |
35485 | Was she in a consumption? |
35485 | Was she leading the old quiet life, sitting in that shabby parlour, where he had sat by her side? |
35485 | Was she not trying to be good now, and was not goodness incompatible with the perusal of Shelley''s poetry on a Sunday? |
35485 | Was she not trying to be good; and did not all Mr. Colborne''s sermons inculcate self- sacrifice and compassion, tenderness and pity? |
35485 | Was she pretty? |
35485 | Was there anything upon earth denied him, except the ignis- fatuus light of this woman''s black eyes? |
35485 | Was there not a minute description of Lord Thurston''s oak in the very first chapter? |
35485 | Was there to be nothing in her life, then? |
35485 | Was this feminine affectation, provincial Rosa- Matilda- ism? |
35485 | Was this generous? |
35485 | Was this meek young man the Byronic hero they had pictured? |
35485 | Was this the author of"Colonel Montefiasco, or the Brand upon the Shoulder- blade?" |
35485 | Was_ she_ amongst them? |
35485 | Were his thoughts far away in some foreign city with dark- eyed Clotilde? |
35485 | Were their lives so much the better because they scorned the gentle guidance of the apron- string? |
35485 | Were there any of those Beings whose manners and customs her books described to her, but whose mortal semblances she had never seen? |
35485 | Were there any princes in the world? |
35485 | Were there not three volumes of courtship to be gone through first? |
35485 | Were they very happy? |
35485 | What a lovely morning, is it not? |
35485 | What construction can I put upon her conduct of last night except one-- except one? |
35485 | What could I not make of such a girl as that? |
35485 | What could Isabel Gilbert do? |
35485 | What could Mrs. Gilbert say, except that she would be delighted to go home with them? |
35485 | What could any one do for such a husband as this? |
35485 | What could be more intensely proper than this country walk with her mother''s late partial boarder? |
35485 | What could she say to him? |
35485 | What did Mr. Smith make of all his lofty privileges? |
35485 | What did William Jeffson want more than this? |
35485 | What did he know of her? |
35485 | What did he mean by flying at me about Isabel, I wonder; and how does he come to know her? |
35485 | What did he think of during those two long hours in which he sat in the churchyard waiting for the afternoon service? |
35485 | What did he think of? |
35485 | What did it matter to him what_ he_ was like? |
35485 | What did it matter whether she was in love with Sir Reginald Glanville or Mr. Roland Lansdell? |
35485 | What did it matter, then, if she was fluttered and dazed and intoxicated by his presence? |
35485 | What did it matter? |
35485 | What did it matter? |
35485 | What did it signify if the solid earth became empyrean air under this foolish girl''s footsteps? |
35485 | What did she see? |
35485 | What do you mean? |
35485 | What does her past life matter to us if her head''s well balanced? |
35485 | What if it was to be so? |
35485 | What is impossible in a universe where there are such stars? |
35485 | What is the use of me, Gwendoline? |
35485 | What is to become of me, Gwendoline? |
35485 | What more than sweet smiles and gentle looks could the most exacting husband demand? |
35485 | What motive had he in seeking out this stranger staying at a rustic public- house? |
35485 | What odds will you give me against Mr. Tomlinson''s brown colt, Vinegar Cruet, for the Conventford steeple- chase?" |
35485 | What purpose could she have in coming to that house, save one? |
35485 | What relation should she meet alone, secretly, late at night, in such a place as Nessborough Hollow? |
35485 | What right had he to interfere in a wicked woman''s low intrigue? |
35485 | What romance had ever been written that was equal to this story; this perpetual fiction, with a real hero dominant in every chapter? |
35485 | What should I want with so much money?" |
35485 | What should he do with himself? |
35485 | What should there be amiss with me, who never had a day''s illness in my life? |
35485 | What was he thinking of? |
35485 | What was her husband better than a tradesman, when there could be this question of accounts and payment between him and Roland Lansdell? |
35485 | What was it to him that Isabel Sleaford was so near? |
35485 | What was it to him that there was every prospect of a speedy dissolution, unless----? |
35485 | What was medical science worth, if it was powerless to save this one sick man? |
35485 | What was she but a frivolous, helpless creature, fluttering and trembling like a leaf when she essayed to do any little service for the invalid? |
35485 | What was she doing? |
35485 | What was she to him, that he should think of her, or be fluttered by the thought that she was within his reach? |
35485 | What was she to him, that he should trouble himself about her, and bring universal scorn upon his name, perhaps, by some low tavern brawl? |
35485 | What was the use of a ten- pound note spent upon splendour in Murlington, when the honeymoon was to close in degradation such as this? |
35485 | What was there left in all the universe now that he was gone? |
35485 | What would be the good of that? |
35485 | What would be the use of such a change? |
35485 | What''ll you take?" |
35485 | What''s the consequence? |
35485 | What''s the row? |
35485 | What, in Heaven''s name, is Mr. Raymond''s motive for taking her up? |
35485 | When did a matchmaker ever create anything but matrimonial confusion and misery? |
35485 | When had they left his mind, except for that brief interval of passion during which his mind had been a chaos? |
35485 | Whenever is he at home at this time of day?" |
35485 | Where did that twopenny- halfpenny blown- glass sugar- basin come from? |
35485 | Where''s the Britannia metal as I gave thirteen- and- six for seven year ago? |
35485 | Where''s your husband?" |
35485 | Who ate a plum- dumpling yesterday for dinner, and asked for more? |
35485 | Who can calculate the arrangements of the Giaour or Sir Reginald Glanville? |
35485 | Who ever heard of penny numbers being funny? |
35485 | Who ever quotes any passage from the works of Guilbert de Pixà © rà © court, or remembers his name? |
35485 | Who is this person who wants money of you? |
35485 | Who shall tell the bitter sinful story of his grief and passion? |
35485 | Who should come there that day except a stranger? |
35485 | Who was that person?" |
35485 | Who was the Alien? |
35485 | Who would not wish to be great? |
35485 | Who''s the honest- hearted fellow? |
35485 | Why ca n''t people be reasonable, and take life wisely? |
35485 | Why do n''t he come home?''" |
35485 | Why had he ever invited her to Mordred? |
35485 | Why had she come to him at such a time? |
35485 | Why should I have everything in this world? |
35485 | Why should I not have a career like other men, and try like them to be of some use to my species? |
35485 | Why should I not love him; as we love the stars, that are so beautiful and so distant from us? |
35485 | Why should I not worship him as Helena worshipped Bertram, as Viola loved Zanoni? |
35485 | Why should he be ashamed, or humiliated, or degraded? |
35485 | Why should he care? |
35485 | Why should he lament the innocent idol of his dreams? |
35485 | Why should he not enjoy this innocent pleasure of a rustic ramble with simple country- bred people and children? |
35485 | Why should he not marry? |
35485 | Why should not Lady Gwendoline avail herself of her special right? |
35485 | Why should she not bestow this other half of her nature upon whom she chose? |
35485 | Why should she not end her sorrows for ever in the glassy pool, so deep, so tranquil? |
35485 | Why was it that his heart yearned for this woman''s presence? |
35485 | Why, Izzie, what''s the matter? |
35485 | Why, you''re not surprised, are you, Jeff? |
35485 | Will Christie and Manson sell my pictures when I am dead? |
35485 | Will any woman have pity upon me and marry me, and transform me into a family man, with a mania for short- horned cattle and subsoil- drainage? |
35485 | Will she marry that good, sheepish country surgeon, who has fallen in love with her? |
35485 | Will you give me a light for my cigar?" |
35485 | Will you meet me here two days hence,--on Wednesday, at three o''clock? |
35485 | Will you take what you want?" |
35485 | Will you try and think of her as she really is, Gwendoline,--not as these Graybridge people see her,--and be kind to her when I am dead and gone? |
35485 | Would Edith Dombey have been perpetually dropping things? |
35485 | Would George give her a new silk dress? |
35485 | Would Mr. Lansdell do anything of that kind? |
35485 | Would he be there? |
35485 | Would he ever come? |
35485 | Would he go now? |
35485 | Would he linger to meet her and speak to her? |
35485 | Would he read a paragraph in the newspapers some morning at breakfast, and break a blood- vessel into his coffee- cup? |
35485 | Would he remember the sunny afternoon, and the things he had said to her? |
35485 | Would she be found floating on the stream, with weeds of water- lilies tangled in her long dark hair? |
35485 | Would she look pretty when she was dead? |
35485 | Would the master of Mordred Priory have been stricken with any sense of shame if he had met George Gilbert? |
35485 | Would the sight of the wicked squire''s dark reproachful face undo all the work of these two months? |
35485 | Would you have any objection to walk over yonder and see him, Isabel, or shall I call him here?" |
35485 | Would_ he_ be sorry when he heard of her death? |
35485 | You are going almost immediately?" |
35485 | You can remember that?" |
35485 | You have no other Christian name?" |
35485 | You know Gwendoline? |
35485 | You talked some time since of going away from Midlandshire-- from England; do you still think of doing so?" |
35485 | You will try to be patient, wo n''t you, my dear? |
35485 | You will, wo n''t you, Isabel? |
35485 | You''ll come down to dinner, eh?" |
35485 | You''ll go on and show Mrs. Gilbert the Murillo in the next room, Raymond? |
35485 | You''ll use the old work- box, wo n''t you, Izzie?" |
35485 | and was it likely that the family of his rival should have any indulgence for the shortcomings of his pale- faced wife? |
35485 | and was it strange that she should go there now? |
35485 | and what''s the nature of the business altogether?" |
35485 | and who''s the foolish woman? |
35485 | asked Mr. Lansdell, with a dash of fierceness in the sudden change of his tone;"why should I go? |
35485 | could I swear I was not short- sighted? |
35485 | cried Mr. Lansdell, with a strident laugh;"had we not better leave_ his_ name out of the question? |
35485 | cried Roland, turning in his low easy- chair, and staring at the solemn face of his valet;"who should want to see me at such a time of night? |
35485 | cried Roland,"can you misunderstand me so utterly? |
35485 | did she ever think that she might be free to marry Roland Lansdell if the surgeon''s illness should terminate fatally? |
35485 | did they know that she had a free admission to the upper boxes of the Adelphi, and envy her? |
35485 | exclaimed Mrs. Gilbert;"oh, Lady Gwendoline, how can you say that_ he_ is vain? |
35485 | have you any knowledge of the bottomless pit of sin, and misery, and shame, and horror that you are digging before that foolish woman''s feet?" |
35485 | have you no feeling for him, Roland?"'' |
35485 | he mused,"will anybody ever fathom her fancies or understand her dreams? |
35485 | if I should know him without his whiskers? |
35485 | it is a foolish fever, is it not? |
35485 | muttered Mr. Raymond;"was n''t there something to that effect in the''Alien?'' |
35485 | my dear Roland, have I not already told you that my authority is the common Graybridge gossip?" |
35485 | not even the common instinct of a gentleman? |
35485 | or buried a fellow- creature in a cave, like Mr. Aram? |
35485 | sadly think, of thee-- When the shadows darken on the misty lea, Imogen, And the low light dies behind the sea?'' |
35485 | said Lady Gwendoline;"and what do you think of his wife, Roland? |
35485 | she was an improper person, was n''t she? |
35485 | that''s Mr. Gilbert, is it not?" |
35485 | then they were his poor cousin Rosa Harlow''s children, of whom he had heard so much from that dear good Raymond? |
35485 | was it a put- off, or what?" |
35485 | was it real, or had she begun a new flirtation, a little platonic sentimentalism in favour of the popular preacher? |
35485 | what am I good for? |
35485 | what can they say of me? |
35485 | what can they say?" |
35485 | what good am I there more than I am here?" |
35485 | what if she was to meet him now, and the story was appointed to begin to- day,--this very day,--and all her life henceforth was to be changed? |
35485 | what is there for me to do there better than here? |
35485 | when? |
35485 | where?" |
35485 | whether I could swear to the colour of his waistcoat? |
35485 | whether I had been plucked at Oxford? |
35485 | whether I should be able to recognize an acquaintance whom I had only seen once in twenty years? |
35485 | whether I usually devoted my leisure time to travelling about with detective officers? |
35485 | whether I was short- sighted? |
35485 | whether any member of my family had ever been in a lunatic asylum? |
35485 | who shall forbid me to grasp my treasure?" |
35485 | why should we not plan a bright life of happiness and fidelity? |
35485 | why was it? |
35485 | why, what is there that is n''t possible if you go back to the time of the Plantagenets? |
35485 | will she be sorry when she reads it?" |
35485 | with whom?" |
35485 | would I be kind enough to read a verse or so from a diamond edition of the works of Thomas Moore? |
35485 | would he go away at once? |
35485 | you and George are both looking as spooney as-- is it, eh?--yes, it is: is n''t it? |
35485 | you will marry me, my own darling, my beautiful wife?" |
6147 | End is there none? |
6147 | ''But how?'' |
6147 | ''Is this never to have an end?'' |
6147 | ''What are we to do in England?'' |
6147 | ''What are you up to? |
6147 | --''You think so?'' |
6147 | A certain''excellent equestrian''falling in with Coleridge on horseback, thus accosted him--''Pray, Sir, did you meet a tailor along the road?'' |
6147 | A little overflow of vivacity, a_ pirouette_ more or less, what harm should_ that_ do to any of us? |
6147 | After the absolute restoration to health, a man is very apt to say,--''Now, then, how shall I use my health? |
6147 | And how? |
6147 | And in framing his plot, which way did he set his face to look out for accomplices? |
6147 | And is this the sorrow that kills you?" |
6147 | And scandal says( but then what will not scandal say?) |
6147 | And the question argued at the London dinner- table was-- Could the writer have been other than a devil? |
6147 | And what is_ that_ expressed in time? |
6147 | And when he says,''Twas thou, what is the wretch talking to? |
6147 | And why? |
6147 | And why? |
6147 | And_ why_ are they not? |
6147 | Are these works, then, to be held cheap, because their truths to their falsehoods are in the ratio of one to five hundred? |
6147 | Are we never to improve? |
6147 | Ay, indeed-- where did he learn_ that_? |
6147 | Besides, is not the science a growth from very ancient times? |
6147 | Breathing, for instance, talking to me,( though rather absurdly,) and airing your legs at a glowing fire?'' |
6147 | But did the reader feel them to be the awful bores which, in fact, they were? |
6147 | But if a cry should arise,''Stop that wretch, who was rude to the Earth: who is he?'' |
6147 | But in what way did that operate upon his exertions as a writer? |
6147 | But is war, then, to go on for ever? |
6147 | But of what is he the revealer? |
6147 | But some will ask-- Was Mr. Coleridge right in either view? |
6147 | But the reader naturally asks, How does all this concern Lord Rosse''s telescope on the one side, or general astronomy on the other? |
6147 | But what possible connection, it was asked, can exist between this vessel on the Nile and a remote peninsula of Southern Europe? |
6147 | But what was it then that went to wreck? |
6147 | But why trouble a festal remembrance with commemorations of crimes or criminals? |
6147 | But, if so, how much less can it be pretended that satisfaction has been rendered to the claims of Coleridge? |
6147 | But_ is_ there? |
6147 | But_ would_ the belligerents wait? |
6147 | Can he be apostrophizing the knout? |
6147 | Could these notions really have belonged to Bowyer, then how do we know but he wrote_ The Ancient Mariner_? |
6147 | Cruelty!--to whom? |
6147 | Do the seventy_ weeks_ of the prophet mean weeks in the sense of human calendars? |
6147 | Does an_ æon_, though a Grecian word, bear scripturally[ either in Daniel or in Saint John] any sense known to Grecian ears? |
6147 | Does the angel touch the pillar with his foot? |
6147 | First, what age now might we take our brother and sister planets to be? |
6147 | For example, will any man believe this? |
6147 | For instance, what sort of a German scholar was Coleridge? |
6147 | For is there, after all, any stationary meaning in the question? |
6147 | Hartmann''s journal? |
6147 | Has a man a right to play the German flute, where the partitions are slender, all day long in the house adjoining to yours? |
6147 | How came it into any man''s heart, first of all, to conceive so audacious an idea as that of a conspiracy against war? |
6147 | How else can you account for so many of his sayings being found amongst_ their_ pages? |
6147 | How should that bird know our destiny, who did not know that it was his own to be shot by Mosollam the Jew?'' |
6147 | If he has taken to opium- eating, can we help_ that_? |
6147 | If the fear created the gods, what created the fear? |
6147 | If_ his_ face shines, must our faces be blackened? |
6147 | In these circumstances, why should it surprise us that men will pursue the science of discovery as a regular trade? |
6147 | Is a wooden spoon dull? |
6147 | Is indeed leviathan_ so_ tamed? |
6147 | Is she a child, in fact, or is she an adult? |
6147 | Let her have lived any number of years that you suggest,( shall we say if you please, that she is in her billionth year?) |
6147 | Old? |
6147 | Or, because juries, when tipsy, will wink at anything, does the privilege extend to the jew''s- harp? |
6147 | Or, if another were indisposed, you might be sure he would ask,''But does he drink beer?'' |
6147 | Or, if you wait till the_ impedimenta_ come up, you may draw your ration of_ Posca_''What was_ posca_? |
6147 | Or, supposing a beneficent jury( beneficent to_ him_) finds this to be no legal nuisance, has he a right to play it ill? |
6147 | Or, without ranging through the whole of the_ Spectator''s_ culinary music, will the bagpipes be found within benefit of jury law? |
6147 | Revenge!--for what? |
6147 | Si je mourrois à l''instant même,_ serois- je damné_? |
6147 | Souvent je me demandois-- En quel état suis- je? |
6147 | Then the angel threw up his glorious hands to the heaven of heavens; saying,"End is there none to the universe of God? |
6147 | This Atrius Umber might be called''that pleonasm of darkness;''and one might say to him, in the words of Othello,''What needs this iteration?'' |
6147 | This ill- fated_ djerme_--what was it called? |
6147 | To what delightful purpose shall I apply it? |
6147 | Twenty pounds ascend in a Scotch mist to the Chancellor of the Exchequer from Leeds; but does it evaporate? |
6147 | Was he dull? |
6147 | Well, and what beside? |
6147 | Well, where_ is_ it? |
6147 | What could do it? |
6147 | What do I infer from this? |
6147 | What good would it do us to have a certificate of our dear little mother''s birth and baptism? |
6147 | What is it that Lord Rosse has revealed? |
6147 | What is it then that Lord Rosse has accomplished? |
6147 | What is it? |
6147 | What is the deadest of things earthly? |
6147 | What then? |
6147 | What then? |
6147 | What was their operation? |
6147 | What was to be done? |
6147 | What''s a_ nebula_, what''s a world, more or less? |
6147 | What''s the row?'' |
6147 | What_ was?_ Where do the true permanent causes of war, as distinguished from its proximate excitements, find their lodgment and abiding ground? |
6147 | What_ was?_ Where do the true permanent causes of war, as distinguished from its proximate excitements, find their lodgment and abiding ground? |
6147 | What_ was_ the logic through which such a tale as this could lend any countenance to the schemes of these abolitionists? |
6147 | Whence could he draw any vapor of hope to sustain his preliminary steps? |
6147 | Where is the Scotchman, said Dr. Johnson, who does not prefer Scotland to truth? |
6147 | Where is the man who shall be equal to these things? |
6147 | Wherefore did God give to man the powers for contending with scientific difficulties? |
6147 | Whither has this work, and so many others swathed about with Coleridge''s MS. notes, vanished from the world?] |
6147 | Why should any decent world wear an_ alias_? |
6147 | Will the causes of war die away because war is forbidden? |
6147 | Would the teeth of a crocodile not splinter under that word? |
6147 | Yet why, or on what principle? |
6147 | You know the_ Paradise Lost_? |
6147 | Young? |
6147 | might have settled his claim,) what, says Fire, setting her arms a- kimbo, would they do for_ him_? |
6147 | retorts his philosophic friend;''my good fellow, are you not using it at this moment? |
6147 | says Fire,''is that all? |
6147 | so young, and yet so wicked?" |
6147 | that it should be so, but really fight we must, for what says the treaty?] |
6147 | the angel solemnly demanded:"Is there indeed no end? |
6147 | to the marrowbones and cleavers? |
6147 | to the poker and tongs? |
6147 | twenty voices will answer, perhaps,''It''s Encke''s Comet; he is always doing mischief;''well, what can you say? |
6147 | warn us of a peculiar sense attached to the word_ day_ in divine ears? |
6147 | what do we properly mean, by a concession or a sacrifice made to a spiritual power, such as Christianity? |
6147 | what?--What''s that you say? |
14598 | A letter from the king? |
14598 | A ring, you say? |
14598 | A riot? |
14598 | A vintner, your Excellency? |
14598 | Afraid? 14598 After all, will it not be foolish?" |
14598 | Am I a thief, a scoundrelly thief, because I have that right common to all men, to love one woman? 14598 America? |
14598 | An insult like this? |
14598 | And I? |
14598 | And I? |
14598 | And are there not plenty of vineyards in Bavaria? |
14598 | And did I not love him? |
14598 | And do you eject yourself thus easily? |
14598 | And do you love this vintner? |
14598 | And for that in the garden below? |
14598 | And for what reason? |
14598 | And have I not cause? 14598 And he is?" |
14598 | And he loves you? |
14598 | And how much is this fortune? |
14598 | And if I can not get in? |
14598 | And if I did? |
14598 | And if I find out anything suspicious? |
14598 | And if I refuse to change my mind? |
14598 | And if I refuse to give that word? |
14598 | And if I should ask to come in? |
14598 | And if trouble came,now smiling,"where should I find you?" |
14598 | And may I bring along a little present? |
14598 | And my father, your Highness? |
14598 | And no one ever came for the reward? 14598 And so Dreiberg no longer appeals to you? |
14598 | And that? |
14598 | And the end? |
14598 | And the girl? |
14598 | And the little Gretchen? |
14598 | And the music? |
14598 | And the significance? |
14598 | And the vintner? |
14598 | And this dream; was there not a woman in it? |
14598 | And to me? |
14598 | And what are you doing here this time of the night? |
14598 | And what do you see? |
14598 | And what do you see? |
14598 | And what has become of the principal cause? |
14598 | And what has the king to suggest? |
14598 | And what is her serene highness like? |
14598 | And what is that to you? |
14598 | And what is that? |
14598 | And what will you do with all that money? |
14598 | And where? |
14598 | And which side will you take? |
14598 | And who am I? |
14598 | And who has written this letter? |
14598 | And who is here with you? |
14598 | And who might you be, and what might you be doing here in Dreiberg, riding with the grand duke? |
14598 | And who sent you? |
14598 | And why not? |
14598 | And you are returning? |
14598 | And you ask no further questions? |
14598 | And you love me like this? |
14598 | And you will go back? |
14598 | And your business here? |
14598 | Angry? 14598 Are all Americans rich?" |
14598 | Are they not always yours? 14598 Are we rich enough for war?" |
14598 | Are you become afraid of me? |
14598 | Are you hurt, Excellency? |
14598 | Are you not a spy from Jugendheit? |
14598 | Are you not afraid to walk about in this part of the town so late? |
14598 | Are you rich? |
14598 | Are you truthfully sure? |
14598 | At the ball? |
14598 | At what age? |
14598 | Blood- money for me? 14598 Breunner, you say this little goose- girl is my daughter?" |
14598 | Breunner? 14598 Brothers, shall this thing take place? |
14598 | But how does he take it? |
14598 | But what does this all mean? 14598 But what is the use of all this, now that her highness is found?" |
14598 | But what positive evidence have you that Jugendheit wronged you? |
14598 | But what possessed the prince to blunder like this? |
14598 | But what proof have you that she is not? 14598 But what was your part?" |
14598 | But what would I do with carriages and jewels? 14598 But whatever can the chancellor want of me?" |
14598 | But who taught you to read? |
14598 | But who will prove it to the world? |
14598 | But who, then, am I? |
14598 | But why Dreiberg? 14598 But why did you come back? |
14598 | But why do n''t you want immunity for yourself? |
14598 | But why the clocks? |
14598 | But why? 14598 But will it be as easy to go in as it was to come out?" |
14598 | But will such happiness last? 14598 But you do n''t tell him who--""Why should he know?" |
14598 | But you say he dances? |
14598 | But you would dare handle him in this way? |
14598 | But you''re from this side of the water? |
14598 | But you, what are you doing in Dreiberg, in this guise? |
14598 | But you, why have you come dressed like this? |
14598 | But your name? |
14598 | But your singing? |
14598 | But, Mr. Carmichael, what is_ your_ interest in Gretchen? |
14598 | But, great God, what''s to be done? |
14598 | Ca n''t you make a confidant of me, Hans? |
14598 | Can I be of any assistance? |
14598 | Can I be of material assistance? |
14598 | Can I grant it? |
14598 | Can I help you in any way? |
14598 | Can you make me happy also? |
14598 | Can you read music? |
14598 | Can you realize how difficult it is not to take you by the throat and strangle you here and now? |
14598 | Can you write? |
14598 | Captain? |
14598 | Carmichael,he said,"will you please help me? |
14598 | Carmichael? |
14598 | Count, has it not occurred to you that we stand in the presence of two very beautiful young women? |
14598 | Dead? |
14598 | Declines? |
14598 | Despair? 14598 Did I not prophesy it?" |
14598 | Did I not say that some impresario would discover you and make your fortune? |
14598 | Did I not worship that boy, who was to me more like a son than a brother? 14598 Did he tell you to whom he sold his honor?" |
14598 | Did you come here to seek her? |
14598 | Did you fight in the war? |
14598 | Did you get your geese together without mishap? |
14598 | Did you go to America with your parents? |
14598 | Did you see that young vintner? |
14598 | Did you see the soldier? |
14598 | Do princesses change their minds like this? |
14598 | Do they ever come true? |
14598 | Do you care for another beer? |
14598 | Do you care for fairy- stories? |
14598 | Do you deny it? |
14598 | Do you ever go to the opera? |
14598 | Do you know him? |
14598 | Do you know what they remind me of? 14598 Do you know where the American consulate is?" |
14598 | Do you know who this fellow was? |
14598 | Do you like it there? |
14598 | Do you like music? |
14598 | Do you mean well by my girl? |
14598 | Do you never keep the change yourselves? |
14598 | Do you recall the first day I met you? |
14598 | Do you remember the night you dropped your fan? |
14598 | Do you think it wise to say so here? |
14598 | Do you think there will be any France in the future? |
14598 | Does not your socialism teach that we are all equal? |
14598 | Ducwitz, your Highness? |
14598 | Enough to take you for ever out of this part of the world? |
14598 | Foolish boy, what good would that do? 14598 For how long?" |
14598 | For the man who is to become your husband? |
14598 | For what, Gretchen? |
14598 | For what? |
14598 | For what? |
14598 | Forget your highness? 14598 Four?" |
14598 | Frederick of Jugendheit? |
14598 | From Jugendheit? |
14598 | From what? |
14598 | Fräu Bauer,she cried, gasping as much in wrath as for lack of breath,"may I come behind your counter?" |
14598 | Gettysburg? |
14598 | Good reasons? |
14598 | Gretchen, where shall I find the Adlergasse? |
14598 | Gretchen, who was that speaking to you? |
14598 | Gretchen? |
14598 | Gretchen? |
14598 | Grumbach,said Carmichael,"what the deuce were you looking at the other night, with those opera- glasses?" |
14598 | Hans, have you no other greeting? |
14598 | Has he not? |
14598 | Has she stolen any flowers or trod on any of the beds? |
14598 | Have I not told you, Hermann? 14598 Have not princesses married commoners?" |
14598 | Have you any dreams? |
14598 | Have you any objection to my becoming your foster grandchild, such as Gretchen is? |
14598 | Have you any sorrows, Captain? |
14598 | Have you any suspicions? |
14598 | Have you ever heard of the kissing cherries? |
14598 | Have you gone forward any? |
14598 | Have you never seen a woman knead flour? |
14598 | Have you the gift of prescience? |
14598 | Have you thought what this marriage will cost us in taxes? |
14598 | Have you wondered why she should write to me? |
14598 | He was not hurt, Fräu? |
14598 | He? 14598 Hebe?" |
14598 | Heine? 14598 Here, and dressed like a carter? |
14598 | Here? |
14598 | Herr Captain, do you know this compatriot? |
14598 | Herr Carmichael? |
14598 | Herr Hoffman? |
14598 | Herr, are you from the police? |
14598 | His little finger? |
14598 | His royal highness? |
14598 | History? |
14598 | Holy Mother, what has happened? |
14598 | How can I save him? |
14598 | How dare you touch me like that? |
14598 | How dare you? |
14598 | How did you come by that Bavarian passport? |
14598 | How did you come by this letter? |
14598 | How long will you be in Dreiberg? |
14598 | How long will you be making your visit? |
14598 | How old are you, Gretchen? |
14598 | How shall I describe her? |
14598 | How the deuce will it end? |
14598 | How was she? |
14598 | How would you like a dream of this kind to come true? |
14598 | How? |
14598 | How? |
14598 | Hurt? |
14598 | I am, then, for all that I am a princess, simply a certificate of exchange? |
14598 | I did? |
14598 | I shall not intrude, I trust? |
14598 | I wonder who that was? |
14598 | I? |
14598 | I? |
14598 | In Heaven''s name, why? |
14598 | In a letter? |
14598 | In spite of publicity? |
14598 | In the prisons? |
14598 | In what way? |
14598 | In your presence, Highness? |
14598 | Insulted you? |
14598 | Is Gretchen one of your waitresses? |
14598 | Is he an American? |
14598 | Is it difficult? |
14598 | Is it her highness? |
14598 | Is it not pride rather than honor? 14598 Is it possible, Herbeck, that you do not appreciate the magnitude of the situation?" |
14598 | Is it true that you have not heard yet? 14598 Is it very large, this America?" |
14598 | Is it you, Hans, and I did not know you? |
14598 | Is not this sudden? 14598 Is that right?" |
14598 | Is there any way to the roofs? |
14598 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
14598 | Is there anything strange in this fact? |
14598 | Is there anything you want? |
14598 | Is this the hand of a liar and a cheat? 14598 Is this the way you work?" |
14598 | It was not, I believe? |
14598 | It was the packet A, your Highness? |
14598 | Jugendheit? |
14598 | Krumerweg? 14598 Krumerweg?" |
14598 | Leo? |
14598 | Leopold, what is the matter with you to- night? 14598 Leopold?" |
14598 | Ludwig what? |
14598 | Making a fool of himself over what? |
14598 | May I present him? 14598 May I retain this bundle?" |
14598 | May I take this to her highness? |
14598 | May I walk along with you? |
14598 | Mine, father? |
14598 | Mine? 14598 Motives, my friend? |
14598 | Mr. Carmichael,she said in English,"tells me that you fought with him in the American war?" |
14598 | Munich? |
14598 | Must I give an order twice? |
14598 | Must I not, little Hans? 14598 Must?" |
14598 | My child, will you roll up your left sleeve? |
14598 | My daughter? |
14598 | My house? |
14598 | My passports were wrong in some respect? |
14598 | My passports, your Excellency? |
14598 | My sleeve? |
14598 | Never knew father or mother? |
14598 | News for me? |
14598 | No? |
14598 | Not Jugendheit? |
14598 | Not any further back than that? |
14598 | Not before? |
14598 | Now, then,he said,"what is the trouble?" |
14598 | Now, who is Hans Grumbach? 14598 Now, your Highness?" |
14598 | On your honor? |
14598 | One what? |
14598 | Or a nephew? |
14598 | Out? |
14598 | Paris? 14598 Perhaps you did not care to have the police ask you questions?" |
14598 | Poker? |
14598 | Positive? 14598 Pray, how?" |
14598 | Regret it in my old age? 14598 Rich?" |
14598 | See that? |
14598 | Shall I live? |
14598 | Shall I speak to him? |
14598 | Shall I weep and tear my hair over a boy I have never seen? 14598 Shall we go at once? |
14598 | Should it not be brought to me on a golden salver? |
14598 | Since when did goose- girls and barmaids become on intimate terms with her serene highness? |
14598 | Singing? 14598 So he dances? |
14598 | So his majesty declines? |
14598 | So she is gentle and beautiful? 14598 So there is a trap, and I am to beware of a mountaineer, a carter, a butcher, and a baker? |
14598 | So this is the end? |
14598 | So you are going to become a prima donna? |
14598 | So you love music? |
14598 | So you will take her away from me? |
14598 | So? 14598 So? |
14598 | So? |
14598 | So? |
14598 | So? |
14598 | So? |
14598 | So? |
14598 | So? |
14598 | Soldiers? |
14598 | Somebody has left you a fortune? |
14598 | Something serious, eh? |
14598 | Still, suppose I bargain for you, too? |
14598 | Strange? |
14598 | Suppose she was vastly his inferior in station, that marriage to him was merely a political contract? 14598 Suppose that?" |
14598 | Suppose you had a son who was making a fool of himself? |
14598 | Surely your majesty will not shoot an old friend? |
14598 | Sword- sticks, sabers or hop- poles? 14598 Tekla? |
14598 | Ten thousand men? |
14598 | Ten thousand? 14598 That? |
14598 | The American consul? 14598 The Black Eagle? |
14598 | The archplotter of this damnable conspiracy? |
14598 | The cause? |
14598 | The end of what? |
14598 | The goose- girl? 14598 The goose- girl?" |
14598 | The grand duke? 14598 The king?" |
14598 | The man was tall? |
14598 | The princess? |
14598 | The scar? 14598 The second crown in Jugendheit?" |
14598 | Then I am to marry the king of Jugendheit? |
14598 | Then he is no stranger to you? |
14598 | Then there are no men angels? |
14598 | Then this is big game, your Highness? |
14598 | Then why bother? |
14598 | Then why seek to be recalled? |
14598 | Then you are not happy with your lot? |
14598 | Then you expected to be turned out? |
14598 | There is a woman? |
14598 | This honor to me? |
14598 | This seat is not reserved, Herr? |
14598 | To that young rascal of a vintner? |
14598 | To the palace? |
14598 | To the palace? |
14598 | To the palace? |
14598 | To what end? |
14598 | To what purpose? |
14598 | To- morrow? |
14598 | Two weeks? 14598 Uncle, is this damnable thing true?" |
14598 | Upon what pretense did he gain admittance at this hour? |
14598 | Villain, what have you to say? 14598 Wallenstein? |
14598 | Was he guilty? |
14598 | Was it a crime, then, to jump out of the window? |
14598 | Was it wise? |
14598 | Was n''t it all about the grand duke''s daughter? |
14598 | Well, Captain, what did his Highness say? |
14598 | Well, and what then? |
14598 | Well, in case she is what you consider insulted, what will you do? |
14598 | Well, my good fairy, what is in your magic wand to- night? |
14598 | Well, my little soldier? |
14598 | Well, or a nephew? |
14598 | Well, your Excellency? |
14598 | Well? |
14598 | Well? |
14598 | Well? |
14598 | Were you afraid? |
14598 | Were you ever wounded? |
14598 | What am I, and who am I? |
14598 | What are angels like? |
14598 | What are you doing here? |
14598 | What are you going to do? |
14598 | What can not your highness explain? |
14598 | What did Colonel Wallenstein say to you? |
14598 | What did he try to do to you, Gretchen? |
14598 | What did the policeman say? |
14598 | What do I care what they say? 14598 What do you advise?" |
14598 | What do you do? |
14598 | What do you infer? |
14598 | What do you say to that? |
14598 | What do you think of this, Hildegarde? |
14598 | What do you wish? |
14598 | What else? |
14598 | What good will lies do? |
14598 | What happened to her? |
14598 | What has happened, child? |
14598 | What has that to do with it? 14598 What has that to do with it?" |
14598 | What has this clock- mender to do with the case? |
14598 | What have you done to me, who am innocent of any wrong? 14598 What have you to say?" |
14598 | What is Gretchen to you? |
14598 | What is all this about? |
14598 | What is all this about? |
14598 | What is going on here, little goose- girl? |
14598 | What is he like? |
14598 | What is it you wish to say to me? |
14598 | What is it, Leo? |
14598 | What is it, father? |
14598 | What is it? |
14598 | What is it? |
14598 | What is it? |
14598 | What is it? |
14598 | What is on your mind? |
14598 | What is she like, this angel? |
14598 | What is that you say? |
14598 | What is the matter, Herr? |
14598 | What is the matter? 14598 What is the trouble, Hermann?" |
14598 | What is this new- found princess like? |
14598 | What is this? |
14598 | What is your business in America? |
14598 | What is your business? |
14598 | What is your name? |
14598 | What is your name? |
14598 | What is your name? |
14598 | What jest is this, Leopold? |
14598 | What name? |
14598 | What part of Germany? |
14598 | What remedy do you suggest? |
14598 | What shadow? |
14598 | What shall she sing in, your Highness? 14598 What sort of clothes does a vintner wear?" |
14598 | What then? 14598 What troop?" |
14598 | What was that song you were singing before the horses came up? |
14598 | What was this adventure? |
14598 | What was this little finger like? |
14598 | What will you be drinking? |
14598 | What will you do? |
14598 | What would he say to a goose- girl? |
14598 | What would you say if I told you that your mystery is no mystery at all? 14598 What''s all this nonsense about?" |
14598 | What''s that? |
14598 | What''s the good word, Captain? |
14598 | What''s the trouble? |
14598 | What''s up, Hans? |
14598 | What? |
14598 | What? |
14598 | What? |
14598 | When a fellow turns in early in the morning? |
14598 | When did you come? |
14598 | When did you get this? |
14598 | When is the wedding? |
14598 | When? |
14598 | Where are you from? 14598 Where are you going, Gretchen?" |
14598 | Where are your companions? |
14598 | Where did these come from? |
14598 | Where did you find these? |
14598 | Where did you get a watch like this? |
14598 | Where did you get it? |
14598 | Where did you get that? |
14598 | Where did you take the chancellor to- night? |
14598 | Where did you take the veiled lady? |
14598 | Where is she? |
14598 | Where is the king? |
14598 | Where is the prince? |
14598 | Which way have you been riding? |
14598 | Who are they? |
14598 | Who are you? |
14598 | Who are you? |
14598 | Who are you? |
14598 | Who can say what a man will do? 14598 Who can say where we shall go next? |
14598 | Who could help it, your Highness? |
14598 | Who does not, father? |
14598 | Who has n''t? 14598 Who has not dreamed of riding in carriages, of dressing in silks, of wearing rich ornaments?" |
14598 | Who is dead? |
14598 | Who is he? 14598 Who is this mysterious woman?" |
14598 | Who knows? 14598 Who knows? |
14598 | Who knows? |
14598 | Who may describe an angel one has seen only in a golden dream? |
14598 | Who taught you to sing? |
14598 | Whom were you seeking? |
14598 | Why are you always talking like that? 14598 Why ca n''t your bandmaster give us light opera once in a while?" |
14598 | Why could n''t I have fallen in love with some one like this? |
14598 | Why did you ask all those questions? |
14598 | Why did you do it? |
14598 | Why did you do that? |
14598 | Why did you jump out of the window? |
14598 | Why do you always rouse me in this fashion, Herbeck? 14598 Why do you call me that?" |
14598 | Why do you do that, Captain? |
14598 | Why do you do that? |
14598 | Why do you do this, father? 14598 Why have you returned?" |
14598 | Why not? 14598 Why should I? |
14598 | Why should he wish to see you? |
14598 | Why should his late majesty abduct the daughter of the grand duke? 14598 Why, Grumbach, what are you doing here?" |
14598 | Why, father,kissing him,"what brings you here?" |
14598 | Why, in God''s name, did you not refuse when the overtures were first made? 14598 Why, no, your Highness; but--""What is the harm, then?" |
14598 | Why? |
14598 | Why? |
14598 | Why? |
14598 | Why? |
14598 | Why? |
14598 | Why? |
14598 | Will it balance war and devastation? |
14598 | Will it be necessary? |
14598 | Will that satisfy you? |
14598 | Will you bring me a tankard of brown Ehrensteiner? |
14598 | Will you consent to this marriage? |
14598 | Will you kindly look over my papers? |
14598 | Will you not join me, Herr? |
14598 | Will you return to America? |
14598 | Will you send some one to his excellency the chancellor and tell him I have come from number forty Krumerweg? |
14598 | Will you sheathe it? |
14598 | Will you stand aside? |
14598 | Will you subject me to public arrest? |
14598 | Will you tell me how to find the Adlergasse? |
14598 | Will you trust me a little longer, Gretchen, just a little longer? |
14598 | Will you want me, Fräu- Wirtin, for a little while to- night? |
14598 | Will your highness leave the matter in my hands? |
14598 | With a pair of opera- glasses? |
14598 | With these? |
14598 | Would a man who was brave and kind and resourceful, but without a title, would he be an inferior? |
14598 | Would it be-- honest? |
14598 | Would it benefit the people? 14598 Would it do any good to reject it?" |
14598 | Would there be two lockets, Highness? |
14598 | Would you not like to be a princess, Gretchen? |
14598 | Yes, my dear nephew; what do you mean by Gretchen? |
14598 | You accept it calmly, in this fashion? |
14598 | You accused the king? |
14598 | You are bidding me farewell, your Highness? |
14598 | You are fond of France? |
14598 | You are forty? |
14598 | You are from America? |
14598 | You are from the United States? |
14598 | You are positive that you were disinterested? |
14598 | You are returning to America? |
14598 | You are thinking of leaving? |
14598 | You ask? |
14598 | You forgive me, then, Hermann? |
14598 | You forgive me? |
14598 | You have already heard? |
14598 | You have been riding hard? |
14598 | You have been to school? |
14598 | You have overslept? |
14598 | You have served? |
14598 | You have, of course, retained your Bavarian passport? |
14598 | You here, Gretchen? |
14598 | You know her? |
14598 | You love some one else, Highness? |
14598 | You mean that there will be other kings? |
14598 | You say patience when my heart is dying inside my breast? 14598 You say she wore the costume of a Gipsy child when you lost her?" |
14598 | You see? |
14598 | You sent for us, father? |
14598 | You speak of God? 14598 You still have your permit to leave Bavaria?" |
14598 | You were afraid? |
14598 | You were in the war? |
14598 | You were not born in America? |
14598 | You will be good to her? |
14598 | You will make yourself known to them? |
14598 | You will not tell me? |
14598 | You will promise to take it? |
14598 | You wished to see me, Herr Grumbach? |
14598 | You would go so far? |
14598 | You, Hans? |
14598 | You, my child? 14598 You? |
14598 | You? 14598 You? |
14598 | You? |
14598 | Your Highness, do you see that man yonder, on the parapet? 14598 Your excellency has no further orders?" |
14598 | Your excellency, then, really leaves me to work in the dark? |
14598 | Your excellency? |
14598 | Your eyes, your nose-- Arnsberg, here and alive? 14598 Your father--?" |
14598 | Your highness does not recognize me, then? |
14598 | Your highness sent for me? |
14598 | Your highness? |
14598 | Your own music? 14598 Your pardon, sir,"he said in good English,"but you are Mr. Carmichael, the American consul?" |
14598 | Your recall? |
14598 | Yours? 14598 _ Ach, Gott!_ Do n''t we all dance to some tune or other?" |
14598 | _ Du lieber Gott!_ Was that his excellency? 14598 _ Du lieber Gott!_ You are Leopold Dietrich?" |
14598 | _ Gott!_"What did you say, Herr? |
14598 | A political scavenger, the man she loved? |
14598 | A princess? |
14598 | A princess? |
14598 | A princess? |
14598 | A spy, this man to whom she had joyously given the flower of her heart and soul? |
14598 | A step? |
14598 | A tavern?" |
14598 | About what, father?" |
14598 | After all, who was the lady in black and why should he bother himself about her? |
14598 | After all, why not? |
14598 | Ah, Herr Captain,"with a friendly jerk of his head toward Carmichael;"will you do me the honor to join me in my cabinet, quarter of an hour hence?" |
14598 | Ah, have not my arms hungered for the touch of you, my heart ached for the longing of you? |
14598 | Ah, is there such villainy? |
14598 | Am I a chattel, that I am to be offered across this frontier or that?" |
14598 | Am I cruel to speak of love in the moment of your great affliction? |
14598 | An adventure? |
14598 | And how?" |
14598 | And if I do, which is mine, and what does this signify?" |
14598 | And may I ask a favor of your highness?" |
14598 | And now what do you think? |
14598 | And shall we submit, like the dogs in Flanders, to become beasts of burden?" |
14598 | And that other, who? |
14598 | And the young lady?" |
14598 | And these two children: which is mine?" |
14598 | And this Gipsy?" |
14598 | And was she happy with all this grandeur, with all these lackeys and attentions and environs? |
14598 | And what might your name be?" |
14598 | And what right had conscience to drag him back to Ehrenstein, where he had known the bitterest and happiest moments of his life? |
14598 | And what will you do now?" |
14598 | And who but the French could produce such a woman spy? |
14598 | And who were her nocturnal visitors? |
14598 | And why should you be sad and miserable?" |
14598 | And will you be long in the city?" |
14598 | And you are to be married when the vintage is done? |
14598 | And you knew him all the while?" |
14598 | Are such men born and do they live? |
14598 | Are we, then, afraid of Jugendheit?" |
14598 | Are you mad to attack a man this way? |
14598 | Are you not the grand duke, and am I not your daughter?" |
14598 | Blunder, wrong? |
14598 | Breunner? |
14598 | But Gretchen? |
14598 | But I repeat, do you mean well by my girl?" |
14598 | But am I less a man for that? |
14598 | But can you prove it?" |
14598 | But do you believe me"--putting a hand against his heart--"something here tells me that some day fate will drag him back and give him into my hands?" |
14598 | But do you like music?" |
14598 | But his highness"--eagerly--"was he very angry?" |
14598 | But his own people; what does he say of them?" |
14598 | But how?" |
14598 | But if they question me?" |
14598 | But if you are discovered here?" |
14598 | But if your Gipsy fails you?" |
14598 | But once the banns are published, it will be neither wise nor--""Proper? |
14598 | But suppose she has set her heart on the crown of Jugendheit? |
14598 | But what could he be? |
14598 | But what did you mean when you said you knew all you wanted to know?" |
14598 | But what had the lieutenant further to conceal? |
14598 | But what kind of a woman?" |
14598 | But what to do till that time? |
14598 | But what''s the odds? |
14598 | But where? |
14598 | But where? |
14598 | But who could read her eyes whenever they roved in Carmichael''s direction? |
14598 | But who was the lady in the veil? |
14598 | But you believe, Ludwig?" |
14598 | But you-- who are you to recall these things?" |
14598 | But"--mildly--"who may say that it is not a cunning forgery?" |
14598 | But, God in Heaven, where should he begin? |
14598 | But, girl, are you speaking truthfully?" |
14598 | By what right should I possess these things?" |
14598 | By which sentry did you pass?" |
14598 | CHAPTER III FOR HER COUNTRY"Count, must I tell you again not to broach that subject? |
14598 | Ca n''t you throw back the top?" |
14598 | Can you read?" |
14598 | Carmichael ably concealed his surprise:"You have some one who reads to you?" |
14598 | Carmichael put in a counter- query:"What was your brother doing here?" |
14598 | Carmichael thirstily drank his first tankard, thinking:"So this vintner is in love with our goose- girl? |
14598 | Carmichael?" |
14598 | Carmichael?" |
14598 | Carmichael?" |
14598 | Come,"savagely,"what do you mean by the goose- girl?" |
14598 | Could a man with hands like these mean well toward Gretchen? |
14598 | Could he trust any one in the world? |
14598 | Could he trust this man? |
14598 | Could n''t the chancellor go out in a common hack if he wanted to? |
14598 | Could the fellow be crazy? |
14598 | Did I not warn you against this very thing when you proposed this mad junket? |
14598 | Did I offer immunity to him?" |
14598 | Did he confess to you the crime he committed?" |
14598 | Did not Herr Goldberg, whom the police detested, did he not say that all men were equal? |
14598 | Did not my wife die of a broken heart, and did I not become a broken man? |
14598 | Did the curtain stir? |
14598 | Did they think that he was in his dotage, to offer an insult of this magnitude? |
14598 | Diplomats? |
14598 | Do I not know that you love me? |
14598 | Do I see these things, or do I not? |
14598 | Do men love as women love? |
14598 | Do n''t you know that no one is allowed in here without a permit?" |
14598 | Do not their pleasures grind us so much deeper into the dirt? |
14598 | Do we ever trust any one fully without being in the end deceived? |
14598 | Do we not always pay for the luxuries of the rich? |
14598 | Do you begin to understand me, or must I be more explicit?" |
14598 | Do you know Herr Carmichael?" |
14598 | Do you know that you are the most beautiful being in all Dreiberg?" |
14598 | Do you like music?" |
14598 | Do you live alone?" |
14598 | Do you not know, and have you not known? |
14598 | Do you understand me?" |
14598 | Does that frighten you?" |
14598 | Eh? |
14598 | For what benefits? |
14598 | For what purpose had she been stolen, and by whom? |
14598 | Gretchen? |
14598 | Grumbach, you have your honorable discharge with you?" |
14598 | Guards? |
14598 | Had he not opposed it for months? |
14598 | Had he not seen battles and storms, revolutions and bloodshed? |
14598 | Had not all the brothers and sisters died but he? |
14598 | Had there ever been a more likable adventure? |
14598 | Hans Breunner, brother of Hermann, and you put yourself into my hands?" |
14598 | Have I eyes and ears? |
14598 | Have I not always known and loved you?" |
14598 | Have I not lived in hell, your Highness?" |
14598 | Have I not my dowry, and are we not to be married after the vintage?" |
14598 | Have I not seen and read and heard?" |
14598 | Have you any ready funds?" |
14598 | Have you ever seen ripe wheat in a rain- storm? |
14598 | Have you had breakfast?" |
14598 | Have you opened yours as frankly?" |
14598 | Have you really cares of state, that you walk five times round this fountain, bump into me, and start to go on without so much as a how- do- you- do?" |
14598 | He declines the honor of my hand: is that not it?" |
14598 | He felt that he was confronted with a great problem; what to do with the man? |
14598 | Her highness? |
14598 | Herr Captain, you will return with me to the ball- room?" |
14598 | His brother Hans alive and here, and rich? |
14598 | How can I reward you for bringing this message? |
14598 | How long ago did you leave Bavaria?" |
14598 | How long ago was it I met you first?" |
14598 | How long had he been steeling his heart against this very scene? |
14598 | How long had_ he_ been in Dreiberg? |
14598 | How many times had he gazed at these trinkets in these sixteen or more years? |
14598 | How many times had the talons of remorse gashed his heart? |
14598 | How many years had the old fellow swung the baton? |
14598 | How many years, thought Herbeck, had he been preparing for this moment? |
14598 | How often had he uttered lamentations over them? |
14598 | How should a goose- girl know that such a question was indelicate? |
14598 | How would you like these things? |
14598 | How? |
14598 | How?" |
14598 | I find you at this moment, of all others?" |
14598 | I make overtures? |
14598 | I ruin my life, I break the heart of the grand duke, I nearly cause war between two friendly states-- why? |
14598 | I, who have been so cruelly wronged all these years? |
14598 | If I let you read it, will you agree to that?" |
14598 | If not a princess, what was she? |
14598 | Is it everything and all things, or only an incident? |
14598 | Is it not years? |
14598 | Is it the hand of a dishonest man?" |
14598 | Is not the new ballerina enough conquest? |
14598 | Is she not worthy a crown?" |
14598 | Is that all you have? |
14598 | Is that explicit?" |
14598 | Is that not the way? |
14598 | Is there no way of changing the king''s mind?" |
14598 | Is this the door?" |
14598 | It always comes back in a circle; what benefit to me would have been a crime like that of which I was accused? |
14598 | It was"Do you remember this?" |
14598 | It''s a fine mystery, is n''t it?" |
14598 | Moselle?" |
14598 | Must I teach you economy?" |
14598 | Need I tell you? |
14598 | Never again to worry about your hands, never again to know the weariness of toil, to be mistress of swans instead of geese?" |
14598 | Now then, what''s to be done? |
14598 | Now, do you understand?" |
14598 | Now, may I ask how you came to be dressed in these clothes on this particular night?" |
14598 | Now, what has happened since I went away? |
14598 | Now, what is at the bottom of all this?" |
14598 | Now, why are you here? |
14598 | Now, why should this stranger laugh all by himself like that? |
14598 | Now, will you get me that invitation to the gallery at the military ball?" |
14598 | Of what? |
14598 | Patience? |
14598 | Perhaps you can dispel this phantom?" |
14598 | Roll up her sleeve? |
14598 | Shall the daughter of Ehrenstein become Jugendheit''s vassal? |
14598 | Shall we not be happier as our crowns accumulate, to ward off sickness and hunger? |
14598 | She enters the palace without any more trouble than this?" |
14598 | Should he ask the way to the Adlergasse? |
14598 | Should he knock at the door and ask to be admitted? |
14598 | Should he mount and be off before she made the turn? |
14598 | Should he wait across the street? |
14598 | So he had purposely tried to avoid her? |
14598 | So she had a dowry and was going to be married? |
14598 | So the Princess Hildegarde has come back to her own? |
14598 | So then, within seven days I shall come for your answer?" |
14598 | So this was Gretchen''s lover? |
14598 | So war is gathering in your veins?" |
14598 | So you are on speaking terms with her highness?" |
14598 | So you are to be recalled?" |
14598 | So you ask for nothing? |
14598 | So you have trapped me blindly? |
14598 | Some women--""But what kind of women?" |
14598 | Suppose the chancellor should look at the situation adversely, from the duke''s angle of vision, should the duke learn? |
14598 | That ring on the carter''s finger? |
14598 | The hour, your appearance, the letter-- to what else could they point? |
14598 | The king clutched the back of his chair with a grip of iron: Gretchen? |
14598 | Then you do not judge me harshly?" |
14598 | There was, then, something new under the sun? |
14598 | There were two sides to it: which had interested the vintner? |
14598 | They would play with him, eh? |
14598 | Thieves? |
14598 | Thieves? |
14598 | To love, what is the sickle of death?" |
14598 | To what end? |
14598 | Trouble? |
14598 | Vintner? |
14598 | War again? |
14598 | War and famine and pestilence; did these not always follow at the heels of women? |
14598 | Was I not high in honor? |
14598 | Was I not wealthy? |
14598 | Was immunity promised?" |
14598 | Was not my home life a happy one? |
14598 | Was she a simple goose- girl? |
14598 | Was she not something more, something deeper? |
14598 | Was that some one coming for her? |
14598 | Was there ever such a fine world? |
14598 | Well, what of it? |
14598 | What benefit to me, I say?" |
14598 | What blunder had been made? |
14598 | What can he be doing here? |
14598 | What can you do?" |
14598 | What did Grumbach mean by that? |
14598 | What did those yonder know of war? |
14598 | What did you do that compelled your flight from Ehrenstein?" |
14598 | What do you do during the day? |
14598 | What do you do?" |
14598 | What do you mean by Gretchen?" |
14598 | What do you say to an hour or two at the Black Eagle? |
14598 | What do you suggest?" |
14598 | What does_ she_ know? |
14598 | What have I done to you that you should wreck all I hold dear?" |
14598 | What have you done that you ca n''t come back here openly?" |
14598 | What have you done to me?" |
14598 | What indeed should he do? |
14598 | What is in the letter, Herbeck?" |
14598 | What is the meaning?" |
14598 | What is your name?" |
14598 | What kind of a blunder, and who was innocently wronged? |
14598 | What kind of a curtsy should she make? |
14598 | What made him run away like this?" |
14598 | What place had the goose- girl in this tragedy? |
14598 | What possessed her father? |
14598 | What proof, I say?" |
14598 | What regiment?" |
14598 | What shall I do now?" |
14598 | What shall I do?" |
14598 | What should I do without your solid common sense? |
14598 | What should he do? |
14598 | What should he do? |
14598 | What should he do? |
14598 | What should she say to her serene highness? |
14598 | What the devil is my army for if not to uphold my dignity? |
14598 | What the devil was going on? |
14598 | What then?" |
14598 | What to do? |
14598 | What was Gretchen doing here? |
14598 | What was a crown to me who, till now, have never worn one save in speech? |
14598 | What was he really hunting for with those glasses? |
14598 | What was it all about? |
14598 | What was it? |
14598 | What was the American consul doing in this part of the town, so near midnight? |
14598 | What was your purpose?" |
14598 | What would you do?" |
14598 | What would you? |
14598 | What young girl has not her dream of romance? |
14598 | What''s this? |
14598 | What? |
14598 | Whatever is the matter?" |
14598 | When did the king decline this alliance?" |
14598 | When is the wedding?" |
14598 | When the waiter set the beer down before him, he said:"Where does Herr Carmichael live?" |
14598 | Where are you going?" |
14598 | Where did you take him?" |
14598 | Where does madame your guest sing, in Berlin or Vienna?" |
14598 | Where had he read that there is no crime but leaves some evidence, infinitesimally small though it be, which shall lead to the truth? |
14598 | Where had he seen that young vintner before? |
14598 | Where is the grand duke''s pride we have heard so much about? |
14598 | Where should he begin? |
14598 | Where were you going when this popinjay stopped you?" |
14598 | Where''s the story- book to match it? |
14598 | Which way should he move? |
14598 | Who can say? |
14598 | Who can?" |
14598 | Who could describe her sensations as she passed through marble halls, up marble staircases, over great rugs so soft that her step faltered? |
14598 | Who is she?" |
14598 | Who is this fellow Grumbach? |
14598 | Who knows but that I might find the true conspirator, the archplotter? |
14598 | Who knows?" |
14598 | Who was she?" |
14598 | Who was the gentleman in civilian clothes?" |
14598 | Who was this old woman who thought nothing of writing a letter to her serene highness? |
14598 | Who was this terrible old man, with the mind of a serpent and the strength of a bear? |
14598 | Who will recognize me now? |
14598 | Who, then, is this woman I have called my child?" |
14598 | Whoever heard of a serene highness doing the things I do? |
14598 | Whose writing, I ask?" |
14598 | Why did he bring in the head gardener and leave him standing there all that while?" |
14598 | Why did she not refuse outright, indignantly, contemptuously, as became one of the House of Ehrenstein? |
14598 | Why had he not gone on instead of waiting at the fork? |
14598 | Why not? |
14598 | Why should I marry?" |
14598 | Why should any man wish to see a woman knead bread? |
14598 | Why should he be surprised? |
14598 | Why should he run like that? |
14598 | Why the devil could n''t you have left well enough alone? |
14598 | Why were not kings molded in this form? |
14598 | Why, did we not work together in the vineyards, and did we not plan for the future? |
14598 | Why? |
14598 | Will they not laugh and turn me out?" |
14598 | Will you accept my hand, as one man to another?" |
14598 | Will you be on the field this afternoon?" |
14598 | Will you be patient for a moment?" |
14598 | Will you come into the garden with me now?" |
14598 | Will you denounce me, brother?" |
14598 | Will you do this?" |
14598 | Will you forgive an old man who ought to have known better?" |
14598 | Will you grant me a favor?" |
14598 | Will you kindly look them over?" |
14598 | Will you let me by peacefully?" |
14598 | Would any one, save an Irishman, give way, day after day, to those insane maunderings? |
14598 | Would his uncle go with him? |
14598 | Would it be for the good of the state?" |
14598 | Would she toss aside this crown, or would she fight for it? |
14598 | Would you like a riot in the gardens?" |
14598 | Would you like to hear about it?" |
14598 | Wrong her? |
14598 | You are also a stranger in Dreiberg?" |
14598 | You are going to the ball to- night?" |
14598 | You ca n''t remember? |
14598 | You could n''t leave her in peace, could you? |
14598 | You have never been to sea before?" |
14598 | You have some other meaning?" |
14598 | You have some purpose?" |
14598 | You will give me their descriptions, your Excellency?" |
14598 | You will see the chancellor to- night and show him this letter?" |
14598 | You will, of course, go down to them with me?" |
14598 | You will, then, tell the duke that you have changed your mind, that you have reconsidered?" |
14598 | You wo n''t forget the extra crown, Herr?" |
14598 | [ Illustration:"Are all Americans rich?" |
14598 | [ Illustration:"Surely your Majesty will not shoot an old friend?"] |
14598 | _ Du lieber Himmel!_ What kind of a mix- up was this? |
14598 | _ Gott!_ What was going on? |
14598 | _"Ach!_ So you have one, too?" |
14598 | and,"Do you recall that?" |
14598 | interrupted the duke, with despairing gesture toward Grumbach,"why did you not leave us all in peace?" |
14598 | said Goldberg, bowing with ridicule:"Since when did her serene highness make you her confidante?" |
52242 | ''Ah, mon Dieu, pourquoi ne l''avez vous pas nommé? |
52242 | ''And what is drawing for? |
52242 | ''Art, poetry?''... |
52242 | ''But how can I get out of this scrape?'' |
52242 | ''But my_ perception_ of God, of him whom I seek,''asked I of myself,''where has that perception come from?'' |
52242 | ''But what is it for in summer, when not yet cut down?'' |
52242 | ''But why draw figures?'' |
52242 | ''For what do we who love truth, strive after in life? |
52242 | ''How can a man live in peace,''I asked,''so long as he has not solved the question of a future life?'' |
52242 | ''How can men do such things?'' |
52242 | ''How was it, you told us, your Aunt had her throat cut?'' |
52242 | ''If I give you five rolls, and you eat one of them, how many rolls will you have left?''... |
52242 | ''In what respect does Russia differ from other countries? |
52242 | ''Indeed? |
52242 | ''Lyóf Nikoláyevitch,''said Fédka to me( I thought he was going again to speak about the Countess),''why does one learn singing? |
52242 | ''Mais comment est- ce que je puis me tirer de cette affaire?'' |
52242 | ''No, really,''insisted Fédka;''why does a lime tree grow?'' |
52242 | ''Of an evening we often play_ vint_[ a game similar to bridge]--do you?'' |
52242 | ''So you will take each of us home? |
52242 | ''Then you consider that I educate my daughter badly?'' |
52242 | ''What are you teaching him?'' |
52242 | ''What is a stick for, and what is a lime tree for?'' |
52242 | ''What is drawing for?'' |
52242 | ''What is drawing for?'' |
52242 | ''What is it? |
52242 | ''What is the matter with you? |
52242 | ''What on?'' |
52242 | ''What shall we do if it leaps out... and comes at us?'' |
52242 | ''What will you give us?'' |
52242 | ''Where have you been?'' |
52242 | ''Why did he sing a song when he was surrounded?'' |
52242 | ''Why do n''t I do this? |
52242 | ''Why do you come here?'' |
52242 | ''Why should I ask you, where I am to go? |
52242 | ''Why should I not say what I am convinced is true?'' |
52242 | ''Why should he beat it? |
52242 | ''Wo n''t you walk a little longer?'' |
52242 | ''Yes, what is a lime tree for?'' |
52242 | ''You see those two horses grazing there,''he answered;''are they not laying up for a future life?'' |
52242 | ''[ 52][ 51]_ What is Art?_ p. 54: Constable, London, and Funk and Wagnalls Co., New York. |
52242 | ''_ When shall I come home?_''God only knows. |
52242 | *****''But perhaps I have overlooked something, or misunderstood something? |
52242 | ----How must I? |
52242 | ----what is it? |
52242 | 1862 Even then the matter was not at an end, for on 7th January[ new style?] |
52242 | Again the question: Why? |
52242 | Again''God''? |
52242 | Am I mistaken or not? |
52242 | And how go on living? |
52242 | And if he found nothing to cling to, what can I find? |
52242 | And is not the trait of Sádo''s devotion admirable? |
52242 | And lest the simple question should suggest itself: What do I know, and what can I teach? |
52242 | And what does man do? |
52242 | And what had I done during the whole thirty years of my conscious life? |
52242 | And what happened? |
52242 | And what''s the use of talking about them? |
52242 | And why do such good people as you, and, most wonderful of all, such a being as my wife, love me? |
52242 | And why should it not, once in a way, stop with a homeless soldier like Gordéy? |
52242 | And why write well?'' |
52242 | And without remarking that we knew nothing, and that to the simplest of life''s questions: What is good and what is evil? |
52242 | Art: exclusive or universal? |
52242 | At this moment Ostáshkof, armed with a small switch, came running up, shouting:''Where are you getting to? |
52242 | But I asked myself: What is that cause, that force? |
52242 | But afterwards I thought,''Well, but what should my brother do to remove the putrefying body of the child from the house? |
52242 | But how can one write now? |
52242 | But joking apart, how is your Hafiz getting on? |
52242 | But life had lost its attraction for me; so how could I attract others? |
52242 | But what desire is there that can always be satisfied in spite of external conditions? |
52242 | But what ground was there for laughter? |
52242 | But what kind of knowledge? |
52242 | But what shall we really carry away from the University?... |
52242 | But where did the truth and where did the falsehood come from? |
52242 | CHAPTER XI CONFESSION What is the meaning of life? |
52242 | Can feelings of enmity, vengeance, or lust to destroy one''s fellow beings, retain their hold on man''s soul amid this enchanting Nature? |
52242 | Can it be that people have not room to live in this beautiful world, under this measureless, starry heaven? |
52242 | Can it be wondered at, that he came more and more to identify Government with all that is most opposed to enlightenment? |
52242 | Described it, that is, as it is in reality? |
52242 | Differently expressed, the question is: Why should I live, why wish for anything, or do anything? |
52242 | Disregarding his niece''s question, he continued:''Write...''''But what are we to write, uncle?'' |
52242 | Do you hear?'' |
52242 | Do you remember Fabrice riding over the field of battle and understanding"nothing"?'' |
52242 | Do you remember, dear Aunt, how you made fun of me when I told you I was going to Petersburg''to test myself''? |
52242 | Does it wish to manifest itself? |
52242 | Does not the Crown money always stop somewhere? |
52242 | Does nothing tell him there is here no cause for great rejoicing? |
52242 | Et n''est- ce pas que le trait de dévouement de Sado est admirable? |
52242 | First one and then the other?'' |
52242 | From whom indeed do we get sensuality, effeminacy, frivolity in everything, and many other vices, if not from women? |
52242 | Have you read_ Pensées de Pascal_--_i.e._ have you read it recently with a mature head- piece? |
52242 | He really was asking, What is Art for? |
52242 | He tacitly asks: What is good and what is bad? |
52242 | He was so pleased to have won them, and asked me so often,''What do you think? |
52242 | His man, Alexis, would bring him his hunting- boots, and the Count would shout at him,''Why have you not dried them? |
52242 | How am I to think of it? |
52242 | How are they with you? |
52242 | How can man fail to see this? |
52242 | How can reason deny life, when it is the creator of life? |
52242 | How could the monks help demanding the study of the Holy Scriptures, which stood on an immovable foundation? |
52242 | How did he find it out?'' |
52242 | How does it express its wish? |
52242 | How is it that among his friends not one was found to give to that supreme moment of life the character suitable to it? |
52242 | How is it to be got? |
52242 | How is it to be when we grow weak and die? |
52242 | How is one to finish the matter decently?'' |
52242 | How, oh how, are we to see one another? |
52242 | I am fond of pawns.... Do you know the new phrase now in fashion among the French--_vieux jeu_? |
52242 | I did not understand that I with my question: How do you know what and how to teach? |
52242 | I know you will cry out; but what''s to be done? |
52242 | I often think, why, really, does one?'' |
52242 | I then understood that my answer to the question,''What is life?'' |
52242 | If Peter Afanásyevitch has no plans for September, will not he go with me to see the Kirghiz and their horses? |
52242 | If she has deserted me, who is it that has done so? |
52242 | If so, then how can we fail to be glad when death comes to us?'' |
52242 | If, for instance, some one was in the dumps about the weather, Tolstoy would say:''Is your weather behaving badly?'' |
52242 | In reality I was ever revolving round one and the same insoluble problem, which was: How to teach without knowing what? |
52242 | In reply to the question: Do people need the_ beaux arts_? |
52242 | In_ Sevastopol_, for instance, he exclaims:''Where in this tale is the evil shown that should be avoided? |
52242 | Is it not astonishing to see one''s petitions granted like this the very next day? |
52242 | Is it not my plain and sacred duty to care for the welfare of these seven hundred people for whom I must account to God? |
52242 | Is nature to take her course, are we to... and nothing else? |
52242 | Is that spring still alive? |
52242 | It can also be expressed thus: Is there any meaning in life, that the inevitable death awaiting one, does not destroy? |
52242 | It was, What will come of what I am doing to- day or shall do to- morrow-- What will come of my whole life? |
52242 | N''est- ce pas étonnant que de voir ses voeux aussi exaucés le lendemain même? |
52242 | Need I say that we would have laid down our lives for him? |
52242 | On one occasion the hero is out hunting in the woods and asks himself:''How must I live so as to be happy, and why was I formerly not happy?'' |
52242 | Only why do you want so much land? |
52242 | Or has it forgotten how to express itself? |
52242 | Or tell me where are the limits of the one or the other? |
52242 | Or when considering how the peasants might be prosperous, I suddenly said to myself,''But what business is it of mine?'' |
52242 | Or, when considering my plans for the education of my children, I would say to myself: What for? |
52242 | People have asked, How can we find the degree of freedom to be allowed in school? |
52242 | Pour faire plaisir à qui, voudrais- je devenir meilleur, avoir de bonnes qualités, avoir une bonne réputation dans le monde? |
52242 | Que resterait- il pour moi si Dieu exauçait votre prière? |
52242 | Read, Is it worth learning to? |
52242 | Really, why should it be beaten?'' |
52242 | Shall we-- you and I and Borísof-- not have to take our swords down from their rusty nails?... |
52242 | She was greatly revolted at what I told her, and rebuking me said,''Why did you not stop him?'' |
52242 | So how can they help believing in the destinies of the people and the Slavonic races... and all the rest of it?'' |
52242 | Some moments before his death he drowsed off, but awoke suddenly and whispered with horror:''What is that?'' |
52242 | Suffering? |
52242 | Teach, What must I? |
52242 | That happiness consists not in killing others, but in sacrificing oneself?'' |
52242 | That they may come to the despair that I feel, or else be stupid? |
52242 | That when you look at it well and clearly, you wake with a start and say with terror, as my brother did:''What is that?'' |
52242 | The great questions, Tolstoy says, are:( 1) What must I teach? |
52242 | The mathematician, hardly refraining from tears, kept saying:''Well, well, what of it?'' |
52242 | The old man asked in astonishment,''How could this monk, so unrestrained in many ways, deserve so great a reward?'' |
52242 | The whole village was surprised, and asked,''What has the priest told the Count, that has suddenly made him so fond of church- going?'' |
52242 | Then why go on making any effort?... |
52242 | They shook hands when they said''How do you do?'' |
52242 | They were always expressed by the questions: What''s it for? |
52242 | Thus Tolstoy for the second time found himself faced by the question: What is Art? |
52242 | To Potémkin''s suggestion that he should do so, he replied:''What makes him think I will marry his strumpet?'' |
52242 | To please whom should I then wish to become better, to have good qualities and a good reputation in the world? |
52242 | To what can one pray? |
52242 | Tolstoy received a deputation, consisting of three of the leading peasants of the village, and asked them:''Well, lads, what do you want?'' |
52242 | Tourgénef writes to Fet: And now a plain question: Have you seen Tolstoy? |
52242 | Under what circumstances, asks Tolstoy, can a pupil acquire knowledge most rapidly? |
52242 | What about his_ Youth_, which was sent for your verdict? |
52242 | What am I waiting for?'' |
52242 | What am I? |
52242 | What are my relations to that which I call''God''? |
52242 | What desire? |
52242 | What do I mean by religious reverence? |
52242 | What do you mean by''something or other''? |
52242 | What do you think of the Polish business? |
52242 | What does it lead to? |
52242 | What for? |
52242 | What if this be only a_ desire_ for love and not real love? |
52242 | What is God, imagined so clearly that one can ask him to communicate with us? |
52242 | What is that?'' |
52242 | What is the use of it? |
52242 | What means have we of lifting this corner of the veil?... |
52242 | What profit hath man of all his labour under the sun?... |
52242 | What proves it? |
52242 | What shall we be good for, and to whom shall we be necessary?" |
52242 | What wo n''t she do afterwards? |
52242 | What would be left to me if God granted your prayer? |
52242 | What''s the good of looking?'' |
52242 | What''s to be done? |
52242 | What?'' |
52242 | When describing that death, is it possible that you did not suffer from the horny indifference of good but unawakened human souls? |
52242 | When shall I see you? |
52242 | When will he turn his last somersault and stand on his feet? |
52242 | When you meet some one carried on a stretcher, and ask,''Where from?'' |
52242 | Where am I to send the money to?... |
52242 | Where are you getting to?'' |
52242 | Where did he get all this? |
52242 | Where is she-- that mother? |
52242 | Where is the good that should be imitated? |
52242 | Where was he to take money from? |
52242 | Where, in our day, can we get such faith in the indubitability of our knowledge as would give us a right to educate people compulsorily? |
52242 | Which of these benefits does the railway bring to the peasant? |
52242 | Whither? |
52242 | Who ever before so described war? |
52242 | Who has in his soul so immovable a_ standard of good and evil_ that by it he can measure the passing facts of life?'' |
52242 | Who has not wept over the story of Joseph and his meeting with his brethren? |
52242 | Who is the villain, who the hero of the story? |
52242 | Who said so? |
52242 | Who was that some one? |
52242 | Who will do the writing?''... |
52242 | Whoever was it wrote_ The Cossacks_ and_ Polikoúshka_? |
52242 | Whose fault is it, if not women''s, that we lose our innate qualities of boldness, resolution, reasonableness, justice, etc.? |
52242 | Why are they current only among authors, and not among musicians, painters, and other artists? |
52242 | Why are you so pale: are you ill?'' |
52242 | Why did you not tell us who it was? |
52242 | Why do you beat him? |
52242 | Why does Tolstoy not get rid of that nightmare? |
52242 | Why should I love them, guard them, bring them up, or watch them? |
52242 | Why should they live? |
52242 | Why strive or try, since of what was Nicholas Tolstoy nothing remains his? |
52242 | Why? |
52242 | Why? |
52242 | Will it not be a sin if, following plans of pleasure or ambition, I abandon them to the caprice of coarse Elders and stewards? |
52242 | Will your brother be glad that I have done this?'' |
52242 | With such a task, how can she be logical? |
52242 | With what must we sympathise and what must we reject? |
52242 | Wo n''t you take up that work? |
52242 | Would it not be all the same if one did not know them at all? |
52242 | Would you feel no pity for him?'' |
52242 | Yet when one has learnt these stories only in childhood, and has afterwards partly forgotten them, one thinks: What good do they do us? |
52242 | You consciously follow a definite road faithfully and undeviatingly; but are you really completely alien to the literature of indictment? |
52242 | [ 42]''Qui est donc ce singulier personnage?'' |
52242 | [ 47] Some details of this crime are given in''Why do Men Stupefy Themselves?'' |
52242 | [ 6] Do you remember, dear Aunt, the advice you once gave me-- to write novels? |
52242 | [ o.s.?] |
52242 | _ What is Art?_ 260, 342, 378, 430. |
52242 | and( 2) How must I teach it? |
52242 | he kept mentally repeating:''Then why not live for others?'' |
52242 | says:''If you have to die, lads, will you die?'' |
38186 | ''E''s a daisy, ai n''t''e? |
38186 | ''Mary,''he said,''do you remember your words eleven months ago?'' |
38186 | ''Scuse my interrupting, sir,said Mr. MacFarlane,"but how did ye know it was the will o''God?" |
38186 | A pretty job we had with her, had n''t we, Gert? |
38186 | About fixes it-- what? |
38186 | Albert,said the chairman,"who''s that cab oss?" |
38186 | An''did n''t he say a day''s wages and railway fares both ways? |
38186 | And I never shake hands with a swanker, do I, Bonser? |
38186 | And by threatening to withdraw it if she does n''t behave herself? |
38186 | And how many will they sell? |
38186 | And if Ginger Jukes, who is five foot six an''draws the beam at eleven stun in his birthday suit, why not Mr. Enery Arper? |
38186 | And if you do n''t want us it''s all the same to us-- ain''t it, Sailor boy? |
38186 | And swallers yer? |
38186 | And what are you going to do with it now you''ve written it? |
38186 | And what does he do? 38186 And what was it, Enery, that Auntie promised you if you come''ome again with ninepence?" |
38186 | And, of course, you''ll be able to bring it out as a book as well? |
38186 | Any use? |
38186 | Are n''t you well, sir? |
38186 | Are you a relation of hers? |
38186 | Ashore? |
38186 | Assuming it were not too late, do you think you could help him now? |
38186 | At Brum? |
38186 | At the Palace? |
38186 | Been long at sea? |
38186 | Before the mast? |
38186 | But I suppose a man like Stevenson or Bert Hobson would sell by the hundred thousand? |
38186 | But in the meantime how can she be kept from making herself objectionable? |
38186 | But the doctors? |
38186 | But what about his goalkeeping? 38186 But you are bound to say that, are n''t you?" |
38186 | But you believe it? |
38186 | By paying her a sum weekly? |
38186 | Ca n''t yer read? |
38186 | Call yourself a gentleman? |
38186 | Can he clear well? |
38186 | Can yer jump? |
38186 | Can you hold it, me lad? |
38186 | Can you tell me, mister, of lodgings, clean and decent, for a single man? |
38186 | Can you walk, me lad? |
38186 | Cora who? |
38186 | Could you eat a bit o''bacon, do you think? |
38186 | Could you throw yerself at the ball like a rattlesnake if you see it fizzing for the fur corner o''the net? |
38186 | Cruelty to children, is n''t it? |
38186 | Did I say he could? |
38186 | Did he so? |
38186 | Did n''t I most strongly warn you against her when I found her that morning in the shop? |
38186 | Did n''t I say he''d drawed the ticket? |
38186 | Did n''t I tell you she was up to no good, and that you had better be careful? |
38186 | Did n''t you, Sailor boy? 38186 Did yer sye, mate, yer wanted a shakedown?" |
38186 | Do about it? 38186 Do about it?" |
38186 | Do about learnin''a bit o''figurin''what you ought to ha''knowed afore you went to sea? |
38186 | Do about learnin''what you''ve forgot? |
38186 | Do about what? 38186 Do about what?" |
38186 | Do n''t you advise it? |
38186 | Do n''t you know me, Mr. Thompson? 38186 Do n''t you know that Bert Hobson, who writes those stories for the_ Rotunda_, makes his thousands a year?" |
38186 | Do n''t you think his eyes are rather nice? |
38186 | Do n''t you think it''s a good idea? 38186 Do n''t you understand plain English? |
38186 | Do tell us where you met the great man? |
38186 | Do you believe it? |
38186 | Do you desire a warm bath or a cold, sir? |
38186 | Do you know where Ginger Jukes is, miss? |
38186 | Do you mean reading literature, my dear fellow, writing literature, or selling literature? |
38186 | Do you mind having the window down a little? |
38186 | Do you mind not sayin''anythink about it to Ginger Jukes, miss? |
38186 | Do you mind where we are married, Harry? |
38186 | Do you press the question? |
38186 | Do you think I''m Datas? |
38186 | Enery Arper,said the woman with a shrill snigger not unlike the whinny of a horse,"Auntie said she''d wait up for you, did n''t she? |
38186 | Enery,said Ginger, choosing his words carefully,"if I was you, do you know what I''d do?" |
38186 | Enry Arper, is it? 38186 Enry what?" |
38186 | Enry what? |
38186 | Ever had the birch rod, Mister Enry Arper? |
38186 | Ever tried Bowdon House? |
38186 | Excuse me,said the lady,"but you are Mr. Harper, are n''t you?" |
38186 | Harry do n''t smoke, do you, Harry? |
38186 | Has n''t it, Miss Cora? |
38186 | Have n''t you got anything English? |
38186 | He is the only author I have ever met who comes near to being----"To being what? |
38186 | Henry Harper, is she worth it? 38186 Henry,"he said suddenly,"does Mary Pridmore know you have returned?" |
38186 | Henry,said his friend when the young man looked in one afternoon in Pall Mall,"what are you doing tomorrow week, Friday, the twenty- third?" |
38186 | Her brother Jack? 38186 His name is not Henry Harper, by any chance?" |
38186 | Honest, mister,he said, gazing wistfully into the face of Klondyke,"do you_ fink_ I could?" |
38186 | How is''A Master Mariner''? |
38186 | How long have you been afloat? |
38186 | How long''s he been coming here? |
38186 | How much? |
38186 | How tall are you, Sailor? 38186 How''s the new story getting on?" |
38186 | I dare say Mr. Harper wo n''t want to come to dinner? |
38186 | I know that,said the cabman urbanely,"but what do you want to pay fur''em?" |
38186 | I suppose you do n''t quite know why I''ve come? |
38186 | I suppose you knew Klondyke? |
38186 | I suppose you''ll be there, sir? |
38186 | I suppose, Mr. Thompson, this is a decent ship to which you will be taking the poor child? |
38186 | If I get a bit of paper and an envelope and a pen and ink, will you have any objection to writing the letter now, sir? |
38186 | If a guy like Dink, why not me? |
38186 | In some kind of a store or an office? |
38186 | Is it a boy or a girl? |
38186 | Is it necessary? |
38186 | Is n''t it bound to be? |
38186 | Is n''t it too late? |
38186 | Is the captain of the vessel a gentleman? |
38186 | Is there anywhere we can talk? |
38186 | It was most trying to have to leave one''s warm bed in the middle of winter at eight o''clock, to breakfast hastily, merely for what? 38186 It''s a very good title, do n''t you think so, dear?" |
38186 | Keb, sir? |
38186 | Lady,he said humbly,"you do n''t happen to know of a shack?" |
38186 | Like another tankard of mild? |
38186 | Like it? |
38186 | Lookin''for a billet? |
38186 | Lookin''for anything? |
38186 | Mary,he said,"do you remember your words eleven months ago?" |
38186 | Me? |
38186 | Might let him go this time? |
38186 | Mr. Harper, what do you think of Nietzsche? |
38186 | Mr. Harper, wherever are you going to? |
38186 | Mr. who? 38186 Name?" |
38186 | No plans? |
38186 | No? 38186 No?" |
38186 | No? |
38186 | None so dusty-- what? |
38186 | Not the great Esme? |
38186 | Nothing smaller, sonny? |
38186 | Now, me lad, which is it to be? |
38186 | Potery? |
38186 | Pray, how did you come to write it all? 38186 Pray, what do you mean? |
38186 | Pray, which is that? |
38186 | Priceless, is n''t he? |
38186 | Read that yarn about Kitchener and the Gippy? |
38186 | Ready, Harper? |
38186 | Said she''d make it up to a shillin''for you, did n''t she? 38186 Sailor is he?" |
38186 | Shall we fix that? 38186 She has not been told?" |
38186 | She''s a rum one, is n''t she? |
38186 | Sirpints, Cap''n? |
38186 | Still foller the sea? |
38186 | Sugar? |
38186 | Suppose I walk with you a little of the way? |
38186 | Suppose a man had been divorced through no fault of his own? |
38186 | Suppose, m''m, you had forgot all yer knowed of your writin''and readin''while you was at sea, what''u''d you do about_ that_? |
38186 | Tell me, Mary,said Edward Ambrose on the way down,"who in the world is Klondyke?" |
38186 | Tell me, Mr. Harper, exactly how you feel about Dostoievsky? 38186 Tell me, Mr. Harper,"said she,"what really led you to Stevenson?" |
38186 | That so? |
38186 | That''s hardly the point, is it? |
38186 | The good bourgeois, in fact, without a spark of imagination? |
38186 | The right full back, Gus? |
38186 | Then why not? |
38186 | Then,he said,"a master mariner has really come into port?" |
38186 | Took the wrong turnin'', eh? |
38186 | Up the pole, sir? |
38186 | Very well, then, why do n''t yer say so? |
38186 | Wants you to write it again, does he? |
38186 | Was it necessary? |
38186 | Was that you, you----? |
38186 | We are all for a bit of fun, but we ca n''t stand by and see a good girl suffering in silence, can we, Gertie? |
38186 | We''ve allus played for the same club, we lodge together, we work together, we are pals in everythink-- ain''t we, Sailor boy? |
38186 | Well, Edward, what can we do for you? |
38186 | Well, Harry,said Miss Dobbs, breaking suddenly upon a whirl of rather terrifying thoughts,"why did n''t you come last Sunday?" |
38186 | Well, Harry,she said,"why did n''t you come last Sunday?" |
38186 | Well, now, what do you think we ought to pay for it? 38186 Well, suppose you walk as far as the docks?" |
38186 | Well, what are you going to do ashore? |
38186 | Well, what are you going to do? |
38186 | Well, what do you advise? |
38186 | Well? |
38186 | What abaht me? |
38186 | What about it? 38186 What are you going to do with it, then?" |
38186 | What can I do for yer? |
38186 | What can I do for you? |
38186 | What can we do for you? |
38186 | What can we do... in the face of such an opinion? |
38186 | What can you do with a kid like that? 38186 What did I tell yer, Dink?" |
38186 | What did I tell yer? |
38186 | What did he say? |
38186 | What do you mean? |
38186 | What do you think o''that, young feller, my lad? |
38186 | What do you think on it, eh? |
38186 | What do you want for_ that_, missus? |
38186 | What do you want to learn? |
38186 | What has it to do with her? |
38186 | What is the point? |
38186 | What is your favorite Stevenson? |
38186 | What is your name, old friend? |
38186 | What place do they call this, mister? |
38186 | What place is this, mister? |
38186 | What sort o''lodgings are you wantin'', mister? |
38186 | What was the check that_ Brown''s_ gave him? |
38186 | What''ll you do about it, Job? |
38186 | What''ll you do with him, anyhow? |
38186 | What''s Society got to do with it, anyway? |
38186 | What''s Ted Ambrose think about it? 38186 What''s Ted Ambrose think?" |
38186 | What''s that, Miss Cora? |
38186 | What''s that, Mr. Harper? 38186 What''s the name of your book?" |
38186 | What''s up now? |
38186 | What''s up? |
38186 | What''s yer job? |
38186 | What''s yer name? |
38186 | What''s your fighting weight in the buff? |
38186 | What''s your name, boy? |
38186 | What-- never? |
38186 | When are you going to sea again? |
38186 | When will it be published? |
38186 | Where are ye playin''? |
38186 | Where are you, Mother? 38186 Where goin''?" |
38186 | Where is Klondyke now, Miss Pridmore? |
38186 | Where''s he been this time? |
38186 | Which way you goin''? |
38186 | Who are we p- playin''? |
38186 | Who are you, sir? |
38186 | Who have we got keepin''goal? |
38186 | Who is this gentleman, Cora? |
38186 | Why did n''t oo, Harry? |
38186 | Why did n''t you open it, then? |
38186 | Why did you stick it, then? |
38186 | Why did you stick it, then? |
38186 | Why not go to a school? |
38186 | Why not look the facts in the face? |
38186 | Why not, like anybody else... if you stuck it? 38186 Why not?" |
38186 | Why not? |
38186 | Why not? |
38186 | Why not? |
38186 | Why should she? |
38186 | Why should you feel that? 38186 Why should you think so?" |
38186 | Why should you think, Mr. Harper, that I think anything of the kind? |
38186 | Why write it then? |
38186 | Why, Mr. Harper, you are never going away? |
38186 | Why, blow me, Iggins, what''s all this year? |
38186 | Why? |
38186 | Why? |
38186 | Why? |
38186 | Will it be as good as the old one? |
38186 | Win by much? |
38186 | Without your supper? |
38186 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
38186 | Wo n''t you, Miss Pridmore? 38186 Working his passage?" |
38186 | Would you rather not stay? |
38186 | Yes, but that''s because you were a sailor before you were a writer, is n''t it? |
38186 | Yes, why not? |
38186 | You are going to do nothing with it? |
38186 | You are mixing, I think-- aren''t you-- two entirely different things? |
38186 | You did n''t know that I was married, did you? |
38186 | You did n''t like it? |
38186 | You did n''t mean anything, Mr. Harper? 38186 You do n''t mean to say that Dick Smith has been sailing the high seas all these long months?" |
38186 | You do n''t mean to say you have gone and got married? |
38186 | You do n''t mean to say you thought I had? |
38186 | You do n''t mean you deceived me? |
38186 | You do understand, Mary? |
38186 | You have been a little run down some days now, have you not, sir? |
38186 | You mean to say you did n''t know? |
38186 | You mean, sir, I ca n''t get free of her? |
38186 | You quite understand that, Jukes? |
38186 | You understand, Jukes? |
38186 | You were not able to do what he asked? |
38186 | You will want rooms, wo n''t you-- somewhere to go? |
38186 | You''ve met my brother Jack? |
38186 | You_ do_ take two lumps and milk, of course? |
38186 | ... the trusty friend in his hand was speaking to him.... Had you forgotten me? |
38186 | Afraid of what? |
38186 | All''s well that ends well, is n''t it?" |
38186 | Almost the first question she asked him, as soon as they were man and wife, was what he had done with the check for three hundred pounds? |
38186 | Am I right, Alec?" |
38186 | Ambrose, therefore, contented himself with asking,"Well, what of him?" |
38186 | And if Grandma calls again and you feel you_ must_ set your mark on her, what''s wrong with your ten commandments, anyway?" |
38186 | And if it is n''t, I get my money back, do n''t I?" |
38186 | And it must be pure brigantine_ Excelsior_, must n''t it, Mary?" |
38186 | And she always keeps a promise, do n''t she, my boy?" |
38186 | And that face of clear- cut good sense, with eyes of a fathomless gray, where had he seen it? |
38186 | And then with a return to carelessness, as though no answer was required to a merely conventional inquiry:"What''s he doing now, do you know?" |
38186 | And was it not her right to know all concerning him before he demanded so great a sacrifice? |
38186 | And why should he remember him? |
38186 | And why? |
38186 | And why? |
38186 | And yet what could he do-- with such a wife as that? |
38186 | And you are going to get a sure five hundred, apart from the book, for the story you are writing now?" |
38186 | And you are not so very amusing, are you?" |
38186 | And you did n''t like it?" |
38186 | Are n''t I, Harry?" |
38186 | As the sailorman was handing them into the car, Silvia said:"By the way, have you remembered to tell Mr. Harper about Klondyke?" |
38186 | BOOK V FULFILLMENT I"Why do you taunt me?" |
38186 | Before Meredith and after Cuthbert Rampant, or before Cuthbert Rampant and after Thomas Hardy?" |
38186 | Before issuing her invitation Miss Dobbs had already taken the precaution of asking casually whether"he was doing anything Sunday afternoon?" |
38186 | Before the mast?" |
38186 | Besides, had he not known Miss Gwladys Foldal who had played in Shakespeare and been admitted to an intimacy of a most intellectual kind? |
38186 | But did he say that about It?" |
38186 | But it''s an impertinence, is n''t it? |
38186 | But ought it to make a difference? |
38186 | But there are many queer things in the world, ai n''t there? |
38186 | But was he? |
38186 | But what was that in comparison with a real live parrot all the way from the West Indies? |
38186 | But why tonight? |
38186 | But you do n''t think so, Miss Pridmore, do you?" |
38186 | But you_ will_ let us hear you talk? |
38186 | Can he keep goal or ca n''t he? |
38186 | Coming to his assistance,"What on earth''s that?" |
38186 | Could his friend tell him how such a thing must be managed? |
38186 | Did you ever see Jock Norton o''the Villa?" |
38186 | Did you like him?" |
38186 | Do I make myself clear?" |
38186 | Do n''t yer see what it means?" |
38186 | Do n''t you understand what Dinkie Dawson says?" |
38186 | Do you desire the Oxford manner?" |
38186 | Do you propose to take Orders?" |
38186 | Do you still look at things in the way you did?" |
38186 | Do you understand that? |
38186 | Do you understand, me lad?" |
38186 | Greaves?" |
38186 | Had he not seen, done and suffered things which held him forever from any human thrall? |
38186 | Had he not walked and talked with Zeus himself? |
38186 | Had n''t he better jump out? |
38186 | Had the blow been dealt by her? |
38186 | Harper?" |
38186 | Harper?" |
38186 | Harper?" |
38186 | Harper?" |
38186 | Have n''t we, Zoe?" |
38186 | He remembered now quite well how they gave him a bath before they..."What are you crying for?" |
38186 | How could he bear the burden of existence for such an intolerable length of time without a sight of her? |
38186 | How could such a person as herself repel him? |
38186 | How did he know it was she? |
38186 | How do you stick it? |
38186 | How does it go?" |
38186 | How far? |
38186 | How had he come by it? |
38186 | How much can you read at present?" |
38186 | How old next birthday?" |
38186 | How the hell should I know?" |
38186 | How was he going to face Cora now he had seen the pà © ri, now he had looked within the Enchanted Gates? |
38186 | How would she look to one who had sailed before the mast over all the oceans of the world? |
38186 | I dare say Auntie has told you I have been on the stage?" |
38186 | I dare say I''m wrong... in a world in which nothing is certain... however... what do you think we ought to pay for the serial rights? |
38186 | I suppose you''ll get another three hundred for this one?" |
38186 | I wonder where you was brought up?" |
38186 | I''ve taught him all he knows-- haven''t I, Sailor boy?" |
38186 | I... will you marry me, Miss Cora?" |
38186 | II Where was he? |
38186 | III"My friend,"said Edward Ambrose, as he helped the last departing guest into his overcoat,"I suppose you know you have made a conquest?" |
38186 | If you go to this party and meet other women while I am left at home, I shall....""You''ll what?" |
38186 | In answer to her invariable,"Well, what of it?" |
38186 | It ought n''t to be beyond your powers, ought it, having regard to the acknowledged character of the lady?" |
38186 | It said: DEAR HARRY, Why have n''t you been or written? |
38186 | It was hell all the time, was n''t it?" |
38186 | It was no longer Harry, but Mr. Harper; and they shook hands with him without cordiality, but with quiet dignity, and said,"How do you do?" |
38186 | It was_ third_, Sailor boy?" |
38186 | It would be telling if I told you her name, but do n''t you think it''s business?" |
38186 | It''s a hard world for lonely girls like her, is n''t it, Gert?" |
38186 | It''s-- it''s----""It''s what?" |
38186 | Might it not be possible to improve upon George Gregory with the aid of the talisman and his own experience? |
38186 | Milton?" |
38186 | Not had that pleasure? |
38186 | Not that you would think it to look at him, would yer?" |
38186 | Not to be knocked about-- but the sea''s the sea, you quite understand?" |
38186 | Now what do you say to a little trip as far as Frisco, for the sake of old times? |
38186 | Now what do you say?" |
38186 | Now, Mr. Harper, kindly let me hear you read this leading article in the Times on''What is Wrong with the Nation?'' |
38186 | Now, Sailor, what do you say?" |
38186 | Now, boy, which is it to be?" |
38186 | Now, my boy, which is it to be?" |
38186 | Or do you think it would be better to see the Villa?" |
38186 | Or should it be Volume CXLI of_ Brown''s Magazine_, 2_s._ 9_d._, re- bound with part of the July number missing? |
38186 | Otto says he is not altogether... Do you think that?" |
38186 | Ought he to tell her? |
38186 | Perhaps you''ll say that Sailor did n''t read Dinkie''s letter?" |
38186 | Pythons, I think they''re called, or am I thinkin''o''boar constrictors?" |
38186 | Sailors do n''t write as a rule, do they? |
38186 | Shall I ask him up?" |
38186 | Shall we say Wednesday? |
38186 | Shall we?" |
38186 | Should he run for it? |
38186 | Should it be the"Queens of England,"by Agnes Strickland, also several times to be quoted in the History? |
38186 | Six foot?" |
38186 | Soon, however, Edward Ambrose, who was looking particularly unhappy, remarked:"Then you do n''t advise him to fight it?" |
38186 | Tell me... is there anything I can do to help you?" |
38186 | That voice, where had he heard it? |
38186 | That''ll be swank if he does, wo n''t it, Bonser?" |
38186 | The Sailor was performing miracles in every match, and Ginger, his mentor, was going about with a permanent expression of,"What did I tell yer?" |
38186 | The man turned to Cora:"Why did n''t you tell me? |
38186 | There, what did I say?" |
38186 | Thompson?" |
38186 | Thompson?" |
38186 | Thompson?" |
38186 | To Miss Dobbs:"Do n''t you think so, dear?" |
38186 | To this lady''s"How do you do?" |
38186 | Understand? |
38186 | Understand?" |
38186 | Understand?" |
38186 | VII"What''ll you do with him, Mother?" |
38186 | Was Mary the cause? |
38186 | Was he not a sailor who six long years had sailed the seas? |
38186 | Was it for nothing that he had looked on the Island of San Pedro? |
38186 | Was it for nothing that, shoeless and stockingless, he had cried,"Orrible Crime on the Igh Seas,"in the slush of a Blackhampton gutter? |
38186 | Was it that he was afraid? |
38186 | Was it true that he had been a sailor? |
38186 | Was she upon the verge of some great tragedy? |
38186 | Well, if she was...? |
38186 | What are you reading? |
38186 | What can you ask fairer? |
38186 | What club did he play for? |
38186 | What did Mr. Harper expect to get by it? |
38186 | What did anything matter? |
38186 | What did it matter where it went so long as he went with it? |
38186 | What did it matter? |
38186 | What did it matter? |
38186 | What did it portend? |
38186 | What do you say, Davis?" |
38186 | What do you say, Sailor boy? |
38186 | What do you say, old friend?" |
38186 | What else ought I to read of Stevisson?" |
38186 | What had happened? |
38186 | What had he to fear? |
38186 | What had she surmised? |
38186 | What hope had such a one of outfacing the decrees of fate? |
38186 | What if Auntie was still there? |
38186 | What reason can you have, a man of your wonderful powers, a man with all his life before him?" |
38186 | What was I saying? |
38186 | What was Pall Mall in comparison with the forecastle or the futtock shrouds of the_ Margaret Carey_? |
38186 | What was he writing? |
38186 | What was the good? |
38186 | What was the use? |
38186 | What was the use? |
38186 | What were the commissionaire and the frock- coated gentleman in comparison with Mr. Thompson and the Old Man? |
38186 | What''d you do about it?" |
38186 | What''s the matter?" |
38186 | What?" |
38186 | When one remembers how he gloated over the yarn one would have thought----""But how should he know? |
38186 | Whenever Miss Dobbs looked in she never failed to ask,"How is it going today?" |
38186 | Where did Harper come from? |
38186 | Where do you place him? |
38186 | Where had he heard it? |
38186 | Where had he heard that name? |
38186 | Where was Auntie now? |
38186 | Where was he going? |
38186 | Where was he? |
38186 | Where was he? |
38186 | Where was he? |
38186 | Where was he? |
38186 | Where was it going? |
38186 | Who could believe that such faultless magnificence had been washed habitually out of its berth in the half- deck of the_ Margaret Carey_? |
38186 | Who the''ell''s Arper?" |
38186 | Who the''ell''s Jukes?" |
38186 | Who was he that he should be remembered by such a man as Klondyke? |
38186 | Why get up so early and sit up so late? |
38186 | Why had he taken so much trouble if he was not going to get a nice fat check out of it? |
38186 | Why not pay a visit to Woking on the morrow? |
38186 | Why use all that good ink and expensive paper if he did n''t expect to get something out of it? |
38186 | Will you face it, Henry, just to oblige a friend?" |
38186 | Wo n''t you, Sailor boy?" |
38186 | Would he be re- engaged? |
38186 | Would n''t he, Bonser?" |
38186 | Would the Rovers take him on for another year? |
38186 | Would you like to see a doctor, sir? |
38186 | Would you, Bonser?" |
38186 | XII"Now that Greased Lightning is beginning to make good,"said Miss Gertie Press,"I suppose you''ll marry him, my Cora?" |
38186 | XVII"Sailor boy,"said Ginger, on Christmas night,"what are you readin''now?" |
38186 | Yet was it? |
38186 | You are not offended?" |
38186 | You can take your choice: Alec-- Mr. Thompson-- or the Work''us?" |
38186 | You think so, do n''t you, dear?" |
38186 | You think that, do n''t you, dear?" |
38186 | [ Illustration:"''Mary,''he said,''do you remember your words eleven months ago?''"] |
38186 | _ You_ read Dinkie Dawson''s letter?" |
9376 | ''Uncle,''said he,''can you direct me to Colonel Thompson''s?'' 9376 All dose,"said he,"w''at you call him?" |
9376 | Are n''t you the agent of this company? |
9376 | Billy,said I,"have you ever been above the Big Falls?" |
9376 | Billy,said I,"have you ever been over in those hills?". |
9376 | Buckshot,said I, pursuing the inevitable linguistics,"what does Kawágama mean?" |
9376 | Buckshot,we went on,"what does Tawabinisáy mean?" |
9376 | Ca n''t you carry her any farther? |
9376 | Can you make it another half- hour? |
9376 | Crescent, like moon? 9376 Dick,"said I,"are you tired?" |
9376 | Did you go by that thing? |
9376 | Do you know anything about the country? 9376 Do you know the chosen water where the ouananiche is waiting?" |
9376 | Do you mean to say that you are going to carry your pack and mine too? |
9376 | Do you think it would be any good to wait for the_ North Star_? 9376 Do you think we can climb those hills with packs?" |
9376 | Dog any good? |
9376 | Doug,said we,"do you want to go to Kawágama to- morrow?" |
9376 | Going to camp here? |
9376 | How are you? |
9376 | How would it be if one or two of us went with him to- morrow to see how he does it? |
9376 | How''s the fur in this district? |
9376 | If you could have just one wish come true, Pierre,I asked,"what would you desire?" |
9376 | In Heaven''s name, Dick,I demanded at last,"how did you get_ there_?" |
9376 | Kée- gons? |
9376 | Qwaw? |
9376 | Then why do n''t you know something about its business and plans and intentions? |
9376 | They''re what? |
9376 | W''at you call dat? |
9376 | Well? |
9376 | What I want to know is, where''s that boat? |
9376 | What do you suppose they are doing? |
9376 | What is it, Peter? |
9376 | What is it? |
9376 | What more obvious? 9376 What of it?" |
9376 | What time? |
9376 | What were you going to do with that? |
9376 | What''s the matter? |
9376 | When is the next boat through here? |
9376 | When''s the next boat north? |
9376 | Where is it, Peter? |
9376 | Where''s the nearest station? |
9376 | Who hath lain alone to hear the wild goose cry? |
9376 | Who hath smelt wood- smoke at twilight? 9376 Why?" |
9376 | You going to camp here? |
9376 | After a time some one murmured,"Why?" |
9376 | And why in the name of all the woods gods would a man want to wade or swim to it if he could? |
9376 | Any of you boys got any vaseline? |
9376 | Are there any trails?" |
9376 | At the end of a long period the Trader inquired,"Which way you headed?" |
9376 | But what in time could they be doing here? |
9376 | Did you ever fish with the fly from a birch- bark canoe on absolutely still water? |
9376 | Do you still wonder at finding these strange, taciturn, formidable, tender- hearted men dwelling lonely in the Silent Places? |
9376 | Do you suppose they can be coming? |
9376 | Do you suppose they''ve altered the schedule?" |
9376 | Do you think we make him to- night?" |
9376 | Do you wonder that in after years that child hits the Long Trail? |
9376 | Does he want it across current or up current; will he rise with a snap, or is he going to come slowly, or is he going to play? |
9376 | Does your trout to- day fancy the skittering of his food, or the withdrawal in three jerks, or the inch- deep sinking of the fly? |
9376 | Finally, as you are hanging your wet things near the fire, you inquire casually over your shoulder,--"Dick, have any luck?" |
9376 | Have you ever watched a competent portraitist at work? |
9376 | How in the world did they get here? |
9376 | Now here was the River-- and Dick resolved to desert it for no more short cuts-- but where was the canoe? |
9376 | To my relief, the agent merely inquired,--"North or south?" |
9376 | What fly? |
9376 | What in the name of everlasting blazes should I want to go north again for?" |
9376 | Who hath heard the birch log burning? |
9376 | Who is quick to read the noises of the night? |
9376 | Why would it not be possible to cut loose entirely at this point, to strike across through the forest, and so to come out on the upper reaches? |
9376 | bow?" |
9376 | half- circle? |
9376 | horseshoe? |
9376 | think you can, do you?" |
62385 | A good sup of it Tom Toole, a good sup of it, ay? |
62385 | A rowan? |
62385 | Against me? |
62385 | Ah, God deliver ye, and indeed I do n''t want to know your business at all but----but----where are ye going? |
62385 | Ah, but what was it-- in that grand book of yours? |
62385 | Ah, good day t''ye, and phwat part are ye fram? |
62385 | Ah, she died? 62385 And happy?" |
62385 | And the husband... they could n''t....? |
62385 | And they lived happy ever after? |
62385 | And what fortune is in it, did ye find the farm? |
62385 | And whom''s to bury us then? |
62385 | And whose to look after the house? 62385 Are ye daft?" |
62385 | Are ye sure o''that? |
62385 | But what about? 62385 But what''s''impound it''? |
62385 | Chris who? 62385 Could mankind be so poor,"the angel resumed,"as poor as these, if it housed something greater than itself?" |
62385 | Dear, dear, what''ull us all come to? |
62385 | Did she give you the directions on the head of it? |
62385 | Did ye say it was in the Galtee Mountains that the young fellow met the lady? |
62385 | Do n''t Heaven ever? |
62385 | Do things ever fall out of the sky? |
62385 | Do you like me better than her? |
62385 | Does it so, indeed? |
62385 | Does that mean insincere? 62385 Eh?" |
62385 | Gone? |
62385 | Has Rosa Beauchamp been along here? |
62385 | Have you been well? |
62385 | Have you ever acted-- you would do it so well? |
62385 | How did it happen-- when will it be? |
62385 | How would it thrive,I ask you,"in a place which was stiff with granite and sloppy with haggis? |
62385 | How''d they account for it? |
62385 | How? |
62385 | Hullo,said Jan, surprised at his wife''s pink face and sparkling eyes,"bin church?" |
62385 | I am your unrealised desires,it said:"Did you think that the dignity of virginhood, rarely and deliberately chosen, could be so brief and barren? |
62385 | If the present so derides the dignified past surely your desire lies in a future incarnating beautiful old historic dreams? |
62385 | Is it the rale stuff, Tom Toole? |
62385 | Is it very daring? |
62385 | Is it wounded? |
62385 | Is that all? |
62385 | Kate? |
62385 | Look here, how many horses_ did_ your father have, mum... really, though? |
62385 | Look, what is his name to be, Pomony? 62385 No, but what''s this?" |
62385 | No, but who is it; I may be making another howler, I thought you meant Kate; what did she warn you of, I mean against me? |
62385 | No? 62385 Nor the Kerry cow?" |
62385 | Nor the good milk? |
62385 | Now what is it like,said she jocularly to the angel at her side, and speaking of her old home,"what is it like now at Weston- super- Mare?" |
62385 | Nurse,moaned the dying girl,"what was I born into the world at all for?" |
62385 | O confound her,he cried; and then:"You must n''t mind me saying that so, so sharply; you do n''t mind, do you?" |
62385 | O, go to... go to...."Hell? |
62385 | O, why did we come here? |
62385 | Of black milk,said Tom Toole''s friend,"where would you get that?" |
62385 | Oh, Johnny, what are you doing? |
62385 | Oh, you told him of it? |
62385 | Or would you like William Wallace, then, or Robert Bruce? |
62385 | Pomona, did you get them worms? |
62385 | Quite? |
62385 | Shall we? |
62385 | Tell him? |
62385 | That? |
62385 | Was there a trial then? |
62385 | What are we going to do about_ her_? |
62385 | What are you laughing at? |
62385 | What d''ye want? |
62385 | What did she warn you against? |
62385 | What directions is it? |
62385 | What do you say about me-- in bed? 62385 What do you think of it, mum?" |
62385 | What do you write that for? 62385 What is it you do know?" |
62385 | What is it? |
62385 | What is it? |
62385 | What is your aspiration? |
62385 | What is your desire, sick- minded man? |
62385 | What it is!--well, what is it? |
62385 | What would become of you and your child? 62385 What''s that?" |
62385 | What? |
62385 | When, how did you come to do it? |
62385 | Where are ye going? |
62385 | Where do they go? |
62385 | Where''s the money for nurses and doctors to come from? 62385 Where?" |
62385 | Who the deuce is going to look after her? 62385 Why are you like this?" |
62385 | Why do ye vex people so, Johnny? |
62385 | Why do you say that? 62385 Why not?" |
62385 | Why-- why not? |
62385 | Why? 62385 With Chris Halton, do you mean?" |
62385 | Wo n''t you see me again? |
62385 | You... give... me... somethin... for... los flores? |
62385 | ''But I''m all behind as''tis'', he shouts to me,''you knows your gospel, do n''t you: time and tide wait for no man?'' |
62385 | Am I at all histrionic?" |
62385 | Am ah speaking wrong? |
62385 | And as his mother did not say anything, he added,"What about it? |
62385 | And if any friendly person in the village asked her,"How are you getting on up there, Phemy?" |
62385 | And sure enough when he sat down beside her she asked him,''What is your aspiration, Neal Carlin?'' |
62385 | And what would ye do, my clever man, what would ye do, if ye met a sweet fairy woman----?" |
62385 | Another cup of beer? |
62385 | Better or worse?" |
62385 | But what did she mean when she spoke of always falling in love with men who did not like her? |
62385 | But what had he got to do with it?" |
62385 | But why have you idealised me so?" |
62385 | But why?" |
62385 | Do roads ever run backward-- leaps not forward the eye? |
62385 | Do you mean go to a home? |
62385 | Do you?" |
62385 | For the servant it was"Phemy, do this,"or"Phemy, have you done that?" |
62385 | Had n''t you noticed anything? |
62385 | Halfway up its steps to the road he paused, and asked:"Then who is it that is so fond of me?" |
62385 | He asks:"What?" |
62385 | He prevaricated:"Like what?" |
62385 | How can you be married? |
62385 | How do you do it-- or how do I fail so?" |
62385 | I did n''t know there was a bog in this parish; is it creeping in a bog you have been?" |
62385 | I promised, did n''t I?" |
62385 | I sha n''t alter, will you?" |
62385 | I''m not ashamed; what is there to be ashamed of?" |
62385 | If those elephants fell on him-- what would they do? |
62385 | Is that wrong? |
62385 | One of the rooks flapped just over him; it had a small round hole right through the feathers of one wing-- what was that for? |
62385 | Shall we ever be happy again?" |
62385 | She looked at the one by her side:"Who are you?" |
62385 | Should he-- would he-- could he...? |
62385 | Stringer?'' |
62385 | Take it from me?" |
62385 | Then what was it she did love? |
62385 | They went to lunch in the city and at the end of the meal he asked her:"Well, why have you come back again?" |
62385 | This our outing, is n''t it?" |
62385 | Three miles and three- quarters from Dyke to the_ Cock& Goat_ at Shapley Fell, am ah right?" |
62385 | What am I?" |
62385 | What are we to do?" |
62385 | What could have inspired her to make this idealisation of himself, for it was idealisation in spite of its fidelity and likeness? |
62385 | What do you say about me-- in bed?" |
62385 | What for? |
62385 | What for?" |
62385 | What had become of Kate, where had she hidden? |
62385 | What has she got against me?" |
62385 | What shall us do?" |
62385 | What was it the old writer had said? |
62385 | What was it, Mary, he has let it all out of his mind?" |
62385 | What''s been going on here?" |
62385 | What_ would_ be the end of it all? |
62385 | Where are ye from?" |
62385 | Who was this Christopher whom Ianthe fondly imagined her sister to favour? |
62385 | Who?" |
62385 | Why after all should sympathetic mendacity be a monopoly of polite society? |
62385 | Why ca n''t ye behave like Pomony?" |
62385 | Why could he not take this woman with the loving and constant heart and we d her? |
62385 | Why had he been so responsive to her? |
62385 | With his fingers still upon the handle of the door he looked up at the tallest policeman and said:"What''s the matter?" |
62385 | With me, with me, is n''t she?" |
62385 | You do n''t know your human nature, Sam; wherever was you brought up? |
62385 | You may wear yourself to the bone, and what does it signify to such as them? |
62385 | asked Clorinda,"if there is a ghost of me, why not a ghost of the rain?" |
62385 | said the traveller staring at him through the railings, but the man from Kilsheelan only said,"Come in, Tom Toole, is it staying or going ye are?" |
62385 | the saint interrogated him,"what consummation would exalt your languid eyes?" |
62385 | they cried, snatching some of the fruit and pressing it into her hands,"what do you think of it?" |
62385 | well?" |
62385 | what did anything matter? |
62385 | what did it all matter? |
35684 | A fair beard? |
35684 | A thousand pardons, my dear fellow; but how could I expect to see you here? 35684 A young fellow?" |
35684 | After finding him again, do you think I will endure this a moment longer? |
35684 | Alice,he began gravely,"you know our few words last night? |
35684 | Alice? |
35684 | All is vague; why not be specific? |
35684 | And Maurice? |
35684 | And can you lightly grieve those who love you? |
35684 | And do n''t you return the compliment? 35684 And he has no other friends in England?" |
35684 | And not long set up shop? |
35684 | And so you''re the fine gentleman now, are you? |
35684 | And the tenants? |
35684 | And this is what you want with me? |
35684 | And water? |
35684 | And what then? |
35684 | And when did you land? |
35684 | And why? |
35684 | And why? |
35684 | And will get him, eh? |
35684 | And writes no letters nor receives any? |
35684 | And you agreed with me? |
35684 | And you are going on Monday? |
35684 | And you want to get back to the music, and the wine, and the women, do you? |
35684 | And your father made friends with him? |
35684 | And? |
35684 | Anyone in the room on the right? |
35684 | Are they engaged? |
35684 | Are you asleep, driver? |
35684 | Are you going to see them off? |
35684 | Are you really going out again-- back to the bush? |
35684 | At least,he sneered in a low, suppressed voice,"you have someone behind you with a warrant? |
35684 | Away? |
35684 | Barren? |
35684 | But are you-- are you really going back-- back over the seas? |
35684 | But did he admit that he had shot himself? |
35684 | But is he safe? |
35684 | But surely they are back by now? |
35684 | But what does he get for all that? |
35684 | But what? |
35684 | But why did n''t you go to bed when you got home? |
35684 | But ye''ve left t''key in t''door? |
35684 | But-- my boy,cried Mrs. Edmonstone,"what has been the matter with you? |
35684 | Ca n''t you see? |
35684 | Can you ask? |
35684 | Consequently you expect to find them waiting for us in the next clump, eh? |
35684 | Dick Edmonstone!--is it really Dick? |
35684 | Did he expect me? 35684 Did n''t they tell you that at one time, out there I was hawking?" |
35684 | Did no one else disappear? |
35684 | Did you know,said Alice, seeing that he was thinking more than he said,"that she was a widow?" |
35684 | Did you recognise him? |
35684 | Did you, though? |
35684 | Do n''t you see that the woman is his accomplice? 35684 Do you know that-- that--"timorously--"Alice went up- stairs and never came down again?" |
35684 | Do you mean Compton? |
35684 | Do you mean by borrowing from me? |
35684 | Do you mean it? |
35684 | Do you mean that you are going to betray me after all? |
35684 | Do you mean that you ask me to stay in England? |
35684 | Do you mean to say old Jack is doing the absentee landlord altogether? 35684 Do you mean to say you do n''t remember seeing me before-- before this last month?" |
35684 | Do you mean to say you have been staring at that bit of paper ever since-- a sort of deputy- me, eh? |
35684 | Do you tell me to stay? 35684 Do you?" |
35684 | Drugged you, eh? 35684 Eh? |
35684 | Eh? |
35684 | Eh? |
35684 | Escaped? |
35684 | Euchred? |
35684 | Evict? |
35684 | Fifty pounds-- to- morrow night? |
35684 | For the moors, sir? |
35684 | Has he nobody with him? |
35684 | Has he told you that? |
35684 | Has it not been patent? |
35684 | Has papa never told you? |
35684 | Hast sprung from t''grave, woman? |
35684 | Haste? |
35684 | Have you and Alice been quarrelling? |
35684 | Have you took us? |
35684 | He said good- bye to you, perhaps? |
35684 | He will be back to say it, though? |
35684 | How are you two? 35684 How can you force such things from me? |
35684 | How can you tell, sir? |
35684 | How could you think that? 35684 How is she?" |
35684 | How long did you say it is since he saved your father''s life? |
35684 | How many are there of you, Colonel, up here who know? |
35684 | How much is in it? |
35684 | How so? 35684 How the devil do you know?" |
35684 | How? |
35684 | I do not understand--Mrs. Ryan was beginning, but he checked her impatiently:"You are the nurse, are you not?" |
35684 | I have only one thing to ask,he began hurriedly, in a low tone:"was this a plot? |
35684 | I thought you meant turning out early? |
35684 | I thought you were going to get on so well in England? |
35684 | I wonder how on earth he did it? |
35684 | I''ve found you out; why not make the best of it? |
35684 | In fact, he is a friendless adventurer, whom you do n''t know a thing about beyond what you have told me? |
35684 | Indeed? 35684 Indeed?" |
35684 | Is it not a terrible disappointment to your family? |
35684 | Is it possible you do not know me? |
35684 | Is she-- is she-- dead? |
35684 | Is there anything you want before we go? |
35684 | Is there nothing that could stop you from going now? |
35684 | It speaks for itself, eh? 35684 It''s worth your neck to make it anything else?" |
35684 | Jack,gasped Edmonstone, very suddenly, after half- an- hour,"there''s some one galloping in the scrub somewhere-- can''t you hear?" |
35684 | Matter? |
35684 | May I ask what is the special quality of torture you have reserved for me? 35684 May I ask what you have learnt this morning?" |
35684 | May I look at them? |
35684 | Mean? 35684 Mr. Edmonstone; one of the Edmonstones who lived in that big house across the river-- surely you remember?" |
35684 | Much? 35684 Must you answer now?" |
35684 | My dear boy,cried he,"have I or have I not been as many years out here as you''ve been weeks? |
35684 | No!--really?--then what? |
35684 | No, no,he was thinking,"if I may not live for her, what else is there to live for? |
35684 | No; why? |
35684 | Not coming? |
35684 | Not so very well,was the reply;"but why do you ask?" |
35684 | Not when this is the subject,said Dick, in a low voice, picking up a print;"how did you manage to take yourself?" |
35684 | Nothing at all? |
35684 | Now, what do you think of that cove? |
35684 | Oh, Alice,cried he,"did you mean that? |
35684 | Oh, and pray when were you in the Sandwich Islands? |
35684 | Oh, he told you that too, did he? |
35684 | Oh, sir,exclaimed Mrs. Edmonstone,"do you think there is no spark of goodness in the worst natures? |
35684 | Oh, so you''re in a hurry, are you? |
35684 | On oath, now: is it so very much? |
35684 | Philip, will you show Dick his room? 35684 Pound? |
35684 | Really? 35684 Really?" |
35684 | Say, mate, is this hundred and odd quid so very much to you? |
35684 | See me? 35684 See whom off?" |
35684 | Seen sharks? 35684 Sharks?" |
35684 | She did n''t, did n''t she? 35684 So you kept up your sketching out there, and drew bush scenes for our illustrated papers?" |
35684 | Some one''s galloping in the scrub-- can''t you hear the branches breaking? 35684 Still, there is no one but Dick, I dare swear; who should there be but Dick?" |
35684 | Suppose I refuse to go? 35684 Surely you can see the rest for yourself? |
35684 | Taller than I am, I suppose? |
35684 | That Miles is a common swindler? |
35684 | That would be treating us all abominably; in fact, we could never allow it-- eh, Dick? |
35684 | The Australian gentleman on a trip home, eh? 35684 Then I-- no longer-- have your love?" |
35684 | Then do you mean to say,the Colonel almost shouted,"that you have known all this, and let me be duped by the fellow before your eyes?" |
35684 | Then do you think he''s come over on purpose? 35684 Then how am I to learn?" |
35684 | Then how have you lived-- what on? |
35684 | Then it is only,he said eagerly--"only that you wish to cancel the past? |
35684 | Then we''re on his track? |
35684 | Then what is? 35684 Then you admit that she is your wife? |
35684 | Then you have not seen him yet? |
35684 | Then,added Dick, hope rekindling in his heart,"may I never-- that is, wo n''t you hold out to me the least faint spark?" |
35684 | There it is, quite close-- don''t you see it? 35684 To be sure you see how the wind lies, missis?" |
35684 | To whom? |
35684 | Was his manner, up to the last, that of a man who had deliberately shot himself? |
35684 | We did n''t come out for a consultation, did we? 35684 Well, if he is n''t paid for it, what on earth is his object?" |
35684 | Well, then, the first is, have you taken a dislike to me-- a new one? 35684 Well, well, what does it matter?" |
35684 | Well? |
35684 | Well? |
35684 | What am I to do for you? |
35684 | What are you giving us, Dick? 35684 What are you saying? |
35684 | What do you mean to say? |
35684 | What do you mean? 35684 What do you mean? |
35684 | What do you mean? |
35684 | What do you mean? |
35684 | What do you mean? |
35684 | What does he do-- besides making an ass of himself? |
35684 | What else can I do? |
35684 | What else did you hear, then? |
35684 | What else would you have me do? 35684 What has brought you here?" |
35684 | What have I done with him? |
35684 | What have I done? |
35684 | What is it he is making? |
35684 | What is it? |
35684 | What is it? |
35684 | What is that? |
35684 | What is the alternative? |
35684 | What made him go, I wonder? |
35684 | What name was that? |
35684 | What of that? |
35684 | What of that? |
35684 | What right have you to speak to me like this? |
35684 | What town? |
35684 | What was that? |
35684 | What were you doing there? |
35684 | What''s a jackeroo? 35684 What''s the good of talking about it?" |
35684 | What? |
35684 | What? |
35684 | What? |
35684 | Where am I? 35684 Where is it?" |
35684 | Where is she? |
35684 | Where is that? |
35684 | Where is the nearest doctor? |
35684 | Where? |
35684 | Where? |
35684 | Where? |
35684 | Who helped you? |
35684 | Who is Pinckney? |
35684 | Who is dead? |
35684 | Who is going with you? |
35684 | Who is that customer? |
35684 | Who wants to get him? 35684 Who-- who are you? |
35684 | Who? 35684 Why Townsville?" |
35684 | Why are you going back? |
35684 | Why did you ever leave us, when you can do so splendidly here at home? |
35684 | Why did you save me a minute ago? 35684 Why did you wait?" |
35684 | Why do n''t you go? 35684 Why should I? |
35684 | Why, has anything happened? |
35684 | Why, how long have you been in? |
35684 | Why,he owned, with a grating laugh,"I certainly do n''t look very fit, now you mention it, do I? |
35684 | Why-- when you promised us weeks ago? |
35684 | Why? 35684 Why? |
35684 | Why? |
35684 | Will you join me? 35684 Will you stand and talk sensibly, and listen to what I tell you?" |
35684 | Will you tell me,said Miles,"what you have heard? |
35684 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
35684 | Would n''t you see if they''ve cleaned it entirely? |
35684 | Yes, yes? |
35684 | Yes? 35684 Yes? |
35684 | You are not going out alone, then? |
35684 | You are not going to walk to Melmerbridge Church? |
35684 | You did n''t see Miles, I suppose? |
35684 | You followed me down here yesterday, did you? 35684 You gave us the slip before,"he said;"how do we know you wo n''t do it again?" |
35684 | You have just landed, then? |
35684 | You have n''t noticed any one ahead of us this afternoon on horseback? |
35684 | You honestly think it would end it the right way? |
35684 | You know what I mean? |
35684 | You mean to stay at home, yet sketch the ends of the earth; is that it? |
35684 | You remember,he said at last, in a calmer voice,"you remember the old days? |
35684 | You saw him go? |
35684 | You surely have n''t forgotten the lesson you promised to give me? |
35684 | You take his word for it? |
35684 | You understand that if you break it, all''s up with you? |
35684 | You will wait and see him, of course? 35684 --the turning of the door handle made him break off short, and add in a quick whisper,I may speak to you to- morrow?" |
35684 | A mate? |
35684 | Again the little old lady came to Alice, and said very gravely:"My dear, did you notice the way our visitor refused the hock this evening? |
35684 | All I want you to tell me is this: Do you know anything yourself of his station, his partner, or his agent?" |
35684 | All that you landed with? |
35684 | And has n''t my life been gay enough, and wild enough, and long enough?... |
35684 | And if the house was the smallest he had ever stayed in, would not Castle Flint seem cheerless, vast, sepulchral, by comparison? |
35684 | And now did she even desire it? |
35684 | And that letter?" |
35684 | And then where should I be without my little pile?" |
35684 | And what the deuce do you want with me?" |
35684 | And-- the Honourable?" |
35684 | Answer me: had you planned this?" |
35684 | Are you going on?" |
35684 | Are you mad? |
35684 | As the wagon drew abreast his horse was wheeled to one side, and a hearty voice hailed the hawkers:"Got a match, mateys? |
35684 | As to your friends, did you expect to live on them forever?" |
35684 | At last he seemed unable to stand it any longer, for he sprang forward and whispered hoarsely in the woman''s ear:"What are you doing? |
35684 | Bad as he was-- bad as she was-- could he go coldly on his way and let her die? |
35684 | Besides, Robson had behaved well yesterday: without him, what might not have happened before Dr. Mowbray arrived? |
35684 | But Dick could have said nothing without the whole truth bursting out, so he merely asked:"When did he go?" |
35684 | But I may tell you we expect some tough yarns of you; our taste has been tickled by Miles, who has some miraculous-- why, where is Miles?" |
35684 | But about the lesson? |
35684 | But as for his people, better tell them just before he went-- say the week before, or why not on the very day of sailing? |
35684 | But can you expect it?" |
35684 | But had she changed her name, or sunk her identity, or disowned her husband, as some women might have done? |
35684 | But how could he tell? |
35684 | But how should I know? |
35684 | But if so, for whom? |
35684 | But listen to sense: you do n''t suppose I''ve got that money here, do you? |
35684 | But man, man, what about you? |
35684 | But not for always,"added Flint suddenly;"I do n''t say''ever afterwards;''why should you? |
35684 | But what could he do? |
35684 | But what was he to do? |
35684 | But who''d ha''thought you''d be better than your word? |
35684 | But why would n''t Alice see him?" |
35684 | By the bye, is she engaged to that long chap who''s been dancing with her all the evening?" |
35684 | By- the- bye, we missed you too; did you go home?" |
35684 | Ca n''t you guess the reason?" |
35684 | Ca n''t you see?" |
35684 | Can you do it?" |
35684 | Could he possibly have been made so miserable during these few weeks that he would be glad to bury himself again in the bush? |
35684 | Could he refuse her now so small a measure of what she gave him without stint? |
35684 | Could his case be really so hopeless as he himself believed it? |
35684 | Could it be from any other cause? |
35684 | Could nothing be done to save him? |
35684 | Could she not at least compare with the fairest there in looks? |
35684 | Could there be better conditions for a pleasant visit? |
35684 | D''ye hear? |
35684 | Dangerous? |
35684 | Dear Dick,"she added in a tone of earnest entreaty,"can not we be friends still?" |
35684 | Dick felt his heart bleeding for her, but what could he do? |
35684 | Dick would see Mrs. Parish; he would be as civil to his old enemy as to the rest of them; why not? |
35684 | Dick, think seriously-- you are both four years older; are you, for one, still of the same mind?" |
35684 | Did he never go back?" |
35684 | Did it matter how he made it, once out there? |
35684 | Did this absurd romanticism run in the family? |
35684 | Did ye iver see sich a long''un, missis?" |
35684 | Did you sleep well, though? |
35684 | Do n''t you hear him? |
35684 | Do you agree?" |
35684 | Do you call our friend, Mr. Edmonstone here, sane or not?" |
35684 | Do you hear? |
35684 | Do you hear? |
35684 | Do you mean to say you believe this maniac''s cock- and- bull yarn about me?" |
35684 | Do you promise?" |
35684 | Do you remember my disagreeing with you when you declared Alice had never been more brilliant, and so on? |
35684 | Do you say that Jem Pound murdered my husband?" |
35684 | Do you think a trifle''ll pay for all that? |
35684 | Do you think he could carry it ten miles, let alone two hundred?" |
35684 | Do you understand now?" |
35684 | Do you want to madden me, you cur? |
35684 | Even in her intense excitement she remembered that she had left her charge sleeping lightly, and her words were low:"What is it you say? |
35684 | Evidence? |
35684 | Flint?" |
35684 | For whom was this passion? |
35684 | Give you another chance? |
35684 | Had not Dr. Mowbray himself said that the bullet extracted fitted the one empty cartridge found in the revolver? |
35684 | Had she been mistaken in her first impression? |
35684 | Had she not given her heart to him in the beginning? |
35684 | Had she not loved him when he spoke? |
35684 | Had she not tacitly admitted as much in this very room? |
35684 | Had they not got the pistol-- Miles''s own pistol? |
35684 | Had we not better start?" |
35684 | Has he been on the look- out night and day all this while?" |
35684 | Has he been raising money on his station?" |
35684 | Has he said good- bye, too, then?" |
35684 | Has the trap that took him come back yet?" |
35684 | Have ye never heard tell o''the shark in Corio Bay, an''what he done? |
35684 | Have you actually done that?" |
35684 | Have you been away?" |
35684 | Have you forgotten it? |
35684 | Have you no pride?" |
35684 | He had promised to accompany them again in a week or two; would not Dick join the party? |
35684 | He had put his question in rather an underhand way, but how was he to do otherwise? |
35684 | He said,''Yes, the gentleman who''s been staying there; where is he?'' |
35684 | He simply said:"Well?" |
35684 | He was biding his time-- but for what? |
35684 | He was hardly likely to--""He did n''t ask to see Alice, I suppose?" |
35684 | He was silent for the next minute; then added in the tone of one who bides his time to laugh last and loudest:"Go on? |
35684 | Hopes and leaves had gone the same way-- was it the way of all hopes as well as of all leaves? |
35684 | How about hiring a boat and rowing to Graysbrooke? |
35684 | How can I make that do-- a lamp instead of the sun? |
35684 | How could I clear out with the gold? |
35684 | How could I have borne the thought yesterday? |
35684 | How could I push, push, push-- as I''ve got to-- after losing all to start with? |
35684 | How could I risk going back for it when once I got away? |
35684 | How could it be anything else but suicide? |
35684 | How could one think that on the brink of the grave a man should ask for news from another''s sick bed? |
35684 | How could passion carry her so far? |
35684 | How could we go on without it-- hawking with an empty wagon? |
35684 | How do you know I can do any real good? |
35684 | How many more times am I to tell you so?" |
35684 | How many times have they tried to pot you, my unjust landlord? |
35684 | How the deuce did you get here? |
35684 | How was he, the father, to get at the facts of the case? |
35684 | I did them a thing once of a bullock- dray stuck up in the mud; and how did it appear? |
35684 | I have no watch on me: have you? |
35684 | I mean, if he was at your mercy, you know?" |
35684 | I might not have valued you as I ought-- who knows? |
35684 | I suppose you will listen to a man?" |
35684 | I told you so before, did n''t I? |
35684 | I took my passage for New York, and--""Do you mean what you say? |
35684 | I wonder how it came about? |
35684 | I wonder now where he''s been?" |
35684 | If so, then the best young fellow in England has been----But perhaps you can tell me whether it really is so?" |
35684 | If so, was it the father, or the grandfather, or the great- grandfather that died in a madhouse? |
35684 | Is he capable of such madness at a moment''s notice? |
35684 | Is it all on Alice''s account, I wonder? |
35684 | Is it so very much to ask?" |
35684 | Is that the step of a healthy girl? |
35684 | Is that what you''d say? |
35684 | Is there any truth in this message that has been given me, that you have had enough of me?" |
35684 | It ended thus:"Then you are quite sure that this hundred will be enough for you to go on with?" |
35684 | It is, then-- and, indeed, you must grant me an honest answer-- do you love another man?" |
35684 | It was true that Ned had treated her heartlessly; but, believing what he believed of her, could she blame him? |
35684 | It''s my own idea entirely, and I want you to tell me just this: Have your friends heard anything of this Miles since he left them? |
35684 | Let go my hands, will you? |
35684 | Look at me-- don''t you think so?" |
35684 | Miles Alice cares for?" |
35684 | Miles answered with cool contempt:"Do you think a man clears out with five hundred ounces in his pockets? |
35684 | Miles himself? |
35684 | Miles so dread a photograph of himself? |
35684 | Miles take all these?" |
35684 | Miles, for instance?" |
35684 | Miles, who was standing near the piano, and asked him confidentially if he had not secured some dances with Alice? |
35684 | Miles?" |
35684 | Miles?" |
35684 | Miles?" |
35684 | Miles?" |
35684 | Miles?" |
35684 | Mother dear, what do you mean?" |
35684 | Mother, will you? |
35684 | Must he, then, parley a second time with the villain-- let him off again, trust him again, go on shielding a known desperado? |
35684 | Ned Ryan glanced sharply from his wife to the man who had brought her from Australia; and then he spoke:"My good woman, why not be frank? |
35684 | Ned, my husband, I am by your side; have you no word of welcome?" |
35684 | No? |
35684 | No? |
35684 | No? |
35684 | Nothing but your bare word and the dim recollection of years ago? |
35684 | Now I know she''d waltzes to spare,''cause I heard her give one----""Oh, so she snubbed you, eh?" |
35684 | Now what am I to do about Dick?" |
35684 | Now, after me having crossed the whole blessed world to speak to you, it would be roughish if you refused me your best ear; now would n''t it?" |
35684 | Now, what would you do, Dick?" |
35684 | Of course you gave him your version as to who I am?" |
35684 | Of course you have some evidence?" |
35684 | Of whom? |
35684 | Oh, Dick, why-- why did you never tell us about the bush- ranger?" |
35684 | Oh, why had she told Pound? |
35684 | On leaving England he had asked himself, What was his chief object in going out? |
35684 | Parish?" |
35684 | Perhaps it was; but why did he not show it? |
35684 | Pinckney?" |
35684 | Robson?" |
35684 | Robson?" |
35684 | Ryan,"added Edmonstone in an altered manner,"you understand me by this time? |
35684 | Shall I see you, sir, then?" |
35684 | She was singing; would she sing afterwards? |
35684 | Six miles? |
35684 | Suppose I stay and insist on evidence being brought against me?" |
35684 | Surely he loved her then-- a little? |
35684 | Surely you can put yourself in my place at this point? |
35684 | Surely you wo n''t be so hard on me now? |
35684 | That was the intention expressed in your letter, I think?" |
35684 | That''Week in the Sandwich Islands''--it was yours, was n''t it?" |
35684 | The Colonel laid his hand on Dick''s shoulder, and added:"You wo n''t disappoint us, my boy?" |
35684 | The Colonel was confessedly unversed in women''s ways-- then why did he meddle? |
35684 | The answer came in a trembling whisper, with a fresh torrent of tears:"What if I did?" |
35684 | The doctor stopped, as he was driving off, to shriek something through the storm:"Have you any one who can nurse-- among the servants?" |
35684 | The fact is, Dick,"he said aloud,"Miles has dealt with me rather queerly in some money matters, and-- What on earth''s the matter?" |
35684 | The inner Alice echoed the question: Was it so very much to ask-- or to grant? |
35684 | The name of him to whom she had breathed her last conscious words? |
35684 | The thought throbbed in his brain, the unspoken words sang in his ears: Was she dead? |
35684 | Then Dick put a last question:"You think it has been-- murder?" |
35684 | Then he started up in his bed, and called sternly:"Who is there? |
35684 | Then how was he to act? |
35684 | Then turning to Dick with fiery, blood- shot eyes, he cried:"Suppose, since there is no evidence at all, I shoot the inventor of all these lies?" |
35684 | Then what was he to do? |
35684 | Then who could it be? |
35684 | Then why do nothing till to- night?" |
35684 | Then why had not this been done? |
35684 | Then why was Dick''s heart not filled with joy and thanksgiving? |
35684 | There was no harm in that, was there?" |
35684 | There was some excuse, perhaps, for the string of excited questions reeled off on the spur of the moment by young Pinckney:"Why? |
35684 | To Colonel Bristo''s, do you know?" |
35684 | To him it seemed like lead; until suddenly-- did it press a bruise or a wound, that such a hideous spasm should cross his face? |
35684 | To my mind, a few hours, or even a night or two, more or less----""Are neither here nor there? |
35684 | To the township, do you hear? |
35684 | To whom? |
35684 | Unless-- unless-- unless-- What made Elizabeth Ryan clench her drenched cold fingers and draw her breath so hard? |
35684 | Wait till we pass, will you?" |
35684 | Was he not a fool and a madman to think at all of a woman who unmanned him so? |
35684 | Was he to show no quarter, since this villain had played false? |
35684 | Was her heart of ice? |
35684 | Was it not admitted in the beginning that he was an obstinate fellow? |
35684 | Was it not credible that he might have reasons for speaking-- mistaken ones, of course-- which he could not reveal to her? |
35684 | Was it possible that his suspicion could be absolutely groundless? |
35684 | Was it possible that this was he who landed in England less than a month ago-- so gay, so successful, so boyish? |
35684 | Was she dying? |
35684 | Was she so very indignant with him? |
35684 | Was the woman ill? |
35684 | Was there one with a foot more light and nimble? |
35684 | Was this man to die in his arms without an effort to save him? |
35684 | Was this the man she had loved so wildly long ago-- this wreck? |
35684 | Was this the result of trying to rule her heart by her head? |
35684 | Was this, then, her handiwork? |
35684 | We kep''nothing like this at my place on the Murray, now did we?" |
35684 | Well, at all events, you own that we should lose no time about getting to some bank or other?" |
35684 | Well, was she not to be admired and envied? |
35684 | What apology to''One who was Deceived''--as I shall sign my''Times''letter, when I write it?" |
35684 | What are we here for? |
35684 | What could be better? |
35684 | What could be the meaning of that quick gasp from the other side of the room that preceded the faint monosyllable? |
35684 | What did he say?" |
35684 | What discovered? |
35684 | What do you mean by holding my wrists like this? |
35684 | What do you mean? |
35684 | What do you say, Alice?" |
35684 | What do you say, mother? |
35684 | What do you think me, I wonder? |
35684 | What else could it be but money? |
35684 | What explanation have you to offer? |
35684 | What had Miles said? |
35684 | What had been Alice''s answer? |
35684 | What had changed and saddened her? |
35684 | What had come over Dick? |
35684 | What had come over the girl in these few weeks? |
35684 | What had happened to Elizabeth? |
35684 | What had he to fear? |
35684 | What has happened?" |
35684 | What have we crossed the sea for? |
35684 | What have you done?" |
35684 | What have you to do with it?" |
35684 | What is it? |
35684 | What is that to me? |
35684 | What made her droop like a trampled flower? |
35684 | What right have I to live any more? |
35684 | What shall we do with him?" |
35684 | What tie or obligation could possibly exist between this young Edmonstone and Sundown the Australian bushranger? |
35684 | What was coming next? |
35684 | What was he to do? |
35684 | What was suspected? |
35684 | What was the gentleman like?" |
35684 | What was the matter-- was it the heart? |
35684 | What was the matter? |
35684 | What was there against him? |
35684 | What was this? |
35684 | What were his thoughts? |
35684 | What would you say in my place? |
35684 | What''s the use of acting a part to me? |
35684 | What''s the use of shaking your head? |
35684 | What, did n''t you hear our last words? |
35684 | What, did n''t you know I was a dead shot with this? |
35684 | What, indeed, but the suggestions of Jem Pound? |
35684 | What, none? |
35684 | What, then, could the father do? |
35684 | What, to begin with, was the meaning of this masterly plan for an honourable exit? |
35684 | When a faint spark of hope burned on the horizon, was it natural that he should detect it at once? |
35684 | When did you arrive?" |
35684 | When did you see her?" |
35684 | When do you sail?" |
35684 | Where am I?" |
35684 | Where is she?" |
35684 | Where is''t ye want to be?" |
35684 | Where was a woman to turn on such a night? |
35684 | Where was his wife? |
35684 | Where?" |
35684 | Who am I any good to, I should like to know? |
35684 | Who are they?" |
35684 | Who are you? |
35684 | Who are you?" |
35684 | Who cares what becomes of him? |
35684 | Who could have discouraged him? |
35684 | Who has taught you to play with men''s hearts like this?" |
35684 | Who is he?" |
35684 | Who that watched her dancing could have admitted it for a moment? |
35684 | Who would ever know? |
35684 | Who?" |
35684 | Whom is it to?" |
35684 | Whose name was for ever on her lips? |
35684 | Why all these questions?" |
35684 | Why could n''t the fellow keep to the part he was playing?" |
35684 | Why did you wait?" |
35684 | Why do you watch me like that? |
35684 | Why make them unhappy before their time, when their happiness in having him back was still boundless? |
35684 | Why not? |
35684 | Why refuse a chance of escape?" |
35684 | Why should I be a slave to my Castle and you to your City? |
35684 | Why should he not repeat the performance he had gone through then? |
35684 | Why should he not take a boat and row up to Graysbrooke? |
35684 | Why should n''t we emigrate together?" |
35684 | Why? |
35684 | Will you come, too?" |
35684 | Will you send some one with us? |
35684 | Would Dick add this to his little list of suspicious circumstances? |
35684 | Would she ever sing like this again? |
35684 | Would she look like this afterwards? |
35684 | Would she refuse him the dances he had set his heart on? |
35684 | Would she speak to him? |
35684 | Would tears often fill her eyes in the time to come? |
35684 | Would you behold her most sweet? |
35684 | Would you see a graceful maiden at her best? |
35684 | XIII IN BUSHEY PARK"So boss, you know me?" |
35684 | XXVII THE FATAL TRESS Was she dead? |
35684 | Yet Dick had only asked her:"Will you never, never forgive me?" |
35684 | You have guessed the reason? |
35684 | You know I never danced in my life; am I to disgrace my country to- night?" |
35684 | You know him, then?" |
35684 | You never thought of my following you out here? |
35684 | You refuse? |
35684 | You remember, Jack, how much more that hundred seemed to me at that time than it really was, and how much less to you?" |
35684 | You understand me, I think? |
35684 | and how we parted?" |
35684 | and our promises? |
35684 | cried Pound, savagely,"is it all gone? |
35684 | exclaimed Alice;"then I think it was too good of you to come and see us so soon; do n''t you, papa?" |
35684 | from the younger ones; and Mrs. Edmonstone simply pronounced the question:"Graysbrooke?" |
35684 | has he stuck to the road?" |
35684 | he replied;"but suppose he gives us some of his Irish adventures instead? |
35684 | not to make up to Miss Bristo, then?" |
35684 | not to the station? |
35684 | of Marshall''s Creek?" |
35684 | of generosity in the most selfish?" |
35684 | of truth in the falsest? |
35684 | or what does it matter?" |
35684 | pursued Pound in the same tone, adding a strong dash of vulgar familiarity;"ca n''t you see that you''re out of the running, Liz, my lass? |
35684 | really only that?" |
35684 | said Miles smoothly;"do you hear that step in the distance? |
35684 | she exclaimed in a whisper;"not my brother Frank?" |
35684 | that he should shake off the woman so savagely? |
35684 | what against"it"? |
35684 | what is that over there? |
35684 | you do n''t remember me?" |
35684 | you know what that means to us two?" |
8167 | After that the Lord of Suckfist had ended, Pantagruel said to the Lord of Kissbreech, My friend, have you a mind to make any reply to what is said? |
8167 | Afterwards I asked him, Good man, these two girls, are they maids? |
8167 | And how long hast thou been there? |
8167 | And how? |
8167 | And to what end? |
8167 | And what a devil is become of them? |
8167 | And what is that? |
8167 | And what lawsuits couldst thou have? |
8167 | And where are they? |
8167 | And wherefore, said Pantagruel, wert thou afraid of the toothache or pain of the teeth? |
8167 | And wherewith didst thou live? |
8167 | Are you resolved to live and die with me? |
8167 | Are you there, said Eudemon, Genicoa? |
8167 | As soon as I was perceived by him, he asked me, Whence comest thou, Alcofribas? |
8167 | At which noise the enemies awaked, but can you tell how? |
8167 | At which word the company began to laugh, which Pantagruel perceiving, said, Panurge, what is that which moves you to laugh so? |
8167 | At whose appearance before the court Pantagruel said unto them, Are you they that have this great difference betwixt you? |
8167 | But I will tell you what you shall do, said he to the midwives, in France called wise women( where be they, good folks? |
8167 | But Pantagruel said unto them, Are the two lords between whom this debate and process is yet living? |
8167 | But how, and wherewith? |
8167 | But to the purpose, said he; are not you in love with me? |
8167 | But what shall I say of those poor men that are plagued with the pox and the gout? |
8167 | But where is the last year''s snow? |
8167 | But will you go with me to gain the pardons? |
8167 | By Palm Sunday, said Panurge, is there any greater pain of the teeth than when the dogs have you by the legs? |
8167 | Can you tell how? |
8167 | Can you tell how? |
8167 | Come, brave boys, are you resolved to go with me? |
8167 | Do you see this diamond? |
8167 | Do you speak Christian, said Epistemon, or the buffoon language, otherwise called Patelinois? |
8167 | Do you understand none of this? |
8167 | Et ubi prenus? |
8167 | For why? |
8167 | Go to, begin and cry, Do you lack any green sauce? |
8167 | Ha, I understand, said Thaumast, but what? |
8167 | Have you understood all this well? |
8167 | How now, madam, said he, your paternosters? |
8167 | How so? |
8167 | How? |
8167 | How? |
8167 | I heard Master Francis Villon ask Xerxes, How much the mess of mustard? |
8167 | In the meanwhile he would fart like a horse, and the women would laugh and say, How now, do you fart, Panurge? |
8167 | Is any man so learned as the devils are? |
8167 | Is this nothing? |
8167 | Now which is most honourable, the air or the earth? |
8167 | Now, in my way, I met with a fellow that was lying in wait to catch pigeons, of whom I asked, My friend, from whence come these pigeons? |
8167 | Now, whilst they were thus busy about me, the fire triumphed, never ask how? |
8167 | O my friend, said Pantagruel, dost thou know what Agesilaus said when he was asked why the great city of Lacedaemon was not enclosed with walls? |
8167 | O my good God, what had I done that thou shouldest thus punish me? |
8167 | Prut, tut, said Pantagruel, what doth this fool mean to say? |
8167 | Shall I weep? |
8167 | That is well cacked, well scummered, said Panurge; do you compare yourself with Hercules? |
8167 | The lady at this word thrust him back above a hundred leagues, saying, You mischievous fool, is it for you to talk thus unto me? |
8167 | The people then asked why it was the friars had so long and large genitories? |
8167 | Then Panurge put off his counterfeit garb, changed his false visage, and said unto her, You will not then otherwise let me do a little? |
8167 | Then again said the gallant:''Despota tinyn panagathe, diati sy mi ouk artodotis? |
8167 | Then said Pantagruel, How dost thou know that the privy parts of women are at such a cheap rate? |
8167 | Then said Pantagruel, My friend, is this all you have to say? |
8167 | Then, said Pantagruel, St. Alipantin, what civet? |
8167 | This, then, is the exposition of that which the lady means, Diamant faux, that is, false lover, why hast thou forsaken me? |
8167 | Thou comest from Paris then, said Pantagruel; and how do you spend your time there, you my masters the students of Paris? |
8167 | Thus as they talked and chatted together, Carpalin said, And, by the belly of St. Quenet, shall we never eat any venison? |
8167 | To what a devil, then, said he, serve so many paltry heaps and bundles of papers and copies which you give me? |
8167 | To which Pantagruel answered, What devilish language is this? |
8167 | To which Pantagruel said, Is it true? |
8167 | To which he answered that they were Hebrew words, signifying, Wherefore hast thou forsaken me? |
8167 | Tunc, my lords, quid juris pro minoribus? |
8167 | Well, my friend, said Pantagruel, but can not you speak French? |
8167 | Wert thou not cured of thy rheums? |
8167 | What devil were able to overthrow such walls? |
8167 | What did he? |
8167 | What didst thou drink? |
8167 | What do you mean by that? |
8167 | What is the meaning of this? |
8167 | What shall I say? |
8167 | What though she be dead, must not we also die? |
8167 | What will my husband say? |
8167 | What, said Pantagruel, have they the pox there too? |
8167 | What? |
8167 | Whereat I was much astonished, and asked them, My masters, is there any danger of the plague here? |
8167 | Which of you, said Pantagruel, is the plaintiff? |
8167 | Whom do you think you have in hand? |
8167 | Why didst thou not take me away before her, seeing for me to live without her is but to languish? |
8167 | Why? |
8167 | Will this fair father make us here an offering of his tail to kiss it? |
8167 | Will you have a piece of velvet, either of the violet colour or of crimson dyed in grain, or a piece of broached or crimson satin? |
8167 | Will you have chains, gold, tablets, rings? |
8167 | Yea but, said Carpalin, were it not good to cloy all their ordnance? |
8167 | Yea but, said Epistemon, if thou shouldst be set upon, how wouldst thou defend thyself? |
8167 | Yea but, said I, my friend, what is the name of that city whither thou carriest thy coleworts to sell? |
8167 | Yea but, said Pantagruel, is the king there? |
8167 | Yea but, said he, my friend Panurge, he is marvellously learned; how wilt thou be able to answer him? |
8167 | Yea but, said he, where didst thou shite? |
8167 | Yes, for why? |
8167 | by St. Anthony''s belly, doth it become thee to speak without command? |
8167 | hast thou dwelt any while in Greece? |
8167 | hast thou taken from me the perfectest amongst men? |
8167 | must I again contrist myself? |
8167 | said Epistemon; everyone shall ride, and I must lead the ass? |
8167 | said I, and where? |
8167 | said I, is there here a new world? |
8167 | said Pantagruel, and what is that? |
8167 | said Pantagruel, do they ask any better terms than the hand at the pot and the glass in their fist? |
8167 | said Panurge, are your farts so fertile and fruitful? |
8167 | what did I see there? |
8167 | what''s the matter? |
35238 | Well,we asked,"have you seen him?" |
35238 | What, more than double? |
35238 | ''A new Jewish paper?'' |
35238 | ''A preacher speaks with authority, but this penny- a- liner----''''With truth?'' |
35238 | ''About that?'' |
35238 | ''Addie,''he said,''is n''t it funny I should be marrying a Jewish girl, after all?'' |
35238 | ''Addie?'' |
35238 | ''After all these years?'' |
35238 | ''Ah then, you do know something about Miss Ansell?'' |
35238 | ''Ah, what is that? |
35238 | ''And did he?'' |
35238 | ''And do the Goldsmiths know of your discontent?'' |
35238 | ''And do you really believe that we are sanctified to God''s service?'' |
35238 | ''And do you really think we two between us can fill up the paper every week?'' |
35238 | ''And does lack of modern lights constitute ignorance?'' |
35238 | ''And how is the_ Flag of Judah_?'' |
35238 | ''And how is your sister Hannah? |
35238 | ''And how many tongues do you know?'' |
35238 | ''And so she is still a Bachelor?'' |
35238 | ''And suffered much?'' |
35238 | ''And what do you think of it? |
35238 | ''And what has become of her?'' |
35238 | ''And where is Bobby?'' |
35238 | ''And why are n''t you at school?'' |
35238 | ''And why have you broken your resolution?'' |
35238 | ''And you have seen such sights?'' |
35238 | ''And you really think that Judaism is not dead, intellectually speaking?'' |
35238 | ''And your mother and father?'' |
35238 | ''And your relatives?'' |
35238 | ''And, naturally, everybody detests me?'' |
35238 | ''Are the Belcovitches all well? |
35238 | ''Are the same people living here?'' |
35238 | ''Are you a Socialist, then?'' |
35238 | ''Are you_ meshuggah_?'' |
35238 | ''Are your mother and father well?'' |
35238 | ''Art thou a man or a woman?'' |
35238 | ''At the British Museum?'' |
35238 | ''Aunt Leah? |
35238 | ''Becky married yet?'' |
35238 | ''Besides, will you deny they have the organ in their Sabbath services?'' |
35238 | ''Bessie, was n''t it?'' |
35238 | ''But Rosenbaum is a good pull- down on the other side, eh?'' |
35238 | ''But about all those meetings?'' |
35238 | ''But did n''t you get another?'' |
35238 | ''But did n''t you look for her?'' |
35238 | ''But do you mean to say you look upon them as facts?'' |
35238 | ''But have you Socialistic sympathies?'' |
35238 | ''But how about meetings?'' |
35238 | ''But how can I forget?'' |
35238 | ''But how will you live?'' |
35238 | ''But if he is as ignorant as all that, how could he have written the letter?'' |
35238 | ''But if nobody has read the man''s book,''Raphael Leon ventured to interrupt at last,''is it quite fair to assume his book is n''t fit to read?'' |
35238 | ''But is n''t it_ schnorring_ to be dependent on strangers?'' |
35238 | ''But is n''t that a narrow conception of God''s revelation?'' |
35238 | ''But is the author to blame for that? |
35238 | ''But is the civilised world any better? |
35238 | ''But ought you not rather to utilise yourself for the correction of the portrait of Abrahams?'' |
35238 | ''But sha n''t we want a publisher?'' |
35238 | ''But suppose you fail?'' |
35238 | ''But surely you do n''t also long to return to Palestine?'' |
35238 | ''But surely you would have taken help of me?'' |
35238 | ''But then what will become of the next number?'' |
35238 | ''But thou didst not?'' |
35238 | ''But what if the mechanism of competitive society works so that thousands do n''t get even the plainest living? |
35238 | ''But what is to be said of a rich community which recruits its clergy from the lowest classes? |
35238 | ''But what is to become of me-- of my conversion?'' |
35238 | ''But what will you do?'' |
35238 | ''But who''d have_ me_? |
35238 | ''But why must we preserve any boundaries? |
35238 | ''But why postpone the inevitable?'' |
35238 | ''But why should n''t Jews without Judaism marry Christians without Christianity? |
35238 | ''But why?'' |
35238 | ''But why_ should n''t_ I buy it for myself?'' |
35238 | ''But will it come to anything?'' |
35238 | ''But wo n''t we be terribly late?'' |
35238 | ''But would n''t that be wasting money?'' |
35238 | ''But you said business was all right?'' |
35238 | ''But you will not do this?'' |
35238 | ''But you would n''t make a cult of Beauty?'' |
35238 | ''But you-- whatever your change-- you have not lost faith in primaries?'' |
35238 | ''But, Rosetta, what has Raphael Leon to do with my getting into Parliament?'' |
35238 | ''But, then, what about this?'' |
35238 | ''Ca n''t they?'' |
35238 | ''Ca n''t you say you want to buy it for yourself? |
35238 | ''Ca n''t you see that it''s false economy to risk a breakdown, even if you use yourself purely for others? |
35238 | ''Can I do anything for you, mum, afore I go to bed?'' |
35238 | ''Can not you read in them?'' |
35238 | ''Can not you trust me?'' |
35238 | ''Can there be any doubt of it? |
35238 | ''Can you undertake to print an eight- page paper?'' |
35238 | ''Can you wonder at it? |
35238 | ''Could n''t we be more than friends? |
35238 | ''Could n''t your sister Adelaide do you a story?'' |
35238 | ''Could you treat Jewish matters from a social standpoint-- gossipy sort of thing?'' |
35238 | ''Did I not say you vould produce the finest paper in the kingdom? |
35238 | ''Did n''t I say an Englishman could never master the Talmud?'' |
35238 | ''Do I? |
35238 | ''Do for us?'' |
35238 | ''Do n''t you know,''he gasped,''that the ministers always send up their own sermons, pages upon pages of foolscap?'' |
35238 | ''Do n''t you remember me?'' |
35238 | ''Do they?'' |
35238 | ''Do you call that being a_ Schnorrer_?'' |
35238 | ''Do you ever see that paper?'' |
35238 | ''Do you expect that fellow Sidney Graham back?'' |
35238 | ''Do you mean I''m to take part in my own conversion?'' |
35238 | ''Do you mean the young man with the dyed carnation in his buttonhole and the crimson handkerchief in his bosom?'' |
35238 | ''Do you mean to say you print them all with your own hand?'' |
35238 | ''Do you realise what sort of a position you are asking me to keep? |
35238 | ''Do you suffer from headaches?'' |
35238 | ''Do you suppose a man can take such a step as that without its getting known? |
35238 | ''Do you think George Eliot and Lessing did n''t understand the Jewish character?'' |
35238 | ''Do you think I ca n''t take care of myself, that I need any one to protect me or to help me?'' |
35238 | ''Do you think I have a stone for a heart like Gideon, M.P., or your English stockbrokers and Rabbis? |
35238 | ''Do you think so? |
35238 | ''Do you think that''s it?'' |
35238 | ''Do you think the paper''ll live?'' |
35238 | ''Do you?'' |
35238 | ''Done? |
35238 | ''Eh, Parliament? |
35238 | ''Ha, then it vill appear in the other half,_ hein_?'' |
35238 | ''Hannah,''he said, his voice tremulous with pain and astonishment,''dost thou, too, set light by thy father?'' |
35238 | ''Hansom, sir?'' |
35238 | ''Has Goldsmith agreed to your terms, then?'' |
35238 | ''Has anything happened?'' |
35238 | ''Has one of you ever been there?'' |
35238 | ''Have n''t I remembered you all these years? |
35238 | ''Have n''t you detected the cloven hoof in my leaders? |
35238 | ''Have they?'' |
35238 | ''Have you done preaching at me, Raphael?'' |
35238 | ''Have you never taken soup at the kitchen?'' |
35238 | ''Have you told her?'' |
35238 | ''He''s a bit of a gambler and a spendthrift, is n''t he? |
35238 | ''Henry,''she continued impressively,''how would you like to get into Parliament?'' |
35238 | ''How are you, Becky?'' |
35238 | ''How are you?'' |
35238 | ''How are your people in America?'' |
35238 | ''How can I eat? |
35238 | ''How can it die? |
35238 | ''How can that be?'' |
35238 | ''How can you say that? |
35238 | ''How can you suspect me of writing orthodox leaders?'' |
35238 | ''How could either of you have borne the sights and smells of the steerage? |
35238 | ''How do you justify that?'' |
35238 | ''How do you know I could?'' |
35238 | ''How do you mean?'' |
35238 | ''How does Miss Ansell live? |
35238 | ''How is that possible?'' |
35238 | ''How long was that ago?'' |
35238 | ''How many brothers and sisters have_ you_ got?'' |
35238 | ''How many shall you want?'' |
35238 | ''How much will they want for it?'' |
35238 | ''How? |
35238 | ''I always told Addie Raphael could never write so eloquently-- didn''t I, Addie? |
35238 | ''I shall see you again before you go to America?'' |
35238 | ''I suppose Mr. Weingott is getting a good living now in Manchester?'' |
35238 | ''I suppose he writes in Hebrew?'' |
35238 | ''I suppose it is all about now?'' |
35238 | ''I suppose you have come to scold me for not answering the invitation to speak at the distribution of prizes to your religion class?'' |
35238 | ''I thought the_ Flag_ was your own?'' |
35238 | ''I-- I write for an orthodox paper?'' |
35238 | ''I?'' |
35238 | ''If Esther wanted us to know her address, what can prevent her sending it?'' |
35238 | ''If the latest news made a column when it was first set up before the accident, how can it make less now?'' |
35238 | ''Indeed?'' |
35238 | ''Is it so astonishing to you?'' |
35238 | ''Is n''t it rather to his credit that he has conquered his bad habits?'' |
35238 | ''Is n''t that like a steam- hammer cracking a nut, or Hoti burning down his house to roast a pig? |
35238 | ''Is n''t that the thought deep down in your heart of hearts?'' |
35238 | ''Is she still as pretty?'' |
35238 | ''Is that in the Prayer- Book?'' |
35238 | ''Is that the way you sit on the books sent in for review?'' |
35238 | ''Is that what you two have been plotting? |
35238 | ''Is the gentleman waiting to see me?'' |
35238 | ''Is there anything lacking in your life, then?'' |
35238 | ''Is your grandmother in town?'' |
35238 | ''It did n''t seem probable, did it?'' |
35238 | ''It''s a healthy sign of affection, is a storm- cloud; but do n''t you think it''s just a wee, tiny, weeny bit too previous?'' |
35238 | ''May I ask him up here?'' |
35238 | ''May I come in?'' |
35238 | ''May I trouble you to put on your things at once, Miss Ansell?'' |
35238 | ''May we not dream nobler dreams than political independence? |
35238 | ''Me? |
35238 | ''Mother,''said Hannah, passionately breaking the silence,''are you going to stay here while Levi is dying in a strange town?'' |
35238 | ''My dear, how can he?'' |
35238 | ''No, how can we say that?'' |
35238 | ''No, why should you?'' |
35238 | ''No?'' |
35238 | ''No?'' |
35238 | ''No?'' |
35238 | ''Nonsense, why not?'' |
35238 | ''Nonsense?'' |
35238 | ''Not Reb Shemuel?'' |
35238 | ''Not a Jew?'' |
35238 | ''Not?'' |
35238 | ''Now what can I do for you?'' |
35238 | ''Of course there are snobs amongst us, but is it not the same in all sects?'' |
35238 | ''Often have I said to my Becky,"Where is little Esther? |
35238 | ''Oh, Sidney, what are you saying?'' |
35238 | ''Oh, ca n''t he?'' |
35238 | ''Oh, how is Miss Hyams? |
35238 | ''Oh, indeed; what did she want?'' |
35238 | ''Oh, then you agree with the others about the book?'' |
35238 | ''Oh, why will you sneer at Strelitski?'' |
35238 | ''On a holiday?'' |
35238 | ''Or have you, perhaps, saved up a tidy sum of money?'' |
35238 | ''Outsiders admitted?'' |
35238 | ''Perhaps I write you a comic opera for your company--_hein?_ Already I love you like a brother. |
35238 | ''Perhaps the prize- distribution is over?'' |
35238 | ''Phwat''s the matther?'' |
35238 | ''Really?'' |
35238 | ''Shall I buy it up and let you work it on your lines?'' |
35238 | ''She cut herself adrift?'' |
35238 | ''Should I?'' |
35238 | ''Sister?'' |
35238 | ''Strelitski is n''t married, is he?'' |
35238 | ''Suppose you had been in want and I could have helped you?'' |
35238 | ''Surely we were friends?'' |
35238 | ''Surely you can write to her publishers?'' |
35238 | ''Surely you know what you are?'' |
35238 | ''Talking of Karlkammer''s article, are you ever going to use up Herman''s scientific paper?'' |
35238 | ''Tell me-- your aunt is called Mrs. Levine, is n''t she?'' |
35238 | ''That steamer? |
35238 | ''The Rédacteur will not redact long,_ hein?_''he said presently. |
35238 | ''The long one in his prize poem?'' |
35238 | ''Then they do n''t sit on the stairs in the morning any more?'' |
35238 | ''Then why are you smiling?'' |
35238 | ''Then why give up your platform, your housetop, whence you may do so much good? |
35238 | ''Then why not start it if you wish to reform the world?'' |
35238 | ''Then you will live with your people, I suppose?'' |
35238 | ''Then, if there is no one else in your thoughts, why should n''t it be me? |
35238 | ''Then, why waste it?'' |
35238 | ''They put all those petty little things in the Jewish papers, do n''t they?'' |
35238 | ''They write that themselves?'' |
35238 | ''This man-- tell me, my daughter, thou lovest him still?'' |
35238 | ''Thou meanest that I am not guiltless; that I should have kept him at my side?'' |
35238 | ''Thou wilt take this journey though I forbid thee?'' |
35238 | ''To make you laugh?'' |
35238 | ''To whom are you apologising?'' |
35238 | ''To- morrow we''ll discuss matters further; and now, dear, can I help you with your sewing?'' |
35238 | ''Twopence?'' |
35238 | ''Vat vill you give me if I find you a Rédacteur?'' |
35238 | ''Vat you care? |
35238 | ''Vat you think me?'' |
35238 | ''Vere''s my poem, my great poesie?'' |
35238 | ''Vould our sages-- their memories for a blessing!--put anything into the Talmud that vasn''t true?'' |
35238 | ''Was he well?'' |
35238 | ''Was it treacherously to undermine Judaism that you so eagerly offered to edit for nothing?'' |
35238 | ''Was n''t she your art- critic?'' |
35238 | ''Was n''t that the man who appeared at the police- court the other day for being drunk and disorderly?'' |
35238 | ''We are so ignorant of our own history-- can we wonder at the world''s ignorance of it? |
35238 | ''Well, I am to take it for granted you will not write that antidote?'' |
35238 | ''Well, but, then, what am I to say to the committee?'' |
35238 | ''Well, did you enjoy yourselves?'' |
35238 | ''Well, how do you expect me to get the knowledge?'' |
35238 | ''Well, must you put in your leader?'' |
35238 | ''Well, sir, and is not that a good reason?'' |
35238 | ''Well, what of it? |
35238 | ''Well, when are you going to get him?'' |
35238 | ''Well, who else is there?'' |
35238 | ''Well, you know whether you believe in Judaism or not?'' |
35238 | ''Well?'' |
35238 | ''Well?'' |
35238 | ''What allegory is that of Raphael''s?'' |
35238 | ''What are you saying? |
35238 | ''What are you talking about?'' |
35238 | ''What are you to him? |
35238 | ''What became of the grandmother you mentioned?'' |
35238 | ''What degradation is there in art teaching a noble lesson?'' |
35238 | ''What do other girls do? |
35238 | ''What do you mean by the true Hamlet?'' |
35238 | ''What do you mean?'' |
35238 | ''What do you say?'' |
35238 | ''What does he know of the Holy Tongue?'' |
35238 | ''What does it matter? |
35238 | ''What else do authors write for? |
35238 | ''What for?'' |
35238 | ''What have I done?'' |
35238 | ''What is it?'' |
35238 | ''What is the matter, my dear?'' |
35238 | ''What is the matter?'' |
35238 | ''What is the matter?'' |
35238 | ''What is the paper for, except to right wrongs?'' |
35238 | ''What is the truth?'' |
35238 | ''What is the use of talking about the old Jews? |
35238 | ''What is the use?'' |
35238 | ''What is this mania for keeping up an effeteism? |
35238 | ''What is your own salary?'' |
35238 | ''What journey? |
35238 | ''What madness is this? |
35238 | ''What maiden? |
35238 | ''What maiden?'' |
35238 | ''What new reason have you discovered to think so?'' |
35238 | ''What news?'' |
35238 | ''What right have you to say it must not be?'' |
35238 | ''What sayest thou? |
35238 | ''What was it we used to say in school? |
35238 | ''What would be the use of my deceiving you?'' |
35238 | ''What''s that?'' |
35238 | ''What''s this about a new Jewish paper?'' |
35238 | ''What''s two thousand in seven years in London? |
35238 | ''What, be your chaperon?'' |
35238 | ''What, have n''t you noticed all Jewish sermons are"eloquent"?'' |
35238 | ''What, the lion without the mane? |
35238 | ''What?'' |
35238 | ''When did I visit your people? |
35238 | ''When may I hope for the honour of another visit from a real live editor?'' |
35238 | ''Where are you living?'' |
35238 | ''Where are your machines?'' |
35238 | ''Where did you get that from? |
35238 | ''Where, then? |
35238 | ''Where? |
35238 | ''Where?'' |
35238 | ''Which man do you mean?'' |
35238 | ''Which of all these objections am I to answer?'' |
35238 | ''Whither goest thou?'' |
35238 | ''Whither goest thou?'' |
35238 | ''Who am I to save Judaism? |
35238 | ''Who is it now?'' |
35238 | ''Who is taking material views of life now?'' |
35238 | ''Who is that stout gentleman with the bald head?'' |
35238 | ''Who spoke to thee?'' |
35238 | ''Who spoke to thee?'' |
35238 | ''Who told me, indeed? |
35238 | ''Who told you Mrs. Henry Goldsmith turned her adrift?'' |
35238 | ''Who told you that?'' |
35238 | ''Who told you the Reformers do this?'' |
35238 | ''Who was that, Leonard?'' |
35238 | ''Who would believe the little beggar had no existence? |
35238 | ''Who would have thought of seeing you here? |
35238 | ''Who would make friends with me, Miss Ansell?'' |
35238 | ''Who''s that?'' |
35238 | ''Who''s that?'' |
35238 | ''Why are you not at the_ Flag_? |
35238 | ''Why are you so cold to me?'' |
35238 | ''Why could n''t you write us a Jewish serial story?'' |
35238 | ''Why did n''t he describe our circle?'' |
35238 | ''Why did you abolish the old style of minister who had to slaughter the sheep? |
35238 | ''Why do n''t you have a real fire? |
35238 | ''Why do n''t you throw that awful staring thing away?'' |
35238 | ''Why do you make it so hard for me to speak? |
35238 | ''Why have you not told Addie?'' |
35238 | ''Why not have the sermon good?'' |
35238 | ''Why not? |
35238 | ''Why not? |
35238 | ''Why not?'' |
35238 | ''Why not?'' |
35238 | ''Why should I forget? |
35238 | ''Why should I not?'' |
35238 | ''Why should I subject myself to petty martyrdom for the sake of an outworn creed and a decaying sect?'' |
35238 | ''Why should I waste money on new papers when I can always forget the_ London Journal_ sufficiently? |
35238 | ''Why waste money?'' |
35238 | ''Why, is she married?'' |
35238 | ''Why, what do you work at?'' |
35238 | ''Why, what harm have they done you?'' |
35238 | ''Why, what has happened to him?'' |
35238 | ''Why, what tales?'' |
35238 | ''Why-- are-- you not?'' |
35238 | ''Why? |
35238 | ''Why?'' |
35238 | ''Will you come, mother, or must I go alone?'' |
35238 | ''Wo n''t you tell me your trouble?'' |
35238 | ''Work?'' |
35238 | ''Would you be so good as to point out where I have gone wrong?'' |
35238 | ''Yes, and did I not teach him to walk alone?'' |
35238 | ''Yes, but is n''t it the Bible that says,"The fathers have eaten a sour grape, and the teeth of the children are set on edge"?'' |
35238 | ''Yes, is n''t it?'' |
35238 | ''Yes, why not? |
35238 | ''Yes; but how are we to get these reports, especially from the provinces?'' |
35238 | ''Yes; why not?'' |
35238 | ''Yes? |
35238 | ''You do n''t like that style of art?'' |
35238 | ''You do n''t mean that?'' |
35238 | ''You do? |
35238 | ''You have left off being orthodox?'' |
35238 | ''You have made her; vy should she survive you? |
35238 | ''You read a great deal, do n''t you?'' |
35238 | ''You vill put it in next veek?'' |
35238 | ''You want an eloquent, persuasive man, with a gift of the gab----''''Did n''t I tell you so?'' |
35238 | ''You were taken away to be educated, was it not?'' |
35238 | ''You will not, I suppose, go over to the Reform Synagogue?'' |
35238 | ''You''ll come in and have a cup of tea with us, wo n''t you, after we''ve lodged the_ Greeners_?'' |
35238 | ''Your name''s Ezekiel, is n''t it?'' |
35238 | ''Your"copy"? |
35238 | A storm of protest raged in his heart-- all he had meant to say to her rose to his lips, but he only said,''Must you go?'' |
35238 | After a pause she asked timidly,''Why not stay here?'' |
35238 | After an agonised pause he said:''Tell me, Hannah, is there nothing I can do to make atonement to thee?'' |
35238 | Again, she asked herself, what had existence to offer her? |
35238 | And did he think she could thus unceremoniously be handed over to somebody else? |
35238 | And have n''t you had any other friends?'' |
35238 | And how goes it with the father and the family in America?'' |
35238 | And in so sad a world was there not something ignoble about happiness, a selfish aloofness from the life of humanity? |
35238 | And in your prognostications of the future of the Jews have you not forgotten the all- important factor of Palestine?'' |
35238 | And so you really do n''t know what''s become of her?'' |
35238 | And suppose I refuse to take in the new Jewish paper? |
35238 | And then there is Miss Cissy Levine: you have read her novels, of course? |
35238 | And vas I not born to be a Rédacteur, a editor, as you call it? |
35238 | And who was she that she should venture to hope for love? |
35238 | And will you do me a favour?'' |
35238 | Another glass stout? |
35238 | Are n''t they cooeying for us?'' |
35238 | Are not we Jews always the first prey of new ideas, with our alert intellect, our swift receptiveness, our keen critical sense? |
35238 | Are there not plenty of subjects for the Jew''s pen without his attacking his own people? |
35238 | Are we to cripple our lives for the sake of a word? |
35238 | Belcovitch?'' |
35238 | Bensh(? |
35238 | Besides, had not the hypocrites really enjoyed her book? |
35238 | Besides, he was used to these jeremiads now-- had he not often heard them from Sidney? |
35238 | But I have been thinking vat have I come to after all these years, all these vanderings? |
35238 | But do n''t you-- don''t all idealists-- overlook the quieter phenomena? |
35238 | But do you wonder at the intolerance of every nation towards its Jews? |
35238 | But how do you know his name?'' |
35238 | But how will you live?'' |
35238 | But if I went to a gathering for you, how should I know which were Jews?'' |
35238 | But if_ you_ see it, why not show the world the other side of the shield?'' |
35238 | But vy come not beaudiful maidens to_ me_?'' |
35238 | But vy have I not my copy by post? |
35238 | But what are you, after all? |
35238 | But what can I do for you?'' |
35238 | But what in Heaven''s name can your father have seen him doing?'' |
35238 | But where is your fighting editor? |
35238 | But, in a higher and broader sense, is it not the one fine thing in life which is a certainty, the one ideal which is not illusion?'' |
35238 | By the way, are you engaged yet, Esther?'' |
35238 | By the way, did you see the letter complaining of our using that quotation on the ground it was from the New Testament?'' |
35238 | By- the- bye, are you going to review the poison? |
35238 | CHAPTER VI COMEDY OR TRAGEDY? |
35238 | COMEDY OR TRAGEDY? |
35238 | Can not I read between the lines of your leaders?'' |
35238 | Can not we be a conscious force, making for nobler ends? |
35238 | Can you not guess that this damnable white tie has been choking the life and manhood out of me? |
35238 | Come up and dine with us again soon, will you? |
35238 | Could a satirist have invented anything funnier? |
35238 | Could any man deserve the trust of this celestial soul? |
35238 | Could n''t we commence again-- where we left off?'' |
35238 | Could she ever really have walked them with light heart, unconscious of the ugliness? |
35238 | Could she really care if his health gave way? |
35238 | Could we not, for instance, be the link of federation among the nations, acting everywhere in favour of Peace? |
35238 | Did n''t you tell me that we should never rise to the surface?'' |
35238 | Did the grey atmosphere that overhung them ever lift, or was it their natural and appropriate mantle? |
35238 | Did those initials never strike you? |
35238 | Did you give it me?'' |
35238 | Did you never hear of it? |
35238 | Do any of you believe that?'' |
35238 | Do n''t you see they''re half printed already?'' |
35238 | Do n''t you think I''d paint anonymously if I dared? |
35238 | Do you ever remember me going to the Board of Guardians? |
35238 | Do you know him?'' |
35238 | Do you know my little Esther took the scholarship for logic at London? |
35238 | Do you know, Esther, I did n''t sleep all night?'' |
35238 | Do you know, I picked her out of the gutter, so to speak?'' |
35238 | Do you know, ever since then I''ve suspected he''s one of us; perhaps you can tell me, Esther? |
35238 | Do you not understand? |
35238 | Do you think I could stand having my hands and feet tied-- with phylacteries?'' |
35238 | Do you think I have not told myself all these things a thousand times? |
35238 | Do you think I have not tried every kind of opiate? |
35238 | Do you think there''s anything, Esther, in that idea of its being a woman?'' |
35238 | Does n''t this appendix about Ben Samuel show that it was never meant to be taken seriously?'' |
35238 | Dost thou think thy mother will obey thee rather than her husband?'' |
35238 | For Judaism was worked out from within-- Abraham asked,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
35238 | For, of course, it was about you that I had been thinking----''''About me?'' |
35238 | Graham?'' |
35238 | Graham?'' |
35238 | Graham?'' |
35238 | Had he not read them in Esther''s book? |
35238 | Had her earlier day- dream left her no wiser than that? |
35238 | Had n''t you better go before you give yourself-- and me-- more cause for regret?'' |
35238 | Had n''t you better go down to your friend? |
35238 | Has he got a better offer from America?'' |
35238 | Has n''t anything been heard of her? |
35238 | Have I ever told you my idea that vegetarianism is the first step in a great secret conspiracy for gradually converting the world to Judaism? |
35238 | Have I found your religion at last?'' |
35238 | Have I not given you the idea of starting this paper? |
35238 | Have n''t I explained to you that Leon is going to start an orthodox paper which will be circulated among your future constituents? |
35238 | Have n''t you got a handkerchief to put round your throat? |
35238 | Have n''t you got better use for your money?'' |
35238 | Have n''t you let your pipe out? |
35238 | Have you ever tasted pork, Esther?'' |
35238 | Have you never been to one?'' |
35238 | Have you never guessed it? |
35238 | Have you not been good to_ me_? |
35238 | Have you?'' |
35238 | He began to stammer, then took his pipe out of his mouth and said more calmly:''How should I know anything about Miss Ansell?'' |
35238 | He prevaricated by retorting,''Why should I not?'' |
35238 | He went on humming a sprightly air, then suddenly interrupting himself, he said,''But have you got an advertisement canvasser, Mr. De Haan?'' |
35238 | His lips were moving: was it in grateful prayer, in self- reproach, or merely in nervous trembling? |
35238 | How can they? |
35238 | How can your life be a blank, with Judaism yet to be saved?'' |
35238 | How could I be?'' |
35238 | How could he have missed seeing? |
35238 | How is it the Chinese have got on all these years without religion? |
35238 | How is it?'' |
35238 | How is she?'' |
35238 | How is your head feeling now?'' |
35238 | How many of the councillors believe in their established religion? |
35238 | How much commission vill you give me?'' |
35238 | How''s that for witnesses? |
35238 | How''s this?'' |
35238 | How, indeed, could she earn a living? |
35238 | I always said you would grow up clever, did n''t I, though?'' |
35238 | I am a great actor--_hein?_ You know not my forte is voman''s parts-- I make myself so lovely complexion vith red paint, I fall in love vith me.'' |
35238 | I am not bound to advertise it, am I? |
35238 | I hope you are well?'' |
35238 | I hope you''re not annoyed with me for refusing to contribute fiction?'' |
35238 | I said:"Why not? |
35238 | I suppose it will be advanced?'' |
35238 | If you are bent upon going away, why deny me the pleasure of the society I am about to lose for ever?'' |
35238 | Is it not so, Becky? |
35238 | Is it wise to we d with the grey spirit of the Ghetto that doubts itself?'' |
35238 | Is n''t life hard enough without inventing a new hardship? |
35238 | Is n''t that the thought deep down in your heart of hearts?'' |
35238 | Is n''t there something of the kind in Esther-- in Miss Ansell''s book? |
35238 | Is orthodoxy either so inefficacious or so moribund as you fancy? |
35238 | Is she married yet?'' |
35238 | Is that a bargain?'' |
35238 | Is that the copy?'' |
35238 | Is there any other house, where the company is so exclusively Jewish, that could boast of a better gathering?'' |
35238 | Is there any particular reason why you want to know?'' |
35238 | Is there any such thing as an absolute system of morality? |
35238 | It is n''t half what he deserves,''said Mrs. Goldsmith,''or ought I to say she? |
35238 | It will be written in English?'' |
35238 | It would be awkward if an aggrieved reader came in and mistook me for the editor, would n''t it? |
35238 | It''s my private business, is n''t it? |
35238 | Jews may be below Judaism, but are not all men below their creed? |
35238 | Leon, do you not understand? |
35238 | Leon?'' |
35238 | May I announce him? |
35238 | Me?'' |
35238 | Mr. Phillips''s business been doing badly? |
35238 | Must a Jew needs have a Jewess to help him break the Law?'' |
35238 | No, no; be silent, if you can say nothing to strengthen me in my resolution: am I not weak enough already? |
35238 | No? |
35238 | Now, why not write an antidote to that book? |
35238 | Nu(_ R._), Well? |
35238 | Of course, you wo n''t suspect me of underrating the moral and religious considerations?'' |
35238 | Oh, why had she deserted them? |
35238 | Once touch anything, and where are you to stop? |
35238 | Or have Jews the brazenness to assert it is all invention?'' |
35238 | Perhaps you would like me to marry in a synagogue?'' |
35238 | Pinch me, will you?'' |
35238 | Race affinity is a potent force, why be in a hurry to dissipate it? |
35238 | Raphael smiled good- naturedly, and, turning to De Haan, said:''But do you think there is any hope of a circulation?'' |
35238 | Schnecks(? |
35238 | Since when have you developed this extraordinary enthusiasm for Jewish history? |
35238 | Sit down, wo n''t you? |
35238 | So she murmured instead:''What can detain him?'' |
35238 | Sure you wo n''t jump in? |
35238 | Then, seeing him rise as if to go, she said:''Wo n''t you have a cup of tea?'' |
35238 | There, Esther, is n''t that just what I''ve been saying in other words?'' |
35238 | There, is n''t it a beauty? |
35238 | They may be the best fellows going, honourable, high- minded, generous-- why expect them to be martyrs more than other Englishmen? |
35238 | Vat vill be my end? |
35238 | Was Mr. Armitage in England? |
35238 | Was it fair to his readers? |
35238 | Was it not so? |
35238 | Was it not the_ London Journal_? |
35238 | Was it possible it could have taken even her childish feet six strides to cross them, as she plainly remembered? |
35238 | Was it racial affinity, or was it merely the spiritual affinity of souls that feel their identity through all differences of brain? |
35238 | Was it really worth while to trouble the clear depths of her spirit with his turbid past? |
35238 | Was n''t that the young man who married the Widow Finkelstein?'' |
35238 | Was this the sequel to the strange episode in Mr. Henry Goldsmith''s library? |
35238 | Well, and how are you?'' |
35238 | Well, are you going, or must I?'' |
35238 | What are you talking about?'' |
35238 | What change had come over him? |
35238 | What constituency would have me?'' |
35238 | What do you think my father wanted me to be? |
35238 | What does it matter if it''s a he or a she?'' |
35238 | What had she been doing all these years-- amid her books and her music and her rose- leaves-- aloof from realities? |
35238 | What had she in common with all this mean wretchedness, with this semi- barbarous breed of beings? |
35238 | What hath he done?'' |
35238 | What hopes could she yet cherish? |
35238 | What is he going to do in America?'' |
35238 | What is its_ raison d''être_?'' |
35238 | What is the use of your elaborate essay on the Septuagint, when the public is dying to hear who''s dead?'' |
35238 | What is there strange about me?'' |
35238 | What were they doing now, without her mother- care, out and away beyond the great seas? |
35238 | What would people say? |
35238 | What''s that great ugly picture over there?'' |
35238 | What''s the good of that to me? |
35238 | What''s wrong about that?'' |
35238 | Where did you put it? |
35238 | Where else?'' |
35238 | Where is she? |
35238 | Where would the art of the world be if the Second Commandment had been obeyed? |
35238 | Where''s that one I gave you? |
35238 | Where''s that to come from?'' |
35238 | Where''s your pouch?'' |
35238 | Who and what am I? |
35238 | Who are our guests now? |
35238 | Who are you?'' |
35238 | Who cares for poetry?'' |
35238 | Who could comprehend as she these stunted souls, limited in all save suffering? |
35238 | Who gave you that, Esther?'' |
35238 | Who is he?'' |
35238 | Who is there worthy to alter them? |
35238 | Who knows but that it will be born again in us, if we are only patient? |
35238 | Who knows what more luck my father might drop in for? |
35238 | Who was she, to aspire to such a match? |
35238 | Who would think she was the child of a pauper immigrant, a rough jewel one has picked up and polished? |
35238 | Who''ll be a penny the worse for it?'' |
35238 | Why ca n''t Judaism take a natural view of things and an honest pride in its genuine history, instead of building its synagogues on shifting sand?'' |
35238 | Why ca n''t we drag in a couple of thousand names every week?'' |
35238 | Why did n''t you get inside it out of the rain, or stand in the entrance? |
35238 | Why do n''t they brighten the piece up with ballet- girls?'' |
35238 | Why do n''t you see more of him?'' |
35238 | Why do you keep him on?'' |
35238 | Why give it an extra advertisement by slating it?'' |
35238 | Why go to Browning for theism, when the words of his"Rabbi Ben Ezra"are but a synopsis of a famous Jewish argument? |
35238 | Why had he developed so disagreeably? |
35238 | Why had he not thought of so likely a place for a_ littérateur_? |
35238 | Why must we exist at all as a separate people?'' |
35238 | Why not?'' |
35238 | Why not?'' |
35238 | Why should God not teach through a great race as through a great man?'' |
35238 | Why should Jews claim the patent in those moral ideas which you find just as well in all the great writers of antiquity? |
35238 | Why should he disturb her anew? |
35238 | Why should it not be trimmed into concordance with the culture of the time? |
35238 | Why should n''t you? |
35238 | Why should the Creator deceive us?'' |
35238 | Why should we be so conventional, you and I? |
35238 | Why should we not have our own country?'' |
35238 | Why should we not revive or strengthen that, rather than waste ourselves on impracticable novelties? |
35238 | Why should you risk infection for our sakes?'' |
35238 | Why this new- born interest in Esther? |
35238 | Why was n''t he made sub?'' |
35238 | Why, who ever heard of such foolish haste? |
35238 | Why? |
35238 | Will it suspend publication?'' |
35238 | Will you be able to get a circulation?'' |
35238 | With all its love and reverence, do you think it forgets I am its hireling? |
35238 | Wo n''t Sidney stare if you pulverise him in the_ Flag of Judah_? |
35238 | Wo n''t you let me be your friend?'' |
35238 | Wo n''t you say"Yes"? |
35238 | Wo n''t you sit down?'' |
35238 | Yes, four pounds; and what think you I have bought with it? |
35238 | You are married-- not? |
35238 | You do n''t expect me to hang a placard round my breast like those on concert- room chairs,"Engaged"?'' |
35238 | You have seen my comedy,"The Hornet of Judah"? |
35238 | You know what Jews are; they wo n''t ask,"Is this paper wanted?" |
35238 | You vill announce it in the paper? |
35238 | You vill not leave it out like Sampson left out my article last week?'' |
35238 | You wo n''t back out?'' |
35238 | You?'' |
35238 | Your congregation would----''''Crucify me between two money- lenders?'' |
35238 | _ What_ had she in common with all this mean wretchedness? |
35238 | do Jews suppose they alone are free from the snobbery, hypocrisy and vulgarity that have shadowed every society that has ever existed?'' |
35238 | do you find Socialism, too, in orthodox Judaism?'' |
35238 | how could I?'' |
35238 | said Sidney reproachfully,''how_ can_ you be so conventional?'' |
35238 | said Sidney, pricking up his ears,''doubled your circulation already?'' |
35238 | they''ll balance it in their hand, as if weighing up the value of the advertisements, and ask,"Does it pay?" |
35238 | what living can you earn, you with your gloves? |
35238 | what was that journal resting against the half- loaf as for perusal during the meal? |
35238 | where did_ you_ spring from?'' |
35238 | why didst Thou not take him then?'' |
35238 | you are sending me away, are you?'' |
7475 | ''Dear miss,''I said,''are you not in great suffering?'' 7475 Ah, did you once see Shelley plain? |
7475 | But Rubinstein? |
7475 | Do n''t know Sly? |
7475 | Give you any of his money? 7475 Is it a cravat that Monsieur wishes? |
7475 | Mean? |
7475 | My children,he laughs,"what is the difference between six dozen dozen and half a dozen dozen?" |
7475 | Oh, is he? |
7475 | Then it is skill only,_ technique_? |
7475 | Well, what is he? |
7475 | Well, you do n''t know anything against him, do you? |
7475 | What on earth is it all about? |
7475 | Will he give me any of his money? |
7475 | You say he is very rich? |
7475 | And did he stop and speak to you? |
7475 | And just as he is thinking so another friend leans forward and says, in a decided tone of utter disappointment,"Just let me take your glass, will you? |
7475 | And ought we not to demand that Faust shall woo Gretchen in their mother- tongue? |
7475 | And the_ garde du roi_? |
7475 | And why is this precious knowledge imparted to us? |
7475 | And why not? |
7475 | Are not the taxes of these Jem Baggses, these wandering minstrels, the"only rates uninvidious in the levy, ungrudged in the assessment?" |
7475 | Are these players? |
7475 | Are they only materially better? |
7475 | Are we all essentially lackeys who love to wear a livery? |
7475 | Are we more truthful, more upright, manlier men? |
7475 | Are you never out of tune, good sir? |
7475 | But how has secession helped it? |
7475 | But if a man may falter, shall we not forgive to a trombone even a half- note? |
7475 | But if men should agree to surrender their seats that women should be first accommodated, is there any doubt that the wrong would be speedily righted? |
7475 | But in this world is the gentle Bayard as truly the type of the average man as Jeanie Deans of the average woman? |
7475 | But is Buckle right? |
7475 | But is it so invested in this play? |
7475 | But is there no other than a humiliating explanation of the fact? |
7475 | But must they also move away from those who do want them? |
7475 | But still-- still, do you get any thrill from the most perfect mosaic? |
7475 | But why try to describe beauty? |
7475 | But will they please to curb their wrath for a moment and listen to Dr. Clarke? |
7475 | But would the shame and indignation be due to the consciousness that the accommodation paid for was not provided? |
7475 | But, my dear Easy Chair, can you tell me why it is that all our young American poets write nothing but Longfellow and water? |
7475 | But-- who-- is-- Sly?" |
7475 | Could any critic, however inclined to misogyny, seriously allege ill- manners against the sex of Sidney''s sister, Pembroke''s mother? |
7475 | Could the music of the bells be spared from the story of London more than that of the cries? |
7475 | Could there be more ineffable selfishness than Adam''s plea in the garden? |
7475 | Did Whitfield pronounce the word Mesopotamia like a wind harp sighing exquisite music? |
7475 | Did you ever see a more sumptuous entertainment or a more splendid palace? |
7475 | Do the Aldermen, like Homer, sometimes nod? |
7475 | Do we find more public virtue when we get there? |
7475 | Do you see? |
7475 | Do you suppose they can escape the effect? |
7475 | Does he want a cravat? |
7475 | Does my dear Mrs. Grundy comprehend?" |
7475 | For the first time we behold Niagara, and resentfully we ask,"Is that all?" |
7475 | For who would live out of town if he could live comfortably in it? |
7475 | Grundy?" |
7475 | Has our literature produced any wiser book? |
7475 | Has tolerance gone out with astrology? |
7475 | Have they better poets, better artists, than the Greeks, than Dante, than Shakespeare, than Raphael and Michael Angelo? |
7475 | Have they brought us nearer heaven? |
7475 | Have they higher standards of conduct than those of Confucius and the Hindoos? |
7475 | Have they wiser men than Plato, Aristotle, Bacon? |
7475 | He opened it, and saw a young man, who briskly inquired,"Is Mr. Easy Chair here?" |
7475 | How are the causes of discontent removed? |
7475 | If Adam plained that Eve had lost him Paradise, does not every son of Adam own that she has regained it for him? |
7475 | If Turpin may be respectfully lamented with indulgent hope, shall a hesitating horn be doomed to"the all- sweeping besom of societarian reformation?" |
7475 | If a higher general welfare prevails, what matter if the population somewhat declines? |
7475 | If there be too much noise in the streets, might not some other form of noise have been first silenced than that of the street musicians? |
7475 | If they are players, who is in earnest? |
7475 | If we have ever had a greater preacher of that gospel who is he? |
7475 | If you whispered"Paganini?" |
7475 | If, indeed, Darby can afford to pay a hundred dollars monthly to a_ chef_, Joan need know nothing of messes; but how many such Darbys are there? |
7475 | Is it because you have no work for them at home? |
7475 | Is it blue, or this, or that, that Monsieur prefers? |
7475 | Is it only snobbishness, a mean admiration of mean things? |
7475 | Is it otherwise with his glass and porcelain? |
7475 | Is it quite so? |
7475 | Is it the instinctive effort to prolong the brilliancy of youth that induces the advancing woman to decorate herself so brightly? |
7475 | Is it the involuntary hope that she will really seem to be buoyant and gay of heart if only her dress be gay? |
7475 | Is the sincerity of religious feeling always in proportion to the magnificence of the ritual? |
7475 | It is a Daniel come to judgment, but how shall it be done? |
7475 | It is a heroic story, a romantic tradition.--And the Queen? |
7475 | Let us suppose, said the orator, that secession is successful, what has been gained? |
7475 | Must he be accounted a sturdy beggar because you happen not to be in immediate want of his wares? |
7475 | Not worth the money? |
7475 | Or do you prefer the diamonds behind the next pane? |
7475 | Or, continued the orator, more vehemently, do they think, in that case, to carry their slaves into territories now free? |
7475 | Perhaps you have played the little game of parlor magic? |
7475 | Shall he be adjudged a nuisance? |
7475 | Shall it be stopped altogether? |
7475 | Shall men keep their seats until, by sheer shame, and in deference to indignant public protest, the company does its duty? |
7475 | Sometimes, for an inadvertent hour, do the finer instincts of public spirit flag in those civic bosoms? |
7475 | Suppose that women on their side were to expect men in the family to be heroes and gentlemen as well as''good providers?''" |
7475 | The happy loiterers could see all the beautiful things, and what could they do more if they should buy them all? |
7475 | The young pale general there, the placid woman, the man in the orchestra stall, have they been playing only? |
7475 | This is the reason of the wondering question, What has become of roast meat? |
7475 | Was not the deep bay of St. Paul''s heard when Nelson, the old sea- dog, died? |
7475 | Were they not the same voices that called Whittington to turn again? |
7475 | What do you mean?" |
7475 | What do you think that he could tell you of Dresden china-- its history, its masters, its manufacture? |
7475 | What does he know about them? |
7475 | What does he know of pictures? |
7475 | What evil genius, hostile to the enjoyment of the people, persuaded them? |
7475 | What is it, do you ask? |
7475 | When, in the happy words of another, Canada has been brought down to the Potomac, do they think their fugitives will be restored? |
7475 | Why are we not also taught what else they did during the day? |
7475 | Why do we learn nothing of Mr. and Mrs. Y. and Z., at the other end of the alphabet, in Baxter Street? |
7475 | Why so eager to cast the first stone? |
7475 | Why so insistent, so scrupulously exigent? |
7475 | Will he permit?" |
7475 | Will the malcontents have seceded because of the non- rendition of fugitive slaves? |
7475 | Would they not arise rather from the consciousness of the peculiar wrong that the gentler sex should be so incommoded? |
7475 | Yes, but to what does art, especially musical art, appeal? |
7475 | Yonder trombone may have its weaknesses-- who of us, pray, is without? |
7475 | Your chords, say in the domestic concert, are they always finely harmonious, and your own reed never cracked? |
7475 | said the Senator at the Symphony Concert,"and why do people come here?" |
7475 | would it be, could it be, even with all our expectation, what we believe it to have been? |
48022 | A new trial? |
48022 | A yellow stripe upon a brown ground? |
48022 | And it is your opinion that he had made no enemies in the neighbourhood? |
48022 | And that money has never been heard of since? |
48022 | And the windows-- which open to the ground-- are sometimes left open, I dare say? |
48022 | And who do you think had cause to be spiteful agen him, Steeve? |
48022 | And you went that night to pay it to him? |
48022 | Are you stayin''up town, Steeve? |
48022 | Aurora, what was the sum you gave James Conyers upon the night of his death? |
48022 | Avoids you, dear? |
48022 | But Aurora may have had some very particular reason, dear? |
48022 | But can you remember selling one of them to anybody else? |
48022 | But suppose I think I_ can_ help you? |
48022 | But tell me,--tell me, Aurora,cried Talbot, almost too eager to find words,"how long had you left him when you heard the report of the pistol?'' |
48022 | But there was naught o''sort between her and the trainer, was there? |
48022 | But where is my wife, ma''am? |
48022 | But where-- where has he been all this time? |
48022 | But who could have known of the money? |
48022 | But you''ve discovered nothing fresh, then? |
48022 | But, coom, let me go now, will you? |
48022 | Can you imagine any one having any motive for getting rid of this man? |
48022 | Can you remember who you sold''em to? |
48022 | Did you now? |
48022 | Do you know any one amongst your servants, Mr. Mellish,asked the coroner,"whom you would consider likely to commit an act of violence of this kind? |
48022 | Do you think they had any motive in following you? |
48022 | Do you think we deserve to be happy, Lolly? |
48022 | Do you want to get to the City or the West End? |
48022 | Eh? |
48022 | For what purpose? |
48022 | Had him and Mr. Mellish fell out about the management of the stable? |
48022 | Had the man any money about him? |
48022 | Has any one else suspected me? 48022 Have I been such a blessing to you, John,"she said,"that you should be grateful for me? |
48022 | Have you any idea who it was that shot this Conyers? |
48022 | He left no message, then? |
48022 | Him as you give it to? |
48022 | How could he know that you were to be there to- day? |
48022 | How do I know as my sister Eliza''s child wrote that? |
48022 | How do we know that the-- that the man was murdered? |
48022 | How do you mean, dear? |
48022 | How long is it since you missed him? |
48022 | How many people know this secret, Aurora? |
48022 | How should I ever think of him without thinking of his love for me? |
48022 | How should this paper concern me? |
48022 | I am sorry to see you looking ill. Where shall I find John? |
48022 | I suppose a poor chap may fetch his few bits of clothes without being_ called_ like this? |
48022 | I suppose so,Talbot answered thoughtfully;"what sort of a man was he?" |
48022 | I''m not obliged to tell everybody my business,he answered coolly;"this footpath is a public thoroughfare, I believe?" |
48022 | In a cheque? |
48022 | Is it wrong of Aurora to come alone, Talbot, dear? |
48022 | Is it wrong? |
48022 | John Mellish,exclaimed Mr. Bulstrode,"was there any money found upon the person of the murdered man?" |
48022 | John, why do you refuse to trust me? |
48022 | Mr. and Mrs. Mellish are both below, I suppose? |
48022 | My word, Steeve,he said laughing,"what takes you to Liverpool? |
48022 | No, no,he gasped;"who said so-- who said----?" |
48022 | No; how should I know it? |
48022 | Now, then, Grimstone,he said;"what news?" |
48022 | Oh, Talbot, how could I have told you this? 48022 Oh, it''s nothing particular, sir,"the man said,"and perhaps I ought n''t to trouble you about it; but did you expect any one down to- day, sir?" |
48022 | Remember it? 48022 Shall I go and look for Aurora?" |
48022 | Shall I show you the letter? |
48022 | Shall I tell you why, you foolish John? |
48022 | Shall we go to the house? |
48022 | She had more money than she knew what to do with-- eh? |
48022 | She was a bit above him, loike-- wasn''t she? |
48022 | Suppose I mean to try and do so, whether you will or no? 48022 That train will reach Penistone in time to catch the Liverpool train, wo n''t it?" |
48022 | The Penistone train? |
48022 | The document is of some importance, then? |
48022 | The funeral will take place to- morrow, John, will it not? |
48022 | The-- the man is buried, I suppose, Talbot? |
48022 | Then they followed you into town, John? |
48022 | There ai nt nothing turned up here, I suppose, sir,said Joseph Grimstone, addressing Mr. Bulstrode,"as will be of any help to us?" |
48022 | This is the place, I think, gentlemen? |
48022 | To what cause, then, do you attribute his death? |
48022 | To- night? |
48022 | Upon no unpleasant business, I hope? |
48022 | WHAT? |
48022 | Was he alone in the room? |
48022 | What about? |
48022 | What are you doing here? |
48022 | What clothes? 48022 What did he want to coot away for?" |
48022 | What do you mean? |
48022 | What do you mean? |
48022 | What do you want with me? 48022 What do you want with me?" |
48022 | What do you want? |
48022 | What have you got there? |
48022 | What horses do you run? |
48022 | What is it, Forbes? |
48022 | What is the matter? 48022 What is the matter?" |
48022 | What pistol? 48022 What time did it go?" |
48022 | What will he think of me? |
48022 | What, he was still living, then? |
48022 | What, in Heaven''s name, could be his motive in coming here? |
48022 | Where is Aurora? |
48022 | Who can it be, dear? |
48022 | Who could the man have been? |
48022 | Who else could it have been, then, as had a spite against the man? |
48022 | Who is it?'' 48022 Who says that the deed was treacherously done? |
48022 | Who suspects me of this crime? |
48022 | Who told you I did n''t want the''Manchester Guardian,''Jarvis? |
48022 | Who was it that could n''t find words that was bad enough for him, or looks that was angry enough for him? 48022 Who was it that ran away from her own home and hid herself, after the inquest?" |
48022 | Who was it that was afraid to stop in her own house, but must run away to London without leaving word where she was gone for anybody? 48022 Who was it that went to meet him late at night in the north lodge?" |
48022 | Who''s blaming you? |
48022 | Who''s the''Softy''? |
48022 | Why should I ask any questions upon the subject? |
48022 | Why should you prevent my seeing Aurora? |
48022 | Why was I ever born to bring such sorrow upon him? |
48022 | Will God have mercy upon a wretch like that? |
48022 | Will to- morrow bring us no nearer what we want, I wonder? 48022 Will you please to step this way?" |
48022 | Will you ride into the town, Talbot? |
48022 | Would it be wrong for you to go tearing from here to Cornwall, child? |
48022 | Yes, yes; but what of that? |
48022 | Yes; but why do you associate this weapon with Aurora? 48022 Yes; did n''t you hear the north- country twang?" |
48022 | You argue, therefore, that your wife took the pistol? |
48022 | You bought a second- hand waistcoat of Gogram, in the market- place, did n''t you, about a year and a half ago? |
48022 | You can tell me the gardener''s name, I suppose? |
48022 | You did not find any of the servants in the room that morning? |
48022 | You do not even guess at any one? |
48022 | You do not wish to hear anything from Dork? |
48022 | You gave it away, then? |
48022 | You have n''t got anything with brass buttons, I suppose? |
48022 | You infer, then, that James Conyers was unmarried? |
48022 | You know that the murderer of James Conyers has not yet been discovered? |
48022 | You know who she was, I suppose? |
48022 | You put John''s guns back into their places upon that morning, Aurora,said Mr. Bulstrode;"do you remember seeing that particular pistol?" |
48022 | You remember the morning at Brighton? |
48022 | You thought what, dear? |
48022 | You were talking to him? 48022 You''re a lawyer, I suppose?" |
48022 | You''ve only got five left out of the dozen,said the detective;"then you''ve sold seven?" |
48022 | Am I never, never, never to be released from the consequences of my miserable folly?" |
48022 | Any one besides-- my husband?" |
48022 | But do you think we take life quite seriously enough, Lolly dear? |
48022 | But how could she have come by that knowledge? |
48022 | But she was so perfect; and how could she, how could she? |
48022 | But the room is not locked, I suppose?" |
48022 | But what''s the use of standing jawing here? |
48022 | But why should Aurora have hated the dead man? |
48022 | By what hellish witchcraft had she been ensnared into the degrading alliance, recorded in this miserable scrap of paper? |
48022 | Ca n''t you see that I''m almost mad, and that this is no time for you to force your sympathy upon me? |
48022 | Ca n''t you see that I''m nearly mad?" |
48022 | Can Heaven be so cruel as to afflict us any more?" |
48022 | Can I wonder that he avoids me?" |
48022 | Can he be deep enough to have destroyed that waistcoat, I wonder? |
48022 | Can it be possible that the trouble I expected has come so soon?" |
48022 | Can it be wondered, then, that she rejoiced now that all need of secrecy was over, and this generous spirit might expand as it pleased? |
48022 | Can you call at the house, say at nine, this evening? |
48022 | Condemnation or release? |
48022 | Could anybody have given her reason to suppose----? |
48022 | Could it be possible that all the trouble and confusion of the past week or two had indeed unsettled this poor girl''s intellect? |
48022 | Could she have heard----? |
48022 | Did Aurora know anything of all this? |
48022 | Did you know that?" |
48022 | Do you know that since I came back from London not a creature has called at this house? |
48022 | Do you know that the cursed gaping rabble come from Doncaster to stare over the park- palings, and that this house is a show to half the West Riding? |
48022 | Do you remember how she paid into t''''Softy''?" |
48022 | Do you think I am right in wishing this, dear?" |
48022 | Do you think_ I''m_ afraid of anything these penny- a- liner fellows can write?" |
48022 | Do you want me to betray myself? |
48022 | Does she think so lightly of my love as to believe that it could fail her now, when she wants it most? |
48022 | Free, have I said? |
48022 | Had he not seen his niece''s shining orbs flame fire upon the dead man only a quarter of an hour before he received his death- wound? |
48022 | Had not Mrs. Powell said as much, or hinted as much? |
48022 | Had she known of the trainer''s existence when she asked for it? |
48022 | Had the day of trouble come already? |
48022 | Have I not brought you far more sorrow than happiness, my poor dear?" |
48022 | Have you any one of an especially vindictive character in your household?" |
48022 | Have you asked Aurora why she took upon herself to rearrange your guns?--she had never done such a thing before, I suppose?" |
48022 | Have you asked her how long she was in your room, and whether she can remember seeing this particular pistol, among others?'' |
48022 | Have you ever tried to imagine the anger of a person whom you have never seen angry? |
48022 | Have you no mercy upon me, Talbot Bulstrode? |
48022 | How can he look at me without remembering who and what I am? |
48022 | How could he answer them? |
48022 | How could he be otherwise than sorrowful, thinking of these things? |
48022 | How could she wish to know more than this? |
48022 | How could they dare, these foul- minded slanderers, to harbour one base thought against the purest, the most perfect of women? |
48022 | How could you do this? |
48022 | How did he know how many Acts of Parliament his conduct in leaving Doncaster without giving his evidence might come under? |
48022 | How did he know what inquiries had possibly been made for the missing witness? |
48022 | How should she care to read when it pleased her husband to desist from reading? |
48022 | How should she think of anything but her new- born happiness-- the new- born confidence between herself and the husband she loved? |
48022 | How was I to know owght about it? |
48022 | How?" |
48022 | How_ could_ he believe in me? |
48022 | How_ could_ it concern him? |
48022 | I did n''t say anything at the inquest, did I? |
48022 | I thought you''d never been further than York in your life?" |
48022 | I----Why did you come to this accursed house?" |
48022 | Is it kind of you to withhold your friendship from me now, when I have come here on purpose to be a friend to you-- to you and to Aurora?" |
48022 | Is it my fancy that he averts his eyes when he speaks to me? |
48022 | Is it my fancy that he roams about the house like a ghost, and paces up and down his room half the night through? |
48022 | Is it my fancy that his voice changes when he pronounces my name? |
48022 | Is there any one of the servants whom you could suspect of such a crime, John?" |
48022 | Is there anything else I can do for you?" |
48022 | It ca n''t be, surely? |
48022 | It''s my sister Eliza''s child you want to slander, is it? |
48022 | Mellish?" |
48022 | Mellish?" |
48022 | Must we subtract something from the original sum when we are called upon to meet a new demand? |
48022 | Now tell me all about it, ca n''t you?" |
48022 | Or did they make some imperceptible advance towards the mountain- top, despite of all discouragement? |
48022 | Powell?" |
48022 | Shall I ring the bell for Parsons?" |
48022 | Shall Smith of 1857 be called upon to perform the contract entered into by that other Smith of 1850? |
48022 | Shall Smith the second be called upon to pay the debts of Smith the first? |
48022 | Shall we build a lot of schools, or a church, or alms- houses, or something of that sort? |
48022 | She had not explained this in her hurried story of the murder, and how could he press her upon so painful a subject? |
48022 | She was always following me about; and I suppose she had heard me talking to----""Talking to whom?" |
48022 | Talbot, why do you wring these things from me?" |
48022 | Then this Stephen Hargraves was in the room that morning?" |
48022 | They one and all asked him the same question:"Had any one a motive for killing this man?" |
48022 | To what end were his labours, after all? |
48022 | Two words will tell me that, I suppose?" |
48022 | WHAT WIFE? |
48022 | WHAT WIFE? |
48022 | Was he really that creature of the irrecoverable past? |
48022 | Was it I who called a lady with white eyelashes''the guiding star of a lonely life''? |
48022 | Was she-- that which he feared people might be led to think her, if they heard the story of that scene in the wood? |
48022 | Was the ghastly business as yet unfinished, then? |
48022 | Was the great accumulation of evil so heavy that it rolled for ever back upon the untiring Sisyphus? |
48022 | Was this the secret humiliation which had prostrated her at his feet in the chamber at Felden Woods? |
48022 | Were any of the buttons missing off that waistcoat when you gave it away?" |
48022 | What companions are so adhesive as trouble and sorrow? |
48022 | What could bring him there-- to that place above all other places, which, if he were indeed guilty, he would surely most desire to avoid? |
48022 | What could they say to him? |
48022 | What did it matter? |
48022 | What disturbance?" |
48022 | What do you mean by saying that the pistol was in her possession?" |
48022 | What do_ you_ think about it?" |
48022 | What further disturbance could there be? |
48022 | What had Aurora done with that money? |
48022 | What has been the matter with my poor darling?" |
48022 | What have you got there, in that bundle under your arm?" |
48022 | What have you got there?" |
48022 | What if it should go on like this for long? |
48022 | What inquiries might be made? |
48022 | What is the business in which I can help or advise you? |
48022 | What is this hideous avalanche of trouble which is slowly descending to crush me?" |
48022 | What more have I to tell of this simple drama of domestic life? |
48022 | What motive could they possibly have had to seek his death?" |
48022 | What party in Onslow Square? |
48022 | What right had they to speak to him like this? |
48022 | What secret could she have had, that a groom was likely to discover? |
48022 | What shall we do, dear? |
48022 | What shall we do, my darling, to deserve the blessings God has given us so freely; the blessings of youth and strength, and love and wealth? |
48022 | What was he but a poor half- witted hanger- on of the murdered man, who had lost all by his patron''s untimely death? |
48022 | What was her life to be henceforth? |
48022 | What was the dark cloud which he saw brooding so fatally over the far horizon? |
48022 | What was this paper? |
48022 | What will he not think of me that is base and horrible?" |
48022 | What will they not suffer? |
48022 | What would be the result of that inquest? |
48022 | What would it be? |
48022 | What?" |
48022 | When I came back-- I----""Well, what then?" |
48022 | When did she ever think him anything but the truest and wisest and most perfect of created beings? |
48022 | Where did he put it, I wonder? |
48022 | Who was he? |
48022 | Who was it that did this?" |
48022 | Who was it that met him there in the dark,--as others could tell as well as me? |
48022 | Who was this?" |
48022 | Why did n''t he come? |
48022 | Why did they look at him with those grave, pitying faces? |
48022 | Why did you send for me?" |
48022 | Why do you come here? |
48022 | Why do you give me this horrible pain again? |
48022 | Why do you insist upon humiliating yourself and me by such a scene as this?" |
48022 | Why does she avoid me, Talbot? |
48022 | Why had they called him back? |
48022 | Why have you left Mellish Park? |
48022 | Why should I disbelieve him? |
48022 | Why should I stay to account to you for my folly, Talbot Bulstrode? |
48022 | Why should he go into the house? |
48022 | Why should he not accept her own assurance that all was over, and that nothing remained but peace? |
48022 | Why should n''t I see her?" |
48022 | Why were you in the wood that night?" |
48022 | Will anything ever come to break our happiness again, my dear? |
48022 | Will you help us, Aurora?" |
48022 | Will you run to the house, and send some of the men to fetch a constable, while I stop here?" |
48022 | Will you sit down by Lucy and compose yourself? |
48022 | Will you trust in the love and friendship of those who are around you, and promise to bear this new trial bravely? |
48022 | Would they ever seem as cheerful as they had once done to their master? |
48022 | You can keep us in sight, I suppose?" |
48022 | You remember the night upon which you left Felden?" |
48022 | You talked about the money, I suppose?" |
48022 | You will remember?" |
48022 | and had she wanted it for him? |
48022 | asked Mr. Bulstrode, sternly;"and why did you come in at the window?" |
48022 | cried John Mellish, passionately;"why did you come here, Talbot Bulstrode? |
48022 | cried Mrs. Mellish, still writhing in the"Softy''s"grasp, still restraining her dog from flying at him with her disengaged hand;"what do you mean?" |
48022 | cried Talbot suddenly,"am I to think you a coward and a fool? |
48022 | for when did that lady- like creature ever vulgarize her opinions by stating them plainly? |
48022 | had all his glorification of her been the vain- boasting of a fool who had not known what he talked about? |
48022 | had you learnt to know me no better than_ this_, in all our happy married life?" |
48022 | he cried fiercely;"who gave you the right to dictate what I''m to read or what I''m to leave unread? |
48022 | he cried,"what is the meaning of this? |
48022 | he said;"at your house? |
48022 | he thought,"what is this misery that is coming upon me? |
48022 | how could you wrong me so much? |
48022 | how is it possible that John should change towards you? |
48022 | or has not affection rather some magic power by which it can double its capital at any moment when there is a run upon the bank? |
48022 | said Talbot;"you''ve nothing new to tell me?" |
48022 | she cried piteously,"why did n''t I run away and hide myself from you? |
48022 | she cried, bursting into a passion of hysterical sobs, and covering her face with her clasped hands;"am I never to hear the last of this? |
48022 | she said, tenderly,"what can I do to bring the roses back to your cheeks?" |
48022 | surely I''m free to tell my thoughts?" |
48022 | thought John Mellish;"will that man be forgiven for having brought disgrace and misery upon a trusting girl?" |
48022 | what associates so tenacious, what friends so watchful and untiring? |
48022 | what evidence might, by some unhappy accident, be produced to compromise or to betray her? |
48022 | what if it should go on for ever, until Aurora and I go mad with this wretched anxiety and suspense? |
48022 | what were his antecedents and associations? |
48022 | what will become of him? |
48022 | what will they not endure, if the wicked madness of my youth should become known to the world?" |
48022 | where did he come from? |
48022 | where?" |
48022 | whither had they fled, all these shadows of the happy days that were gone? |
48022 | why did n''t I trust to my first instinct, and run away from you for ever? |
48022 | why does my wife avoid me like this? |
48022 | why should I weary you with it?" |
48022 | you do n''t mean to say you think it''s him? |
785 | Again, Where can the billows yield a way, so long As ever the fish are powerless to go? |
785 | Again, behold we not the monuments Of heroes, now in ruins, asking us, In their turn likewise, if we do n''t believe They also age with eld? |
785 | Again, gold unto gold Doth not one substance bind, and only one? |
785 | Again, shall taste Accuse this touch or shall the nose confute Or eyes defeat it? |
785 | Again, why never hurtles Jupiter A bolt upon the lands nor pours abroad Clap upon clap, when skies are cloudless all? |
785 | Again, why see we among objects some Of heavier weight, but of no bulkier size? |
785 | And O how Canst thou believe he shoots at one same time Into diverse directions? |
785 | And first, Why doth the mind of one to whom the whim To think has come behold forthwith that thing? |
785 | And hast thou never marked With what a force the water will disgorge Timber and beam? |
785 | And is not brass by tin joined unto brass? |
785 | And out of what does Ether feed the stars? |
785 | And seest thou not how those whom mutual pleasure Hath bound are tortured in their common bonds? |
785 | And seest thou not, indeed, How widely one small water- spring may wet The meadow- lands at times and flood the fields? |
785 | And so I''ll follow on, and whereso''er thou set The extreme coasts, I''ll query,"what becomes Thereafter of thy spear?" |
785 | And the mare''s filly why not trained so well As sturdy strength of steed? |
785 | And the rest Of all those monsters slain, even if alive, Unconquered still, what injury could they do? |
785 | And too, when all is said, What evil lust of life is this so great Subdues us to live, so dreadfully distraught In perils and alarms? |
785 | And what besides of those first particles Whence soul and mind must fashioned be?--Seest not How nice and how minute? |
785 | And what is there so horrible appears? |
785 | And what motions, too, They give and get among themselves? |
785 | And why Doth he himself allow it, nor spare the same Even for his enemies? |
785 | And why is never a child''s a prudent soul? |
785 | And, contrariwise, if wills he to o''erwhelm us, Quite off our guard, with fire, why thunders he Off in yon quarter, so that we may shun? |
785 | BOOK V PROEM O WHO can build with puissant breast a song Worthy the majesty of these great finds? |
785 | Beside these matters, why Doth nature feed and foster on land and sea The dreadful breed of savage beasts, the foes Of the human clan? |
785 | Besides are seeds of soul there left behind In the breathless body, or not? |
785 | Besides, if''tis his will that we beware Against the lightning- stroke, why feareth he To grant us power for to behold the shot? |
785 | But ask the mourner what''s the bitterness That man should waste in an eternal grief, If, after all, the thing''s but sleep and rest? |
785 | But should some say that always souls of men Go into human bodies, I will ask: How can a wise become a dullard soul? |
785 | For hast thou not observed How eyes, essaying to perceive the fine, Will strain in preparation, otherwise Unable sharply to perceive at all? |
785 | For how, I ask, can things so varied be, If formed of fire, single and pure? |
785 | For what could hurt us now that mighty maw Of Nemeaean Lion, or what the Boar Who bristled in Arcadia? |
785 | For what may we surmise A blow inflicted can achieve besides Shaking asunder and loosening all apart? |
785 | For where can scaly creatures forward dart, Save where the waters give them room? |
785 | For which will last against the grip and crush Under the teeth of death? |
785 | For whither shall we make appeal? |
785 | For who of us Wondereth if some one gets into his joints A fever, gathering head with fiery heat, Or any other dolorous disease Along his members? |
785 | For why could he mark everything by words And utter the various sounds of tongue, what time The rest may be supposed powerless To do the same? |
785 | How stars and constellations drop to earth, Seest not? |
785 | Indeed, and were there not For each its procreant atoms, could things have Each its unalterable mother old? |
785 | Is''t not serener far than any sleep? |
785 | Nay, why, then, aim they at eternal wastes, And spend themselves in vain?--perchance, even so To exercise their arms and strengthen shoulders? |
785 | Now what is there so sad about it all? |
785 | O why most oft Aims he at lofty places? |
785 | O why not rather make an end of life, Of labour? |
785 | Or darest thou Contend that never hath it come to pass That divers strokes have happened at one time? |
785 | Or do the idols watch upon our will, And doth an image unto us occur, Directly we desire-- if heart prefer The sea, the land, or after all the sky? |
785 | Or else the air? |
785 | Or how can mind wax strong Coequally with body and attain The craved flower of life, unless it be The body''s colleague in its origins? |
785 | Or how, when thus restored, may daedal Earth Foster and plenish with her ancient food, Which, kind by kind, she offers unto each? |
785 | Or lest its house, Outworn by venerable length of days, May topple down upon it? |
785 | Or shall the ears have power to blame the eyes, Or yet the touch the ears? |
785 | Or what new factor could, After so long a time, inveigle them-- The hitherto reposeful-- to desire To change their former life? |
785 | Or what''s the purport of its going forth From aged limbs?--fears it, perhaps, to stay, Pent in a crumbled body? |
785 | Or, again, O what could Cretan Bull, or Hydra, pest Of Lerna, fenced with vipers venomous? |
785 | Our gratefulness, O what emoluments could it confer Upon Immortals and upon the Blessed That they should take a step to manage aught For sake of us? |
785 | Seest thou not also how the clouds be sped By contrary winds to regions contrary, The lower clouds diversely from the upper? |
785 | Seest thou not, Besides, how drops of water falling down Against the stones at last bore through the stones? |
785 | Then for what reason shoots he at the sea?-- What sacrilege have waves and bulk of brine And floating fields of foam been guilty of? |
785 | Then what the difference''twixt the sum and least? |
785 | Then, why may yonder stars in ether there Along their mighty orbits not be borne By currents opposite the one to other? |
785 | What marvel, then, that mind doth lose the rest, Save those to which''thas given up itself? |
785 | What power, in sum, Can raise with agile leap our body aloft, Save energy of mind which steers the limbs? |
785 | What then? |
785 | What, then''s, the principle? |
785 | Whence may the water- springs, beneath the sea, Or inland rivers, far and wide away, Keep the unfathomable ocean full? |
785 | Wherefore stalks at large Death, so untimely? |
785 | Whither have sunk so oft so many deeds Of heroes? |
785 | Why behold we Marks of his lightnings most on mountain tops? |
785 | Why do the seasons bring Distempers with them? |
785 | Why do those deeds live no more, Ingrafted in eternal monuments Of glory? |
785 | Why rouseth he beforehand darkling air And the far din and rumblings? |
785 | Why suffer they the Father''s javelin To be so blunted on the earth? |
785 | Why this bemoaning and beweeping death? |
785 | for what More certain than our senses can there be Whereby to mark asunder error and truth? |
785 | the blood? |
785 | the bones? |
785 | the fire? |
785 | the moist? |
785 | which then? |
785 | why keep we not Some footprints of the things we did of, old? |
785 | why not with mind content Take now, thou fool, thy unafflicted rest? |
7952 | And after Sicily? |
7952 | And after you have conquered the world? |
7952 | Are you in earnest? 7952 Break one of them and what do you see?" |
7952 | But must I then die sorrowing? 7952 I have fallen into the hands of thieves,"says Jeremy Taylor;"what then? |
7952 | That which does not make a man worse, how can it make his life worse? 7952 The true, the good, and the beautiful,"says Cousin,"are but forms of the infinite: what then do we really love in truth, beauty, and virtue? |
7952 | Then,asked Cineas,"why can you not take your ease and be merry now?" |
7952 | To sit at home,says Leigh Hunt,"with an old folio(?) |
7952 | We talk,says Helps,"of the origin of evil;... but what is evil? |
7952 | Who has traced,says Cousin,"the plan of this poem? |
7952 | Am I not free? |
7952 | Am I not without fear? |
7952 | Am I not without sorrow? |
7952 | And how do I meet with those whom you are afraid of and admire? |
7952 | And if it were, would friends be any real advantage? |
7952 | And what do I want? |
7952 | And who has guided reason and love? |
7952 | But how can we fill our lives with_ life_, energy, and interest, and yet keep care outside? |
7952 | But if I have been greatly favored, ought I not to be on that very account especially qualified to write on such a theme? |
7952 | But if death is the journey to another place, and there, as men say, all the dead are, what good, O my friends and judges, can be greater than this? |
7952 | But is this so? |
7952 | But ought we not to place before ourselves a very different ideal-- a healthier, manlier, and nobler hope? |
7952 | But ought we so to regard death? |
7952 | But what came of all his victories? |
7952 | But what is glory? |
7952 | But what of the future? |
7952 | But, on the other hand, what gift is there which is without danger? |
7952 | Can I be prevented from going with cheerfulness and contentment? |
7952 | Can we then retrace our steps? |
7952 | Can you then show me in what way you have taken care of it? |
7952 | Did I ever accuse any man? |
7952 | Did I ever blame God or man? |
7952 | Did any of you ever see me with a sorrowful countenance? |
7952 | Do n''t you think that we should all consider it to be a primary duty to learn at least the names and the moves of the pieces? |
7952 | Do not I treat them like slaves? |
7952 | Do you seek a reward greater than that of doing what is good and just? |
7952 | Does it really give that love of learning which is better than learning itself? |
7952 | Does it then seem to you so small and worthless a thing to be good and happy?" |
7952 | Does not this seem natural? |
7952 | For which would you rather have? |
7952 | Has Biology ever professed to explain existence? |
7952 | Hence, we dread ghosts more than robbers, not only without reason, but against reason; for even if ghosts existed, how could they hurt us? |
7952 | How can he think or act for himself? |
7952 | How may we see in them all that is to be seen by the finest senses? |
7952 | How then do we stand now? |
7952 | How then is this great object to be secured? |
7952 | How, then, is this to be paid for? |
7952 | I asked myself, as on previous occasions, How was this colossal work performed? |
7952 | I fancied one of the angels came and asked me,''Well, M. l''Abbé how did you like the beautiful world you have just left?'' |
7952 | If the condemnation is just, it should be welcome as a warning; if it is undeserved, why should we allow it to distress us? |
7952 | In the words of the old Lambeth adage--"What is a merry man? |
7952 | Is it not extraordinary that many men will deliberately take a road which they know is, to say the least, not that of happiness? |
7952 | Is it really so; need it be so? |
7952 | Is the object to produce the same impression on the mind as that created by the scene itself? |
7952 | It is indeed sometimes objected that Landscape painting is not true to nature; but we must ask, What is truth? |
7952 | Man, what are you saying? |
7952 | Many are wearily asking themselves"Ah why Should life all labor be?" |
7952 | Moreover, have we not all, in a better sense-- have we not all thousands of acres of our own? |
7952 | Moreover, to what do Generals and Statesmen owe their fame? |
7952 | Must I then also lament? |
7952 | Must we not all admit, with Sir Henry Taylor, that"the retrospect of life swarms with lost opportunities"? |
7952 | Now that which does not make a man worse, how can it make his life worse?" |
7952 | On the other hand, we must remember how much we have gained in security? |
7952 | Sed quibus? |
7952 | That they prefer to make others miserable, rather than themselves happy? |
7952 | The Canaanitish woman lives more happily without a name than Herodias with one; and who would not rather have been the good thief than Pilate?" |
7952 | The fount of tears is sealed, Who knows how bright the inward light To those closed eyes revealed? |
7952 | There was silence; and I heard a voice saying Shall mortal man be more just than God?" |
7952 | This seems a paradox, yet it there not much truth in his explanation? |
7952 | To lose such Deans as Stanley would indeed be a great misfortune; but does it follow? |
7952 | Well then does Epictetus ask,"Is there no reward? |
7952 | Well, banishment? |
7952 | Well, then, why should we complain of what is but a preparation for future happiness? |
7952 | What are friends, books, or health, the interest of travel or the delights of home, if we have not time for their enjoyment? |
7952 | What does it matter if the pupil know a little more or a little less? |
7952 | What is he that he should resist? |
7952 | What is it to be king, sheikh, tetrarch, or emperor over a''bit of a bit''of this little earth?" |
7952 | What is there?" |
7952 | What more is there we could ask for ourselves? |
7952 | What science brings so much out of so little? |
7952 | What then is the difference? |
7952 | What would not a man give if he might converse with Orpheus, and Musaeus, and Hesiod, and Homer? |
7952 | What would one not give for a Science primer of the next century? |
7952 | What, says Marcus Aurelius,"What is that which is able to conduct a man? |
7952 | When did any of you see me failing in the object of my desire? |
7952 | When we speak of Palestrina or Perugino, of Nelson or Wellington, of Newton or Darwin, who remembers the towns? |
7952 | Wherefore weep?" |
7952 | Who chiselled these mighty and picturesque masses out of a mere protuberance of the earth? |
7952 | Who discovered the art of procuring fire? |
7952 | Who has given it life and charm? |
7952 | Who invented letters? |
7952 | Who saw the dance of the dead clouds when the sunlight left them last night, and the west wind blew them before it like withered leaves? |
7952 | Who saw the narrow sunbeam that came out of the south, and smote upon their summits until they melted and mouldered away in a dust of blue rain? |
7952 | Who would not rather be forgotten, than recollected as Ahab or Jezebel, Nero or Commodus, Messalina or Heliogabalus, King John or Richard III.? |
7952 | Who, when he sees me, does not think that he sees his king and master?" |
7952 | Why should we expect Religion to solve questions with reference to the origin and destiny of the Universe? |
7952 | Why, then, should this be so? |
7952 | Would you have me to bear poverty? |
7952 | Would you have me to bear poverty? |
7952 | Would you have me to possess power? |
7952 | Yes, but what world? |
7952 | Yet consider what it contains; or rather, what does it not contain? |
7952 | Yet in comparison with what possession, of all others, would not a good friend appear far more valuable?" |
7952 | Yet what is the ocean compared to the sky? |
7952 | [ 10] And yet"if, in our moments of utter idleness and insipidity, we turn to the sky as a last resource, which of its phenomena do we speak of? |
7952 | [ 7] The future of man is full of hope, and who can foresee the limits of his destiny? |
7952 | can we recover what is lost? |
7952 | or ever falling into that which I would avoid? |
7952 | where is thy sting? |
7952 | where is thy victory?" |
7278 | Had Greece but been as carping and as cold To new productions, what would now be old? 7278 Have you a mother, father, kin, To whom your life is precious?" |
7278 | How''s this? |
7278 | How,--anon He rambles off,--"how get you on, You and Maecenas? |
7278 | I''ve nothing in the world to do, And what''s a paltry mile or two? 7278 Is it so? |
7278 | Pyrrha, what slender boy, in perfume steeped, Doth in the shade of some delightful grot Caress thee now on couch with roses heaped? 7278 The Parthian, under Caesar''s reign, Or icy Scythian, who can dread, Or all the tribes barbarian bred By Germany, or ruthless Spain? |
7278 | What witch, what magician, with drinks and with charms, What god can effect your release from her harms? 7278 Whence, friends, and whither to?" |
7278 | Why doth he shun The Campus Martius''sultry glare? 7278 Why wilt thou kill me with thy boding fears? |
7278 | With what poison is this that my vitals are heated? 7278 You wo n''t? |
7278 | You''d have a speedy doom? 7278 ''But has he spoken?'' 7278 ''I say, where are you pushing to? 7278 ''The Thracian gladiator, can One match him with the Syrian?'' 7278 ''What shook the stage, and made the people stare?'' 7278 --And is Quinctilius, then, weighed down by a sleep that knows no waking?" |
7278 | 12)? |
7278 | 18):--"For me, when freshened by my spring''s pure cold, Which makes my villagers look pinched and old, What prayers are mine? |
7278 | 2), we see what was the discipline he applied to himself--"You''re not a miser: has all other vice Departed in the train of avarice? |
7278 | 2)--"Three hungry guests for different dishes call, And how''s one host to satisfy them all?" |
7278 | 24), when a friend of signal nobleness and purity is suddenly struck down--"_Ergo Quinctilium perpetuus sopor urget_?" |
7278 | All I meet Accost me thus--''Dear friend, you''re so Close to the gods, that you must know: About the Dacians, have you heard Any fresh tidings? |
7278 | And does he still aspire To marry Theban strains to Latium''s lyre, Thanks to the favouring muse? |
7278 | And wherefore should it be so, when Augustus has at command the genius of such men as Virgil and Varius? |
7278 | And, when the bird''s cooked, what becomes of its splendour? |
7278 | Are you afraid it will damage your reputation with posterity to be thought to have been one of my intimates?" |
7278 | Are you all deaf?'' |
7278 | At length the town mouse;"What,"says he,"My good friend, can the pleasure be, Of grubbing here, on the backbone Of a great crag with trees o''ergrown? |
7278 | But after me as still he came,"Sir, is there anything,"I cried,"You want of me?" |
7278 | But is this any reason you should not apply Your superfluous wealth to ends nobler, more high? |
7278 | But not about our neighbours''houses, Or if''tis generally thought That Lepos dances well or not? |
7278 | But what concerns us nearer, and Is harmful not to understand, By what we''re led to choose our friends,-- Regard for them, or our own ends? |
7278 | But where are the fever and the strong pulse of passion which, in less ethereal mortals, would be proper to such a theme? |
7278 | By viper''s blood-- certes, it can not be less-- Stewed into the potherbs; can I have been cheated? |
7278 | Can you make of the feathers you prize so a feast? |
7278 | Can you make sport of portents, gipsy crones, Hobgoblins, dreams, raw head and bloody bones? |
7278 | Did not Achilles succumb to Briseis, Ajax to Tecmessa, Agamemnon himself to Cassandra? |
7278 | Do n''t talk to me of taste, Ofellus continues--"Will it give you a notion If this pike in the Tiber was caught, or the ocean? |
7278 | For whom dost thou thine amber tresses knot"With all thy seeming- artless grace? |
7278 | Gibbon speaks contemptuously of many of the incidents recorded in this poem, asking,"How could a man of taste reflect on them the day after?" |
7278 | Give you up, or my cause?" |
7278 | HE.--What, if our ancient love return, And bind us with a closer tie, If I the fair- haired Chloë spurn, And as of old, for Lydia sigh? |
7278 | Have they rain- water or fresh springs to drink? |
7278 | Have we never encountered a piscatory Gargilius near the Spey or the Tweed? |
7278 | He that once recked of neither dust nor sun, Why rides he there,"First of the brave, Taming the Gallic steed no more? |
7278 | How should it have been otherwise? |
7278 | How think ye then? |
7278 | I am sure he could not have written any two consecutive stanzas of Horace; and if he could not, who could?" |
7278 | I, choked with rage, said,"Was there not Some business, I''ve forgotten what, You mentioned, that you wished with me To talk about, and privately?" |
7278 | If better course none offer, why should we Not seize the happy auspices, and boldly put to sea? |
7278 | If it used''twixt the bridges to glide and to quiver, Or was tossed to and fro at the mouth of the river?" |
7278 | If she had injured him, what of that? |
7278 | In what does good consist, and what Is the supremest form of that? |
7278 | In what state did Horace find Italy after his return from Philippi? |
7278 | Is his flesh than the capon''s more juicy or tender? |
7278 | Is it so? |
7278 | Just at this moment who but my Dear friend Aristius should come by? |
7278 | Like the Persian poet, Omar Khayyám, this is ever in his thoughts--"What boots it to repeat, How Time is slipping underneath our feet? |
7278 | Or Canidia, did she cook the villainous mess? |
7278 | Or do ambitious longings, angry fret, The terror of the grave, torment you yet? |
7278 | Or haply rage And mouth in bombast for the tragic stage?" |
7278 | Or what young"oiled and curled"Oriental prince is for the future to pour out his wine for him? |
7278 | Or why should you dare To think that misfortune will never o''ertake you? |
7278 | Our temples, why should they be tumbling to wrack? |
7278 | SHE.--Though lovelier than yon star is he, And lighter thou than cork-- ah why? |
7278 | Say, are not these a sight, To warn a man from squandering his patrimonial means?'' |
7278 | Says me nay?" |
7278 | So, when from town and all its ills I to my perch among the hills Retreat, what better theme to choose Than satire for my homely Muse? |
7278 | The best need large grains of allowance, and to whom should these be given if not to friends? |
7278 | The man who, you find, Has by luxuries pampered both body and mind? |
7278 | The stately Epic Varius leads along, And where is voice so resonant, so strong? |
7278 | Then why not sing, rejoins Trebatius, his justice and his fortitude,"Like sage Lucilius, in his lays To Scipio Africanus''praise?" |
7278 | To what good, he asks, all this turmoil and disquiet? |
7278 | To which of the royal damsels does he intend to throw the handkerchief, having first cut down her princely betrothed in single combat? |
7278 | To- day though driven from his gate, What matter? |
7278 | Unborn To- morrow, and dead Yesterday, Why fret about them if To- day be sweet?". |
7278 | What is this? |
7278 | What pleasure will you extract from these, which a moderate estate will not yield in equal, if not greater, measure? |
7278 | What shall stop him, who starts at break of day From sleeping Rome, and on the Lucrine sails Before the sunshine into twilight pales?" |
7278 | What standard works would there have been, to come Beneath the public eye, the public thumb?" |
7278 | What then had he to gain by courting the favour of the head of the state? |
7278 | What to the oak and ilex, that afford Fruit to the cattle, shelter to their lord? |
7278 | What would you have, you madman, you?'' |
7278 | What, but that rich Tarentum must have been Transplanted nearer Rome, with all its green? |
7278 | Where That colour? |
7278 | Where now that beauty? |
7278 | Where those movements? |
7278 | Wherefore do you not Despatch this King here on the spot? |
7278 | Which tract is best for game? |
7278 | Who could take amiss the rebuke of the kindly satirist, who was so ready to show up his own weaknesses? |
7278 | Who dance with such distinguished grace? |
7278 | Who will best meet reverses? |
7278 | Who would venture to deal in this way with the Eleanore, and"rare pale Margaret,"and Cousin Amy, of Mr Tennyson? |
7278 | Who''d not to these wild woods prefer The city, with its crowds and stir? |
7278 | Whom will Venus[1] send To rule our revel? |
7278 | Why cast such very merciless stones at one who, by his own avowal, had erewhile witched his very soul from him? |
7278 | Why do his arms no livid bruises soil, He, once so skilled,"The disc or dart Far, far beyond the mark to hurl? |
7278 | Why doth he shrink from Tiber''s yellow wave? |
7278 | Why is this? |
7278 | Why rejoice to see this once beautiful creature the scoff of all the heartless young fops of Rome? |
7278 | Why thus abhor"The wrestlers''oil, As''twere from viper''s tongue distilled? |
7278 | Why, oh Maecenas, why? |
7278 | Why, then, should he have felt thus abashed? |
7278 | Why? |
7278 | Will you here Stand witness?" |
7278 | Would you Affront the circumcised Jew?" |
7278 | Wretch, of all this great heap have you nothing to spare For our dear native land? |
7278 | You ask, how is this? |
7278 | You so rich, why should any good honest man lack? |
7278 | You''d praise the climate; well, and what d''ye say To sloes and cornels hanging from the spray? |
7278 | You''re bloated by ambition? |
7278 | he cried with loud uproar,"Where are you off to? |
7278 | how now, ye knaves, Inside three hundred people stuff? |
7278 | is there nobody about? |
7278 | my dear fellow, how d''ye do?" |
7278 | on which sea- coast Urchins and other fish abound the most? |
7278 | see you not, when striding down The Via Sacra[ 1]in your gown Good six ells wide, the passers there Turn on you with indignant stare? |
7278 | shall we wreaths of oozy parsley trim,"Or simple myrtle? |
7278 | when in you shall I Myself, eased of unpeaceful thoughts, espy? |
7278 | when, when shall I be made The happy tenant of your shade? |
38156 | How long? |
38156 | ''A public danger? |
38156 | ''After what?'' |
38156 | ''Against Me?'' |
38156 | ''Ai n''t you got none?'' |
38156 | ''Am I? |
38156 | ''And I do n''t know what new religion it is you''re supposed to be teaching----''''New religion? |
38156 | ''And the Roman Catholic is not one of them?'' |
38156 | ''And then what happened?'' |
38156 | ''And what''s to happen in the meantime?'' |
38156 | ''And yet you have looked for My coming?'' |
38156 | ''Are we to accept this as a sober narrative of actual fact, or-- where''s the joke?'' |
38156 | ''Are you a doctor, sir?'' |
38156 | ''Are you all homeless, as I am?'' |
38156 | ''Are you hurt?'' |
38156 | ''Are you in earnest?'' |
38156 | ''Are you mad, sir? |
38156 | ''Are you mad? |
38156 | ''Are you sure that he was dead?'' |
38156 | ''Are you sure that it is he?'' |
38156 | ''Are you sure that it is no concern of Mine?'' |
38156 | ''Broke?'' |
38156 | ''But does not your Eminence know this is the Lord? |
38156 | ''But how? |
38156 | ''But shall the day never come when they shall know You?'' |
38156 | ''But where is He? |
38156 | ''But where is He?'' |
38156 | ''But why?'' |
38156 | ''But you are lame?'' |
38156 | ''By the way, what is the truth about that woman at the hospital?'' |
38156 | ''Ca n''t we? |
38156 | ''Can you not see? |
38156 | ''Cause a nuisance? |
38156 | ''Did I not say I am He you know not of? |
38156 | ''Did I not say that no miracle shall bring a man to the knowledge of Me? |
38156 | ''Did I? |
38156 | ''Did Jim Bates know what he was doing?'' |
38156 | ''Did they not ask that question of the prophets? |
38156 | ''Did you not hear what I said? |
38156 | ''Do I understand, Braidwood, that you are personally convinced that this person is possessed of supernatural powers?'' |
38156 | ''Do n''t I tell you that I am ready? |
38156 | ''Do n''t you know that He is Christ-- not in your heart of hearts?'' |
38156 | ''Do you come also?'' |
38156 | ''Do you hear that? |
38156 | ''Do you not know Me?'' |
38156 | ''Do you often smile?'' |
38156 | ''Does it not occur to you what an awful thing it would be if what you say were true?'' |
38156 | ''Does she? |
38156 | ''Does that include God the Father? |
38156 | ''Does your trouble resemble the rich young man''s of whom some of us have read?'' |
38156 | ''Doris, what is wrong?'' |
38156 | ''Doris, why should we keep on pretending to each other? |
38156 | ''Ever heard of Hanwell?'' |
38156 | ''Father, do you not know Christ?'' |
38156 | ''Father, have you forgotten that Christ was made man?'' |
38156 | ''Fellow? |
38156 | ''For knowing it is the Lord?'' |
38156 | ''For the last time; will you give me them two coats?'' |
38156 | ''For what have you come here?'' |
38156 | ''For what?'' |
38156 | ''General, is there nothing which you wish to say to us? |
38156 | ''Given you the slip? |
38156 | ''Go home? |
38156 | ''Grey, what do you mean?'' |
38156 | ''Has it been clearly proved,''asked Farquharson,''that he himself claims to be the Christ?'' |
38156 | ''Have you received any official intimation of what is taking place?'' |
38156 | ''Have you seen, as you came along, two persons walking along the road towards London?'' |
38156 | ''Heal some that were sick? |
38156 | ''How can it be any concern of yours?'' |
38156 | ''How can the Lord of all the earth do wrong?'' |
38156 | ''How do you make that out, when you read the names of the people who are prepared to swear to the truth of the St. Philip''s tale?'' |
38156 | ''How shall I know you, since you are to me a stranger?'' |
38156 | ''How''s he done it?'' |
38156 | ''I bid you tell me what is this thing that you would do?'' |
38156 | ''I had never thought that under any possible circumstances I should be constrained to ask myself the question, Has Christ come again? |
38156 | ''If I heal them, what then? |
38156 | ''If for any cause the Church withholds its command, is the Lord to depart unrecognised?'' |
38156 | ''If the Lord proclaims Himself, are His children to refuse Him recognition until the Church commands?'' |
38156 | ''In a sense? |
38156 | ''In a social or a spiritual sense? |
38156 | ''In what sense?'' |
38156 | ''Including the Roman Catholic?'' |
38156 | ''Is Mr. Jebb mad?'' |
38156 | ''Is all well with you?'' |
38156 | ''Is good form more than Christ?'' |
38156 | ''Is he a friend of yours?'' |
38156 | ''Is it so bad as that?'' |
38156 | ''Is it well?'' |
38156 | ''Is it well?'' |
38156 | ''Is she ill?'' |
38156 | ''Is that all? |
38156 | ''Is that your answer? |
38156 | ''Is there not one who loves Him?'' |
38156 | ''Is there then a season at which Christ should not come again?'' |
38156 | ''Is this the person? |
38156 | ''Is, then, dinner more than Christ?'' |
38156 | ''Is, then, the Church against the Lord? |
38156 | ''It was but seeming-- the music which seemed to speak to your heart?'' |
38156 | ''It was you who came just now; what do you mean by coming again? |
38156 | ''It''s all very well for you to talk like that, but what am I to do? |
38156 | ''Jebb, what noise is that?'' |
38156 | ''Know you?'' |
38156 | ''Little, am I? |
38156 | ''Look here, I do n''t know what your game is----''''Game?'' |
38156 | ''Look here, my friend; are you suggesting that you''re anybody in particular? |
38156 | ''Lord, of those that are here are You known to me alone?'' |
38156 | ''My children? |
38156 | ''My dear friend, what has happened to you since I saw you last?'' |
38156 | ''My very dear old chap, this sort of thing is so awfully unlike you, do n''t you know?'' |
38156 | ''None? |
38156 | ''Now, then,''he cried,''why do n''t you start me? |
38156 | ''Now? |
38156 | ''Of that you are all persuaded?'' |
38156 | ''Of this room?'' |
38156 | ''Of what? |
38156 | ''Officer, do n''t you understand what it means when you are told that Christ has come again? |
38156 | ''Oh, Guv''nor, what shall I do?'' |
38156 | ''Oh, you do, do you? |
38156 | ''Only got to say a word, has he, and the trick''s done? |
38156 | ''Or in which He should not restore the dead to life?'' |
38156 | ''Or shall we say what we have to say to you here? |
38156 | ''Over the walls at the back?'' |
38156 | ''Pardon me, sir, if I seem to take a liberty, but might I ask if the Second Coming has really come at last? |
38156 | ''Say, Joe, what''s the matter with you? |
38156 | ''Say, Joe, who is this bloke?'' |
38156 | ''Seen whom?'' |
38156 | ''Shall I shake the answer out of you?'' |
38156 | ''Since all men are brethren, and this is a man, if he is not your brother, what, then, are you?'' |
38156 | ''So bad as that? |
38156 | ''Someone? |
38156 | ''Strangers hereabouts?'' |
38156 | ''Suppose he were the Christ?'' |
38156 | ''Suppose this fellow in the papers turned out to be Him, how would that be then?'' |
38156 | ''That is,''added a second man,''you are the individual who is stated to have been performing miracles in London?'' |
38156 | ''That''s it-- have I? |
38156 | ''The Lord?'' |
38156 | ''The soldiers? |
38156 | ''Their will, not mine, be done?'' |
38156 | ''Then what can you give?'' |
38156 | ''Then what''ll it be?'' |
38156 | ''Then why do you not go to it?'' |
38156 | ''This? |
38156 | ''Was your happiness but a dream?'' |
38156 | ''Well, and why not? |
38156 | ''Well, will you come?'' |
38156 | ''What ails Charlie?'' |
38156 | ''What am I to do? |
38156 | ''What are we to understand by your silence?--that you lack the power, or the will? |
38156 | ''What are you doing? |
38156 | ''What do you mean?'' |
38156 | ''What do you mean?'' |
38156 | ''What do you propose to do?'' |
38156 | ''What do you want it for?'' |
38156 | ''What do you want them for?'' |
38156 | ''What does he mean by preaching at us?'' |
38156 | ''What for? |
38156 | ''What hair- splitting''s this? |
38156 | ''What has Christ to do with you, or you with Christ?'' |
38156 | ''What have I done to them, save healing those that were sick?'' |
38156 | ''What have I to do with you, or you with Me? |
38156 | ''What idol have you fashioned which you call after My Name?'' |
38156 | ''What is it that you want?'' |
38156 | ''What is it that you would do?'' |
38156 | ''What is it that you would do?'' |
38156 | ''What is it that you would say?'' |
38156 | ''What is it, constable? |
38156 | ''What is it?'' |
38156 | ''What is that to us? |
38156 | ''What is that?'' |
38156 | ''What know you of the why and wherefore of My coming?'' |
38156 | ''What like is He to look at? |
38156 | ''What my friends say is, no doubt, very excellent in its way; but the main point still is-- Will you come with us? |
38156 | ''What right have you to be there at all? |
38156 | ''What sort of proof does Professor Wilson require? |
38156 | ''What yer got there?'' |
38156 | ''What''s it got to do with you?'' |
38156 | ''What''s my friend been doing to you, and what have you been doing to him?'' |
38156 | ''What''s that? |
38156 | ''What''s the little game?'' |
38156 | ''What''s the matter here? |
38156 | ''What''s the message, Guv''nor?'' |
38156 | ''What''s wrong with you? |
38156 | ''Where am I?'' |
38156 | ''Where do you go?'' |
38156 | ''Where is he?'' |
38156 | ''Where will you take me?'' |
38156 | ''Where, then, can I sleep?'' |
38156 | ''Which man knows what he does, or will let God know, either?'' |
38156 | ''Which way can He have gone?'' |
38156 | ''Who are these persons?'' |
38156 | ''Who are you that you should judge your brother?'' |
38156 | ''Who are you, sir? |
38156 | ''Who are you?'' |
38156 | ''Who does not seek a sign? |
38156 | ''Who is this fellow?'' |
38156 | ''Who is this?'' |
38156 | ''Who is this?'' |
38156 | ''Who is your father?'' |
38156 | ''Who''s he getting at?'' |
38156 | ''Who, then, is? |
38156 | ''Whose house is this?'' |
38156 | ''Why are you so unclean of mouth? |
38156 | ''Why do n''t you answer me?'' |
38156 | ''Why do you call me king? |
38156 | ''Why do you say that?'' |
38156 | ''Why do you speak such words to Me?'' |
38156 | ''Why have you come to judge me before my time?'' |
38156 | ''Why should I heal you?'' |
38156 | ''Why should you come with Me?'' |
38156 | ''Why, who are you?'' |
38156 | ''Why? |
38156 | ''Why? |
38156 | ''Will you come with us in the wagonette?'' |
38156 | ''Will you come?'' |
38156 | ''With a word?'' |
38156 | ''With what degree?'' |
38156 | ''Work a miracle, can he, every time he opens his mouth? |
38156 | ''Yes; why not? |
38156 | ''You also seek a sign?'' |
38156 | ''You are sure?'' |
38156 | ''You are the Christ-- the Lord Christ?'' |
38156 | ''You do?'' |
38156 | ''You hear, Jane, what Mr. Mason says?'' |
38156 | ''You heard me calling? |
38156 | ''You knew her? |
38156 | ''You really believe your friend is a supernatural being?'' |
38156 | ''You say that the woman whom you sought to heal is dead?'' |
38156 | ''You see how it is? |
38156 | ''You see what you''ve done? |
38156 | ''You think not?'' |
38156 | ''You think that Christ might come and go without any official notice being taken of the matter?'' |
38156 | ''You would not believe even though one rose from the dead-- eh, Archbishop?'' |
38156 | ''You would not have the people refrain from coming to greet their Lord?'' |
38156 | ''You? |
38156 | ''Your coming? |
38156 | ''Your knowledge is greater than Mine?'' |
38156 | A sense of uncertainty came into men''s minds, a desire to find answers to the questions which each asked of the other:''Who is this man? |
38156 | Ada said:''You hear that? |
38156 | Again there came murmurs from the students on the benches:''What''s he up to?'' |
38156 | Ai n''t it only the false veneer of a rotten civilization what''s upset all that? |
38156 | Ai n''t that law and justice-- natural law, mind you, and natural justice?'' |
38156 | Ai n''t woman the inferior animal? |
38156 | Am I again to suffer shame at the hands of those that call themselves My children? |
38156 | Am I not, then, to do Mine?'' |
38156 | Am I to understand, and to give them to understand, that in so thinking they are under an entire delusion?'' |
38156 | Amplett, leaning farther over the table, called to him in short, sharp tones:''Why do you stand and look like that? |
38156 | And He asked him:''How is it that you know Me, since I do not know you?'' |
38156 | And He cried aloud:''Father, is it for this I came?'' |
38156 | And all the people were amazed, saying:''What manner of man is this, that makes the lame to walk with a touch?'' |
38156 | And then where will you be, eh? |
38156 | And to her He said:''Is any worthy? |
38156 | And what do you mean by interfering in what is no concern of yours? |
38156 | And what is the matter with the girl, that she goes on like this?'' |
38156 | And when I say I''m coming, do n''t I always come?'' |
38156 | And will He not? |
38156 | Are n''t we better off without You?'' |
38156 | Are n''t you ignoring the fact that this is a Christian country?'' |
38156 | Are n''t you sure that you can trust me?'' |
38156 | Are our needs not greater? |
38156 | Are they not of him? |
38156 | Are we going to take it, or are we going to sneak away with our tails between our legs?'' |
38156 | Are you coming along with us to- night on that there little razzle?'' |
38156 | Are you insane?'' |
38156 | Are you suggesting that we should seek his presence? |
38156 | Are you, then, so ignorant as not to be aware that God''s ways are not as men''s? |
38156 | As He came before, in the simple garb of a simple man, may He not come in that same form again? |
38156 | As a liar? |
38156 | As a subject of hallucinations? |
38156 | As a victim of hysteria? |
38156 | As the sound grew fainter He cried to them with a loud voice:''Save this woman and that man, is there none that knows Me? |
38156 | At Louvain do they teach such forwardness, or is this an acquaintance of your seminary days?'' |
38156 | At sight of her husband she burst into exclamations:''Oh, Tommy, have you pawned them?'' |
38156 | Awful? |
38156 | But He asked:''Where shall I go? |
38156 | But He replied:''What is it you ask of Me? |
38156 | But all at once, as if she could not bear the silence any longer, she raised her head and met His glance, asking:''Who are you?'' |
38156 | But if it is true, if but the half of it is true-- if this morning he healed that crowd of people with a word, why should he not do the same to us? |
38156 | But if you''re right, what do n''t I lose?'' |
38156 | But when He saw that there was a place for only one, He asked:''What is this? |
38156 | But who is there shall know Me?'' |
38156 | But why ought I to?'' |
38156 | But, Lord, if no one tells them You are here, how shall they know it? |
38156 | Ca n''t I have a guest in my house without being subjected to this abominable nuisance?'' |
38156 | Ca n''t I see someone who''s responsible? |
38156 | Ca n''t you trust me in every sense?'' |
38156 | Can it be possible that you are not a Christian?'' |
38156 | Can you look upon His face and not see that it is He, or enter into His presence and not know that He is here?'' |
38156 | Candidly, would n''t they? |
38156 | Cardinal, what is wrong?'' |
38156 | Come in here to rest?'' |
38156 | Could n''t you demonstrate instead of talk?'' |
38156 | Could the Apostles have given a mathematical demonstration of the causes of their belief? |
38156 | Could two such single- minded souls, in the face of such a message, delay from making all haste in the direction of the Ripley road? |
38156 | Could you see it taken into the house?'' |
38156 | Courtesy useless? |
38156 | Dare she do this thing? |
38156 | Did n''t I say I was? |
38156 | Did n''t Nature mean it to be her pride to minister to man? |
38156 | Did the Jews know Him when He came before? |
38156 | Did they deserve more than we? |
38156 | Did you not know that?'' |
38156 | Do n''t you hear?'' |
38156 | Do n''t you know Christ when you see him? |
38156 | Do n''t you realise that He who is in the room above us has but to lift His little finger to lay you dead?'' |
38156 | Do n''t you see I''m ready?'' |
38156 | Do n''t you think so, Hailsham?'' |
38156 | Do n''t you understand?'' |
38156 | Do you base your belief on his reported miracles?'' |
38156 | Do you blaspheme? |
38156 | Do you hear? |
38156 | Do you not know Me?'' |
38156 | Do you see what I''m doing here? |
38156 | Do you wish to cause a public scandal?'' |
38156 | Do you yourself wish that they should press upon Him in an unmanageable mob?'' |
38156 | Do your Nonconformist friends admit your primacy? |
38156 | Does it not commend itself to you? |
38156 | Does it? |
38156 | Does the Professor suggest that any power short of what we call Divine can go outside nature?'' |
38156 | Does the sight of Him blind, as it did Moses?'' |
38156 | For unto those that suffer most, shall not most be forgiven? |
38156 | Got the rhino?'' |
38156 | Have I forbidden you to come?'' |
38156 | Have I struck you as being of the stuff which makes for madness? |
38156 | Have n''t I always observed your mother''s wishes, and seen that you went regularly to church? |
38156 | Have you anywhere a tender place? |
38156 | Have you forgotten that there is more joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth than over ninety- nine just persons? |
38156 | Have you met this gentleman before? |
38156 | He feels what we feels, or how''d He be able to help us?'' |
38156 | He has done you nothing but good, and in return what would you do to him? |
38156 | He looked at the people, asking:''Who are these?'' |
38156 | He muttered:''What have I to do with you?'' |
38156 | He pointed to the body lying in the roadway, saying:"Your brother sleeps?" |
38156 | He replied:''Are you of the children of the Lord? |
38156 | He said:''Does not a father eat with his children? |
38156 | He said:''What would you have of Me?'' |
38156 | He''s been healing, has he? |
38156 | His first remark was addressed to Sir William Braidwood:''But if this is the Christ, would you not expect Him to mete out justice as well as mercy? |
38156 | How are we profited, though miracles are worked for others, if none are worked for us? |
38156 | How are you going to set about getting''arf a sovereign? |
38156 | How awful?'' |
38156 | How can we do Him reverence if we do not know where He is?'' |
38156 | How comes it that you womenfolk have had a friend of whom I''ve been told nothing?'' |
38156 | How could it be otherwise? |
38156 | How does it profit a man to build unto God if he lives unto the world?'' |
38156 | How have we managed to wander into this discussion? |
38156 | How shall I do My Father''s business if I seek a burrow beneath the ground?'' |
38156 | How shall you wonder at those who denied Him at the first if you, who preach Him, deny Him now? |
38156 | How would your little girl be any better for their laying you out?'' |
38156 | How?'' |
38156 | How?'' |
38156 | I Are you the person of whom such extraordinary stories are being told? |
38156 | I am a- goin'', ai n''t I? |
38156 | I ask it with all possible reverence, but why is the Lord so little mindful of His own?'' |
38156 | If I send them from us, why did I come?'' |
38156 | If you do n''t, it''s your fault, is n''t it? |
38156 | In what place shall I hide? |
38156 | In what sense? |
38156 | Is He in that room? |
38156 | Is he a friend of yours as well as of your mother''s? |
38156 | Is he a wooden block? |
38156 | Is he really someone in particular? |
38156 | Is it because you are afraid that He has come, or because you fear He has n''t?'' |
38156 | Is it because you are unclean of heart, or because you do not know what the things are which you utter?'' |
38156 | Is it not time that you should go to your homes and rest?'' |
38156 | Is it possible that that lame fellow can have told Him of the message I was sending, and that He has purposely given me the slip? |
38156 | Is it possible that you are unaware that I am the head of the Christian hierarchy?'' |
38156 | Is it possible you do not know Him, too?'' |
38156 | Is it spiritual fear or physical? |
38156 | Is it to mock your sacred office to spread abroad the news that He has come again? |
38156 | Is n''t He going to do anything? |
38156 | Is n''t He going to heal us? |
38156 | Is n''t ordinary English good enough for you?'' |
38156 | Is not that a prospect pleasing even unto God? |
38156 | Is not this His own city?'' |
38156 | Is she not of those who know not what is the thing they do till it is done? |
38156 | Is that all the answer you have to give?'' |
38156 | Is there a greater than God? |
38156 | Is there any little thing which, if you had it, would make your life brighter and more worth the living? |
38156 | Is there anything you want?'' |
38156 | Is there no one I can see?'' |
38156 | Is there none that would eat with me?'' |
38156 | Is there not one among you in whom the spirit is? |
38156 | Is there not one who waits outside? |
38156 | Is there not one?'' |
38156 | Is there not one?'' |
38156 | Is there nothing by which you may know Me?'' |
38156 | Is there one who has lived for Me? |
38156 | Is there one?'' |
38156 | Let us but remind him that in the sight of God all men are equal; if he restores to us our equality, what does it matter how he does it? |
38156 | Mr. Kinloch inquired, being puzzled:''What is this? |
38156 | Mr. Treadman put a question to the servant, who still lingered in the passage:''What does she mean? |
38156 | Mrs. Amplett interposed:''Had n''t you better sit down, Hugh, and have something to eat? |
38156 | Mrs. Amplett''s voice rang out sharply:''Hugh, what is the matter with you? |
38156 | Now will you give me an answer?'' |
38156 | Of what am I the king? |
38156 | Of what avail to heal the body if the spirit continues sick?'' |
38156 | Of what shall they be healed? |
38156 | Of what? |
38156 | Of your hearts and lives? |
38156 | Of your thoughts at your rising up and lying down? |
38156 | Officer, are you mad?'' |
38156 | One replied:''Among those whom you healed this morning, how many were there who, as you call it, love God? |
38156 | One, leaning over the side, said to the Stranger:''Are you he we are looking for?'' |
38156 | Only talk? |
38156 | Or do you think I am?'' |
38156 | Permit me to put one or two questions: Are you an Englishman?'' |
38156 | Powell?'' |
38156 | Powell?'' |
38156 | Seeing that I was silent, He spoke again:"Are you not of one spirit and of one flesh? |
38156 | Sergeant, you see that Man? |
38156 | Shall I tell you how you''ll manage? |
38156 | So in your sleep you smiled?'' |
38156 | So the question at once assumes another phase-- Who are you?'' |
38156 | Someone called out from the crowd:''Ai n''t he coming, sir? |
38156 | Still dumb? |
38156 | Still nothing? |
38156 | Surely this is not a subject on which you would desire to have your voice unheard?'' |
38156 | Surely you know this is the Lord?'' |
38156 | Tell me, are you that person?'' |
38156 | Tell me, my friend,--you do n''t appear to be a loquacious soul,--don''t you think that to be prepared is half the battle?'' |
38156 | The Archbishop cried, also trembling:''What ails your Eminence? |
38156 | The Stranger answered, without raising His eyes from the ground:''Is it I that have brought you here? |
38156 | The Stranger asked of him:''May I not stay here and sleep upon the grass? |
38156 | The Stranger asked of his father:''Would you have it so?'' |
38156 | The Stranger said:''Is it not written that many are called, but few chosen? |
38156 | The Stranger, looking at him, inquired:''In your churches whom do you worship?'' |
38156 | The crowd was still until a voice inquired of the Stranger:''Who are you?'' |
38156 | The girl Ada touched him on the arm:''Mother is in heaven; do you not understand?'' |
38156 | The subject of his evening''s discourse had been announced as''The Second Coming: Is it Fact or Dream?'' |
38156 | The woman stood before Him trembling, with bowed form and face cast down, and she cried:''Who are you, sir?'' |
38156 | Then how can you tell it is the Lord?'' |
38156 | There were some who laughed, and others inquired among themselves:''Who is this fellow? |
38156 | They asked, of their own hearts, if not of one another:''Why has he come to trouble us?'' |
38156 | They cried to him:''What is the meaning of your telegram?'' |
38156 | To do reverence to their Master? |
38156 | To prostrate themselves at His feet in the dust, or to play the patron? |
38156 | To stand on the grass and catch cold?'' |
38156 | To the curate He said:''What do you want of Me?'' |
38156 | To them He said:''Why do you stay? |
38156 | To you and me what does it matter what comes?'' |
38156 | Tom Jones asked him stolidly, gazing with his lack- lustre eyes intently at the crowd:''Which other way?'' |
38156 | Was he mad or drunk? |
38156 | Were His ears not always open to the prayers of those that stood in need of help? |
38156 | Were they in earnest? |
38156 | What He did then can He not do now? |
38156 | What I want to know is, Why not? |
38156 | What amount would he esteem sufficient? |
38156 | What are these things which he says? |
38156 | What blasphemous words are these you utter? |
38156 | What blasphemy does this man utter? |
38156 | What demonstration would you have of Me?'' |
38156 | What difference did the night or the morning make to Him? |
38156 | What do You want to trouble us for? |
38156 | What do you mean by addressing your father as if he were a heathen?'' |
38156 | What do you mean by coming here?'' |
38156 | What do you mean by someone?'' |
38156 | What do you mean?'' |
38156 | What do you say, Trent, to our going to- morrow to pay our respects together?'' |
38156 | What do you suppose I''m going to do with them-- eat''em, or give them to the Queen?'' |
38156 | What does he want?'' |
38156 | What does it matter to us who enters heaven if the door is slammed in our faces?'' |
38156 | What does it matter who he is, or what he is? |
38156 | What has he done to you that you hound him about like this? |
38156 | What has he done?'' |
38156 | What has taken place?'' |
38156 | What have we done to him that he should speak to us like this?'' |
38156 | What have you got to be frightened at? |
38156 | What is He like? |
38156 | What is his name? |
38156 | What is it you have given Me?'' |
38156 | What is it you think you are doing? |
38156 | What is it you would do?'' |
38156 | What is the meaning of this extraordinary behaviour? |
38156 | What is this idol which they have fashioned, calling it after My Name, so that wherever I go I find a Christ which is not Me? |
38156 | What is this woman to you that you should seek to slay her body and soul? |
38156 | What right has he to hold himself up as different from us? |
38156 | What time have I for atonement? |
38156 | What would it not mean if, at His Second Coming, He found us still unready? |
38156 | What would you yourself do if this person who is turning London topsy- turvy were actually the Christ?'' |
38156 | What''s he done to you, Joe?'' |
38156 | What''s the matter?'' |
38156 | What''s the meaning of these outrageous proceedings? |
38156 | What''s wrong? |
38156 | What''s your name?'' |
38156 | What, not after healing those people yesterday at Maida Vale, and after our coming all this way and waiting all this time?'' |
38156 | What, then, is it that I shall give to you?'' |
38156 | What, then, is it that you do here?'' |
38156 | When He appeared one cried in the crowd:''Why did n''t you heal them, like you did the others?'' |
38156 | When He ceased to speak the people drew farther from Him and closer to each other, murmuring among themselves:''Who is he? |
38156 | When He had searched them all, He cried:''Is there not one that knows Me save this woman? |
38156 | When Mr. Treadman had finished, the Stranger asked of Mr. Jebb:''What is it that you would say to Me?'' |
38156 | When and where? |
38156 | When he had heard them to an end, He said:''You ask always; what is it you give?'' |
38156 | When in our bewilderment we ask,"Where is He? |
38156 | When the Stranger had gained the platform, He turned towards the people, asking:''Who is there here that knows Me? |
38156 | When the young priest was about to reply, the Stranger, going to the Cardinal, looking him in the face, asked:''Am I an impostor?'' |
38156 | When they were at table, the lame man said:''Lord, if You will not stay with us, may we come with You?'' |
38156 | When?'' |
38156 | Whence has He come, and how? |
38156 | Where can He have got to? |
38156 | Where does he come from? |
38156 | Where does he come from? |
38156 | Where is my father and my mother?'' |
38156 | While it continued, Someone stood up in the body of the hall, and a Voice inquired:''Who shall know Him when He comes?'' |
38156 | Who among you doeth My commandments? |
38156 | Who are we that we should answer? |
38156 | Who are we to time His movements, and fix the hour of His coming so that it may fall in with our convenience? |
38156 | Who are you, sir?'' |
38156 | Who are you?'' |
38156 | Who are you?'' |
38156 | Who does he pretend to be? |
38156 | Who is this man? |
38156 | Who is this mountebank to whom he speaks?'' |
38156 | Who knows?'' |
38156 | Who shall say? |
38156 | Who''s been doing something to yer?'' |
38156 | Who? |
38156 | Why do n''t you earn enough to keep your''usband like a gentleman? |
38156 | Why do n''t you go and lay fast hold on him?'' |
38156 | Why do n''t you start?'' |
38156 | Why do you trouble Me with your babbling tongue?'' |
38156 | Why do you, also, not go home?'' |
38156 | Why does n''t he speak when he''s spoken to? |
38156 | Why has He thus left me in the lurch?'' |
38156 | Why not in Bryanston Square if on the hill of Calvary? |
38156 | Why not us as well as them? |
38156 | Why not? |
38156 | Why not? |
38156 | Why not? |
38156 | Why should we suppose that the remedy has become accessible to whoever chooses to ask for it? |
38156 | Why should you spoil your life-- and mine!--for the sake of such a hound?'' |
38156 | Why wholly unannounced, in such guise and fashion?" |
38156 | Why you? |
38156 | Why, then, does he seem to slight the efforts of His faithful servant? |
38156 | Why, you do n''t mean to say---- Are you he of whom all the world is talking? |
38156 | Why? |
38156 | Why? |
38156 | Why? |
38156 | Why? |
38156 | Will you move, or must I make you? |
38156 | Will you not allow us to hear our thoughts on a subject whose magnitude bulks larger with each word we utter?'' |
38156 | Would he expect that the demonstration should be repeated in the case of each separate individual? |
38156 | Would it be seemly to rouse Him out of slumber to press on Him such a petition? |
38156 | Yet Mrs. Powell went close to Him, asking:''Are you in very deed the Lord?'' |
38156 | Yet if she did not do it now, when could she? |
38156 | Yet what are they among so many? |
38156 | You wo n''t do your child any good by getting yourself knocked to pieces, will you?'' |
38156 | You would go forth as healers of men? |
38156 | because, if so, tell us straight out, who? |
38156 | for is not suffering akin to repentance?'' |
38156 | he flashed at her; then back at the Stranger:''I''m not hurt, am I?'' |
38156 | many of us have cried--"O Lord, how long?" |
38156 | that I am mad? |
38156 | until presently He turned, saying:''Why do you continue to entreat that I should suffer you? |
38156 | what''s up with you? |
38156 | when you would not I should come?'' |
38156 | who''s this?'' |
9768 | Ah, Vargrave, how are you? 9768 And do you think that_ I_ will aid, will abet?" |
9768 | Are we not daily told, do not our priests preach it from their pulpits, that the cottage shelters happiness equal to that within the palace? 9768 Behold England, the wise, the liberal, the free England-- through what struggles she has passed; and is she yet contented? |
9768 | But did you not tell me,said Caroline,"that Evelyn proposed and promised to place her fortune at your disposal, even while rejecting your hand?" |
9768 | But what good will result to yourself in this project? 9768 By the by, you will want the five thousand pounds you lent me?" |
9768 | Can we, with new agencies at our command, new morality, new wisdom, predicate of the Future by the Past? 9768 Can you really imagine she will still accept your hand?" |
9768 | Do you not employ on behalf of individuals the same moral agencies that wise legislation or sound philosophy would adopt towards the multitude? 9768 Doltimore has positively fixed, then, to go abroad on your return from Cornwall?" |
9768 | It was the draught from the door; go on, I beseech you, the young lady, the friend, her name? |
9768 | Price, sir? |
9768 | So you go to Cornwall to- morrow, Doltimore? |
9768 | The particulars, Colonel? |
9768 | Well, what can I do for you,--some little favour, eh? 9768 Well,"said Vargrave,"and where is it? |
9768 | What can you intend? |
9768 | What, it would vex him so? |
9768 | You have managed to obtain terms with Mr. Douce, and to delay the repayment of your debt to him? |
9768 | You mean the forfeit money of thirty thousand pounds? |
9768 | *"What shall I do, a bachelor?" |
9768 | ** Has not all this proved prophetic? |
9768 | And can you say fairly that by laws labour can not be lightened and poverty diminished? |
9768 | And if he married Evelyn, and if Evelyn bought Lisle Court, would not Lisle Court be his? |
9768 | Apply the flame to the log on the hearth, or apply it to the forest, is there no distinction in the result? |
9768 | Are we now contented? |
9768 | But can you tell me anything about my fair stranger and her friends? |
9768 | But what are such sober infirmities to the vices that arise from defiance and despair? |
9768 | But what is the difference here between the rules of a village lord and the laws of a wise legislature? |
9768 | But who broached the absurd report?" |
9768 | But who have just entered the opposite box? |
9768 | Can you suppose that, if she marry another, her husband will ever consent to a child''s romance? |
9768 | Devilish cold; is it not? |
9768 | Did society gain; did literature lose? |
9768 | Has Colonel Maltravers been extravagant?" |
9768 | Has either nation fallen back? |
9768 | Have you heard anything of your brother lately?" |
9768 | He desires still, but what? |
9768 | He might have made an admirable savage: but surely the mass of civilized men are better than the thief?" |
9768 | How know we that excellence may not be illimitable? |
9768 | How know we that there is a certain and definite goal, even in heaven? |
9768 | Is Democracy better than the aristocratic commonwealth? |
9768 | Is it so? |
9768 | Is life, mere animal life, on the whole, a curse or a blessing?" |
9768 | Is man created for nothing nobler than freighting ships and speculating on silk and sugar? |
9768 | Is there no difference in the quality of that desire? |
9768 | It is the fashion nowadays to postpone budgets as long as we can,--eh? |
9768 | Look at the Greeks, who knew both forms; are they agreed which is the best? |
9768 | Lord Vargrave?" |
9768 | Now, he is a very good fellow, and I gave him that place to oblige you; still, as you are no longer a_ garcon_--but perhaps I shall offend you?" |
9768 | Should I get them as her dependant? |
9768 | Snug sinecure for a favourite clerk, or a place in the Stamp- Office for your fat footman-- John, I think you call him? |
9768 | So you go to your villa every day? |
9768 | Was one a greater torment than the other is? |
9768 | Well, and how are all at home? |
9768 | What Englishman, what Frenchman, would wish to be a Swiss? |
9768 | What form of government is then the best? |
9768 | What is there against Legard?" |
9768 | What you have done in one village, why should not legislation do throughout a kingdom? |
9768 | Where are you going, Caroline?" |
9768 | Where is the goal, and what have we gained? |
9768 | Where was the safety- valve of governments, where the natural vents of excitement in a population so inflammable? |
9768 | Where was there ever an oligarchy equal to this? |
9768 | Where, in the page of history, shall we look back and say,''Here improvement has diminished the sum of evil''? |
9768 | Why, does not that belong to Colonel Maltravers?" |
9768 | Will you dine with me to- day, Lumley?" |
9768 | Without a middle class, would there ever have been an interposition between lord and slave? |
9768 | Without an aristocracy, would there have been a middle class? |
9768 | Would Movement and Progress be without their divine uses, even if they limited their effect to the production of such a class? |
9768 | Yet what the distinction between the peasant and the prince, differing from that between the peasant and the savage? |
9768 | Yet, while one left the world an immortal heirloom of genius, where are the poets, the philosophers, the statesmen of the other? |
9768 | You ask what England has gained by her progress in the arts? |
9768 | You can join us at Christmas, I trust?" |
9768 | You will not forget the letters of introduction? |
6841 | But grant the host, with wealth our chieftain load; Except detraction, what hast thou bestowed? 6841 Do you hear, Æschines, in this very inscription, that''the gods never lack success, nor strive in vain?'' |
6841 | How could they dream-- or how believe when taught-- The sun a red- hot iron ball, in bulk Not less than Peloponnesus? 6841 If you thus praise it from my reading it,"exclaimed Æschines,"what would you have said if you had heard Demosthenes himself deliver it?" |
6841 | In these do we find the name of the general? 6841 Is the name of Pyrrhus to blanch your cheeks? |
6841 | The secret, hath it been told you? 6841 There the breach lies for passage, the ladder to scale; And your hands on your sabres, and how should ye fail? |
6841 | What though his feet have scathless stood In the rush of the Punic foam? 6841 When, O my countrymen I will you exert your vigor? |
6841 | Where has either Greek or modern literature,says MAHAFFY,"produced a nobler ideal than the Alcestis of Euripides? |
6841 | Who now protects her wives with guardian care? 6841 Why should I haste?" |
6841 | ''Is Philip dead? |
6841 | All the world over, I wonder, in lands that I never have trod, Are the people eternally seeking for the signs and steps of a God? |
6841 | And are Ulysses''arts no better known? |
6841 | And has Our arrowy tempest spent its force in vain? |
6841 | And has it come to this? |
6841 | And that stretched on yon billows distained by their gore Missolonghi''s assassins have gasped? |
6841 | And think''st thou not how wretched we shall be, A widow I, a helpless orphan he? |
6841 | Are ye not sons of the deathless Greeks Who fired the gates of Troy? |
6841 | Ask''st thou from Art but what the Art is worth? |
6841 | At what more glorious can the wealthy aim Than thus to purchase fair and lasting fame? |
6841 | But how returned he? |
6841 | But it may be asked, what became of Helen, the primary cause of the Trojan war, disastrous alike to victors and vanquished? |
6841 | But when shall earth again exult to see Visions divine like theirs renewed in aught like thee? |
6841 | But who shall estimate her influence on private happiness? |
6841 | By their right arms the conquest must be wrought? |
6841 | Can anything be more new than that a man of Maçedon should conquer the Athenians and give law to Greece? |
6841 | Could those spoils be thine? |
6841 | Did he not petition for such an honor? |
6841 | Do I wake, and live, Were there such things? |
6841 | Does a Providence rule in the fate of a word? |
6841 | Does he think with idle speeches to delude and cheat us all, As he does the doting elders that attend his daily call? |
6841 | Doth Macistus sleep On his tower- clad steep? |
6841 | Earth- born, bloodless; undecaying, Ever singing, sporting, playing, What has Nature else to show Godlike in its kind as thou? |
6841 | For the guerdon ye sought with your bloodshed and toil, Was it slaves, or dominion, or rapine, or spoil? |
6841 | For why? |
6841 | Had I not slain Apollo? |
6841 | Hath even a Whisper come Of the secret-- whence and whither? |
6841 | He counted them at break of day-- And when the sun set, where were they? |
6841 | Hear''st thou the rattling of spears on the right? |
6841 | Heard ye their sound, and the thunder around, as it thrilled through the petrified air? |
6841 | Hovering o''er Athens, blazed in airy panoply? |
6841 | How are you concerned in these rumors? |
6841 | How believe The moon no silver goddess girt for chase, But earth and stones, with caverns, hills, and vales? |
6841 | How long Will he live thus? |
6841 | How? |
6841 | I ask the Earth, have not the mountains felt? |
6841 | I ask yon Heaven, the all- beholding Sun, Has it not seen? |
6841 | I pity the dumb victim at the altar; But does the robed priest for his pity falter? |
6841 | If the epic poets ignore the importance of the masses on the battlefield, is it not likely that they underrate it in the public assemblies? |
6841 | Is Athens or America the theme of these immortal strains? |
6841 | Is Hellas then unscathed? |
6841 | Is his heart still? |
6841 | Is life, then, a dream and delusion? |
6841 | Is the world seen like shadows on water? |
6841 | Is there not here conceit of knowledge which is a disgraceful sort of ignorance? |
6841 | Is there one spark that cheered my hearth, one left For thee, my last of love?" |
6841 | It may now be asked, perhaps, whether the expression of our own sympathy, and that of the country, may do them good? |
6841 | Looks he not with high hope beaming? |
6841 | Menelaus turns aside to say,"Can she think of home? |
6841 | Miltiades, who conquered the barbarians at Marathon, or this man? |
6841 | Need we wonder, then, if the authority of the founders of the Grecian colonies, even where it had originally existed, soon gave way to liberty?" |
6841 | Oh, where were then thy sons, the great, the free, Whose deeds are guiding stars from age to age? |
6841 | Or, say, is it your sole ambition to wander through the public places, each inquiring of the other,''What new advices?'' |
6841 | Our women-- oh say, shall they shriek in despair, Or embrace us from conquest, with wreaths in their hair? |
6841 | Poor rabble, who have yet Outgrown so little the green grasshoppers From whom they boast descent, are they to blame? |
6841 | SCHILLER gives expression to the poet''s lament in the following lines: Art thou, fair world, no more? |
6841 | Says an English poet, Who knows not Solon, last, and wisest far, Of those whom Greece, triumphant in the height Of glory, styled her father? |
6841 | Seek''st thou the place where,''midst the dead The hero of the battle bled? |
6841 | Seems he not a god? |
6841 | Seest thou the gleam in the sky? |
6841 | Shall I list to the word of the English, who come from the uttermost sea? |
6841 | Shall he burn, and kill, and destroy? |
6841 | Sparta, Sparta, why in slumbers Lethargic dost thou lie? |
6841 | Suppose some hero should his spoil resign, Art thou that hero? |
6841 | Sways there in heaven a viewless power O''er the chance of the tongue in the naming hour? |
6841 | That servitude should bind in galling chain Whom Asia''s millions once opposed in vain, Who could have thought? |
6841 | That the mother aghast sees her offspring no more By the hand of Infanticide grasped? |
6841 | The Greek poet THEOCRITUS, who lived much at his court, thus characterizes him: What is his character? |
6841 | The Sea, in storm or calm, Heaven''s ever- changing shadow, spread below, Have its deaf waves not heard my agony? |
6841 | The chiefs who led back the people from Phy''le; Aristides, surnamed the Just, or Demosthenes? |
6841 | The fruit? |
6841 | The good man, surprised at the adventure, asked him''Whether Aristides had ever injured him?'' |
6841 | The haven-- ah, who has known it? |
6841 | The path-- ah, who has shown it, and which is the faithful guide? |
6841 | Think you the Grecians from your coasts are gone? |
6841 | This free form of government, this popular assembly-- the common council for the common good-- where have we contemplated its earliest models? |
6841 | Though his sword be red to its hilt with the blood That has beat at the heart of Rome? |
6841 | Thus Achilles asks him--"How hast thou dared descend into the gloom Of Hades, where the shadows of the dead, Forms without intellect, alone reside?" |
6841 | Unlamented he dies-- unregretted? |
6841 | Unnumbered are the sands of th''ocean shore; And who shall number o''er Those joys in others''breasts which Theron''s hand hath sown? |
6841 | Was Pericles speaking of his own country as he saw it or knew it? |
6841 | Was then the state ungrateful? |
6841 | Were they much to blame? |
6841 | Westward across the ocean, and northward beyond the snow, Do they all stand gazing, as ever? |
6841 | What leader must we wail? |
6841 | What more than madness has possessed your brains? |
6841 | What sceptred chief, Dying, hath left his troops without a lord? |
6841 | What trace remaineth of the Thunderer''s shrine? |
6841 | What valley echoes the response of Jove? |
6841 | What were ten thousand to a fame like mine? |
6841 | What, then, are we to think of our present condition? |
6841 | When forced by some necessity? |
6841 | When roused by some event? |
6841 | Where the pride of his horse is the strength of his camp, Shall the Mede forget to gain? |
6841 | Where then This king of gods and men? |
6841 | Where then was Cretan Jove? |
6841 | Where would be the gain Of wisdom and divine astronomy, Could we not school our fretful minds to bear The ills all life inherits? |
6841 | Who is not fallen? |
6841 | Who meets his death?'' |
6841 | Who now falls prostrate at the monarch''s throne? |
6841 | Who now shall lead thy scattered children forth, And long accustomed bondage uncreate? |
6841 | Who saves her infants from the rage of war? |
6841 | Who shall number the host of the Mede? |
6841 | Who shall say how many thousands have been made wiser, happier, and better, by those pursuits in which she has taught mankind to engage? |
6841 | Who shall tell the many hoofed tramp That shakes the dusty plain? |
6841 | Who was the general in this battle? |
6841 | Who, to command fair Athens but one day, Would not himself, with all his race, have fallen Contented on the morrow? |
6841 | Whose fortune who saw not with envious glances? |
6841 | Why, then, All vainly question? |
6841 | Will Gaul or Muscovite redress thee? |
6841 | Wilt thou never come, O Death? |
6841 | [ Footnote: It was a kindred spirit that led our own great statesman, Webster, in quoting from this oration, to ask:"Is it Athens or America? |
6841 | ah, whither dost thou run? |
6841 | and what do the wisest know? |
6841 | and what if the mirror break? |
6841 | and what is your message to me? |
6841 | and where shall the dreamer awake? |
6841 | dare ye deplore That the death- shriek is silenced on Hellas''shore? |
6841 | does Christendom breed The base hearts that will question the fame of your deed? |
6841 | he exclaimed,"who are they?" |
6841 | he mutters Brokenly now: that was a difficult breath-- Another? |
6841 | is thine aged grove, Prophetic fount, and oracle divine? |
6841 | know ye not Who would be free themselves must strike the blow? |
6841 | looks he not with pride elate? |
6841 | now draw the string; Bend at the mark the bow: To whom shall now the glorious arrow wing The praise of mild benignity? |
6841 | of all our host The man who acts the least, upbraids the most? |
6841 | or may the unquiet brain, Vexed by the wise mad talk of the old Jew, Have shaped itself these shadows of its fear? |
6841 | or was he gazing upon a bright vision, then two thousand years before him, which we see in reality as he saw it in prospect?"] |
6841 | plucked the beard Of Jove himself? |
6841 | she said-- and her woman''s face Flushed out both pride and shame--"I ask, by the memory of your race, Are ye worthy of the name? |
6841 | speak honestly, And thus escape my vengeance-- was it force That bore thee off?" |
6841 | to how many the studies which took their rise from her have been wealth in poverty, liberty in bondage, health in sickness, society in solitude? |
6841 | what fate hast thou decreed for me? |
6841 | what fury reigns? |
6841 | what though no succor advances, Nor Christendom''s chivalrous lances Are stretched in our aid? |
6841 | when will ye take heart, And fear the reproach of your neighbors at hand? |
6841 | who is''t cries"a blow?" |
6841 | you''re forced to call for help? |
14988 | Ay,says Diagoras,"I see those who were saved, but where are those painted who were shipwrecked?" |
14988 | How am I then injured by being torn by those animals, if I have no sensation? |
14988 | How can I, when I do not know how learned or how good a man he is? |
14988 | How can you do that,they answer,"for you will not perceive them?" |
14988 | Is Archelaus, then, miserable? |
14988 | What are they? |
14988 | What do you mean? |
14988 | What less than this,says Aristotle,"could be inscribed on the tomb, not of a king, but an ox?" |
14988 | You can not, then, pronounce of the great king of the Persians whether he is happy or not? |
14988 | After all, what kind of a Deity must that be who is not graced with one single virtue, if we should succeed in forming this idea of such a one? |
14988 | Am I superior to Plato in eloquence? |
14988 | And Africanus boasts, Who, from beyond Mæotis to the place Where the sun rises, deeds like mine can trace? |
14988 | And as I continued to observe the earth with great attention, How long, I pray you, said Africanus, will your mind be fixed on that object? |
14988 | And as to other things, do not Epicurus and the rest of the philosophers seem sufficiently prepared? |
14988 | And as to the men, what shall I say? |
14988 | And can you, then, refuse to acknowledge also Codrus, and many others who shed their blood for the preservation of their country? |
14988 | And do we not see what the Lacedæmonians provide in their Phiditia? |
14988 | And do you set bounds to vice? |
14988 | And does it become a philosopher to boast that he is not afraid of these things, and that he has discovered them to be false? |
14988 | And if Hecate is a Goddess, how can you refuse that rank to the Eumenides? |
14988 | And if that really is the case-- for I say nothing either way-- what is there agreeable or glorious in it? |
14988 | And if the constant course of future time is to resemble that night, who is happier than I am? |
14988 | And if these are the effects of virtue, why can not virtue itself make men happy? |
14988 | And if they are admitted, what reason have we to reject the Gods of the barbarians? |
14988 | And in this state of things where can the evil be, since death has no connection with either the living or the dead? |
14988 | And is not the art of the soothsayers divine? |
14988 | And must not every one who sees what innumerable instances of the same kind there are confess the existence of the Gods? |
14988 | And shall not the great man found laws, institutions, and a republic? |
14988 | And should you observe any one of your friends under affliction, would you rather prescribe him a sturgeon than a treatise of Socrates? |
14988 | And thus there will be something better than a happy life: but what can be more absurd than such an assertion? |
14988 | And to what purpose? |
14988 | And what are those things of more consequence? |
14988 | And what is it that constitutes the happiness which you assert that he enjoys? |
14988 | And when it is thus explained, what can a warrior, a commander, or an orator want more? |
14988 | And where do the multitude of Gods dwell, if heaven itself is a Deity? |
14988 | And wherein doth poverty prevent us from being happy? |
14988 | And who is there whom pain may not befall? |
14988 | And whose images are they? |
14988 | And why should I be uneasy it I were to expect that some nation might possess itself of this city ten thousand years hence? |
14988 | And why should we worship them from an admiration only of that nature in which we can behold nothing excellent? |
14988 | And why so? |
14988 | And, again, how are we to conceive how much it is able to contain? |
14988 | Anything sudden or unforeseen? |
14988 | Are any of them hook- nosed, flap- eared, beetle- browed, or jolt- headed, as some of us are? |
14988 | Are not their opinions subversive of all religion? |
14988 | Are these parts necessary to immortality? |
14988 | Are these the good things which remove the most afflicting grief? |
14988 | Are these your words or not? |
14988 | Are they afraid of any attacks or blows? |
14988 | Are they all alike in the face? |
14988 | Are they conducive to the existence of the Deity? |
14988 | Are we to suppose the divine seed fell from heaven upon earth, and that men sprung up in the likeness of their celestial sires? |
14988 | Are we, then, to attribute the first of these characteristics to animals? |
14988 | Are you able to tell? |
14988 | Are you not acquainted with the first principles of logic? |
14988 | As to the beasts, do they not bear cold and hunger, running about in woods, and on mountains and deserts? |
14988 | As to the natural fortifications of Rome, who is so negligent and unobservant as not to have them depicted and deeply stamped on his memory? |
14988 | As, therefore, it is plain that what is moved by itself must be eternal, who will deny that this is the general condition and nature of minds? |
14988 | Besides, how can the world move itself, if it wants a body? |
14988 | Besides, how could that Deity, if it is nothing but soul, be mixed with, or infused into, the world? |
14988 | Besides, is not everything that had a beginning subject to mortality? |
14988 | Besides, what piety is due to a being from whom you receive nothing? |
14988 | But I ask you if I have effected anything or nothing in the preceding days? |
14988 | But I would demand of you both, why these world- builders started up so suddenly, and lay dormant for so many ages? |
14988 | But among men, do we not see a disparity of manners in persons very much alike, and a similitude of manners in persons unlike? |
14988 | But are any of these miserable now? |
14988 | But can not we have the pleasure of hearing you resume it, or are we come too late? |
14988 | But could not the Deity have assisted and preserved those eminent cities? |
14988 | But do not you, who are so great an adept in physics, see what a soothing flatterer, what a sort of procuress, nature is to herself? |
14988 | But do we imagine that he was afterward delighted with that variety with which we see the heaven and earth adorned? |
14988 | But do you mean, said Tubero, that he dared to speak thus to men almost entirely uneducated and ignorant? |
14988 | But do you really imagine them to be such? |
14988 | But do you think they were all madmen who thought that a Deity could by some possibility exist without hands and feet? |
14988 | But does your Epicurus( for I had rather contend with him than with you) say anything that is worthy the name of philosophy, or even of common- sense? |
14988 | But how can that be miserable for one which all must of necessity undergo? |
14988 | But how can wisdom reside in such shapes? |
14988 | But how can you assert that the Gods do not enter into all the little circumstances of life, and yet hold that they distribute dreams among men? |
14988 | But how does all this face of things arise from atomic corpuscles? |
14988 | But how does he speak on these subjects? |
14988 | But how is it that you take it for granted that life is nothing but fire? |
14988 | But how will any one be enabled to bear his misfortunes the better by knowing that it is unavoidable that such things should happen to man? |
14988 | But how will you get rid of the objections which Carneades made? |
14988 | But if a concourse of atoms can make a world, why not a porch, a temple, a house, a city, which are works of less labor and difficulty? |
14988 | But if it does not ease our pain, why should we debase ourselves to no purpose? |
14988 | But if their doctrine be true, of what avail is piety, sanctity, or religion? |
14988 | But if understanding, faith, virtue, and concord reside in human kind, how could they come on earth, unless from heaven? |
14988 | But if you decline those opinions, why should a single form disturb you? |
14988 | But if you think Latona a Goddess, how can you avoid admitting Hecate to be one also, who was the daughter of Asteria, Latona''s sister? |
14988 | But is that the truth? |
14988 | But it is not necessary at present to go through the whole: the question is, to what point are we to advance in order to abate our grief? |
14988 | But let us see what she will perform? |
14988 | But like what man? |
14988 | But must they, for that reason, be all eternal? |
14988 | But since the universe contains all particular beings, as well as their seeds, can we say that it is not itself governed by nature? |
14988 | But still, what was this extraordinary fortune? |
14988 | But suppose we are mistaken as to his pleasure; are we so, too, as to his pain? |
14988 | But supposing these were to be allowed, how can the rest be granted, or even so much as understood? |
14988 | But the question is, had he died, would he have been taken from good, or from evil? |
14988 | But to detract from another''s reputation, or to rival him with that vicious emulation which resembles an enmity, of what use can that conduct be? |
14988 | But what age is long, or what is there at all long to a man? |
14988 | But what are those degrees by which we are to limit it? |
14988 | But what are those images you talk of, or whence do they proceed? |
14988 | But what are those more important things about which you say that you are occupied? |
14988 | But what are we doing? |
14988 | But what can be more internal than the mind? |
14988 | But what conception can we possibly have of a Deity who is not eternal? |
14988 | But what do you think of those to whom a victory in the Olympic games seemed almost on a par with the ancient consulships of the Roman people? |
14988 | But what does the same man say in his funeral oration? |
14988 | But what is Chrysippus''s definition? |
14988 | But what is it, Epicurus, that you do for them? |
14988 | But what is that great and noble work which appears to you to be the effect of a divine mind, and from which you conclude that there are Gods? |
14988 | But what is that opinion of Epicharmus? |
14988 | But what is that peroration? |
14988 | But what is there more effectual to dispel grief than the discovery that it answers no purpose, and has been undergone to no account? |
14988 | But what is there of any excellency which has not its difficulty? |
14988 | But what life do they attribute to that round Deity? |
14988 | But what occasion is there to animadvert on the opinions of individuals, when we may observe whole nations to fall into all sorts of errors? |
14988 | But what occasion is there to philosophize here in a matter with which we see that philosophy is but little concerned? |
14988 | But what pleasures can they enjoy? |
14988 | But what said that chief of the Argonauts in tragedy? |
14988 | But what sense can the air have? |
14988 | But what shall I say of human reason? |
14988 | But what signifies that, if his defects were beauties to Catulus? |
14988 | But what think you of those whose mothers were Goddesses? |
14988 | But when virtue governs the Commonwealth, what can be more glorious? |
14988 | But whence comes that divination? |
14988 | But where is truth? |
14988 | But who can with correctness speak in praise of a mediocrity of evils? |
14988 | But who ever thanked the Gods that he was a good man? |
14988 | But why are we angry with the poets? |
14988 | But why are we to add many more Gods? |
14988 | But why do I mention Socrates, or Theramenes, men distinguished by the glory of virtue and wisdom? |
14988 | But why was not man endued with a reason incapable of producing any crimes? |
14988 | But would any one say of us, who do exist, that we want horns or wings? |
14988 | But would it not have been better that these inhumanities had been prevented than that the author of them should be punished afterward? |
14988 | But, do you not see how much harm is done by poets? |
14988 | But, indeed, who can dispute the antiquity of philosophy, either in fact or name? |
14988 | Can any one contradict himself more? |
14988 | Can any one in whom there is lust or desire be otherwise than libidinous or desirous? |
14988 | Can anything be natural that is against reason? |
14988 | Can anything show stupidity in a greater degree? |
14988 | Can he who does not exist be in need of anything? |
14988 | Can madness be of any use? |
14988 | Can there be any doubt that whatever may be lost can not be properly classed in the number of those things which complete a happy life? |
14988 | Can there be any glory or excellence in that nature which only contemplates its own happiness, and neither will do, nor does, nor ever did anything? |
14988 | Can we suppose any of them to be squint- eyed, or even to have a cast in the eye? |
14988 | Can we, then, think that this plentiful fountain of evil sprung from the immortal Gods? |
14988 | Can you deny, my Lælius, that this is a fair definition of a democracy, where the people are all in all, and where the people constitute the State? |
14988 | Can you, then, call yourself a brave man, of a great soul, endued with patience and steadiness above the frowns of fortune? |
14988 | Can you, then, think, after this plain refutation, that there is need to employ more subtle reasonings? |
14988 | Could he, then, be happy who occasioned the death of these men? |
14988 | Could the Scythian Anacharsis[69] disregard money, and shall not our philosophers be able to do so? |
14988 | Could the different courses of the stars be preserved by the uniform movement of the whole heaven? |
14988 | Could the earth at one season be adorned with flowers, at another be covered with snow? |
14988 | Could the flux and reflux of the sea and the height of the tides be affected by the increase or wane of the moon? |
14988 | Could these things subsist, I say, in such a harmony of all the parts of the universe without the continued influence of a divine spirit? |
14988 | Did he not follow his philosophical studies with the greatest satisfaction at Athens, although he was banished? |
14988 | Did not his colleague Junius, in the same war, lose his fleet in a tempest by disregarding the auspices? |
14988 | Did not they plainly deny the very essence of a Deity? |
14988 | Did not this grave and wise man sufficiently show that the public revenue was dissipated by the Sempronian law? |
14988 | Did she avoid labor? |
14988 | Did you ever observe anything like this, Epicurus? |
14988 | Did you ever see any world but this? |
14988 | Did you, then, say that it was your opinion that such a man was as naturally liable to perturbation as the sea is exposed to winds? |
14988 | Do I explain your opinion rightly? |
14988 | Do I talk of their men? |
14988 | Do not the Egyptians esteem their sacred bull, their Apis, as a Deity? |
14988 | Do not they put their names to those very books which they write on the contempt of glory? |
14988 | Do they not hate every virtue that distinguishes itself? |
14988 | Do those grandiloquent gentlemen state anything better than Epicurus in opposition to these two things which distress us the most? |
14988 | Do we look, then, on the libidinous, the angry, the anxious, and the timid man, as persons of wisdom, of excellence? |
14988 | Do we not observe that where those exercises called gymnastic are in esteem, those who enter the lists never concern themselves about dangers? |
14988 | Do you admit this-- that souls either exist after death, or else that they also perish at the moment of death? |
14988 | Do you believe an eagle, a lion, or a dolphin prefers any shape to its own? |
14988 | Do you believe that they thought that their names should not continue beyond their lives? |
14988 | Do you commit your affairs to the hands of many persons? |
14988 | Do you conceive him to have the least skill in natural philosophy who is capable of thinking anything to be everlasting that had a beginning? |
14988 | Do you imagine that Epaminondas groaned when he perceived that his life was flowing out with his blood? |
14988 | Do you imagine that I am angry when in pleading I use any extraordinary vehemence and sharpness? |
14988 | Do you intend all the laws indifferently? |
14988 | Do you not consider, Balbus, to what lengths your arguments for the divinity of the heaven and the stars will carry you? |
14988 | Do you not look upon him as unworthy of his own father''s light? |
14988 | Do you observe how he constrains himself? |
14988 | Do you see that I have much leisure? |
14988 | Do you see that city Carthage, which, though brought under the Roman yoke by me, is now renewing former wars, and can not live in peace? |
14988 | Do you suppose if beasts were endowed with reason that every one would not give the prize of beauty to his own species? |
14988 | Do you take that print of a horse''s hoof which is now to be seen on a stone at Regillus to be made by Castor''s horse? |
14988 | Do you take these for fabulous stories? |
14988 | Do you think the Deity is like either me or you? |
14988 | Do you think there is any creature on the land or in the sea that is not highly delighted with its own form? |
14988 | Do you, then, admit our idea of that governor of a commonwealth to whom we wish to refer everything? |
14988 | Do you, then, asked Scipio, believe in nothing which is not before your eyes? |
14988 | Do you, then, think that it can befall a wise man to be oppressed with grief, that is to say, with misery? |
14988 | Does not Dionysius, then, seem to have declared there can be no happiness for one who is under constant apprehensions? |
14988 | Does not Niobe here seem to reason, and by that reasoning to bring all her misfortunes upon herself? |
14988 | Does not Old age, though unregarded, still attend On childhood''s pastimes, as the cares of men? |
14988 | Does pain annoy us? |
14988 | Does the earth bring forth fruit and grain in such excessive abundance and variety for men or for brutes? |
14988 | Doth anything come nearer madness than anger? |
14988 | Eternal sorrows what avails to shed? |
14988 | For how is such a one judged to be best either in learning, sciences, or arts? |
14988 | For how without these qualities could it be infinitely perfect? |
14988 | For if that last day does not occasion an entire extinction, but a change of abode only, what can be more desirable? |
14988 | For let the soul perish as the body: is there any pain, or indeed any feeling at all, in the body after death? |
14988 | For piety is only justice towards the Gods; but what right have they to it, when there is no communication whatever between the Gods and men? |
14988 | For what can be thought better than the best? |
14988 | For what can possibly be more evident than this? |
14988 | For what can possibly ever have been put together which can not be dissolved again? |
14988 | For what can we pronounce more deplorable than folly? |
14988 | For what is Athos or the vast Olympus? |
14988 | For what is a republic but an association of rights? |
14988 | For what is better and more excellent than goodness and beneficence? |
14988 | For what is memory of words and circumstances? |
14988 | For what is more unbecoming in a man than to cry like a woman? |
14988 | For what is not only more miserable, but more base and sordid, than a man afflicted, weakened, and oppressed with grief? |
14988 | For what is that faculty by which we remember? |
14988 | For what is that love of friendship? |
14988 | For what is there in human knowledge, or the short span of this life, that can appear great to a wise man? |
14988 | For what is there in natures of that kind which has the power of memory, understanding, or thought? |
14988 | For what is there in this life that can appear great to him who has acquainted himself with eternity and the utmost extent of the universe? |
14988 | For what nation, what people are there, who have not, without any learning, a natural idea, or prenotion, of a Deity? |
14988 | For what now remains of those antique manners, of which the poet said that our Commonwealth consisted? |
14988 | For what shall we say? |
14988 | For what should he be concerned for who has not even any sensation? |
14988 | For what stronger argument can there be that it is of little use than that some very profound philosophers live in a discreditable manner? |
14988 | For what superior force can there be? |
14988 | For what was the State of Athens when, during the great Peloponnesian war, she fell under the unjust domination of the thirty tyrants? |
14988 | For what-- can such a man be disturbed by fear? |
14988 | For whence comes piety, or from whom has religion been derived? |
14988 | For who does not see this, that an appetite is the best sauce? |
14988 | For who that fears either pain or death, the one of which is always present, the other always impending, can be otherwise than miserable? |
14988 | For whom, then, will any one presume to say that the world was made? |
14988 | For why should I entreat him to be propitious? |
14988 | For why should a woman be disabled from inheriting property? |
14988 | For, in the first place, what are the pleasures of which we are deprived by that dreadful thing, blindness? |
14988 | For, with respect to him what better authority can we cite than Plato? |
14988 | From what would you derive Vejupiter and Vulcan? |
14988 | From whence arose those five forms,[83] of which the rest were composed, so aptly contributing to frame the mind and produce the senses? |
14988 | Granting, then, everything to be made of atoms, what advantage is that to your argument? |
14988 | Had there not been danger, we should say, who would have applied to you? |
14988 | Has it not even entered the heavens? |
14988 | Has our entrance at all interrupted any conversation of yours? |
14988 | Have I invented this? |
14988 | Have they any warts? |
14988 | Have they no names? |
14988 | Have you any grounds of complaint, then, that she recalls it at her pleasure? |
14988 | Have you, then, no commendation at all for any kind of democratical government? |
14988 | He determines to be miserable: and can any one determine on anything against his will? |
14988 | Here some people talk of moderate grief; but if such be natural, what occasion is there for consolation? |
14988 | How can anything of this kind befall one to whom nothing is sudden and unforeseen that can happen to man? |
14988 | How can he be brave and undaunted, and hold everything as trifles which can befall a man? |
14988 | How can it be right that you should voluntarily grieve, rather than take the trouble of acquiring what you want to have? |
14988 | How can that divine sense of the firmament be preserved in so rapid a motion? |
14988 | How comes it that no one is in love with a deformed young man, or a handsome old one? |
14988 | How could the Gods err? |
14988 | How could the air, fire, water, and earth pay obedience and submit to the will of the architect? |
14988 | How do the beasts live in the fields and in the forests? |
14988 | How is it that the very first moment that I choose I can form representations of them in my mind? |
14988 | How is it that they come to me, even in my sleep, without being called or sought after? |
14988 | How is it when some things do of themselves prevent your grieving at them? |
14988 | How much more reasonable is the doctrine of the Stoics, whom you censure? |
14988 | How shall we account for this? |
14988 | How so? |
14988 | How was it with T. Altibutius? |
14988 | How we are to behave in bed? |
14988 | How, then, can a life be pleasant without prudence and temperance? |
14988 | How, then, can we conceive this to be a Deity that makes no use of reason, and is not endowed with any virtue? |
14988 | How, therefore, can they be those persons? |
14988 | I desire, therefore, to know, Balbus, why this Providence of yours was idle for such an immense space of time? |
14988 | I perceive your gradations from happiness to virtue, and from virtue to reason; but how do you come from reason to human form? |
14988 | I should be glad to be confuted; for what am I endeavoring at but to clear up truth in every question? |
14988 | I would inquire of him which of his family the nephew of Africanus''s brother was like? |
14988 | I? |
14988 | If I ask, why? |
14988 | If I have not faculties for knowing all that I could desire to know, will you not even allow me to make use of those which I have? |
14988 | If a just man and a virtuous man is bound to obey the laws, I ask, what laws do you mean? |
14988 | If any sentiments, indeed, are communicated without obscurity, what is there that Velleius can understand and Cotta not? |
14988 | If he never heard a lecture on these Democritean principles, what lectures did he ever hear? |
14988 | If it is not the same, then why did she make the world mortal, and not everlasting, like Plato''s God? |
14988 | If it were not so, why should we pray to or adore them? |
14988 | If it were not so, why would not a bull become enamored of a mare, or a horse of a cow? |
14988 | If it were true, what occasion was there to come so gradually to it? |
14988 | If the Gods can exist without corporeal sense, and if there can be a mind without a body, why did he annex a mind to water? |
14988 | If the human mind were a Deity, how could it be ignorant of any thing? |
14988 | If there are Gods, are nymphs also Goddesses? |
14988 | If there be no such thing as a Deity, what is there better than man, since he only is possessed of reason, the most excellent of all things? |
14988 | If these are Deities, which we worship and regard as such, why are not Serapis and Isis[255] placed in the same rank? |
14988 | If they are Goddesses, are Pans and Satyrs in the same rank? |
14988 | If you did not deify one as well as the other, what will become of Ino? |
14988 | If you suppose that wisdom governs the State, is it not as well that this wisdom should reside in one monarch as in many nobles? |
14988 | If, then, honor and riches have no value, what is there else to be afraid of? |
14988 | If, therefore, she neglects whole nations, is it not very probable that she neglects all mankind? |
14988 | In afflictions, in labor, in danger? |
14988 | In short, how is he happy? |
14988 | In the first place, therefore, I ask you, Where is the habitation of your Deity? |
14988 | In what manner? |
14988 | In what other parts to the north or the south, or where the sun rises and sets, will your names ever be heard? |
14988 | In what respect are they superior to these ideas? |
14988 | In what was Epicurus happier, living in his own country, than Metrodorus, who lived at Athens? |
14988 | In what way, said Lælius, are you going to make me again support your argument? |
14988 | In what, therefore, can it be defective, since it is perfect? |
14988 | In which, how could I have acted if I had not been consul at the time? |
14988 | Is anger inflamed? |
14988 | Is any country of barbarians more uncivilized or desolate than India? |
14988 | Is he deprived of eyes? |
14988 | Is he destitute of children? |
14988 | Is he not involved in a very great error? |
14988 | Is it because the mere separation of the soul and body can not be effected without pain? |
14988 | Is it because you can not be liberal without pity? |
14988 | Is it for beasts? |
14988 | Is it in your innumerable worlds, some of which are rising, some falling, at every moment of time? |
14988 | Is it not easier, then, to find one man of such a spirit as we are inquiring after, than to meet with a whole city of such men? |
14988 | Is it not sufficient, if it is not disagreeable? |
14988 | Is it possible that you should attain any human applause or glory that is worth the contending for? |
14988 | Is it the contempt of honors? |
14988 | Is it the same man who calls pain the greatest of all evils? |
14988 | Is not a dog like a wolf? |
14988 | Is not the decree of the senate concerning Vatienus still subsisting? |
14988 | Is not the temple, built by Posthumius in honor of Castor and Pollux, to be seen in the Forum? |
14988 | Is not this the case with the people everywhere? |
14988 | Is poverty the subject? |
14988 | Is she not called Leucothea by the Greeks, and Matuta by us? |
14988 | Is that sufficient for beings who are supposed to enjoy all good things and the most supreme felicity? |
14988 | Is the face itself of use? |
14988 | Is there no natural charity in the dispositions of good men? |
14988 | Is there, then, anything that a disturbed mind can do better than one which is calm and steady? |
14988 | Is this all? |
14988 | Is this that Telamon so highly praised By wondering Greece, at whose sight, like the sun, All others with diminish''d lustre shone? |
14988 | It is an important question for us, Which has the most appearance of truth? |
14988 | It is reported that Cleanthes on that struck his foot on the ground, and repeated a verse out of the Epigonæ: Amphiaraus, hear''st thou this below? |
14988 | It may be said, on the other side, Who is so mad as to grieve of his own accord? |
14988 | Lastly, if fortitude is ascribed to the Deity, how does it appear? |
14988 | Lastly, what have the principal poets and the most learned men published of themselves in their poems and songs? |
14988 | Moreover, how can a good man avoid referring all his actions and all his feelings to the one standard of whether or not it is laudable? |
14988 | Moreover, who can think anything in human affairs of brilliant importance who has penetrated this starry empire of the gods? |
14988 | Must I now seek for arguments to refute this doctrine seriously? |
14988 | Must not the mind, then, when it is puffed up, or distended, be out of order? |
14988 | Must we conclude that some Deity appoints and directs these ebbings and flowings to certain fixed times? |
14988 | Must we not attribute prudence to a Deity? |
14988 | Nay, more; is not the whole of heaven( not to dwell on particulars) almost filled with the offspring of men? |
14988 | No beast has more sagacity than an elephant; yet where can you find any of a larger size? |
14988 | Nothing is more true, and he says very appropriately, What, are you sane, who at this rate lament? |
14988 | Now imagine a Democritus, a Pythagoras, and an Anaxagoras; what kingdom, what riches, would you prefer to their studies and amusements? |
14988 | Now what made these men so easy, but their persuasion that grief and lamentation was not becoming in a man? |
14988 | Now who that is acquainted with these instances can doubt that this motion of the mind is altogether in opinion and voluntary? |
14988 | Now, do you understand what is meant by quasi- body and quasi- blood? |
14988 | Now, does it not appear to you that he is here placing the whole of a happy life in virtue alone? |
14988 | Now, in what sense do you say there is nothing better than the world? |
14988 | Now, let our wise man be considered as protecting the republic; what can be more excellent than such a character? |
14988 | Now, that very warlike anger, which is of such service in war, what is the use of it to him when he is at home with his wife, children, and family? |
14988 | Now, what disorders can be worse to the body than these two distempers of the mind( for I overlook others), weakness and desire? |
14988 | Now, what ignominy can a wise man be affected with( for it is of such a one that I am speaking) who can be guilty of nothing which deserves it? |
14988 | Now, what were these inventions? |
14988 | Of what use is reason to him? |
14988 | Of what value is this philosophy, which, like old women and illiterate men, attributes everything to fate? |
14988 | On the other side, what disgrace, what ignominy, would he not submit to that he might avoid pain, when persuaded that it was the greatest of evils? |
14988 | Or are they free from imperfections? |
14988 | Or can any one be angry without a perturbation of mind? |
14988 | Or did Plato''s happiness exceed that of Xenocrates, or Polemo, or Arcesilas? |
14988 | Or do you think Æsopus was ever angry when he acted, or Accius was so when he wrote? |
14988 | Or for the sake of fools? |
14988 | Or how can that nature be called animated which neither regards nor performs anything? |
14988 | Or how can you, or any one else, be indebted to him who bestows no benefits? |
14988 | Or how, if it is in perpetual self- motion, can it be easy and happy? |
14988 | Or is it in your atomical corpuscles, which form such excellent works without the direction of any natural power or reason? |
14988 | Or is that city to be valued much that banishes all her good and wise men? |
14988 | Or the relations and sons of many other excellent men, whose names there is no occasion to mention? |
14988 | Or was Theseus in a passion when he seized on the horns of the Marathonian bull? |
14988 | Or were these things made, as you almost assert, by God for the sake of men? |
14988 | Or what is there that had a beginning which will not have an end? |
14988 | Or what old woman is now to be found so weak and ignorant as to stand in fear of those infernal monsters which once so terrified mankind? |
14988 | Or what religion did Prodicus the Chian leave to men, who held that everything beneficial to human life should be numbered among the Gods? |
14988 | Or who can think anything connected with mankind long who has learned to estimate the nature of eternity? |
14988 | Or would we rather imitate Epicurus? |
14988 | Or, if uninterrupted, still how do you prove them to be eternal? |
14988 | Ought not such authorities to move you? |
14988 | Ought we to contemn Attius Navius''s staff, with which he divided the regions of the vine to find his sow? |
14988 | Secondly, What motive is it that stirs him from his place, supposing he ever moves? |
14988 | Seeing, then, that it is clear that whatever moves itself is eternal, can there be any doubt that the soul is so? |
14988 | Shall Amphiaraus and Tryphonius be called Gods? |
14988 | Shall I adore, and bend the suppliant knee, Who scorn their power and doubt their deity? |
14988 | Shall I call the sun, the moon, or the sky a Deity? |
14988 | Shall I immediately crowd all my sails? |
14988 | Shall I superficially go over what I said before, that my discourse may have a greater scope? |
14988 | Shall Tantalus''unhappy offspring know No end, no close, of this long scene of woe? |
14988 | Shall a wise man be afraid of pain? |
14988 | Shall men not be able to bear what boys do? |
14988 | Shall musicians compose their tunes to their own tastes? |
14988 | Shall the Deity, then, have a tongue, and not speak-- teeth, palate, and jaws, though he will have no use for them? |
14988 | Shall the happy life of a wise and consistent man succumb to this? |
14988 | Shall the industrious husbandman, then, plant trees the fruit of which he shall never see? |
14988 | Shall the members which nature has given to the body for the sake of generation be useless to the Deity? |
14988 | Shall the world be possessed of every other perfection, and be destitute of this one, which is the most important and valuable of all? |
14988 | Shall virtue, then, yield to this? |
14988 | Shall we give, therefore, any credit to Pauæstius, when he dissents from his master, Plato? |
14988 | Shall we imagine that there is a kind of measure in the soul, into which, as into a vessel, all that we remember is poured? |
14988 | Shall we imagine the soul to receive impressions like wax, and memory to be marks of the impressions made on the soul? |
14988 | Shall we not then allow the Gods to have these perfections, since we worship the sacred and august images of them? |
14988 | Shall we say, then, that madness has its use? |
14988 | Shall we, then, prefer determining between them, or shall we return to our subject? |
14988 | Shall we, therefore, receive a lame Deity because we have such an account of him? |
14988 | Shall, then, a veteran soldier be able to behave in this manner, and shall a wise and learned man not be able? |
14988 | She turn''d me out- of- doors; she sends for me back again; Shall I go? |
14988 | Should Pythagoras, Socrates, or Plato say to me, Why are you dejected or sad? |
14988 | Should it be asked, why not? |
14988 | Should you ask what its nature is? |
14988 | Socrates, in Xenophon, asks,"Whence had man his understanding, if there was none in the world?" |
14988 | Still, you would not be liable to punishment; for who could prove that you had known? |
14988 | Suppose that we allow that to be without pain is the chief good? |
14988 | Supposing he is so, would his happiness be less perfect if he had not two feet? |
14988 | Take away this, and who would be so mad as to spend his life amidst toils and dangers? |
14988 | That indeed is absurd; for how shall we form any idea of the bottom, or of the shape or fashion of such a soul as that? |
14988 | That of nature? |
14988 | The flights and notes of birds? |
14988 | Then Lælius asked: But what difference is there, I should like to know, between the one and the many, if justice exists equally in many? |
14988 | Then Mucius said: What, then, do you consider, my Lælius, should be our best arguments in endeavoring to bring about the object of your wishes? |
14988 | Then Tubero said: I do not mean to disagree with you, Lælius; but, pray, what do you call more important studies? |
14988 | Then said Furius, What is it that you are about? |
14988 | Therefore, as fear with them, prevailed over grief, can not reason and true philosophy have the same effect with a wise man? |
14988 | Therefore, when he had set off the riches of Priam to the best advantage, which had the appearance of a long continuance, what does he add? |
14988 | This is not only a weak, but a false, argument; for, first of all, how do you know the opinions of all nations? |
14988 | Though_ Sol_( the sun) is so called, you say, because he is_ solus_( single); yet how many suns do theologists mention? |
14988 | Thus reasons Carneades; not with any design to destroy the existence of the Gods( for what would less become a philosopher? |
14988 | Thy aid, O Venus, why should I invoke? |
14988 | To judge whom? |
14988 | To what length now will not anger go? |
14988 | To whom is owing that knowledge from the entrails of beasts? |
14988 | V._ A._ Should this be the case, is it not to be feared that you are dressing up philosophy in false colors? |
14988 | Was Romulus, then, think you, king of a barbarous people? |
14988 | Was it for the wise? |
14988 | Was it, then, an unwise act in him to prefer the liberty of banishment to slavery at home? |
14988 | Was there no evil in what afflicted Alcibiades thus? |
14988 | We grant you this; but where is the similitude? |
14988 | We must drive away this grief of hers: how is that to be done? |
14988 | We should assist her, for she looks out for help: Where shall I now apply, where seek support? |
14988 | We that are alive, are we not wretched, seeing we must die? |
14988 | Were not that the case, why should the Stoics say so much on that question, Whether virtue was abundantly sufficient to a happy life? |
14988 | What Hector? |
14988 | What advantage, then, is the knowledge of futurity to us, or how does it assist us to guard against impending evils, since it will come inevitably? |
14988 | What and how various are the kinds of animals, tame or wild? |
14988 | What are the characters of the words, what of the facts themselves? |
14988 | What are the notions of you philosophers? |
14988 | What are the poet''s views but to be ennobled after death? |
14988 | What are those good things? |
14988 | What artificer but nature, whose direction is incomparable, could have exhibited so much ingenuity in the formation of the senses? |
14988 | What being is there but a God superior to man? |
14988 | What bounds can you set to the value of conversing with Orpheus, and Musæus, and Homer, and Hesiod? |
14988 | What can I say to these definitions? |
14988 | What can be more childish than to assert that there are no such creatures as are generated in the Red Sea or in India? |
14988 | What can be wanting to such a life as this to make it more happy than it is? |
14988 | What can make a worse appearance than Homer''s Achilles, or Agamemnon, during the quarrel? |
14988 | What city would endure the maker of a law which should condemn a son or a grandson for a crime committed by the father or the grandfather? |
14988 | What comeliness is there in the heart, the lungs, the liver, and the rest of them, abstracted from their use? |
14988 | What could be better than to assert that fortune interferes but little with a wise man? |
14988 | What could be weaker than this? |
14988 | What do our philosophers think on the subject? |
14988 | What do predictions and foreknowledge of future events indicate, but that such future events are shown, pointed out, portended, and foretold to men? |
14988 | What do you allude to? |
14988 | What do you conclude from thence? |
14988 | What do you imagine that so many and such great men of our republic, who have sacrificed their lives for its good, expected? |
14988 | What do you think of that son of Phoebus? |
14988 | What do you think, then? |
14988 | What does that man say in Terence who punishes himself, the Self- tormentor? |
14988 | What doth Alcæus, who was distinguished in his own republic for his bravery, write on the love of young men? |
14988 | What else is it, I say, that we do, but invite the soul to reflect on itself? |
14988 | What else is the object of these lines, Behold old Ennius here, who erst Thy fathers''great exploits rehearsed? |
14988 | What entertainment could that be to the Deity? |
14988 | What fire have not candidates run through to gain a single vote? |
14988 | What gladiator, of even moderate reputation, ever gave a sigh? |
14988 | What greater example need we seek for? |
14988 | What have we to ask of the Gods, and why do we prefer our vows to them? |
14988 | What if your assertion, Velleius, proves absolutely false, that no form occurs to us, in our contemplations on the Deity, but the human? |
14988 | What is his course of life? |
14988 | What is his object in doing so, except that he is interested in posterity? |
14988 | What is more agreeable than a learned retirement? |
14988 | What is the meaning, then, of this absurd acceptation, unless some one wishes to make the whole of Athos a monument? |
14988 | What is the reason that I entertain one idea of the figure of the same person, and you another? |
14988 | What is the result, then? |
14988 | What is the swine good for but to eat? |
14988 | What is there in Epicurus''s physics that is not taken from Democritus? |
14988 | What is there in them which does not prove the principle of an intelligent nature? |
14988 | What is there that can discompose such gravity and constancy? |
14988 | What is this dread-- this fear? |
14988 | What is to be done at home? |
14988 | What is to be done, then? |
14988 | What madness is it, then, in us to require the same from others? |
14988 | What materials, what tools, what bars, what machines, what servants, were employed in so vast a work? |
14988 | What men do you mean? |
14988 | What necessity can there be of feet, without walking; or of hands, if there is nothing to be grasped? |
14988 | What pleasures? |
14988 | What proof, says Balbus, do you require of me? |
14988 | What say you to this? |
14988 | What shall I say of Dicæarchus, who denies that there is any soul? |
14988 | What shall I say of Socrates,[282] whose death, as often as I read of it in Plato, draws fresh tears from my eyes? |
14988 | What shall I say of our military affairs; in which our ancestors have been most eminent in valor, and still more so in discipline? |
14988 | What shall I say of our own ambitious pursuits or desire of honors? |
14988 | What shall we say of Ino, the daughter of Cadmus? |
14988 | What shall we say of him who not only dreads these evils as impending, but actually feels and bears them at present? |
14988 | What shall we say of the sacrilegious, the impious, and the perjured? |
14988 | What shall we say of those who think it unbecoming in a man to grieve? |
14988 | What signifies what men say when we see what they do? |
14988 | What similitude is there between them? |
14988 | What sort of life does he lead? |
14988 | What strange things does Lycon say? |
14988 | What then? |
14988 | What think you of Diagoras, who was called the atheist; and of Theodorus after him? |
14988 | What time do you mean? |
14988 | What troubles, then, are they free from who have no connection whatever with the people? |
14988 | What was it that incited the Deity to act the part of an ædile, to illuminate and decorate the world? |
14988 | What will you say of her brother Absyrtus, whom Pacuvius calls Ægialeus, though the other name is more frequent in the writings of the ancients? |
14988 | What will you say? |
14988 | What words does Sophocles here put in his mouth, in his Trachiniæ? |
14988 | What, in the name of those Deities concerning whom we are now disputing, is the meaning of all this? |
14988 | What, lastly, is that power which investigates secret things, and is called invention and contrivance? |
14988 | What, sweet? |
14988 | What, then, are those goods in the possession of which you may be very miserable? |
14988 | What, then, is that being but a God? |
14988 | What, then, is this opinion of theirs? |
14988 | What, then, was the subject of your discussion? |
14988 | What, then, will you say of his brothers? |
14988 | What, then, would your just man do, if, in a case of shipwreck, he saw a weaker man than himself get possession of a plank? |
14988 | What, then? |
14988 | What, then? |
14988 | What, then? |
14988 | What, then? |
14988 | What, then? |
14988 | What, then? |
14988 | What, then? |
14988 | What, too, is invention? |
14988 | What? |
14988 | When they reason in this manner, what think you-- is what they say worth attending to or not? |
14988 | When we pronounce the word"aristocracy,"which, in Greek, signifies the government of the best men, what can be conceived more excellent? |
14988 | When we see machines move artificially, as a sphere, a clock, or the like, do we doubt whether they are the productions of reason? |
14988 | When will the dire reward of guilt be o''er, And Myrtilus demand revenge no more? |
14988 | When you go out at the Capene gate and see the tombs of the Calatini, the Scipios, Servilii, and Metelli, do you look on them as miserable? |
14988 | Whence can I, then, more properly begin than from Nature, the parent of all? |
14988 | Whence comes justice, faith, equity? |
14988 | Whence comes law, either that of nations, or that which is called the civil law? |
14988 | Whence fortitude in labors and perils? |
14988 | Whence modesty, continence, the horror of baseness, the desire of praise and renown? |
14988 | Whence proceeded that happy concourse of atoms which gave so sudden a rise to men in the form of Gods? |
14988 | Where hence betake me, or to whom resort?" |
14988 | Where is his abode? |
14988 | Where is his habitation? |
14988 | Where is the place where he is to be found? |
14988 | Where is to be the end of this trifling? |
14988 | Where now is your sagacity? |
14988 | Where shall I begin, then? |
14988 | Where, then, are they who say that anger has its use? |
14988 | Where, then, is it seated, you will say? |
14988 | Where, then, is the evil? |
14988 | Where, then, is this intellect seated, and of what character is it? |
14988 | Who else is to be tried? |
14988 | Who first made observations from the voice of the crow? |
14988 | Who has not heard how Demosthenes used to watch, who said that it gave him pain if any mechanic was up in a morning at his work before him? |
14988 | Who invented the Lots? |
14988 | Who is it saith this? |
14988 | Who is not compelled to admit the truth of what I assert by that agreeable, uniform, and continued agreement of things in the universe? |
14988 | Who is there who does not dread poverty? |
14988 | Who is there who is unacquainted with the customs of the Egyptians? |
14988 | Who is there, then, that does not lament the loss of his friends, principally from imagining them deprived of the conveniences of life? |
14988 | Who now believes in Hippocentaurs and Chimæras? |
14988 | Who on thy malice ever could refine? |
14988 | Who that thinks death an evil could approve of the evenness of temper in this great man at the instant of dying? |
14988 | Who, do you think, will admit that? |
14988 | Whom did the grandson of P. Crassus, that wise and eloquent and most distinguished man, resemble? |
14988 | Whom has it not attacked? |
14988 | Whose assistance, then, can be of more service to me than yours, when you have bestowed on us tranquillity of life, and removed the fear of death? |
14988 | Why can a vestal virgin become an heir, while her mother can not? |
14988 | Why did Cannæ deprive us of Paulus? |
14988 | Why did Hannibal kill Marcellus? |
14988 | Why did Maximus[279] lose his son, the consul? |
14988 | Why did Phidias include a likeness of himself in the shield of Minerva, when he was not allowed to inscribe his name on it? |
14988 | Why did that Marius live to an old age, and die so happily at his own house in his seventh consulship? |
14988 | Why do I mention poets? |
14988 | Why do the priests preside over the altars, and the augurs over the auspices? |
14988 | Why do they not admit the same estimate in life? |
14988 | Why do we frame ideas of men, countries, and cities which we never saw? |
14988 | Why do we image to ourselves such things as never had any existence, and which never can have, such as Scyllas and Chimæras? |
14988 | Why do you expect a proof from me, says Balbus, if you thoroughly believe it? |
14988 | Why do you faint, and yield to fortune, which, perhaps, may have power to harass and disturb you, but should not quite unman you? |
14988 | Why do you impose upon me, Zeno? |
14988 | Why else do you believe there is any? |
14988 | Why fire rather than air, of which the life of animals consists, and which is called from thence_ anima_,[248] the soul? |
14988 | Why had Marius, the most perfidious of men, the power to cause the death of Catulus, a man of the greatest dignity? |
14988 | Why is Rutilius, my uncle, a man of the greatest virtue and learning, now in banishment? |
14988 | Why is it that there is this sensible difference between a raw recruit and a veteran soldier? |
14988 | Why is not the superintendence of human affairs given to some of those idle Deities which you say are innumerable? |
14988 | Why need I mention Albutius? |
14988 | Why need I mention oxen? |
14988 | Why need I mention the exercises of the legions? |
14988 | Why should I say more? |
14988 | Why should you pity rather than assist, if it is in your power to do so? |
14988 | Why so? |
14988 | Why was Scævola, the high- priest, that pattern of moderation and prudence, massacred before the statue of Vesta? |
14988 | Why was my own friend and companion Drusus assassinated in his own house? |
14988 | Why was not Africanus protected from violence in his own house? |
14988 | Why was that inhuman wretch Cinna permitted to enjoy so long a reign? |
14988 | Why was the body of Regulus delivered up to the cruelty of the Carthaginians? |
14988 | Why, before that, were so many illustrious citizens put to death by Cinna? |
14988 | Why, then, are riches desired? |
14988 | Why, then, did others bear it afterward? |
14988 | Why, then, do you call in the assistance of anger? |
14988 | Why, then, may I not call him happy, nay, the happiest of men, who has attained them? |
14988 | Why, then, should Camillus be affected with the thoughts of these things happening three hundred and fifty years after his time? |
14988 | Why, then, should we not believe the world is a living and wise being, since it produces living and wise beings out of itself?" |
14988 | Why, therefore, as we are inferior in all other respects, should we be equal in form? |
14988 | Why, therefore, do you presume to assert that there are not only six hundred thousand worlds, but that they are innumerable? |
14988 | Why, therefore, should it not be considered troublesome also to the Deity? |
14988 | Why, therefore, was the Carthaginian in Spain suffered to destroy those best and bravest men, the two Scipios? |
14988 | Will not the temerity of P. Claudius, in the first Punic war, affect us? |
14988 | Will temperance permit you to do anything to excess? |
14988 | Will that suffer you to labor and take pains to no purpose? |
14988 | Will they not fight for their young ones till they are wounded? |
14988 | Will you act in a manner consistently with courage, and its attendants, greatness of soul, resolution, patience, and contempt for all worldly things? |
14988 | Will you allow of such a virtue as prudence, without which no virtue whatever can even be conceived? |
14988 | Will you condemn yourself, Thyestes, and deprive yourself of life, on account of the greatness of another''s crime? |
14988 | Will you not rather bear it with resolution and constancy? |
14988 | Will you say that it did not foresee it? |
14988 | Will you, notwithstanding that, persist in the defence of such an absurdity? |
14988 | Will you, then, invite Telamon to this kind of life to ease his grief? |
14988 | With baneful art his dire machine he shapes; From such a God what mortal e''er escapes? |
14988 | With regard to animals, do we not see how aptly they are formed for the propagation of their species? |
14988 | Would courage, unless it began to get furious, lose its energy? |
14988 | Yet what need has a being for the discernment of good and ill who neither has nor can have any ill? |
14988 | Yet, for all this, who is so mad as to doubt which of these two men he would rather be? |
14988 | You may ask, How the case is in peace? |
14988 | You may inquire, perhaps, how? |
14988 | You must necessarily confess, indeed, they have none; for what occasion is there for different names if their persons are alike? |
14988 | You say it is a great and difficult undertaking: who denies it? |
14988 | Your sect, Balbus, frequently ask us how the Gods live, and how they pass their time? |
14988 | [ 23] Can this change of abode appear otherwise than great to you? |
14988 | [ 24] What was it that Leonidas, their general, said to them? |
14988 | [ 258] But if you deify the rainbow, what regard will you pay to the clouds? |
14988 | [ 273] What are these frauds, tricks, and stratagems but the effects of reason? |
14988 | [ 31] Can we then, despise pain, when we see Hercules himself giving vent to his expressions of agony with such impatience? |
14988 | [ 53] Now, is not this inconstancy and mutability of mind enough to deter any one by its own deformity? |
14988 | [_ Scipio._ Ought not a farmer] to be acquainted with the nature of plants and seeds? |
14988 | _ A._ And who could not on such a subject? |
14988 | _ A._ By what means? |
14988 | _ A._ Do you take me to be so imbecile as to give credit to such things? |
14988 | _ A._ Hitherto you are on my side; I will see to that by- and- by; and, in the mean while, whence are those verses? |
14988 | _ A._ How can it, after what I now know? |
14988 | _ A._ How comes that to be so easy? |
14988 | _ A._ How so? |
14988 | _ A._ How so? |
14988 | _ A._ In what respect? |
14988 | _ A._ More prolix than was necessary? |
14988 | _ A._ What is it that you mean, for I do not exactly comprehend you? |
14988 | _ A._ What opinion? |
14988 | _ A._ What, then? |
14988 | _ A._ What, when in torments and on the rack? |
14988 | _ A._ What, will you leave me when you have raised my expectations so high? |
14988 | _ A._ What? |
14988 | _ A._ Why may I not? |
14988 | _ A._ Why, I beg? |
14988 | _ Lælius._ What examples do you mean? |
14988 | _ Lælius._ What senses do you mean? |
14988 | _ Lælius._ Wherefore Jupiter? |
14988 | _ Lælius._ You mean the model that would be approved by the truly accomplished politician? |
14988 | _ M._ And do you think a wise man subject to these? |
14988 | _ M._ But what is there of evil in that opinion? |
14988 | _ M._ Can you, then, help calling any one miserable who lives ill? |
14988 | _ M._ Do you ask how it can? |
14988 | _ M._ Do you imagine I am speaking of him as laid on roses and violets? |
14988 | _ M._ Do you not, then, perceive how great is the evil from which you have delivered human nature? |
14988 | _ M._ Do you perceive, then, how much of the terror of pain you have given up on a small hint? |
14988 | _ M._ Do you, then, expect that I am to give you a regular peroration, like the rhetoricians, or shall I forego that art? |
14988 | _ M._ How comes that? |
14988 | _ M._ In what respect? |
14988 | _ M._ It is a misery, then, because an evil? |
14988 | _ M._ Then all are miserable? |
14988 | _ M._ Then that boasted wisdom is but of small account, if it differs so little from madness? |
14988 | _ M._ Then those who have already died, and those who have still got to die, are both miserable? |
14988 | _ M._ Well, then, I appeal to you, if the arguments which prove that there is something divine in the souls of men are not equally strong? |
14988 | _ M._ What is it that you do say, then? |
14988 | _ M._ What occasion have you, then, for my assistance? |
14988 | _ M._ What, and to the other perturbations of mind, as fears, lusts, anger? |
14988 | _ M._ What, do you not believe them? |
14988 | _ M._ What, even greater than infamy? |
14988 | _ M._ What, if I should ask you a question, would you not answer? |
14988 | _ M._ What, more so than not to have existed at all? |
14988 | _ M._ What, then? |
14988 | _ M._ What, then? |
14988 | _ M._ What, to those who are already dead? |
14988 | _ M._ Where, then, are those you call miserable? |
14988 | _ M._ Which, then, shall we do? |
14988 | _ M._ You do not think, then, that a wise man is subject to grief? |
14988 | _ M._ You say, then, that they are so? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ But who was his predecessor? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ Do not you observe that it was the cruelty and pride of one single Tarquin only that made the title of king unpopular among the Romans? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ Do you think that knowledge only fit for a steward? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ How, then, can you doubt what opinion to form on the subject of the Commonwealth? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ Well, in your whole establishment, is there any other master but yourself? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ Well, then, does a mind thus governed and regulated meet your approbation? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ Well, then, what are four centuries in the age of a state or city? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ Well, then, when you are angry, do you permit your anger to triumph over your judgment? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ What do you at home? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ You desire, then, that all the faculties of the mind should submit to a ruling power, and that conscience should reign over them all? |
14988 | _ Scipio._ You grant, then, that a state which is entirely in the power of a faction can not justly be entitled a political community? |
14988 | and shall a philosopher, master of a much better art, seek to ascertain, not what is most true, but what will please the people? |
14988 | and shall custom have such great force, and reason none at all? |
14988 | and that all these things assume too melancholy or too cheerful an appearance through our own error? |
14988 | and that there is no evil that should be able to overwhelm you, or the suspicion of which should distract you? |
14988 | and what is there in this discussion which resembles that poem? |
14988 | and what, again, is that prodigious greatness which can give rise to impressions of so many things? |
14988 | and whom has it spared? |
14988 | can we imagine that Homer, or any other learned man, has ever been in want of pleasure and entertainment for his mind? |
14988 | did not the grief of Alcibiades proceed from the defects and evils of the mind? |
14988 | did you ever observe anything like the sun, the moon, or the five moving planets? |
14988 | do not even the Stoics, who maintain that all fools are mad, make the same inferences? |
14988 | do you deny that virtue can possibly be sufficient for a happy life? |
14988 | do you imagine Epicurus really meant this, and that he maintained anything so sensual? |
14988 | do you imagine that I am going to argue against Brutus? |
14988 | do you imagine that a happy life depends on that?" |
14988 | do you then call studies lust? |
14988 | does every commotion of the mind seem to you to be madness? |
14988 | for what is there agreeable in life, when we must night and day reflect that, at some time or other, we must die? |
14988 | for what seed could there be of injustice, intemperance, and cowardice, if reason were not laid as the foundation of these vices? |
14988 | for who is so weak as to be concerned about them? |
14988 | has there not been enough said on bearing poverty? |
14988 | have I misrepresented him? |
14988 | have you ever seen the Deity himself? |
14988 | how eternal? |
14988 | in wonder at whom men exclaimed thus: Is this the man surpassing glory raised? |
14988 | is it a long time? |
14988 | is lust excited? |
14988 | is not virtue sufficient to enable us to live as we ought, honestly, commendably, or, in fine, to live well? |
14988 | is the contention about the Punic war? |
14988 | is there no other way you can know it by?" |
14988 | oblige it to converse with itself, and, as far as possible, break off its acquaintance with the body? |
14988 | of what use is understanding? |
14988 | or Philoctetes? |
14988 | or advise him to listen to the music of a water organ rather than to Plato? |
14988 | or because the body will admit of a cure, while there is no medicine whatever for the mind? |
14988 | or can a man who is occupied by anger avoid being angry? |
14988 | or can one who is exposed to any vexation escape being vexed? |
14988 | or glorious who is aware of the insignificance of the size of the earth, even in its whole extent, and especially in the portion which men inhabit? |
14988 | or he who collected the dispersed inhabitants of the world, and united them in the bonds of social life? |
14988 | or he who confined the sounds of the voice, which used to seem infinite, to the marks of a few letters? |
14988 | or he who first observed the courses of the planets, their progressive motions, their laws? |
14988 | or how is it, if anger is natural, that one person is more inclined to anger than another? |
14988 | or how long will he be Hector? |
14988 | or if he is under the influence of fear, must he not be fearful? |
14988 | or is it because the disorders of the mind are less dangerous than those of the body? |
14988 | or is it no vice to disobey reason? |
14988 | or is it possible for any other member of the body, when swollen or enlarged, to be in any other than a disordered state? |
14988 | or on that of providing counsels for the future, as you, who, by dispelling two mighty perils from our city, have provided for its safety forever? |
14988 | or shall I make use of my oars, as if I were just endeavoring to get clear of the harbor? |
14988 | or that any one should repent of what he had done in a passion? |
14988 | or that the lust of revenge should cease before it has revenged itself? |
14988 | or that there are innumerable worlds, some rising and some perishing, in every moment of time? |
14988 | or to those who must die? |
14988 | or what divine form can be attributed to it? |
14988 | or what length of days can be imagined which would be preferable to such a night? |
14988 | or what place do they inhabit? |
14988 | or what trouble is it to refute these monstrous inventions of the poets and painters? |
14988 | or why do we glory in its name? |
14988 | or will you deny that any one who you allow lives well must inevitably live happily? |
14988 | or, rather, whom has it not wounded? |
14988 | said Lælius; or what was the discussion we broke in upon? |
14988 | said he,"did you not perceive by our slight repast of yesterday that I had no occasion for money?" |
14988 | saith he;"do you think the night can furnish no pleasure?" |
14988 | should an affair of such importance be left to the decision of fools, who, by your sect especially, are called madmen? |
14988 | should we be under any difficulty? |
14988 | that where the praise of riding and hunting is highly esteemed, they who practice these arts decline no pain? |
14988 | though he should be deprived of the senses of seeing and hearing? |
14988 | to ease his grief, must we mix him a cup of sweet wine, or something of that kind? |
14988 | to the birds and beasts?" |
14988 | was not Aristides( I had rather instance in the Greeks than ourselves) banished his country for being eminently just? |
14988 | what gain is it to die? |
14988 | what had not only I myself, but the whole life of man, been without you? |
14988 | what is its force? |
14988 | what its nature? |
14988 | when I write out my speeches after all is over and past, am I then angry while writing? |
14988 | where is your own, and what is its character? |
14988 | which can recollect the past, foresee the future, and comprehend the present? |
14988 | who can admire them? |
14988 | who can think they merit a religious adoration? |
14988 | who ever disgraced himself either in the actual combat, or even when about to die? |
14988 | who ever turned pale? |
14988 | who that had been defeated ever drew in his neck to avoid the stroke of death? |
14988 | why do n''t you rather take a view of the magnificent temples among which you have arrived? |
14988 | why eternal? |
38177 | ''Oo''s she to look after, eh? |
38177 | ''Tis a Welch main? |
38177 | ''Twould be about this very forenoon that you are talking, ma''am? |
38177 | A Lachrymatory perhaps? 38177 A Papist, eh?" |
38177 | A bed, your honour? 38177 A bed?" |
38177 | A pinch of snuff, George? |
38177 | Afraid, dear heart, afraid? |
38177 | Ai n''t your beds aired, landlord? 38177 Alone?" |
38177 | Always? |
38177 | Amor? 38177 Amor? |
38177 | Amor? |
38177 | An ace of hearts? |
38177 | And Miss Courteen? |
38177 | And Mrs. Lovely? 38177 And a pretty neck, eh?" |
38177 | And a vase of daffodils by her mirrour? |
38177 | And for the sake of a hundred guineas he was ready to cheapen the honour of a maid? |
38177 | And happy? |
38177 | And heard nothing? |
38177 | And how should I know, Sukey, how should I know? |
38177 | And if he should fail? |
38177 | And my nephew, ma''am, what does Curtain Wells think of my nephew? |
38177 | And no message? |
38177 | And nothing afterwards? |
38177 | And nothing else? |
38177 | And now he is paid? |
38177 | And now let us gossip of thy wedding,said Mrs. Tabrum in a cosy tone of voice,"or would''ee rather go to thy chamber, pretty miss?" |
38177 | And pray how do you propose to make her accompany you? |
38177 | And say when you come to her and have sent that wagabone packing off to his Lunnon, say the linnets are piping away down in Hampshire, will''ee? |
38177 | And that is your life? |
38177 | And the curtains pinned together? |
38177 | And the horses? |
38177 | And the logs burning brightly? |
38177 | And what if she wishes to stay with me? |
38177 | And what the d----l does it matter whether the ships sail in February or March? |
38177 | And what was the loquacious gentleman''s name? |
38177 | And what will my Amor be doing? |
38177 | And what will your good lady take? |
38177 | And who, may I ask, was the author of those graceful stanzas? |
38177 | And why not, i''faith? |
38177 | And will she turn back? 38177 And you have ridden in pursuit? |
38177 | And you propose to join the merrymaking? |
38177 | And you''d do a great deal for a shilling- piece? |
38177 | And you''ll be married soon? |
38177 | And you, sir? |
38177 | Any name, your honour? |
38177 | Are n''t you coming too, mamma? |
38177 | Are you better of your cold? |
38177 | Are you happy, my dearest? |
38177 | Are you making a sojourn here, Sir? |
38177 | Betty, Mr. Amor kissed me this evening, and what should I do? |
38177 | Business? |
38177 | Business? |
38177 | But if I told I was in mind to we d my Venus? |
38177 | But if you have never made the attempt? |
38177 | But in time? |
38177 | But masked as I am? |
38177 | But supposing you ran away? |
38177 | But what if you''re shot, Sir? |
38177 | But what the d----l does it matter which day they are held? |
38177 | But what was inside, foolish one? |
38177 | But who would write such cruel words of a young woman? |
38177 | But why will you repulse me? 38177 But why wo n''t you make sure in advance?" |
38177 | But why, mamma, do you suddenly drive to Melton Abbey? |
38177 | But you are not a man of intrigue? |
38177 | But your mother? |
38177 | By what right? |
38177 | Ca n''t you? |
38177 | Chaps your ankles, miss? 38177 Charles crowding all canvas after a petticoat?" |
38177 | Charles is not jigging with old Butterbun, is he? |
38177 | Come, Mr. Virgin, you''ll open to me, Charles Lovely? |
38177 | Come, Sirrah, will you meet me? 38177 D''ye know who the lady was?" |
38177 | Dick who? |
38177 | Did he? |
38177 | Did she speak of me before she died? |
38177 | Did she weep, boy? |
38177 | Did you hear anything more of the Valentine? |
38177 | Did you recognize the voices? |
38177 | Do n''t you think it is somewhat unwise to travel alone, especially as your postillions do not seem a very trusty pair? |
38177 | Do they, indeed, sir? |
38177 | Do you always propose yourself in that precipitous manner? |
38177 | Do you imagine, madam, that I am going to tire a good- hearted horse for the sake of allowing you to bask in the flattery of your friends? 38177 Do you know the, Maze? |
38177 | Do you think he will be a very long time? |
38177 | Does Mr. Maggs live here? |
38177 | Does he paint landskips as an Amateur? |
38177 | Does it take an hour and a half to direct a man out of a shrubbery? |
38177 | Does my hoop sit straight? 38177 Does she carry a white swansdown muff?" |
38177 | Egad, Vernon would you take it unkind if I rang for a tankard of ale? 38177 Eh, indeed,"said Charles,"and who is the shepherd?" |
38177 | Eh? 38177 Eh?" |
38177 | Faith, is that so? |
38177 | For one night? |
38177 | For what other reason should I show it to you? |
38177 | For what? |
38177 | For whom else? |
38177 | Give what? |
38177 | Going to we d a Puritan, eh? |
38177 | Gone where? |
38177 | Good G----, sir, are you mad? |
38177 | Hand what over? |
38177 | Has he? |
38177 | Has the Beau appeared yet? |
38177 | Have I, Betty, have I? |
38177 | Have you a bed? |
38177 | Have you seen a post- chariot? |
38177 | He said''have I repeated it?'' 38177 Heh?" |
38177 | His maiden- aunt in short? |
38177 | Horse ai n''t hurt? |
38177 | How are you, Sir Jermy Dummer, Sir? 38177 How can you have the heart to persist when you know....""The heart, madam?" |
38177 | How did you discover me? |
38177 | How long ago? |
38177 | How long will it take to mend the damage to my chaise? |
38177 | How many sold, these three months? |
38177 | How now, Charles, have you been smuggling rare spirits in the cloister? |
38177 | How''s business, ma''am? |
38177 | How''s the gout, George? 38177 However,"said Charles,"I take it the taste is not an extended one?" |
38177 | Humour,said the Justice,"you call this obscene doggerel, humour?" |
38177 | I could not find Miss Courteen,said the Beau,"have you had better luck?" |
38177 | I have not the slightest intention of doing anything so insane,quavered the ancient soldier,"ca n''t you see that I dropped''em by accident?" |
38177 | I know that, simpleton, how much? |
38177 | I know, I know, but z----ds''You would n''t have me fail Dicky Claribut? |
38177 | I suppose you find the difference in temperature sufficient variety? |
38177 | I take it, then, you are not prepared to offer a sum of money on account of a new volume? |
38177 | I wrote this damnable doggerel? 38177 I''ve brought over a party with me, farmer?" |
38177 | In the back parlour, I presume? |
38177 | Indeed,said Sir George Repington, on whose mind a new prospect was breaking,"and how do you pass your time during the intervening months?" |
38177 | Indeed? |
38177 | Indeed? |
38177 | Is Kensington dull? |
38177 | Is Mary Maria watching the fowls? |
38177 | Is Moll here? |
38177 | Is it? 38177 Is that Miss Phyllida Courteen?" |
38177 | Is that Sir Moffyn Bunbutter''s lady? |
38177 | Is that a date in youth''s short calendar that breeds a specially sensitive disposition of mind? |
38177 | Is that you, Pridgeon? |
38177 | Is this true? |
38177 | Is your mistress within? |
38177 | Is your name George, boy? |
38177 | Madam, is that surprizing, when Miss Morton inclines so much to scarlet? |
38177 | Maids, do''ee hear that? 38177 Many Valentines?" |
38177 | May I beg the favour of your name, Sir? 38177 Might I,"says he,"without impertinence inquire your necessity?" |
38177 | Misery, my beloved? 38177 Miss Courteen?" |
38177 | Mr. Clare about? |
38177 | Mr. Mayor, my lords, and gentlemen, may I say citizens? 38177 Murdered him?" |
38177 | My fault? |
38177 | No business of mine? 38177 No longer with Farmer Hogbin?" |
38177 | No,said Charles,"is it on the London Road?" |
38177 | No,said Charles,"you would n''t like that?" |
38177 | No? |
38177 | Nobody in the garden this morning? |
38177 | Not a lady, I presume? |
38177 | Not even when we are we d? |
38177 | Not young Charles Lovely? |
38177 | Now I wager you ai n''t thought nothin''about postillions? |
38177 | Now what the deuce can be the meaning of that? |
38177 | Now? |
38177 | Odds my life, Tom, why wo n''t you tread a minuet with a handsome young woman? |
38177 | Oddslife, Charles,said Mr. Chalkley,"where have been your eyes these past six weeks to have so lately discovered the fair Courteen?" |
38177 | Oddslife,thought Charles,"was ever Society so corrupt, so insincere, so entirely damnable?" |
38177 | Of what you were saying? |
38177 | Oh, my dear, harm? 38177 On Monday night?" |
38177 | On my good behaviour? |
38177 | Or drunk? |
38177 | Or laugh-- before she died? 38177 Or picket?" |
38177 | Poems? |
38177 | Possibly,he went on,"you would let me kiss those sweet lips to a smile-- if we were not observed?" |
38177 | Pray, sir, are you trying to humour a madman? 38177 Proof, eh? |
38177 | Refuse him what? |
38177 | Ripple? |
38177 | Rules? 38177 Seen Mr. Clare lately?" |
38177 | Shall I give you your revenge? |
38177 | Shall damask flowers lose their beauty, shall silver lace be tarnished and broideries lack lustre because Ripple has commanded the impossible? 38177 Shall we catch them, Tony?" |
38177 | Shall we make such an impressive entrance, d''ye think? |
38177 | Shall we say Wednesday night, Sir? |
38177 | Sir George Repington? |
38177 | So oaths depend on age for their propriety? 38177 So, sir, your late phrenzy was nothing more than the unbridled haste and inconsiderate volition of youthful folly?" |
38177 | Squall coming? |
38177 | Sure, you are n''t abroad on a love- affair, too, William? |
38177 | Surely my angel sees the circumstances are slightly altered? |
38177 | Take it for a sign, will''ee? |
38177 | Take you away? 38177 Talking of kill or cure,"exclaimed the Major, jumping up,"did I ever repeat my tale of the Hessian captain?" |
38177 | That''s all very fine, Mr. Lovely, but what about my bill? |
38177 | That''s the man whose letters made her cry? |
38177 | The Major? 38177 The Maze?" |
38177 | The cards? |
38177 | The little Major? |
38177 | Then how do you----? |
38177 | Then truly, dear Betty, you swear you think there is no harm in what I have done? |
38177 | Then what do you advise me to do? |
38177 | Then what is your life? 38177 Then what should we do?" |
38177 | Then why continue to play? |
38177 | Then you are a poet? |
38177 | Then you are alone in this inn? |
38177 | Then you''ll present me? |
38177 | They''m beänt gone sick mad for love of''ee, do''ee think, Ma''am? |
38177 | Thomas,said Miss Courteen in her most engaging voice,"you would do anything for me?" |
38177 | To myself? |
38177 | To the river? 38177 Tony, you''ll act for me?" |
38177 | Too brutal for a poet, eh? |
38177 | Very proper,he said,"and what about my poems?" |
38177 | Very well,said Vernon,"whom do you want me to employ?" |
38177 | Vill you stay to see the sport? |
38177 | Violent, you dog? 38177 Was it an Urn?" |
38177 | We are quite alone? |
38177 | Well, Charles, and is n''t silk a more durable excrement than most? 38177 Well, little Impropriety, what excuse have you to hand?" |
38177 | Well, sir, what the deuce are you grumbling at? |
38177 | What Jebusite wrote this book? 38177 What about the duck?" |
38177 | What are those? |
38177 | What are us to hark to, pretty pink? |
38177 | What became of him? |
38177 | What birds are being set to? |
38177 | What book? |
38177 | What book? |
38177 | What d''ye mean? |
38177 | What did you say? |
38177 | What did you see? |
38177 | What do you mean, sir? |
38177 | What do you mean? |
38177 | What duck? 38177 What has your honour been doing to enrage Mr. Ripple? |
38177 | What in the name of-- what''s the matter? |
38177 | What is strange? |
38177 | What is the first thing to be done? |
38177 | What is to become of Miss Courteen? |
38177 | What lines? |
38177 | What patches, ma''am? |
38177 | What proof have you of this? |
38177 | What right had I to interfere between lovers? |
38177 | What scents, mamma? |
38177 | What shall it be, Mr. Vernon? 38177 What shall we do with the carriage?" |
38177 | What shall we do? |
38177 | What the d----l do you mean, sir? |
38177 | What the d----l''s this? |
38177 | What the deuce is this seditious gathering? |
38177 | What the plague made you do that? |
38177 | What were''ee best to do? 38177 What would that be?" |
38177 | What would you gain by such an impulse of folly? |
38177 | What''s a fellow to do? |
38177 | What''s his charmer''s name? |
38177 | What''s that? |
38177 | What''s the matter? |
38177 | What''s to be done? |
38177 | When do you want her? |
38177 | Where are we going? |
38177 | Where are your pearls kept? |
38177 | Where can they be? |
38177 | Where''s Charles? |
38177 | Where''s Lovely? |
38177 | Which way, which way, sirrah? |
38177 | Which way? |
38177 | Who be caaling? |
38177 | Who was your late Vis à Vis? |
38177 | Who will help us with our boots? |
38177 | Who wrote them? |
38177 | Who wrote them? |
38177 | Who wrote those lines? 38177 Who''d have thought of seeing poor old Sir Moffyn''s lady here of all places?" |
38177 | Who''s flippant-- who''s intol-- erol-- erable, sir? 38177 Who''s he?" |
38177 | Who? |
38177 | Whoever heard tell of such a thing in the milk before? |
38177 | Why Lovely, man, do n''t you know me? 38177 Why did you let me travel alone? |
38177 | Why do n''t you make Blewforth dance with the hussy? |
38177 | Why do you love me? |
38177 | Why fall in love? 38177 Why not now?" |
38177 | Why was my charmer absent yesterday? 38177 Why was n''t he admitted, too?" |
38177 | Why who wrote this? |
38177 | Why will you shake your muff so vehemently? |
38177 | Why, Betty, why? |
38177 | Why, do''ee think I''m gone daft to forget suchlike? |
38177 | Why, sir,called out Charles,"what have you been about? |
38177 | Why, who else could have written it? |
38177 | Why, you be all in top- boots? |
38177 | Wi''candlelight and the cracking of logs and green bayleaves in the presses? |
38177 | Wi''rosy curtains drawn close? |
38177 | Will your bird win? |
38177 | Will your mistress receive us in the front parlour or the back parlour this morning? |
38177 | William, would it have been your life if things had been different on that April morning? 38177 William,"persisted the other,"did I ever mention Thistlegrove Cottage to you?" |
38177 | With the old rhyme-- till Christmas-- you remember? |
38177 | With what viper in sheep''s clothing? |
38177 | Would it be stealing you mean, ma''am? |
38177 | Yes, but where is Kensington? |
38177 | Yes, my good fellow, have you seen him? |
38177 | You are a poet, Sir? |
38177 | You are feeling faint? |
38177 | You are fond of dancing, madam? |
38177 | You are making a long stay here? |
38177 | You are not in earnest, Charles? |
38177 | You are not sad? |
38177 | You are sure he is quite dead? |
38177 | You are sure the candles are lighted, Polly? |
38177 | You did not interfere? |
38177 | You have travelled? |
38177 | You know him? |
38177 | You lack energy? |
38177 | You longed for me? |
38177 | You loved her? |
38177 | You observe, Madam, the resemblance to yourself? |
38177 | You owed him money, in fact? |
38177 | You remember the young woman by whom I was seated? |
38177 | You saw nothing? |
38177 | You will protect my watchmen? |
38177 | You wo n''t betray your Phyllida? |
38177 | You wo n''t betray your Phyllida? |
38177 | You would not withdraw your hand if you were sure we were not observed? |
38177 | You wrote it? |
38177 | You''d publish it? |
38177 | You''ll never not love me, Amor? |
38177 | You''ll pardon my ignorance, Mr. Lovely, but of what does the entertainment before us consist? |
38177 | You''ll play, Tony? |
38177 | You''re not frightened of the Maze? |
38177 | You''ve no brother and your father is dead? |
38177 | Your muse? |
38177 | Your pearls? |
38177 | Your toe? |
38177 | Your what, sir? |
38177 | _ You_ wrote it? 38177 ''Ah,''said I,''what indeed?'' 38177 ''Ow many? |
38177 | ''Tis I, Vernon, what the plague do you mean by so much impertinence? |
38177 | After all, where''s the ultimate difference between sweet sensibility a hundred and fifty years ago and sweet sensibility today? |
38177 | Ai n''t they made yet?" |
38177 | Am I to blame? |
38177 | Amor? |
38177 | Amor? |
38177 | Amor?" |
38177 | And have you got any good from learning the collects for Sunday and the Benedicite and the Athanasian Creed and the thirty- nine Articles? |
38177 | And this Lovely? |
38177 | And this sub- conscious self, what is it, under analysis? |
38177 | And what had upset his equanimity? |
38177 | And where''s the bridegroom?" |
38177 | And why should I delay you with the narrative of the attempt to open her mother''s jewel- case with a bodkin and a silver paper- knife? |
38177 | And yet, to be honest with himself, was not he behaving in much the same way as the despised Wully Pearce? |
38177 | Are they-- are they in the-- er-- taproom?" |
38177 | Besides, what good had he done? |
38177 | But I''ve found, I''ve found the author, and I''ll walk with him in Curtain Mead-- in Curtain Mead by moonlight, eh? |
38177 | But perhaps you''ll forget that long message?" |
38177 | But why? |
38177 | By the way, do you know a Miss Phyllida Courteen? |
38177 | By the way, who was the author of those graceful stanzas?" |
38177 | Ca n''t you see his intention?" |
38177 | Can you see? |
38177 | Chalkley?" |
38177 | Civick Unity, Health, and Society-- could any other personifications so justly convey the essential quality of Curtain Wells? |
38177 | Clare?" |
38177 | Come, what do you say? |
38177 | Could anything be more enchanting than the warning fore- finger, save the lips to which it was lifted? |
38177 | Could anything better console his enforced silence than the knowledge that between him and her existed a secret? |
38177 | Could he have made a worthier end? |
38177 | Could that chatter of Blewforth''s have gone deeper than he thought? |
38177 | Courteen?" |
38177 | Courteen?" |
38177 | Courteen?" |
38177 | Did I not promise you some pretty heroicks a score of pages back? |
38177 | Did she send you too?" |
38177 | Do n''t I keep a maid to look after her? |
38177 | Do n''t you think April once broke as sweet for her?" |
38177 | Do n''t you think that shaded lane once lisped to her footsteps? |
38177 | Do you know that my house is full of legal cases?" |
38177 | Do you wonder at the early hour of rising when you know that his decree was responsible for the united achievement? |
38177 | Ecarté?" |
38177 | Eh, boys? |
38177 | Everything was perfectly familiar, perfectly ordinary and perfectly safe; yet something in the room was strange, or was it herself who was altered? |
38177 | Gadslife, do you suppose that my subjects care a jot about your schemes, if their own bodies are uncomfortable? |
38177 | Good birds?" |
38177 | Has he tried other remedies? |
38177 | Have I not repeated to her the history of half a score seductions? |
38177 | Have I not warned her a hundred times that gentlemen do not love the gawky charms of a hoyden? |
38177 | Have you got a pair of good honest postboys?" |
38177 | Have you met a goddess?" |
38177 | Heu quove color? |
38177 | His face clears again and he asks,"You wish it delivered?" |
38177 | How am I to know you have not been sitting in this heathen nook for days in succession?" |
38177 | How can you be so irreverend, Phyllida?" |
38177 | How did he spend his time in bed? |
38177 | How do you pass your time?" |
38177 | However, they tell me that Gothick will soon be à la Mode, and who am I to dispute the commands of fashion?" |
38177 | I ask you, Mr. Ripple, what else?" |
38177 | I dare swear he patted your hands, eh? |
38177 | I hope you sent him about his business?" |
38177 | I myself-- but why should I fatigue you with personal anecdotes?" |
38177 | I suppose you''ve come for the Main?" |
38177 | I''m in a devilish mess and need the advice of a man who has seen-- who has seen----""Well, sir?" |
38177 | If I promise never, never again to cause you the slightest uneasiness, will you forgive me for once, and take me away from this odious town?" |
38177 | If I told you that to- morrow morning I was going to run away with Mr. Amor to Gretna Green, what would you say?" |
38177 | If weddings were not moral, what would become of our weak humanity? |
38177 | In those days he was a younger, shall I add, a more foolish man? |
38177 | Is he dead? |
38177 | Is her chamber ready?" |
38177 | Is it by his wish these meetings are kept secret? |
38177 | Is it not well that we have banished her from society? |
38177 | Is it wonderful that Mr. Ripple cried,"Good G----, sir, are you mad?" |
38177 | Is n''t that so? |
38177 | Lovely?" |
38177 | May we not regard this relick as the tears of Æsculapius? |
38177 | Moon? |
38177 | Mr. Lovely, sir, I''ll trouble you to say if this is your planting or did you wish to insinuate that your bed was not made this morning?" |
38177 | My Phyllida, will you come?" |
38177 | Never?" |
38177 | Now come, you''ll present me to this Mr. Amor? |
38177 | Of course a moneylender was different, but what security could he offer? |
38177 | Or a Lunette? |
38177 | Or does he-- when he is not quite a gentleman? |
38177 | Or,"Mr. Ripple grew breathless with excitement,"not an Image of Æsculapius?" |
38177 | Phyllida, how dare you accuse me of selfishness? |
38177 | Pray, what is your business, sir?" |
38177 | Religion, what is it?" |
38177 | Ripple?" |
38177 | Rules? |
38177 | Shall we say the last week in March?" |
38177 | Shall we set out at once, Tony?" |
38177 | Shall we sit for a while in an alcove, or shall we saunter in Curtain Garden?" |
38177 | She swears I''m but a child, but I''m not a child, am I, sir?" |
38177 | Should he try Chalybeate? |
38177 | Should he try Chalybeate? |
38177 | Should he try Chalybeate? |
38177 | Snuff, sir?" |
38177 | Sometimes he would murmur"When will my charmer be there?" |
38177 | Take you away, miss? |
38177 | Then is great Anna really dead?" |
38177 | Then you are her lover-- eh? |
38177 | There was Signor Amoroso, d''ye know him? |
38177 | They talked of play; but was it high enough to make their fellowship worth joining? |
38177 | To be sure there remained wine, but whoever heard of a man''s will exercised by wine? |
38177 | To be sure, his gout is as virulent as ever, but has he despaired? |
38177 | Twice he counted twenty slowly, and"Vill any vun take it?" |
38177 | Was he in love? |
38177 | Was he, in fact, already divesting himself of all passionate reality? |
38177 | Was it fancy or did Charles really see his mentor blow a tuft of swansdown from his cuff? |
38177 | Was it merely a sense of eccentricity that made the host fancy he detected a note of condescension in their loud and jovial greeting to himself? |
38177 | Was not his chief objection to Vernon based on the latter''s reputation as a man of intrigue? |
38177 | Was she out of harmony with this palace of amber morning dreams, this treasure- box of twilight hopes and imaginations? |
38177 | Were you shocked to see me trying to kiss a saucy school- minx, eh? |
38177 | What caused a further delay? |
38177 | What could be the matter with him? |
38177 | What could she do but murmur assent? |
38177 | What d''ye mean by chaps your ankles? |
38177 | What do you propose to do?" |
38177 | What do you say?" |
38177 | What duck?" |
38177 | What else has that hussy to do? |
38177 | What had upset his equanimity? |
38177 | What is one to do?" |
38177 | What mattered the censorious world? |
38177 | What right have you to interfere?" |
38177 | What was Vernon about meanwhile? |
38177 | What''s o''clock?" |
38177 | What''s the good of rules? |
38177 | What?" |
38177 | When?" |
38177 | Where could he have seen them? |
38177 | Where could he raise that two hundred pounds he owed Vernon? |
38177 | Where have you been?" |
38177 | Where is Hyde Park?" |
38177 | Where is Phyllida?" |
38177 | Which way did Mr. Ripple''s chaise go?" |
38177 | Who is he?" |
38177 | Who is her Vis à Vis?" |
38177 | Who knows? |
38177 | Who was the witch? |
38177 | Who was this woman, this correspondent with monarchs? |
38177 | Who wrote them, who wrote them?" |
38177 | Why did Mr. Daish hurriedly wave back the white- capped cook bearing the first tureen? |
38177 | Why die in a consumption? |
38177 | Why do you ask?" |
38177 | Why do you love me?" |
38177 | Why had he not accompanied her? |
38177 | Why live this life of ours at all? |
38177 | Why should he not forget him, taking for his own that fortunate pseudonym which had set him as high as the angels? |
38177 | Why should we? |
38177 | Why we d a mountain, however rich in pasture when you can we d a mountain- nymph?" |
38177 | Why were you willing to sit in this dark corner, unless for the charms of love?" |
38177 | Why would you fall in love? |
38177 | Why, what harm could there be with your great fat Betty to watch and guard''ee?" |
38177 | Will you take a harm, Sir Jermy?" |
38177 | Would he fight? |
38177 | Would you have the courage to slip out, my dearest heart, my Phyllida?" |
38177 | Yet her long black gloves and white face haunted many pillows on the night when she paid the ultimate penalty; and for what was she hanged? |
38177 | Yet was not this power of taking so much for granted, this passive acceptance of change and decline, a surrender of his youth? |
38177 | Yet why not? |
38177 | You doubt anybody can be a Burgundian hero? |
38177 | You love him, eh?" |
38177 | You thought that he was going to turn out poor humanity after bullying Mr. Virgin so heroically? |
38177 | You will attend the Publick Breakfast awarded to Sir Jeremy Dummer?" |
38177 | You''ll come Charles?" |
38177 | You''ll join us, Sir?" |
38177 | Your name, sir?" |
38177 | Your seduced( or was it seducted, or abduced, or abducted?) |
38177 | _ Chapter the Thirty- fifth_ THE CUTTING OF A DIAMOND"And what is your life, William?" |
38177 | _ Quo fugit Venus? |
38177 | and why, may I inquire, are you abroad on such an unpleasant night?" |
38177 | called you his pretty dear, made old man''s love, eh? |
38177 | d''ye know her? |
38177 | decens__ Quo motus?_ or to paraphrase with an extempore couplet,_ Where now is fled thy beauty? |
38177 | decens__ Quo motus?_ or to paraphrase with an extempore couplet,_ Where now is fled thy beauty? |
38177 | have you been languishing under the sky? |
38177 | here it is-- it was Miss----""Courteen?" |
38177 | how did you guess?" |
38177 | how shall I look the world in the face?" |
38177 | inquired Charles, somewhat too suddenly,"is his name Amor?" |
38177 | is that so? |
38177 | leave us, sirrah,"and"What do you want?" |
38177 | ma''am, has not the Law an equal fascination? |
38177 | ma''am, what is it?" |
38177 | my maids, ye''ll get thy twinkling toes rarely trod on, or shall I lend''em my slippers to each in turn?" |
38177 | pray tell me-- was it to''white''?" |
38177 | said Miss Morton very innocently,"why what would he do that for?" |
38177 | said Mr. Ripple,"a dead man?" |
38177 | said Mrs. Courteen,"and where does he lodge?" |
38177 | snapped the Major,"who is gone?" |
38177 | that pleases you, eh?" |
38177 | the old man muttered to himself,"and why do I tell you this?" |
38177 | there''s a good inn called_ The Basket of Roses_ about twenty five miles away, dy''e know it?" |
38177 | was ever such a mad errand before?" |
38177 | what good is it to educate a young woman in the way she should go? |
38177 | what''s romantick? |
38177 | you love me? |
38177 | you remember our only interview?" |
38177 | your honour, if ever in this sweet Springtime you loved my dear one, will''ee follow her now and bring her back to me?" |
47242 | ''And how was that?'' |
47242 | ''But is he in any danger of losing it?'' |
47242 | ''Did the vulture fly East or West?'' |
47242 | ''Finally, Proteus arrives in Greece; and what does he do there? |
47242 | ''Hermotimus? |
47242 | ''How so?'' |
47242 | ''Just a stroll?'' |
47242 | ''Pindar once found himself in a similar difficulty with an over- abundant theme: Ismenus? |
47242 | ''Proteus,''he cried,''Proteus vain- glorious? |
47242 | ''Twas in the crater that Empedocles sought death?'' |
47242 | ''Twas the thunderbolt, methinks, that slew Asclepius, Dionysus[5]? |
47242 | ''What is that? |
47242 | ''Who trades in his own wife''s favours?'' |
47242 | ''Will we have a fine day?'' |
47242 | ''Yes, what am I to look you at?'' |
47242 | --''But how,''I asked,''and why?'' |
47242 | Adimantus__ Ly._ Said I not well? |
47242 | Again I ask: do you want your sons to conceive an ambition of this sort? |
47242 | Again, when people use edible things not for food but to get dye out of-- the murex- dyers, for instance-- are they not abusing God''s gifts? |
47242 | Ah, Polemon, so you are back at last; are you well? |
47242 | All that is another''s is mine: for can I not open his doors, put his guards to sleep, and walk in unperceived? |
47242 | Am I mad, that I should forget Myrtium, so soon to become the mother of my child? |
47242 | Am I meaner than Xerxes? |
47242 | And as to''set''and''sit,''surely it is the whole difference between transitive and intransitive? |
47242 | And did n''t I put down a solid drachma for you at the feet of Aphrodite''s statue, when it was her feast the other day? |
47242 | And how is your cupbearer going to hand you a thing of that weight, when he has filled it? |
47242 | And how will you like taking it from him? |
47242 | And if Gods are patriotic, shall not men be more so? |
47242 | And if that were all!--but to- day is harvest festival; and where is his present? |
47242 | And it was she made you cry like that, was it? |
47242 | And no wonder; where else could one find such clear sparkling water? |
47242 | And now that you feel sure of me, and know how I dote on you, what is the consequence? |
47242 | And surely it is a very humiliating circumstance that you should be apt to fall ill, just like ordinary people? |
47242 | And what eye would not delight to feed on joys so varied? |
47242 | And what have they been doing to you exactly? |
47242 | And what is the great river that flows so close beneath the walls? |
47242 | And where do I come in? |
47242 | And who are the men, pray, who hold such language? |
47242 | And will the piebald bull yonder[25], from Memphis, explain what use_ he_ has for a temple, an oracle, or a priest? |
47242 | Antipater__ Ar._ Is it well with you, Antipater? |
47242 | Aristaenetus told him he was quite right to come; would he take a chair and sit behind Histiaeus and Dionysodorus? |
47242 | As far as I remember, he said-- but who comes here in such haste? |
47242 | But how died he? |
47242 | But it ca n''t have been a trifle that drove him away: what was it all about? |
47242 | But leaving them out of the case, do you consider that you have good security for the continuance of your health? |
47242 | But perhaps your case is a very different one; is the light so bright that you can not manage to fix your eyes on the dazzling glory of Demosthenes? |
47242 | But there was Antiphon-- son to Menecrates-- and a whole mina; why not him? |
47242 | But what may it be?'' |
47242 | But what point is there in Proteus''s throwing himself into the fire? |
47242 | But what recked Hyperides? |
47242 | But what was the inducement in the present case? |
47242 | But when did you make this discovery? |
47242 | But who are these men? |
47242 | But your father is not dead? |
47242 | But, O King, how had you been the better off, if he had come alive? |
47242 | But_ I_ can not think what he_ finds_ in her; where are his eyes? |
47242 | Cadmus? |
47242 | Can Bacis turn an oracle too, as well as the Sibyl? |
47242 | Choose-- a mighty champion, and loathed, or a confessed liar, and-- Hymnis? |
47242 | Could any contrast be greater than that presented by their words and their deeds? |
47242 | Could there be a more timely warning, balanced as it is by the prospect of abundance held out to him that follows the true method of agriculture? |
47242 | Dazzled by gold and costly gems, how should the beholder do justice to the charms of a clear complexion, to neck, and eye, and arm, and finger? |
47242 | Did I ever displease you? |
47242 | Did they tell you how he brought them here, and all their adventures? |
47242 | Did you ever notice his teeth? |
47242 | Did you ever, among all the nations you passed in your flight, meet with a similar case of mental aberration? |
47242 | Did you get that hay- cock? |
47242 | Do I not live for you alone? |
47242 | Do n''t you know? |
47242 | Do you expect to be eighteen all your life, Musarium? |
47242 | Do you suppose he could not get sheets and shoes, and therefore went as he did? |
47242 | Do you suppose if I wanted to marry I should pass over Demeas''s daughter in favour of Phido''s? |
47242 | Does that imply that, though there is nothing pleasanter, there may be something grander or more divine? |
47242 | Doris__ Myr._ Well, Pamphilus? |
47242 | H. IV_ The Rich to Cronus, Greeting._ Do you really suppose, Sire, that these letters of the poor have gone exclusively to_ your_ address? |
47242 | Had n''t you better see what she is like first? |
47242 | Has he got by? |
47242 | Have we some overweening tyrant, who insults us with his wealth? |
47242 | Have you lost your horns? |
47242 | He laughed:''Why, how will it make things worse for you?'' |
47242 | He took up a man who said,''Yes, I can grapple with that,''meaning that he understood, with''Oh, you are going to throw me, are you? |
47242 | Her Mother__ Mother._ You must be mad, Philinna; what_ was_ the matter with you at the dinner last night? |
47242 | Here Zenothemis woke up and thundered out:''Chrysippus? |
47242 | Here are some specimens: What time do you set out on your travels?--What time? |
47242 | How aggravating!--Indeed? |
47242 | How can we possibly keep the feast( they ask), when we are numb with frost and pinched with hunger? |
47242 | How do we hunt our vermin down? |
47242 | How is he going to improve the honest men, without hardening and encouraging the rogues? |
47242 | How should I scorn your Muse? |
47242 | How would he have taken it? |
47242 | How would you like it, if the criminal classes were to profit by his lesson in fortitude, and learn to scorn death, and burning, and so on? |
47242 | I dare say, now, she was very cruel and scornful? |
47242 | I embrace and kiss a man like that? |
47242 | I feel compassion for them, and have chosen you from among all the Gods to heal their ills; for who else should heal them?'' |
47242 | I had not brought my sword with me, or you may be sure I should have known what to do with it.--What are you both laughing at? |
47242 | I said;''do you suppose I have kept my picture turned the same way all these years? |
47242 | I should like to know what sort of presents the Bithynian makes you? |
47242 | I should take it kindly of you, sir, if you would tell me whether you_ have_ ever seen Virtue or Fortune or Destiny anywhere? |
47242 | I suppose you have forgotten him? |
47242 | If he were not in love with you, why should he mind your having another lover? |
47242 | If you have not lost a thing, you still have it? |
47242 | Is it a heap? |
47242 | Is it a heap? |
47242 | Is it just a cobweb spun in that jealous little brain of yours? |
47242 | Is it so amusing, Pythias? |
47242 | Is mine weaker? |
47242 | It is useless, of course, to offer gold to the gifted son of Calliope? |
47242 | Let either of them tell me, What is Philosophy? |
47242 | Logic and life, rhetoric and philosophy, popularity and death-- ay, but which? |
47242 | Melia''s distaff golden- bright? |
47242 | More misdeeds of the ignorant herd? |
47242 | Need I enumerate instances? |
47242 | Now begin with telling me what Aristaenetus was giving the banquet for; was it his boy Zeno''s wedding? |
47242 | Now, if a man came to you and said that he had left his wife''s home, would you stand that? |
47242 | Now, if_ you_ will not enlighten me on this subject, who can? |
47242 | Now, what are the facts? |
47242 | Now, what are your feelings when you hear a man deprecating his own merits, and depreciating his friend''s excessive gratitude? |
47242 | Or again, if you hate pleasure and condemn the Epicureans, how comes it that you will do and endure the meanest things for it? |
47242 | Others you may see naked, swimming for their lives; and what was the reef that wrecked them, pray? |
47242 | Pass the cutting off the wretched Paphlagonian''s head, what did you want to spike it on a spear for, and let the blood run down on you? |
47242 | Perhaps you consider that a stiffish dose of hellebore would serve the turn? |
47242 | Perhaps you think it a trifle always to win at dice, and be able to count on the sice when the ace is the best the others can throw? |
47242 | Pray tell me, do you not call extravagance a vice? |
47242 | Purist__ Ly._ Are you the man whose scent is so keen for a blunder, and who is himself blunder- proof? |
47242 | Shall I call evidence? |
47242 | Shall we have another match on the old lines? |
47242 | Shall we try to find the answers? |
47242 | Shall we wait for him here, or do you think I had better go back on board? |
47242 | So I said How d''ye do, and then asked,''Do tell me, Parmenon, how you got on; have you made anything to repay you for all your fighting?'' |
47242 | So- and- so is a tribes- man of mine.--Oh, you are a savage, are you? |
47242 | Somewhere in Greece, of course? |
47242 | Suppose I were to return you evil for evil? |
47242 | Take it at the best; let all endure for ages: what will it profit your senseless clay? |
47242 | The fellow is a boozy.--Oh, Boozy was his mother''s name, was it? |
47242 | The general opinion clearly was that he was an impudent rogue, and various people struck in with what came to hand:''What, Menelaus, art distraught?'' |
47242 | The land is consequently uninhabited; savage, dried up, barren, droughty, how should it support life? |
47242 | The patrimonial income supplies me well enough.--Patrimonial? |
47242 | Thebe''s dark circlet? |
47242 | Then how is Proteus going to draw the line? |
47242 | There was a general laugh; upon which,''You vile scum,''says he,''you laugh, do you, because I invoke our God Heracles as I toast the bride? |
47242 | These are riddles, Archias; you took him alive, and you have him not? |
47242 | They went to law, but were compounded.--You do n''t say they did n''t get apart again? |
47242 | This was how I began to Parmenon:''Did you and your master''s ears burn, Parmenon?'' |
47242 | Three Runaway Slaves.__ Apol._ Father, is this true, about a man''s publicly throwing himself upon a pyre, at the Olympian Games? |
47242 | Used mortals to play draughts in your time? |
47242 | Was it for this that he suffered bondage in Syria? |
47242 | Was that a woman''s voice, reciting Homer? |
47242 | Was there anything to be got by jumping on to a pyre, and being converted to cinders? |
47242 | Welcome, my musical friend: you have not forgotten Heracles, I hope? |
47242 | Well, I suppose there may be fools and empty- headed enthusiasts in India as elsewhere? |
47242 | Well, and who were the guests? |
47242 | Well, do you know what a historian is? |
47242 | Well, now what are we to do? |
47242 | Well, why do n''t you speak? |
47242 | Well? |
47242 | What avail ashes and urns, if I have not Demosthenes? |
47242 | What can we call this but a drunken freak? |
47242 | What do I know about brides, ugly or pretty? |
47242 | What do you mean? |
47242 | What do you recommend, Lycinus? |
47242 | What faults have you to find, Lycinus? |
47242 | What girl would look at a man who likes such nastiness-- let alone drink or sleep with him? |
47242 | What have I ever done to you? |
47242 | What is coming? |
47242 | What is the meaning of it all? |
47242 | What is to be looked for from people whose worship is of Dionysus, whose life is in feasting and dancing? |
47242 | What is to prevent one single ring from doing all the work? |
47242 | What is your opinion of this gentleman? |
47242 | What names am I to say, Philosophy? |
47242 | What orator would not feel that his credit was at stake, and be fired with ambition to surpass himself, rather than be found wanting to his theme? |
47242 | What other end had Heracles? |
47242 | What remains to tell? |
47242 | What say you, friends? |
47242 | What should you say to that? |
47242 | What value can one attach to a man whom one''s nose would identify for one of those minions? |
47242 | What was I to do? |
47242 | What was the good of this multitude of wonderful cups, he wanted to know, when earthenware would serve the purpose? |
47242 | What, make the story public? |
47242 | What, no answer? |
47242 | What, nothing to say for yourself? |
47242 | What, then, I am an interloper too, am I? |
47242 | What, then, should a man of sense do, when he finds one friend''s virtue pitted against another''s truth? |
47242 | What? |
47242 | What_ have_ you done? |
47242 | What_ is_ it all about, Charmides? |
47242 | When some one described his sick servant as undergoing torture, he asked,''What for? |
47242 | Whence, and whither?'' |
47242 | White- armed Harmonia''s bridal?--Ay, but which? |
47242 | Whither, I wonder, goes this mighty host, issuing from Arcadia? |
47242 | Who are to be the first victims? |
47242 | Who dares name the word? |
47242 | Who has been telling you all this? |
47242 | Who knows? |
47242 | Who was it they all compared me to, Chenidas? |
47242 | Why are you crying, child? |
47242 | Why go about with your left hand loaded,--a ring to every finger? |
47242 | Why_ is_ it all? |
47242 | Yes? |
47242 | You do n''t suppose he will remember tears and kisses and vows, with five talents of dowry to distract him? |
47242 | You mean to say you are_ not_ going to be married? |
47242 | You seem like one rapt in contemplation; you are pondering on matters of no light import? |
47242 | You surely find him a more temperate and better man than the other? |
47242 | You would be there, no doubt,--when that old man burnt himself? |
47242 | [ 19] All this your Demosthenes endured, and who knows not what an orator it made of him? |
47242 | _ Ad._ How so? |
47242 | _ Ad._ Who begins? |
47242 | _ Ant._ And he has died on the way? |
47242 | _ Ant._ And it was indeed--? |
47242 | _ Ant._ And what hearing did he give them? |
47242 | _ Ant._ Ay? |
47242 | _ Ant._ Ha? |
47242 | _ Ant._ Ha? |
47242 | _ Ant._ What mean you? |
47242 | _ Ant._ Why took you him not alive? |
47242 | _ Apol._ But what was his object, father? |
47242 | _ Apol._ Oh? |
47242 | _ Ar._ How? |
47242 | _ Ar._ Was it not your charge that we should use no force at first? |
47242 | _ Ba._ But you_ did_ know Hermotimus, I suppose? |
47242 | _ Ch._ Go on slapping me? |
47242 | _ Ch._ Is that the only way to tell? |
47242 | _ Che._ Shall I tell her you lied to make her think you a fine fellow? |
47242 | _ Che._ Why, who should it be? |
47242 | _ Co._ Is the man mad? |
47242 | _ Cro._ That conceited shepherd[11]? |
47242 | _ Cy._ A man''s sufficiency is that which meets his necessities; will that do? |
47242 | _ Cy._ And do you think my feet walk worse than yours, or than the average man''s? |
47242 | _ Cy._ And economy a virtue? |
47242 | _ Cy._ And want occurs when the supply falls short of necessity-- does not meet the need? |
47242 | _ Cy._ But now, pray, what is the purpose of the protection, in turn? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Clothing-- what is that for? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Do you see, or must I explain? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Is he temperate? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Oh, yes; look at it this way; what have feet to do? |
47242 | _ Cy._ That brings us to the questions, What is want, and what is sufficiency? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Then do you think my feet are in worse condition than yours? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Then, if you find me living economically, and others extravagantly, why blame me instead of them? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Well, consider the purpose of anything we require; the purpose of a house is protection? |
47242 | _ Cy._ Well, the rest of my body, then? |
47242 | _ Do._ And how do you like him for a lover? |
47242 | _ First Master._ Ha, Cantharus, have I got you? |
47242 | _ First Master._ So tragic? |
47242 | _ First Master._ Why, what is all this about? |
47242 | _ Gly._ Yes, dear; is n''t it_ horrid_ of her? |
47242 | _ Her._ And why is that? |
47242 | _ Her._ Does none of you know anything about this other? |
47242 | _ Her._ How am I to understand that? |
47242 | _ Her._ Straight to Thrace, then? |
47242 | _ Her._ Very good; and what comes next? |
47242 | _ Her._ Yes, come along, and we will polish off a few to- day.--Which way, Philosophy? |
47242 | _ Her._ Yes? |
47242 | _ Innkeeper._ Why, the Three- headed Dog is a book, master? |
47242 | _ Jo._ Shut him out? |
47242 | _ Jo._ Why not? |
47242 | _ Le._ Such a coward, girl? |
47242 | _ Ly._ And if a person were to use''interchange''there instead of''exchange,''what would you take him to mean? |
47242 | _ Ly._ And if you caught him committing a solecism, would you stand it? |
47242 | _ Ly._ And the fancy? |
47242 | _ Ly._ And what lover would not have been jealous? |
47242 | _ Ly._ But what would you have me do? |
47242 | _ Ly._ By the way, do you know of any one who is on the look in for a wife? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Can it be a love affair? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Charinus? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Do I understand that you are proof? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Do you also see that the exchange of one for the other is a solecism? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Have you realized on what a slender thread all this wealth depends? |
47242 | _ Ly._ How about that last? |
47242 | _ Ly._ How did''one are''get past you? |
47242 | _ Ly._ How do you make that out? |
47242 | _ Ly._ I suppose one must be blunder- proof, to detect the man who is not so? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Is there such a person? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Monstrous sly, is it not, to say''mutual''instead of''joint''? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Not sure? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Now, can you tell me the difference between''setting''and''sitting,''or between''be seated''and''sit''? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Or the only way you can learn? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Outrageous? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Perhaps one at a time are too few? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Pythias? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Then, as you can not feel the difference between''deprecate''and''depreciate,''shall we conclude that you are an ignoramus? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Well, shall you be able to detect a culprit, and convict him if he denies it? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Well, what is to happen, if you can not follow now? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Well? |
47242 | _ Ly._ What do I want with a wish? |
47242 | _ Ly._ What, not observed''broad open''? |
47242 | _ Ly._ What? |
47242 | _ Ly._ Why, how can they be equivalent? |
47242 | _ Masters._ Indeed, madam? |
47242 | _ Me._ What was her fee? |
47242 | _ Mo._ Have I your permission to speak, sir? |
47242 | _ Mother._ But what about kissing Lamprias? |
47242 | _ Mother._ They do n''t all find it so hard to get round their fathers; why ca n''t he get a slave to wheedle him? |
47242 | _ Mu._ Oh well, mother, are the rest of them happier or better- looking than I am? |
47242 | _ Myr._ Well, and when you sailed again, did n''t I give you that waistcoat, that you might have something to wear when you were rowing? |
47242 | _ Pa._ Are you mad, or what is the matter with you? |
47242 | _ Pa._ How much more nonsense are you going to talk about shipowners and marriages? |
47242 | _ Pa._ Oh, Dorcas, what_ am_ I to do? |
47242 | _ Pa._ Oh, what will become of me? |
47242 | _ Pa._ Well; and you did? |
47242 | _ Pa._ What shall I do, Dorcas? |
47242 | _ Pa._ What, straight off like that? |
47242 | _ Phi._ And who may you be, good sir? |
47242 | _ Phi._ Dionicus the doctor had told him, he said;_ he_ was one of you, was he not? |
47242 | _ Phi._ Heracles, who is this comely person with a lyre? |
47242 | _ Phi._ I know; a fine lad; only a lad, though; old enough to marry? |
47242 | _ Phi._ The usual thing, I suppose-- a panegyric on the bride, or an epithalamium? |
47242 | _ Phi._ Well, my dear, where is that wine? |
47242 | _ Po._ Polemon, deme Stiria, tribe Pandionis; will that do for you? |
47242 | _ Po._ Who is this person coming to you? |
47242 | _ Pr._ But what possessed you to abdicate? |
47242 | _ Pr._ First, then, is the common story true? |
47242 | _ Pur._ Again? |
47242 | _ Pur._ But what have I to do with solecists on the look in for wives? |
47242 | _ Pur._ Feelings? |
47242 | _ Pur._ How can that be, before you have opened your lips? |
47242 | _ Pur._ How could I call myself educated, if I made blunders at my age? |
47242 | _ Pur._ Namely--? |
47242 | _ Pur._ Three? |
47242 | _ Pur._ Well? |
47242 | _ Pur._ What_ are_ you talking about? |
47242 | _ Pur._ Why, what may the difference be? |
47242 | _ Pur._ Would it? |
47242 | _ Pur._ You are joking, of course? |
47242 | _ Sa._ Are you going to show the white feather too, Adimantus, now that the danger is near?--Timolaus, what is your advice? |
47242 | _ Sa._ Well, tell me what you think of mine? |
47242 | _ Sa._ You see when it was we lost him, Lycinus? |
47242 | _ Sa.__ O sancta simplicitas!_ Did you think that you were at Athens all this time? |
47242 | _ Second Master._ Ha, you rascal there, am I mistaken, or are you my lost Lecythio? |
47242 | _ Ti._ Well, Lycinus, what do you expect? |
47242 | _ Try._ And the tears were all for her? |
47242 | _ Try._ Had you a full view of her, or did you just see her face and as much as a woman of forty- five likes to show? |
47242 | _ Try._ Is this recent? |
47242 | _ Try._ Well, which are you going to trust-- her word, or your own eyes? |
47242 | _ Try._ Which? |
47242 | _ You_ are very proud of your eulogy on Homer; and is Demosthenes a light matter to_ me_?'' |
47242 | _ Zeus._ Oh, it''s the philosophers who have been misbehaving themselves? |
47242 | _ Zeus._ Then if it is neither the philosophers nor the common people, who is it that you complain of? |
47242 | a man of mature years riding about on a finger- ring, moving whole mountains with a touch; bald and snub- nosed, yet the desire of all eyes? |
47242 | a repetition of the Socrates and Anytus affair? |
47242 | and I am to let him outrage my feelings just for that? |
47242 | and did she steal away Zeus, and give you a stone to swallow for a baby? |
47242 | and going across and embracing him? |
47242 | and how did they receive you at your first descent? |
47242 | and how shall I describe them? |
47242 | and that Mede there, Mithras, with the candys and tiara? |
47242 | and what brings you here, away from the world? |
47242 | and what is the trouble now? |
47242 | and what were they? |
47242 | because a pretender like Hetoemocles comes short of his profession, you argue from him to the real sages, to Cleanthes and Zeno? |
47242 | column? |
47242 | did you hear that? |
47242 | do you remember? |
47242 | ever look at any other man? |
47242 | give a full description of what men do in their cups? |
47242 | great Bacchus''merry fame? |
47242 | has he never found out how thin her hair is? |
47242 | he has given you up, and taken her in your place? |
47242 | he left life for want of belief in my promises? |
47242 | he was not there; what can he know about it? |
47242 | how do your pipes come to be broken? |
47242 | how they were saved by a star? |
47242 | how?'' |
47242 | is he a man of sense? |
47242 | is that all? |
47242 | is that it? |
47242 | is that true? |
47242 | it is a treat to hear him when he sings and tries to make himself agreeable; what is it they tell me about an ass that would learn the lyre? |
47242 | never a word of how Polemon had talked or thought of me, or prayed he might find me alive? |
47242 | or how long has it been going on? |
47242 | or should I have made him my right- hand man in the management of Greece and of the empire? |
47242 | or that Chaereas will be of the same mind when he has his fortune, and his mother finds a marriage that will bring him another? |
47242 | or the other, the one they call The Trap? |
47242 | or was it just a drunken freak? |
47242 | or, not to go beyond the merest elements, how does_ condition_ differ from_ constitution? |
47242 | so poor of heart? |
47242 | take it quietly and make her words seem true and let her be queen? |
47242 | that he forgave his country a debt of a million odd? |
47242 | that he was cast out of Rome,--he whose brilliance exceeds the Sun, fit rival of the Lord of Olympus? |
47242 | that is surely Adimantus? |
47242 | the all- daring might Of Heracles? |
47242 | the old gentleman deserved a better fate? |
47242 | the race from dragon''s teeth that came? |
47242 | there are two of them; one in Piraeus, who has only just come there; Damyllus the governor''s son is in love with her; is it that one? |
47242 | used you to eat the children Rhea bore you? |
47242 | was Demosthenes not our enemy of enemies? |
47242 | was there ever a juster man than Aristides? |
47242 | what do they suppose they are going to get out of him?'' |
47242 | what do you mean?'' |
47242 | what does it aggravate? |
47242 | what is it? |
47242 | what would it be if I saw the thing done, and the blood, and the bodies lying there? |
47242 | why not tell his mother he will go off for a soldier if she does n''t let him have some money? |
47242 | you do not suppose he knew anything worth knowing about me? |
47242 | you name that name? |
9484 | Ah, who? |
9484 | ''At last then even Delphis knows content?'' |
9484 | ''Our dreams''? |
9484 | ***** EDMUND BEALE SARGANT THE CUCKOO WOOD Cuckoo, are you calling me, Or is it a voice of wizardry? |
9484 | ***** JAMES ELROY FLECKER JOSEPH AND MARY Joseph: Mary, art thou the little maid Who plucked me flowers in Spring? |
9484 | ***** RONALD ROSS HESPERUS Ah whither dost thou float, sweet silent star, In yonder floods of evening''s dying light? |
9484 | ***** T. STURGE MOORE A SICILIAN IDYLL( FIRST SCENE) Damon: I thank thee, no; Already have I drunk a bowl of wine... Nay, nay, why wouldst thou rise? |
9484 | --''In love and happy, Delphis; and the boy?'' |
9484 | --''Loves and is happy''-- You hale from?'' |
9484 | --And the king, Gloating upon the white sheen of that palace, And weeping like a girl ashamed, inquired''What is that stone?'' |
9484 | --Have you the Indian speech? |
9484 | ...( the words are thine) Had he but the will; and has he now? |
9484 | A Ship''s Captain: You are my man, my passenger? |
9484 | Again I front my appointed ministry.-- But why the Indian lot to me? |
9484 | Alas, are his companions still No better than such ne''er- do- wells? |
9484 | And Certainty? |
9484 | And I, so certain and so friended, How could I cloud, or how distress, The heaven of your unconsciousness? |
9484 | And after, ere the night is born, Do hares come out about the corn? |
9484 | And he who failed in proof, how should he arm Another against perils? |
9484 | And is there honey still for tea? |
9484 | And laughs the immortal river still Under the mill, under the mill? |
9484 | And shall my soul, and God in my soul, drown? |
9484 | And sunset still a golden sea From Haslingfield to Madingley? |
9484 | And when has the sea been friendly unto man? |
9484 | And would your spell Be daunting to a cuttle, think you now? |
9484 | And would yours have done better? |
9484 | Are the mortal and the tree Now made one in ecstasy, One in foretaste of the dawn? |
9484 | Art thou a tear left by the exiled day Upon the dusky cheek of drowsy night? |
9484 | Before she knew who it could be, I said"Why yes, he is a fool, but we, fair friend, Were we not foolish waiting for such fools? |
9484 | But being there-- tell me now of the land: How use they strangers there? |
9484 | But here a grave contemptuous youth cries out''Womanish babblers, how can we build god''s altar Ere we divine its foreordained true shape?'' |
9484 | But what? |
9484 | Can my means Prevent the ruin of the thing I cherish? |
9484 | Captain: I, my Lord? |
9484 | Captain: Not meant? |
9484 | Captain: You have a talisman? |
9484 | Could Philip of Macedon Breed a true Greek of his son? |
9484 | Could such a man sink in the sea unknown? |
9484 | Cydilla: But tell me, is he tutor to that boy? |
9484 | Cydilla: Damon, see, my glad tears have drowned all fear; Think''st thou he may come back and win renown, And fill his father''s place? |
9484 | Cydilla: Delphis, Delphis, Good Damon had been making me so happy By telling... Delphis: How he watched me near the zenith? |
9484 | Cydilla: What can have happened, Delphis? |
9484 | Damon: Let lie the sad contents of vanished years; Why with complaints reproach the helpless dead? |
9484 | Damon: Not many days have been so beautiful As yesterday, Cydilla; yet one was; And I with thee broke tranced on its fine spell; Thou dost remember? |
9484 | Damon: Sit down, be patient, let us hear and aid;-- Has aught befallen Amyntas? |
9484 | Deep meadows yet, for to forget The lies, and truths, and pain? |
9484 | Delphis: Where is the Athens that Pericles loved? |
9484 | Did you hear A sound, a little sound? |
9484 | Do I wish the god to come? |
9484 | Fools, fools, Where is a town such as Pericles ruled? |
9484 | For what is it to be a poet? |
9484 | Good Damon, tell me quick? |
9484 | Had Paris so much bliss? |
9484 | Has Pan gone by? |
9484 | Has he a trade? |
9484 | Have you a mind To hug your belly to the slanted deck, Like a louse on a whip- top, when the boat Spins on an axle in the hissing gales? |
9484 | He may not come... what? |
9484 | I hope India Is not a fly- plagued land? |
9484 | I left it in that place-- The thing that showed no face, Was it a man that had Suffered till he went mad? |
9484 | I ne''er would harm thee; art thou not ashamed To treat thy conquest thus?'' |
9484 | I would not that we wait too long; I loathe a dallying journey.--I should suppose We''ld have good sailing at this season, now? |
9484 | II Was I not man? |
9484 | Is dawn a secret shy and cold Anadyomene, silver- gold? |
9484 | Joseph: A King, dear wife? |
9484 | Mary: Do you hear, in the dark and starlit blue The clarion and the horn? |
9484 | Must I preach God to these murderous hearts? |
9484 | Nay, why Trouble myself with ugly words? |
9484 | No, Damon, what''s an answer worth to one Whose mind has been flung open? |
9484 | O Joseph, what do you see? |
9484 | O Mary, what do you hear and see With your brow toward the West? |
9484 | Oh, is the water sweet and cool Gentle and brown, above the pool? |
9484 | Or dost thou as a lark carol alway Full in the liquid glow of heavenly light? |
9484 | Or has the mere thought of the Indian journey Made your marrow quail with a cold fever? |
9484 | Or shake at Time''s sufficient spell, Stammering of lights unutterable? |
9484 | Or, bent on discord and angelic wars, As some bright spirit tread before the trooping stars? |
9484 | Say, do the elm- clumps greatly stand, Still guardians of that holy land? |
9484 | Say, is there Beauty yet to find? |
9484 | Seems he not The god of this fair scene? |
9484 | Should I have come so eagerly to thee If all there was to tell thee were such poor news? |
9484 | Should not my sole unbridled purpose fill All hidden paths with light when once was riven God''s veil by my indomitable will? |
9484 | Silver Birch, would you endeavour, Trembling in your bridal dress, To win at last a dog''s caress? |
9484 | Spluttering Amyntas rose, Hipparchus near him Who cried''Why coy of kisses, lovely lad? |
9484 | Stranger: And was the slave For putting out with you? |
9484 | Stranger: Yea? |
9484 | THE LISTENERS''Is there anybody there?'' |
9484 | Tell me busy, busy glade, Half in light and half in shade, Is your world of wood- folk there? |
9484 | Tell me, busy, busy glade, Are little flying things afraid? |
9484 | Tell me, silent, silent glade, All in light that once was shade, All in shade that once was light, How went the creatures from my sight? |
9484 | Tell me, wherefore hiss and sigh Those shrivelled leaves? |
9484 | Tell me, whispering, whispering glade, Am I eager or afraid? |
9484 | That chance which left Hipparchus with no clothes, Surely divinity was ambushed in it? |
9484 | The Stranger:( to the Captain) You are the master of this ship? |
9484 | The chestnuts shade, in reverend dream, The yet unacademic stream? |
9484 | Then a lean giant''Is not a calyx needful?'' |
9484 | There well may once have been a golden age: Why should we treat it as a poet''s tale? |
9484 | Thomas: And have none made for the king his desire? |
9484 | Thomas: But does your king then need a carpenter? |
9484 | Thomas: Flies? |
9484 | Thomas: Have you good skill In seamanship? |
9484 | Thomas: Not start? |
9484 | Thomas: What do you wait for, then? |
9484 | Thomas: What dream was that? |
9484 | Thomas: Why, what do you mean? |
9484 | Unregarded on the ground Leaves of yester- year abound, For what is autumn''s gold to one That hoards a life scarce yet begun? |
9484 | Was I not man, with proud imperial will To cancel all the secrets of high heaven? |
9484 | Was the man killed? |
9484 | Was this not A sign? |
9484 | Welcome, welcome, cloudless night, Is our labour ended quite? |
9484 | What ails man to love with such pains? |
9484 | What cares Zeus for him? |
9484 | What element Dare snarl against my going, what incubus dare Remember to be fiendish, when I light My whole being with memory of Him? |
9484 | What honour to conquer a world Where Alcibiades failed, Lead half- drilled highland hordes Whose lust would inherit the wise? |
9484 | What is your skill To hold the god against my will? |
9484 | What men are they? |
9484 | What shall I say if he be dumb? |
9484 | What were this flower''s prayer Had it a voice? |
9484 | Where are the shapes that turned to stone, And my tree that reigned alone? |
9484 | Where are the youths that were Socrates''friends? |
9484 | Where are you bound? |
9484 | Where youths to replace those whom Socrates loved? |
9484 | Why do your thousand pools of light Gaze like eyes that fade at night? |
9484 | Why had crude Sparta such treasonous force? |
9484 | Why mine Such fearful gospelling? |
9484 | Why toil to create in the mind Of those who shall close in his grave The best that he is and has hoped? |
9484 | Wise Damon, thou art silent;--Mother, thou Hast only arms to cling about thy son.-- Who can descry the purpose of a god With eyes wide- open? |
9484 | Worse Than all land- evils is the water- way Before me now.--What, cowardice? |
9484 | Would I not feel The power in me if''twas there? |
9484 | Yet here''s much cost-- these packages piled up, Ivory doubtless, emeralds, gums, and silks, All these they trust on shipboard? |
9484 | You look like death; is it the falling sickness? |
9484 | You''re not for dealing in new gods? |
9484 | and Quiet kind? |
9484 | lie closer...''Adam, where art thou?'' |
9484 | was Helen''s kiss To be compared with those I tasted? |
9484 | was it then to this That all my tale was prologue? |
9484 | yes? |
9484 | yet Stands the Church clock at ten to three? |
42045 | A high ideal for the poor folk in the village, and Wilkins the grocer, and old Mrs. Joel with her pigs? |
42045 | After all, why should n''t she leave something behind her-- something to remember her by? 42045 After being here for years, how can you go to a Governesses''Institution? |
42045 | Ah, from the Heath? |
42045 | Ah, that is when they have a nice mother to look after them-- a woman like poor Hester; but what are those two doing? 42045 All-- settled?" |
42045 | All? 42045 Am I?" |
42045 | And did you really consent,said Cicely, seriously, looking him straight in the eyes,"without ever saying a word to us, or to Miss Brown? |
42045 | And it is, I suppose, is n''t it? |
42045 | And what is to become of the children? |
42045 | And what so natural as that he should be tired? |
42045 | And why should you think amusement is my great object? 42045 And you have nothing-- absolutely nothing?" |
42045 | Are they all Harry''s? |
42045 | Are you not coming to supper, papa? |
42045 | Are you tired of me so soon? |
42045 | Be you poorly, sir? |
42045 | Better? 42045 But papa?" |
42045 | But then,said Mab,"what would you have done with Mrs. St. John? |
42045 | But these are not clerical amusements, are they? |
42045 | But what are we to do, papa? |
42045 | But what can be done? |
42045 | But when he goes back among those Oxford men, those dons, do you think they will pay any attention to him? 42045 But why should they be kept clean? |
42045 | But, Aunt Jane, tell us, tell us-- what good will that do? |
42045 | But, papa, where shall we go? 42045 But, papa,"said Cicely,"will it be right for us to stay at home, when you have them to provide for, and there is so little money?" |
42045 | Can nobody help anything in this world? 42045 Dear me,"said Mr. St. John, concerned,"I am very sorry; I hope it is not anything you have heard here that has turned you against Brentburn? |
42045 | Did any one speak? |
42045 | Did n''t they say anything? |
42045 | Did you speak, sir? |
42045 | Do I think badly of human nature? 42045 Do you love any one else?" |
42045 | Do you mean that something will happen to papa? |
42045 | Do you practise it? |
42045 | Do you think I have much cause to be happy? |
42045 | Do you venture to meddle with what my sister does? |
42045 | Everything, Cicely? |
42045 | Five of us to provide for now-- and that is not the worst; what is papa to do? 42045 Had she been their own mother, what should we have done?" |
42045 | Happy? |
42045 | Has Mr. St. John been here so long? |
42045 | Has n''t it? |
42045 | Have you left papa behind you, Mr. Mildmay? 42045 He has two daughters grown up,"said Mildmay,"and two small children; and so far as I can judge is---- What is there to laugh at?" |
42045 | Help it? |
42045 | Hours ago,said the doctor to himself, shaking his head;"he is quite cold; who saw him last?" |
42045 | How can I tell you, Cicely,said the curate,"when I do not know myself? |
42045 | How can you speak of a street when you are on the common? 42045 How can you?" |
42045 | How could we ever have had ball- dresses off papa''s two hundred a year? |
42045 | I beg your pardon,she cried;"they had no right to make any objection; but did n''t they say anything at least-- about papa?" |
42045 | I have not made so much progress myself as I hoped I should; but you? 42045 I hope you are liking Brentburn?" |
42045 | I suppose it ca n''t be said that I do,he said, with hesitation:"perhaps it is wrong, but what do I know of girls''education? |
42045 | I wonder if any one will apply? 42045 I wonder what sort of a man Mr. Chester is?" |
42045 | I wonder,said Mab,"if we met the Queen driving in the forest-- as one does sometimes-- whether we might not ask her, as people used to do long ago? |
42045 | I? |
42045 | If he goes away, after being here so long, why should n''t you be sent away, too? |
42045 | Is it in the papers? 42045 Is it not a pretty house? |
42045 | Is it-- in the papers? |
42045 | Is n''t there a Latin word? 42045 Is one expected to be fond of one''s half- brother?" |
42045 | Is tea ready, my dear, for I have a great deal to do? 42045 Is that all, papa?" |
42045 | Is this really Mabel''s? |
42045 | Is this what you were all talking about? |
42045 | It can not be any one coming to call so soon? |
42045 | It is not nice, in fact-- is it? 42045 It is very likely you may be right,"said Mr. St. John, who always yielded to impetuosity,"but what should I do with Miss Brown?" |
42045 | Let us not go back upon that-- but, oh, tell me, what is to be done now? |
42045 | Maybe you was looking for lodgings, like? |
42045 | Maybe you''d like a cup of tea? |
42045 | Miss St. John,said Mildmay, in this interval,"may I come back as your father says? |
42045 | Mr. Mildmay, you must not be hard upon me-- how can I? 42045 Mr. St. John, sir? |
42045 | Mr. St. John? 42045 My dear love,"she said,"how could I suppose it was your fault or Mab''s? |
42045 | My dear sir,said the curate, with his kind smile,"you do n''t think I mean to imply any grudge against you? |
42045 | My dear, how could he help it? |
42045 | Nothing else-- what could it be else? 42045 Now, why should people be so different?" |
42045 | Of country amusements, then-- riding, and that sort of thing? 42045 Oh yes, I will try to help; but wo n''t you forgive Annie, just for this little time, and let her stay?" |
42045 | Oh, Mab, Mab, what did papa want with these children? 42045 Oh, how can I tell?" |
42045 | Oh, what will you say to them? 42045 Oh,"she cried,"ca n''t you fancy how a poor girl, so helpless as I am, is driven often to say a great deal more than she means? |
42045 | Papa, are you asleep? |
42045 | Papa, what are you doing with these? |
42045 | Papa, what is it? |
42045 | Papa? |
42045 | Please do n''t be vulgar, Henry-- unless what? |
42045 | Right for you to stay? 42045 Sell the furniture?" |
42045 | Since you have been here? 42045 So, so; he has_ daughters_?" |
42045 | That is all very well, Henry,she replied;"but what man, in his senses, would marry a girl with a couple of children dependent on her?" |
42045 | That is it? 42045 The Queen has nothing to do with Brentburn; and why should she be troubled with us any more than any other lady? |
42045 | The girls? 42045 The men says, please, miss, will you come downstairs?" |
42045 | The rest of us are ghosts; what are we all doing? 42045 There is nothing to forgive,"he said;"but you will tell me more? |
42045 | Tired of you? |
42045 | Unless-- something is done? 42045 Venture? |
42045 | Was mamma''s like that? |
42045 | Well, Mildmay,said the Master,"come to say good- bye? |
42045 | What am I to say to them? |
42045 | What are you saying, Cicely? |
42045 | What are you talking about? 42045 What are you thinking of? |
42045 | What consolation is wanted? 42045 What could we do, I wonder,"she said half to herself, for she did not expect any advice from her sister,"about the living? |
42045 | What do they want? 42045 What do you think of Mr. St. John going away?" |
42045 | What do you think, Cicely? |
42045 | What do you want with me? 42045 What does he mean by life?" |
42045 | What does''nice''mean? |
42045 | What good would it have done had he refused? |
42045 | What have they distinguished themselves in, papa? 42045 What is amiss with it?" |
42045 | What is fairy green? 42045 What is it?" |
42045 | What is it? |
42045 | What is the matter with Cicely? |
42045 | What is the matter? |
42045 | What should I have done else? |
42045 | What was it to you? 42045 What were you saying to Mr. Mildmay in the garden?" |
42045 | What were you saying to her, my dear? |
42045 | What were you saying, Cicely? 42045 Where are you going? |
42045 | Where? |
42045 | Who are you going to write to? |
42045 | Who are''they all?'' 42045 Who is that?--who is that man?" |
42045 | Who is the curate? |
42045 | Why are you frightened at me? 42045 Why did she cover them up so?" |
42045 | Why do you make caricatures of her, then? |
42045 | Why not,he said,"for them as well as for others?" |
42045 | Why should I ask any favour of those people who do not know me? |
42045 | Why should I depend upon it? |
42045 | Why should I hush, papa? 42045 Why should Oxford dons be so much worse than other men?" |
42045 | Why should she be different from you? |
42045 | Why should they be always quite alone? |
42045 | Why should you? 42045 Why, is it not ladylike? |
42045 | Why, the grass is as dry as the carpet; and what are their little legs good for but to run with? |
42045 | Will papa discuss your health with this new man? |
42045 | Will you do so, really? |
42045 | Yes, I think I recollect the name: very tall-- stoops-- a peaceable sort of being? 42045 Yes, in debt-- do you wonder now that I am wretched? |
42045 | You are the sexton''s wife? 42045 You can not slide out of it like this,"he said;"nay, pardon me, I do n''t mean to be unkind; but what am I to do?" |
42045 | You do not think Mr. Mildmay wants all that mahogany, papa? 42045 You hate her, I suppose?" |
42045 | You have done all that has been done, papa; what are those college people worth? 42045 You have not been ill, papa?" |
42045 | You think that is everything any one could desire? |
42045 | You-- would be a greater loss? |
42045 | Your fingers to the bone-- what good would that do? 42045 ''Church principles''--is that better? 42045 ''Were it not better, Because that I am more than common tall, That I did suit me all points like a man?'' |
42045 | A thing that is put up in churches when people are dead? |
42045 | And Mr. Mildmay, in the same breath, said:"Miss St. John, I hope you do not regret coming to the school?" |
42045 | And how did they dare, how did they venture, to give it to anybody but you?" |
42045 | And to answer it-- to answer it without any one knowing? |
42045 | And what could he add after that? |
42045 | And what did she mean by petitions, and the Lord Chancellor? |
42045 | And you know all the Teddingtons, of course? |
42045 | Are these yours?" |
42045 | Are we not being educated now? |
42045 | Are you going to write there?" |
42045 | Are you happy in it? |
42045 | Are you not Mr. St. John''s daughter? |
42045 | Aunt Jane----""About Mrs. St. John? |
42045 | But I felt a responsibility upon me since I met you; and I ask you now urgently, feeling that I have almost a right to your advice, what am I to do? |
42045 | But Mildmay, wondering, and touched to the heart, asked himself, with a suppressed throb of emotion, could she mean him? |
42045 | But he can not get anything very great now, can he, to make up for so long waiting? |
42045 | But how could he say so to a lady? |
42045 | But this-- what was this? |
42045 | But to say he can not help it; how could he ever dare to give such a miserable excuse?" |
42045 | But what did they care for that? |
42045 | But what is the use even of that?" |
42045 | But when he got outside he began to reflect, why should she be ashamed of it? |
42045 | But who will they find to buy them?" |
42045 | But whose fault is it? |
42045 | But why do you laugh, my dear? |
42045 | But why insist upon these details? |
42045 | But yet, you know, we ought to ask ourselves,''Were we happier at home, or are we happier here?''" |
42045 | But you wo n''t name it, not as coming from me? |
42045 | But, my dear fellow, what do you expect me-- what do you expect the college to do? |
42045 | By what strange wonder was it that he put such a question to her? |
42045 | Can they be cheating? |
42045 | Cicely said, moralizing;"why should we have so little, and Alice Robinson so much? |
42045 | Cicely, have you that letter about the curacy in Liverpool? |
42045 | Cicely, we can give Mr. Mildmay a bed?" |
42045 | Cicely, what are you thinking of now?" |
42045 | Come here, Harry, and tell me why you take all the bricks? |
42045 | Could he-- love her? |
42045 | Could n''t_ we_ go to the Lord Chancellor, Aunt Jane?" |
42045 | Could not you do instead?" |
42045 | Could she, if a man did love her, suffer him to take such a weight on his shoulders? |
42045 | Did she frighten''em, then? |
42045 | Did she like it, he wondered? |
42045 | Did they so? |
42045 | Do I look so utterly frivolous?" |
42045 | Do n''t you know that we are going to- day?" |
42045 | Do n''t you smell the pines, Aunt Jane, and the honey in the gorse? |
42045 | Do n''t you think we might go to Aunt Jane?" |
42045 | Do n''t you think, on the whole, we get on very well as we are? |
42045 | Do not you understand the girls, young reader? |
42045 | Do nothing more for him-- while still he sat there, just as he always did, in his own chair? |
42045 | Do you feel the satisfaction of living, as it seems to me you must?" |
42045 | Do you mean my example? |
42045 | Do you think God will be pleased because he is well connected? |
42045 | Do you want anything more?" |
42045 | Does he think that two hundred a year is a great fortune? |
42045 | Does n''t it smell nice-- like the hay- fields? |
42045 | Does not a touch of nature make the whole world kin? |
42045 | Dons, I suppose, are just like other people?" |
42045 | For what? |
42045 | For why? |
42045 | For why? |
42045 | Go back where? |
42045 | Good heavens, if you had never heard of the poor fellow, do n''t you think it would have happened all the same? |
42045 | Had he any right to attempt to make such a bargain as was in his mind? |
42045 | Had he been looking ill lately? |
42045 | Had they ever been absent? |
42045 | Had they received him at once as the new rector without a word? |
42045 | Had they said nothing to him? |
42045 | Had they, too, without an effort, without a remonstrance, gone over to the enemy? |
42045 | He could not coin money; and how do you think he could have saved it off what he had? |
42045 | He has something of his own, I suppose-- some private income? |
42045 | He would have given the same invitation, he said afterwards, to any probable new resident in the parish, and why not to the new rector? |
42045 | His Italian cabinets were enough to make you faint with envy; his Venice glass-- but why should I go on? |
42045 | How are Mab and you to maintain these two little boys? |
42045 | How are they ever to be paid? |
42045 | How can I ask her for more? |
42045 | How can Mr. Mildmay know?" |
42045 | How can he live with everything taken from him? |
42045 | How can you, such a man as you, speak like this to a girl such as I am? |
42045 | How could she do it? |
42045 | How could she oppose a thing Cicely had set her heart upon? |
42045 | How could she talk and smile as the others had been doing? |
42045 | How could we help but feel it? |
42045 | How dare you all stand by and see it done? |
42045 | How dared he speak of their mother? |
42045 | How is Betsy to remember in the middle of her cooking the right time to give''em their cod- liver oil?" |
42045 | How many children has he? |
42045 | How then was he to know life, and have it? |
42045 | How was he to get at life? |
42045 | How will he ever manage to bring up the two boys?" |
42045 | I ca n''t help seeing them, can I?" |
42045 | I can not say situation, can I? |
42045 | I do n''t feel that I do; and why should this be thinking badly? |
42045 | I do n''t know Mr. St. John, and if one neglected one''s own interests for every hard case one heard of, where would one be? |
42045 | I do n''t like to think of it-- and if we can be of any use in your preparations---- I hear there is to be a sale, too?" |
42045 | I do n''t mean any harm, but if people will look funny, how can I help it? |
42045 | I do n''t say for you or for me, but in the abstract----""Devotion?" |
42045 | I heard Mrs. Ascott herself speak of some effort to be made for Mr. St. John----""I-- what did I say?" |
42045 | I hope you have not been putting anything into her head?" |
42045 | I hope you like what you have seen of it? |
42045 | I lost my temper-- who could help it? |
42045 | I may be quite willing to do it, for it is my duty; but why should I depend upon it as being the best?" |
42045 | I never had any patience with that marriage; and Miss Brown, I suppose, had no friends that could take them up?" |
42045 | I suppose he is going through all the rooms?" |
42045 | I suppose that is what this Mr. Mildmay has really come about? |
42045 | I suppose you do n''t remember me?" |
42045 | I suppose your papa must have heard from Mr. Mildmay, and that all is settled now?" |
42045 | I think I have met some relations of yours, Mr. Mildmay-- the Hamptons of Thornbury? |
42045 | If I could do without one, at double his age, what should he want with a curate? |
42045 | If he works, what is the good of it? |
42045 | If one is clever, and has a gift, is one not to use it? |
42045 | If we were to help any number of old women, what would it matter now?" |
42045 | If you are ready, perhaps we should start soon; and you will come back and have some of our early dinner before you go?" |
42045 | If you take to them, and they to you----""On what pretence should I go to see them, unsettled as I am about my future?" |
42045 | In Latin and Greek-- which will do a great deal in the parish, do n''t you think? |
42045 | Is it much-- is it very bad? |
42045 | Is it that the very idea of a benefactor, even before the mind is capable of comprehending what it is, sets nature on edge? |
42045 | Is that nice, do you suppose? |
42045 | Is that papa she is talking to?" |
42045 | Is that the only place you have to go to?" |
42045 | Is that too much?" |
42045 | It was a trial; but what of that? |
42045 | John?" |
42045 | John?" |
42045 | John?" |
42045 | John?" |
42045 | John?" |
42045 | Let him, then, go back to his own profession; and what was he to do? |
42045 | May I ask your father to continue at Brentburn as my curate? |
42045 | May I do this? |
42045 | May we finish the conversation we began this morning? |
42045 | May we go there before we go in? |
42045 | Meet you in the Oberland, eh? |
42045 | Mildmay?" |
42045 | Mildmay?" |
42045 | More than double what we have now? |
42045 | Mr. Mildmay, all that I said was quite true; but what does that matter? |
42045 | Mr. St. John went maundering kindly--"You said you were going to London, and had left your things at the station? |
42045 | Must this always be the first question? |
42045 | My dears, have you heard anything?" |
42045 | Need I describe the look of dismay that came into Miss Blandy''s face? |
42045 | Not_ nice?_ I want to know what_ nice_ means?" |
42045 | Not_ nice?_ I want to know what_ nice_ means?" |
42045 | Now, tell me seriously and soberly, why do you come to me with this story? |
42045 | Oh, Mab, I do n''t want to disturb you, but if you knew how unhappy I am----""What is the matter? |
42045 | Oh, how have you the courage to do it? |
42045 | Oh, papa, what are we to do?" |
42045 | Oh, papa, why did you ask him? |
42045 | Oh, why could n''t he go away, and let her have her cry out? |
42045 | One does not like to say anything disagreeable about one''s papa, but what_ did_ he want with those children? |
42045 | Or was there any other motive that could make him desirous of taking her burden upon his shoulders? |
42045 | Or would nobody, in his senses, marry a girl burdened with two babies dependent on her? |
42045 | People can not keep old things when they are worn out-- the new are better; but why should any one pretend to make a moan over it? |
42045 | Perhaps if I had not settled down so completely when I was young, if I had been more energetic; I feel that now-- but what good does it do? |
42045 | Pray, what do you mean by that smile? |
42045 | Shall I ever be able to do anything, do you think? |
42045 | Shall everybody be sad because we are in trouble? |
42045 | She felt herself capable of going down on her knees and asking him whether the father of those two sweet girls was to starve in his old age? |
42045 | She had no desire to speak ill of the curate, but if she spoke too well of him, might not that annoy the new rector, and endanger her own cause? |
42045 | She had not seen them since her niece''s death, and what might have become of the poor children left with that incapable father? |
42045 | She is a soft- hearted goose-- eh, Adelaide? |
42045 | She means to give you all she has, and how could I oppose her? |
42045 | She never meant it; only what could she say to the girls when they appealed to her? |
42045 | She was determined, whatever might happen, to do her duty to the last: and then, what did it matter what should follow? |
42045 | She was not fond of the children; how could she be? |
42045 | Should I have declined and put myself entirely out of the way of being of any use at all? |
42045 | Should he marry and have a family, which is the virtuous and respectable answer to his question? |
42045 | Singleton will never hear of it; and what can I do? |
42045 | So he''s Chester''s curate? |
42045 | Tea is always nice, is it not, Aunt Jane?" |
42045 | That he had no further occasion for her services? |
42045 | That was always something; and to make money, would not that be best of all, as well as the pleasantest? |
42045 | The Governesses''Institution sounded miserable to him, and what could he do? |
42045 | The good people up there,"and he pointed towards the Heath,"myself, almost everybody I know? |
42045 | The harder life is, has it not the more need of some clear perception of all the higher meanings in it? |
42045 | The old man before him, so gentle, so suave, so smiling, his own inferior in position, for was he not rector elect, while Mr. St. John was but curate? |
42045 | The one was past, and had got a beautiful funeral, carriages coming from all parts of the county; and what could man desire more? |
42045 | The parish? |
42045 | The truth somehow, such as it really was; but how? |
42045 | Therefore, if you think you would like it, Miss Brown----"How can I relate what followed? |
42045 | They had a peep at the sea from their window, and they had their youth-- what could any one desire more? |
42045 | They want to have tutors and things, and to go to the university; and then what is the good of it all if they are not clever? |
42045 | Was he relieved to be able to think of their mother without Miss Brown coming in to disturb his thoughts? |
42045 | Was it a skeleton in the closet, as the domestic cynic says? |
42045 | Was it mere poverty that exposed those forlorn young creatures, whose case surely was sad enough to put all laughter out of court, to such comment? |
42045 | Was it that sort of folly he was thinking of, or she, poor girl, who had said nothing to him but reproaches? |
42045 | Was it to her he was speaking? |
42045 | Was that the plain English of it? |
42045 | Was the kettle boiling? |
42045 | Was there an insinuation in this that he had abandoned the unpleasant work, finding it uncongenial to him? |
42045 | Was this life, or was he making a bad joke at her expense? |
42045 | Was this life-- this mean, still, solitary place, which nobody shared, which neither love nor fellowship brightened? |
42045 | Was this true? |
42045 | We are to go away-- to go away-- don''t you remember, to- day?" |
42045 | We can not give, I suppose, the full name and address here?" |
42045 | Were they the kind of people among whom he could find the life he sought? |
42045 | What am I to do now? |
42045 | What am I to do? |
42045 | What are they to do?" |
42045 | What are they to us?" |
42045 | What are we to do? |
42045 | What are you crying for? |
42045 | What are your names?" |
42045 | What can anybody think-- what can any one say-- if one of us miserable subalterns is put over that veteran''s head? |
42045 | What can be done?" |
42045 | What can we do, we girls?--say out some of the things that choke us, that make our hearts bitter within us, and then be sorry for it afterwards? |
42045 | What can you do with them? |
42045 | What change had happened? |
42045 | What could I do then? |
42045 | What could I say to your aunt? |
42045 | What could be said more? |
42045 | What could he do on his bit of moorland with those white hands of his? |
42045 | What could he have done to her? |
42045 | What could he have done with his fine tastes and pure habits in the_ coulisses_ or the casinos? |
42045 | What could he make up his mind to do? |
42045 | What could he say? |
42045 | What could she do? |
42045 | What did he mean? |
42045 | What did it all mean? |
42045 | What did you say?" |
42045 | What do ladies know of such matters? |
42045 | What do you think she would say? |
42045 | What does he mean by it? |
42045 | What does it matter? |
42045 | What does the old woman mean? |
42045 | What does the parish say?" |
42045 | What good would crying do? |
42045 | What had come over her? |
42045 | What had he to say but yes or no? |
42045 | What had they done or said, she wondered, to him? |
42045 | What has he to do with it? |
42045 | What has possessed him to stay so long there?" |
42045 | What have you been putting into that good woman''s head? |
42045 | What if really his very poverty, his very gentleness, made him unsuitable for it? |
42045 | What if-- extraordinary as that seemed-- it did not want Mr. St. John? |
42045 | What interest do they suppose me to take in the late Mrs. St. John? |
42045 | What is a catafalque, Cicely? |
42045 | What is a man with eight children to be expected to know about rare china? |
42045 | What is it all about?" |
42045 | What is it? |
42045 | What is it?" |
42045 | What is life? |
42045 | What is the date? |
42045 | What is to become of us?" |
42045 | What is your voice? |
42045 | What shall we do? |
42045 | What should he say? |
42045 | What so likely as that something good should fall by inheritance to a man with such a patrician name? |
42045 | What then? |
42045 | What was Mildmay to answer? |
42045 | What was it to him that Cicely St. John was like her mother? |
42045 | What was life? |
42045 | What was she to say to him? |
42045 | What will she do? |
42045 | What woman can ever be independent? |
42045 | What''s he got to do with little children at his age? |
42045 | What''s your objection? |
42045 | What, in such a case, do you suppose I can do?" |
42045 | When do you go?" |
42045 | When do you take possession, Mr. Mildmay? |
42045 | When do you wish me to leave, sir?" |
42045 | When people have the patronage of a parish in their hands, ought they not to know about it? |
42045 | Where are we to go to? |
42045 | Where but in the Church could such a thing be done-- without at least such a clamour as would set half England by the ears?" |
42045 | Where could you be so well as at home?" |
42045 | Where ought they to apply? |
42045 | Where were you going with that hat and cloak? |
42045 | Who were they, or what? |
42045 | Who would have thought it? |
42045 | Why did the girl look at him with that paleness of anger in her face? |
42045 | Why is it not nice for Mab to draw? |
42045 | Why is it unladylike?" |
42045 | Why not? |
42045 | Why should it not be me? |
42045 | Why should n''t you stay all night here instead? |
42045 | Why should not life always go as it was doing? |
42045 | Why should not your eyes be dry-- as dry as the fields-- as dry as people''s hearts?" |
42045 | Why should she mind? |
42045 | Why should they want to go out just then like the tradespeople, a thing which ladies never did? |
42045 | Why should we be unkind to him?" |
42045 | Why should you be thus burdened-- why?" |
42045 | Why was he here as curate? |
42045 | Why was he up so early? |
42045 | Will that affect your papa?" |
42045 | Would any one, he wondered, think of_ her_ sometimes as Mr. St. John had done of his Hester? |
42045 | Would it look as it did when they were children, or with that indefinable difference which showed in_ her_ time? |
42045 | Would it not be much more sensible to pay honest wages to some poor honest man out of work, and let him do the digging? |
42045 | Would there be a sale? |
42045 | Would there be any visible change upon it? |
42045 | Would they be miserable after all? |
42045 | You did a great deal more than any one else would have done-- is that why you think it is your fault?" |
42045 | You have been to see it? |
42045 | You ought not to have the living; papa ought to have it; but what then? |
42045 | You recollect, Henry, they lunched with us here the year before last, on the cup day? |
42045 | You will stay to luncheon? |
42045 | You will tell Betsy?" |
42045 | _ Locum_ something or other; would not that be more dignified?" |
42045 | and how do you think it will feel to be an orderly rector, setting a good example, instead of enjoying yourself, and collecting crockery here?" |
42045 | and if it was true, what must he do? |
42045 | and then where was Roger Mildmay? |
42045 | and this part of Berkshire is rich in old churches, I understand?" |
42045 | and what difference does it make after all?" |
42045 | and where had the other been trained to draw so well? |
42045 | and why did_ that_ girl look at himself with so much suppressed passion in her eyes? |
42045 | and why should not he be so too? |
42045 | and why should you be more anxious than papa is?" |
42045 | and, so far as I can learn, very badly left?" |
42045 | are you not impatient to see me standing by looking on while you are working? |
42045 | contralto? |
42045 | cried Cicely in her exasperation,"what had we to do with him? |
42045 | cried Cicely;"and who would take care of them for the money I could give? |
42045 | cried Mr. Ascott, almost roughly in his amazement;"you are going out of your senses-- the appointment to the parish school?" |
42045 | do I want to like it?" |
42045 | do n''t you know me?" |
42045 | do you know how it has happened? |
42045 | do you know that we are-- in debt? |
42045 | had anything happened since that day when Aunt Jane surprised them in their pinafores? |
42045 | has he really gone at last? |
42045 | he cried;"preach patience to them? |
42045 | he said, laughing;"not the things one would choose a parish for?" |
42045 | he said,"you do n''t like it? |
42045 | how is a man like that to be distinguished from a Dissenting preacher, for instance? |
42045 | how should they? |
42045 | is there anything we can do?" |
42045 | my dear child, of what are you thinking?" |
42045 | never anything but why?--why?" |
42045 | or is it God''s fault?" |
42045 | or is the very sight of me disagreeable to you? |
42045 | or that two of us, and two of them, and two maids( though they are little ones), and himself, can get on upon two hundred a year?" |
42045 | or what else can I do? |
42045 | said Cicely, scarcely listening to him;"did n''t they make any objection?" |
42045 | said Cicely, with a stamp of her foot to emphasize her words,"do n''t you see you_ must_ decide something-- make up your mind to something? |
42045 | said Miss Maydew;"and how dared you let that poor woman see them? |
42045 | said the girl, speaking low;"what is it, papa? |
42045 | should not they, rather, on the whole,_ like_ it, if it was not wrong to say so? |
42045 | tell them it is for the best? |
42045 | think a little; what are we to do?" |
42045 | was that the way to traffic with a cure of souls? |
42045 | what did he mean when he said they were kind? |
42045 | what is the good of thinking? |
42045 | what was that?" |
42045 | why should anything ever happen? |
42045 | you have the charge of it?" |
44145 | 5th, In short, after having voted the tax, do you wish to get free from it? 44145 And how can you give consistency to this mass of contradictions?" |
44145 | And if you found they were not in harmony? |
44145 | And if you procured the cloth from Verviers, how much would it cost you? |
44145 | And my question recurs,''What does it signify?'' 44145 And that cost him much labour?" |
44145 | And then? |
44145 | And then? |
44145 | And what did he live on during that time? |
44145 | And what is that, if you please? |
44145 | And where do these 20 francs go to? |
44145 | And who established the octroi? |
44145 | And why is it forbidden? |
44145 | But are you sure that the one will balance the other? |
44145 | But if you found that the just and the useful were one and the same thing? |
44145 | But suppose yourself already a minister, and that you experience no opposition from the majority, what would you do? |
44145 | But the question recurs,''What else? |
44145 | Certainly; do n''t you see that France would be a loser if you received twenty parcels, instead of fifteen? |
44145 | Did Robinson not see that he could devote the time saved to_ something else?_"What else? |
44145 | Did Robinson not see that he could devote the time saved to_ something else?_"What else? |
44145 | Do you desire proof of this? 44145 Even raw materials?" |
44145 | Exactly so; and with what? |
44145 | F.: Are you sure of that? 44145 F.: What matters it, if we have the game? |
44145 | Friday: What do you think of it? 44145 How do you suppose that our manufacturers can compete with foreign manufacturers who have their raw materials free?" |
44145 | How much do you pay for this wine? |
44145 | How much does this coat cost you? |
44145 | How much would you have paid for it outside the barrier? |
44145 | How? |
44145 | If my proposal is rejected, what am I to conclude? 44145 In sober earnest, can the two( except as regards revenue) be put in comparison for a moment? |
44145 | In two volumes folio? |
44145 | Is it necessary for me to enumerate the advantages of my proposal? 44145 Is it not that which,_ for a determinate amount of labour, obtains the greater quantity of cloth?_""It seems so." |
44145 | R.: Then, what shall we gain? 44145 So that what holds true of the one, holds true of the other?" |
44145 | The first question we have to consider is this: Is the correspondence which passes between individual citizens a proper subject of taxation? 44145 The whole army?" |
44145 | Then, if prohibition is bad, restriction can not be good? |
44145 | There would, then, be a certain amount of her labour rendered inert? |
44145 | To what? |
44145 | Well, what would you do? |
44145 | What happened to the hatchet? |
44145 | What is prohibition? |
44145 | What is restriction? |
44145 | What is the definitive effect of protection? |
44145 | What is the name which is common to restriction and prohibition? |
44145 | What is the reason of this difference? |
44145 | What should we do in case of war,it is said,"if we are placed at the mercy of England for iron and coal?" |
44145 | What? |
44145 | When? |
44145 | Where should they go to, but into the pocket of the cloth- manufacturer? |
44145 | Why are men attached to the system of protection? |
44145 | Why do you say apparent? |
44145 | Why, then, did you not order it from Verviers? |
44145 | Why? 44145 Why?" |
44145 | With what? |
44145 | )_"What course should an agricultural and manufacturing country take under such circumstances? |
44145 | Again, would you judge of the two doctrines? |
44145 | Am I not warranted in regarding their argument only as a pretext? |
44145 | And do the Chambers and the Government not obey the injunction? |
44145 | And do they not act in the interest of the civil list, which profits most of all from the policy of protection? |
44145 | And do they not avail themselves of the cupidity of Lille and the north? |
44145 | And do they not borrow from the same source the quibbles of protection? |
44145 | And do they not make use of the words drawback and budget? |
44145 | And do they not parody Lord George Bentinck and the British aristocracy? |
44145 | And for that end what ought we to do? |
44145 | And how do we proceed? |
44145 | And how does the postmaster then proceed? |
44145 | And now that we have put salt, postages, and customs duties on a new footing, does this end your projected reform?" |
44145 | And then, is it quite clear that our postal system has need to be reformed? |
44145 | And then, what service do they render me in return for this nectar which has cost me so much toil? |
44145 | And to what does all this tend? |
44145 | And to whose profit? |
44145 | And what does it matter? |
44145 | And what if I can hinder float- wood from being brought into Paris? |
44145 | And what is the remedy? |
44145 | And what religion more favourable to peace than Christianity? |
44145 | And what tax, pray, do I pay which does not reach the Treasury?" |
44145 | And where did this idea of establishing a policy of protection take its rise? |
44145 | And who gains by the cheapness of products? |
44145 | And why do they sell cheaper than you? |
44145 | And why not? |
44145 | And why not? |
44145 | And why should nations bring each other under a yoke of this kind? |
44145 | And why? |
44145 | And why? |
44145 | And yet what analogy is there between an exchange and an invasion? |
44145 | And yet, what do the Customhouse books tell M. Lestiboudois regarding this transaction? |
44145 | And you force me, as a tradesman, to purchase from you the product of the blunt hatchet? |
44145 | And your sham friends exclaim,"But for monopolies, where would you find employment?" |
44145 | And, please, Sir, for what purpose do you intend them? |
44145 | Are there not in Paris thirty thousand Germans who make clothes and shoes? |
44145 | Are they better clothed, because there is_ less_ cloth and linen? |
44145 | Are they not created by nature? |
44145 | Are two houses exactly similar necessarily of the same value? |
44145 | Are we farmers? |
44145 | Are we iron- masters? |
44145 | Are we manufacturers of cotton stuffs? |
44145 | Are we not represented as being all angels of disinterestedness? |
44145 | Are we physicians? |
44145 | Are we vine- dressers? |
44145 | Are you ill? |
44145 | Are you no longer in love with equality? |
44145 | At all events, who will tell us that the balance of trade is not in their favour, and that we are not obliged to pay them a tribute in hard cash? |
44145 | At the present time, when indigenous sugar supplies one- third of our consumption, how much land is devoted to that culture? |
44145 | At this rate, we shall all be ruined in three years, and what will become of the poorer classes? |
44145 | Better assisted in their labour, because there are_ fewer_ tools and_ less_ iron, copper, and machinery? |
44145 | Better warmed, because there is_ less_ coal? |
44145 | But Kouang persisted, and said:"Sire, what is your object?" |
44145 | But do you not find that it takes you by the throat? |
44145 | But does the law which says, We shall no longer receive such or such a product from abroad, we shall make it at home, augment the capital? |
44145 | But how and from what source will it be remunerated? |
44145 | But how can you manage it? |
44145 | But how does it show itself? |
44145 | But if the neighbouring communes had erected the octroi for their profit, what would have been the consequence?" |
44145 | But if this half being gratuitous, determines you to exclude competition, how should the whole, being gratuitous, induce you to admit competition? |
44145 | But is it not too much so? |
44145 | But is this a complete view of the subject? |
44145 | But it may be asked, Are the benefits of liberty so hidden as to be discovered only by Economists by profession? |
44145 | But it may be asked, Is there not a species of theft which is more simple still? |
44145 | But it may be said, Why make use of this ugly term, Spoliation? |
44145 | But of errors in the moral world, can the same thing be said? |
44145 | But take the case of a sack of corn, a bar of iron, a hundredweight of coals,--are these commodities produced by labour? |
44145 | But tell me what you intend to make of this last cask, the best of my whole stock? |
44145 | But tell me, gentlemen, if you regard the books of merchants as holding good in practice? |
44145 | But then what will the country in question have lost? |
44145 | But what are humours? |
44145 | But what constitutes the measure of our prosperity, or of our wealth? |
44145 | But what has happened? |
44145 | But when you lay down a principle in opposition to ours, you perhaps imagine you are not proceeding on theory? |
44145 | But which of them should legislation favour, as identical with the public good-- if, indeed, it should favour either? |
44145 | But which? |
44145 | But who ever claimed for it this character, or put forward on its behalf so exorbitant a pretension? |
44145 | But who reaps the advantage of this liberality of nature? |
44145 | But who would profit? |
44145 | But why should he contest the utility of the duty which has devolved upon us? |
44145 | But why? |
44145 | But will any one undertake to affirm that fire has become a greater evil since the introduction of insurance? |
44145 | Butter? |
44145 | Can Paris produce firewood as cheaply as the Forest of Bondy? |
44145 | Can it be explained how such a system could coexist with the constantly increasing prosperity of nations? |
44145 | Can we be surprised at this, when the public winks at it? |
44145 | Can you maintain that export duties will not be onerous?" |
44145 | D. to do with my wine? |
44145 | D., forsooth, is to make up his losses by laying hold of my wine? |
44145 | D., the cloth- manufacturer? |
44145 | D.? |
44145 | DOES PROTECTION RAISE THE RATE OF WAGES? |
44145 | Did not M. Saint Cricq exclaim,"Production is excessive?" |
44145 | Do n''t you see the great service you are rendering to the country? |
44145 | Do n''t you see we are providing employment for you? |
44145 | Do we attack their principle? |
44145 | Do we establish our doctrine? |
44145 | Do we not hear it said every day,"The foreigner is about to inundate us with his products?" |
44145 | Do workmen break machines? |
44145 | Do you desire to appreciate the bearing of an economic phenomenon? |
44145 | Do you desire to be in a situation to decide between liberty and protection? |
44145 | Do you imagine I am going to amuse myself by selling my timber at the price of float- wood? |
44145 | Do you not compete with one another? |
44145 | Do you not see that 48,000_ hectares_ of land, with capital and manual labour in proportion, are sufficient to supply all France with sugar? |
44145 | Do you resign the pen for the brush, to save your paying_ tribute_ to the shoeblack? |
44145 | Do you see the consequence? |
44145 | Do you think this probable? |
44145 | Do you want me to shut your mouth? |
44145 | Do you want to know whether you are rich? |
44145 | Does he not exact more than is due to him? |
44145 | Does he not take them by stealth or by force? |
44145 | Does not M. d''Argout urge as an argument against sugar- growing the very productiveness of that industry? |
44145 | Does not common sense tell us that we must equalize the conditions by a protective octroi tariff? |
44145 | Does she not always aspire at universal supremacy? |
44145 | Does the farmer make his own clothes? |
44145 | Does the tailor produce the corn he consumes? |
44145 | Does the tariff alone protect you? |
44145 | Does this mean that they are no longer plundered? |
44145 | Does your housekeeper continue to have your bread made at home, after she finds she can buy it cheaper from the baker? |
44145 | Dupin?) |
44145 | Est- ce que j''écris mal? |
44145 | Except, then, the sale of tobacco, what employment remains for your female subjects? |
44145 | From monopolists? |
44145 | From their point of view, I would ask what you could make of such rights if you had them? |
44145 | From whom does it come, then? |
44145 | Granted; but will not these prices be again raised by an increased demand? |
44145 | Has any one ever asserted, or is it possible to maintain, that scarcity is at the foundation of human wellbeing? |
44145 | Has every man as much of it as he would wish to have? |
44145 | Has he created the laws of gravitation, of the transmission of forces, of affinity? |
44145 | Has iron relations only with those who make it? |
44145 | Has it done so? |
44145 | Has it never occurred to you, that you thereby exercise over your brethren the most iniquitous species of spoliation?" |
44145 | Has it no relations with those who use it? |
44145 | Has not M. Bugeaud pronounced these words,"Let bread be dear, and agriculturists will get rich?" |
44145 | Has that accident nothing to do with his present unhappy state? |
44145 | Have I any voice in the matter? |
44145 | He receives in exchange-- what? |
44145 | How He could have willed that they should be unable to avoid Injustice and War except by renouncing the possibility of attaining prosperity? |
44145 | How can Paris ever compete with Normandy in dairy produce? |
44145 | How can agriculture flourish in such a locality? |
44145 | How do they manage to conceal them? |
44145 | How does each succeeding day bring what is wanted, nothing more, nothing less, to so gigantic a market? |
44145 | How is this brought about? |
44145 | How long will men shut their eyes to this simple truth? |
44145 | How many_ hectares_ had we under beet- root in 1828? |
44145 | How then can morality restrain acts of spoliation when public opinion places such acts in the rank of the most exalted virtue? |
44145 | How, for example, can we possibly produce milk and butter in Paris, with Brittany and Normandy at our door? |
44145 | I ask such people, as Harpagon asks Elise,**"Is it the word or the thing which frightens you?" |
44145 | I had at the time this question to resolve:"Why does an article manufactured at Brussels, for example, cost dearer when it comes to Paris?" |
44145 | I like your plan; but what comes of the poor cloth- manufacturer?" |
44145 | If abnegation has indeed so many charms for you, why do you fail to practise it in private life? |
44145 | If commerce were free, what use would you have for your great standing armies and powerful navies?.... |
44145 | If religion is powerless, and if philosophy is equally powerless, how then are wars to be put an end to? |
44145 | If they ask how we are to pay for these things? |
44145 | If you are asked what, then, is to be done? |
44145 | If you open your gates freely to these rival products, what will become of the cowfeeders, woodcutters, and pork- butchers? |
44145 | Infallible, did I say? |
44145 | Is it credible? |
44145 | Is it established or maintained with capital which has fallen from the moon? |
44145 | Is it not an incontestable axiom in political economy that taxes ultimately fall on the consumer? |
44145 | Is it not because that is its cost price? |
44145 | Is it not evident that if the industry of Poitou were transplanted to Paris, it would open up a steady demand for Parisian labour? |
44145 | Is it not their business to put an end to the practice? |
44145 | Is it not very convenient to be in a situation to address yourselves to him?" |
44145 | Is it the result of the effort? |
44145 | Is it worth while exposing seriously such an abuse of language? |
44145 | Is it, or is it not, true, that if we admit firewood, meat, and butter freely or at a lower duty, our markets will be inundated? |
44145 | Is its sole and ultimate destination to be produced? |
44145 | Is not this_ sisyphism_ in all its purity? |
44145 | Is our industry_ en masse_ diminished in consequence? |
44145 | Is philanthropy to be again brought into play? |
44145 | Is repose nothing? |
44145 | Is that what is called selling? |
44145 | Is the consumption of cloth a fixed and invariable quantity? |
44145 | Is the essential thing to_ make it_, or to_ get it?_""A very sensible question, truly! |
44145 | Is the manufacturer not beholden to nature in his processes? |
44145 | Is there a different law for international exchanges? |
44145 | Is there any certainty that we should do either the one or the other? |
44145 | Is there in the world a more melancholy picture than this?" |
44145 | Is there no means, then, of counteracting this singular measure that Peter and his colleagues got adopted twenty years ago? |
44145 | Is this possible? |
44145 | It is with M. Lestiboudois, then, that we must deal, for how can we argue with M. Gauthier? |
44145 | It may be asked how this abuse of words first came to be introduced into the rhetoric of the monopolists? |
44145 | J.: And what becomes of the capital? |
44145 | J.: And what benefit do I derive from this now? |
44145 | J.: And what service do they render me? |
44145 | J.: And would that balance not be quite as well maintained if the European powers were to reduce their forces by one- half or three-fourths? |
44145 | J.: How? |
44145 | J.: I am sorry to hear it, but what can I do? |
44145 | J.: Shall I re- elect him, to divide my wine among Africans and manufacturers? |
44145 | Jacques: And after that? |
44145 | Jacques: And after that? |
44145 | Jacques: But the Treasury? |
44145 | Jacques: What connexion is there between the two subjects of comparison? |
44145 | John: And I, what shall I gain by overcharging you for my sausages, if you overcharge me for my faggots and bread and butter? |
44145 | John: And after that? |
44145 | John: And after that? |
44145 | John: And after that? |
44145 | John: And after that? |
44145 | John: And after that? |
44145 | John: And after that? |
44145 | John: And after that? |
44145 | John: And if the letters are prepaid? |
44145 | John: And then? |
44145 | John: And then? |
44145 | John: And then? |
44145 | John: And then? |
44145 | John: And then? |
44145 | John: And then? |
44145 | John: And what is that? |
44145 | John: Do not the Treasury and the public sail in the same boat? |
44145 | John: How so? |
44145 | L.: And upon what does the gallant general live? |
44145 | L.: What would happen to him if he voted a reduction of the army, and of your contingent? |
44145 | L.: Whom did you vote for as deputy? |
44145 | L.: Why should you indulge in complaints? |
44145 | L.: Would you consider two tuns as more than your fair contribution to the expense of the army and navy? |
44145 | L.: You have secured twenty tuns of wine? |
44145 | Labour of every kind is in itself sufficiently repugnant to warrant one in asking to what result it leads? |
44145 | M. Simiot proposes this question:-- Should the proposed railway from Paris to Madrid offer a solution of continuity at Bordeaux? |
44145 | M. de Saint- Cricq inquires,"Whether it is certain that the foreigner will buy from us as much as he sells?" |
44145 | Mais ne puis- je savoir ce que dans mon sonnet?... |
44145 | Meat? |
44145 | Men are, no doubt, not so well provided with what they want; but are we to impute this to free- trade, or to the bad harvests? |
44145 | Milk? |
44145 | No; nothing is more deceptive than theory; your doctrine? |
44145 | Now I would ask, Are the people who live under our laws better fed because there is_ less_ bread, meat, and sugar in the country? |
44145 | Now, I ask, would we not have attained the same result by lowering the tariff by 5 francs? |
44145 | Now, do you follow me? |
44145 | Now, on what does the_ supply_ of labour depend? |
44145 | Now, what does this prove? |
44145 | Now, when there are fewer enjoyments upon the whole, will the workman''s share of them be augmented? |
44145 | Now, why is this sack of wool worth 100 fr.? |
44145 | Of these two means, which is the best?" |
44145 | Of these two processes, which exercises the more efficacious influence on social progress? |
44145 | On what does the rate of wages depend? |
44145 | On what does the_ demand_ for labour depend? |
44145 | Open their books and their journals; and what do you find? |
44145 | Paul: How do you like this Normandy butter? |
44145 | Paul: To give a man something at a lower price-- is that what you call beating him? |
44145 | Perhaps you will not object to read my defence? |
44145 | Practically how are such matters transacted? |
44145 | Provided the bankers I represent offer sufficient security, under what pretext can my proposal be refused acceptance? |
44145 | Public opinion alone can overturn such an edifice of iniquity; but where can it make a beginning, when every stone of the edifice is tabooed? |
44145 | Remark this: A nation isolates itself looking forward to the possibility of war; but is not this very act of isolating itself the beginning of war? |
44145 | So much for the disposal of one tun; but what about the five others? |
44145 | Some people will say, You are partisans, then, of the_ laissez passer?_--economists of the school of Smith and Say? |
44145 | Son: And when is this to stop? |
44145 | Son: How can that be, seeing he has got rid of competition? |
44145 | Son: How did that happen? |
44145 | Son: The three magistrates must have made a large fortune? |
44145 | Suppose it accomplished, what would you do? |
44145 | Surely, in making him my proxy, I was guilty of a piece of folly; for what is there in common between a general officer and a poor vinedresser? |
44145 | Take the case of any producer whatever, what is his immediate interest? |
44145 | The general wealth has increased, no doubt; but has the individual wealth of the shoemakers and tailors been diminished? |
44145 | The lottery gone, what means have we of providing for our_ protégées?_ Tobacco- shops and the post- office. |
44145 | The people, moreover, find their arguments too clear, and why should they be expected to believe what is so easily understood? |
44145 | The slaves regret to part with their chains, for they ask themselves,"Whence will come the cassava?" |
44145 | Then you simply desire to deprive our workmen of employment, of wages, and of bread?" |
44145 | Then, I venture to ask, what, under such circumstances, is the good of your railway? |
44145 | These offices have been shut up by a pitiless philanthropy, and on what pretext? |
44145 | To which of these two last circumstances are we to attribute the first? |
44145 | Was he the richer for this? |
44145 | Was it necessary to insinuate that we free- traders are the agents of England, of the south of France, of the government? |
44145 | We are about to offer you an admirable opportunity of applying your-- what shall we call it? |
44145 | We display exactly the same degree of wisdom and sense, when we desire, at the cost of millions, to defend our country.... From what? |
44145 | Well, on this hypotheses, what reason should we have to regret the stoppage of industrial production? |
44145 | What are we to expect, for instance, from the cultivation of beet- root? |
44145 | What are your deductions from them? |
44145 | What can the soil be made to produce with a well- founded expectation of fair remuneration? |
44145 | What difference, then, can we possibly discover between the Bordeaux petitioners and the Corypheus of restriction? |
44145 | What do such phrases mean? |
44145 | What do we say; and what do they say? |
44145 | What do we see? |
44145 | What do you mean? |
44145 | What does it signify? |
44145 | What gain will it be to the people if foreign competition, which may damage their sales, does not benefit them in their purchases? |
44145 | What good can result from liberty to purchase if you want the means-- in other words, if you are out of employment? |
44145 | What has become of the culture of indigo by slave labour? |
44145 | What has been the result? |
44145 | What has that to do with your butter? |
44145 | What have you got to say?'' |
44145 | What is astonishing in all this? |
44145 | What is done with the letters that are put into the post- office? |
44145 | What is it that we protect in France? |
44145 | What is the immediate interest of the consumer? |
44145 | What is the object in view? |
44145 | What is the present destiny of women in France? |
44145 | What is your second article?" |
44145 | What more powerful means of rendering a people moral than religion? |
44145 | What more proofs would you have? |
44145 | What more would you have? |
44145 | What shall I say of the vine- dressers? |
44145 | What shallow writer fails to devote himself to the wellbeing of the working classes? |
44145 | What should we make of these three hours? |
44145 | What takes place, and what is resolved upon? |
44145 | What takes place? |
44145 | What use would it be to prohibit the importation of houses by sea or by land?" |
44145 | What was I thinking of? |
44145 | What would you be at? |
44145 | What, then, is to be gained by it? |
44145 | What, under such circumstances, are we to do? |
44145 | What? |
44145 | When called upon to elect those whose province it is to determine the sphere and remuneration of governmental action, whom do they choose? |
44145 | When did you take your seat in the Palais Bourbon? |
44145 | When shall we be done with these puerile declamations? |
44145 | When shall we cease to exhibit this nauseous contradiction between our professions and our practice? |
44145 | When they set about reforming the convents in Spain, they asked the beggars,"Where will you now find food and clothing? |
44145 | When will_ tartuferie_ be finally banished from science? |
44145 | Whence this difference? |
44145 | Where is your place, then, in the Chamber of Peers? |
44145 | Where will that land us? |
44145 | Which is best for man, and for society, abundance or scarcity? |
44145 | Who could entertain for a moment any such thought? |
44145 | Who has consulted you? |
44145 | Why are they permitted to establish themselves alongside of you while the importation of cloth is restricted? |
44145 | Why do you drive away the Belgians? |
44145 | Why should I go on tormenting myself with this dry and dreary science of_ Political Economy?_ Why? |
44145 | Why should I go on tormenting myself with this dry and dreary science of_ Political Economy?_ Why? |
44145 | Why then should not the foreigner bear the charges necessary to the production of the commodity of which ultimately he is the consumer?" |
44145 | Why was this? |
44145 | Why? |
44145 | Why? |
44145 | Why? |
44145 | Will it be said that there is something else to be paid for, materials, apparatus, etc.? |
44145 | With what do they reproach free trade? |
44145 | Wool? |
44145 | Would such a pretended reform not overturn the whole existing state of things? |
44145 | Would you explain yours to me? |
44145 | Would you venture to pull it down? |
44145 | Yet what have we witnessed for eighteen hundred years? |
44145 | You allow that France could make this something else to exchange for cloth, with a less expenditure of labour than if she had made the cloth itself?" |
44145 | You ask me, then, What is your conclusion? |
44145 | You ask what gain this would be to the people? |
44145 | You ask, Who is to find you employment? |
44145 | You fancy, perhaps, that the Customhouse is merely an instrument of taxation, like the_ octroi_ or the toll- bar? |
44145 | You have doubtless invented a new tax?" |
44145 | and do you lay taxation out of account? |
44145 | and is there any such disease? |
44145 | and who, after having inundated us with their hams and sausages, take perhaps nothing from us in return? |
44145 | but who protects you workmen? |
44145 | butter as cheaply as Normandy? |
44145 | cry the two sophists; is it not better to expose ourselves to an eventual invasion than accept an invasion which is certain? |
44145 | gratis? |
44145 | he of course ran to appropriate it?" |
44145 | in charity? |
44145 | is slavery then invulnerable? |
44145 | is there a human foresight apart from humanity? |
44145 | meat as cheaply as Poitou? |
44145 | or is it the effort itself? |
44145 | or, again,"Can you arrange to barter this Newcastle coal against this champagne wine?" |
44145 | said the physician,"do you make no allowance for his broken arms? |
44145 | who will deliver me from this hurricane of reforms? |
44145 | will it be said that because you are workmen you are for that reason unintelligent and immoral? |
44145 | you exclaim, can that be a question? |
44145 | your principle? |
44145 | your system? |
44145 | your theory? |
4799 | ''Am I like a strong fellow who steals kine? |
4799 | ''God omnipotent, Is there no mercy? |
4799 | ''Is it then Thine, Almighty Power,''she cries,''Whence tears of endless sorrow dim these eyes? |
4799 | ''Or whether mortal taught or God inspired The power of unpremeditated song? |
4799 | ''Tis in vain that I fly:_ 35- What remains, but to curse him,--to curse him and die? |
4799 | ''Tis night-- what faint and distant scream_ 30 Comes on the wild and fitful blast? |
4799 | ''Twixt witches and incubi, what shall be done? |
4799 | ''What madness is this, Gallus? |
4799 | ''Whence, think''st thou, kings and parasites arose? |
4799 | ''With me, you unkind God?'' |
4799 | --''Dear mother,''Replied sly Hermes,''wherefore scold and bother? |
4799 | --said Mercury:''Is it about these cows you tease me so? |
4799 | ... PROCTO- PHANTASMIST: What is this cursed multitude about? |
4799 | ...''What madness is this, Gallus? |
4799 | 12 10 9: Truly for self, thus thought that Christian Priest indeed, 12 11 9: A woman? |
4799 | 17. death? |
4799 | 33. ye? |
4799 | 461; Phanae, 470; blood 551; tyrant 557; Cydaris, 606; Heaven 636; Highness 638; man 738; sayest 738; One 768; mountains 831; dust 885; consummation? |
4799 | 6 40 1: And such is Nature''s modesty, that those 8 4 9: Dream ye that God thus builds for man in solitude? |
4799 | 8 5 1: What then is God? |
4799 | : Do evil deeds thus quickly come to end? |
4799 | A HALF- WITCH BELOW: I have been tripping this many an hour: Are the others already so far before? |
4799 | A VOICE[ WITHIN]: What is the glory far above All else in human life? |
4799 | A book is written before a certain event, in which this event is foretold; how could the prophet have foreknown it without inspiration? |
4799 | AUTHOR: Who now can taste a treatise of deep sense And ponderous volume? |
4799 | And canst thou mock mine agony, thus calm In cloudless radiance, Queen of silver night? |
4799 | And dost thou not find, replied Adam, these words therein, And Adam rebelled against his Lord and transgressed? |
4799 | And dost thou wish the errors to survive That bar thee from all sympathies of good, After the miserable interest Thou hold''st in their protraction? |
4799 | And is The new cheese pressed into the bulrush baskets? |
4799 | And love and concord hast thou swept away,_ 65 As if incongruous with thy parted sway? |
4799 | And shall that soul, to selfish peace resigned,_ 10 So soon forget the woe its fellows share? |
4799 | And thou, O stranger, tell how art thou called? |
4799 | And what are the joys that the modish share, In their sickly haunts of pleasure? |
4799 | And what city nourished ye? |
4799 | And you wild winds, thus can you sleep so still_ 5 Whilst throbs the tempest of my breast so high? |
4799 | And, being opposite, If one be good, is not the other evil? |
4799 | Are not thy days Days of unsatisfying listlessness? |
4799 | Are not thy views of unregretted death Drear, comfortless, and horrible? |
4799 | Are the screech, the lapwing, and the jay, All awake as if''twere day? |
4799 | Are there no stores of vengeful violent fate Within the magazines of Thy fierce hate? |
4799 | Are there not hopes within thee, which this scene_ 180 Of linked and gradual being has confirmed? |
4799 | Are we so wise, and is the POND still haunted? |
4799 | Art thou a monstrous shadow which my madness Has formed in the idle air? |
4799 | Art thou indeed forever gone, Forever, ever, lost to me? |
4799 | As you see me drink--... CYCLOPS: How now? |
4799 | Awful Avenger in Heaven, hast Thou in Thine armoury of wrath a punishment more dreadful? |
4799 | Bacchus, O beloved, where,_ 65 Shaking wide thy yellow hair, Wanderest thou alone, afar? |
4799 | Beneath whose looks did my reviving soul_ 5 Riper in truth and virtuous daring grow? |
4799 | But let me ask, whence have ye sailed, O strangers? |
4799 | But what is sweeter to revenge''s ear Than the fell tyrant''s last expiring yell? |
4799 | But what needs this serious haste, O father? |
4799 | CHORUS OF SATYRS: STROPHE: Where has he of race divine_ 45 Wandered in the winding rocks? |
4799 | CHORUS: How then? |
4799 | CHORUS: May I, as in libations to a God, Share in the blinding him with the red brand? |
4799 | CHORUS: What are you roaring out, Cyclops? |
4799 | CHORUS: What, did you fall into the fire when drunk? |
4799 | CHORUS: Ye have taken Troy and laid your hands on Helen? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: Are the bowls full of milk besides? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: At my right hand or left? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: By no means.--... What is this crowd I see beside the stalls? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: By whom? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: Did not the rascals know I am a God, sprung from the race of Heaven? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: How does the God like living in a skin? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: In truth? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: Should I not share this liquor with my brothers? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: Well, is the dinner fitly cooked and laid? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: What do you put the cup behind me for? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: What do you say? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: What is this tumult? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: What sort of God is Bacchus then accounted? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: What, have ye shared in the unenvied spoil_ 260 Of the false Helen, near Scamander''s stream? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: Where then? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: Where? |
4799 | CYCLOPS: You jeer me; where, I ask, is Nobody? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: And if you both Would marry her, is it not weak and vain, Culpable and unworthy, thus beforehand To slur her honour? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: And you? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: Do you regret My victory? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: Have you Studied much? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: Permit one question further: is the lady Impossible to hope or not? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: What is this? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: What noise is that among the boughs? |
4799 | CYPRIAN: Would you for your Part, marry her? |
4799 | Can Snowdon''s Lethe from the free- born mind So soon the page of injured penury tear? |
4799 | Can the daystar dawn of love, Where the flag of war unfurled Floats with crimson stain above The fabric of a ruined world? |
4799 | Can the fierce night- fiends rest on yonder hill, And, in the eternal mansions of the sky, Can the directors of the storm in powerless silence lie? |
4799 | Can this be wondered at? |
4799 | Can those eyes, Beaming with mildest radiance on my heart To purify its purity, e''er bend To soothe its vice or consecrate its fears? |
4799 | Can you, ye flow''rets, spread your perfumed balm Mid pearly gems of dew that shine so bright? |
4799 | Ceux meme qui font profession d''adorer le meme Dieu, sent- ils d''accord sur son compte? |
4799 | Come they yet? |
4799 | Consider now,_ 10 Is it a dream of which I speak to thee? |
4799 | Could a set of men, whose passions were not perverted by unnatural stimuli, look with coolness on an auto da fe? |
4799 | DAEMON: And who art thou, before whose feet my fate Has prostrated me? |
4799 | DAEMON: But how Canst thou defend thyself from that or me, If my power drags thee onward? |
4799 | DAEMON: How can I impugn_ 200 So clear a consequence? |
4799 | DAEMON: What difficulty find you here? |
4799 | DAEMON: Who but regrets a check In rivalry of wit? |
4799 | Dar''st thou amid the varied multitude To live alone, an isolated thing? |
4799 | Dares the lama, most fleet of the sons of the wind, The lion to rouse from his skull- covered lair? |
4799 | Do you come here Always to scold, and cavil, and complain? |
4799 | Do you not hear the Aziola cry? |
4799 | Do you think these motives, which I shall present, are powerful enough to rouse him? |
4799 | Does not so monstrous and disgusting an absurdity carry its own infamy and refutation with itself? |
4799 | Dost thou not cry, ere night''s long rack is o''er,"When will the morning come?" |
4799 | Dost thou not hear? |
4799 | Est- il une centree sur la terre ou la science de Dieu se soit reellement parfectionnee? |
4799 | FAUST: In introducing us, do you assume The character of Wizard or of Devil? |
4799 | FAUST: Seest thou not a pale, Fair girl, standing alone, far, far away? |
4799 | FAUST: Then saw I-- MEPHISTOPHELES: What? |
4799 | FAUST: Who? |
4799 | FLORO: From what rocks And desert cells? |
4799 | Hath then the gloomy Power Whose reign is in the tainted sepulchres_ 10 Seized on her sinless soul? |
4799 | Have they escaped, or are they yet within? |
4799 | How could they starve her into compliance with their views? |
4799 | How do I feel my happiness? |
4799 | How long then ought the sexual connection to last? |
4799 | How many years dost thou find the law was written before I was created? |
4799 | How much longer will man continue to pimp for the gluttony of Death, his most insidious, implacable, and eternal foe? |
4799 | How say you now? |
4799 | How then does one will one thing, one another? |
4799 | I met a maniac-- like he was to me, I said--''Poor victim, wherefore dost thou roam? |
4799 | I offer a calm habitation to thee.-- Say, victim of grief, wilt thou slumber with me? |
4799 | I see thee shrink,_ 70 Surpassing Spirit!--wert thou human else? |
4799 | I was_ 65 Upon my way to Antioch upon business Of some importance, but wrapped up in cares( Who is exempt from this inheritance?) |
4799 | IF GOD HAS SPOKEN, WHY IS THE UNIVERSE NOT CONVINCED? |
4799 | If they have, how could the Earl have foreknown them without inspiration? |
4799 | In the space here left blank, line 231, the manuscript has manhood, which is cancelled for some monosyllable unknown-- query, spring? |
4799 | Is confidence So vain in virtue that I learn to doubt The mirror even of Truth? |
4799 | Is he gone so quickly? |
4799 | Is it impossible to realize a state of society, where all the energies of man shall be directed to the production of his solid happiness? |
4799 | Is it not indisputable That two contending wills can never lead To the same end? |
4799 | Is it strange_ 85 That this poor wretch should pride him in his woe? |
4799 | Is it the Eternal Triune, is it He Who dares arrest the wheels of destiny And plunge me in the lowest Hell of Hells? |
4799 | Is it to be believed that a being of gentle feelings, rising from his meal of roots, would take delight in sports of blood? |
4799 | Is not thy youth_ 250 A vain and feverish dream of sensualism? |
4799 | Is the love of such a frigid heart of more worth than its belief? |
4799 | Is this new feeling But a visioned ghost of slumber? |
4799 | Is this the language of delicacy and reason? |
4799 | Is this the real reason? |
4799 | JUSTINA: And who art thou, who hast found entrance hither, Into my chamber through the doors and locks? |
4799 | JUSTINA: Have you not seen him? |
4799 | JUSTINA: It can not be!--Whom have I ever loved? |
4799 | JUSTINA: Thou melancholy Thought which art_ 35 So flattering and so sweet, to thee When did I give the liberty Thus to afflict my heart? |
4799 | LELIO: Whence comest thou, to stand_ 225 Between me and my vengeance? |
4799 | MEPHISTOPHELES: As thou, O Lord, once more art kind enough To interest Thyself in our affairs,_ 30 And ask,''How goes it with you there below?'' |
4799 | MEPHISTOPHELES: The Doctor? |
4799 | MEPHISTOPHELES: Would you not like a broomstick? |
4799 | MOSCON: How happens it, although you can maintain The folly of enjoying festivals, That yet you go there? |
4799 | Mais ce Dieu n''est- il donc pas la chose en question? |
4799 | Mais pourquoi m''en rapporterais- je a vous? |
4799 | Mais trouvons- nous de l''harmonie entre les opinions theologiques des differens inspires, ou des penseurs repandus sur la terre? |
4799 | Melodious Arethusa, o''er my verse Shed thou once more the spirit of thy stream: Who denies verse to Gallus? |
4799 | Milking Their dams or playing by their sides? |
4799 | Moonbeam, why art thou so pale, As thou walkest o''er the dewy dale, Where humble wild- flowers grow? |
4799 | Must putrefaction''s breath Leave nothing of this heavenly sight But loathsomeness and ruin? |
4799 | Must this poor bosom beat alone, Or beat at all, if not for thee? |
4799 | NOTE:_ 197 And]query, Ay? |
4799 | No poison in the clouds to bathe a brow That lowers on Thee with desperate contempt? |
4799 | Not at home? |
4799 | Now tell me, friend, What is there better in the world than this? |
4799 | Now, have these particulars come to pass, or have they not? |
4799 | O Venus? |
4799 | Old gentlewomen, what do you do out here? |
4799 | On tombs? |
4799 | Or can the heated mind engender shapes From its own fear? |
4799 | Or is it only a sweet slumber Stealing o''er sensation, Which the breath of roseate morning_ 25 Chaseth into darkness? |
4799 | Or is the state popular? |
4799 | Peace, soft Peace, art thou for ever gone, Is thy fair form indeed for ever flown? |
4799 | Prometheus Unbound: A Lyrical Drama: In Four Acts: With Other Poems: By: Percy Bysshe Shelley: Audisne haec, Amphiarae, sub terram abdite? |
4799 | Quas MANIBUS premit illa duas insensa papillas Cur mihi sit DIGITO tangere, amata, nefas? |
4799 | S''IL A PARLE, POURQUOI L''UNIVERS N''EST- IL PAS CONVAINCU? |
4799 | S''il est immuable, de quel droit pretendrions- nous faire changer ses decrets? |
4799 | S''il est inconcevable, pourquoi nous en occuper? |
4799 | S''il est infiniment bon, quelle raison aurions- nous de le craindre? |
4799 | S''il est infiniment sage, de quoi nous inquieter sur notre sort? |
4799 | S''il est juste, comment croire qu''il punisse des creatures qu''il a rempli de faiblesses? |
4799 | S''il est maitre de tout, pourquoi lui faire des sacrifices et des offrandes? |
4799 | S''il est partout, pourquoi lui elever des temples? |
4799 | S''il est raisonnable, comment se mattrait- il en colere contre des aveugles, a qui il a laisse la liberte de deraisonner? |
4799 | S''il est tout- puissant, comment l''offenser, comment lui resister? |
4799 | S''il sait tout, pourquoi l''avertir de nos besoins, et le fatiguer de nos prieres? |
4799 | SILENUS: Have you it now?--or is it in the ship? |
4799 | SILENUS: I? |
4799 | SILENUS: Stay-- for what need have you of pot companions? |
4799 | SPIRIT:''Do I dream? |
4799 | SPIRIT:''Is there a God?'' |
4799 | Say, what do you infer_ 190 From this? |
4799 | See''st thou shapes within the mist? |
4799 | Seems nothing ever right to you on earth? |
4799 | Shall I stay? |
4799 | Shall we onward? |
4799 | Si la grace fait tout en elles, quelle raison aurait- il de les recompenser? |
4799 | Sont- ils contents des preuves que leurs collegues apportent de son existence? |
4799 | Souscrivent- ils unanimement aux idees qu''ils presentent sur sa nature, sur sa conduite, sur la facon d''entendre ses pretandus oracles? |
4799 | THE GIRL: What does he want then at our ball? |
4799 | THE LORD: Have you no more to say? |
4799 | THE LORD: Knowest thou Faust? |
4799 | Take pleasure in his abjectness, and hug The scorpion that consumes him? |
4799 | That man''s mild nature rises not in war Against a king''s employ? |
4799 | The legion of witches is coming behind,_ 160 Darkening the night, and outspeeding the wind-- A VOICE: Which way comest thou? |
4799 | The poor are set to labour,--for what? |
4799 | The way is wide, the way is long,_ 170 But what is that for a Bedlam throng? |
4799 | The word revived suits well with clod; but what is a revived clog? |
4799 | There is a true witch element about us;_ 215 Take hold on me, or we shall be divided:-- Where are you? |
4799 | They wept aloud, and little Anselm mine, Said--''twas my youngest, dearest little one,--_ 35"What ails thee, father? |
4799 | Thy manhood blighted with unripe disease? |
4799 | Thy mind, Is it not morbid as thy nerveless frame,_ 255 Incapable of judgement, hope, or love? |
4799 | To triumph whilst I die, To triumph whilst thine ebon wing Enfolds my shuddering soul? |
4799 | Trophies of my oblivion and disdain,_ 80 Floro and Lelio did I not reject? |
4799 | ULYSSES: And are there walls, and tower- surrounded towns? |
4799 | ULYSSES: And are they just to strangers?--hospitable? |
4799 | ULYSSES: And who possess the land? |
4799 | ULYSSES: Did it flow sweetly down your throat? |
4799 | ULYSSES: Friends, can you show me some clear water- spring, The remedy of our thirst? |
4799 | ULYSSES: How live they? |
4799 | ULYSSES: I am the same, but do not rail upon me.-- SILENUS: Whence sailing do you come to Sicily? |
4799 | ULYSSES: If he gives joy, what is his skin to you? |
4799 | ULYSSES: Know''st thou what thou must do to aid us hence? |
4799 | ULYSSES: Obeying whom? |
4799 | ULYSSES: The Cyclops now-- where is he? |
4799 | ULYSSES: Were you then driven here by stress of weather? |
4799 | ULYSSES: What, sprained with standing still? |
4799 | ULYSSES: Would you first taste of the unmingled wine? |
4799 | VICE: And, secret one, what hast thou done, To compare, in thy tumid pride, with me? |
4799 | VOICES ABOVE: Out of the crannies of the rocks_ 190 Who calls? |
4799 | Was Nero a man of temperate life? |
4799 | What are my father''s ocean promontories, The sacred rocks whereon he dwells, to me? |
4799 | What favour now Shall I receive to praise you at your hands? |
4799 | What good_ 5 Is there in making short a pleasant way? |
4799 | What have you done since you departed hence? |
4799 | What is the cause of morbid action in the animal system? |
4799 | What is the cause of this new Power Which doth my fevered being move,_ 40 Momently raging more and more? |
4799 | What then avail their virtuous deeds, their thoughts Of purity, with radiant genius bright, Or lit with human reason''s earthly ray? |
4799 | What was the shriek that struck Fancy''s ear As it sate on the ruins of time that is past? |
4799 | What would the world say If one should slay the other, and if she_ 280 Should afterwards espouse the murderer? |
4799 | What? |
4799 | When the tiger approaches can the fast- fleeting hind Repose trust in his footsteps of air? |
4799 | When will the pride of ignorance blush at having believed before it could comprehend? |
4799 | When will the sun smile on the bloodless field,_ 45 And the stern warrior''s arm the sickle wield? |
4799 | When will the vulgar learn humility? |
4799 | Where is the fame Which the vainglorious mighty of the earth Seek to eternize? |
4799 | Where the destroying Minister that flew Pouring the fiery tide of desolation Upon the leagued Assyrian''s attempt? |
4799 | Where, sweet mountain- beast, Got you that speckled shell? |
4799 | Whether it is more probable that we are ignorant of the natural cause of an event, or that we know the supernatural one? |
4799 | Who dare confide in right or a just claim? |
4799 | Who denies verse to Gallus? |
4799 | Who does not see that this is a remedy which aggravates whilst it palliates the countless diseases of society? |
4799 | Who is it thus late at the Abbey- gate? |
4799 | Who laid his fist upon your head? |
4799 | Who moves? |
4799 | Who with unwearied feet could e''er impress The sand with such enormous vestiges? |
4799 | Whose eyes have I gazed fondly on, And loved mankind the more? |
4799 | Whose is the love that gleaming through the world, Wards off the poisonous arrow of its scorn? |
4799 | Whose is the warm and partial praise, Virtue''s most sweet reward? |
4799 | Whose stingings bade thy heart look further still, When, to the moonlight walk by Henry led, Sweetly and sadly thou didst talk of death? |
4799 | Why come you here to ask me what is done With the wild oxen which it seems you miss? |
4799 | Why do you let that fair girl pass from you, Who sung so sweetly to you in the dance? |
4799 | Why dost thou shroud thy vestal purity In penury and dungeons? |
4799 | Why is it said thou canst not live In a youthful breast and fair, Since thou eternal life canst give, Canst bloom for ever there? |
4799 | Why is the aged husbandman more experienced than the young beginner? |
4799 | Why look so at thine?" |
4799 | Will Ianthe wake again, And give that faithful bosom joy Whose sleepless spirit waits to catch Light, life and rapture from her smile? |
4799 | Will any one Furnish with food seamen in want of it? |
4799 | Will not steel drink the blood- life where it swells? |
4799 | Will not the lightning''s blast destroy my frame? |
4799 | Will yon vast suns roll on Interminably, still illuming The night of so many wretched souls, And see no hope for them? |
4799 | Wilt thou hear? |
4799 | Wilt thou roam with me To the restless sea,_ 20 And linger upon the steep, And list to the flow Of the waves below How they toss and roar and leap? |
4799 | Ye mock yourselves and give 8 6 1: What then is God? |
4799 | Yet is the tie departed Which bound thy lovely soul to bliss? |
4799 | Yet tell me, dark Death, when thine empire is o''er, What awaits on Futurity''s mist- covered shore? |
4799 | Yon silver beams, Sleep they less sweetly on the cottage thatch_ 205 Than on the dome of kings? |
4799 | Yon sun, Lights it the great alone? |
4799 | You grub those stumps? |
4799 | _ 10 Already Spring kindles the birchen spray, And the hoar pines already feel her breath: Shall she not work also within our limbs? |
4799 | _ 10 Has it left thee broken- hearted In a world so cold as this? |
4799 | _ 10 I offer a calm habitation to thee,-- Say, victim of grief, wilt thou slumber with me? |
4799 | _ 100 SILENUS: How, touched you not at your paternal shore? |
4799 | _ 105 Those gilded flies That, basking in the sunshine of a court, Fatten on its corruption!--what are they? |
4799 | _ 115 ULYSSES: Have they the Bromian drink from the vine''s stream? |
4799 | _ 115 What]query Which? |
4799 | _ 130 SILENUS: But how much gold will you engage to give? |
4799 | _ 140 Strange accents are ringing Aloft, afar, anear? |
4799 | _ 15 Where is the noonday Pestilence that slew The myriad sons of Israel''s favoured nation? |
4799 | _ 170 What shall we do? |
4799 | _ 185 How are my young lambs in the cavern? |
4799 | _ 185 If equal in their power, unequal only In opportunity, which of the two Will remain conqueror? |
4799 | _ 20 And canst thou not contend with agony, That thus at midnight thou dost quit thine home?'' |
4799 | _ 20 Spare nothing but a gloomy theme, On which the lightest heart might moralize? |
4799 | _ 20 Where the dark Earthquake- daemon who engorged At the dread word Korah''s unconscious crew? |
4799 | _ 20 Will not the universal Spirit e''er Revivify this withered limb of Heaven?'' |
4799 | _ 200 Outlaws or thieves? |
4799 | _ 245 Ay, art thou not the veriest slave that e''er Crawled on the loathing earth? |
4799 | _ 25 Why should you blaze away there to no purpose? |
4799 | _ 255 Who are you? |
4799 | _ 315 FAUST: What is that yonder? |
4799 | _ 335 Have we not long since proved to demonstration That ghosts move not on ordinary feet? |
4799 | _ 5 Is it to mimic me? |
4799 | _ 545 CYCLOPS: What shall I do, Silenus? |
4799 | _ 565 SILENUS: How is it mixed? |
4799 | _ 85 Tell me, shall we go or stay? |
4799 | _ 90 CYPRIAN: Wherefore? |
4799 | alive and so bold, O Earth? |
4799 | all is past-- swift time has fled away, Yet its swell pauses on my sickening mind; How long will horror nerve this frame of clay? |
4799 | are your Sicinnian measures Even now the same, as when with dance and song You brought young Bacchus to Althaea''s halls? |
4799 | cattle- stealing? |
4799 | could you read calm health in his cheek, flushed with ungovernable propensities of hatred for the human race? |
4799 | did you observe the Black Canon pass, And did you observe his frown? |
4799 | do they eat man''s flesh? |
4799 | do they sow the corn of Ceres? |
4799 | dost thou not joy at this? |
4799 | dost thou reject it? |
4799 | for such to thee: And who feels discord now or sorrow? |
4799 | hast thou none For thine own child-- is there no help from thee?" |
4799 | have I not heard your yelling: God prosper, speed, and save: Good- night? |
4799 | how could false hope rend, a bosom so fair? |
4799 | how could fond visions such softness deceive? |
4799 | how could he have been inspired without God? |
4799 | in the lapse of years,_ 15 Is there no hope in store? |
4799 | is a question just as common as, Do you think this lever has the power of raising this weight? |
4799 | may I request that you Would favour us with your bright company? |
4799 | must our punishment Be endless? |
4799 | must this last for ever? |
4799 | sailed ye not From Greece to Phrygia for one woman''s sake? |
4799 | sawest thou the impious Polypheme_ 370 Feasting upon your loved companions now? |
4799 | the race of beasts? |
4799 | they were fiends: But what was he who taught them that the God_ 155 Of nature and benevolence hath given A special sanction to the trade of blood? |
4799 | what door is opened? |
4799 | what is the gain of restless care, And what is ambitious treasure? |
4799 | what is this? |
4799 | what is this? |
4799 | what is this? |
4799 | what is this? |
4799 | what law ought to specify the extent of the grievances which should limit its duration? |
4799 | what reasonings are these? |
4799 | when shall day dawn on the night of the grave, Or summer succeed to the winter of death? |
4799 | when will come the time, when o''er the plain No more shall death and desolation reign? |
4799 | whence that rushing sound? |
4799 | whence yon glare That fires the arch of Heaven!--that dark red smoke Blotting the silver moon? |
4799 | where are you? |
4799 | where is thy sting? |
4799 | where is thy victory? |
4799 | where is thy victory? |
4799 | where pleasure smiled; What now remains?--the memory Of senselessness and shame-- What is immortal there? |
4799 | wherefore hast Thou made In mockery and wrath this evil earth? |
4799 | wherefore lurkest With danger, death, and solitude; yet shunn''st_ 70 The palace I have built thee? |
4799 | whither can we fly? |
4799 | who is first, that with his hand Will urge down the burning brand Through the lids, and quench and pierce_ 485 The Cyclops''eye so fiery fierce? |
4799 | why do dark''ning shades conceal The hour, when man must cease to be? |
4799 | why is the Father of Hell in such glee, As he grins from ear to ear? |
4799 | why soarest thou above that tomb? |
4799 | why soarest thou above that tomb? |
4799 | why was love to mortals given,_ 5 To lift them to the height of Heaven, Or dash them to the depths of Hell? |
4799 | will long ages roll away,_ 130 And see no term? |
4799 | ye will not aid me then? |
55162 | A single louis? 55162 A single louis?" |
55162 | All of what thought? |
55162 | And I? |
55162 | And everything: is that castles? |
55162 | And it is really you? |
55162 | And now, sir, whom have I the honor to address? |
55162 | And these? |
55162 | And to whom, pray? |
55162 | And what became of the girl? |
55162 | And what is your grievance against Murphy? 55162 And who is this young woman?" |
55162 | And you are sure I am not? |
55162 | And you do not know me? |
55162 | And you? |
55162 | And you? |
55162 | And, pray, what? |
55162 | And? |
55162 | Are n''t you just a little above such escapades as this? |
55162 | Are you Cinderella, then? |
55162 | Are you Cinderella? |
55162 | Are you a poet, then? |
55162 | Are you an actor? |
55162 | Are you mad, to anger me in this fashion? |
55162 | Are you one of those men who accomplish something besides novel dinners? |
55162 | Are you quite sure? |
55162 | Are you wise in taking me there to- night? |
55162 | Betty Lee? 55162 Broke the bank?" |
55162 | But I am not trying to capture any prince, not even a fairy prince; and I wouldn''t--"Cut off your toes? |
55162 | But the money? |
55162 | But what shall I do? |
55162 | But what shall we do? 55162 But where is your brother?" |
55162 | But you do not know me? |
55162 | By the way,said I carelessly,"is Nancy Marsden engaged to be married?" |
55162 | Candidly, now,said I with a bit of excusable impatience,"do I look like a man who would wear a hat like that?" |
55162 | Carruthers? 55162 Cheaper than burying me here, eh? |
55162 | Come in? 55162 Confess, then, that you were properly spanked.... Heavens and earth, wherever did you come from?" |
55162 | Curse it, what''s the use of taking on so? 55162 Did n''t you wear your hair in two plaits down your back?" |
55162 | Do n''t you remember Betty Lee? |
55162 | Do you bid me remain? |
55162 | Do you dare believe that I knew you lived in this apartment? |
55162 | Do you know the hostess? |
55162 | Do you know this gentleman? |
55162 | Do you know where he may be found? |
55162 | Do you live in New York? |
55162 | Do you mean to tell me that you have never dreamed of any Prince Charming? |
55162 | Do you think he would prefer it broiled or baked? |
55162 | Does that make the difference so great? |
55162 | Does truth annoy you? |
55162 | Does your interest in episodes like to- night always die so suddenly? |
55162 | Ever heard of Starlight? |
55162 | For what? |
55162 | Good gracious, he has n''t been_ stealing_? 55162 Hats?" |
55162 | Have I ever acted like a dummy, Betty? 55162 Have I ever met you before?" |
55162 | Have n''t you a better epigram? |
55162 | Have n''t you an incantation? |
55162 | Have you Mr. Chittenden''s hat? |
55162 | Have you a stamp? |
55162 | Have you found Cinderella? |
55162 | Have you no more regard for romance than that? |
55162 | Have you no vanity, madam? |
55162 | He did that? |
55162 | He is worthy? |
55162 | How came you to select a louis for a bangle? |
55162 | How could I have done it? 55162 How dared you sneak in in this fashion? |
55162 | How old are you? |
55162 | How shall you know who it is? |
55162 | How will this do? |
55162 | I appreciate the honor, sir,I said;"but now will you favor me with the_ modus operandi_, or, to be particular, the reason of all this mystery?" |
55162 | I have zee honaire to address zee-- ah-- gentleman in numbaire six? |
55162 | I will ask you: Will you do me the honor of telling me who you are? |
55162 | I, monsieur? 55162 I? |
55162 | I? |
55162 | If it were not defeat... if it were victory? |
55162 | In face of that document? |
55162 | In what manner would it benefit me to tell you my name and what my occupation in the great world is? 55162 In what way?" |
55162 | Indeed? |
55162 | Is Monsieur de Beausire in? |
55162 | Is it possible? 55162 Is n''t it fine,"I cried with a burst of confidence,"to possess the courage to speak to strangers?" |
55162 | Is that he? |
55162 | Is that proof enough? |
55162 | Is this yours? |
55162 | It is you, daddy? |
55162 | John? 55162 Madam,"said I gravely,"are you Cinderella?" |
55162 | Make a blackmailer of myself? 55162 Mark my attire; or, candidly, do I look like a footman?" |
55162 | Matthews? 55162 May I not offer you some aid?" |
55162 | Meaning house- parties, or that I am a gentleman? |
55162 | Monsieur de Beausire? |
55162 | Monsieur has lost? |
55162 | Mr. Chittenden''s hat? |
55162 | Mr. Chittenden''s hat? |
55162 | Mr. Chittenden''s hat? |
55162 | My brother? |
55162 | Nancy? 55162 No? |
55162 | No? 55162 Not yet? |
55162 | Now, in honor to yourself, what is my name? |
55162 | Now, which is it; have I been licked, or have I won? |
55162 | Of Suffolk? |
55162 | Oh, what_ shall_ I do? |
55162 | Pardon me, but wo n''t you tell me if you are Cinderella? |
55162 | Pounds? |
55162 | Red? |
55162 | Shall I take the hat in, or will you? |
55162 | Shall I tell you frankly what I at one time took you to be? |
55162 | So soon? |
55162 | Supposing I try this white slipper on your foot? |
55162 | Terrible? 55162 The gold? |
55162 | The hat or the letter? |
55162 | The money? |
55162 | The shoe? |
55162 | The world? 55162 Then there_ is_ a Cinderella, after all?" |
55162 | This is final? |
55162 | This is yours, then? |
55162 | Thursday, after four? |
55162 | Time for what? |
55162 | To keep? |
55162 | To which do you refer: the honor or the_ modus operandi_? |
55162 | To your brother''s room? |
55162 | To- night? |
55162 | Too late? |
55162 | Too late? |
55162 | Upon what? |
55162 | Was it difficult? |
55162 | Was it_ your_ letter he was seeking? |
55162 | Well, I lower the bucket, then; and if I can bring truth to the top of the well you will promise not to blush on beholding her? |
55162 | Well, bally rot; how will that go? |
55162 | Well, sir? |
55162 | Well? |
55162 | What did Cranford play,--roulette or faro? |
55162 | What did he do? |
55162 | What difference would that have made? |
55162 | What do you mean, sir, by entering a gentleman''s house in this manner? |
55162 | What do you suppose Carrington did to- night? |
55162 | What do you wish me to do? |
55162 | What do you wish me to do? |
55162 | What happened to young Carruthers? |
55162 | What has he done? |
55162 | What have you done with it? |
55162 | What have you done? 55162 What in the world should I do with Cinderella''s slipper, once she was married to the prince?" |
55162 | What is it? |
55162 | What is it? |
55162 | What is that? |
55162 | What made you do it? |
55162 | What matters it now? 55162 What the devil is that to you?" |
55162 | What was the prince''s name? |
55162 | What''s the matter? |
55162 | What''s the matter? |
55162 | What, may I ask, was your business in the old, old days? |
55162 | What? 55162 What?" |
55162 | Where are the pumpkins? |
55162 | Where did you find him? |
55162 | Where has he gone? |
55162 | Where is the other hat: the one I gave you? |
55162 | Where? |
55162 | Which one? |
55162 | Who knows that I am not writing a play? |
55162 | Who knows? |
55162 | Why did I come to you? 55162 Why did you come to me?" |
55162 | Why do n''t you seek a footman,she asked, after a pause,"and have him announce that you have found a slipper?" |
55162 | Why has n''t it been turned over to the district attorney? |
55162 | Why in the world did n''t we think of that? |
55162 | Why not? |
55162 | Why? |
55162 | Will you answer a single question? 55162 Will you come in?" |
55162 | Will you dance with me to prove it one way or the other? |
55162 | Will you do me the honor? |
55162 | Will you kindly stop the driver, or shall I? |
55162 | Wo n''t you please do that again? |
55162 | Would it not be wise for me to go at once? |
55162 | Would n''t it be wise for you to hand it over to some policeman to keep for you till to- morrow? 55162 Would you know him if you saw him?" |
55162 | You are English? |
55162 | You are in trouble? |
55162 | You are not afraid, are you? |
55162 | You are the gentleman who occupies number six? |
55162 | You dared to search it? |
55162 | You have lost all your money, too? |
55162 | You have really and truly lost a slipper? |
55162 | You know me? |
55162 | You make me think of Monte Cristo: what terrible revenge are you going to take? |
55162 | You? |
55162 | You? |
55162 | ( Did I mention the bloomy cheeks?) |
55162 | And had n''t dear old grandma come down stairs three days later, saying that she felt much improved? |
55162 | And had n''t he taken my few letters from his sister''s desk and played postman up and down the street? |
55162 | And now, how was I ever to win her? |
55162 | And suppose the girl was independently rich? |
55162 | And then, with a hand on her escort''s arm, she laughed, and walked( or should I say glided? |
55162 | And_ my_ hat; where was_ my_ hat? |
55162 | Anonymous''do Miss Berkeley the honor of visiting her box?" |
55162 | Are you here alone, without masculine protection?" |
55162 | Betty, I''ve been licked, have n''t I, and old Dick has gone and done it, eh?" |
55162 | But what in the world am I to do?" |
55162 | But what was to be done with the Frenchman''s?... |
55162 | But....""Well?" |
55162 | Ca n''t you put some one else in his place?" |
55162 | Chance whispered in my ear:"Of what use?" |
55162 | Chittenden?" |
55162 | Did friendship demand such a sacrifice? |
55162 | Did you ever hear of how I broke one of the roulette banks at Monte Carlo?" |
55162 | Do I look like a woman who could wear a little thing like that? |
55162 | Do you believe for a minute that you can bring about this revolution? |
55162 | Do you believe me? |
55162 | Do you grasp the point?" |
55162 | Do you recollect the verses I used to write to you when we were children? |
55162 | Dragged into what? |
55162 | Ees thees your hat?" |
55162 | Eh?" |
55162 | Going into the club after me? |
55162 | Had a crime been committed, or had some one run away with another man''s wife? |
55162 | Had he lost or had he won? |
55162 | Had he made a mistake? |
55162 | Had he turned this aside? |
55162 | Had n''t he beaten out the brains of his toy bank and bought up the peanut man on the corner? |
55162 | Had n''t he emptied his grandma''s medicine capsules and substituted cotton? |
55162 | Had n''t you better sit down here beside me and give an account of yourself and what you have been doing all these ten years?" |
55162 | Had she really mistaken me? |
55162 | Had the fourth act gone off as smoothly as the others? |
55162 | Hard, was n''t it? |
55162 | Have you either the hat or the letter?" |
55162 | Have_ you_ got it?" |
55162 | How could I? |
55162 | How do you like it?" |
55162 | How the deuce do you win a girl, anyhow? |
55162 | How the deuce was I to get up town to the club? |
55162 | How would you like to succeed him?" |
55162 | I forget zee name?" |
55162 | I laugh; eh?" |
55162 | I look as if I had been to war, do n''t I?" |
55162 | I wonder if she knew that I had stolen the rose? |
55162 | I wondered if she would have me arrested when she found out? |
55162 | In justice to me, have I?" |
55162 | In the wheat country, in the cattle country, or in the mines? |
55162 | Is n''t it terrible?" |
55162 | Is n''t it?" |
55162 | Is not dishonesty fought with dishonesty; is n''t it corruption against corruption? |
55162 | Is there anything you would like?" |
55162 | Is there not a fly in the ointment whichever way you look? |
55162 | Must I return it to you?" |
55162 | NO CINDERELLA THE ADVENTURE OF THE SATIN SLIPPER I"Madam, have you lost a slipper?" |
55162 | Nan, what would you do with him if you were in my place?" |
55162 | Now, where in the world was Cinderella? |
55162 | Or was some one making his will? |
55162 | Or would you prefer brandy?" |
55162 | Ought I to kiss her? |
55162 | Pshaw, what''s the use? |
55162 | Shall I lower truth along with the butter of flattery?" |
55162 | Shall I send her up? |
55162 | She began to wring her hands, and when a woman does that what earthly hope is there for the man who looks on? |
55162 | Should he step down and aside for his friend? |
55162 | So that is how the great public looks upon us?" |
55162 | That homely little girl turned into a goddess? |
55162 | Thought I would never come? |
55162 | To- night, what would you have done in my place?" |
55162 | Was I married, single, a brother, a near friend? |
55162 | Was it a wedding and was I to be a witness? |
55162 | Was it worth while to be true to oneself? |
55162 | Was n''t this a capital revenge? |
55162 | Was the young fellow''s honesty greater than his ambition? |
55162 | Was there any honesty? |
55162 | Well, I would go up to the club, and if I did n''t get home till mor- r- ning, who was there to care? |
55162 | Well, who ever heard of a homely woman going a- venturing? |
55162 | What am I to believe?" |
55162 | What became of the girl?" |
55162 | What do you mean?" |
55162 | What do you say?" |
55162 | What excuse will you have?" |
55162 | What good would that do me?" |
55162 | What had she written to this other fellow? |
55162 | What have you done?" |
55162 | What if she refused me in the end? |
55162 | What is poverty like?" |
55162 | What right had he to win when he had millions backing him? |
55162 | What the deuce did it all mean? |
55162 | What the deuce was her trouble? |
55162 | What the deuce was it all about, anyway? |
55162 | What was expected of me? |
55162 | What was in a letter that she should go to this extreme to recall it? |
55162 | What was the end?" |
55162 | What was the use asking myself questions? |
55162 | What will you do? |
55162 | What world?" |
55162 | What would he do when he heard from McDermott that he( Carrington) had deliberately crossed him off the ticket of appointees? |
55162 | What would the voters say if they heard that their respective candidates were hobnobbing at a private club? |
55162 | What''s goin''on?" |
55162 | What''s the graft, anyway?" |
55162 | Where did you learn to read a woman so readily? |
55162 | Where in the world did you come from?" |
55162 | Where is your brother? |
55162 | Where should I begin life anew? |
55162 | Where the deuce_ was_ my hat? |
55162 | Where was her brother? |
55162 | Where were we going? |
55162 | Where''s your room?" |
55162 | Who told you that when you confront a woman with a mystery you trap her interest along with her curiosity? |
55162 | Who was I, anyway? |
55162 | Who was I? |
55162 | Who would n''t forgive her? |
55162 | Why could n''t they let me be? |
55162 | Why did n''t she call me by some first name? |
55162 | Why was it written that their paths must cross in everything? |
55162 | Why?" |
55162 | Will you find, in all this wide land, a ruling municipality that is incorrupt? |
55162 | Will you go to my brother''s room with me and explain all this to him?" |
55162 | Will you see it to the end, or shall I press the button?" |
55162 | Will you stop the driver?" |
55162 | Wo n''t you accept this louis?" |
55162 | Would it put me on the list of your acquaintance?" |
55162 | Would n''t you have been eager to marry, especially the girl you loved? |
55162 | You are English?" |
55162 | You have come in regard to a hat?" |
55162 | You have given the hat to another man? |
55162 | You have no fear?" |
55162 | You understand me, do n''t you? |
55162 | You would n''t have believed all this of me, would you? |
55162 | _ Did_ she love some one else and was she afraid that I might learn who it was? |
55162 | give up? |
55162 | how much is in there?" |
55162 | she cried,"what have you been doing to this girl?" |
55162 | she cried;"do you mean to tell me you do not know?" |
46645 | And what should that rare mirror be? 46645 But could thy fiery poisoned dart, At no time, touch her spotless heart, Nor come near?" |
46645 | But what is he? 46645 Can ye tell what you do, sirs?" |
46645 | Dost thou not her, with self- same passion strike? |
46645 | Have you so? |
46645 | How can a man give that, is not his own? |
46645 | How might I that fair wonder know, That mocks Desire with endless''No!''? |
46645 | May I depart indeed? |
46645 | May I? |
46645 | Then, must I live, and languish still in pain? |
46645 | What doth he here? |
46645 | What is the cause ALCILIA is displeased? |
46645 | What shall I do? |
46645 | What uncouth cause hath these strange passions bred, To make at once, sick, sound, alive, and dead? |
46645 | Where is that knave, the printer[_ of the ballad_]? |
46645 | Who walks so sure, but sometimes treads awry? |
46645 | Who? |
46645 | Why so? |
46645 | You speak of Papists there, sir,said Master MASON,"I pray you, how define you a Papist?" |
46645 | # Parson.# Why, neighbour JOHN, and art thou now there? |
46645 | ''Cause her fortunes seem too low, Shall I therefore let her go? |
46645 | ***** Can she excuse my wrongs with virtue''s cloak? |
46645 | ***** Now in our sum of---- fishermen; let us see what vent[_ sale_] have we for our fish into other countries? |
46645 | ***** O what hath overwrought My all amazed thought? |
46645 | ***** Shall I sue? |
46645 | ***** When shall this time of travail cease Which we, with woe sustain? |
46645 | ***** Whoever thinks, or hopes of love for love? |
46645 | ***** Yet to shew himself an understanding man, he demanded of RAWLINS,"What weapons he had? |
46645 | *****"Yea, but you were otherwise inutile, not coming to the Star Chamber, nor to the Council table?" |
46645 | 103 What poor astronomers 621 What thing is Beauty? |
46645 | 267 I saw my Lady weep''522 Is this a fair avaunt? |
46645 | 292 What thing is LOVE? |
46645 | Ah, what unlucky chance that way me led? |
46645 | All this while, RAWLINS drew the Captain to lie for the Northern Cape[? |
46645 | Am I alive? |
46645 | And O, what had power to move, Flames of lust or wanton love So far, to disparage us; If we all, were minded thus? |
46645 | And Sion''s hill, with cheerful voice, Sing psalms with triumphing? |
46645 | And bring a woman into slanderous name And tell how he her body hath do shame? |
46645 | And if that same mind I see, What care I, how Poor She be? |
46645 | And it being demanded of the said Spaniards,"What other ships remained in the port whence they came? |
46645 | And still, on sorrow feed, That can no loss repair? |
46645 | And what virtue wherewith her noble breast is not garnished? |
46645 | And when, afterwards, I saw that men were to be put to their oath,"With whom they had had conference, and whether any did dissuade them?" |
46645 | And yet, wherefore should I care What another''s censures are? |
46645 | And your noblest Ladies tell"Which of you( that worth can see), This my Mistress would not be?" |
46645 | Another,"Is such a soldier in yours?" |
46645 | Are the authors of it afraid of it, or ashamed of it? |
46645 | Are these thy fruits? |
46645 | Are those clear fires, which vanish into smoke? |
46645 | Art thou blind? |
46645 | Art thou blind? |
46645 | Art thou mad? |
46645 | As they are high, so high is my desire, If she this deny, what can granted be? |
46645 | Before Thy face to dwell; When shall Thy foes, at Thy left hand, Be cast into the hell? |
46645 | Being demanded of her,"For what cause?" |
46645 | Betrayin not men, cities great and kings? |
46645 | But my reply was,"But what then, doth he coerce those refractories? |
46645 | But since the peace[_? |
46645 | But some of our Officers[_? |
46645 | But tell me, mast[er] Parson, one thing, and you can; What Saint is Copsi Cursty, a man, or a woman? |
46645 | But what can stay my thoughts, they may not start? |
46645 | But what stand I praising this patience in them( which yet deserveth the same)? |
46645 | But whilst they, musing with themselves, bethought Which way, out of this Shepherd to have wrought What Nymph this Fair One was? |
46645 | But who goeth about so finely to depict with APELLES''s instrument, this said_ Register_, thinking to exceed the rest? |
46645 | But, I pray you, what is my fault that bringeth this upon me? |
46645 | But, by degrees, he cooled, and asked the Major- General,"Whether he would stay to dinner with him?" |
46645 | Can I think, the Guide of Heaven Hath so bountifully given Outward features,''cause He meant To have made less excellent Her divine part? |
46645 | Can LOVE be rich, and yet I want? |
46645 | Can Love quickly fly? |
46645 | Can there be so dull an ear As of so much worth to hear, And not seriously incline To this saint- like friend of mine? |
46645 | Change and alteration bringeth somewhat with it; what have they to do with kerchiefs and staves, with lame or sickly men? |
46645 | Come and try, if you, by this, Know my Mistress, who she is? |
46645 | Could your fathers ever tell Of a Nymph, did more excel? |
46645 | Dare he not show his face?" |
46645 | Do you not know my voice?" |
46645 | Doth not the sun rise smiling, When fair at e''en he sets? |
46645 | Eyes but too fair, envièd by the skies? |
46645 | For all titles and discontents, all factions of religion there suppress themselves till his death: but what will ensue afterwards? |
46645 | For he made towards us, and sent his boat aboard us; to whom, our Captain complained that being becalmed by the Southern Cape[? |
46645 | For what power of Words, or Art, Can her Worth at full, impart? |
46645 | For what was he not fit to determine in Church or Commonwealth, in Court or Council, in peace or war, at land or at sea, at home or in foreign parts? |
46645 | For when shall the common people have leave to exercise, if not upon the Sundays and Holy Days? |
46645 | For why? |
46645 | For, O, why should envious Time Perpetrate so vile a crime As to waste, or wrong, or stain What shall ne''er be matched again? |
46645 | For, could I have reachèd to So like Strains, as these you see; Had there been no such as She? |
46645 | Further they demanded of him,"When he was with the Lady ELIZABETH?" |
46645 | Further, he said,"What will the King, my Master, say of me, if I expose his army to these hazards?" |
46645 | Further, the said Duke asked me,"After what sort the town was lost?" |
46645 | Furthermore they examined him,"What the Lord DEVONSHIRE sent by him to Her Grace?" |
46645 | Having Arts, and favours too, More t''encourage what they do? |
46645 | Heat still remaining, And yet no spark of fire? |
46645 | His Excellency asked him,"If he would meet him at two o''clock, at the opening of the approaches?" |
46645 | His Excellency asked,"What he meant?" |
46645 | His life in Oxford was to pick quarrels in the Lectures of the Public Readers, and to advertise[_ denounce_] them to the then Bishop of DURHAM[? |
46645 | How can it come to pass? |
46645 | How many nosegays did Her Grace receive at poor women''s hands? |
46645 | How may it be interpreted that he doth so? |
46645 | How may this man, for shame, be so bold To falsin her, that, from his death and shame Him kept, and gate him so great a prize and name? |
46645 | How ofttimes stayed she her chariot, when she saw any simple body offer to speak to Her Grace? |
46645 | How shall I then gaze on my mistress''eyes? |
46645 | How that agreeth with His Majesty''s Commission and Proclamation, which are quoted in the margent? |
46645 | I cry,__ Yet when it comes, I am as far to seek.__ For who can tell, though all the earth he roam_; Or when, or where to find, he knows not whom? |
46645 | I informed myself of learned men afterward, what this light should be? |
46645 | I muffled me with a sarsenet, which the rude people in the streets would murmur at, saying,"What is he? |
46645 | I will remember that of Foord: and will your Grace command me any more service? |
46645 | If Fire nor Water, Air nor Earth it be; What then is it, that thus tormenteth me? |
46645 | If I, for sorrow die? |
46645 | If She be not so to me, What care I, how Bad She be? |
46645 | If She be not so to me, What care I, how Black She be? |
46645 | If She be not so to me, What care I, how Curst She be? |
46645 | If this be so, yet what is that to me? |
46645 | If you would not, so you might, Leave them all, despised, to prove What contents are in her love? |
46645 | In counsel and wisdom, what Councillor will go beyond Her Majesty? |
46645 | In great haste, Sir JOHN GAGE took the matter in hand,"Thou callest men Papists there,"said he,"who be they that thou judgest to be Papists?" |
46645 | In men on earth, or women''s minds partaking? |
46645 | In reasons, looks, or Passions never seeing? |
46645 | In the rifling of this_ Catalcynia_[? |
46645 | In thoughts or words, in vows or promise making? |
46645 | Into what fear, what trouble of mind, and what danger of death was she brought? |
46645 | Is LOVE my judge, and yet am I condemned? |
46645 | Is Love without Desire? |
46645 | Is it good to confess himself a traitor? |
46645 | Is it not a godly hearing? |
46645 | Is that the cause I am called before your Honours?" |
46645 | Is there any one of you Wanteth feeling of affection? |
46645 | Is there no way of releasement? |
46645 | Is this a fair avaunt? |
46645 | Is this honour? |
46645 | It is in the bottom,_ View of the reign of HENRY III._, whether it be fit to give such allowance to the book; being surreptitiously put out? |
46645 | It is, in the bottom,_ View of the reign of HENRY III._; and whether it be fit to give such allowance to the book; being surreptitiously put out? |
46645 | JOHN DAY did print the same book[_? |
46645 | Like those fools who do despair To find any Good and Fair? |
46645 | Major- General MORGAN demanded of his Excellency,"Whether he would shock the whole army at one dash; or try one wing first?" |
46645 | Marshal TURENNE was pleased to asked the Major- General"whether he would be one of the Commissioners?" |
46645 | Moreover, what a speech is this? |
46645 | Must I praise the leaves, where no fruit I find? |
46645 | My wits are me benumme: For I can not study where the wine should become? |
46645 | O happy days, who may contain But swell with proud disdain When seas are smooth, Sails full, and all things please? |
46645 | O what is then this Passion I endure, Which neither Reason, Art, nor Time can cure? |
46645 | O, I am as heavy as earth, Say, then, who is Humour now? |
46645 | O, what man would further range, That in one, might find such change? |
46645 | One asking,"Is such an Officer in your army?" |
46645 | Or a thwarting hoggish nature Joinèd in as bad a feature? |
46645 | Or hath any Story told Of the like, in times of old? |
46645 | Or her faults to me make known, Make me think that I have none? |
46645 | Or her lovelier teeth, the while She doth bless him with a smile? |
46645 | Or myself, with care cast down,''Cause I see a woman brown? |
46645 | Or put my tongue in durance for to die? |
46645 | Or that loves not such perfection? |
46645 | Or the beauties of her Mind Which her body hath enshrined? |
46645 | Or what is there, may be found, Placed within the Sense''s bound, That can paint those sweets to me, Which the Eyes of Love do see? |
46645 | Or whereto am I brought? |
46645 | Or who beloved, in CUPID''s laws doth glory? |
46645 | Or, from whence was he, could prove Such a monster in his love, As, in thought, to use amiss Such unequalled worth as this? |
46645 | PAGE[? |
46645 | Perhaps you will ask me, why I, that have travelled many countries and ought to have some experience, do not undergo this business myself? |
46645 | Quem si vere dixisse censeamus( ut quidem verissime) cur non terra Britannica plauderet? |
46645 | Returning hemp, flax, cordage, cables, and iron; corn, soap ashes, wax, wainscot, clapholt[? |
46645 | Shall I call her good, when she proves unkind? |
46645 | Shall I pray? |
46645 | Shall I straight yield to despair? |
46645 | Shall I strive to a heavenly joy, With an earthly love? |
46645 | Shall I think that a bleeding heart, Or a wounded eye, Or a sigh, can ascend the clouds, To attain so high? |
46645 | Shall I, mine affections slack,''Cause I see a woman''s Black? |
46645 | Shall a woman''s vices make Me her vices quite forsake? |
46645 | Shall my foolish heart be burst,''Cause I see a woman''s curst? |
46645 | Should such tyrannical tragedies be kept one hour, from the hands of so noble and virtuous a Governess? |
46645 | Should we, forthy, give all angels proud name? |
46645 | Since what I saw delighted me so much? |
46645 | So here, why may I not affirm without flattery, that[ which] every man''s conscience can testify? |
46645 | Some goddess or some Queen is she?" |
46645 | Steersman, how stands the wind? |
46645 | That ye could so soon from wine to blood ha brought it? |
46645 | The Bishop of WINCHESTER demanded of her,"What she said to that man?" |
46645 | The Major- General desired to know of his Excellency,"Whether he was certain, the enemy was so near him?" |
46645 | The advantages of the Governors, besides their pay from the King, are presents from the country, dead payes[_? |
46645 | The bulwarks[_? |
46645 | Then mote it follow, of necessity, Sith art asketh so great engine and pain A woman to deceive, what so she be? |
46645 | Then we came to a halt on rising hills of sand; and having more room took in[? |
46645 | Then would I say unto them,"Do you not know me? |
46645 | Thereupon, the Marshal TURENNE came up, with above a hundred Noblemen, to know what was the matter, and the reason of that great shout? |
46645 | Things went on every day, and speech was of much money to be raised out of some counties, yet afterwards it was not so readily paid as preferred[? |
46645 | To slaunder women thus, what may profit To gentleness? |
46645 | To whom shall I complain me, When thus friends do disdain me? |
46645 | Two hearts consenting, Shall they no comforts prove? |
46645 | Upon this, Marshal TURENNE asked,"How many English he would venture?" |
46645 | Was I so base, that I might not aspire, Unto those high joys, which she holds from me? |
46645 | Was he not changeable? |
46645 | We were forced to march up in four lines[? |
46645 | Were not, yet, that task to do, Which my word enjoins me to; I would beg of you, to hear What your own inventions are? |
46645 | What care I, what others be? |
46645 | What course? |
46645 | What dull eye, such worth can see, And not sworn a lover be? |
46645 | What force is it, such a wight to beguile? |
46645 | What gentleness might she have doin more Than she, with heart unfeigned, to him kidde? |
46645 | What heaven then governs earth? |
46645 | What is it to dread? |
46645 | What language she can not speak? |
46645 | What liberal art or science, she hath not learned? |
46645 | What mak''st thou here In presence of a Queen? |
46645 | What makes my heart to tremble, When, on a sudden, I, ALCILIA spy?" |
46645 | What meanest thou? |
46645 | What need we languish? |
46645 | What need you flow so fast? |
46645 | What needeth all this haste? |
46645 | What shall I do?" |
46645 | What sudden chance hath changed my wonted cheer, Which makes me other than I seem to be? |
46645 | What the House of GUISE, upon that of BOURBON? |
46645 | What the Kings of Spain and England, if they see a breach made by civil dissension? |
46645 | What the League? |
46645 | What the Protestants? |
46645 | What the rest of the House of BOURBON will enterprise upon the King''s children? |
46645 | What then have we need of the saints''help that are in heaven, whereas the LORD Himself doth so freely offer Himself for us?" |
46645 | What thing is Beauty? |
46645 | What thing is LOVE? |
46645 | What tongue is it that Her Grace knoweth not? |
46645 | What wight is it that can shape remedy Against these falsely proposèd things? |
46645 | What, am I dead? |
46645 | When can the craft, such crafts to espy But man? |
46645 | When shall Contention and Debate, For ever slack and cease? |
46645 | When shall Jerusalem rejoice In Him, that is their King? |
46645 | When shall Thy CHRIST, our King, appear With power and renown? |
46645 | When shall Thy Spouse, and Turtle Dove Be free from bitter blast? |
46645 | When shall Thy grace, our sins remove, With pardon at the last? |
46645 | When shall Thy mercies set us free From wickedness and ill? |
46645 | When shall Thy saints, that suffer here, Receive their promised crown? |
46645 | When shall True Dealing rule the rost With those that buy and sell; And Single Mind, in every coast, Among us bide and dwell? |
46645 | When shall True Faith and Equity Remain in general? |
46645 | When shall her children have their doom, Which virtue would confound? |
46645 | When shall our minds wholly convert From wealth, and worldly gain? |
46645 | When shall our motions and delight Be free from wrath and strife? |
46645 | When shall sin and iniquity Be cast into the bed? |
46645 | When shall that Man of Sin appear To be, even as he is? |
46645 | When shall that painted Whore of Rome Be cast unto the ground? |
46645 | When shall that perfect Olive Tree, Give odour like the Bay? |
46645 | When shall the SPIRIT more fervent be, In us that want good will? |
46645 | When shall the Trump blow out his blast, And thy dear babes revive? |
46645 | When shall the Vineyard be restored, That beastly boars devour? |
46645 | When shall the Whore be headlong cast, That sought us to deprive? |
46645 | When shall the aged, with grey hairs, Rejoice at children''s birth? |
46645 | When shall the blood revengèd be, Which on the earth is shed? |
46645 | When shall the days of evil date, Be turnèd unto peace? |
46645 | When shall the days of rest and peace, Return to us again? |
46645 | When shall the faithful, firmly stand? |
46645 | When shall the mind be movèd right To leave this lusting life? |
46645 | When shall the movings of our heart From wickedness refrain? |
46645 | When shall the people, late abhorred, Receive a quiet hour? |
46645 | When shall the serpents, that surmise To poison Thine Elect, Be bound to better exercise, Or utterly reject? |
46645 | When shall the time of woful tears Be movèd unto mirth? |
46645 | When shall the trial of our trust Appearing with triumphing? |
46645 | When shall the walls erected be, That foes, with fury,''fray? |
46645 | When shall this flesh return to dust, From whence the same did spring? |
46645 | When shall this life translatèd be, From fortune''s fickle fall? |
46645 | When shall thy babes and children dear Receive eternal bliss? |
46645 | When she saw it she said,"What shall I do with it?" |
46645 | When sleep yields more delight, Such harmless beauty gracing: And while sleep feignèd is May not I steal a kiss Thy quiet arms embracing? |
46645 | When the high GOD, angellis formèd had: Amongis them all formed, were there none That foundin were malicious and bad? |
46645 | When we came to them,"Master UNDERHILL,"said NEWMAN,"what news, that you walk so late?" |
46645 | Where thou complain''st of sorrows in thy heart, Who lives on earth but therein hath his part? |
46645 | Where was there any wight so ententife Aboutin Him as woman? |
46645 | Whereat RAWLINS was much moved; and so hastily asked,"What the matter meant? |
46645 | Wherefore proceedeth this, but of envy? |
46645 | Whereupon I rose, made me ready, and came unto him, demanding,"What he would with me?" |
46645 | Wherewith, being contented, but not altogether satisfied, she asked,"What Sir H. BEDINGFIELD was? |
46645 | Which being done, he spake to this purpose,"What have you done? |
46645 | Which when Sir HENRY standing by, heard, he asked,"What the matter was?" |
46645 | Who could dote on thing so common As mere outward- handsome woman? |
46645 | Who joys in vows, or vows not to remove: Who, by this light god, hath not been made sorry? |
46645 | Who may of ADAM bear such a witness? |
46645 | Who thinks that change is by entreaty charmed? |
46645 | Who thinks that sorrows felt, desires hidden, Or humble faith in constant honour armed, Can keep love from the fruit that is forbidden? |
46645 | Who would be rapt up into the third heaven To see a world of strange imaginations? |
46645 | Who would think so much? |
46645 | Who, careless, would leave all at six and seven, To wander in a labyrinth of Passions? |
46645 | Who, when she saw it, asked him,"What he would do with him?" |
46645 | Why doth this Age expel thee? |
46645 | Why hast thou made my heart, thine anger''s fuel; And now would kill my Passions with thy words? |
46645 | Why have ye cast it forth, as nothing worth, Without a tomb, or grave? |
46645 | Why sayest thou so? |
46645 | Why should we hope for that which is to come, Where the event is doubtful, and unknown? |
46645 | Why then should I, this robbery delay? |
46645 | Why, then,''tis I am drowned in woe? |
46645 | Why, what say''st thou to the other? |
46645 | Will ye se? |
46645 | Wilt thou be abused still, Seeing that she will right thee never? |
46645 | Yet they seem to disagree, Whether of the two shall reign? |
46645 | [ Sidenote:_ Amor est otiosorum negotium._] The Cynic[4] being asked,"When he should love?" |
46645 | [? |
46645 | [? |
46645 | _ Archbishop._ How cometh this about? |
46645 | _ Archbishop._ How then, shall I know what it is? |
46645 | _ ELIZABETH arms England, which MARY had__ left defenceless,_(? |
46645 | _ Examination and__ Imprisonment in August 1553; with anecdotes of the Time_(? |
46645 | _ JOHN BON AND MAST PARSON._(? |
46645 | _ The winning of Calais by the__ French, January 1558_ A.D._ General Narrative of the Recapture._(? |
46645 | _ To the__ Queen, our sovereign Lady._(? |
46645 | _ columns_]( for we had not room enough to wing[? |
46645 | and in what manner he would execute the business?" |
46645 | and neither please, nor be freely heard? |
46645 | and still is black in sight; Ye might me deem a fool, for to believe so light? |
46645 | and then put the question,"Whether if the enemy came on, he should make good the siege on the Newport side, and give them battle: or raise the siege?" |
46645 | and therefore, living, tell me, Where is thy seat? |
46645 | and what commodities and coin is brought into this kingdom? |
46645 | and what ships are set on work by them, whereby mariners are bred or employed? |
46645 | and where she lived? |
46645 | and whether he was of that conscience or not, that if her murdering were secretly committed to his charge, he would see the execution thereof?" |
46645 | and why may not she leave off frowning? |
46645 | and, in the end, the crown of immortality purchased?" |
46645 | as well thyself dost know? |
46645 | be duller?__ No! |
46645 | but that I may go to my own houses at all times?" |
46645 | cur non populus gaudiam atque lætitiam agitaret? |
46645 | did not you set forth a ballet of late, in print?" |
46645 | do you think it is for the King''s service, in this sort, to send me away? |
46645 | do you think that I will not do the Council''s commandment? |
46645 | fly?_ Shall I fear death or some petty trial; when GOD is to be honoured! |
46645 | gladly would I know it, If ever Loving Passion pierced thy heart? |
46645 | how shalt thou thyself chevice; Sith men of thee, so mochil harm witness? |
46645 | if ever thou didst find A woman with a constant mind?" |
46645 | immo, cur non hunc diem albo( quod aiunt) lapillo notaret? |
46645 | in whom dear lovers oft have talked, How do you now a place of mourning prove? |
46645 | is the haste such, that it might not have pleased you to come to- morrow, in the morning?" |
46645 | knowest not that? |
46645 | namely, that them arm should In defence of women, and them delight As that the Order of Gentleness would? |
46645 | no device to free us from this bondage? |
46645 | no exploit, no action of worth to be put in execution, to make us renown in the world, and famous to posterity? |
46645 | or for gladness?" |
46645 | or whether he would kill him or not?" |
46645 | p. 147_], newly made Master of the Horse to the Queen, and seeing me standing there prisoner, frowning earnestly upon me, said,"Are you come? |
46645 | quoth RAWLINS,"what can be worse? |
46645 | quoth he,"am I, or this poor cheer, The cause that you so melancholy are? |
46645 | quoth one,"What?" |
46645 | quoth the Lord Chamberlain;"what say you, my Lord CHANDOS?" |
46645 | said I,"what do you here?" |
46645 | said I,"will you be my discharge?" |
46645 | said he,"are you so short with me?" |
46645 | said he,"what doth he here?" |
46645 | said he,"who appointed you this office?" |
46645 | said the Secretary;"would you that I should tell the King so much?" |
46645 | saith he unto me;"what do you here?" |
46645 | shall I prove? |
46645 | shall I seek for grace? |
46645 | that freest from mortality? |
46645 | these trees 457 Shall a woman''s vices 579_ Shall a woman''s_ 578_ Shall a woman''s_ 454 Shall I, mine 577 Shall I strive with 650 Shall I sue? |
46645 | they cry,__"How moving would he be? |
46645 | thus''reave me Of my heart, and so leave me? |
46645 | to be at work so soon? |
46645 | what devil inflamed thy mind such malicious mischief? |
46645 | what gaping among the Lords of the Clergy to see the day, wherein they might wash their goodly white rochets in her innocent blood? |
46645 | when deeds receive not due regard? |
46645 | when thou hast no heart? |
46645 | where are now those eyes? |
46645 | where shall I seek thy being? |
46645 | who would have thought it? |
46645 | whose wit is e''er ready to apply To thing that sowning is into falshede? |
46645 | why do you so?" |
46645 | why then do you reign? |
46645 | why then have you slain the life of love on earth? |
46645 | why will you rise? |
9371 | Again what city ever received Plato''s or Aristotle''s laws, or Socrates''precepts? |
9371 | Again what is it, I pray, to see old fellows and half blind to play with spectacles? |
9371 | Again, she that has but once tried what it is, would she, do you think, make a second venture if it were not for my other companion, Oblivion? |
9371 | Again, what greater thing do they wish in their whole lives than that they may please the man? |
9371 | Again, what is more friendly than when two horses scrub one another? |
9371 | And are they not most happy while they do these things? |
9371 | And as to the court lords, what should I mention them? |
9371 | And does he not plainly confess as much, Chapter 7,"The heart of the wise is where sadness is, but the heart of fools follows mirth"? |
9371 | And first, if prudence depends upon experience, to whom is the honor of that name more proper? |
9371 | And first, who knows not but a man''s infancy is the merriest part of life to himself, and most acceptable to others? |
9371 | And how great a happiness is this, think you? |
9371 | And not without cause, for when were the Grecian Demosthenes or Roman Cicero ever guilty of the like? |
9371 | And now tell me, what higher letters of recommendation have they to men than this folly? |
9371 | And now, having vindicated to myself the praise of fortitude and industry, what think you if I do the same by that of prudence? |
9371 | And of scoffs, what not, have not the ancient comedies thrown on him? |
9371 | And then for youth, which is in such reputation everywhere, how do all men favor it, study to advance it, and lend it their helping hand? |
9371 | And then what pleasure they take to see a buck or the like unlaced? |
9371 | And therefore, what is that life hereafter, after which these holy minds so pantingly breathe, like to be? |
9371 | And though they have not the same judgment of sense as other bodies have, yet wherein has architecture gone beyond their building of houses? |
9371 | And to what other purpose than that of pleasure? |
9371 | And to what purpose should I run over any of the other gods''tricks when you know enough of Jupiter''s loose loves? |
9371 | And truly, if they had the least proportion of sound judgment, what life were more unpleasant than theirs, or so much to be avoided? |
9371 | And what does all this drive at, but that all mankind are fools-- nay, even the very best? |
9371 | And what does that sacred book of Iliads contain but a kind of counter- scuffle between foolish kings and foolish people? |
9371 | And what is more commendable than truth? |
9371 | And what is the meaning of"I did it ignorantly"but that I did it out of folly, not malice? |
9371 | And what matter is it to slight those few learned if yet they ever read them? |
9371 | And what of"Therefore I received mercy"but that I had not obtained it had I not been made more allowable through the covert of folly? |
9371 | And whence is it, but that their continual and restless thoughts insensibly prey upon their spirits and dry up their radical moisture? |
9371 | And whence, I pray, all this grace? |
9371 | And why all this? |
9371 | And why, I pray but that, like a cunning fellow and one that was his craft''s master, he did nothing without the advice of Pallas? |
9371 | And why, forsooth, but because those tents were covered with skins? |
9371 | And why, good Jeremiah, would you not have a man glory in his wisdom? |
9371 | And yet from whom can it more properly be said to come than from me? |
9371 | And yet what more loving to man? |
9371 | And yet what more trusty? |
9371 | And yet, what is there that is either delightful or taking, nay rather what not the contrary, that a man does against the hair? |
9371 | Be it as foolish as they would make it, so they confess it proper: and what can be more than that Folly be her own trumpet? |
9371 | Besides why should I desire a temple when the whole world is my temple, and I''m deceived or''tis a goodly one? |
9371 | Besides, what should I mention what these gods do when they are half drunk? |
9371 | But Christ, interrupting them in their vanities, which otherwise were endless, will ask them,"Whence this new kind of Jews? |
9371 | But to come to the purpose: I have given you my name, but what epithet shall I add? |
9371 | But what if I show you that I am both the beginning and end of this so great good also? |
9371 | But what of this when they give up and down their foolish insipid verses, and there wants not others that admire them as much? |
9371 | But what? |
9371 | But who are they that for no other reason but that they were weary of life have hastened their own fate? |
9371 | But who the devil put that in your head? |
9371 | But why am I so careful to no purpose that I thus run on to prove my matter by so many testimonies? |
9371 | But why do I altogether spend my breath in speaking of mortals? |
9371 | But why do I launch out into this ocean of superstitions? |
9371 | But why do I thus staggeringly defend myself with one single instance? |
9371 | But why should I be silent in a thing that is more true than truth itself? |
9371 | But, O you gods,"shall I speak or hold my tongue?" |
9371 | But, to return to my design, what power was it that drew those stony, oaken, and wild people into cities but flattery? |
9371 | Can that be called life where you take away pleasure? |
9371 | Do you like what I say? |
9371 | For by what more proper name can so great a goddess as Folly be known to her disciples? |
9371 | For first, what is more sweet or more precious than life? |
9371 | For to what purpose is it to say anything of the common people, who without dispute are wholly mine? |
9371 | For what benefit is beauty, the greatest blessing of heaven, if it be mixed with affectation? |
9371 | For what difference between them, but that the one has more wrinkles and years upon his head than the other? |
9371 | For what else is madness than for a man to be out of his wits? |
9371 | For what injustice is it that when we allow every course of life its recreation, that study only should have none? |
9371 | For what is it they do not permit them to do? |
9371 | For what is more foolish than for a man to study nothing else than how to please himself? |
9371 | For what is there at all done among men that is not full of folly, and that too from fools and to fools? |
9371 | For what other is this? |
9371 | For what ridiculous stuff is there which that stump of the fig tree Priapus does not afford them? |
9371 | For who can set me out better than myself, unless perhaps I could be better known to another than to myself? |
9371 | For who does not know that every good, the more diffusive it is, by so much the better it is? |
9371 | For who does not know what a dearth there is of wise men, if yet any one be to be found? |
9371 | For who is so faint whom their devices will not enliven? |
9371 | For who would not shun and startle at such a man, as at some unnatural accident or spirit? |
9371 | Go to then, do n''t you find among the several kinds of living creatures that they thrive best that understand no more than what Nature taught them? |
9371 | If a man have a crooked, ill- favored wife, who yet in his eye may stand in competition with Venus, is it not the same as if she were truly beautiful? |
9371 | In like manner, the apostles press to us grace; but which of them distinguishes between free grace and grace that makes a man acceptable? |
9371 | Is not the author and parent of all our love, Cupid, as blind as a beetle? |
9371 | Is not war the very root and matter of all famed enterprises? |
9371 | Is there any of you so very a fool as to leave jewels and gold in the street? |
9371 | Nay, and when a justly deserved gout has knotted their knuckles, to hire a caster, or one that may put the dice in the box for them? |
9371 | Or Isocrates, that was so cowhearted that he dared never attempt it? |
9371 | Or as Lycurgus his example of his two whelps? |
9371 | Or as if any man, mistaking me for wisdom, could not at first sight convince himself by my face the true index of my mind? |
9371 | Or beget pleasure in another that is troublesome to himself? |
9371 | Or ever agree with another who is not at peace with himself? |
9371 | Or his ridiculous emblem of pulling off a horse''s tail hair by hair? |
9371 | Or of what authority will the censure of so few wise men be against so great a cloud of gainsayers? |
9371 | Or otherwise, I beseech you, under how many notions do I tax myself? |
9371 | Or to what purpose is it I should mind you of our professors of arts? |
9371 | Or to what purpose laws, where there were no ill manners? |
9371 | Or to what purpose, think you, should I describe myself when I am here present before you, and you behold me speaking? |
9371 | Or what is it that their own very names are often counterfeit or borrowed from some books of the ancients? |
9371 | Or what is that, when he attributes an upright mind without craft or malice to a fool, when a wise man the while thinks no man like himself? |
9371 | Or what need was there to have said so much, as if my very looks were not sufficient to inform you who I am? |
9371 | Or what woman is there would ever go to it did she seriously consider either the peril of child- bearing or the trouble of bringing them up? |
9371 | They knew the mother of Jesus, but which of them has so philosophically demonstrated how she was preserved from original sin as have done our divines? |
9371 | To how many misfortunes would he find the life of man subject? |
9371 | To make himself the object of his own admiration? |
9371 | Was it a philosophical oration? |
9371 | Were they not the next neighbors to wisdom? |
9371 | What are you the worse if the people hiss at you, so you applaud yourself? |
9371 | What but that of the most foolish? |
9371 | What deity did the Romans ever more religiously adore than that of Flora, the foundress of all pleasure? |
9371 | What has more of those little tricks than a squirrel? |
9371 | What is it when one kisses his mistress''freckle neck, another the wart on her nose? |
9371 | What is more prosperous or wonderful than the bee? |
9371 | What is this, I say, but mere folly? |
9371 | What more fawning than a dog? |
9371 | What need of rhetoric, where there were no lawsuits? |
9371 | What philosopher ever founded the like republic? |
9371 | What shall I say? |
9371 | What that inner purple; is it not an earnest and fervent love of God? |
9371 | What things are more proper to be laid up with care, such as are rare and precious, or such as are common and of no account? |
9371 | What tricks and legerdemains with which Mercury does not cloak his thefts? |
9371 | What use of logic, where there was no bickering about the double- meaning words? |
9371 | What was it that, when the common people of Rome were like to have destroyed all by their mutiny, reduced them to obedience? |
9371 | What wise man''s oration could ever have done so much with the people as Sertorius''invention of his white hind? |
9371 | What woman would have such a husband, what goodfellow such a guest, or what servant would either wish or endure such a master? |
9371 | What would become of them, think you, were they to fight it out at blows that are so dead through fear when the contest is only with empty words? |
9371 | What youth, if corrupted with the severity of old age? |
9371 | When a father shall swear his squint- eyed child is more lovely than Venus? |
9371 | When that chaste Diana shall so far forget her sex as to be ever hunting and ready to perish for Endymion? |
9371 | Whence but from me? |
9371 | Whence is it else that they are in so great request with princes that they can neither eat nor drink, go anywhere, or be an hour without them? |
9371 | Whereas on the contrary, if another''s stomach should turn at a sturgeon, wherein, I pray, is he happier than the other? |
9371 | Who denies it? |
9371 | Who denies it? |
9371 | Who would not conceive a prince a great lord and abundant in everything? |
9371 | Why Venus ever in her prime, but because of her affinity with me? |
9371 | Why do you give me no answer? |
9371 | Why is Cupid always portrayed like a boy, but because he is a very wag and can neither do nor so much as think of anything sober? |
9371 | Why is it that Bacchus is always a stripling, and bushy- haired? |
9371 | Will he, I pray, love anyone that hates himself? |
9371 | Yet he that shall diligently examine it with himself, would he not, think you, approve the example of the Milesian virgins and kill himself? |
9371 | Yet what do they beg of these saints but what belongs to folly? |
9371 | Yet why this? |
9371 | or defend it, so purchased, with swords, poisons, and all force imaginable? |
9371 | or who so quick- sighted before whose eyes they ca n''t cast a mist? |
9371 | or who would purchase that chair with all his substance? |
9371 | so great a profit would the access of wisdom deprive him of-- wisdom did I say? |
9371 | what Palemon, what Donatus, do they not scorn in comparison of themselves? |
9371 | what are they but mere words? |
9371 | what other thoughts had he, do you believe, than that, as I said before, the life of man is nothing else but an interlude of folly? |
9371 | who had delivered the church from such mists of error, which yet no one ever met with, had they not come out with some university seal for it? |
9371 | who so stupid whom such spurs ca n''t quicken? |
8168 | ( And wherefore?) |
8168 | Am I a Jan? |
8168 | And if so be it was preordinated for thee, wouldst thou be so impious as not to acquiesce in thy destiny? |
8168 | And must my words be thus interpreted? |
8168 | And there is made-- what? |
8168 | And what kind of fool? |
8168 | And what, I pray you? |
8168 | And why should I not? |
8168 | And would you know what I would do unto him? |
8168 | Are not these beggarly devils sufficiently wretched already? |
8168 | Are not you assured within yourself of what you have a mind to? |
8168 | Are they all cuckolds? |
8168 | Are you married, or are you not? |
8168 | Art thou content that thirty thousand wainload of devils should get away with thee at this same very instant? |
8168 | At this dingle dangle wagging of my tub, what would you have me to do? |
8168 | But although it should continue longer, is there any man so foolish as to have the confidence to promise himself three years? |
8168 | But how is it that you do these things? |
8168 | But howsoever tell me, Should I marry or no? |
8168 | But if I do not marry? |
8168 | But if in my adventure I encounter aright, as I hope I will, shall I be fortunate? |
8168 | But in this carnal strife and debate of yours have you obtained from God the gift and special grace of continency? |
8168 | But what happened thereupon? |
8168 | But what harm, in the devil''s name, have these poor devils the Capuchins and Minims done unto him? |
8168 | But what then, my gentle companion? |
8168 | But what, in good earnest? |
8168 | But what? |
8168 | But what? |
8168 | But when you have done all these fine things, quoth Trinquamelle, how do you, my friend, award your decrees, and pronounce judgment? |
8168 | But whence comes this ciron- worm betwixt these two fingers? |
8168 | But who is he, conspicuous from afar, With olive boughs, that doth his offerings bear? |
8168 | But who shall cuckold me? |
8168 | But will you tell me? |
8168 | But, I pray you, sir, must I this evening, ere I go to bed, eat much or little? |
8168 | But, quoth Pantagruel, when will you be out of debt? |
8168 | But, quoth the abbess, thou roguish wench, why didst not thou then make some sign to those that were in the next chamber beside thee? |
8168 | By the belly of Saint Buff, quoth Panurge, should I be Vulcan, whom the poet blazons? |
8168 | By the blood of a hog''s- pudding, till when wouldst thou delay the acting of a husband''s part? |
8168 | By the body of a fox new slain, quoth Pantagruel, what is that? |
8168 | By the haven of safety, cried out Rondibilis, what is this you ask of me? |
8168 | By the pody cody, I have fished fair; where are we now? |
8168 | Did not you take heed, quoth he, a little before he opened his mouth to speak, what a shogging, shaking, and wagging his head did keep? |
8168 | Did you ever hitherto find me in the confraternity of the faulty? |
8168 | Didst thou ever hear the vulgar proverb, Happy is the physician whose coming is desired at the declension of a disease? |
8168 | Didst thou ever see the monk of Castre''s cowl? |
8168 | Do not we thereby honour the Lord God Almighty, Creator, Protector, and Conserver of all things? |
8168 | Do we know but that she may be an eleventh sibyl or a second Cassandra? |
8168 | Do you find any trouble or disquiet in your body by the importunate stings and pricklings of the flesh? |
8168 | Do you jog hither, wagging your tails, to pant at my wine, and bepiss my barrel? |
8168 | Do you remember what happened at Rome two hundred and threescore years after the foundation thereof? |
8168 | Do you see this russet? |
8168 | Do you, quoth Panurge, aver that without all exception? |
8168 | Dost thou not know, and is it not daily told unto thee, that the end of the world approacheth? |
8168 | Dost thou not see the Abbey of Theleme? |
8168 | Dost thou think, Friar John, by thy faith, that he is in the state of salvation? |
8168 | Dum venerit judicari? |
8168 | Foolish and dishonest? |
8168 | For to what end should the sun impart unto her any of his light? |
8168 | For who so rich can be that sometimes may not owe, or who can be so poor that sometimes may not lend? |
8168 | Give me thy advice freely, I beseech thee, Should I marry or no? |
8168 | Give me your advice, billy, and tell me your opinion freely, Should I marry or no? |
8168 | Good people, most illustrious drinkers, and you, thrice precious gouty gentlemen, did you ever see Diogenes, and cynic philosopher? |
8168 | Had you good luck in your first marriage? |
8168 | Have I not got a brave determination of all my doubts, and a response in all things agreeable to the oracle that gave it? |
8168 | Have you any dice in your pocket? |
8168 | Have you undertaken the task to enrich me in this world? |
8168 | He gave me a lusty rapping thwack on my back,--what then? |
8168 | Hearken here, Epistemon, my little bully, dost not thou hold him to be very resolute in his responsory verdicts? |
8168 | How do they call thee? |
8168 | How doleful, trist, and plangorous would such a sight and pageantry prove unto them? |
8168 | How interpret you that passage? |
8168 | How is it, quoth Panurge, that you conceive this matter? |
8168 | How should the bells be rung? |
8168 | How the devil can she be cuckolded who never yet was married? |
8168 | How thrive you with this second wife of yours? |
8168 | I heartily beseech you, what must I do? |
8168 | I say, you who are here, and not that other you who playeth below in the tennis- court? |
8168 | I will be? |
8168 | If I had put within this bottle two pints, the one of wine and the other of water, thoroughly and exactly mingled together, how would you unmix them? |
8168 | If you shall be a cuckold? |
8168 | In confirmation hereof, Theophrastus, being asked on a time what kind of beast or thing he judged a toyish, wanton love to be? |
8168 | In hurlyburly fight, Can any tell where random blows may light? |
8168 | Is it a blaspheming clause or reserve any way scandalous unto the world? |
8168 | Is it an ill expression? |
8168 | Is it not a canonical and authentic exception, worthy to be premised to all our undertakings? |
8168 | Is it not because they have not enough at home wherewith to fill their bellies and their pokes? |
8168 | Is it not the want of flesh meat? |
8168 | Is it possible for me to live without a wife, in the name of all the subterranean devils? |
8168 | Is it so, quoth Panurge, that you understand the matter? |
8168 | Is it your pleasure, most dear father, that you speak? |
8168 | Is not that a mean whereby we do acknowledge him to be the sole giver of all whatsoever is good? |
8168 | Is not that verily a sanctifying of his holy name? |
8168 | Is not this an infallible and sovereign antidote? |
8168 | Is she a cucquean for that? |
8168 | Is this small saving or frugality? |
8168 | It falleth to your turn to give an answer: Should Panurge, pray you, marry, yea or no? |
8168 | Let us turn the clean contrary way, and brush our former words against the wool: what if I encounter ill? |
8168 | O the Lord help us now, quoth Panurge; whither are we driven to, good folks? |
8168 | Of what kind? |
8168 | One, two, three; where is the fourth? |
8168 | Or yet by the mystery of necromancy? |
8168 | Or, for the more certainty, will you have a trial of your fortune by the art of aruspiciny, by augury, or by extispiciny? |
8168 | Our faithful friend, speak; are you married? |
8168 | Shall I be a cuckold, father, yea or no? |
8168 | Shall I go yet further? |
8168 | Shall I marry? |
8168 | Shall I marry? |
8168 | Shall I thrive or speed well withal? |
8168 | Shall I yet say more? |
8168 | Shall not I be a cuckold? |
8168 | Should I marry? |
8168 | Tell me-- do you prosper well with her? |
8168 | Then shall I not marry? |
8168 | Therefore I beseech you, my good Master Rondibilis, should I marry or not? |
8168 | To revile with opprobrious speeches the good and courageous props and pillars of the Church,--is that to be called a poetical fury? |
8168 | To what end doth she quaver with her lips, like a monkey in the dismembering of a lobster? |
8168 | To what use can those writings serve you, those papers and other procedures contained in the bags and pokes of the law- suitors? |
8168 | Tripes and bowels of all the devils, cries Panurge, what do you tell me? |
8168 | Was not he sent for? |
8168 | Was she to blame for an ill- managed fear,-- Or rather pious, conscionable care? |
8168 | Were it not for it, what would become of the toll- rates and rent- rolls? |
8168 | Were not they very careful to entertain them well, punctually to look unto them, and to attend them faithfully and circumspectly? |
8168 | Were you ever a cuckold? |
8168 | What a pox to thy bones dost thou mean, stony cod? |
8168 | What can be the signification of the uneven shrugging of her hulchy shoulders? |
8168 | What could it have cost him to hearken unto what the honest man had invented and contrived for his good? |
8168 | What do they do then? |
8168 | What fool so confident to say, That he shall live one other day? |
8168 | What have I heard? |
8168 | What is it makes the wolves to leave the woods? |
8168 | What is it that this polypragmonetic ardelion to all the fiends of hell doth aim at? |
8168 | What is it that you advise and counsel me to do? |
8168 | What is the meaning of that? |
8168 | What joy, conjecture you, will then be found amongst those officers when they see this rivulet of gold, which is their sole restorative? |
8168 | What kind of dice, quoth Trinquamelle, grand- president of the said court, do you mean, my friend Bridlegoose? |
8168 | What makes poor scoundrel rogues to beg, I pray you? |
8168 | What maketh all this for our present purpose? |
8168 | What maketh women whores? |
8168 | What meaneth this restless wagging of her slouchy chaps? |
8168 | What say they? |
8168 | What say you? |
8168 | What says Cato in his Book of Husbandry to this purpose? |
8168 | What the deuce moved him to be so snappish and depravedly bent against the good fathers of the true religion? |
8168 | What the devil else shouldst thou do but marry? |
8168 | What the devil, quoth Panurge, means this busy restless fellow? |
8168 | What wonder is it then? |
8168 | What, are you there yet? |
8168 | When I tell you,--If it please God,--do I to you any wrong therein? |
8168 | When it was asked Ovid, Why Aegisthus became an adulterer? |
8168 | When the Massorets and Cabalists are asked why it is that none of all the devils do at any time enter into the terrestrial paradise? |
8168 | Where shall we put it? |
8168 | Whereof could the chassis or paper- windows be made? |
8168 | Whether wouldst thou be jealous without cause, or be a cuckold and know nothing of it? |
8168 | Who is able to tell if the world shall last yet three years? |
8168 | Why didst thou not leave thy purse with the miller? |
8168 | Why do you then doubt of that which you know not? |
8168 | Why not? |
8168 | Why not? |
8168 | Why so, I prithee tell? |
8168 | Why, replied Panurge, the lately married? |
8168 | Why? |
8168 | Why? |
8168 | Why? |
8168 | Will not this be the golden age in the reign of Saturn? |
8168 | Will she be discreet and chaste? |
8168 | Will you eat a pudding? |
8168 | Will you have another draught of white hippocras? |
8168 | Will you maintain, quoth Pantagruel, that the codpiece is the chief piece of a military harness? |
8168 | Will you not be gone? |
8168 | Will you teach me, quoth Panurge, how to discern flies among milk, or show your father the way how to beget children? |
8168 | Wilt thou come along with us, Friar John? |
8168 | Without it, how could the papers and writs of lawyers''clients be brought to the bar? |
8168 | Without it, how should the water be got out of a draw- well? |
8168 | Would not the noble art of printing perish without it? |
8168 | Would you know whither? |
8168 | Wouldst thou be content to be found with thy genitories full in the day of judgment? |
8168 | Yea but, quoth Panurge, would you have me so solitarily drive out the whole course of my life, without the comfort of a matrimonial consort? |
8168 | You do not? |
8168 | You monks and friars of the cowl- pated and hood- polled fraternity, have you no remedy nor salve against this malady of graffing horns in heads? |
8168 | You never saw her? |
8168 | You were also married before you had this wife? |
8168 | You, my French countrymen, which is the way you take to go thither? |
8168 | answered Panurge; have you fixed your thoughts there? |
8168 | are we come to that pass? |
8168 | or as the Cilician women, according to the testimony of Dioscorides, were wo nt to do the grain of alkermes? |
8168 | the true idea of the Olympic regions, wherein all( other) virtues cease, charity alone ruleth, governeth, domineereth, and triumpheth? |
4081 | Drink to me only with thine eyes,or"Still to be neat, still to be dressed"? |
4081 | ''Slid, Subtle, how shall we do? |
4081 | ''Slid, doctor, how canst thou know this so soon? |
4081 | ''Slight, do not say so, He will repent he gave you any more-- What say you to his constellation, doctor, The Balance? |
4081 | ''Slight, make you that a question, lady? |
4081 | ''Sprecious!--What do you mean? |
4081 | ''Tis true, you shall not open them, indeed; Nor have them forth, do you see? |
4081 | ''Tis well done, Nab; thou''lt bring the damask too? |
4081 | ''slight, What else is thanks? |
4081 | ''tis he, he said he would send what call you him? |
4081 | ), fol., 1616; The Alchemist, 4to, 1612; Catiline, his Conspiracy, 4to, 1611; Bartholomew Fayre, 4to, 1614(? |
4081 | );(?) |
4081 | --Come on, master Dapper, You see how I turn clients here away, To give your cause dispatch; have you perform''d The ceremonies were enjoin''d you? |
4081 | --This is the west, and this the south? |
4081 | --Ti, ti, ti, ti, ti, ti, Would her grace speak with me? |
4081 | --Where''s this varlet? |
4081 | A Lullianist? |
4081 | A bonnibel? |
4081 | A man an hour strangled, and could not speak, And both you heard him cry? |
4081 | A seller of tobacco? |
4081 | ADVISED, informed, aware;"are you--?" |
4081 | Abel Drugger? |
4081 | About the second day of the third week, In the ninth month? |
4081 | All what? |
4081 | Already, sir, have you found it? |
4081 | And I shall carry it? |
4081 | And as oft buz? |
4081 | And but one coach? |
4081 | And do you think to have the stone with this? |
4081 | And dripping- pans, and pot- hangers, and hooks? |
4081 | And hast thou done it? |
4081 | And hath cried hum? |
4081 | And have you broke with him, captain? |
4081 | And have you quit him? |
4081 | And how do you like The lady Pliant? |
4081 | And how? |
4081 | And is he fasting? |
4081 | And my captain Face? |
4081 | And not cut my throat, but trim me? |
4081 | And save the ground? |
4081 | And shall we twitch him? |
4081 | And tell her''tis her fortune? |
4081 | And the philosopher''s vinegar? |
4081 | And the ruff too? |
4081 | And the widow? |
4081 | And those are your two sides? |
4081 | And what could have been the nature of this"purge"? |
4081 | And what does he owe for lotium? |
4081 | And what shall I do? |
4081 | And where be your andirons now? |
4081 | And wilt thou insinuate what I am, and praise me, And say, I am a noble fellow? |
4081 | And would you incur Your aunt''s displeasure for these trifles? |
4081 | And your quarrelling disciple? |
4081 | And, lastly, Thou hast descry''d the flower, the sanguis agni? |
4081 | Another too? |
4081 | Are not the choicest fables of the poets, That were the fountains and first springs of wisdom, Wrapp''d in perplexed allegories? |
4081 | Are there such? |
4081 | Are they gone? |
4081 | Are they perfumed, and his bath ready? |
4081 | Are they within then? |
4081 | Are you officers, And can not stay this violence? |
4081 | Are you sound? |
4081 | Are you sure you loosed them In their own menstrue? |
4081 | Are you, sir, the owner? |
4081 | Art thou in earnest? |
4081 | Art thou return''d? |
4081 | As he that built the Water- work, does with water? |
4081 | As one would say, do you think I am a Turk? |
4081 | Ay, are you bolted? |
4081 | Ay, those same Are best of all: where are they? |
4081 | Ay, what is that? |
4081 | Ay; What''s the complexion? |
4081 | Ay; but stay, This act of coining, is it lawful? |
4081 | BEDSTAFF,(?) |
4081 | BULLED,(?) |
4081 | Because o''your fermentation and cibation? |
4081 | Blushes the bolt''s- head? |
4081 | But do you hear? |
4081 | But do you hear? |
4081 | But does he teach Living by the wits too? |
4081 | But how long time, Sir, must the saints expect yet? |
4081 | But how out of purpose, and place, do I name art? |
4081 | But where''s the widow? |
4081 | But will he send his andirons? |
4081 | But wilt thou Ulen, Be constant to thy promise? |
4081 | But''tis for me? |
4081 | But, Face, How cam''st thou by this secret don? |
4081 | But, in a monarchy, how will this be? |
4081 | By pouring on your rectified water? |
4081 | CRY("he that cried Italian"),"speak in a musical cadence,"intone, or declaim(? |
4081 | Can you remember this? |
4081 | Can you so? |
4081 | Can you sublime and dulcify? |
4081 | Come on, you ewe, you have match''d most sweetly, have you not? |
4081 | Come, my venturers, You have pack''d up all? |
4081 | Come, will you quarrel? |
4081 | Con licencia, se puede ver a esta senora? |
4081 | Could he tell you that too? |
4081 | DAME P. What is he then, sir? |
4081 | DAME P. What say you, brother? |
4081 | DAME P. Why, is that better than an English countess? |
4081 | DIBBLE,(?) |
4081 | DISTANCE,(?) |
4081 | DOL[ APPEARS AT THE DOOR].-- Who is this? |
4081 | DOR,(?) |
4081 | Did Adam write, sir, in High Dutch? |
4081 | Did I not quarrel bravely? |
4081 | Did not I say, I would never have you tupp''d But by a dubb''d boy, to make you a lady- tom? |
4081 | Did you look On the bolt''s- head yet? |
4081 | Did you never see Her royal grace yet? |
4081 | Did you not hear the coil About the door? |
4081 | Did you not tell me so? |
4081 | Did you see me at all? |
4081 | Didst thou hear A cry, sayst thou? |
4081 | Do we succeed? |
4081 | Do we? |
4081 | Do you but think it now? |
4081 | Do you intend it? |
4081 | Do you know who hears you, sovereign? |
4081 | Do you mark? |
4081 | Do you not gull one? |
4081 | Do you rebel, Do you fly out in the projection? |
4081 | Do you think I fable with you? |
4081 | Do you think so? |
4081 | Do you think that I dare move him? |
4081 | Doctor, wherein? |
4081 | Does he not use her bravely? |
4081 | Does not this diamond better on my finger, Than in the quarry? |
4081 | Dol, I am sorry for thee i''faith; but hear''st thou? |
4081 | Dost thou not laugh? |
4081 | EYEBRIGHT,(?) |
4081 | Error? |
4081 | FIGGUM,(?) |
4081 | FROLICS,(?) |
4081 | FUGEAND,(?) |
4081 | Filius artis? |
4081 | For God''s sake, when will her grace be at leisure? |
4081 | For what, my sudden boy? |
4081 | For what, my zealous friends? |
4081 | For what? |
4081 | For why, sir? |
4081 | Free of the grocers? |
4081 | GRASS,(?) |
4081 | Gentlemen, what is the matter? |
4081 | Gentlemen, what mean you? |
4081 | Giv''n thee thy oaths, thy quarrelling dimensions, Thy rules to cheat at horse- race, cock- pit, cards, Dice, or whatever gallant tincture else? |
4081 | Give it me,--and prays you, You would devise-- what is it, Nab? |
4081 | Good captain, What must I give? |
4081 | H has his white shirt on? |
4081 | HOIDEN, hoyden, formerly applied to both sexes( ancient term for leveret? |
4081 | Has he a competent sum there in the bag To buy the goods within? |
4081 | Has he bit? |
4081 | Has there been such resort, say you? |
4081 | Hast brought the damask? |
4081 | Hast brought the damask? |
4081 | Hast thou gull''d her of her jewels or her bracelets? |
4081 | Hast thou no credit with the players? |
4081 | Hast thou? |
4081 | Hast[ thou] told her, The Spanish count will come? |
4081 | Have I discours''d so unto you of our stone, And of the good that it shall bring your cause? |
4081 | Have you another? |
4081 | Have you brought money To buy more coals? |
4081 | Have you brought pistolets, or portagues, My solemn Don?--Dost thou feel any? |
4081 | Have you disposed of them? |
4081 | Have you done there? |
4081 | Have you provided for her grace''s servants? |
4081 | Have you set the oil of luna in kemia? |
4081 | Have you together cozen''d all this while, And all the world, and shall it now be said, You''ve made most courteous shift to cozen yourselves? |
4081 | Have you your senses, masters? |
4081 | Have you your wits? |
4081 | He shall do any thing.--Doctor, do you hear? |
4081 | Here: what news? |
4081 | Hold, Hold, gentlemen, what means this violence? |
4081 | How did you put her into''t? |
4081 | How do you sublime him? |
4081 | How does it? |
4081 | How doth my noble Diego, And my dear madam countess? |
4081 | How know you him? |
4081 | How know you? |
4081 | How like you her? |
4081 | How might one do t''have conference with her, Lungs? |
4081 | How much? |
4081 | How much? |
4081 | How must I do then, sir? |
4081 | How shall I beat them off? |
4081 | How shall we, sir, trust you In the other matter? |
4081 | How should I know it? |
4081 | How then? |
4081 | How will''t be done, then? |
4081 | How wouldst thou ha''done, if I had not help''t thee out? |
4081 | How, issue on? |
4081 | How? |
4081 | I am the Spanish don"that should be cozen''d, Do you see, cozen''d?" |
4081 | I ask thee with what conscience Thou canst advance that idol against us, That have the seal? |
4081 | I have not seen you thus distemper''d: who is''t? |
4081 | I see You are lodged here, in the house of a rare man, An excellent artist; but what''s that to you? |
4081 | I warrant thee.-- Why sent hither? |
4081 | I will feize you, sirrah; Why do you not buckle to your tools? |
4081 | I will: and shave himself? |
4081 | I''ll think of this: will you, sir, call the widow? |
4081 | I? |
4081 | I? |
4081 | If I should? |
4081 | If she should have precedence of her mistress? |
4081 | In chains of adamant? |
4081 | In no ill sense, sweet lady; but to ask How your fair graces pass the hours? |
4081 | Into gold? |
4081 | Is Drugger''s damask there, And the tobacco? |
4081 | Is all lost, Lungs? |
4081 | Is he a doctor? |
4081 | Is he gone? |
4081 | Is he gone? |
4081 | Is he the constable? |
4081 | Is it a marriage? |
4081 | Is it not, honest Nab? |
4081 | Is no projection left? |
4081 | Is our day come? |
4081 | Is she no way accessible? |
4081 | Is she, i''faith? |
4081 | Is that the matter? |
4081 | Is there an officer, there? |
4081 | Is this the cunning- man? |
4081 | Is this your sister? |
4081 | Is yet her grace''s cousin come? |
4081 | Is your name Kastril, sir? |
4081 | Is''t best? |
4081 | Is''t no more? |
4081 | Is''t not French? |
4081 | Is''t not a gallant language that they speak? |
4081 | Is''t not, Dol? |
4081 | It is not he? |
4081 | Jeremy butler? |
4081 | Knew you not that? |
4081 | Know you the sapor pontic? |
4081 | Let me see, How''s the moon now? |
4081 | MINSITIVE,(?) |
4081 | Made thee a second in mine own great art? |
4081 | More antichristian than your bell- founders? |
4081 | Must I? |
4081 | Must not she make curt''sy? |
4081 | My mad tobacco- boy, here, tells me of one That can do things: has he any skill? |
4081 | Nay, look ye, sovereign, general, are you madmen? |
4081 | Nay, pray you, hold: he is her grace''s nephew, Ti, ti, ti? |
4081 | No gold about thee? |
4081 | No, I can not tell-- It may be they should.--What then? |
4081 | No, what was''t? |
4081 | No: terra damnata Must not have entrance in the work.--Who are you? |
4081 | Nor heard a drum struck for baboons or puppets? |
4081 | Nor my Drugger? |
4081 | Not those of iron? |
4081 | Not? |
4081 | Now do you see, that something''s to be done, Beside your beech- coal, and your corsive waters, Your crosslets, crucibles, and cucurbites? |
4081 | Now, Nab, Art thou well pleased, Nab? |
4081 | Now, queen Dol, Have you pack''d up all? |
4081 | O monsieur Caution, that WILL NOT BE GULL''D? |
4081 | O, are you come? |
4081 | O, do you so, sir? |
4081 | O, is it so? |
4081 | O, is it so? |
4081 | O, what else, sir? |
4081 | O, you are sent from master Wholesome, Your teacher? |
4081 | ODLING,(?) |
4081 | Of what kind, sir? |
4081 | Of what? |
4081 | Of white oil? |
4081 | One glass o''thy water, with a madam I know, Will have it done, Nab: what''s her brother, a knight? |
4081 | Or a knight o''the curious coxcomb, do you see? |
4081 | Or more profane, or choleric, than your glass- men? |
4081 | Or what is homogene, or heterogene? |
4081 | Or, what do you say to a collar of brawn, cut down Beneath the souse, and wriggled with a knife? |
4081 | PARANTORY,(?) |
4081 | PATOUN,(?) |
4081 | Paton, pellet of dough; perhaps the"moulding of the tobacco... for the pipe"( Gifford);(?) |
4081 | Pertinax,[ my] Surly, Will you believe antiquity? |
4081 | Por el amor de dios, que es esto que se tarda? |
4081 | Porque no se acude? |
4081 | Puede ser de hazer burla de mi amor? |
4081 | Put thee in words and fashion, made thee fit For more than ordinary fellowships? |
4081 | Que es esto, senores, que no venga? |
4081 | Rascals, Would run themselves from breath, to see me ride, Or you t''have but a hole to thrust your heads in, For which you should pay ear- rent? |
4081 | Say you so, sir Epicure? |
4081 | Senores, porque se tarda tanto? |
4081 | Shall I not have it with me? |
4081 | Shall I see her grace? |
4081 | Shall he not? |
4081 | Sir, do you Believe that eggs are hatch''d so? |
4081 | Sir, have you done? |
4081 | Sir, please you, Shall I not change the filter? |
4081 | Sir? |
4081 | Speak not the scriptures oft in parables? |
4081 | Speak you this from art? |
4081 | Stay, Face, you must go to the door,''Pray God it be my anabaptist-- Who is''t, Dol? |
4081 | Stay, man; what is she? |
4081 | Subtle, Let''s know where you set up next; I will send you A customer now and then, for old acquaintance: What new course have you? |
4081 | Swear by your fac, and in a thing so known Unto the doctor? |
4081 | Sweet Dol, You must go tune your virginal, no losing O''the least time: and, do you hear? |
4081 | TIM,(?) |
4081 | That''s your crow''s head? |
4081 | The angry tongue he talks in? |
4081 | The venture tripartite? |
4081 | Then I may send my spits? |
4081 | Think you so, sir? |
4081 | This day, thou shalt have ingots; and to- morrow, Give lords th''affront.--Is it, my Zephyrus, right? |
4081 | This is heathen Greek to you!--And what''s your mercury? |
4081 | This is heathen Greek to you, now!-- And when comes vivification? |
4081 | Thy hair went off? |
4081 | To be a countess, say you, a Spanish countess, sir? |
4081 | UNBORED,(?) |
4081 | WHETSTONE, GEORGE, an author who lived 1544(?) |
4081 | WHINILING,(?) |
4081 | WHIT,(?) |
4081 | Was Shakespeare then concerned in this war of the stages? |
4081 | Was not all the knowledge Of the Aegyptians writ in mystic symbols? |
4081 | Was not my Dapper here yet? |
4081 | We''ll draw lots: You''ll stand to that? |
4081 | Well-- Your business, Abel? |
4081 | Were the orphans''parents Sincere professors? |
4081 | Were you the don, sir? |
4081 | What are you, sir? |
4081 | What box is that? |
4081 | What call you her brother? |
4081 | What can you not do Against lords spiritual or temporal, That shall oppone you? |
4081 | What care you? |
4081 | What device should he bring forth now? |
4081 | What did he come for? |
4081 | What do you mean, my masters? |
4081 | What do you mean? |
4081 | What do you say? |
4081 | What do you think of me, That I am a chiaus? |
4081 | What dost thou think on''t, Subtle? |
4081 | What else are all your terms, Whereon no one of your writers''grees with other? |
4081 | What else? |
4081 | What is he, general? |
4081 | What is he, is with you? |
4081 | What is she when she''s out of her fit? |
4081 | What is she? |
4081 | What is some three ounces Of fresh materials? |
4081 | What is that portion? |
4081 | What is the motive? |
4081 | What is this? |
4081 | What is your name, say you? |
4081 | What is''t an ounce? |
4081 | What is''t, Nab? |
4081 | What knaves, what cheaters? |
4081 | What mean you, sir? |
4081 | What mean you, sir? |
4081 | What means this? |
4081 | What need you? |
4081 | What news, Dol? |
4081 | What now? |
4081 | What paper''s that? |
4081 | What paper? |
4081 | What says he? |
4081 | What says my dainty Dolkin? |
4081 | What shall I do? |
4081 | What shall I do? |
4081 | What shall we do now, Face? |
4081 | What shall we do then? |
4081 | What shall we do with this same puffin here, Now he''s on the spit? |
4081 | What should I swear? |
4081 | What should my knave advance, To draw this company? |
4081 | What sort of birds were they? |
4081 | What talks he now? |
4081 | What to do? |
4081 | What trade art thou on? |
4081 | What warrant have you? |
4081 | What will serve? |
4081 | What will the orphan''s goods arise to, think you? |
4081 | What will you do With these the while? |
4081 | What wilt thou give me, i''faith? |
4081 | What''s cohobation? |
4081 | What''s that? |
4081 | What''s that? |
4081 | What''s that? |
4081 | What''s the matter, good sir? |
4081 | What''s the matter, sir? |
4081 | What''s the proper passion of metals? |
4081 | What''s to do there? |
4081 | What''s your medicine, To draw so many several sorts of wild fowl? |
4081 | What''s your name? |
4081 | What''s your ultimum supplicium auri? |
4081 | What, and so little beard? |
4081 | What, and turn that too? |
4081 | What, do you change your copy now? |
4081 | What, those in the cellar, The knight sir Mammon claims? |
4081 | What, with the plague? |
4081 | What? |
4081 | What? |
4081 | When do you make projection? |
4081 | When must he come for his familiar? |
4081 | When saw you him? |
4081 | Where are you, doctor? |
4081 | Where be the French petticoats, And girdles and hangers? |
4081 | Where does he carry her? |
4081 | Where have you greater atheists than your cooks? |
4081 | Where is he? |
4081 | Where is he? |
4081 | Where is he? |
4081 | Where is my Subtle, there? |
4081 | Where is my drudge? |
4081 | Where is she? |
4081 | Where is she? |
4081 | Where is the doctor? |
4081 | Where is the doxy? |
4081 | Where is the instrument of wickedness, My lewd false drudge? |
4081 | Where is this collier? |
4081 | Where shall it be done? |
4081 | Where shall we now Bestow him? |
4081 | Where''s Drugger? |
4081 | Where''s Subtle? |
4081 | Where''s master? |
4081 | Where''s master? |
4081 | Where''s the captain? |
4081 | Where''s the lady? |
4081 | Where''s the money? |
4081 | Where''s the widow? |
4081 | Where? |
4081 | Wherein, sir? |
4081 | Wherein, sir? |
4081 | Wherein? |
4081 | Wherein? |
4081 | Which finger''s that? |
4081 | Which? |
4081 | Who can not? |
4081 | Who had it then? |
4081 | Who is he? |
4081 | Who is it, Dol? |
4081 | Who is it, sir? |
4081 | Who is''t? |
4081 | Who says so? |
4081 | Who shall do''t? |
4081 | Who shall take your word? |
4081 | Who would have look''d it should have been that rascal, Surly? |
4081 | Who would you speak with, sir? |
4081 | Who would you speak with? |
4081 | Who''s that? |
4081 | Who''s that? |
4081 | Who''s that? |
4081 | Who''s that? |
4081 | Who''s there? |
4081 | Who''s there? |
4081 | Who''s there? |
4081 | Who, sir, Jeremy? |
4081 | Who? |
4081 | Whom? |
4081 | Why do you ask? |
4081 | Why should you wish so? |
4081 | Why you the keys? |
4081 | Why, I pray you, have I Been countenanced by you, or you by me? |
4081 | Why, have you so? |
4081 | Why, if it do, What remedy? |
4081 | Why, sir? |
4081 | Why, what have you observ''d, sir, in our art, Seems so impossible? |
4081 | Why, what''s the matter? |
4081 | Why, what''s the matter? |
4081 | Why, who Am I, my mungrel? |
4081 | Why, would you be A gallant, and not game? |
4081 | Why? |
4081 | Will he take then? |
4081 | Will he win at cards too? |
4081 | Will nought be sav''d that''s good for med''cine, think''st thou? |
4081 | Will the doctor teach this? |
4081 | Will you be Your own destructions, gentlemen? |
4081 | Will you be so loud? |
4081 | Will you begone, sir? |
4081 | Will you commit more sin, To excuse a varlet? |
4081 | Will you go fetch Don Diego off, the while? |
4081 | Will you go help to fetch in Don in state? |
4081 | Will you have The neighbours hear you? |
4081 | Will you mar all? |
4081 | Will you then do? |
4081 | Will you undo yourselves with civil war? |
4081 | Will you, don bawd and pickpurse? |
4081 | Will you, sir? |
4081 | Wilt thou do this? |
4081 | Wilt thou? |
4081 | With all my heart, sir; Am I discharged o''the lot? |
4081 | Without priority? |
4081 | Would I were hang''d then? |
4081 | Would you be gone now? |
4081 | Wrought thee to spirit, to quintessence, with pains Would twice have won me the philosopher''s work? |
4081 | Yes, but do you think, doctor, I e''er shall quarrel well? |
4081 | Yes, how then, sir? |
4081 | Yes, sir; did you never see me play the Fool? |
4081 | Yes; are they gone? |
4081 | Yes; say, lord general, how fares our camp? |
4081 | You are indeed: Will you hear me, sir? |
4081 | You do mistake the house, sir: What sign was''t at? |
4081 | You have heard all? |
4081 | You hear the Don too? |
4081 | You mean no treason, sir? |
4081 | You most notorious whelp, you insolent slave, Dare you do this? |
4081 | You saw no bills set up that promised cure Of agues, or the tooth- ach? |
4081 | You were born upon a Wednesday? |
4081 | You''ll bring your head within a cockscomb, will you? |
4081 | You''ll do it? |
4081 | You''ll hear me, sir? |
4081 | Your aunt of Fairy? |
4081 | Your cock''s- comb''s, is it not? |
4081 | Your grace will command him no more duties? |
4081 | Your lapis philosophicus? |
4081 | Your magisterium now, What''s that? |
4081 | a Ripley? |
4081 | a billing? |
4081 | a bona roba? |
4081 | all things in common? |
4081 | and dost thou despair, my little Nab, Knowing what the doctor has set down for thee, And seeing so many of the city dubb''d? |
4081 | and flee me When I come in? |
4081 | and gat you? |
4081 | and holds it? |
4081 | and toward such a fortune? |
4081 | and your brass pots, That should have been golden flagons, and great wedges? |
4081 | art thou so near? |
4081 | as if you only had The powder to project with, and the work Were not begun out of equality? |
4081 | calcine? |
4081 | can we ever think, When you have won five or six thousand pound, You''ll send us shares in''t, by this rate? |
4081 | do not we Sustain our parts? |
4081 | do you talk? |
4081 | do you think it? |
4081 | do you use me thus? |
4081 | dost thou deal, Nab? |
4081 | flacon) round the neck(?). |
4081 | for that money? |
4081 | for what? |
4081 | good prize? |
4081 | had your holy consistory No name to send me, of another sound, Than wicked Ananias? |
4081 | has he bit? |
4081 | hath the count Been courteous, lady? |
4081 | have I lost her then? |
4081 | have you done? |
4081 | have you found that out? |
4081 | have you no more regard To your reputations? |
4081 | have you that? |
4081 | he hung out no banners Of a strange calf with five legs to be seen, Or a huge lobster with six claws? |
4081 | he is a slave, Whate''er he is, and the son of a whore.--Are you The man, sir, I would know? |
4081 | heathen Greek? |
4081 | how so? |
4081 | in a dream? |
4081 | indeed.-- Why do you not thank her grace? |
4081 | is Ars sacra, Or chrysopoeia, or spagyrica, Or the pamphysic, or panarchic knowledge, A heathen language? |
4081 | is he such a fellow? |
4081 | is he? |
4081 | is his mouth down? |
4081 | is this true? |
4081 | it will repair you when you are spent: How do they live by their wits there, that have vented Six times your fortunes? |
4081 | liberal, and open? |
4081 | my honest Abel? |
4081 | no means, No trick to give a man a taste of her-- wit-- Or so? |
4081 | on D, sir? |
4081 | perfect? |
4081 | records? |
4081 | reel you? |
4081 | sapor stiptic? |
4081 | sell my fortune? |
4081 | should they have been, sir, turn''d into gold, all? |
4081 | that I am? |
4081 | the loud lie? |
4081 | to 1587(?). |
4081 | to quarrel? |
4081 | to take it? |
4081 | to tempt you with these spirits? |
4081 | what colour says it? |
4081 | what mates, what Baiards have we here? |
4081 | what shall I do? |
4081 | what sight is here? |
4081 | where be the trunks? |
4081 | where''s your judgment? |
4081 | which is he? |
4081 | who am I? |
4081 | who comes here? |
4081 | whom do you seek? |
4081 | why? |
4081 | why? |
4081 | will nothing be preserv''d Of all our cost? |
4081 | will you betray all? |
4081 | would you have me stalk like a mill- jade, All day, for one that will not yield us grains? |
4081 | you Knipper- doling? |
4081 | you admire now? |
4081 | you have eaten your gag? |
6148 | But what charges? |
6148 | End is there none? |
6148 | ''And what day of the month?'' |
6148 | ''But how?'' |
6148 | ''But what was it probable that this man meditated? |
6148 | ''Did the recruit know his family, the De Erausos?'' |
6148 | ''Did the recruit know little Catalina?'' |
6148 | ''Is this never to have an end?'' |
6148 | ''Well, I suppose I must say thank ye: but what comes next? |
6148 | ''What are we to do in England?'' |
6148 | ''What are you up to? |
6148 | ''What the hell do you gay fellows want with me? |
6148 | ''What''s that?'' |
6148 | ''When-- where?'' |
6148 | ''Who was it that I wanted?'' |
6148 | ''Who was it,''he asked eagerly,''you made the bargain with? |
6148 | ''_ What people_?'' |
6148 | --''You think so?'' |
6148 | A certain''excellent equestrian''falling in with Coleridge on horseback, thus accosted him--''Pray, Sir, did you meet a tailor along the road?'' |
6148 | A little overflow of vivacity, a_ pirouette_ more or less, what harm should_ that_ do to any of us? |
6148 | A thousand things might have occurred to cause that delay, without needing to suppose any accident; or, if an accident, why not a very trifling one? |
6148 | After the absolute restoration to health, a man is very apt to say,--''Now, then, how shall I use my health? |
6148 | Ah, what a vista did that gateway expose before her dazzled eye? |
6148 | Ah, yes, my dear Kate, at that solemn moment, where, indeed, were_ you_? |
6148 | And how? |
6148 | And in framing his plot, which way did he set his face to look out for accomplices? |
6148 | And is this the sorrow that kills you?" |
6148 | And scandal says( but then what will not scandal say?) |
6148 | And the question argued at the London dinner- table was-- Could the writer have been other than a devil? |
6148 | And then, if not known as the man who shot him, where is the shadow even of vengeance? |
6148 | And were you ever acquainted there with Senor Miguel de Erauso? |
6148 | And what is_ that_ expressed in time? |
6148 | And when he says,''Twas thou, what is the wretch talking to? |
6148 | And why? |
6148 | And why? |
6148 | And_ why_ are they not? |
6148 | Are these works, then, to be held cheap, because their truths to their falsehoods are in the ratio of one to five hundred? |
6148 | Are we never to improve? |
6148 | Arriving there, all turned round in eagerness, saying,''Where is our dear Kate?'' |
6148 | As she drew near to it, a voice challenged--''_Who goes there_?'' |
6148 | Ay, indeed-- where did he learn_ that_? |
6148 | Besides, is not the science a growth from very ancient times? |
6148 | Besides, though the Empress might accept an excuse for the past, would she the less forbear to suspect for the future? |
6148 | Breathing, for instance, talking to me,( though rather absurdly,) and airing your legs at a glowing fire?'' |
6148 | But did the reader feel them to be the awful bores which, in fact, they were? |
6148 | But had we any means arranged for pursuing our flight, and turning this escape to account when out of confinement? |
6148 | But how can this come to pass, if she is to continue in her present obscurity? |
6148 | But how escape from reviving, whether I give it utterance or not, that which is for ever vividly before me? |
6148 | But if a cry should arise,''Stop that wretch, who was rude to the Earth: who is he?'' |
6148 | But in what way did that operate upon his exertions as a writer? |
6148 | But is war, then, to go on for ever? |
6148 | But of what is he the revealer? |
6148 | But some will ask-- Was Mr. Coleridge right in either view? |
6148 | But tell me, before we part, was it accident only which led you to my rescue? |
6148 | But the reader naturally asks, How does all this concern Lord Rosse''s telescope on the one side, or general astronomy on the other? |
6148 | But was the exclusion absolute and universal? |
6148 | But what possible connection, it was asked, can exist between this vessel on the Nile and a remote peninsula of Southern Europe? |
6148 | But what was it then that went to wreck? |
6148 | But what was to be their final mark, the port of shelter after so fearful a course of wandering? |
6148 | But what were my poor pretensions by the side of Kate''s? |
6148 | But what''s the use of sitting down to cry? |
6148 | But what''s the use of wasting tears upon our Kate? |
6148 | But where or how should this notification be made, so as to exclude Russian hearers? |
6148 | But which_ was_ forward? |
6148 | But who''s afraid? |
6148 | But why trouble a festal remembrance with commemorations of crimes or criminals? |
6148 | But why? |
6148 | But, if so, how much less can it be pretended that satisfaction has been rendered to the claims of Coleridge? |
6148 | But, when out and free once more in the bright starry night, which way should Kate turn? |
6148 | But_ is_ there? |
6148 | But_ would_ the belligerents wait? |
6148 | Can he be apostrophizing the knout? |
6148 | Can such condescensions exist? |
6148 | Coming close behind him, she touched his shoulder, and said,''My friend, are you sleeping?'' |
6148 | Could these notions really have belonged to Bowyer, then how do we know but he wrote_ The Ancient Mariner_? |
6148 | Cruelty!--to whom? |
6148 | Did I live to read it? |
6148 | Did it settle the motion of the Atlantic? |
6148 | Did it settle the winds? |
6148 | Did the Bashkirs at any point collect into a cluster for the sake of giving impetus to the assault? |
6148 | Did they stand to that? |
6148 | Did this judgment of the court settle the opinion of the public? |
6148 | Do the seventy_ weeks_ of the prophet mean weeks in the sense of human calendars? |
6148 | Does an_ Ã ¦ on_, though a Grecian word, bear scripturally[ either in Daniel or in Saint John] any sense known to Grecian ears? |
6148 | Does the angel touch the pillar with his foot? |
6148 | First, what age now might we take our brother and sister planets to be? |
6148 | For example, will any man believe this? |
6148 | For instance, what sort of a German scholar was Coleridge? |
6148 | For is there, after all, any stationary meaning in the question? |
6148 | Had Agnes been restored to her liberty and her home, where would she have been found but watching at my bed- side? |
6148 | Happiness do I say? |
6148 | Hartmann''s journal? |
6148 | Has a man a right to play the German flute, where the partitions are slender, all day long in the house adjoining to yours? |
6148 | Her answer yet rings in my ear:--''Why should I make myself odious to you and to your innocent wife? |
6148 | How came it into any man''s heart, first of all, to conceive so audacious an idea as that of a conspiracy against war? |
6148 | How else can you account for so many of his sayings being found amongst_ their_ pages? |
6148 | How he escaped the trench, who can tell? |
6148 | How should she accomplish this? |
6148 | How should that bird know our destiny, who did not know that it was his own to be shot by Mosollam the Jew?'' |
6148 | I exclaimed,''partner in_ my_ paradise, where art thou? |
6148 | I interrupted him;''surely they do n''t detain the corpses of prisoners?'' |
6148 | If he has taken to opium- eating, can we help_ that_? |
6148 | If the fear created the gods, what created the fear? |
6148 | If_ his_ face shines, must our faces be blackened? |
6148 | In these circumstances, why should it surprise us that men will pursue the science of discovery as a regular trade? |
6148 | Indeed, you know, if Kate could n''t give a good description of''Pussy,''who could? |
6148 | Interpreted by the tumultuous dreams of Kate, was it the cavalry of Spain, at whose head so often she had charged the bloody Indian scalpers? |
6148 | Is a wooden spoon dull? |
6148 | Is indeed leviathan_ so_ tamed? |
6148 | Is it from reviving, from calling up again into fierce and insufferable light the images and features of a long- buried happiness? |
6148 | Is it possible? |
6148 | Is she a child, in fact, or is she an adult? |
6148 | Let her have lived any number of years that you suggest,( shall we say if you please, that she is in her billionth year?) |
6148 | Manasseh?'' |
6148 | Meantime, what was the first thing to be done? |
6148 | Old? |
6148 | On the other hand, what might Juana think of the cornet? |
6148 | Or had you acquired any knowledge of the plot by which I was decoyed into this snare?'' |
6148 | Or how could it profit him to betray us?'' |
6148 | Or, because juries, when tipsy, will wink at anything, does the privilege extend to the jew''s- harp? |
6148 | Or, if another were indisposed, you might be sure he would ask,''But does he drink beer?'' |
6148 | Or, if you wait till the_ impedimenta_ come up, you may draw your ration of_ Posca_''What was_ posca_? |
6148 | Or, supposing a beneficent jury( beneficent to_ him_) finds this to be no legal nuisance, has he a right to play it ill? |
6148 | Or, without ranging through the whole of the_ Spectator''s_ culinary music, will the bagpipes be found within benefit of jury law? |
6148 | Revenge!--for what? |
6148 | Running from a wrath that was doubtful, into the very jaws of a wrath that was inexorable? |
6148 | She got a ducking herself; but what cared she? |
6148 | She might have tossed up, having coins in her pocket,_ heads or tails_? |
6148 | Si je mourrois à l''instant même,_ serois- je damnà ©_? |
6148 | So, say away-- what''s the damage?'' |
6148 | Souvent je me demandois-- En quel à © tat suis- je? |
6148 | Still I kept arguing, What is half an hour? |
6148 | The Czarina''s_ pardon_ they might obtain, but could they ever hope to recover her_ confidence_? |
6148 | The Kalmucks, on the contrary, were always obliged to run; was it_ from_ their enemies, as creatures whom they feared? |
6148 | The delirium had vanished: why had not the painted scenery of the delirium vanished, except as visionary memorials of a sorrow that was cancelled? |
6148 | The magistrates were impressed with Catalina''s answers( yet answered to_ what_?) |
6148 | The momentary shock of a pistol- bullet-- what is it? |
6148 | The prophetess departed; and what mood of mind did she leave behind her in Agnes and myself? |
6148 | Then came the question-- how long would these terraces yet continue? |
6148 | Then the angel threw up his glorious hands to the heaven of heavens; saying,"End is there none to the universe of God? |
6148 | Then----but why linger? |
6148 | This Atrius Umber might be called''that pleonasm of darkness;''and one might say to him, in the words of Othello,''What needs this iteration?'' |
6148 | This ill- fated_ djerme_--what was it called? |
6148 | Those poor deserters, for instance, were they necessarily without excuse? |
6148 | To what delightful purpose shall I apply it? |
6148 | Twenty pounds ascend in a Scotch mist to the Chancellor of the Exchequer from Leeds; but does it evaporate? |
6148 | Was he dull? |
6148 | Well, and what beside? |
6148 | Well, where_ is_ it? |
6148 | Were they to lose the whole journey of two thousand miles? |
6148 | What a capital speech it would have made to say--''_Friend_ were you? |
6148 | What am I to do to pay the damages?'' |
6148 | What could do it? |
6148 | What do I infer from this? |
6148 | What do you know of my son?'' |
6148 | What followed? |
6148 | What good would it do us to have a certificate of our dear little mother''s birth and baptism? |
6148 | What had frost and snow to do with the quarrel? |
6148 | What had_ he_ to do with people''s health? |
6148 | What has the_ corregidor_ to do with that? |
6148 | What is it that Lord Rosse has revealed? |
6148 | What is it then that Lord Rosse has accomplished? |
6148 | What is it? |
6148 | What is life? |
6148 | What is the deadest of things earthly? |
6148 | What is to be thought of it? |
6148 | What made her think of St. Sebastian, so far away in depths of space and time? |
6148 | What should be done with the body? |
6148 | What the blazes is this humbugging letter about? |
6148 | What then? |
6148 | What then? |
6148 | What was her end? |
6148 | What was it? |
6148 | What was their operation? |
6148 | What was to be done? |
6148 | What was to be done? |
6148 | What''s a_ nebula_, what''s a world, more or less? |
6148 | What''s the row?'' |
6148 | What_ was?_ Where do the true permanent causes of war, as distinguished from its proximate excitements, find their lodgment and abiding ground? |
6148 | What_ was?_ Where do the true permanent causes of war, as distinguished from its proximate excitements, find their lodgment and abiding ground? |
6148 | What_ was_ the logic through which such a tale as this could lend any countenance to the schemes of these abolitionists? |
6148 | Whence could he draw any vapor of hope to sustain his preliminary steps? |
6148 | Where is the Scotchman, said Dr. Johnson, who does not prefer Scotland to truth? |
6148 | Where is the man who shall be equal to these things? |
6148 | Wherefore did God give to man the powers for contending with scientific difficulties? |
6148 | Wherefore? |
6148 | Which of us would n''t subscribe a shilling for poor Katy to put into the first trouser pockets that ever she will wear? |
6148 | Which way should the unhappy fugitive turn? |
6148 | Whither has this work, and so many others swathed about with Coleridge''s MS. notes, vanished from the world?] |
6148 | Who is at the door? |
6148 | Who will go to the door? |
6148 | Whose tread? |
6148 | Why is it that_ Adventures_ are so generally repulsive to people of meditative minds? |
6148 | Why should any decent world wear an_ alias_? |
6148 | Why, if the sacrifice were to be total, was it necessary to reach it by so dire a struggle? |
6148 | Will the causes of war die away because war is forbidden? |
6148 | Wo n''t she? |
6148 | Would the teeth of a crocodile not splinter under that word? |
6148 | Yet why, or on what principle? |
6148 | Yet, how if a man that she killed were----? |
6148 | You know the_ Paradise Lost_? |
6148 | You will ask me, What became of Kate? |
6148 | You will, will you? |
6148 | Young? |
6148 | _, how came she to be brother to the late Mr. Erauso? |
6148 | and which backward? |
6148 | but of what month?'' |
6148 | do you see what your pet is going to do? |
6148 | might have settled his claim,) what, says Fire, setting her arms a- kimbo, would they do for_ him_? |
6148 | or had it, perhaps, long commenced? |
6148 | or the public either? |
6148 | retorts his philosophic friend;''my good fellow, are you not using it at this moment? |
6148 | says Fire,''is that all? |
6148 | so young, and yet so wicked?" |
6148 | that it should be so, but really fight we must, for what says the treaty?] |
6148 | the angel solemnly demanded:"Is there indeed no end? |
6148 | there was no man that pursued? |
6148 | to one needle, two hanks of thread, and a very inferior pair of scissors? |
6148 | to the marrowbones and cleavers? |
6148 | to the poker and tongs? |
6148 | twenty voices will answer, perhaps,''It''s Encke''s Comet; he is always doing mischief;''well, what can you say? |
6148 | warn us of a peculiar sense attached to the word_ day_ in divine ears? |
6148 | what a revelation of heavenly promise? |
6148 | what did you know of headaches, except now and then afterwards from a stray bullet, or so?] |
6148 | what do we properly mean, by a concession or a sacrifice made to a spiritual power, such as Christianity? |
6148 | what is an hour? |
6148 | what?--What''s that you say? |
6148 | wherefore do I shrink in miserable weakness from-- what? |
5419 | ''Who then is sane?'' 5419 Arrius''two sons, twin brothers, of a piece In vice, perverseness, folly, and caprice, Would lunch off nightingales: well, what''s their mark? |
5419 | But surely that''s a merit quite unique, His gift of mixing Latin up with Greek,Unique, you lags in learning? |
5419 | How now, you creature? 5419 How stand you with Maecenas?" |
5419 | I,says a slave,"ne''er ran away nor stole:"Well, what of that? |
5419 | So''twill not sink, what matter if my boat Be big or little? 5419 Take it? |
5419 | Then what''s the attraction? 5419 What mischief have I done?" |
5419 | What moves you, Agamemnon, thus to fling Great Ajax to the dogs? 5419 What of that?" |
5419 | What said he? |
5419 | What? 5419 What? |
5419 | What? 5419 When with your withered lips you bill and coo, Is he that builds card- houses worse than you? |
5419 | When you pick apple- pips, and try to hit The ceiling with them, are you sound of wit? 5419 Whither are you bound?" |
5419 | Why not? |
5419 | Will Caesar grant his veterans their estates In Italy, or t''other side of the straits? |
5419 | Will Syria''s champion beat the Thracian cock? |
5419 | ''I may be right, I may be wrong,''said he,''Who cares? |
5419 | ''She calls me: ought I to obey her call, Or end this long infliction once for all? |
5419 | ''The price?'' |
5419 | ''Then what''s a miser?'' |
5419 | ''Well, if a man''s no miser, is he sane That moment?'' |
5419 | ''What steps d''ye mean?'' |
5419 | ''What? |
5419 | ''Why not sane?'' |
5419 | ''Why, Stoic?'' |
5419 | ''You wish to live? |
5419 | ''twixt the bridges twain, Or at the mouth where Tiber joins the main? |
5419 | A bard who died a hundred years ago, With whom should he be reckoned, I would know? |
5419 | A rancid boar our fathers used to praise: What? |
5419 | A sage, you ask me? |
5419 | A truce to murmuring: with another''s store To use at pleasure, who shall call you poor? |
5419 | Albius, kind critic of my satires, say, What do you down at Pedum far away? |
5419 | All in their way good things, but not just now: You''re happy at a cypress, we''ll allow; But what of that? |
5419 | Am I worse trounced than you when I obey My stomach? |
5419 | And how fare you? |
5419 | And think you, on the strength of this, to rise A Paullus or Messala in our eyes? |
5419 | And what''s the question that brings on these fits?-- Does Dolichos or Castor make more hits? |
5419 | And you, sir Critic, does your finer sense In Homer mark no matter for offence? |
5419 | And you, what aims are yours? |
5419 | Antenor moves to cut away the cause Of all their sufferings: does he gain applause? |
5419 | Ask you of me? |
5419 | Ask you what makes the uncourteous reader laud My works at home, but run them down abroad? |
5419 | Because she made these heavy those weigh light? |
5419 | But grant that folks have different hobbies; say, Does one man ride one hobby one whole day? |
5419 | But pray, since folly''s various, just explain What type is mine? |
5419 | But tell me, Stoic, if the wise, you teach, Is king, Adonis, cobbler, all and each, Why wish for what you''ve got? |
5419 | But what are Rhodes and Lesbos, and the rest, E''en let a traveller rate them at their best? |
5419 | But what are we? |
5419 | But what befalls the wight who yearns for more Than Nature bids him? |
5419 | But what of Rome? |
5419 | But what''s my sect? |
5419 | But what''s the argument? |
5419 | But where''s my vantage if you wo n''t agree To go by law, because the law''s with me? |
5419 | But who are you to treat me to your raps? |
5419 | But why should Rome capriciously forbid Our bards from doing what their fathers did? |
5419 | But, if''tis still unbroken, what delight Can all that treasure give to mortal wight? |
5419 | Can you be sane? |
5419 | Can you make sport of portents, gipsy crones, Hobgoblins, dreams, raw head and bloody bones? |
5419 | Cervius attacks his foes with writ and rule: Albutius''henbane is Canidia''s tool: How threatens Turius? |
5419 | Come, tell me, Tillius, have you cause to thank The stars that gave you power, restored you rank? |
5419 | Come, will you hear what wealth can fairly do? |
5419 | D. What? |
5419 | D. Who wants it? |
5419 | Do all look poor beside our scenes at home, The field of Mars, the river of old Rome? |
5419 | Does he not laugh at Ennius''halting verse, Yet own himself no better, if not worse? |
5419 | Does purer water strain your pipes of lead Than that which ripples down the brooklet''s bed? |
5419 | Felt they for Lupus or Metellus, when Whole floods of satire drenched the wretched men? |
5419 | For me, when freshened by my spring''s pure cold Which makes my villagers look pinched and old, What prayers are mine? |
5419 | For where''s the difference, down the rabble''s throat To pour your gold, or never spend a groat? |
5419 | For where''s the voice so strong as to o''ercome A Roman theatre''s discordant hum? |
5419 | From the high rostra a report comes down, And like a chilly fog, pervades the town: Each man I meet accosts me"Is it so? |
5419 | Go back? |
5419 | Gold counts for more than silver, all men hold: Why doubt that virtue counts for more than gold? |
5419 | H. But who was lecturer? |
5419 | H. Davus, eh? |
5419 | H. For whom d''ye mean this twaddle, tell me now, You hang- dog? |
5419 | H. Good varlet, how? |
5419 | H. I own I''m foolish-- truth must have her will-- Nay, mad: but tell me, what''s my form of ill? |
5419 | H. Ill verses? |
5419 | H. Or a pike? |
5419 | H. What shall I do? |
5419 | H. What, never write a single line again? |
5419 | H. What? |
5419 | H. Where''s there a stone? |
5419 | Had Greece but been as carping and as cold To new productions, what would now be old? |
5419 | Had Rome no poets, who would teach the train Of maids and spotless youths their ritual strain? |
5419 | Has the dear child a squint? |
5419 | Have they rain- water or fresh springs to drink? |
5419 | Have you or I, young fellows, looked more lean Since this new holder came upon the scene? |
5419 | He paused for breath: I falteringly strike in:"Have you a mother? |
5419 | He roars like thunder: then to me:"You''ll stand My witness, sir?" |
5419 | His footsteps now I follow as I may, Lucanian or Apulian, who shall say? |
5419 | How could I treat him worse, were he to thieve, Betray a secret, or a trust deceive? |
5419 | How fix him down in one enduring type? |
5419 | How is it all to end? |
5419 | How like you Chios, good Bullatius? |
5419 | How moderate care for things of trifling worth? |
5419 | How now? |
5419 | How shall I hold this Proteus in my gripe? |
5419 | How should we view them? |
5419 | I bid you take a sum you wo n''t return: You take it: is this madness, I would learn? |
5419 | I''m dubbed Alcaeus, and retire in force: And who is he? |
5419 | I, if I chance in laughing vein to note Rufillus''civet and Gargonius''goat, Must I be toad or scorpion? |
5419 | If anything''s sufficient, why forswear, Embezzle, swindle, pilfer everywhere? |
5419 | If both contain the modicum we lack, Why should your barn be better than my sack? |
5419 | If hot sweet- cakes should tempt me, I am naught: Do you say no to dainties as you ought? |
5419 | Is peace procured by honours, pickings, gains, Or, sought in highways, is she found in lanes? |
5419 | Is springing grass less sweet to nose or eyes Than Libyan marble''s tesselated dyes? |
5419 | Is there a spot where care contrives to keep At further distance from the couch of sleep? |
5419 | Is there a wight can give a grand regale, Act as a poor man''s counsel or his bail? |
5419 | Is this their reasoning? |
5419 | Is virtue raised by culture or self- sown? |
5419 | Lives there a partisan so weak of brain As to join issue on a fact so plain? |
5419 | Man''s works must perish: how should words evade The general doom, and flourish undecayed? |
5419 | May I ask questions then, and shortly speak When you have answered? |
5419 | May he get up? |
5419 | Messius had much to answer:"Was his chain Suspended duly in the Lares''fane? |
5419 | Nay, more,"he asked,"why had he run away, When e''en a single pound of corn a day Had filled a maw so slender?" |
5419 | Nay, you''re a perfect Hydra: who shall choose Which view to follow out of all your views? |
5419 | None stirring? |
5419 | Now, lodged in my hill- castle, can I choose Companion fitter than my homely Muse? |
5419 | O when, Pythagoras, shall thy brother bean, With pork and cabbage, on my board be seen? |
5419 | Of Smyrna what and Colophon? |
5419 | One day when Maenius happened to attack Novius the usurer behind his back,"Do you not know yourself?" |
5419 | Or e''en Lucilius, our good- natured friend, Sees he in Accius nought he fain would mend? |
5419 | Or is it said that poetry''s like wine Which age, we know, will mellow and refine? |
5419 | Or pick his steps, endeavour to walk clean, And fancy every mud- stain will be seen? |
5419 | Or why should Plautus and Caecilius gain What Virgil or what Varius asks in vain? |
5419 | Or would you turn to Lebedus for ease In mere disgust at weary roads and seas? |
5419 | Or, starting for Brundisium, will it pay To take the Appian or Minucian way? |
5419 | Press home the matter further: how d''ye call The thrall who''s servant to another thrall? |
5419 | QUID TIBI VISA CHIOS? |
5419 | Robbers get up by night, men''s throats to knive: Will you not wake to keep yourself alive? |
5419 | Say, is your bosom fevered with the fire Of sordid avarice or unchecked desire? |
5419 | Say, is your fancy fixed upon some town Which formed a gem in Attalus''s crown? |
5419 | Say, what''s a miser but a slave complete When he''d pick up a penny in the street? |
5419 | Say, would you rather have the things you scrawl Doled out by pedants for their boys to drawl? |
5419 | Shall bug Pantilius vex me? |
5419 | Shall it be chalk or charcoal, white or dark? |
5419 | Sides, stomach, feet, if these are all in health, What more could man procure with princely wealth? |
5419 | Sire of the morning( do I call thee right, Or hear''st thou Janus''name with more delight?) |
5419 | So Tantalus catches at the waves that fly His thirsty palate-- Laughing, are you? |
5419 | Such are the marks of freedom: look them through, And tell me, is there one belongs to you? |
5419 | T. Indeed? |
5419 | That Damasippus shows himself insane By buying ancient statues, all think plain: But he that lends him money, is he free From the same charge? |
5419 | The heart that air- blown vanities dilate, Will medicine say''tis in its normal state? |
5419 | The nuptial bed is in his hall; he swears None but a single life is free from cares: Is he a bachelor? |
5419 | The priceless early or the worthless late? |
5419 | The size attracts you: well then, why dislike The selfsame quality when found in pike? |
5419 | The stomach here is sound as any bell, Craterus may say: then is the patient well? |
5419 | Then, as he still kept walking by my side, To cut things short,"You''ve no commands?" |
5419 | Think too of Rome: can I write verses here, Where there''s so much to tease and interfere? |
5419 | Think you by turning lazy to exempt Your life from envy? |
5419 | Three guests, I find, for different dishes call, And how''s one host to satisfy them all? |
5419 | UNDE ET QUO CATIUS? |
5419 | Was this your breeding? |
5419 | Wastes he a thought on Horace? |
5419 | We stop: inquiries and replies go round:"Where do you hail from?" |
5419 | Well, betwixt these, what should a wise man do? |
5419 | Well, but for us; what thoughts should ours be, say, Removed from vulgar judgments miles away? |
5419 | Well, could Pomponius''sire to life return, Think you he''d rate his son in tones less stern? |
5419 | Well, here''s a poet now, whose dying day Fell one month later, or a twelvemonth, say: Whom does he count with? |
5419 | Well, when you offered in a heifer''s stead Your child, and strewed salt meal upon her head, Then were you sane, I ask you? |
5419 | Were it not greater madness to renounce The prey that Mercury puts within your pounce? |
5419 | Were turbots then less common in the seas? |
5419 | What ails me now, to dose myself each spring? |
5419 | What answer would you make to such as these? |
5419 | What boot Menander, Plato, and the rest You carried down from town to stock your nest? |
5419 | What can I do? |
5419 | What constitutes a madman? |
5419 | What gives you appetite? |
5419 | What good were that, if though I mind my ways And shun all blame, I do not merit praise? |
5419 | What if a man appeared with gown cut short, Bare feet, grim visage, after Cato''s sort? |
5419 | What if at last a greater fool you''re found Than I, the slave you bought for twenty pound? |
5419 | What if your grandfathers, on either hand, Father''s and mother''s, were in high command? |
5419 | What if, Maecenas, none, though ne''er so blue His Tusco- Lydian blood, surpasses you? |
5419 | What is my Celsus doing? |
5419 | What marvel if, when wealth''s your one concern, None offers you the love you never earn? |
5419 | What matters it if, when you eat your snack,''Twas paid for yesterday, or ten years back? |
5419 | What matters it to reasonable men Whether they plough a hundred fields or ten? |
5419 | What of the town of Samos, trim and neat, And what of Sardis, Croesus''royal seat? |
5419 | What shall a poet do? |
5419 | What soothes annoy, and makes your heart your own? |
5419 | What standard works would there have been, to come Beneath the public eye, the public thumb? |
5419 | What then? |
5419 | What then? |
5419 | What though the marsh, once waste and watery, now Feeds neighbour towns, and groans beneath the plough? |
5419 | What though the river, late the corn- field''s dread, Rolls fruit and blessing down its altered bed? |
5419 | What to the oak and ilex, that afford Fruit to the cattle, shelter to their lord? |
5419 | What tongue hangs fire when quickened by the bowl? |
5419 | What would you more? |
5419 | What wretch so poor but wine expands his soul? |
5419 | What''s coming, pray, that thus he winds his horn? |
5419 | What, but that rich Tarentum must have been Transplanted nearer Rome with all its green? |
5419 | What, give a slave the wall? |
5419 | What? |
5419 | What? |
5419 | What? |
5419 | What? |
5419 | What? |
5419 | What? |
5419 | When I once think a thing, I may n''t speak out? |
5419 | When Marius killed his mistress t''other day And broke his neck, was he demented, say? |
5419 | Where have you milder winters? |
5419 | Where is the gain in pulling from the mind One thorn, if all the rest remain behind? |
5419 | Where shall I find his like for heart and head?" |
5419 | Which place is best supplied with corn, d''ye think? |
5419 | Which should he copy, think you, of the two? |
5419 | Which was more mad? |
5419 | Who broached that slander? |
5419 | Who reads not Naevius? |
5419 | Who then is free? |
5419 | Whom call we good? |
5419 | Why are Jove''s temples tumbling to the ground? |
5419 | Why does one good man want while you abound? |
5419 | Why hail me poet, if I fail to seize The shades of style, its fixed proprieties? |
5419 | Why lengthen out the tale? |
5419 | Why not? |
5419 | Why should false shame compel me to endure An ignorance which common pains would cure? |
5419 | Why should the Gods have put me at my ease, If I may n''t use my fortune as I please? |
5419 | Why, what did Ajax when the flock was slain? |
5419 | Why? |
5419 | Why? |
5419 | Would you be told how best your pearls to thread? |
5419 | Would you respect him, hail him from henceforth The heir of Cato''s mind, of Cato''s worth? |
5419 | Would you your play should prosper and endure? |
5419 | Yet what says Milvius? |
5419 | Yet where''s the profit, if you hide by stealth In pit or cavern your enormous wealth? |
5419 | You are our great king- killer: why delay To kill this King? |
5419 | You fear to come to want yourself, you say? |
5419 | You live so near the gods, you''re sure to know: That news about the Dacians? |
5419 | You offer up your daughter for a lamb; And are you rational? |
5419 | You see that pike: what is it tells you straight Where those wide jaws first opened for the bait, In sea or river? |
5419 | You think to fix it? |
5419 | You''d praise the climate: well, and what d''ye say To sloes and cornels hanging from the spray? |
5419 | You''re bloated by ambition? |
5419 | Your side''s in pain; a doctor hits the blot: You wish to live aright( and who does not? |
5419 | a knack Caught by Pitholeon with his hybrid clack? |
5419 | all say nay? |
5419 | although I ne''er was taught, Is that a cause for owning I know nought?" |
5419 | are they Greater or less than travellers''stories say? |
5419 | are you mad, or do you mean to balk My thirst for knowledge by this riddling talk? |
5419 | at home he''s classed With Venus''self;"her eyes have just that cast:"Is he a dwarf like Sisyphus? |
5419 | but pray tell me how yon came To know so well what scarce is known to fame? |
5419 | clamours some one, not without A threat or two,"just mind what you''re about: What? |
5419 | cries the soldier stout, When years of toil have well- nigh worn him out: What says the merchant, tossing o''er the brine? |
5419 | devote no modicum To your dear country from so vast a sum? |
5419 | do you eat the feathers? |
5419 | does he dare to say me nay?" |
5419 | does he suit The strains of Thebes or Latium''s virgin lute, By favour of the Muse, or grandly rage And roll big thunder on the tragic stage? |
5419 | had the act been more insane To fling it in a river or a drain? |
5419 | had they then no noses in those days? |
5419 | have you heard No secret tidings?" |
5419 | have you kith or kin To whom your life is precious?" |
5419 | how d''ye do?" |
5419 | if Maecenas does a thing, must you, His weaker every way, attempt it too? |
5419 | is Agave conscious that she''s mad When she holds up the head of her poor lad? |
5419 | is all this care To save your stores for some degenerate heir, A son, or e''en a freedman, who will pour All down his throttle, ere a year is o''er? |
5419 | is that a reason he should seem Less pleasant, less deserving my esteem? |
5419 | is there none Hears me?" |
5419 | make rules his sport, And dash through thick and thin, through long and short? |
5419 | men cry:"Free, gently born, unblemished and correct, His means a knight''s, what more can folks expect?" |
5419 | of course I take it,"you reply;"You love the praise yourself, then why not I?" |
5419 | of the men I know, With whom I live, have any told you so? |
5419 | ought they to convulse The well- strung frame and agitate the pulse? |
5419 | quoth she:"is this as big?" |
5419 | said one,"or think That if you play the stranger, we shall wink?" |
5419 | shall I choke Because Demetrius needs must have his joke Behind my back, and Fannius, when he dines With dear Tigellius, vilifies my lines? |
5419 | show no reverence to his sacred shade Whose scenes great Roscius and Aesopus played?" |
5419 | some one cries,"have you no failings?" |
5419 | sure I need not die; Heaven can do all things:''ay, the man was sane In ears and eyes: but how about his brain? |
5419 | take three hundred in? |
5419 | then can you not expend Your superflux on some diviner end? |
5419 | they take the stripe, draw on the shoe, And hear folks asking,"Who''s that fellow? |
5419 | true, my back is made to pay: But when you let rich tit- bits pass your lip That cost no trifle, do you''scape the whip? |
5419 | what Think you of Lesbos, that world- famous spot? |
5419 | what matters it if I Die by disease or robbery? |
5419 | what thymy ground Allures the bee to hover round and round? |
5419 | what? |
5419 | what? |
5419 | when Shall I behold your pleasant face again; And, studying now, now dozing and at ease, Imbibe forgetfulness of all this tease? |
5419 | when''tis drest And sent to table, does it still look best? |
5419 | whence and whither? |
5419 | while I live?'' |
5419 | who?" |
5419 | why? |
5419 | with the old, or them Whom we and future times alike contemn? |
5419 | would you have me live like some we know, Maenius or Nomentanus?" |
5419 | you mean my word to doubt? |
5419 | you must knock down all that''s in your way, Because you''re posting to Maecenas, eh?" |
5419 | you to twist men''s necks or scourge them, you, The son of Syrus, Dama, none knows who?" |
55535 | ''Ullo, Polly, lovely weather, do n''t it? |
55535 | ), and at last he blurted out,I say, Beaver, what''s the name of the girl that sits nearest the door in your office?" |
55535 | A woman journalist? |
55535 | All the same,said Barboux,"Paris is a wonderful city,_ hein_?" |
55535 | All well? |
55535 | And what about myself; must not I begin over again, too? |
55535 | And what becomes of those who live? 55535 And you wo n''t run off this time?" |
55535 | Angry? |
55535 | Any good? 55535 Any telegrams from London?" |
55535 | Anything big from Paris? |
55535 | Anything special? |
55535 | Are they difficult to do? |
55535 | Are they relations of yours? |
55535 | Are you going to be sacked, or is your salary to be raised? |
55535 | Are you saved? |
55535 | Are you so wrapped up in it? |
55535 | Been busy? |
55535 | But I''ve kept the cab waiting.... Well, have you two said your sobbing farewells? |
55535 | But WHY did he do it? |
55535 | But do n''t you think you''d do better on a daily paper? |
55535 | But do n''t you think you''re too sensitive? |
55535 | But were n''t you only going to stay in journalism for another year, Humphrey? |
55535 | By the way,said Larkin,"heard about Tommy Pride?" |
55535 | Cannock''s? |
55535 | Could n''t I? 55535 Could you tell me if Mr Beaver happens to be in the office now?" |
55535 | Dance like that-- in front of all these people? |
55535 | Did he often come here? |
55535 | Did n''t I tell you? 55535 Did you have your cocoa?" |
55535 | Did you? |
55535 | Do n''t you feel like that towards me? |
55535 | Do n''t you see how impossible it would be? |
55535 | Do n''t you see it too? |
55535 | Do what? |
55535 | Do what? |
55535 | Do you know,she said,"we have in our office thirty men who are doing the same thing, and, in all London, there are hundreds more?" |
55535 | Do you often come here? |
55535 | Do you really think so? |
55535 | Do you take tea or coffee with your breakfasts, Mr Quain? |
55535 | Do you write books, Mr Pride? |
55535 | Does n''t it revolt you? |
55535 | Does nobody realize the ruin and wreckage that belongs to big cities? 55535 Does your brother help?" |
55535 | Funny, is n''t it, that we''ve got to fly for a safeguard to the People''s Committee? 55535 Getting on all right?" |
55535 | Glorious day, Quain,he said;"makes you feel glad that you''re alive, does n''t it? |
55535 | Go away? 55535 Going to be a blushing bride soon, Lily?" |
55535 | Hallo, here''s Leman-- have you voted yet, Leman? |
55535 | Hallo,said O''Malley,"been here long?" |
55535 | Have n''t they printed your stuff? |
55535 | Have you accepted the post? |
55535 | Have you forgotten? 55535 Have you told your aunt?" |
55535 | Have you told your mother yet? |
55535 | Heard about Wratten? |
55535 | Home,said Humphrey;"where are you?" |
55535 | How could you have been when I had n''t met you? 55535 How did you get it?" |
55535 | How do you help them? |
55535 | How do you make that out? |
55535 | How''s that for descriptive? |
55535 | Hullo, Grame,said Wratten,"anybody else here yet?" |
55535 | Hullo, Quain... what are you doing here? |
55535 | Hullo,said Wratten,"where are you off to?" |
55535 | I forget the name of the street-- somewhere near Charing Cross-- that''s a railway station, is n''t it? |
55535 | I say, old man, lend me a bob, will you?... 55535 I say... may I call you Lilian?" |
55535 | I shall send a boy from the office: I wo n''t set foot in the room again.... Wonder who''ll live here next? |
55535 | I suppose he gets a pretty big salary? |
55535 | I''ll send somebody else up to see her-- she''s at the Hilarity Theatre, is n''t she? 55535 I-- would I let my old and faithful Englishman down?" |
55535 | I? 55535 Is it as big as London?" |
55535 | Is it true? |
55535 | Is it very late, dear? |
55535 | Is it?... 55535 Is n''t it dramatic? |
55535 | Is that so? |
55535 | It was I who asked you to come, was n''t it? 55535 It''s a nice picture, is n''t it?" |
55535 | It''s good of you to say that,she said, and then, with a frank smile,"tell me, Humphrey, do you really miss me very much?" |
55535 | It''s only for to- night,she said...."Why did you kiss me?" |
55535 | It''s pretty here, eh? |
55535 | Life''s not so bad when you get used to it? |
55535 | Look here,he said to O''Malley,"who''s going to give me anything to prevent the soldiers bayoneting me?" |
55535 | Look here,said Humphrey,"are we going to meet again?" |
55535 | M''sieu, desire...? |
55535 | M. Charnac, is n''t it? |
55535 | Married? |
55535 | Me? |
55535 | Me? |
55535 | Milk or cream? |
55535 | Miss Sycamore? |
55535 | Mr Jobling-- the man who''s gone out? |
55535 | Nice pig, is n''t he? |
55535 | No-- are you? |
55535 | No-- what is it? |
55535 | None of my men drink, eh? |
55535 | Not well? |
55535 | Nothing would make you give up Fleet Street, I suppose? |
55535 | Now, yesterday, for instance? |
55535 | Of course, you''ve never thought of that-- have you? 55535 Of what use is tea and coffee to us? |
55535 | Oh, well, you see he was in love with this girl..."Which girl? |
55535 | Oh,said Mrs Filmer, rising and coming forward to shake hands with him,"how do you do?" |
55535 | Oh? 55535 Ought n''t I to meet her?" |
55535 | Pray, what of my bulrushes? |
55535 | Sacked? |
55535 | Sad business this of Mr Bellowes? |
55535 | Shall I tell you? 55535 Shall we go now?" |
55535 | She has n''t been here lately? |
55535 | Slumming, eh? |
55535 | Somebody in Easterham? |
55535 | Still with the nose to the grindstone? |
55535 | Still, it''s nice to see everything, is n''t it? 55535 Stopping for the declaration of the poll, Pride?" |
55535 | Tell me, soldier,she sang,"what do you think of in battle? |
55535 | Tell me,he said, with a lover''s vanity,"when did you first know that I loved you?" |
55535 | Thanks,he said( was his voice really as strange and as husky as it sounded to his ears?) |
55535 | That all the experience you''ve had? |
55535 | Then it does n''t matter...? |
55535 | There is nothing that is happening, ai n''t it? |
55535 | Tired? |
55535 | Very sad, is n''t it? |
55535 | Wait? |
55535 | Was I so late? |
55535 | Well, Pride, I hope things are going all right? |
55535 | Well, how goes it? |
55535 | Well, what about a drink? |
55535 | Well, what about your father? |
55535 | Well, what are you doing to- day, Quain? |
55535 | Well, what do you think of the life to- day? |
55535 | Well, what''s up? |
55535 | Well,Mrs Pride said to him;"so you''re going to try your luck in London, Mr Quain?" |
55535 | Well,said Beaver,"got over your hump?" |
55535 | Well,said Humphrey,"what sort of a chap was this Mr Bellowes?" |
55535 | Well? |
55535 | Well? |
55535 | Were you ever a reporter? |
55535 | What about Miss Sycamore? |
55535 | What about food? |
55535 | What about mother? |
55535 | What can one do? |
55535 | What did I tell you? |
55535 | What did you do yesterday? |
55535 | What did you do-- go away? |
55535 | What do I take, Beaver? |
55535 | What do you mean by the Blind Alley? |
55535 | What do you want to do? |
55535 | What do you want to get married for? |
55535 | What do you want to see me again for? |
55535 | What do you want? |
55535 | What does your brother mean by slumming, Miss Carr? |
55535 | What else can I do? |
55535 | What for? |
55535 | What have you been dreaming about? 55535 What if we did?" |
55535 | What is it-- have they wrecked the train? |
55535 | What part of England? |
55535 | What train are you catching? |
55535 | What''s he doing? |
55535 | What''s he like? 55535 What''s the good of waiting?" |
55535 | What''s the good of writing novels... they do n''t pay, do they? |
55535 | What''s the joke? |
55535 | What''s the missis doing? |
55535 | What''s up? |
55535 | What''s up? |
55535 | What,he cried, horrified,"you go to the Special News Agency after we''re married?" |
55535 | When can you start? |
55535 | When do they expect the verdict in the Hanon case? |
55535 | When will he be back? |
55535 | Where are you stopping? |
55535 | Where did you get it from? |
55535 | Where''s Wratten? |
55535 | Which one? |
55535 | Who are you from? |
55535 | Who''s Collard? |
55535 | Who''s the lucky lady? |
55535 | Who? 55535 Who?" |
55535 | Who? |
55535 | Why did n''t you make him talk? |
55535 | Why did you do that? |
55535 | Why do n''t you come out... come to the Club? |
55535 | Why do n''t you help us, Miss Carr? |
55535 | Why look on the black side of things, Carr? |
55535 | Why not come up and see? |
55535 | Why not? 55535 Why not?" |
55535 | Why should n''t I, if I want to? |
55535 | Why was he so discouraging? |
55535 | Why? |
55535 | Why? |
55535 | Will you come? 55535 Will you have some more tea?" |
55535 | Will you pay the late call at the newspaper offices? 55535 Without them?" |
55535 | Wo n''t t''old hoss do, guv''nor? |
55535 | Wo n''t you come and have a cup of tea? |
55535 | Wo n''t you play something? |
55535 | Would n''t he talk? |
55535 | Would you? 55535 Yes, why not?" |
55535 | You are n''t married then? |
55535 | You could n''t expect me to live on you...."Why not? 55535 You mean to the funeral?" |
55535 | You must not say that.... You wo n''t mind waiting, just a little, will you? 55535 You no like the fricassee, sare?" |
55535 | You sent for me, sir? |
55535 | You will allow me to pay? |
55535 | You will, really? |
55535 | You''ll be editor one day, eh? |
55535 | You''ll let me see you home, wo n''t you? |
55535 | _ C''est quelque chose de grave?_she asked. |
55535 | _ Dis donc_,Desirée said,"are you going again?" |
55535 | _ Eh, bien!_said a voice at Humphrey''s elbow,"she is very good, our little Desirée,_ hein_?" |
55535 | _ J''adore les Anglais, ils sont si gentils._"And why can not you stop? |
55535 | _ Qu''est que c''est?_Margot asked, fussily. |
55535 | ''Do I_ look_ like a dying man?'' |
55535 | ''Y a pas chose--''suis sa chose à lui''Y a pas mal-- Quoi? |
55535 | ("Have a drink?" |
55535 | ("I believe those eyes were saying something to me?") |
55535 | ("I wonder what her name is?") |
55535 | 3 pit: an explosion; a fire--"What is it? |
55535 | A change of voice, a change of expression, a movement of her body-- what was it? |
55535 | A glorious touch, eh?" |
55535 | After all, he thought, was this knowledge? |
55535 | After all, what did it matter? |
55535 | After all, what did it matter? |
55535 | After all, why should n''t he tell Ferrol? |
55535 | And Margaret...? |
55535 | And he thought:"Will my hand be like that one day?" |
55535 | And is n''t it dreadfully difficult to fill the paper?" |
55535 | And now--? |
55535 | And then--"Tommy and I are going to retire soon,"Mrs Pride said, with a fond glance at her husband,"are n''t we, Tommy?" |
55535 | And, as Humphrey left the room, he heard Wratten say casually,"I''ll do that Guildhall luncheon to- day, Rivers, eh?" |
55535 | Anything happened? |
55535 | Are they as bad now?" |
55535 | As bad as the flight to Varennes, is n''t it?" |
55535 | As soon as you marry, what happens? |
55535 | Ask''em who''s Cannock? |
55535 | Barboux continued:"Is it not the most beautiful, the most wonderful, the most entrancing city in the world, young Englishman?" |
55535 | But what of the woman at home?--cooped up in her home with babies? |
55535 | But what''s going to happen to me?" |
55535 | Ca n''t remember it... never mind, I say, old man,_ can_ you spare a bob?" |
55535 | Can you both manage the big one?" |
55535 | Can you imagine anything more peaceful than that book- case?" |
55535 | Can you speak French?" |
55535 | Did n''t you know?... |
55535 | Did you ever speak to her, then?" |
55535 | Do n''t you like being called a boy?" |
55535 | Do n''t you think I hate the idea of never being able to write it as I see it? |
55535 | Do you come often?" |
55535 | Do you see?" |
55535 | Do you think of the glory of the Fatherland and the splendour of dying for France?" |
55535 | Do you think we can live on three pounds a week?" |
55535 | Do you want to go there?" |
55535 | Does all this go towards the making of a man, as the steel is tempered by the fire? |
55535 | Eh? |
55535 | Eh? |
55535 | Eh?" |
55535 | Explain to them, wo n''t you? |
55535 | Go out in the morning and ask people? |
55535 | Had he really taken more than usual care to write his account of their doings? |
55535 | Had she ever been like Lilian? |
55535 | Have n''t you got her? |
55535 | He forgot everything else... what else mattered? |
55535 | He found himself pausing, pen in hand, at his desk in the reporters''room, thinking,"Would Elizabeth be pleased with this?..." |
55535 | He had felt humiliated by her words: did she imagine that he had no heart at all? |
55535 | He made swift calculations-- twelve and seven-- nineteen, and coals-- what of coals? |
55535 | He would ask himself, almost unconsciously,"What does it look like?" |
55535 | He''ll have to pay the cab, Elizabeth, wo n''t he?" |
55535 | His eyes wandered to the buttons.... What_ did_ he want to do? |
55535 | How could one abandon a calling where fortune may change in a moment? |
55535 | How did one"Get On"in the world? |
55535 | How did one_ make_ people talk? |
55535 | How old are you, Beaver?" |
55535 | How?" |
55535 | Humphrey had never said that he was a reporter: how did the policeman know? |
55535 | I mean... would n''t the room be lighter without them?" |
55535 | I shall be able to help you with your work,"he cried, buoyantly,"or will you drop it now?" |
55535 | I''ve done it Will you go through the evening papers? |
55535 | If only Daniel Quain had been there, with his world- wisdom and philosophy.... Tears, Humphrey? |
55535 | Is it that nobleman who came here a few weeks ago? |
55535 | Is it worth a contents bill?" |
55535 | Is there any system in life? |
55535 | It''s funny how few real, social friendships there are in the Street, is n''t it? |
55535 | Let''s go and have supper at the Chariot d''Or.... Will you join us, Mr Quain?" |
55535 | Married, is n''t he?" |
55535 | Miss Filmer, her name was, was n''t it?" |
55535 | Next to the Agency men they''re the most useful people in the world, eh, Beaver?... |
55535 | Odd, is n''t it? |
55535 | Of what avail would all their writing be, if it were not for the men and the machines below? |
55535 | Off Southsea, eh? |
55535 | Or, had there been nothing very special about the story after all, and was her letter merely a courtesy? |
55535 | Or, was it that the vision of her, and the recollection of her earnest eyes, inspired him to better work? |
55535 | Remember that time we had up in Chatsworth, when the Duke...? |
55535 | See?" |
55535 | Seen anything more of that fellow we met in Portsmouth on the Royal visit?... |
55535 | Since that day when Humphrey had first met him in Ferrol''s room, and he had laughed and said,"You''re not a genius, are you?" |
55535 | Tell us?" |
55535 | Then there was always the question of the other correspondents of London newspapers: what were the other fellows sending? |
55535 | Then you hear people saying,''How on earth did he come to marry her?'' |
55535 | There''s always room with us, ai n''t there, Tommy?" |
55535 | There''s sure to be a ticket in your office, why do n''t you ask to do it?" |
55535 | These children here will go through their school- days, and then-- what? |
55535 | They soon find out that it''s better to let hubby do the reporting.... Hullo, young man Trinder, what do you want?" |
55535 | They turned at Humphrey''s wavering"Excuse me....""Eh?" |
55535 | Think you''ll be able to do as well as John K. Garton one day?" |
55535 | This''ll be your first, wo n''t it?" |
55535 | Unless what? |
55535 | VI"One lump or two?" |
55535 | Was he?" |
55535 | We''re not going to be married to- morrow, are we?" |
55535 | Were they_ really nice_ people? |
55535 | What are you doing to- day?" |
55535 | What d''you want to know for?" |
55535 | What did London mean to him, then? |
55535 | What did Mr Filmer do? |
55535 | What do you do? |
55535 | What harm will it do?" |
55535 | What mattered anything to them, except that it touched the root of their lives? |
55535 | What of the others-- have any of them done as much good as he has done?" |
55535 | What on earth could have happened? |
55535 | What on earth should he say? |
55535 | What was his name?... |
55535 | What was it? |
55535 | What was the magic key that the other reporters had to unlock the conversation of those whom they went to see? |
55535 | What was their business and what did they achieve? |
55535 | What was there to be done to avoid it? |
55535 | What would Beaver say? |
55535 | What would old Worthing say...? |
55535 | What''s happened?" |
55535 | What''s her name?" |
55535 | What''s his business?" |
55535 | What''s up, old man?" |
55535 | When are you going to get married?" |
55535 | When did that happen?" |
55535 | When? |
55535 | Where would your home be? |
55535 | Who shall explain this extraordinary passion for bulrushes that still holds in its thrall the respectable landladies of England? |
55535 | Who were the Filmers? |
55535 | Who wrote it? |
55535 | Why could he not have told her all that he had felt? |
55535 | Why did you ever leave it? |
55535 | Why do all these people hold meetings? |
55535 | Why not? |
55535 | Why should n''t I have thought as I did at the funeral? |
55535 | Why should n''t you leave now?" |
55535 | Why was it necessary for him to mask and screen his emotions with absurd talk that only seemed to waste precious opportunities? |
55535 | Why?" |
55535 | Wratten,"he said, jovially,"coming up?" |
55535 | Yes, she had remembered him, and nodded to him, and that smile-- what did it mean? |
55535 | You have n''t a father, have you?" |
55535 | You know him?" |
55535 | You were there, were n''t you?" |
55535 | You''ve asked me the question I''m always asking myself-- How is it to be done?" |
55535 | do n''t you think_ I_ feel it too? |
55535 | have you thought of that? |
55535 | he said, hopelessly,"when are we going to get married? |
55535 | nom d''un nom_--to- night?" |
55535 | said the man, looking about him confusedly, and then, with a touch of indignation at being suddenly dragged into the game,"Me? |
55535 | she cried,"is anything the matter with you?" |
55535 | some one would be asking, or"What about Berlin?"... |
55535 | was n''t I in it?" |
55535 | where does she live?" |
55535 | yes; you''ve been on an Easterham paper, have n''t you?" |
55535 | young Quain-- been busy to- day?" |
39515 | About Household Crockery-- is it to be a promotion, or do you still think of getting someone in? 39515 Abuse you? |
39515 | Acting? 39515 Am I late?" |
39515 | Am I? |
39515 | And do you, madam, endorse the verdict? |
39515 | And have n''t I taken trouble in teaching you your duties? 39515 And have n''t I the right to state my opinion-- and to act on it, too? |
39515 | And sharp''s the word.... What are you waiting for? |
39515 | And should I never see you again? |
39515 | And the dressing- room? |
39515 | And this?... 39515 And why not?" |
39515 | And why not? |
39515 | And you wish us to be decently buried? |
39515 | And your partner, sir? 39515 Another woman, Yates? |
39515 | Any dinner for a hungry wayfarer? |
39515 | Any dinner to- day for a poor relation?... 39515 Anything out of the way?" |
39515 | Are the ladies in? |
39515 | Are there? |
39515 | Are they really so ill- favoured? |
39515 | Are you going to drive me mad among you-- make me commit suicide? 39515 Are you going to strike me?" |
39515 | Are you quite sure that he is our Fentiman? |
39515 | Are you sure? |
39515 | Are you trying to pull my leg? 39515 As a question to begin with-- what about your prospects, in whatever career you have planned?" |
39515 | Beastly unlucky, is n''t it? |
39515 | Besides, where did Enid come in? 39515 But I am truly forgiven?" |
39515 | But I suppose you did it all under her direction? |
39515 | But how? |
39515 | But is it kind to me? 39515 But is_ he_ all right with the girls? |
39515 | But may I make one request-- that when I am unfortunate enough to deserve reproof, it may be administered privately and not in public? |
39515 | But what do they call it when the weather plays tricks at this time of year? 39515 But what has happened? |
39515 | But what makes you believe all this? |
39515 | But where the dickens did you slip away to? 39515 But whichever it is-- boy or girl-- you''ll love it just the same, wo n''t you, Yates?" |
39515 | But would I ask you if I was n''t certain-- as certain as I can be of anything in the world-- that you could never be happy with him? 39515 But you are assured that he can supply you with ample means during his lifetime?" |
39515 | But you are expecting property at your father''s death? 39515 But you_ will_ go, Jane? |
39515 | But, Mr. Marsden, how can I for one moment of time credit you with-- with the love you will go on talking about? |
39515 | But, Mr. Prentice,and Mrs. Marsden smiled;"if a small camp does a little good, why should n''t a large camp do a lot of good?" |
39515 | But, Richard, supposing that we were to sell the business, what would happen to you? |
39515 | But, my darling, why do you cry? 39515 But,"said Marsden,"does n''t Mr. Bence sign it?" |
39515 | But_ how_? |
39515 | By the way,he said, looking round;"shall we let them escort Mrs. Marsden home?" |
39515 | Ca n''t I? 39515 Ca n''t you guess?" |
39515 | Ca n''t you play anything gayer? 39515 Ca n''t you see now the force of what I have told you so often? |
39515 | Cousin Jenny, how goes it? |
39515 | Dick, have you spent it-- have you spent what belonged to me? |
39515 | Did n''t we, mother? 39515 Did this come out of the shop?" |
39515 | Did you ever see such wretched little starveling girls as he puts into the bazaar at Christmas? |
39515 | Did you happen,she asked him,"to read the report of the general meeting of the railway company?" |
39515 | Did you indeed, ma''am? |
39515 | Did you mean what you told me by the river? |
39515 | Did you see him? |
39515 | Did you? |
39515 | Do I?... 39515 Do n''t you admit as much as that, Mr. Kenion? |
39515 | Do n''t you think it''s rather impertinent? |
39515 | Do you mean it still? |
39515 | Do you mean that you want to desert me altogether? |
39515 | Do you mean they are_ silly_ about him? |
39515 | Do you mean, worth money? 39515 Do you remember what I told you eighteen months ago?" |
39515 | Do you say_ done_ to that? |
39515 | Do you think Mr. Charles-- or his family-- would be kind enough to use influence? |
39515 | Do you want me to send the things back into the department? |
39515 | Do you want me to tell them now-- at once? |
39515 | Do you wish me to be present at the interview? |
39515 | Do you? |
39515 | Do you? |
39515 | Does not Mr. Bulford go out hunting? |
39515 | Does that mean that you are thinking of leaving us? |
39515 | Eh-- what? |
39515 | Eh-- what? |
39515 | Emily-- Susan,said Mrs. Marsden quietly,"what_ is_ all this noise and fuss about?" |
39515 | Enid, are you purposely, wilfully unkind to me?... 39515 Enid, have I made a horrible fright of myself?" |
39515 | Enid, may I come in? |
39515 | Enid, my darling, are you there?... 39515 Has n''t he told you about it?" |
39515 | Have I put myself forward? 39515 Have n''t I_ shown_ it to you?" |
39515 | Have you given your heart to some married woman? 39515 Have you heard?" |
39515 | Have you missed me? 39515 Have you thought what_ I_ am to do? |
39515 | How can I have it all-- when you know what I gave to Enid? |
39515 | How can I judge of a horse without trying him? |
39515 | How can he?... 39515 How can you ask? |
39515 | How can you say that, mother? |
39515 | How could I-- even if I were willing? |
39515 | How dare you call me a cheat? |
39515 | How did that apply? |
39515 | How much was it? |
39515 | How was that? |
39515 | Hullo, Jane, what do you think you are doing? |
39515 | I am very sorry-- but I share the unhappiness, do n''t I? 39515 I call him Pontius because he is my_ pilot_.... Do n''t you see? |
39515 | I do n''t think that, under the peculiar conditions of the case, anything could have been more satisfactory-- do you? |
39515 | I fear that you would have preferred the car, Enid? |
39515 | I may trust you not to have dabbed in something artful that I''d never heard of? |
39515 | I say, suppose I had believed you-- and yielded one day, do n''t you know very well that all the world would laugh at me? |
39515 | I suppose he_ is_ a crock-- or he would n''t be here? |
39515 | I told you so all along.... What did I say from the beginning?... 39515 If I convinced you that it was literally true, would it make any difference to you?" |
39515 | If I sit down and talk to you quietly, will you promise that you wo n''t begin again? |
39515 | If I were to tell you that I had n''t another penny in the world? |
39515 | If it is n''t convenient to me to square up at the moment, why ca n''t you wait? 39515 If so,"said the cook, with concentrated sourness,"why not let her go to the police, as she wishes?" |
39515 | If that were to happen, the question would arise, Will it prove an injury or a benefit to the town? |
39515 | Indeed? |
39515 | Is Miss Jane with her? |
39515 | Is Mr. Mears in his room? |
39515 | Is he a hunting man? 39515 Is he? |
39515 | Is he? |
39515 | Is it the news that we had reason to expect? |
39515 | Is it twelve.... Can you hear Holy Trinity clock from here, Prentice? 39515 Is it? |
39515 | Is it?... 39515 Is n''t that just a little cruel?" |
39515 | Is n''t this my right place, Dick-- kneeling on the ground at your feet? |
39515 | Is that a fact? |
39515 | Is that ledge hard, Miss Vincent? 39515 Is that right?" |
39515 | Is that so? |
39515 | Is that true-- bar larks? |
39515 | Is that you, mummy? |
39515 | Is that your answer? |
39515 | It is your wish? |
39515 | It''s exactly the same as the draft that I passed? |
39515 | Jane, what''s the use of asking me that? 39515 Janey? |
39515 | Joke? |
39515 | May I advert to a practice that has fallen into disuse, and drink a glass of wine with you?... 39515 May I ask if you think I am not earning my salary, sir?" |
39515 | May I be of assistance, sir? 39515 May I go with you?" |
39515 | May n''t I go up?... 39515 Meaning your various extensions?" |
39515 | Miss Thompson? |
39515 | Miss Woolfrey, do you feel yourself competent to fill it? 39515 Mother dear, ca n''t you help me?" |
39515 | Mother dear, how can I thank you enough? |
39515 | Mother dear, is anything wrong? 39515 Mother dear, is n''t it wonderful? |
39515 | Mother dear, is n''t this dreadful? |
39515 | Mother dear, is that you? |
39515 | Mother dear, may I come in? 39515 Mother, what''s the matter?" |
39515 | Mother? 39515 Moving now, are n''t we? |
39515 | Mr. Marsden, have you gone out of your senses? |
39515 | Mr. Marsden, where are you? 39515 Mr. Marsden-- have you any suggestions to make?" |
39515 | Mr. Mears, what are we to do about Mr. Greig? 39515 My darling, how can I? |
39515 | My own boy,she murmured,"why should n''t I kneel? |
39515 | No hurry, is there? |
39515 | No, sir, not ordinary visitors-- but Mrs. Thompson never counted you as an ordinary visitor-- did she, sir? 39515 No,"said Marsden shortly,"I do n''t want anything more-- What''s your name?" |
39515 | Nor in your private life? |
39515 | Not real ladies? |
39515 | Not the smallest soreness left? 39515 Nothing wrong, I hope?" |
39515 | Now is not this much nicer-- the air, the quiet enjoyment, the gentle motion-- than if we were being whirled past everything in a motor- car? |
39515 | Now that they''ve given you a dear little granddaughter, you_ will_ do something for them, wo n''t you? |
39515 | Now then-- where do you want my autograph? |
39515 | Now, about this money? |
39515 | Now, sir, will you behave yourself, and let us finish our conversation quietly and decently? |
39515 | Of course, old girl, if you can see your way to making the amount for a little_ more_? |
39515 | Oh, Harriet, here you are.... Where the dickens have you hidden the wine? 39515 Oh, Janey-- how can you?" |
39515 | Oh, but is n''t it too early for tea? |
39515 | Oh, how can he? 39515 Oh, how can you pretend that?" |
39515 | Oh, is it? |
39515 | Oh, that''s easy to say, is n''t it? |
39515 | Oh, that''s the conveyance for the sale, eh? 39515 Oh, why is he away? |
39515 | Oh, yes, you''re glib enough-- but if you''ve got it, why do n''t you bring it out? |
39515 | Oh, you mean that you are giving him a present of fifteen hundred pounds? |
39515 | On your honour as a man, is that true? |
39515 | One of the good old school, is n''t he? 39515 Or beneath yours, Dick?" |
39515 | Or do you think, sir, if you hunted the country, you''d find a man who''d give the same service for the same money? |
39515 | Or have you come back to ask for the money again? |
39515 | Out with it-- d''you hear? |
39515 | Over my head, ma''am? |
39515 | Really and truly, you wo n''t mind? |
39515 | Really? 39515 Resign? |
39515 | Shall I drive on, ma''am? |
39515 | Shall I make you a glass of hot grog to drink in bed? |
39515 | So that''s what you did, Jane, eh? 39515 Suppose you always have to go on paying him half of all you can make by your industry? |
39515 | Surely,said Mrs. Thompson,"you could see that a girl of your age can not do such things without malicious people saying unkind things?" |
39515 | Thank you for nothing.... Where''s the cook? 39515 That will be very convenient-- for both of us, wo n''t it? |
39515 | That you, Rooney? 39515 That''s more than enough business for Thursday afternoon, is n''t it, Enid?" |
39515 | Then ca n''t you make this one sacrifice for me? |
39515 | Then do you think there would be any objection-- would you consider it might seem bad taste if henceforth I were to resume my old name? 39515 Then how do you get along? |
39515 | Then how_ can_ respectable people like the Salters entertain him? |
39515 | Then what''s it worth? 39515 Then when may I have my share?" |
39515 | Then why are you discontented in this one? |
39515 | Then you, Mr. Collins-- understand it''s all mighty fine, but it wo n''t wash."Wo n''t it? |
39515 | Then, will you let me have it? |
39515 | Those things are not at all bad-- but they are n''t genuine, I suppose? |
39515 | To better yourself? |
39515 | Twenty thousand? 39515 Was n''t that enough for you?" |
39515 | We hope to make rather a big thing of our clearance sale.... How long shall we keep it going? 39515 We''ve got on well together, have n''t we, Yates?" |
39515 | We''ve heard such yarns for ten years, have n''t we? |
39515 | Well, Janey, what do you think of my new coat? 39515 Well, Mears, what''s the best news with you?... |
39515 | Well, Mr. Mears, what do you think about it? |
39515 | Well, old girl, I''m leaving you to your own resources again-- but, you understand, do n''t you? 39515 Well, what about it?" |
39515 | Well,asked Marsden,"why do n''t we begin?" |
39515 | Well,said Collins mockingly,"what are you going to do-- keep your bargain, or go to law with us?" |
39515 | Well? |
39515 | Well? |
39515 | What are we waiting for? |
39515 | What are you doing with your private income? |
39515 | What are you doing? 39515 What are you up to now?" |
39515 | What can I have the pleasure of showing you, sir? |
39515 | What can we show madam? |
39515 | What department, sir? |
39515 | What did he say about it? |
39515 | What did she say? |
39515 | What did they bring? |
39515 | What did you expect-- that I should welcome your proposal and thank you for it? |
39515 | What did you tell me, Dick? |
39515 | What did you think of wearing this afternoon? |
39515 | What do you mean by that, Jane? 39515 What do you mean by that? |
39515 | What do you mean? |
39515 | What do you mean? |
39515 | What do you propose for Christmas? |
39515 | What do you say? |
39515 | What do you think of our young lady? |
39515 | What do you want here-- you prying old hag? 39515 What do you want here? |
39515 | What drove you to that, ma''am? |
39515 | What have you ever given me in exchange for all I gave you-- except shame and sorrow? |
39515 | What is it you are playing? |
39515 | What is it you hoped for? |
39515 | What is it you wish to know? |
39515 | What is it, Richard? |
39515 | What is it, Yates? |
39515 | What is it? 39515 What is it?" |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is the dispute? |
39515 | What is the time? |
39515 | What must be stopped? |
39515 | What next? 39515 What nonsense have you been stuffing her up with? |
39515 | What on earth is this? |
39515 | What the dickens has it got to do with you? |
39515 | What the dickens is the matter with you, Jane? |
39515 | What was I talking about? |
39515 | What was it? |
39515 | What''s all this gas about? |
39515 | What''s that? |
39515 | What''s the good of talking about it? |
39515 | What''s the good of waiting, when you have made up your mind? |
39515 | What''s your condition? |
39515 | What, are n''t we done? |
39515 | What? 39515 What? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | When did you think of going to her? |
39515 | Where did you get it? |
39515 | Where did you pick_ her_ up? |
39515 | Where is Enid? |
39515 | Where is her home? |
39515 | Where''s father and mother? |
39515 | Where''s the trick? |
39515 | Where_ is_ her father? |
39515 | Which department, madam? 39515 Which do you hope for, yourself, ma''am?" |
39515 | Who are these gentlemen? 39515 Who cares what a woman says?" |
39515 | Who did you say it was? |
39515 | Who is it? |
39515 | Who is that lady, Enid? |
39515 | Who says I have spent it? |
39515 | Who the devil are you talking about? |
39515 | Who the devil''s that? |
39515 | Who went? 39515 Who,"asked Marsden,"was that spindle- shanked ass?" |
39515 | Who? |
39515 | Why are you laughing like that? |
39515 | Why do n''t you do it? 39515 Why do you call my son Pontius?" |
39515 | Why do you look so glum? |
39515 | Why have n''t I seen him? 39515 Why indeed? |
39515 | Why is n''t it your duty now? |
39515 | Why not let me hear them now? 39515 Why not? |
39515 | Why not? 39515 Why should I tell you? |
39515 | Why should he do that? 39515 Why should they do that?" |
39515 | Why,inquired Mrs. Thompson,"did n''t you ask someone to help you?" |
39515 | Why? 39515 Why?" |
39515 | Why? |
39515 | Will you be quiet, Pontius? |
39515 | Will you go through them, sir? |
39515 | Will you kindly check them with me, Prentice? |
39515 | Will you moderate your language? |
39515 | Will you see him? |
39515 | Will you shut up, and stop nagging? |
39515 | Would you mind-- would he mind if I went in and looked round? |
39515 | Would you still take half my share from me? |
39515 | Yes, but you''ll do a little_ more_ now, wo n''t you? |
39515 | Yes, but, Dick, you wo n''t begin launching out without consulting me-- allowing some weight to my opinion? |
39515 | Yes, has n''t it? |
39515 | Yes, in a minute.... You''ll dismiss me to- morrow, wo n''t you? 39515 Yes, yes-- and tell me, my dear fellow, what were her terms?" |
39515 | Yes,said Mr. Prentice contemptuously,"but who''s Bence, when all''s said and done?" |
39515 | You do n''t often come this way? |
39515 | You do n''t say so? |
39515 | You do? 39515 You give me your word of honour that you won''t-- won''t touch me?" |
39515 | You say he has made all arrangements for his voyage? |
39515 | You silly girl,he said cringingly,"what rubbish have you got into your head? |
39515 | You think he will wish to cast her off? |
39515 | You were angry with me? |
39515 | You wo n''t consent to it? |
39515 | You''ll tell him now, wo n''t you, ma''am? |
39515 | You''ve discontinued them altogether-- haven''t you? |
39515 | Young Marsden? 39515 Your heart? |
39515 | ''And how am I to get the money?'' |
39515 | ''See? |
39515 | Ai n''t I smart enough? |
39515 | Am I not to call on my cousin?" |
39515 | Am I not your mother? |
39515 | And as it is to be just a friendly unceremonious gathering, do you mind wearing morning dress?" |
39515 | And how damn slow they are, are n''t they?" |
39515 | And how''s Mallingbridge? |
39515 | And the sofa?" |
39515 | And the windows when done-- who could resist them? |
39515 | And then? |
39515 | And those chairs?... |
39515 | And what about_ my_ life?" |
39515 | And what the devil did I know of the business before I came into it? |
39515 | And who''s to blame? |
39515 | And why not? |
39515 | And why should he go on working? |
39515 | Another time he said,"Jane, do you twig why I am wearing my topper? |
39515 | Are you a man of property-- landed estates, and so on?" |
39515 | Are you asking me to pay you?" |
39515 | Are you giving it to Enid?... |
39515 | Are you ill?" |
39515 | Attend to me.... Ah- ha,--you''re beginning to look rather foolish.... Now, how much law do you want?" |
39515 | B?... |
39515 | Bence?" |
39515 | But I shall always go on loving you.... Oh, my goodness, what is my life to be without you?" |
39515 | But as the pen is close to your hand, Mr. Marsden-- will you, sir, open the ball?" |
39515 | But come in again when I ring-- and stay with me for a few minutes, will you, Yates?" |
39515 | But did it? |
39515 | But do you honestly feel you could stand alone?" |
39515 | But if you feel up to it?" |
39515 | But lor'', how can_ I_ hurt you? |
39515 | But now I wonder-- would you mind telling me when it was that you first thought of the Bence coup?" |
39515 | But on whom would he drop? |
39515 | But tell me, candidly, supposing you met me now as a stranger-- how old would you guess I was?" |
39515 | But the gas- works spoil the picture, do n''t they?" |
39515 | But was that all you had to say to me?" |
39515 | But was the thing true? |
39515 | But what about bad times? |
39515 | But what promises would he not make? |
39515 | But what was I saying? |
39515 | But what was I saying? |
39515 | But what''s the use of going on? |
39515 | But where''s Harriet disappeared to?" |
39515 | But who''s the other gentleman?" |
39515 | But why am I lighting out so determined and sudden, instead of vegetating here half me life? |
39515 | But wo n''t you lie down again? |
39515 | But you have n''t made up your mind yet, have you?" |
39515 | But you must know what I feel about it.... Is it any good going over the ground again?" |
39515 | But you never got it really?" |
39515 | But you referred them to me?" |
39515 | Ca n''t you and the missus do an advance-- something on account-- however small-- to keep me going?" |
39515 | Can I forget that-- even if you forget it?" |
39515 | Charles? |
39515 | Charles?" |
39515 | Collins tapped his nose jocosely, and smiled at Mr. Prentice-- seeming to say without words,"What do you think of that, old boy? |
39515 | Concentrate your mind-- all your mind on it.... Do n''t you understand, do n''t you see that this is everything and the sale is nothing?" |
39515 | Could it be possible? |
39515 | Could n''t someone get her a cushion? |
39515 | Could one get a decent perambulator in Mallingbridge, or would one have to go fagging up to London? |
39515 | Cut down the staff? |
39515 | D''you hear? |
39515 | D''you want that mare over- reaching herself?" |
39515 | Did he think Mallingbridge would consent to pay for such high- class education? |
39515 | Did n''t I tell you? |
39515 | Did people hire perambulators, or buy them right out? |
39515 | Did she know how they spoke of her-- these few who remembered? |
39515 | Did they mind? |
39515 | Did you see a pretty girl on all your travels, Mrs. Thompson-- except the one you took with you?" |
39515 | Did you, madam, observe signs of economic prosperity among the people?" |
39515 | Do I ever deny your rights?" |
39515 | Do n''t any of you know that Madam is the proper form of address when you''re speaking to your employer''s wife?" |
39515 | Do n''t you see? |
39515 | Do n''t you want some supper?" |
39515 | Do you dare to say that word again? |
39515 | Do you mean Charles?" |
39515 | Do you really mean it?" |
39515 | Do you ride to the meets with him?" |
39515 | Do you see much of them out there?" |
39515 | Do you think that, as your entire capital, it would be enough for you?" |
39515 | Do you want to ruin me?''" |
39515 | Do you wish a blouse of the prevailing tint? |
39515 | Do you wish one of the new fashionable Leghorns?... |
39515 | Does n''t she run smooth?" |
39515 | Dressed up to the nines-- wasn''t she?" |
39515 | Eh? |
39515 | Enid, is n''t there any fish? |
39515 | Extravagance-- what is it? |
39515 | Greig?" |
39515 | Had Gordon dined, or had anger and resentment deprived him of appetite and spared his ill- filled purse? |
39515 | Had it been an accident, or a monstrous impertinence? |
39515 | Had she acted wisely when pushing an untried man so promptly to the front? |
39515 | Has he obliged you to do this?" |
39515 | Have n''t I treated you kindly?" |
39515 | Have n''t you got it with you?" |
39515 | Have you had your grub? |
39515 | Have you missed your Dickybird?" |
39515 | He dared to think it.--But was he wrong? |
39515 | Hide and Seek-- Catch who, Catch can? |
39515 | How could she save herself-- or him? |
39515 | How dare you?... |
39515 | How do I know how many keys there are n''t knocking about the house? |
39515 | How have you dribbled it away-- and let yourself get so low that you have to come howling for a beggarly fifty pounds?" |
39515 | How much value had he knocked off the good will already? |
39515 | How much? |
39515 | How was he to live without_ some_ ready cash? |
39515 | How would they manage now? |
39515 | How''s business?" |
39515 | I ask you, is it kind to me?" |
39515 | I leave you alone, do n''t I?" |
39515 | I look all right, do n''t I? |
39515 | I mean, are you sure of the succession?" |
39515 | I ought to have kicked him down the shop.... Can you guess what he came about?" |
39515 | I say, how am I supposed to carve this? |
39515 | I would like a house just like that-- for you and me to live in when I am able to give up my work....""What were you saying, mother?" |
39515 | I''d like to stay with you-- but may I sleep in Em''ly''s room?" |
39515 | I''ll get out here, and stroll in the garden with you.... My sweet Enid, did the message frighten you?" |
39515 | I''m absolutely dependent on the business-- if the profits go down to nothing, am I to starve?" |
39515 | If I could for a moment believe--""Why ca n''t you believe?" |
39515 | If I renounce all claims on you forever-- if I agree to make a formal renunciation,--well, surely that''s worth_ something_ to you?" |
39515 | If they tried to turn themselves into a company to- morrow, what price could they put down for it? |
39515 | If you will be good enough to tell me your cousin''s name?" |
39515 | Is it all serene between you and Mears? |
39515 | Is it entailed upon you? |
39515 | Is it not so, Emily?... |
39515 | Is it straw hats for ladies? |
39515 | Is it to be cuts? |
39515 | Is it true?" |
39515 | Is it you or I who is to be cock of the walk? |
39515 | Is she not free to respond to your affections?" |
39515 | Is this another joke?" |
39515 | Janey, be nice-- be good.... Dear old Janey-- don''t you know what this means?" |
39515 | Kenion?" |
39515 | Let bygones be bygones-- won''t you?" |
39515 | Marsden?" |
39515 | Marsden?... |
39515 | May she come in? |
39515 | Mears?" |
39515 | Mears?" |
39515 | Men all seem alike, do n''t they?" |
39515 | Might not her darling be now a prey to similar yearnings and longings for a swift reunion? |
39515 | Mr. Marsden, come now, after all, what is this fuss about?" |
39515 | Mrs. Thompson, I should say Mrs. Marsden-- are we to disregard her?" |
39515 | My old room-- is it empty, or are you using it for anything?" |
39515 | No?" |
39515 | No?... |
39515 | No?... |
39515 | Not a professional man? |
39515 | Now then, ladies and gentlemen, hock, claret, whisky and soda? |
39515 | Oh, Enid,"said Mrs. Thompson indignantly, yet very sadly,"did n''t you ever think how deeply this would wound me?" |
39515 | Old Girl?" |
39515 | Or shall she call again? |
39515 | Parisian Jewellery?... |
39515 | Perhaps downstairs this, the greatest of the changes, would not be observable? |
39515 | Prentice, do you understand? |
39515 | Prentice?" |
39515 | Prentice?" |
39515 | Prentice?" |
39515 | Prices on change are down, are they?--and you do n''t care to realise just now?" |
39515 | Put my bag on the table.... Where are you sitting, Prentice.... Over there? |
39515 | See?" |
39515 | See?... |
39515 | Shall I go round and kick the brute?" |
39515 | Shall I order a fresh pot?" |
39515 | Shall we sit down here? |
39515 | She ca n''t do this, can she?" |
39515 | She''s_ Bence''s_; she is... Mrs. Thompson, do n''t I tell you? |
39515 | Starting thus, to what heights might he not attain in Thompson''s? |
39515 | Surely the law would n''t allow her to spoof me like that?" |
39515 | Take this up too-- same room.... Who''s that out there? |
39515 | That is usual on these occasions, is it not?" |
39515 | The college authorities heard of it-- from whom do you suppose? |
39515 | The customers?" |
39515 | The word is, As you were-- eh?... |
39515 | There, this is my hour--""Will you let me go?" |
39515 | They paint them so natural, do n''t they?" |
39515 | Thirty thousand? |
39515 | This is as between Masons, is n''t it?... |
39515 | Thompson?... |
39515 | Was it not cruel to send the brave little thing away from her? |
39515 | Was it the fire- engine?" |
39515 | Was she to accompany him, or to stay moping at home by herself?... |
39515 | Was there any idea of making a permanent provision for him? |
39515 | We must get you on horseback again.... You do like your riding, do n''t you?" |
39515 | We must n''t allow communications.... Where is Mr. Marsden? |
39515 | We would come to the rescue so gladly, if we could-- but, alas, how can we? |
39515 | We''re partners, are n''t we? |
39515 | Were these little puffs of smoke, appearing and disappearing so frequently, indicative of latent fire? |
39515 | What are guesses?" |
39515 | What are we to do?" |
39515 | What are you getting at?" |
39515 | What are you insinuating?... |
39515 | What are you playing at? |
39515 | What are you worth now-- of your very own-- apart from the firm?" |
39515 | What do they say of me down there?... |
39515 | What do you mean?" |
39515 | What does it matter to you when you get it? |
39515 | What does it matter? |
39515 | What does it matter? |
39515 | What does madam think of_ this_?... |
39515 | What good can I do sticking here any longer? |
39515 | What has happened? |
39515 | What have you done with all your own? |
39515 | What is it that you want done?" |
39515 | What is it? |
39515 | What is my private life to you-- or anybody else? |
39515 | What is the grievance? |
39515 | What is_ his_ attitude?... |
39515 | What next?... |
39515 | What promise had he ever failed to break? |
39515 | What sort of woman do I look like now?" |
39515 | What then?" |
39515 | What to do? |
39515 | What''s his name?" |
39515 | What''s that proverb? |
39515 | What''s the good of dabbing a lot of sweets in front of people, before they''ve had any meat? |
39515 | What''s the matter with you? |
39515 | What''s up? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | What? |
39515 | What_ can_ we do? |
39515 | Whatever are we to do?" |
39515 | Where did you get them?" |
39515 | Where do I sign?" |
39515 | Where does the rest go-- if you are n''t saving it? |
39515 | Where has everything gone?" |
39515 | Where has my child gone?... |
39515 | Where is she?" |
39515 | Where''s your quarrel with that?" |
39515 | Which of them has the money-- the husband or the wife?" |
39515 | Who could of believed such a thing''appening?" |
39515 | Who could say what was true or false in this connection? |
39515 | Who makes the members of parliament, the bishops, the prime ministers? |
39515 | Who would n''t be? |
39515 | Who''s driven me out of them?" |
39515 | Why are n''t you rejoicing-- singing your song of joy?" |
39515 | Why are you hesitating? |
39515 | Why ca n''t_ you_ forget it?... |
39515 | Why do n''t you come round the counter and sit on the customers''laps?... |
39515 | Why else should she have felt such a wrathful discontent at the idea of his courting all the silly girls? |
39515 | Why have you left me to learn his name from the lips of servants and busybodies? |
39515 | Why not? |
39515 | Why pay high wages for subordinate chieftains when the over- lords can supervise for nothing? |
39515 | Why should you pretend to be in such a deuce of a hurry?" |
39515 | Why should you throw up a comfortable situation?" |
39515 | Why the devil does n''t she come in and ask if anything''s wanted?" |
39515 | Why?" |
39515 | Why?" |
39515 | Will you think it out-- draw up a list of guests-- and arrange everything?" |
39515 | Wo n''t that be nice?" |
39515 | Wo n''t you take off your coat?" |
39515 | Would he mind? |
39515 | Would you believe it?" |
39515 | Yates, is Miss Enid in?" |
39515 | You and I have got to the end of our tether, have n''t we? |
39515 | You are n''t thinking of putting him up again?" |
39515 | You are not ashamed to be seen with me-- eh, little woman?... |
39515 | You do intend to go-- and no rot?" |
39515 | You do n''t get enough of the holiday feeling.... Oh, where''s my Kodak? |
39515 | You do understand that, do n''t you?" |
39515 | You got the news, I suppose?" |
39515 | You have n''t forgotten my whistle?" |
39515 | You know that, do n''t you, sir?" |
39515 | You mean it, too, do n''t you? |
39515 | You naughty girl-- I''ve apologised, have n''t I? |
39515 | You never came to one of my dinner- parties?... |
39515 | You shoved it away in that safe, did n''t you? |
39515 | You up there?" |
39515 | You will still be what you have always been-- my best and kindest friend?" |
39515 | You would n''t think it, would you? |
39515 | You''d do that, would n''t you?" |
39515 | You''ll consent?" |
39515 | You''re twenty- two, are n''t you? |
6436 | ''A man who flies in the wilderness to escape--''''Spirit, are you acquainted with a Biblical personage named David?'' |
6436 | ''Aboard? |
6436 | ''Ah, yes,--Jacob had a ladder, I remember; he comes up this way, I suppose?'' |
6436 | ''Ah,''said Waring, pausing,''one of the family?'' |
6436 | ''Alongshore?'' |
6436 | ''Am I a child?'' |
6436 | ''Am I not queen of this castle? |
6436 | ''Am I not stronger than you, and the master, if I so choose, of your castle of logs?'' |
6436 | ''Am I, too, a wrecker?'' |
6436 | ''An ignorant half- breed?'' |
6436 | ''And all this time, when you were letting me down-- By the way, how did you do it?'' |
6436 | ''And how does he get on with the Mormons?'' |
6436 | ''And if I die what are you?'' |
6436 | ''And that aunt,--that Jacob?'' |
6436 | ''And the Titian picture?'' |
6436 | ''And those wrecks,''said Waring;''how do you make them balance with your scheme of expiation?'' |
6436 | ''And where are you going?'' |
6436 | ''And who is to do it?'' |
6436 | ''And yet you have taught her to read?'' |
6436 | ''Another member of the family,--Aunt Shadow?'' |
6436 | ''Anything come ashore?'' |
6436 | ''Anything in the way of mermaidens?'' |
6436 | ''Are they happy?'' |
6436 | ''Are they not beautiful?'' |
6436 | ''Are you a clergyman?'' |
6436 | ''Are you going to keep the girl shut up here forever?'' |
6436 | ''Are you not a little sentimental over that ignorant, half- wild creature, Aunt Sarah?'' |
6436 | ''Are you there, darling, safe and well?'' |
6436 | ''Ark,''said Silver;''what is that?'' |
6436 | ''At last?'' |
6436 | ''At least you placed all my property in the dug- out before you set me adrift,''he said;''may I ask your motive?'' |
6436 | ''Back,--back where?'' |
6436 | ''Baptiste not love me? |
6436 | ''Baptiste?'' |
6436 | ''Believer?'' |
6436 | ''Braid hair?'' |
6436 | ''But I might have found my way back to your castle?'' |
6436 | ''But no one really knows?'' |
6436 | ''But supposing he wo n''t, do n''t stifle yourself,''continued Waring; then aloud,''Well, old gentleman, where do you come from?'' |
6436 | ''But what if I will not go back, what if I will not accept your trust? |
6436 | ''But you did not find all these blossoms on the shores about here, did you?'' |
6436 | ''But you omitted the last verse, mademoiselle; may I ask why?'' |
6436 | ''But you were expecting a Jacob?'' |
6436 | ''But, mademoiselle, your Bible--''''What is Bible?'' |
6436 | ''Cafe?'' |
6436 | ''Can anything be done for the men on board? |
6436 | ''Could n''t you take me with you? |
6436 | ''Did he or did he not have anything to say about flying to wildernesses and mountain- tops? |
6436 | ''Did he say he did not love me? |
6436 | ''Did he say he did not love me?'' |
6436 | ''Did n''t you guess it? |
6436 | ''Did you buy that sugar at the Sault?'' |
6436 | ''Did you enjoy the picnic, Miss Augusta?'' |
6436 | ''Did you foresee this end?'' |
6436 | ''Do n''t you believe it?--Speak up, Preacher; are you being carried off?'' |
6436 | ''Do n''t you?'' |
6436 | ''Do you hesitate?'' |
6436 | ''Do you like it, your new one?'' |
6436 | ''Do you mean that you have come across from Lake Superior on foot?'' |
6436 | ''Do you not see the ladder?'' |
6436 | ''Do you see things coming ashore?'' |
6436 | ''Do you start on to- morrow?'' |
6436 | ''Do you take her part, Aunt Sarah?'' |
6436 | ''Do you want the plain truth, old man? |
6436 | ''Does it need the asking?'' |
6436 | ''Father, father,''she sobbed,''must I leave you? |
6436 | ''Fish, of course, and some common supplies I can understand,''said the visitor;''but how do you obtain flour like this, or sugar?'' |
6436 | ''For all day?'' |
6436 | ''For what?'' |
6436 | ''Grieve you? |
6436 | ''Happy?'' |
6436 | ''Have a pipe?'' |
6436 | ''Have they a right side?'' |
6436 | ''Have we so far to go, then? |
6436 | ''Have you any objection to using the Episcopal service?'' |
6436 | ''Her?'' |
6436 | ''How can you find her?'' |
6436 | ''How long has she been away?'' |
6436 | ''How?'' |
6436 | ''I am sorry you go so soon; could n''t you stay a few days?'' |
6436 | ''I do n''t know much about dreams,''replied old Fog, scanning the small picture with curious eyes''but is n''t she a trifle heavy in build? |
6436 | ''I do not understand it all; perhaps you can explain to me?'' |
6436 | ''I know you love her,''said the old man,''but how much?'' |
6436 | ''I say, though, when are you going to bring him back, Believer?'' |
6436 | ''In a month you can sail safely, and I suppose you will go for good this time?'' |
6436 | ''Is he?'' |
6436 | ''Is it expiated, O God? |
6436 | ''Is it hard?'' |
6436 | ''Is it new?'' |
6436 | ''Is it?'' |
6436 | ''Is n''t it comfortable now?'' |
6436 | ''Is n''t she beautiful?'' |
6436 | ''Is she not lovely and good?'' |
6436 | ''Is she not pure and good? |
6436 | ''Is there no one to help me?'' |
6436 | ''Is there no way for her to cross, to the islands or mainland?'' |
6436 | ''Jacob,''she cried gladly,''is that you at last?'' |
6436 | ''Jarvis, Jarvis, what is this?'' |
6436 | ''Jeannette? |
6436 | ''Kidnap him?'' |
6436 | ''Live? |
6436 | ''Mermaidens dwell in the water, they can not live in houses as we can; did you not know that? |
6436 | ''Miserable creature, this is not the first time, then?'' |
6436 | ''Moi? |
6436 | ''More to you?'' |
6436 | ''Never mind where; will you come?'' |
6436 | ''O come, what do you know about bears?'' |
6436 | ''O double it, double it, ca n''t you?'' |
6436 | ''O, does she?'' |
6436 | ''Of course I do not; why do you ask?'' |
6436 | ''Of course; where else should I reside? |
6436 | ''Old man, why are you not afraid of me?'' |
6436 | ''Our ark has kept us cosily through bitter weather, has it not, little one?'' |
6436 | ''Over? |
6436 | ''Papa,''she whispered,''where is he, where is he?'' |
6436 | ''Prescott? |
6436 | ''Purposely?'' |
6436 | ''Qu''est- ce- que- c''est?'' |
6436 | ''Rodney, what is it?'' |
6436 | ''Shall I excuse the deed to you, boy? |
6436 | ''Shall we see the castle soon?'' |
6436 | ''Silver,''he said to her, seriously enough,''do you know how much I love you? |
6436 | ''Silver,''he said, bending over her tenderly,''do I not love you? |
6436 | ''Silver,''he said, taking her into his arms,''are you sure that you can love me as I crave?'' |
6436 | ''Silver,''he whispered, bending over her,''do you love me?'' |
6436 | ''So you can sew?'' |
6436 | ''Something you wish to have done after death?'' |
6436 | ''Sure of the negro blood?'' |
6436 | ''Tell me the truth,''he said,''has the girl no boat?'' |
6436 | ''The Aunt Shadow who has gone away?'' |
6436 | ''Then they do n''t dress like that nowadays?'' |
6436 | ''Then why have you not told her yourself?'' |
6436 | ''There is no need to do it, for I have so many dresses; but I like to sew, do n''t you?'' |
6436 | ''Was it now? |
6436 | ''Was there any real danger?'' |
6436 | ''We have a visitor, father dear; are you not glad, so glad to see him?'' |
6436 | ''Well,''said Waring, still pursuing down the gradual slope of the beach,''will a phantom bark come at my call, I wonder? |
6436 | ''What are one or two miserable crews to the delicate life of my beautiful child? |
6436 | ''What are you doing here?'' |
6436 | ''What are your plans?'' |
6436 | ''What can we do, dear?'' |
6436 | ''What do you think?'' |
6436 | ''What does it all mean anyway? |
6436 | ''What has become of Jeannette Leblanc?'' |
6436 | ''What have you brought for me to- night, father dear?'' |
6436 | ''What is his name?'' |
6436 | ''What is it you are saying, Jacques''? |
6436 | ''What is it?'' |
6436 | ''What is it?'' |
6436 | ''What is that to me?'' |
6436 | ''What is the verse, any way?'' |
6436 | ''What is this?'' |
6436 | ''What new thing is this?'' |
6436 | ''What then?'' |
6436 | ''What, this clumsy imitation of a second- class Western steamer? |
6436 | ''What?'' |
6436 | ''When will she return?'' |
6436 | ''When you were letting me down, and towing me out, and calculating chances, what was I, may I ask?'' |
6436 | ''Where did you get them?'' |
6436 | ''Where did you learn that, child?'' |
6436 | ''Where is Jarvis?'' |
6436 | ''Where is he? |
6436 | ''Where is he?'' |
6436 | ''Who am I that I should torture her? |
6436 | ''Who was he?'' |
6436 | ''Whom do you suppose we have here?'' |
6436 | ''Why did n''t you say so before?'' |
6436 | ''Why do you always judge the child so harshly, Doctor?'' |
6436 | ''Why do you go?'' |
6436 | ''Why not bring her into the church? |
6436 | ''Why not have her up for one of our sociables?'' |
6436 | ''Why not teach her to sew?'' |
6436 | ''Why think of it, then, since I am here?'' |
6436 | ''Why, what more can you require, Doctor? |
6436 | ''Will any one go to rescue her; does any one know of the castle?'' |
6436 | ''Will he? |
6436 | ''Will the fog come up now?'' |
6436 | ''Will you came back too, Jeannette?'' |
6436 | ''Will you go, then,''it said,''and leave the child?'' |
6436 | ''Will you have the whole story?'' |
6436 | ''Would it not be a better plan to bring a clergyman here, and then you two could sail without me? |
6436 | ''Wreckers, perhaps?'' |
6436 | ''Yes; would you like to see them? |
6436 | ''Yes? |
6436 | ''You are not going,''he cried in a shrill voice,''--you are not going? |
6436 | ''You have been here all that time, then?'' |
6436 | ''You have never read the Bible?'' |
6436 | ''You have no boat?'' |
6436 | ''You reside here?'' |
6436 | ''You think I marry you? |
6436 | ''You wish her to die?'' |
6436 | ''You wo n''t tell her? |
6436 | ''You would not ask him to stay, if he wished to go?'' |
6436 | ''Young man,''it said,''how came you here? |
6436 | Ah, mon Baptiste, ou es- tu? |
6436 | Am I anybody? |
6436 | Am I not enough for you? |
6436 | And Silver? |
6436 | And did Waring ever stop to think? |
6436 | And did he pray to Napoleon, you ask? |
6436 | And what possessed Waring, do you ask? |
6436 | And why? |
6436 | And you are that,--aren''t you?'' |
6436 | Back to Silver, of course; have you lost your mind?'' |
6436 | But Silver? |
6436 | But at this stage the shape waved its oar impatiently and demanded,''Who are you?'' |
6436 | But say, do you see things coming ashore?'' |
6436 | But say, has anything come ashore? |
6436 | But shall I tell you the whole? |
6436 | But supposing it had not been all, what then? |
6436 | But what could he do? |
6436 | But when the demand came,''Who giveth this woman to be married to this man?'' |
6436 | But you are not Leah all this time?'' |
6436 | By water?'' |
6436 | Can I help you?'' |
6436 | Can we? |
6436 | Come, my friend, why should you keep it from me?'' |
6436 | Could I not train this forest flower so that it could take its place in the garden? |
6436 | Could she be a companion for your sisters? |
6436 | Could you present this girl to your mother? |
6436 | Did I love this girl who stooped to gather a few shillings from under my feet? |
6436 | Did Jarvis say that?'' |
6436 | Did he or did he not express wishes to sail thither in person?'' |
6436 | Did that tender pity, that ringing inspiration come from a dull mind and shallow heart? |
6436 | Did you whistle for it that night?'' |
6436 | Do n''t you?'' |
6436 | Do they meet out there the counter floes from the Canada side, and then do they all join hands and sink at a given signal to the bottom? |
6436 | Do you hear that, Jarvis Waring? |
6436 | Do you know that to- morrow will be Christmas?'' |
6436 | Do you not see that the whole was a self- immolation, the greatest, the most complete I could make? |
6436 | Do you remember how she looked when she repeated''Ivry''? |
6436 | Do you remember the pathos with which she chanted File, file, pauvre Marie; File, file, pour le prisonnier? |
6436 | Do you suppose I did not know the greatness of the crime? |
6436 | Do you suppose I wished to drown the men? |
6436 | Do you understand what I am saying, Jeannette? |
6436 | Does not every storm threaten them with deathly force? |
6436 | Fish? |
6436 | Friends of yours?'' |
6436 | Had he not just conferred an enormous favor, an alliance which might be called the gift of a prince, on this dull old backwoodsman? |
6436 | Had they not all prophesied a failure? |
6436 | Had they not slowly murdered his Emperor on their barren rock in the sea? |
6436 | Has Jarvis gone?'' |
6436 | Has he gone, then? |
6436 | Have I not explained that I was desperate?'' |
6436 | Have I stopped for anguish? |
6436 | Have I stopped for snow and ice? |
6436 | Have you not heard of Baptiste? |
6436 | Have you noticed a carved door in the back part of the main building? |
6436 | Have you so many dresses then?'' |
6436 | He does not believe me? |
6436 | He had mixed up his Emperor with the stories of the Saints; why should not Napoleon do what they had done? |
6436 | He knew nothing of the shore, and yet there must be a harbor somewhere, for was there not the light? |
6436 | He was; had anything been sent to him from the East,--any clothes, now, for the Indians? |
6436 | How soon did you say we could go?'' |
6436 | I am your husband now, Silver, and you must come with me; do you not wish to come with me, darling?'' |
6436 | I do not deny that I have fought against it, but-- but why should I conceal? |
6436 | I must really send you up some new clothes.--Silver, how have you been able to endure such shabby rags so long?'' |
6436 | I suppose you know what day it is?'' |
6436 | Is it expiated?'' |
6436 | Is it not a beautiful place?'' |
6436 | Is she any the worse for its want? |
6436 | Is she not beautiful as a dream?'' |
6436 | Is there a story about it?'' |
6436 | It all seemed strangely familiar; of what did it remind him? |
6436 | Listen; do you believe in your Christ, the dear Christ? |
6436 | Must she suffer and linger and die? |
6436 | No? |
6436 | Now what had fate next in store? |
6436 | Now, I am brought face to face with reality; I must go; can I leave her behind? |
6436 | O, she married that Baptiste, a lazy, good- for- nothing fellow? |
6436 | Or has the body gone and left me only as an any?'' |
6436 | Over where? |
6436 | Perhaps he and Aunt Shadow will come together,--do you think they will?'' |
6436 | Prescott was there, as usual, I suppose?'' |
6436 | She is lovelier, is n''t she?'' |
6436 | She learned readily; but as there was no foundation, I was obliged to commence with A, B, C.''Why not teach her to cook?'' |
6436 | Talk of tortures; which of them have I not felt, with the pains and faintness of exposure and hunger racking me from head to foot? |
6436 | The child loves pretty things; what could a poor man do? |
6436 | The education you began, could I not finish? |
6436 | The provisions would not last more than a week; and though he might catch fish, how could he cook them? |
6436 | The wind will go down soon, and by daylight the things will be coming ashore; you''ll see to them, wo n''t you?'' |
6436 | Then aloud,''Has he any men with him?'' |
6436 | Then, for that crime, shall a soul suffer forever,--not a thousand years, a thousand ages if you like, but forever? |
6436 | Then, waiving further discussion,--''And where shall we find a clergyman?'' |
6436 | They dress like that nowadays, I suppose,--flowered gowns and gold chains around the waist?'' |
6436 | They had business, he said, with the Preacher; was he at home? |
6436 | To others I say,"What would you? |
6436 | Upon this what do you suppose Waring did? |
6436 | Was it, then, impossible for me to conquer this ignoble passion? |
6436 | Were they, then, so soon dead? |
6436 | What do you know, if you do n''t know the Beavers?'' |
6436 | What does it mean? |
6436 | What is his history?'' |
6436 | What is that white shining toy on the top? |
6436 | What need to picture the love- scene that followed? |
6436 | What then?''. |
6436 | What was I to her? |
6436 | Whence and when came he? |
6436 | Where am I? |
6436 | Where is Jarvis? |
6436 | Where?'' |
6436 | Whither? |
6436 | Who am I? |
6436 | Who are you, then?'' |
6436 | Who knows but that I may be drowned on my way back to the Chenaux?'' |
6436 | Who was he? |
6436 | Whom have I in all the world to tell me, save you?'' |
6436 | Why do I not fish for them? |
6436 | Will it be so with you, Jarvis?'' |
6436 | Without a cry? |
6436 | Women do n''t alter much, do they?'' |
6436 | Would it harm her to know of the Bible?'' |
6436 | Would nothing else content him? |
6436 | Would you?'' |
6436 | Wounded? |
6436 | You can have no intention of making Silver your wife?'' |
6436 | You can see the great white floes drift away into the horizon, and the question comes, Where do they go? |
6436 | You do not like the idea? |
6436 | You fell off that ledge, did n''t you? |
6436 | You look at me with scorn? |
6436 | a child engagement? |
6436 | answered Waring with a short laugh;''am I not giving up my name, my life, into her hands?'' |
6436 | said Silver, thoughtfully;''what do you think, papa?'' |
6436 | thought Waring, with a smile of covert amusement,''he is in a hurry to secure the prize, is he? |
47400 | A what, Master Frank-- a Jem Pansy? |
47400 | A what? |
47400 | An''how can I help it, Judy? |
47400 | Any luggage, sir? |
47400 | Arrah, Pat, why did yez bring me here into this dark hole now? 47400 At what hour did Mr. Heartwell quit this office?" |
47400 | At what hour, madam? |
47400 | At what hour? |
47400 | At whose suit? |
47400 | But are you not soon to leave me, Frank? |
47400 | But do they serve the officers so? |
47400 | But if this destruction of tea is to go on, what are_ we_ to do? 47400 But in Ormond Street,"urged the magistrate,"there you possibly had better light and more time-- what took place there?" |
47400 | But why are you dressed thus? |
47400 | But( we asked in continuation of our conversation) how could you talk with Buonaparte-- did he speak English? |
47400 | By whose authority? |
47400 | Can these be clocks? |
47400 | Can you bear an introduction to one who is able to explain every particular? |
47400 | Can you grope your way? 47400 Cease, my friends,"continued Polverel;"know ye not that deputies have arrived from San Domingo to sit in the great council of the nation? |
47400 | Cork is it? 47400 D''ye think, sir, that the gods above Shave themselves with razors?" |
47400 | Danger, sir? |
47400 | Did Mr. Heartwell take his timepiece with him? |
47400 | Did n''t you heear me call vater afore? |
47400 | Did you ever hear of such a_ dreadful_ creature? |
47400 | Did you see any more of him, sir? |
47400 | Did you see wot a imperent grin the little beast give? |
47400 | Do n''t be foolish, Mary,said my host, scarcely less frightened;"what should it be but the old sign? |
47400 | Do they call them Jem Pansies? 47400 Do you intend to open the window?" |
47400 | Donder und blitzen-- what wo n''t do? |
47400 | Donder und vind-- where are the crew? |
47400 | Euphemius Hipson, my dear, you can assist me to another lump of sugar? |
47400 | Fools!--do you believe in such nonsense as ghosts and spectres? |
47400 | Has anything occurred? |
47400 | Hauled his wind out of this? |
47400 | Have I been dreaming? 47400 Have I the honour to address his worthy lady?" |
47400 | Have a slice o''cold pudden, Bill? |
47400 | Have n''t I been a faithful and thrue wife to yez? 47400 Have not the wretches denounced me, because of the money they owed me, and their base designs upon my child? |
47400 | Have you seen my tiger? |
47400 | Have you seen the tiger? 47400 Have you seen the tiger?" |
47400 | How-- what is this? |
47400 | I have put a plain and simple question to you, sir; will you oblige me with an answer? |
47400 | I knew I was right,said he:"Brady, do you know me now?" |
47400 | I suppose, sir, we had better_ get the man together_? |
47400 | I''ll have a bit of fish, waiter,--which do you recommend to day? |
47400 | I''m bless''d, young gentleman, but you do shake a cloth or two in the wind-- but there, what''s the odds so as you''re happy? 47400 In the event of your leaving, would the gentleman you have named feel disposed to part with it, think you?" |
47400 | In the name of wonder,said he,"what''s the matter?" |
47400 | In vain,she cried,"your powers, Take any shape you may; Are hearts less wise than flowers, That know the night from day?" |
47400 | Is it a fairy,said the Jewess,"or a household demon? |
47400 | Is there any strange watch or clock in the house that you know of? |
47400 | Is your tea agreeable, my dear Miss Dibsley? |
47400 | It must be some trick,said Mrs. Heartwell;"can you hear it distinctly?" |
47400 | Keep her right before it, my man; how''s her head now? |
47400 | Lately, why have n''t you heard? 47400 Mr. Heartwell has been heard of; but are you really able to endure whatever of joy or sorrow may betide--""Joy?--joy?" |
47400 | My dear fellow, I''m going out-- a particular engagement-- been kept in all the morning;--will Friday do? 47400 My dearest madam,_ you_ eat a sausage?" |
47400 | Now, Tim, who_ is_ that? 47400 Now, then, young imp, wot''s the damage?" |
47400 | Of course I must,replied the gentleman;"I can not expect you to trust me; what can I do? |
47400 | Of whom are you speaking? |
47400 | Of_ what_? |
47400 | Oh, what is this, Frank? |
47400 | Pray, Mr. Shipkins, do you remember the number of the coach in which Mr. Heartwell left here last night? |
47400 | Pray,said the magistrate, addressing the coachman,"had you sufficient light or opportunity to observe the person of the officer?" |
47400 | Shall we take possession of the land, in the name of his most Christian Majesty? |
47400 | Shipkins has been taken,said Mr. Wendover,"and he has confessed--?" |
47400 | Should you know the gentleman again? |
47400 | So when master said,''Well, Jacky, will you have any more pudding?'' 47400 So you''ve heard tell of that, have you?" |
47400 | That young gemman''s in a very good humour, ai n''t he, Tom? 47400 These, sir?" |
47400 | Vant a cab, sir? |
47400 | Vhere''s shall I drive, sir? |
47400 | Was Mr. Heartwell here yesterday? |
47400 | Was it all a delusion? |
47400 | Was the officer sober? |
47400 | Wel sie valtz, Fraulein? |
47400 | Were you not at all acquainted with the object to which your husband alluded? |
47400 | What cheer, what cheer, my lad, eh? |
47400 | What do you? |
47400 | What does she go? |
47400 | What has I getten to sup t''''morn, Tam? |
47400 | What has she_ done_? |
47400 | What is all this? |
47400 | What is all this?--who do you want? |
47400 | What is it then? |
47400 | What is''t,says he,"your majesty Would wish of me to- day?" |
47400 | What shall it be-- my surtout coat? 47400 What sort of a man was he?" |
47400 | What was that? |
47400 | What write you, troubled spirit? |
47400 | What''s that? |
47400 | What, a real tiger, yer honour? 47400 What, what has he confessed?" |
47400 | What-- what is it? |
47400 | What? |
47400 | What? |
47400 | Where have you been, scoundrels? |
47400 | Where is he, Ben, where is he? |
47400 | Where''s my tiger? |
47400 | Where''s this egg? |
47400 | Who cares for mocking billows, Or demons of the deep? 47400 Who has dared to let him loose? |
47400 | Who has let loose my tiger? |
47400 | Who, and what are you? |
47400 | Why a then, wil''t have a sup? |
47400 | Why a, I''se getten yal-- dos''t like yal, Tam? |
47400 | Why a, now, what maks thee say_ Ay_ sae aften? |
47400 | Why do n''t you stop her, Mary? |
47400 | Why what did he wear then? |
47400 | Wil''t have it_ otted_, Tam? |
47400 | Will you put that window down, Sir? |
47400 | Will you, Sir, or will you not put down that window? |
47400 | Wine with me, sir? |
47400 | Yes, sir-- we have the same bin now-- the port you mean, sir? |
47400 | You are, I presume, in Mr. Brady''s service? |
47400 | You wish to speak to me, sir? |
47400 | You''ll take a glass of ale or so? 47400 Your H- opposition coach and a pair of horses?" |
47400 | ''All right?'' |
47400 | ''Ay,''says Tom and the others,''now you''ll believe it, von''t you?'' |
47400 | ''Did n''t you?'' |
47400 | ''Done vot?'' |
47400 | ''Lost, how?'' |
47400 | ''No,''says, he;''shall I say you''re a coming into Bristol?'' |
47400 | ''On a bay cob?'' |
47400 | ''Veil,''ses I,''as I vas never here afore, t''aint_ werry_ likely as I have heerd of''un; but who is he?'' |
47400 | ''Vhy not?'' |
47400 | ''Vot old chap?'' |
47400 | ''Well, Quashie,''I said,''you have got here I see, but which of you won?'' |
47400 | ''and, Mr. Banks,''says I,''what shall I order for your supper?''" |
47400 | ( I had light-- very light hair)"vot are yer a looking at now?--a com- paring that ugly phiz o''yourn with a gen''leman''s?" |
47400 | ("What, all?" |
47400 | ***** P.S.--May we ask who threw That shell in the_ Horse Guards_, With one in the barrack- yards To blow up the_ Gallery_ too? |
47400 | --"Hadn''t I better read it for myself?" |
47400 | --"They were gained,"he would say,"under Nelson, fighting for my king and country-- and what''s the odds so as you''re happy?" |
47400 | --"What danger can there be when there''s hardly wind enough to fill the canvas?" |
47400 | --"Why not, man?" |
47400 | --''But will he pay?'' |
47400 | 1 ready? |
47400 | A thing more gentle, laughing, light, More blythe, more full of play, Than e''er_ he_ was-- that luckless wight!-- The lamb you stuck to- day? |
47400 | Again, mark you his freckles-- whoever saw such in the face of beauty? |
47400 | Am I to read? |
47400 | And Sarah faintly answers,"Yes, did you hear that?" |
47400 | And for the_ life_ of the scene? |
47400 | And thou, O Dog, with deep- set eyes, Wert thou, like Love, once blind; With helpless limbs, of pigmy size, And voice that scarcely whined? |
47400 | And what is friendship but a name, That boils on Etna''s breast of flame? |
47400 | And what''s become of him, my boy?" |
47400 | And when did he first see your phiz Reflected in his own? |
47400 | And when your guns are run out, why what''s the use on''em if you do n''t clap a match to the touch- holes and pour in a reg''lar broadside?" |
47400 | And where could he have found a more fitting place? |
47400 | Are you determined to destroy yourself, or are you aware of your danger?" |
47400 | Art thou descended from the pair From whom the Cæsars came? |
47400 | Asaph?" |
47400 | At last one little quaking Miss ventures half- stifled to whisper,"Sarah, are you awake?" |
47400 | Ay, who, sir, who? |
47400 | Be em a live un or a stuffed un?" |
47400 | Berry well-- me bet you fippenny me make you go-- No? |
47400 | Besides, do not you invite ladies in particular to patronise your omnibus, and promise to accommodate them? |
47400 | Bond?'' |
47400 | But are you sure it''s the same? |
47400 | But gracious goodness, what''s the time? |
47400 | But how comes it that my simple little cat( Dummy by name) called up, the other evening, by a very ordinary movement, the image of Cleopatra? |
47400 | But how far does it go? |
47400 | But how was poor Spitz to know what the season was, or tell what his master himself had forgotten? |
47400 | But is n''t this a good deal like cutting his own nose off?" |
47400 | But may not patent- ice pavements be laid down in our popular thoroughfares? |
47400 | But there, what''s the odds so as you''re happy?" |
47400 | But what are we about? |
47400 | But what avails, if fleeting praise Alone the poet''s labour pays? |
47400 | But what is a dun? |
47400 | But what poet ever found a steep so difficult as that_ gradus ad Parnassum_ to the seemingly dislocated donkey? |
47400 | But what''s the odds, my lady, so as you''re happy?" |
47400 | But where was the daughter? |
47400 | But will the advantages end here? |
47400 | Butcher''s cur, is''t true That_ thy_ first parents e''er From Eden''s garden lapp''d the dew, And breathed in rapture there? |
47400 | Butcher- boy, Thou com''st of Adam''s race? |
47400 | By twelve o''clock in the day there was a vast accumulation; and at that hour, the master of the house would say,"James, are all the doors shut?" |
47400 | Can they well be otherwise, when they worship a deity so remorseless and so unfeeling? |
47400 | Can we assume that, in the nature of a mountebank balancing on his chin a ladder surmounted by a long- eared brute, there is no room for vanity? |
47400 | Cavil?" |
47400 | Cold and wet, is n''t it?" |
47400 | Come, roundly, your reason, sir? |
47400 | Commonplace and even plebeian, as is the simple question"Who are you?" |
47400 | Could I think of treading in the boots of a blackleg, albeit they never were his own? |
47400 | Could ever flower with thee compare? |
47400 | Could his eyes have ceased to possess discriminating power? |
47400 | Death? |
47400 | Did I not foretel the death of Louis? |
47400 | Did I not predict the downfal of monarchy in France? |
47400 | Did I not say the king of Sweden was given over to destruction? |
47400 | Did n''t I lock you up for thieving-- didn''t I?" |
47400 | Do you happ''n to know a cove in London by the name o''Ketch-- Jack Ketch?" |
47400 | Do you mutiny?" |
47400 | Do you suppose that a gentleman would come here_ without_ such an_ indispensable_ article of dress?" |
47400 | Do you think other people is as vicked as yerself?" |
47400 | Does Jack heave one sigh in compliment to the illustrious absentees, and in depreciation of the company who_ have_ assembled? |
47400 | Does he mean to say he has ever met with any one of these lines_ before?_][ Footnote 3: Burke.] |
47400 | Euphemius, my dear, will you read?--Martha, you can take away.--Beg pardon, any more tea, Miss Dibsley? |
47400 | Haste then and flee from the wrath to come, for have I not prophesied, and it hath come to pass?--Have I not foretold, and the fulfilment is at hand? |
47400 | Have I not declared that England would be deserted by her allies? |
47400 | Have you ever been to sea?" |
47400 | Have you seen my Ben-- g- g- gal?" |
47400 | He turned to Peach and demanded--"Who and what are you?--how came you here?--who has dared to let you in?--speak-- who are you?" |
47400 | He turns round!--where is the smile of exultation? |
47400 | How canst thou look thus calmly on, And watch them slowly die the while? |
47400 | How grew your legs so like to_ his_, Your growl so like his tone? |
47400 | How is it?" |
47400 | How often do we every day jump from one point to another, as distinct in themselves as the sublime and the ridiculous, and far more widely asunder? |
47400 | How then could a vessel in this forlorn condition continue afloat or contend with so fierce a gale? |
47400 | How? |
47400 | Howsomever I hope I arnt frightened you; but what''s the odds so as you''re happy?" |
47400 | Howsomever, up I gets, and, says I to my box- companion, you wo n''t mind if I goes a little fast, will you? |
47400 | Hurrah!--what''s the odds?" |
47400 | I carn''t conthrol the say or the ship as I would a horse upon the turf-- long life to it-- what would you have?" |
47400 | I guessed his meaning by this time; but affecting ignorance, I asked,"What is that wonderful animal without any inside?" |
47400 | I locked him up last night for robbing the larder, and this morning he is missing; where is he?" |
47400 | I s''pose his mother know_ he''s_ out? |
47400 | I''spose the old man an''her do n''t agree no better? |
47400 | If I recollect right, you had some good wine here once?" |
47400 | If I should demand my Hessians, was there a probability of obtaining them? |
47400 | If talents rare no more can claim Than idle transitory fame? |
47400 | If, when the mind is worn away, Pale misery waits on dim decay? |
47400 | In visions of a future day, I see thy long- lost form appear; And, o''er the counter, whispering, say--"Pray can you make it cheaper,_ dear_?" |
47400 | Is it not so, men?" |
47400 | Is it then asked, why this individual should excite at once in my boyish bosom such lively feelings of horror-- such forebodings of evil? |
47400 | Is the room actually filled with clocks, or am I the victim of enchantment?" |
47400 | It may be said"What''s in a hat?" |
47400 | It was a Squire, a gentle squire, Came spurring darkly down below; His steed was splashed with foam and mire, Oh, what but love could urge him so? |
47400 | It was the same man who responded to the"Why?" |
47400 | Look''d Cheops much the same? |
47400 | May it not, therefore, be looked upon as a wise and kind ordination of providence, to prepare the mind for disastrous events that are to follow? |
47400 | Miffler,_ what do you do that for_? |
47400 | Mr. Gunn consented, Mrs. Gunn consented, Sarah consented, and they all consented; could anything be fairer? |
47400 | Márid?" |
47400 | No Punch and Judy now; it''s unlegal by the law; ai n''t you awor o''the New Police Act what''s put it down?" |
47400 | Now Mrs. Framp,_ what did you do that for_? |
47400 | Now prayers and cards are all the go-- How''s that you ask? |
47400 | Now we cry,"When_ will_ it leave off?" |
47400 | Now, my excellent good Fred,_ what the deuce did you do that for_? |
47400 | Now, reader, what song do you suppose this young gentleman, who scarce sings at all, will select? |
47400 | Now, vot do you stand ringing o''the money for? |
47400 | Now, what on earth_ do you do that for_, Brown? |
47400 | One half sleep on our pillows, While t''others deck- watch keep; Who cares for lightning''s flashing, boys, Or noisy thunder''s roar? |
47400 | Or shall I see you at the club?" |
47400 | Pat, an why did yez bring me here?" |
47400 | R. O. D. What more remains? |
47400 | Rather an old- fashioned sort of thing, an enigma, eh? |
47400 | Ses I,''Vhy do n''t you get down then?'' |
47400 | Shall we caulk the ship, or set up the rigging? |
47400 | Shall we darn our stockings, or go on shore for fresh water? |
47400 | Shall we mend the sails, or mend our clothes? |
47400 | She sat and watch''d one summer''s eve-- Why doth she so? |
47400 | So I ses, ses I,''Vot''s the row, sir?'' |
47400 | So at that I puts the werry top o''my eyes over the bed- clothes, and there I saw----""What?" |
47400 | So you''d better answer it at once, Laura, declining it, you know-- eh?" |
47400 | Springing forward therefore quickly, we exclaimed,"For heaven''s sake, madam, what are you about? |
47400 | Stephen''s Chapel_? |
47400 | Still no egg came; the bell rang once more:"Where_ is_ the egg?" |
47400 | That''ll do-- thank you-- charming!--These Chinese, I believe, have nothing of a navy?" |
47400 | The Mighty Watcher had fallen asleep, but who could say that he never again was to wake up? |
47400 | The bellows which yet bear the inscription,"Who rides on these bellows? |
47400 | The officer took up the newspaper and read for ten minutes, then wondered why his egg did not arrive, and rang the bell.--"My egg?" |
47400 | The one a feeble pup; A babe the other, fondly nursed-- How_ have_ ye been brought up? |
47400 | The servant- maid looked aghast, yet the accustomed spirit of inquiry, Who was he? |
47400 | The"any orders?" |
47400 | Then Adam''s gold has much alloy!-- Was this_ his_ form and face? |
47400 | There was a dun at the very entrance to their"shades below;"how could any place of torment be complete without one? |
47400 | There''s nothin''very pleasant in rising blisters in the mouth-- is there, sir?" |
47400 | Those who know Krähwinkel( and who, I should like to know, is not acquainted with that famous city?) |
47400 | Tom, is that''ere elderly lady come, as ve vaited for last trip? |
47400 | Trotter?" |
47400 | Upon meeting, the following colloquy took place:--"Well, Tom, how goes it at the Placquet, eh? |
47400 | Vell, old Tom Martin was the boots; he as come arterwards to our place, you know, Juggles?" |
47400 | Vot has give you the blues?" |
47400 | WHAT DO YOU DO THAT FOR? |
47400 | Was I, therefore, what the statement I have quoted would lead anybody to infer I was, the companion of dustmen, hodmen, coal- heavers, and scavengers? |
47400 | Was ever star so soft and fair? |
47400 | Was he a man of sober habits and reputable character?" |
47400 | Well, but this Primly-- what can_ he_ want? |
47400 | Well, now, sir, what do you think I should find when I goes the first thing on Monday morning to our office?" |
47400 | Well, one day at dinner, Jacky had only had once of meat, but he''d two helps of pood;""Of what?" |
47400 | What account was taken of the roadside tent- holders, and the number of the families of these real"potwallopers?" |
47400 | What answer could I make? |
47400 | What are yours?" |
47400 | What can she be about? |
47400 | What can she mean? |
47400 | What can you do? |
47400 | What connexion is there between shirt- frills and glass bottles? |
47400 | What do you do that for? |
47400 | What does he mean? |
47400 | What good can passion do? |
47400 | What has this Emperor of Delf been doing? |
47400 | What is it, then, that thus operates on the faculties to produce these symptoms? |
47400 | What is to become of the tee- totallers, Miss Dibsley?'' |
47400 | What saw we then? |
47400 | What shall it be-- my boots, my new white top- boots?" |
47400 | What shall we do first? |
47400 | What was there wonderful in that? |
47400 | What was to be done? |
47400 | What''s that your fast hoss? |
47400 | What''s the odds so as you''re happy?" |
47400 | What_ did_ he want? |
47400 | What_ does_ he want with you? |
47400 | When will you have your dinner?" |
47400 | Whence the ray, that could impart Each subtle trace That defines the mother''s heart, The matron''s grace? |
47400 | Whence the throes of jealousy That struggling rise, Big with mimic agony To those young eyes? |
47400 | Where should Othello go? |
47400 | Where then, it may be asked, are the addenda to be placed at the end of each century? |
47400 | Who are you? |
47400 | Who dared to penetrate into the mysteries of the yellow caravans there collected, or invade the Bohemian seclusion of the tilted hovels? |
47400 | Who was it that astonished his hearers by declaring that beefsteak- pudding always put him in mind of Westminster Abbey? |
47400 | Who will? |
47400 | Who, sir, who? |
47400 | Who, who, who? |
47400 | Why ca n''t they spell the name properly?" |
47400 | Why ca n''t you be cool like me? |
47400 | Why for you no bet?--why for you no go ober?" |
47400 | Why make of Tom a_ dullard_, And Ned a_ genius_?" |
47400 | Why should I be dragged out of my wretched nook here, without an appetite, and against my will? |
47400 | Why will not she her lattice leave? |
47400 | Why, where are the shows? |
47400 | Will he wait five minutes? |
47400 | Will you look over this music- book? |
47400 | Will you walk in, and the young gentleman with you?" |
47400 | Wore Alexander such an air? |
47400 | Would you like to take some more cake, Miss Dibsley? |
47400 | Would you like to wait, or will you call again?" |
47400 | Yes, who, sir, who? |
47400 | Yet where is the pious individual who would feel no tremor, if left to pass the night within the gothic aisles of such an edifice? |
47400 | Yet who can predicate at two o''clock that he shall be happy at a quarter past? |
47400 | Yet why? |
47400 | Yet, can I call it peace? |
47400 | You did n''t take them away with you when you took the boots, did you?" |
47400 | You do n''t recollect me-- what must I do?" |
47400 | You, perhaps, would exercise your influence in my favour?" |
47400 | _ He!_--powers of impudence in the garb of intimacy, where will ye find a limit? |
47400 | _ Who''ll_ set the Thames on fire? |
47400 | _ Who_ burnt the_ House of Lords_? |
47400 | _ Who_ burnt_ Woolwich Dockyard_, eh? |
47400 | _ Who_ fired the_ Royal Exchange_? |
47400 | _ Who_ tried to fire the_ Bank_? |
47400 | _ what do you do that for?_ Why in the name of common sense do you say No! |
47400 | and if I should obtain them, was there a possibility of my ever wearing them again? |
47400 | and wert thou once a child, A cherub small and soft, On whom two human beings smiled, And pray''d for, oft and oft? |
47400 | and what''s the use of writing a volume upon it, as many of our contemporaries might? |
47400 | asked I,"before railroads were thought of?" |
47400 | bright blades again a countryman''s fist? |
47400 | cried Mrs. T. with a scream,"what danger, sir? |
47400 | cruel Fate, why made you My children differ thus? |
47400 | demanded the excited woman in a tone assuming peremptory command;"what is it that produces so loud and peculiar a noise?" |
47400 | did you bring any of_ your_ music?" |
47400 | do you call that English fashion? |
47400 | do you mean to keep me waiting all day?" |
47400 | does she meditate self- destruction? |
47400 | echoed the showman, for an instant raising his eyes;"Ai n''t it enough to make a heart of stone bleed to see this here Fair? |
47400 | exclaimed he;"in your just fury the eye of reason is dimmed-- is he not a man and a brother?" |
47400 | exclaimed our gentleman, in a towering passion,"what do you mean to imply, sir? |
47400 | exclaimed the seaman, looking earnestly in the youth''s face,"Heartwell,--Muster Frank Heartwell as was in the ould Robust?" |
47400 | giving way to the indulgence of sorrow at a moment when prosperity is again extending the right hand of good- fellowship? |
47400 | groaned John,"as-- what, eh?" |
47400 | have you been coming across the fields? |
47400 | he broke cover and stole away this morning-- he must be prowling somewhere about-- have you seen him?" |
47400 | he exclaimed,"why, do n''t you see the poor old Exquisite a coming by itself?" |
47400 | how is this? |
47400 | inquired the friend,--"what_ are_ those_ things_?" |
47400 | is it so? |
47400 | no doubt, Jemima; but what in the name of goodness gracious am I to do in London? |
47400 | oh!--a-- yes-- that man, yes,--you did n''t say I was at home?" |
47400 | or was there living the caitiff wretch so utterly reprobate as to call his loved---- by such names? |
47400 | repeated Frank, in surprise;"why how could they do that?" |
47400 | repeated she with eagerness,"is there then hope, that you use that term? |
47400 | replied Vanderdecken,"or do you think me such an ass as to credit you? |
47400 | returned Mrs. Heartwell, as she strove to subdue the feelings which agitated her,"and who have I now in the wide world but you?" |
47400 | said Kitty, blushing red, And gave his cap a toss over;"Are you? |
47400 | shall we not be rebels?" |
47400 | since all this is so far out of the reach of description, how shall I show you Rachel?'' |
47400 | sir?" |
47400 | there again?" |
47400 | was n''t that funny?" |
47400 | were you in her, in Frejus Bay, when Buonaparte embarked for Elba?" |
47400 | wert thou, Butcher- boy? |
47400 | what has''t getten to sup te''''morn?" |
47400 | what hast getten to sup, I say?" |
47400 | what were ye both_ at first_? |
47400 | what_ is_ the matter?" |
47400 | when you thoroughly believe all that poor Dickson has been telling you? |
47400 | where are the people? |
47400 | where are the swings? |
47400 | where are the turn- abouts-- the round- abouts? |
47400 | where have you been?" |
47400 | where,_ where_ is the Fair? |
47400 | who can ask it? |
47400 | who, sir, who? |
47400 | ye Nine? |
47400 | you no go ober? |
47400 | your Niger men declare( For want of something better,_ q_?) |
6945 | ''Jordan is a hard road to travel,''eh Dick? |
6945 | ''Spose I need n''t ask, be you pretty well posted in law? |
6945 | A compliment to the sterner sex,remarked Phillip, in an undertone, then he exclaimed,"Child, where did you get such ideas?" |
6945 | A gentleman from England, did you say, my dear? 6945 Am I in my sober senses or am I in a nightmare? |
6945 | Am I to blame for his death? 6945 And he has spoken of it lately?" |
6945 | And how do you intend to proceed? 6945 And they are invulnerable?" |
6945 | And why are you wearing it to- day, my dear? |
6945 | And would I not, too? 6945 And yet you never went with_ her_?" |
6945 | And you bought that homely bracelet, my child? |
6945 | And you got the crosscut at the gate? |
6945 | And you have come to inform us that we must give up Melindy? |
6945 | And you must go immediately, I suppose? |
6945 | And you think the guverment did the square thing by them ere half- breeds, do you? |
6945 | Are we to attribute your delinquency to business or total neglect? |
6945 | Are you a minor, sir? |
6945 | Are you going to accompany us to the opera this evening, Madge? 6945 At the bazaar, Dick?" |
6945 | At which? |
6945 | Both,said Helen,"can you guess?" |
6945 | Busy, my dear? |
6945 | But hold on, Melindy, how did you hear that I was at the office? 6945 But of the news, Helen? |
6945 | But on what ground do you ignore Jessie McGregor, who may yet be alive? 6945 But you never told us of the''head of the family,''Helen?" |
6945 | Can it be possible that Marguerite Verne wrote that letter? |
6945 | Dear me,cried Josie,"and you really passed through the campaign without making an attack upon any of the celestials?" |
6945 | Dear papa, what would he think of his rebellious child? |
6945 | Did you form as favorable opinions of the fair sex, there as those of our set? |
6945 | Did you go often to the House, Helen? 6945 Did you see much military life there, Helen?" |
6945 | Did you think of it yesterday, Hester? |
6945 | Do tell me, Matilda, have you ever heard of the Lister family? 6945 Eve, dearest, I know you are disappointed in not going out this evening, and I am sorry; can you not believe me?" |
6945 | Evelyn has told you all, Marguerite? |
6945 | Good news or bad news? |
6945 | Halloo, Tracy, not going so soon? 6945 Has Hubert Tracy the full control of his estates, Eve?" |
6945 | Has James gone for the evening mail, Watkins? |
6945 | Has Phillip been here to- day, my dear? |
6945 | Have you anything to tell me, little one? 6945 He will yet come around all right, sir?" |
6945 | Her papa will receive me; why did she not say Evelyn? |
6945 | Home? |
6945 | How are all my friends at''Gladswood''? |
6945 | How did Hattie find it out? |
6945 | How did you know I was here? |
6945 | How is it that my little girl can not attend to the social demands that press so lightly upon her? |
6945 | I did not happen to find my friends in the Belgravian district, but what matters it? |
6945 | I hope all are well, sir? |
6945 | I may stay here until my hair is gray, and what matters it? 6945 I presume you are aware that Mr. Tracy has sailed for Europe?" |
6945 | I say, Lawson, what in the mischief is the matter? 6945 I say, Mr. Lawson, when are you a- comin''out? |
6945 | I see that your favorite journal advocates that policy? |
6945 | I suppose you have heard of Mr. Verne''s illness? |
6945 | I was on my way to the fishing grounds, and you can imagine my surprise on being hailed in this wise:--''I say, mister, can you take a passenger?'' 6945 I was thinking of my darling child, Hester; how do you think she will bear the news? |
6945 | I will see you again before you go away, Helen? |
6945 | If Mose could just peek in would n''t he stare? |
6945 | In heaven''s name what is the matter, Maria? |
6945 | Is it any harm to inquire as to your wishes Miss Marguerite? |
6945 | Is it anything that I know of,cried Phillip in almost desperate tones;"anything that I can do for you?" |
6945 | Is it possible that mamma forgets poor dear papa, who is most to be pitied? |
6945 | Is it possible,thought she,"that Eve can dissemble so much?" |
6945 | Is n''t she lovely? |
6945 | Is not that grand? 6945 Is she pretty, Helen?" |
6945 | It was while we were in the library, and all sitting together Josie Jordan suddenly called out:''Girls where will we all be two years from now? 6945 Jennie and Marguerite, you mean?" |
6945 | Just think Louise how many changes have taken place since I came? 6945 Like it? |
6945 | Lottie, can you get Edith to stay with you this evening? 6945 Lottie, you silly little puss, why did you go to such trouble?" |
6945 | Madge, whom do you think I met as I was going along Princess street? |
6945 | Marguerite Verne, am I to attribute that gaze to fond admiration or pertinent curiosity? |
6945 | My God,thought the young man in the bitterness of his heart,"will the dead past never bury its dead? |
6945 | Nice looking, did you say? 6945 No; what was it about?" |
6945 | Now, Evelyn, have you not been a little premature? 6945 Oh, Madge, how can Eve marry that man? |
6945 | Oh, Madge, what good luck brought you to our den? 6945 Really, Stephen[ Note: hand- written,''Richard''inked out], have you found time to venture in here? |
6945 | Rossmoyne, do you mean, mamma? |
6945 | Say,''Squire, ai nt there a new kind of insurance consarn''round these diggins? 6945 Spriggins, did you say, Hester?" |
6945 | Suppose you heard of the quarrel between Maud Harrington and Hattie Reynolds? |
6945 | The Crichton''s of the House, did you say, Helen? |
6945 | Then you give up? |
6945 | They live near you Hester? |
6945 | Was he in the city to- day-- and gone back without calling? 6945 Well, little woman, what brought you out to- day?" |
6945 | Well, what is all of''em letters about? |
6945 | What a magnificent dress? |
6945 | What about? |
6945 | What do you mean, Eve? |
6945 | What have I been guilty of now, Josie? |
6945 | What have I done? |
6945 | What have you there, Puss? |
6945 | What is the cause of complaint, sir? |
6945 | What is the matter with your time in the office, Stephen? |
6945 | What letters mother? |
6945 | What now, coz? 6945 What of her brothers-- are they blonde or brunette?" |
6945 | What shall I call you, Louise, a pessimist? |
6945 | What shall I sing? |
6945 | What will the Vernes do now without their grand carriages and retinue of servants? 6945 What will this make, Madge?" |
6945 | What''s all the fun about, I''d like to know? |
6945 | What''s all this about? 6945 What''s the news?" |
6945 | What''s the use of wishin''? 6945 What-- not that young fellow who is so much in the company of Arnold?" |
6945 | Where have the girls gone to- night, Matilda? |
6945 | Where''s N''h''miar gone, Bill? |
6945 | Where''s your promise now? |
6945 | Which paper, papa-- can I get it for you? |
6945 | Who the deuce can they be? |
6945 | Who would have ever thought of meeting you here, old bookworm? |
6945 | Why am I such a fool? |
6945 | Why are you not doing likewise, Mr. Lawson? 6945 Why can I live on and pass through this dreadful ordeal, when so many with bright, happy lives are suddenly cut off? |
6945 | Why did n''t mother send a bushel more? |
6945 | Why did n''t you wait until you came to pick up our bones? |
6945 | Why did you interrupt Louise when she was going to say something good? |
6945 | Why do you call it the Dominion Fund? |
6945 | Why does any one envy me the charms I possess? 6945 Why have the winged winds no mercy? |
6945 | Why, Madge, where have you been? |
6945 | Why, then, take such a gloomy view of the affair, Stephen? 6945 Will you come in, too, Rania? |
6945 | Working as usual, Lawson? |
6945 | Worthy, did you say, Stephen? 6945 Would you not like to be one of the party, Madge?" |
6945 | Yes, it''s a good''spec''; but why is the fellow so anxious for me to get it? 6945 You dear old coz, have I kept you long waiting?" |
6945 | You forgive all, Eve? |
6945 | You have reason to know him? |
6945 | You may not go to the North- West? |
6945 | You mentioned the blue drawing- room, Helen,said Marguerite, anxious to prolong the conversation;"is it not very pretty?" |
6945 | You naughty Madge, where are you? |
6945 | You will be at the reception to- night, my dear? |
6945 | *****"A what- do- ye- call- it weddin'', Miss Lottie?" |
6945 | *****"Better to- day, dearest papa? |
6945 | *****"Spriggins, did you say, papa?" |
6945 | Agent?" |
6945 | Ai nt that right Melindy?" |
6945 | Ai nt that so, eh, Melindy?" |
6945 | And what am I to do? |
6945 | Are there any of us perfect?" |
6945 | But did that fact lesson the reputation of this gifted scholar? |
6945 | But what of Marguerite? |
6945 | But what''s the odds so long as yer happy?" |
6945 | But why do I speak now? |
6945 | Ca n''t I run up here without making your eyes stick out like rabbits''?" |
6945 | Can the fellow be honest? |
6945 | Can you secure that site for him instead of poor Jim Watters? |
6945 | Could it be possible that he had thus been warned of this conspiracy and changed his course of action? |
6945 | Could it be possible? |
6945 | Dearest and best of brothers, can I not help you? |
6945 | Death, did I say?" |
6945 | Did he think she had done wrong? |
6945 | Did she entertain, such high opinion of this fashionable young man? |
6945 | Did the proud heart ever beat with one responsive throb for him whom she had chosen? |
6945 | Did they go back to their delightful Parnassus and revel in the music of their delectable Castalian spring?" |
6945 | Did you not know that Melindy Jane Thrasher has a suitor who calls as regularly as he comes to the city?" |
6945 | Do I hear aright?" |
6945 | Do you love Hubert Tracy with a deep and tender love-- such a love as a true woman gives to her husband?" |
6945 | Do you remember it Madge?" |
6945 | Eh, Moll?" |
6945 | Got into them lawyer''s clutches at last? |
6945 | Had Mr. Lawson removed to another field or had Hubert Tracy played false? |
6945 | Had it fallen into Mr. Lawson''s hands? |
6945 | Had the girl in any way found out the plot? |
6945 | Has she her"concealments"too? |
6945 | Have you any further information?" |
6945 | Have you heard the latest news?" |
6945 | He at last found words to say,"What is your programme today, Eve?" |
6945 | Hear you are making a bold dash there?" |
6945 | How can you submit so tamely to being bored to death by such pests? |
6945 | How could you sleep? |
6945 | How do you think affairs would end if they were allowed to go on without any stop being put to them?" |
6945 | How is business at the governor''s? |
6945 | I ask you if that is right?" |
6945 | I could indeed tell you much that you little dream of, but why is it thus?" |
6945 | I have done everything for that girl that a fond, idolized mother could do, and what is my reward? |
6945 | I have promised two of them to Cousin Jennie, and really am at a loss to decide-- which do you like best?" |
6945 | I hope your host would not be among the list to be boycotted by our new method of prescription?" |
6945 | I know that Tracy is not what he might be, yet he has a kind heart and what''s the use of my talking, who is faultless? |
6945 | I see town is makin''you too toney, what''s the use of cuttin''a fellar up so when he makes a little mistake?" |
6945 | I tell you they''re sharpers, they fleeced dad last summer and I was n''t agoin''to be so green, eh''Squire?" |
6945 | I wonder how you young ladies got along before we had one?" |
6945 | If I was n''t too old would try to learn it yet-- by jimminey, does n''t it say nice things though?" |
6945 | Is Marguerite near?" |
6945 | Is it becoming a suitor to play truant when he wishes to hear favorably from his''ladye fayre''?" |
6945 | Is it part of the agreement?" |
6945 | Is n''t she lovely, Brother Phillip?" |
6945 | Is papa dead?" |
6945 | Is she not tall and slight with auburn hair and straight regular features, with just enough hauteur to give her an air of quiet dignity?" |
6945 | Is the House ready for the question?" |
6945 | Is the property a valuable one?" |
6945 | Is there any grander title this side of Heaven than found in these words,"I am a British subject,"and next"I am a New Brunswicker"? |
6945 | Is there anything genuine in this every- day world? |
6945 | Look at Louise-- reminds one of a Roman empress-- and you, my self- conceited Haligonian, must follow suit; was there ever such a set?" |
6945 | Madge-- is it not dreadful?" |
6945 | Mamma, just look at her color; is it not bewitching? |
6945 | Manning?" |
6945 | Marguerite laughed at the girl''s spirit of enthusiasm and thought"what a power is woman when her energies are directed aright?" |
6945 | Marguerite reached out her hand to receive the kind goodbye, and how pale and wan that little hand? |
6945 | Metcalfe?" |
6945 | Montgomery?" |
6945 | Mr. Lawson; what is your verdict?" |
6945 | Now if all the gentlemen were like you what would be our fate? |
6945 | Now, what''s the use of you gettin''jealors of me and Josiar? |
6945 | Of the husband what can we say? |
6945 | Oh, poor papa? |
6945 | Only a few weeks had passed away since Evelyn had written Marguerite, but how much had transpired in that time? |
6945 | Phillip, what shall I wear? |
6945 | Quite a change there since then, eh Lawson? |
6945 | She wondered if it were possible that her haughty sister ever possessed a true, honest heart? |
6945 | Spriggins?" |
6945 | Squires?" |
6945 | Suppose you''re practising so it wo n''t be so hard on you when the time comes?" |
6945 | The fellow is good; but what is that to me now? |
6945 | The latter had been accustomed to a lavish expenditure of money and now that her husband''s means had been squandered what was she to do? |
6945 | Then throwing it aside, added, with a deep tone of resentment,"Is it possible that one must lose all faith in humanity?" |
6945 | Then, what do you think? |
6945 | Tracy?" |
6945 | Tracy?" |
6945 | Tracy?" |
6945 | Warn them of the danger myself? |
6945 | Was ever bride more enchanting, radiant or beautiful? |
6945 | Was it a tear that glistened on the maiden''s cheek as Montague Arnold once more contemplated the fair brow and madonna- like eyes? |
6945 | Was there any real cause for such alarm? |
6945 | Was there real true happiness existing between these two hearts--"this happy couple?" |
6945 | Was this peerless beauty so fond of Hubert Tracy? |
6945 | Were ever bridal robes more graceful? |
6945 | Were there any pretty pictures in those dreams? |
6945 | Were there many young ladies in the family?" |
6945 | What are Miss Kitty''s demands to- day?" |
6945 | What beauty to arrest a maiden''s eye? |
6945 | What can I do? |
6945 | What causes that blush? |
6945 | What causes the girl to start? |
6945 | What comfort in these words? |
6945 | What did it mean? |
6945 | What did she mean that he alone could save her? |
6945 | What do you expect from this?" |
6945 | What glorious day dreams can now be woven from the golden threads of happy thought? |
6945 | What had he to say?" |
6945 | What invisible presence laid a pressure upon Phillip Lawson''s lips and sealed them fast? |
6945 | What invisible, subtle power prevented the young man from falling on his knees and confessing his love for the pure Marguerite? |
6945 | What knowledge had of late been imparted to her father? |
6945 | What latent property lies hid in a withered moss rose? |
6945 | What nature could withstand Marguerite Verne''s entreaties? |
6945 | What prevented the young man-- aye, every inch a man-- from falling on his knees and declaring his love, and begging a slight return for such love? |
6945 | What right had he to offer consolation? |
6945 | What shall I do with poor Huntington, my latest flame? |
6945 | What subtle power caused Marguerite to look around? |
6945 | What subtle power caused her to hold her breath as if oppressed with some invisible presence? |
6945 | What the devil is up? |
6945 | What then is to debar such an one from entry into the best social circle the city affords? |
6945 | What was to be done? |
6945 | What''s your price?" |
6945 | Where is that novel I saw you reading yesterday?" |
6945 | Who can picture the joy those words gave? |
6945 | Who then would have dreamed that Josie Jordan would become a clergyman''s wife?" |
6945 | Why did I not die ere this fatal news had reached me? |
6945 | Why did I not see my folly ere it was too late? |
6945 | Why do not our children see as we do?" |
6945 | Why does Hubert Tracy instinctively cast a glance towards the new comer, and feel a slight shudder through his frame? |
6945 | Why does it come forth from its shallow sepulchre and meet me on the most trifling occasions? |
6945 | Why such sentiments? |
6945 | Why was it that Marguerite shrank from the touch of Hubert Tracy''s hand as if stung by an adder? |
6945 | Why, you look as if you had been trailed through seven cities-- got the blues,--eh?" |
6945 | Will you trust me?" |
6945 | Will you trust me?" |
6945 | You ask,"Had he a home?" |
6945 | You surely do not like him either?" |
6945 | am I spared to wreck her happiness as well as my own? |
6945 | and was there in her marriage with Montague Arnold the least approach to sympathy? |
6945 | here already, chum? |
6945 | is it possible that my child loves the demon? |
6945 | is that you, Arnold? |
6945 | is there anything on this earth more enchanting than a quaint old Scotch ballad?" |
6945 | is there one true woman?" |
6945 | mothers, why not educate your daughters to be sensible beings? |
6945 | my darling, where is to be found such happiness as ours?" |
6945 | what has prompted you to do anything so dreadful?" |
6945 | what the deuce took you_ there_?" |
6945 | what''s that purty thing a- hangin''out in front of that''ere stoppin''place? |
6945 | what''s this? |
6945 | why can not we live in a state of blissful oblivion?" |
7885 | ''Why will you be silent? 7885 An''are you sorry for our agreement?" |
7885 | An''what are you doing with that box and dice I see in your hand? |
7885 | An''where would I get em''but in the heads of your own sheep? 7885 And do you blame, master?" |
7885 | And do you say no more nor that? |
7885 | And how did you know there were six, you poor innocent? |
7885 | And how did you like the sport? |
7885 | And what do you say to me,says''Saint Kavin,"for making her the like?" |
7885 | And where will I look for''em? |
7885 | And who else should I mean? 7885 And who wo n''t you have, may I be so bold as to ask?" |
7885 | And will you direct me to where she dwells? 7885 Are you doing any soothsaying?" |
7885 | Are you making game of me, man; what else have I to stake? |
7885 | Are you strong? |
7885 | Are you wishful to hang me a third time? |
7885 | Art thou shaved, man? |
7885 | Blur- an- agers, how came ye to know about my goose? |
7885 | But will you gi''e me all the ground the goose flew over? |
7885 | But you''ll keep your word true? |
7885 | Dear me,said Tom,"but is n''t it surprising to hear the stonechatters singing so late in the season?" |
7885 | Devil a one of me knows,said Tom;"but of malt, I suppose, what else?" |
7885 | Did you ever see Fin? |
7885 | Do n''t you see her there away from you? |
7885 | Do you see that black thing at the end of the field? |
7885 | Have n''t you chariot and horses and hounds? |
7885 | Have you any more to stake? |
7885 | He''ll do well enough,said one;"but who''s to mind him whilst we''re away, who''ll turn the fire, who''ll see that he does n''t burn?" |
7885 | Heardst thou ever the like? |
7885 | How could I go? |
7885 | How could I kill you,asked the king''s son,"after what you have done for me?" |
7885 | How could I? |
7885 | How did you forget? |
7885 | How do you know that? |
7885 | How much for your hides, my men? |
7885 | I am King O''Toole,says he,"prince and plennypennytinchery of these parts,"says he;"but how came ye to know that?" |
7885 | I know that you are a great rascal; and where did you get the eyes? |
7885 | I suppose,said the Lepracaun, very civilly,"you have no further occasion for me?" |
7885 | I''ll give you whatever you ask,says the king;"is n''t that fair?" |
7885 | I''m much obleeged to you: where is the baste and yourself going? |
7885 | I''m sure I beg your pardon,said my grandfather"but might I ask you a question?" |
7885 | If thy father had that rod,says the giant,"what would he do with it?" |
7885 | Indeed it is, honest man,replied Oonagh;"God save you kindly-- won''t you be sitting?" |
7885 | Is it a story you want? |
7885 | Is it a tinker you are? |
7885 | Is it fearing I wo n''t pay you, you are? |
7885 | Is it fighting you''ve been? 7885 Is it me myself, you mean?" |
7885 | Is it you, Donald? |
7885 | Is it you,said she,"that were there?" |
7885 | Is that the way you''re leaving me? |
7885 | Is there any other young woman in the house? |
7885 | Is this the way you are mending the path, Jack? |
7885 | Is thy daughter mine now? |
7885 | It''s daybreak that''s the matter: do n''t you see light yonder? |
7885 | Jack, you anointed scoundrel, what do you mean? |
7885 | Jack, you vagabone, do you see what the cows are at? |
7885 | Jewels, do you say? 7885 May your hand turn into a pig''s foot with you when you think of tying the rope; why should you speak of hanging me?" |
7885 | Never welcome you in,cried the captain of the guard,"did n''t we hang you this minute, and what brings you here?" |
7885 | Now, O Conall,said the king,"were you ever in a harder place than to be seeing your lot of sons hanged tomorrow? |
7885 | Now,said he to the story- teller,"what kind of animal would you rather be, a deer, a fox, or a hare? |
7885 | Now,said the lank grey beggarman;"has any one a mind to run after the dog and on the course?" |
7885 | Now,said the raven,"see you that house yonder? |
7885 | Now,says he,"she''ll be without talk any more; now, Guleesh, what good will she be to you when she''ll be dumb? |
7885 | O musha, mother,says Jack,"why do you ax me that question? |
7885 | Oonagh,said he,"can you do nothing for me? |
7885 | So the sea- maiden put up his head(_ Who do you mean? 7885 So,"says Tom to the king,"will you let me have the other half of the princess if I bring you the flail?" |
7885 | Thank you, ma''am,says he, sitting down;"you''re Mrs. M''Coul, I suppose?" |
7885 | The host,they cried;"what do you want with the host? |
7885 | There is gloom on your face, girl,said the youth;"what do you here?" |
7885 | This is the third time, and who knows what luck you may have? 7885 To be sure, you lazy sluggard, I do?" |
7885 | To whom art thou talking, my son? |
7885 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
7885 | Troutie, bonny little fellow,said she,"am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
7885 | Well, honest man,says the king,"and how is it you make your money so aisy?" |
7885 | Well, may be you''d be civil enough to tell_ us_ what you''ve got in the pitcher there? |
7885 | Well, well,cried them all, when he came within hearing,"any chance of our property?" |
7885 | Well, what about_ them_? |
7885 | What are you doing there, you rascal? |
7885 | What are you doing, you contrary thief? |
7885 | What canst thou do? |
7885 | What colour do you want the mare to be? |
7885 | What could I do with the twelve iron ones for myself or my master? 7885 What gift,"said his wife,"would you give me that I could make you laugh?" |
7885 | What is the good of that? 7885 What is the reason of your journey?" |
7885 | What like are these men when seen, if we were to see them? |
7885 | What men are these you refer to? |
7885 | What news have you to- day? |
7885 | What news the day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news to- day? |
7885 | What news today? |
7885 | What piercing, shrill cry is that-- the most melodious my ear ever heard, and the shrillest that ever struck my heart of all the cries I ever heard? |
7885 | What purse is that you are talking about? |
7885 | What reason had you to strike the man who won my daughter? |
7885 | What reward would you give me for sending plenty of fish to you? |
7885 | What robe will you wear? |
7885 | What scoundrel struck that blow? |
7885 | What suitor is that? |
7885 | What work can ye do? |
7885 | What would bring them there? |
7885 | What''ll you take for that hide? |
7885 | What''s the matter, friends? |
7885 | What''s the matter? 7885 What''s the matter?" |
7885 | What''s the reward for putting it back in the bundle as it was before? |
7885 | What''s the reward you would ask? |
7885 | When he felt the birds calling in the morning, and knew that the day was, he said--''Art thou sleeping? 7885 When will he be here?" |
7885 | Whence come you, and what is your craft? |
7885 | Whence comest thou, maiden? |
7885 | Where did I get it, is it? 7885 Where is the water, wife?" |
7885 | Where will I look for them? |
7885 | Where? 7885 Who are you, my good man?" |
7885 | Who deluded you? 7885 Who else took the head off the beast but you?" |
7885 | Who else? |
7885 | Who has dared to interfere with my fighting pet? |
7885 | Who is there? |
7885 | Who is this beauty and where is she to be seen, when she was not seen before till you saw her, if you did see her? |
7885 | Who knows,they replied,"who committed the crime?" |
7885 | Who should take the heads off the knot but the man that put the heads on? |
7885 | Who then? |
7885 | Who then? |
7885 | Who then? |
7885 | Why do n''t you come to breakfast, my dear? |
7885 | Why should n''t I be satisfied? |
7885 | Will you give a body a taste of your beer? |
7885 | Will you give me the first son you have? |
7885 | Will you not put out,said Silver- tree,"your little finger through the key- hole, so that your own mother may give a kiss to it?" |
7885 | Will you play again? |
7885 | Will you play again? |
7885 | Will you take a gold piece? |
7885 | Will you take me? |
7885 | Would you tell a body,says the cock that was perched on the ass''s head,"who was it that opened the door for the robbers the other night?" |
7885 | You home- spun shoe carle, do you think I am fit to be your thrall? |
7885 | You wo n''t go back o''your word? |
7885 | You would not cheat the poor man, would you? |
7885 | You, you poor creature, what good would you do? |
7885 | ''Hast thou boiled that youngster for me?'' |
7885 | ''Play up with you, why should you be silent? |
7885 | ''Strike up with you,''said the head bard,''why should we be still? |
7885 | A LEGEND OF KNOCKMANY What Irish man, woman, or child has not heard of our renowned Hibernian Hercules, the great and glorious Fin M''Coul? |
7885 | A while after this he called again:"Are your asleep?" |
7885 | After some more talk the king says,"What are you?" |
7885 | After they had gone and were out of sight, the henwife came to the kitchen and said:"Well, my dear, are you for church to- day?" |
7885 | After they had gone, the henwife came in and asked:"Will you go to church to- day?" |
7885 | Ah, now, could n''t you take me with you?" |
7885 | Ah, will any of you pull a bed of dry grass for me? |
7885 | And again the mighty voice thundered:"Do you see this great chest of mine?" |
7885 | And if she asks you, Were you at the battle of the birds? |
7885 | And now tell me what dress will you have?" |
7885 | And she said to me,''What brought you here?'' |
7885 | And the giant asked him,"Where is thy father when he has that brave rod?" |
7885 | And the voice said:"Do you see this great head of mine?" |
7885 | And what do you think I made it of?" |
7885 | And when its neck was shown, the thundering voice came again and said:"Do you see this great neck of mine?" |
7885 | Are you in need of soothsaying?" |
7885 | Are you satisfied, Guleesh, and will you do what we''re telling you?" |
7885 | Are you sorry for hiring me, master?" |
7885 | Are you sorry for it?" |
7885 | Are you sorry for our agreement?" |
7885 | At last they stood still, and a man of them said to Guleesh:"Guleesh, do you know where you are now?" |
7885 | But about the time when he should drive the cattle homewards, who should he see coming but a great giant with his sword in his hand? |
7885 | But does that hare come here still?" |
7885 | But have you seen her, and are Deirdre''s hue and complexion as before?" |
7885 | Connachar came out in haste and cried with wrath:"Who is there on the floor of fight, slaughtering my men?" |
7885 | Deirdre heard the voice and said to her foster- mother:"O foster- mother, what cry is that?" |
7885 | Did I not hear you speaking to the king''s son in the palace to- night? |
7885 | Did n''t you see the gold with your own two eyes?" |
7885 | Did you never hear tell of the Danes?" |
7885 | Do you blame me for what I have done?" |
7885 | Do you blame me, sir?" |
7885 | Do you think for all the money in Ireland, I''d run the risk of seeing my lady tramp home on foot?" |
7885 | Fin, who was dressed for the occasion as much like a boy as possible, got up, and bringing Cucullin out,"Are you strong?" |
7885 | For the comic relief of this volume I have therefore had to turn mainly to the Irish peasant of the Pale; and what richer source could I draw from? |
7885 | Guleesh, is n''t that a nice turn you did us, and we so kind to you? |
7885 | Guleesh, my boy, are you here with us again? |
7885 | Guleesh, you clown, you thief, that no good may happen you, why did you play that trick on us?" |
7885 | Has n''t it kept me and mine for years?" |
7885 | He called to speak to the master in the haggard, and said he,"What are servants asked to do in this country after aten their supper?" |
7885 | He gave a cross look to the visitors, and says he to Jack,"What do you want here, my fine fellow? |
7885 | He shouted,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
7885 | He sputtered it out, and cried,"Man o''the house, is n''t it a great shame for you to have any one in the room that would do such a nasty thing?" |
7885 | Her husband forgot, and touched her rather roughly on the shoulder, saying,"Is this a time for laughter?" |
7885 | Her husband tapped her on the shoulder, and asked her,"Why do you weep?" |
7885 | How are you getting on with your woman? |
7885 | I thought to myself that I was near my foe and far from my friends, and I called to the woman,''What are you doing here?'' |
7885 | I went in, and I said to her,''What was the matter that you were putting the knife on the neck of the child?'' |
7885 | In comes the giant, and he said:"Hast thou cleaned the byre, king''s son?" |
7885 | Is he at home?" |
7885 | It was a good trick you played on us last year?" |
7885 | Just then we could be hearing the footsteps of the giant,''What shall I do? |
7885 | Keep your toe in your pump, will you? |
7885 | May I be so bold as to ask where yez are all going?" |
7885 | May I make bold to ask how is your goose, King O''Toole?" |
7885 | Maybe I wo n''t remember your kindness if ever I find you in hardship; and where in the world are you all going?" |
7885 | Maybe you''re sorry for your bargain?" |
7885 | My wings, are they not withered stumps? |
7885 | Now, when they told Arthur how they had sped, Arthur said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek first?" |
7885 | On a day of days, while he was fishing, there rose a sea- maiden at the side of his boat, and she asked him,"Are you getting much fish?" |
7885 | Or has that devil made you really dumb, when he struck his nasty hand on your jaw?" |
7885 | Out came the tanner:"How much for your hides, my good men?" |
7885 | Said Gwrhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
7885 | Said Silver- tree,"Troutie, bonny little fellow, am not I the most beautiful queen in the world?" |
7885 | Said Yspathaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
7885 | Said a man of them to him:"Are you coming with us to- night, Guleesh?" |
7885 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon?" |
7885 | Seeing her so vexed and so changed in the face, the old woman asked:"What''s the trouble that''s on you now?" |
7885 | She asked the boy"Did you tell the master what I told you to tell him?" |
7885 | She cried:"Naois, son of Uisnech, will you leave me?" |
7885 | She rose up before him, and said:"Did n''t I tell you not to leave a bone of my body without stepping on it? |
7885 | So Conn of the hundred fights said to him,"Is it to thy mind what the woman says, my son?" |
7885 | Suddenly she paused, and said aloud:"Where are the women? |
7885 | Thackeray?) |
7885 | That vagabond, bad luck to him--""You mean Donald O''Neary?" |
7885 | The eldest sister came home alone, and the husband asked,"Where is your sister?" |
7885 | The giant asked him--"If thy father had that rod what would he do with it?" |
7885 | The giant awoke and called,"Are you asleep?" |
7885 | The son asked his father one day,"Is any one troubling you?" |
7885 | The very letters that have spread through all Europe except Russia, are to be traced to the script of these Irish monks: why not certain folk- tales? |
7885 | The woman said:"Whose else should they be?" |
7885 | The wren threshed( what did he thresh with? |
7885 | Then he said,''Where art thou, ring?'' |
7885 | There was once a farmer who was seeking a servant, and the wren met him and said:"What are you seeking?" |
7885 | Well, the long and the short of it was that Donald let the hide go, and, that very evening, who but he should walk up to Hudden''s door? |
7885 | What dress would you like?" |
7885 | What has happened to you, Gelban? |
7885 | What kind of soothsaying do you want?" |
7885 | What''s the matter?" |
7885 | What''s the matter?" |
7885 | When he said me then,''Is the ring fitting thee?'' |
7885 | When she perceived that he was asleep, she set her mouth quietly to the hole that was in the lid, and she said to me''was I alive?'' |
7885 | When the giant came home, he said:"Hast thou thatched the byre, king''s son?" |
7885 | When the sisters came home, the henwife asked:"Have you any news from the church?" |
7885 | When the two sisters came home the henwife asked:"Have you any news to- day from the church?" |
7885 | Where are you going?" |
7885 | Where have you been so long?" |
7885 | Where''s all your invention? |
7885 | Which of the keys should I keep?" |
7885 | Who is she, or how did you get her?" |
7885 | Why say so when you were at home every Sunday?" |
7885 | Why should n''t I have them all to myself?" |
7885 | Why what has a poor old man like you to play for?" |
7885 | Will you begin, if you please, and put in the thatch again, just as if you were doing it for your mother''s cabin?" |
7885 | Will you lend me your best pair of scales?" |
7885 | Would n''t it be a fine thing for a farmer to be marrying a princess, all dressed in gold and jewels?" |
7885 | Would you have me meddle with the bastes of any neighbour, who might put me in the Stone Jug for it?" |
7885 | Would you not sooner stay with me than with them?" |
7885 | You would n''t wish to keep the luck all to yourself?" |
7885 | an''who is it, avick? |
7885 | and what would you be taking their feet off for?" |
7885 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
7885 | he shouted;"how is this? |
7885 | here I am, and what do you want with me?" |
7885 | or mayhap you met the police, ill luck to them?" |
7885 | said Fin again;"are you able to squeeze water out of that white stone?" |
7885 | said Tom, bursting out laughing;"sure you do n''t think me to be such a fool as to believe that?" |
7885 | said he, suddenly, as he looked again at the young girl,"in the name of God, who have you here? |
7885 | said he;"is this where the great Fin M''Coul lives?" |
7885 | said the giant;"but were n''t you impudent to come to my land and trouble me in this way? |
7885 | says Ould Nick;"is that the way? |
7885 | then,"says the king,"who are you?" |
7885 | to take a woman with him that never said as much to him as,''How do you do?'' |
7885 | what for?" |
7885 | what made your sons go to spring on my sons till my big son was killed by your children? |
7885 | what shall I do?'' |
7885 | where did you get it?" |
7885 | where?" |
7885 | who was calling him, and not a soul in sight? |
40083 | ''A noticeable man,''eh, Waveney? 40083 ''All''s well that ends well,''eh, Dorrie? |
40083 | ''That is all very well,''returned the conductor, in a disagreeable voice,''but what I wants to know, sir, is how am I to get my fare?'' 40083 ''Will you allow me to offer you this?'' |
40083 | A friend of your mother''s, my dear? |
40083 | Ai n''t it natural, Miss Mollie? 40083 Althea, are you serious? |
40083 | Am I like my great- grandmother Markham? |
40083 | And Ann is to be sent away? 40083 And Ella-- where is your wife, Trist?" |
40083 | And are you ferry well, Miss Ward? 40083 And dad?" |
40083 | And must you be going, Miss Ward? 40083 And not Noel?" |
40083 | And now? |
40083 | And she approves? |
40083 | And that fetched you, of course? |
40083 | And that makes you very happy? |
40083 | And the name, Waveney? |
40083 | And their names?--their Christian names, I mean? |
40083 | And what do you want with me, my little girl? |
40083 | And when may I ask him to marry me? |
40083 | And why not, Wave? |
40083 | And you are to see Miss Harford to- morrow? |
40083 | And you have settled all this without speaking to me? |
40083 | And you think you will get it, Thorold? |
40083 | And you went home with him? |
40083 | And you will never be faithless again? |
40083 | Andrew Duncan& Son, of Number Twenty- one, Lincoln''s Inn? 40083 Are n''t you a little mixed, Althea?" |
40083 | Are n''t you ashamed of yourselves, you two, quarrelling over a silly old battle, that every one else has now forgotten? 40083 Are they all in the verandah still?" |
40083 | Are you fery well, Miss Ward? 40083 Are you glad, Wave?" |
40083 | Are you quite sure of that, Waveney? |
40083 | Are you sure of that, Doreen? |
40083 | Are you sure of that? |
40083 | Are you sure? 40083 Bet, darling,"whispered Joanna, pressing the little white- gowned figure tenderly in her arms,"did father teach you those prayers?" |
40083 | Betty, darling, tell me, why are you out by yourself? |
40083 | But it is not a little way to the Red House, is it? |
40083 | But she married him? |
40083 | But this is much better, is n''t it, dear? |
40083 | But who is to look after her? 40083 But why?" |
40083 | But you like Miss Doreen, too? |
40083 | But you will not leave me without my message, Miss Harford? |
40083 | But, Ally, dear,remonstrated Doreen,"why do you speak in that regretful voice? |
40083 | But, Moritz, why are you so afraid of appearing in your true colours? 40083 But, Thorold, are you sure you really wish it?" |
40083 | But, father, are you sure you do not mind? |
40083 | But, father, why have you dropped such nice friends? |
40083 | But-- but you are not really rich, are you? |
40083 | Can you not come with me? 40083 Cincinnatus went back to the plough, and why not Everard Ward?" |
40083 | Darling, do you think I do n''t know all that? |
40083 | Dear, dearest Miss Althea, was it really you? |
40083 | Did I? 40083 Did Mr. Ingram write to you, Mollie?" |
40083 | Did he say those very words, Mollie? |
40083 | Did they send for me? 40083 Did you find out anything from the Black Prince?" |
40083 | Did you know them well, father? |
40083 | Did you not tell me that Miss Althea suffered with her eyes, and needed a reader and companion? 40083 Did you say Waveney? |
40083 | Did you want your little Bet to be pretty, dad? |
40083 | Did you, really? 40083 Do n''t you care for pretty things, too, Waveney?" |
40083 | Do n''t you know that I love you better than anything in the world? 40083 Do n''t you recollect the dear old governor said something of the kind on his death- bed? |
40083 | Do n''t you remember Lady Betty Ingram, Moritz? 40083 Do n''t you remember you often had dessert on the terrace?" |
40083 | Do you know how you can thank me best? |
40083 | Do you know it? |
40083 | Do you know my home, little lady? |
40083 | Do you mean from here? |
40083 | Do you mean that I am to go to Miss Harford? 40083 Do you mean that you have actually walked downstairs?" |
40083 | Do you mean the old Manor House? |
40083 | Do you mean they are for us? |
40083 | Do you remember an old friend, Tristram? |
40083 | Do you think Doreen and I mean to lose sight of you? 40083 Do you think I am going to be entertained by a description of your baby- house?" |
40083 | Do you think I should fear anything with you? |
40083 | Do you think I was going to leave you alone all the winter? 40083 Do you think Noel is right?" |
40083 | Do you think it will fit? |
40083 | Do you think you could walk a little now? |
40083 | Do you want me to read to you to- night? |
40083 | Do you? |
40083 | Does Miss Harford do that sort of thing? |
40083 | Does not Uncle Theo like me? 40083 Everard, dear old friend, you are not angry with me?" |
40083 | Father, I wish you would tell me how you first came to know the Misses Harford? |
40083 | Father, dear, do you really mean to say that the Harfords gave you up because you were poor? |
40083 | Father, dear, how can we tell? 40083 Father, is Mollie dying?" |
40083 | Five- and- twenty years, was it not, Gwen? |
40083 | Glad that my Mollie should have this beautiful home, and all these fine things? 40083 Have n''t you watched some boy throw a stone in a pond? |
40083 | Have you come for me? 40083 Have you come to spend the evening?" |
40083 | Have you finished, Waveney? |
40083 | Have you seen McGill? |
40083 | Have you told dad about Monsieur Blackie? |
40083 | Have you, indeed? |
40083 | He loves her better than his pretty Mollie? 40083 Her twin sister-- that beautiful girl I saw in Old Ranelagh gardens?" |
40083 | How about the survival of the fittest? |
40083 | How can I help it, when you have been so good to me? 40083 How can he help it? |
40083 | How can she care for that plain, old- looking man? |
40083 | How could we guess that you were Noel''s unknown friend? |
40083 | How did Mollie catch it? |
40083 | How do you know that your sister''s life may not be spared? 40083 How do you mean, dear Miss Althea?" |
40083 | How is Joa? |
40083 | However did you get in? 40083 Hulloa, what have we here?" |
40083 | I am rather a riddle to you, am I not? |
40083 | I painted many a worse picture when we were at the Tin Shanty, eh, Gwen? |
40083 | I suppose my sister is in the library, Mitchell? |
40083 | I suppose you did not hear their Christian names? |
40083 | I was a lucky fellow, was I not, dear? 40083 I was afraid I frightened you?" |
40083 | I wonder if I ever shall have a wife? |
40083 | I wonder if he has anything on his mind? |
40083 | I wonder which of them is right? 40083 I wonder why she has never married?" |
40083 | If Mollie or I did not marry, should we ever be like that? |
40083 | If he loves her, why does he not tell her so? |
40083 | Is Lord Ralston married? |
40083 | Is it always cold in England, father? 40083 Is it another dream?" |
40083 | Is it because she is an old maid? |
40083 | Is it my little lady? |
40083 | Is it not a little awkward for you, Althea? |
40083 | Is it not beautiful, Wave? 40083 Is it some one you have found in the street?" |
40083 | Is it to be a surprise? |
40083 | Is it your house? 40083 Is it-- can it be Althea?" |
40083 | Is not that rather crushing? |
40083 | Is old Andrew Duncan still in existence? |
40083 | Is that a message to father? |
40083 | Is that all your family? 40083 Is that another present? |
40083 | Is that for me, Miss Harford? |
40083 | Is that you, Thorold? |
40083 | Is the picture friend only an acquaintance? |
40083 | Is your father''s name Everard Ward? |
40083 | It is for your sister''s benefit that you do these clever sketches? 40083 It is not such a very long drive, is it? |
40083 | It is not very inviting- looking, is it? 40083 It is the season for old memories, is it not? |
40083 | It was delicious,she murmured, drowsily;"and oh, Wave, why are you so cold, darling? |
40083 | Joa seems very happy, does she not, Dorrie? 40083 Laws, miss, ai n''t it beautiful and like- life?" |
40083 | MY DEAR MISS MOLLIE,was all it said--"Do you think you are well enough to see an old friend? |
40083 | May I give the cabman some? 40083 Miss Harford,"she said, in her poor, hoarse voice,"will you do something for me? |
40083 | Miss Mollie, I mean; have you any message for her? |
40083 | Miss Mollie,he continued,"do you remember the first time I saw you? |
40083 | Miss Ward reads very nicely, does she not, Aunt Sara? |
40083 | Miss Ward, have you forgiven me yet for doing my duty like a man? |
40083 | Miss Ward, is this wise or right? 40083 Mollie, do you wish to pain me, that you say such things to me? |
40083 | Moritz, is this my dear new sister? |
40083 | My days have been always joyless, and what does a little more pain matter? 40083 My dear Joa"--for his sense of fairness was roused by this--"why should not the poor girl have a lover? |
40083 | My dear Moritz, are you crazy? 40083 My dear child, can you not trust me?" |
40083 | My dear old friend, do you not know me? |
40083 | My friend was right, was he not? |
40083 | Noel, what is the matter with your sister? |
40083 | Now what on earth has put it into my cousins''heads to come here to- night? |
40083 | Now, Aunt Sara,returned Miss Harford, good humouredly,"how are Miss Ward and I to understand each other if you will keep interrupting us? |
40083 | Now, Betty dear, will you show me the way to your room? |
40083 | Oh, Miss Althea, how am I to thank you? |
40083 | Oh, Moritz, did you really? |
40083 | Oh, Noel, please do not sing so out of tune; you are as flat as a pancake, and as rough as a nutmeg grater, is n''t he, Moll? |
40083 | Oh, Thorold,she said, and her eyes were full of tears,"how do we know what that poor child may have to suffer for her imprudence? |
40083 | Oh, Wave, do you know what I heard as we came out of church just now? |
40083 | Oh, Wave, do you think that our good little Monsieur Blackie sent it? 40083 Oh, Wave, is he not ridiculous?" |
40083 | Oh, Wave, what will you do? |
40083 | Oh, do you know them? |
40083 | Oh, do you think so? |
40083 | Oh, father, is Mr. Ingram here? |
40083 | Oh, must you go, Wavie, dear? |
40083 | Oh, no, not really? |
40083 | Oh, please, I am quite lost, and will you take me home? |
40083 | Oh, then he is not poor as we are? |
40083 | Oh, then you knew I was alone? |
40083 | Oh, what is it? |
40083 | Oh, why, father? |
40083 | Oh, yes, why not? |
40083 | Oh, yes,--have you heard of him? |
40083 | Oh, you poor little thing,she said, kindly,"where do you live, and what is your name?" |
40083 | Oh-- do you think she will do? |
40083 | Shall I read to you a little? |
40083 | Shall I tell you about my dear old men at the Hospital? |
40083 | Shall we really find them, father? |
40083 | Shall we stand and watch it now? |
40083 | Shall we take a turn in the corridor? |
40083 | Shall you wear it every evening, Wave? |
40083 | So he says to me,''You are dad''s Betty, are you, my little Miss?'' 40083 So you went out, after all?" |
40083 | Thank you, I have heard enough; but I am inclined to take McGill''s part, for how could you see clearly in all that smoke and crowd? 40083 Then mother knew them, too?" |
40083 | Then what did your riddle mean? |
40083 | Theo, do you remember what day this is? |
40083 | There are n''t any homes in England, are there? 40083 There was an old woman once, Aunt Joa, she was a silly old woman, and she did say to dad,''Why do you let that baby pray for her mother? |
40083 | There was no fixed price, was there, Mollie? 40083 There''s Aunt Sara,"she would go on,"is she not like one of Watteau''s Shepherdesses? |
40083 | There, Gwen, do you hear that? |
40083 | They are solicitors, are they not? |
40083 | Thorold,returned his sister, plaintively-- and now she was actually crying--"you do not expect me to help with my money?" |
40083 | Trist, do you know that Thorold has nearly paid off father''s debts? |
40083 | Trouble? 40083 Trouble? |
40083 | Troubled? |
40083 | Two for daddie, and one big one for Uncle Theo? 40083 WHAT AM I TO SAY?" |
40083 | WHAT AM I TO SAY? |
40083 | Was Dinah your brother''s wife? |
40083 | Was Miss Althea Rosalind? |
40083 | Was Sheila your sister? |
40083 | Was it a dream? |
40083 | Was it a poorty leddy, then, and did she want the poor little chickabiddies? |
40083 | Was it really bad of me to go out and meet you, dad?--really and truly? |
40083 | Was n''t it funny? 40083 Was n''t the old chap in?" |
40083 | Was not father here really? |
40083 | Was she engaged to McGill then? |
40083 | Was this not a man and a brother? |
40083 | Was your sister christened Mollie? |
40083 | Wave, why do you stand there, as though you were turned to stone? 40083 Waveney, my poor child, what are you doing? |
40083 | We are very poor, but I would rather please you, dear, than have ever so much money-- you know that, do you not? |
40083 | We must just wait until bed- time; and then wo n''t we make a night of it, Moll? |
40083 | Well, Doreen, what has brought you over this evening? |
40083 | Well, Moritz? |
40083 | Well, child, what then? |
40083 | Well, dear, shall I write and tell him so? 40083 Well, you see,"went on Waveney,"one has steep little bits of road now and then, like that poor King of Corinth-- Sisyphus-- was not that his name? |
40083 | Well,observed Everard, with a questioning smile,"have you talked Mollie into a fever?" |
40083 | Were there only those two brothers, father, dear? |
40083 | What am I to do? |
40083 | What am I to say? |
40083 | What are we to do with her? |
40083 | What can you mean? |
40083 | What could I say? |
40083 | What did you think of the true story of Lady Betty? |
40083 | What do looks matter? 40083 What do you mean, father?" |
40083 | What do you mean? |
40083 | What does it matter about me? |
40083 | What does it matter whether I grind or not? |
40083 | What does it mean? |
40083 | What does it mean? |
40083 | What does it mean? |
40083 | What is it, Miss Mollie? |
40083 | What is it, Mollie darling? |
40083 | What makes you so faint- hearted? 40083 What on earth makes me think of Trist to- night?" |
40083 | What picnic? |
40083 | What picnic? |
40083 | What will Mr. Ingram say? |
40083 | What, still masquerading? 40083 Whatever made you say that, Mollie?" |
40083 | Whatever makes you think so? |
40083 | Where are the shrimps? |
40083 | Where are you going? |
40083 | Where are you taking me, sweetheart? |
40083 | Where did you gain your knowledge of men, little girl? |
40083 | Where have you been? |
40083 | Where is Doreen? 40083 Where is Miss Ward?" |
40083 | Where is father, Mollie? |
40083 | Which is Miss Althea''s? |
40083 | Whichever could it be? 40083 Who buys them, dad?" |
40083 | Who is that child? |
40083 | Why am I like this? |
40083 | Why are men so weak and women so faithful? 40083 Why are you out alone this dreadful night? |
40083 | Why did you rouse me? |
40083 | Why do you call her Miss Ward? |
40083 | Why do you call him Reynard, Waveney? 40083 Why do you not go to the Red House oftener?" |
40083 | Why have you not written to us all these years? |
40083 | Why need the snipping of ribbon, as you describe it, interfere with the development of the higher life? 40083 Why not wait for to- morrow?" |
40083 | Why should we not have a box, too? 40083 Why should you go?" |
40083 | Why, Bet, you chatterbox, are you talking about your friend the captain? |
40083 | Why, Bet,it said,"why are you perched up here, like a lost robin? |
40083 | Why, Bet,observed her uncle, rather shocked at this familiarity,"are n''t you taking rather a liberty with your kind friend?" |
40083 | Why, yes,she returned, coolly,"but we are not throwing stones just now, are we?" |
40083 | Will any one have any strawberries? |
40083 | Will that do, Laura? |
40083 | Will you allow your maid to hang these birds up in your larder? |
40083 | Will you come in here for a minute, Miss Ward? |
40083 | Will you drink this, my dear? 40083 Will you not stay and let me talk to you a little?" |
40083 | Will you pardon me, Miss Ward, if I ask if we have ever met before? 40083 Will you promise to listen, dearest, without interrupting me?" |
40083 | Will you tell me, please, is it very far to Erpingham? |
40083 | Will you? 40083 Wo n''t Mollie prowl, too?" |
40083 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
40083 | Would it be their last difference? |
40083 | Would it not be better for your friend to see the picture first? |
40083 | Would next Tuesday suit you? 40083 Yes, I was admiring it just now,"replied Thorold;"but you will sit down for five minutes, will you not?" |
40083 | Yes, and it was real mean of you,grumbled Noel;"but there, what are you to expect from a woman? |
40083 | Yes; and then you missed your way? |
40083 | You are quite sure, dad? 40083 You do n''t really believe that the dealers will refuse''King Canute''?" |
40083 | You do not surely mean, Miss Mollie, that your father has forbidden my visits? |
40083 | You were speaking of your sister, were you not? |
40083 | Your brother is happy at school, then? |
40083 | ''And a little child shall lead them;''do you remember those words? |
40083 | ''Are you very tired, father dear? |
40083 | ''Do you call yourself a gentleman to ride in a public conveyance without paying your fare?'' |
40083 | ''King Canute,''was it not? |
40083 | ''Why do n''t you try something lively and less historical?'' |
40083 | ''with large grey eyes?''" |
40083 | Althea listened to this in silence; then she said, rather gravely,--"Mr. Ward, what are we to do about Waveney? |
40083 | Althea, these grapes are unusually fine; do n''t you think Laura Cairns would enjoy some? |
40083 | Althea, why have you done this; why have you heaped these coals of fire upon my head?" |
40083 | And as Althea assented to this with a smile, she continued,"I wonder what Gwen will think of her new sister- in- law?" |
40083 | And father, and Noel, what are they to do?" |
40083 | And how am I to thank him, for all he has done? |
40083 | And how the red firelight streams out on the terrace? |
40083 | And then he frowned, and said, a little anxiously,"You do n''t think the fellow is making up to her, eh, Waveney?" |
40083 | And then in a singularly sweet tenor voice he chanted,--"You hear that boy laughing? |
40083 | And then she asked wickedly,"Is Joanna going to be married?" |
40083 | And then, rather abruptly,"Noel, lad, can you keep a secret-- honour bright, you know, and all that sort of thing?" |
40083 | And then, what were they to do? |
40083 | And then, why did he buy''King Canute''?" |
40083 | And this is your little girl, Tristram? |
40083 | And what could Mollie do after that, except hug her silently, in token of yielding? |
40083 | And what does a little rain matter?" |
40083 | And why ever was Mr. Ingram looking at her in that way? |
40083 | And you really saw her, Althea? |
40083 | And, would you believe it? |
40083 | Are not these shut- in lawns pretty? |
40083 | Are you a student of Wordsworth, Miss Ward?" |
40083 | Are you frightened in the dark, too?" |
40083 | Are you joking, Moritz?" |
40083 | Are you musical?" |
40083 | Are you quite sure?" |
40083 | Are you sure that you are quite strong enough to see Mr. Ingram? |
40083 | Are you sure that you do not really mind it?" |
40083 | Are you very sure that you mean that, dad?" |
40083 | Are your eyes paining you, Althea?" |
40083 | As I have now attained the age of manhood, is it too much to ask the name of my venerable benefactor?''" |
40083 | As Nurse Helena opened the door, she heard Mollie''s dear, familiar voice say, in weak accents,"Wave, darling, is it really you?" |
40083 | But how could his cousin Althea imagine that two girls could be alone at a place like Eastbourne? |
40083 | But how was he to identify the little girl in her shabby hat with this dainty little figure in white? |
40083 | But is it really settled, Wave?" |
40083 | But now there was no Orlando, what was to be done? |
40083 | But what am I to do for a nice wrap?" |
40083 | But what does it matter, McGill, how many of those poor wretches you killed?" |
40083 | But when he was left alone, he said to himself,"Now, why in the world should they have hit on that name Kitlands? |
40083 | But you will be saying to yourself,''Is this the way Miss Harford''s reader performs her duties?'' |
40083 | But yours is nice baby hair, too-- it is like little rings that have come undone; but it is pretty, do n''t you think so?" |
40083 | But, Mollie dear, are we really to have luncheon at Brentwood Hall? |
40083 | But, Wave, what am I thinking about? |
40083 | But, father,"--her voice deepening with emotion,--"do you think he is quite good enough for our sweet Mollie? |
40083 | But, for years to come, how was he to marry? |
40083 | But, poor child, what does it matter?" |
40083 | But, seriously, is it not perfectly delicious to think we shall be together every Sunday?" |
40083 | By the bye, Waveney, I wonder why they left Kitlands?" |
40083 | By the bye, Waveney, do you play tennis?" |
40083 | Can you fancy Titania coming down her ladder of cobwebs? |
40083 | Can you tell me if any one of the name of Chaytor lives at Dereham?" |
40083 | Can you walk faster, darling?" |
40083 | Corporal, why do you vex him with contradiction? |
40083 | Could sickness and sorrow of heart have wrought this change in these few days? |
40083 | Dad, dear, did you find Aunt Joa?" |
40083 | Darling, do you think you can care for poor Monsieur Blackie a little?" |
40083 | Day after day, month after month, this was Joanna''s never- varying formula-- until"Is that you, Thorold?" |
40083 | Did you not understand the telegram? |
40083 | Did you see the toy cupboard, where all our dear old dolls and toys are stored? |
40083 | Do n''t you know how I hate to leave my old Sweetheart? |
40083 | Do n''t you know that I love you better than myself? |
40083 | Do n''t you know that all these fine things-- these satins and silks and laces-- would be most incongruous in my position? |
40083 | Do n''t you recollect that horrid note- book that we found?" |
40083 | Do n''t you remember Mr. Fullarton said so? |
40083 | Do n''t you remember how low he was on my wedding day? |
40083 | Do n''t you think he would be pleased, Wave?" |
40083 | Do n''t you want me to be happy?" |
40083 | Do you know what the Germans call''_ heimweh_?'' |
40083 | Do you know where their doctor lives?" |
40083 | Do you know you have not wished the dear ladies a happy Christmas yet?" |
40083 | Do you know, Waveney?" |
40083 | Do you live there?" |
40083 | Do you not wish me to accompany you?" |
40083 | Do you read my little parable, dear?" |
40083 | Do you really wish me to take a box for Wednesday?" |
40083 | Do you remember that March we spent in the Riviera, and those orange groves, and the bed of Neapolitan violets under our window? |
40083 | Do you remember, Miss Mollie?" |
40083 | Do you think I am finding fault with you? |
40083 | Do you think I did not know what my Waveney was feeling? |
40083 | Do you think Jemima could make me a cup of coffee?" |
40083 | Do you think he has ceased to care for us?" |
40083 | Do you think you would feel more at home with us if we were to call you by your Christian name? |
40083 | Do you want the three grim sisters, snow and hail and frost, to be among your guests?" |
40083 | Does your head ache? |
40083 | Even my sister, who is severely critical, allows that she makes wonderful strokes; eh, Dorrie?" |
40083 | Father thinks he must be rich, he is so generous with his money; but he will never be too grand to be our friend, will he?" |
40083 | Father, dear, may I see her now?" |
40083 | For in those days how was he to know that a certain sweet Mollie Ward would steal away his heart? |
40083 | Had he ever cared for her really? |
40083 | Had he really wounded her by his desertion, or had her vanity merely suffered? |
40083 | Has he"--and here she hesitated, and flushed--"has he spoken to you yet? |
40083 | Have they no name?" |
40083 | Have we not, old boy?" |
40083 | Have you ever experienced it?" |
40083 | Have you had a hard day? |
40083 | Have you made her your confidante?" |
40083 | Have you no regard for your health?" |
40083 | How am I to live without you? |
40083 | How could any one mistake such devotion? |
40083 | How could he help it, darling? |
40083 | How could he know what the years would bring? |
40083 | How could she complain that anything was wanting when his thoughtful tenderness was so unceasing? |
40083 | How could she help it?--how could she help it?" |
40083 | How do you know, how does any one know about things?" |
40083 | How is one to feel happy without sunshine and warmth? |
40083 | How long is it since you last honoured our poor abode? |
40083 | How was Mr. Ward? |
40083 | How, then, could she doubt that she was beloved? |
40083 | I am pretty nearly at the end of my tether, I can tell you that?" |
40083 | I mean, has he told you that he loves Mollie?" |
40083 | I put the question to her,''Is Everard Ward your father?'' |
40083 | I suppose"--his voice changing perceptibly--"that Miss Mollie and her father and my friend the humourist are well?" |
40083 | I thought Moritz said his friend was away, and that only servants were there?" |
40083 | I wonder what Aunt Joa will think of my little Betty when she sees her?" |
40083 | I wonder why it has never grown long? |
40083 | If Jemima goes at her month, as she threatens, will she not forfeit her wages? |
40083 | If father does not get a good price for his picture, what are we to do?" |
40083 | If she is ill, why is her sister to be kept away? |
40083 | If you were in another part of the field how could you know what he did?" |
40083 | Is Dr. Duncan a clever man?" |
40083 | Is any one ill-- father? |
40083 | Is it because Mollie is so unconscious and that she will not see, and this is his way of winning her? |
40083 | Is it not Kingsley who points out the beauty and grace of helping"lame dogs over stiles?" |
40083 | Is it not a blessing that I have one tidy gown for evenings?" |
40083 | Is it not a pity she has lost her lovely colour? |
40083 | Is it not comfortable to know that''their good works do follow them''? |
40083 | Is it not enough to have one child ill?" |
40083 | Is it not humiliating, dear, to think we are at the mercy of our over- wrought nerves? |
40083 | Is it not strange that she should be Everard Ward''s daughter?" |
40083 | Is it not sweet of her? |
40083 | Is n''t it humiliating, Mollie, that strangers will always think I am a child? |
40083 | Is n''t it time for you to unmask?" |
40083 | Is not the Cubby- house delightful? |
40083 | Is she-- does she look very bad?" |
40083 | Is supper ready? |
40083 | Is that not a funny, roundabout way?" |
40083 | Is there any grave deep enough to bury a woman''s love? |
40083 | Is this not a nice little place? |
40083 | Is your home near?" |
40083 | Is your name long or short?" |
40083 | It may be a mere pebble, but the circles widen and widen until the whole surface of the water is covered with intersecting circles?" |
40083 | It was shameful extravagance, she repeated, more than once; what did it matter if the furniture was a little old fashioned? |
40083 | May I ask if your sister ever takes orders for them?" |
40083 | May I come to you presently? |
40083 | May I go, now?" |
40083 | May I see her soon?" |
40083 | Miss Ward, will you bid your sister good- bye, please? |
40083 | Mollie-- my Mollie-- is not going to die?" |
40083 | Mr. Ward, will you take my place, please?" |
40083 | Mr. Ward, you will not refuse me this pleasure?" |
40083 | Need he have asked such a question? |
40083 | Now should you mind reading us a page or two?" |
40083 | Now will you add to your kindness by informing me of your name and address?'' |
40083 | Now, Waveney, is it not odd that he has never told us where he lives? |
40083 | Now, as we have finished tea, shall I go to your room?" |
40083 | Now, as we have finished tea, shall I take you to your room, my dearie? |
40083 | Now, would you mind telling me, Miss Ward, how much your father expected to get from the dealers?" |
40083 | Oh, Mollie, do you remember that day, and how I heard you singing, and discovered Cinderella sitting on the hearth? |
40083 | Oh, Moritz, why did you do it?" |
40083 | Oh, Thorold, is she not like him? |
40083 | Oh, Thorold, why does he never write? |
40083 | Oh, Wave, somehow it oppresses me to think of it all, for how is one to repay such kindness?" |
40083 | Oh, dear, how excited I was? |
40083 | Oh, dear, oh, dear, was it not just like him? |
40083 | Oh, that is not big enough, is it, Uncle Theo? |
40083 | Oh, what is that?" |
40083 | Ought I to thank him for it? |
40083 | Rabat- la- Koum,"as a big, grey Persian cat rubbed against his legs,"so you are there, old mother of all the cats; and you are coming up with me, eh?" |
40083 | Rather contrasts, are they not?" |
40083 | Shall I ask him to come in the morning, or the afternoon?" |
40083 | Shall I show you the rooms that he has chosen for his future wife, or shall we go to the picture- gallery?" |
40083 | Shall I tell you a secret, dear? |
40083 | Shall we ask Nurse Helena what she thinks about it?" |
40083 | Shall you be afraid to trust yourself to my keeping?" |
40083 | She is to take Rosalind''s part to- night, is she not?" |
40083 | Should he ring the bell? |
40083 | Suppose you and I start a hospital, refuge, or whatever you like to call it, for diseased works of art? |
40083 | Surely she has not left you alone?" |
40083 | Surely"--in a pathetic voice--"you wo n''t begrudge me this last chance of buying clothes for my sweetheart?" |
40083 | Thank you; but how could you guess so cleverly?" |
40083 | That was plain enough, was it not? |
40083 | The parlour door was not opened, and there was no Joanna, with her irritating question,"Is that you, Thorold?" |
40083 | Then why did Lord Ralston''s eyes brighten so strangely, and why did a sudden smile of tender amusement come to his lips? |
40083 | Then, interrupting herself with sudden impatience,"Why do I stop to ask these questions when it is getting late? |
40083 | There, is that not a pretty speech? |
40083 | This kind lady has come to help us; and do n''t you know, my boy, that to a gentleman all women are beautiful?" |
40083 | True, he could not marry for years; but what if he were to tell her that he loved her, and ask her to wait for him, as other women had waited? |
40083 | Ward?" |
40083 | Was he angry or unhappy? |
40083 | Was he glad or sorry for this? |
40083 | Was he really French?" |
40083 | Was her home to be less to her because Mollie would not be there? |
40083 | Was it likely that she of all persons would think ill of him? |
40083 | Was it very bad?" |
40083 | Was n''t that a funny speech? |
40083 | Was not this Christian socialism in its fairest aspect? |
40083 | Was she dreaming? |
40083 | Was she guilty of loving the flesh- pots of Egypt? |
40083 | Was that not true, absolutely true? |
40083 | Was the burden or the joy the greater? |
40083 | Was the name of their house in Surrey Kitlands?" |
40083 | We were good friends once, so why should I put an affront on her by refusing her my daughter''s services?" |
40083 | Well, Miss Mollie, do you think your father would be willing to let my friend have''King Canute''? |
40083 | Well, and how do you think I have been spending my first day of servitude? |
40083 | Well, dear, why do you look at me so?" |
40083 | Well, have we finished our talk?" |
40083 | Well, how have you enjoyed your shopping expedition?" |
40083 | Well, what now, Althea?" |
40083 | Well, who knows what may happen, when I have earned my fortune?" |
40083 | Were you watching for me? |
40083 | What am I to do? |
40083 | What am I to say to him? |
40083 | What are a few pounds, more or less, compared to all you and Mollie have done for me?" |
40083 | What are we to do about the Prince, Miss Mollie?" |
40083 | What are we to do, Miss Ward?" |
40083 | What could I do with them at Cleveland Terrace?" |
40083 | What could the child have to say? |
40083 | What did it matter what a poor, little Cinderella wore at home? |
40083 | What do you say to a picnic party at Brentwood about the middle of next month?" |
40083 | What does that matter? |
40083 | What has happened?" |
40083 | What have you been doing?" |
40083 | What have you done to yourself?" |
40083 | What is it? |
40083 | What is the use of''putting one''s hand to the plough, and looking back?'' |
40083 | What ladies? |
40083 | What should I have done without you?" |
40083 | What was he doing? |
40083 | What were those words that, in spite of her weakness, seemed stamped on her heart and brain? |
40083 | What will Peachey say? |
40083 | What would Mollie say to her long absence? |
40083 | What would Mollie say when he showed her her future home? |
40083 | What would have become of my Porch House Thursdays, and my classes and Library teas? |
40083 | What would the Misses Harford think of her shabby old trunk, that had once belonged to her mother? |
40083 | When my sister leaves me, do you see any reason why we should not be married?" |
40083 | Where did you pick her up?" |
40083 | Where was she? |
40083 | Why do n''t you hit on something pathetic and suggestive-- some fetching little incident that tells its own story?'' |
40083 | Why do you not finish your sentence, Miss Harford?" |
40083 | Why do you not tell me?" |
40083 | Why does not Mrs. Grimson make up a big fire?" |
40083 | Why had her father looked so pained when she had mentioned the name? |
40083 | Why had these thoughts come to her? |
40083 | Why have you forgotten your poor old cousins at the Red House, and why are you masquerading in this mysterious fashion? |
40083 | Why have you selected pansies, I wonder?" |
40083 | Why is father so dreadfully early, this evening?" |
40083 | Why not accept your son- in- law''s kindness? |
40083 | Why should he bind down that bright young life, and condemn her to years of wearisome waiting? |
40083 | Why should his burdens be laid on her young shoulders? |
40083 | Why should it be hopeless? |
40083 | Why was he so disturbed, so unlike himself? |
40083 | Why were the bees humming so? |
40083 | Why, Thorold, you are never going?" |
40083 | Will you come in, or is your cab waiting? |
40083 | Will you come with me now? |
40083 | Will you let me finish my work? |
40083 | Will you tell her so, please? |
40083 | Will you tell me your name, please? |
40083 | Wo n''t you try and find out all about him?" |
40083 | Would Miss Mollie spare her for half an hour, and she would get Mr. Grainger''s young man to pull the tooth out?" |
40083 | Would Mollie guess how her lover''s heart beat almost to suffocation as he looked at the white vellum book with its clustering pansies? |
40083 | Would any girl care to enter that incongruous household? |
40083 | Would he wish to bring her? |
40083 | Would his home life be gladdened or still further depressed by these new inmates? |
40083 | Would not his home, humble as it was, be a very different place? |
40083 | Would she ever forget his voice, or the smile that had seemed to steal into her weary heart like a benediction? |
40083 | Would that do, Fullarton? |
40083 | Would that not be a happy thought, Althea? |
40083 | Would you wait for me?" |
40083 | Would"this bud of love"which he had been nurturing so tenderly, have blossomed into"a beauteous flower"when they met again? |
40083 | You are so kind, and I can not even thank you?" |
40083 | You are sure of that, Miss Althea?" |
40083 | You know how much Gwen thinks of beauty, and where will you find a sweeter face than Mollie''s? |
40083 | You poor dear, how tired and hungry you must be?" |
40083 | You will help them, will you not?" |
40083 | and are your feet cold? |
40083 | and could any man have done his duty more nobly? |
40083 | are you sure it is for me?" |
40083 | asked Mollie, with a loving hug,"really and truly glad?" |
40083 | gasped Mollie,"how could you think of anything so dreadful? |
40083 | he said, hoarsely,"you will make yourself ill. Why are you so hopeless? |
40083 | he was young?" |
40083 | she had asked, in quite a loud voice;"dukes and earls, and those sort of people?" |
40083 | she said, quite shocked at this extravagance,"have we ever had a fire here before, except when we had the measles?" |
40083 | thought Waveney, pityingly; and then she said, kindly,"Are you alone, little one? |
40083 | was it you, Althea?" |
40083 | what had he done? |
40083 | when he never cared to be away from her? |
40083 | would she add to my troubles? |
36158 | A lesson, Cornelius? |
36158 | After to- morrow? |
36158 | Am I to keep house? |
36158 | Am I to stay here whether I like or not? |
36158 | Am I too near? |
36158 | Am I? |
36158 | And am I not an artist? |
36158 | And be taken up for trespassing? |
36158 | And do I love him? |
36158 | And do you think,she resumed, laughing softly,"he has been quite so slow to take the hint? |
36158 | And how dare you speak so to me, foolish girl? 36158 And how do you know you are to be always with me?" |
36158 | And how do you know? |
36158 | And if it is my pleasure to spend on you the little I have-- what about it, Daisy? |
36158 | And if she had not sent me, Cornelius? |
36158 | And is not that the exasperating part of the business? |
36158 | And is there nothing you will not sell? |
36158 | And mean to keep it still? |
36158 | And shall it not be won for you? |
36158 | And should I, Cornelius, if it were old and worn out? |
36158 | And the meaning of hazel eyes? |
36158 | And the moral of all that, Daisy? |
36158 | And what can I do to you? |
36158 | And what did you do then? |
36158 | And what do you know about that pleasure? |
36158 | And what is there that does not come out of a shop? |
36158 | And why not on a modern coin, as well as on an ancient one? |
36158 | And will you not always want me to sell my pictures? |
36158 | And wo n''t the other girls be jealous of me, Cornelius? |
36158 | And would you not have the right to do so? |
36158 | And you do n''t want me to do that? |
36158 | And you will not have him, will you, Daisy? |
36158 | Are n''t you? |
36158 | Are they by him? |
36158 | Are they gone? |
36158 | Are you a thing? |
36158 | Are you afraid? |
36158 | Are you always studying effects, Cornelius? |
36158 | Are you happy? |
36158 | Are you mad? |
36158 | Are you not afraid of taking cold? |
36158 | Are you not delighted to see him? |
36158 | Are you not going out? |
36158 | Are you not tired? |
36158 | Are you or are you not going away to marry? |
36158 | Are you quite sure? |
36158 | Are you still going? |
36158 | Are you still going? |
36158 | Are you sure you are quite well? |
36158 | Are you, Kate? |
36158 | Are you? |
36158 | Are you? |
36158 | As much as one can,I echoed, passing my arm within his;"that''s how you are going to set at painting, is it not?" |
36158 | Ay, ay,said Kate, smiling,"we may cork up the bottle, and lock it up, may we not, Daisy?" |
36158 | Better than me? |
36158 | But Cornelius,I said, rather perplexed,"how will you manage? |
36158 | But I shall go back to Rock Cottage with you? |
36158 | But do I?--do I dislike long walks with you, Daisy, in town or country, in lanes or in streets? 36158 But how will you manage?" |
36158 | But how, how? |
36158 | But is it not rather unpleasant, Sir? |
36158 | But is it settled that you are to remain with us? |
36158 | But is this one worn out? |
36158 | But what do you want with him?--What can you want with him? |
36158 | But where shall I wear it? |
36158 | But why did you not marry Papa after Mamma died? |
36158 | But why go so soon? |
36158 | But why put it on? 36158 But why should she think of me?" |
36158 | But why so? |
36158 | But why will she not be serious? 36158 But you could not know Kate would send me?" |
36158 | But, Cornelius, when will you begin? |
36158 | By the lanes, at this hour? 36158 Ca n''t you bear it, Cornelius?" |
36158 | Ca n''t you try? |
36158 | Can you read? |
36158 | Can you think I would stay? |
36158 | Can you, Cornelius? |
36158 | Charlotte,I said, breathlessly,"can you take a letter for me to Leigh immediately?" |
36158 | Child,she said,"what keeps you here? |
36158 | Coming to stay? |
36158 | Cornelius, do you no longer like painting? |
36158 | Cornelius, what ails you? |
36158 | Cornelius, who would be out on such a night to harm me? 36158 Cornelius,"I exclaimed,"you have not news-- of-- Kate?" |
36158 | Cornelius,I said a little startled,"how will you do it?" |
36158 | Cornelius,I said, earnestly,"do you blame me?" |
36158 | Cornelius,I said, gently,"is it a sin to remember the truth?" |
36158 | Cornelius,I said, weeping,"will you stay?" |
36158 | Cornelius,I said, with some emotion,"if I have made an appointment with William, where is the harm? |
36158 | Cornelius,she continued rather seriously,"why was it not finished for this year''s Academy?" |
36158 | Could you not do it, Cornelius? 36158 Could you not say so at once, instead of abusing that unfortunate Schwab? |
36158 | Daisy,he asked, anxiously,"what has brought you here at such an hour, in such a plight?" |
36158 | Daisy,he asked,"what have you to say?" |
36158 | Daisy,he exclaimed vehemently,"will you never tell me what he came for?" |
36158 | Daisy,he replied, in a tone of mingled pain and reproach,"where is the use of all this? |
36158 | Daisy,he said, earnestly,"you are quite sure, are you not?" |
36158 | Daisy,he said,"what do you mean?" |
36158 | Daisy,she said, taking my hand in her own,"what is it? |
36158 | Daisy? |
36158 | Decidedly,I thought,"we are all wrong,"and aloud I observed gravely:"Mr. Thornton, is there not some mistake? |
36158 | Did I? |
36158 | Did he ask you? |
36158 | Did he not ask you? |
36158 | Did you ever put them to the test, Sir? |
36158 | Did you expect me? |
36158 | Did your father do so? |
36158 | Do I like it? 36158 Do I prevent you from sketching, Cornelius?" |
36158 | Do n''t I know it? |
36158 | Do n''t I? |
36158 | Do n''t you like it? |
36158 | Do n''t you want to go up to your room? |
36158 | Do n''t you, Cornelius? |
36158 | Do n''t you? |
36158 | Do you care about it, Sir? |
36158 | Do you hear that, Daisy? |
36158 | Do you imagine I want it? |
36158 | Do you kindly mean to spare me the trouble? |
36158 | Do you know that you are very good- looking? |
36158 | Do you know where he is? |
36158 | Do you like him? |
36158 | Do you like it or not? |
36158 | Do you mean that I do not care about you? |
36158 | Do you mean to imply I could not grace a throne, and bear a sceptre? |
36158 | Do you mean to say that I love you as my daughter or child? |
36158 | Do you mean to say that you love me as your father? |
36158 | Do you mean to say, Cornelius, that you will never be one of the celebrated artists of whom I have read so much? |
36158 | Do you mean to turn out a Griseldis? |
36158 | Do you not like it better now? |
36158 | Do you object to my side face? |
36158 | Do you object to that? |
36158 | Do you really like it? |
36158 | Do you really want to know, Daisy? |
36158 | Do you remember the ingenious manner in which two of the characters are made to fall in love with one another? 36158 Do you remember the story of Goethe''s Mignon?" |
36158 | Do you think I could not find that out alone? |
36158 | Do you think a man loses a whole act to find out that a girl is plain? |
36158 | Do you think so? |
36158 | Do you think so? |
36158 | Do you? |
36158 | Do you? |
36158 | Do you? |
36158 | Does thank you, mean yes? |
36158 | Eh? |
36158 | For how long, Daisy? |
36158 | For long? |
36158 | For what else did I bring you to see it? 36158 Has anything or any one annoyed you, whilst I was away?" |
36158 | Have I anything you would really fancy? |
36158 | Have I been indiscreet? |
36158 | Have I done wrong again? |
36158 | Have I not? |
36158 | Have I really succeeded so well? |
36158 | Have her tenants left? |
36158 | Have you any more commands for me? |
36158 | Have you found no one? |
36158 | Have you nothing to say to me? |
36158 | Have you seen these, Bertha? |
36158 | Have you? |
36158 | Heaven forbid; but can I help feeling that the charm of our friendship is gone? 36158 Here or at Miss Murray''s?" |
36158 | Here-- in the house? |
36158 | Horses? |
36158 | How can you think of such nonsense? |
36158 | How could I undeceive her? 36158 How did you find it?" |
36158 | How did you like that? |
36158 | How did you spend your time? |
36158 | How do I know it is admiration? 36158 How do you know this place?" |
36158 | How do you know? |
36158 | How do you think it ended, Cornelius? |
36158 | How is it I never heard of this story before? |
36158 | How is it, Cornelius, that I so often offend you without even knowing why? |
36158 | How long have you been back? |
36158 | How long have you been there? |
36158 | How much further on, Daisy? |
36158 | How old are you? |
36158 | How old are you? |
36158 | How so, Cornelius? |
36158 | How so, Kate? |
36158 | I did not look,he replied in a low tone; then he again said--"Has Miss Russell left?" |
36158 | I do n''t know, Kate, but how came you to let him think of going? |
36158 | I do n''t know-- he will tell it to you himself, and you will agree to it-- wo n''t you, Cornelius? |
36158 | I do n''t think Cornelius would marry as if he were ashamed of himself,I replied, rather indignantly;"then how can he have a family in two years? |
36158 | I had forgotten all about it,I answered, smiling,"What is it, Cornelius?" |
36158 | I had no idea you had so many good reasons for rejecting him,said Cornelius, smiling;"he is fair, a boy, and a sailor-- have you anything else?" |
36158 | I have no right to take it otherwise, Kate; besides, provided Cornelius comes back to us, what matter? |
36158 | I see and feel it; but is it for good? |
36158 | I suppose you could not ask Armari alone? |
36158 | I suppose you know they had ducks? |
36158 | I suppose you were a good deal together? |
36158 | I thought you felt no fear? |
36158 | I? 36158 If you had been Papa''s wife, I mean his first wife,"I said very earnestly,"I should have been the niece of Cornelius, should I not, Kate?" |
36158 | In a place called the Grove, I believe; is it far off? |
36158 | In the Dresden room,she said, looking astonished;"and do you really, a fair maiden of eighteen, venture to remain alone in a Dresden room? |
36158 | Indeed I do; they are beautiful, and then they remind me of our Gallery-- you remember our Gallery, Cornelius? |
36158 | Indeed? |
36158 | Is he not? |
36158 | Is he? |
36158 | Is it not about seven years ago, that I saw you here? |
36158 | Is it the love, honour, and obey that troubles you? 36158 Is it?" |
36158 | Is that a reason? |
36158 | Is that all, Cornelius? |
36158 | Is that you? |
36158 | Is the idea of a daughter so formidable? |
36158 | Is there any lady in the house besides myself? |
36158 | Is there to be? |
36158 | It does not annoy you? |
36158 | It is a wishing- well; will you try its virtues? |
36158 | It is not settled yet? |
36158 | It seems a long time, does it not? |
36158 | Kate says you are to be years away-- is it true? |
36158 | Learnt her lessons well? |
36158 | May I not write to him? |
36158 | May I say something to you? 36158 Midge, is Armari as handsome as Cornelius described him in his letters?" |
36158 | Miss Burns, is the house on fire? |
36158 | Miss Russell has given notice; the bill is up, did you not see it? |
36158 | Money? |
36158 | Mr. O''Reilly,said William, looking at him very fixedly,"do you object?" |
36158 | Mrs. Marks,said Mr. Thornton, with great politeness,"will you have the kindness to show Miss Burns, my grand- daughter, to her room?" |
36158 | Must we go out again to- morrow, Kate? |
36158 | Next week? |
36158 | No genius? |
36158 | No, but she found it out; and what do you want to go to Rome for, Cornelius? |
36158 | Not before? |
36158 | Nothing,he replied hastily,"but do n''t you think you had better go to bed?" |
36158 | Now, Cornelius, what have I done that a good sister, or friend, or daughter, would not do? |
36158 | Now, Miss Burns, what should I care for? |
36158 | O, William, what is it? 36158 Of course I can,"replied Kate, whose clouded face immediately brightened,"child, why are you not ready?" |
36158 | Of course, but what else? |
36158 | Of the contagion, my dear? |
36158 | Of what? |
36158 | Of whom else should I ask it? |
36158 | Oh, Cornelius, would you have me keep it a secret? |
36158 | Oh, Cornelius,I exclaimed, looking up at him,"was it not kind of Mr Thornton to let me come back?" |
36158 | Oh, no,I replied, smiling,"shall I begin another shelf?" |
36158 | Or for poaching? |
36158 | Oxford Street; you surely know Oxford Street? |
36158 | Papa was ten years older than Mamma,I persisted:"was she a mere baby to him?" |
36158 | Perverse girl,he said, chidingly,"do n''t you see it was useless to try to frighten and torment me? |
36158 | Pleasant? |
36158 | Pleasure? |
36158 | Politics? |
36158 | Poor child, did you expect I should? |
36158 | Really,he said, turning round to confront me,"is it possible you do not guess whose face I want, Daisy?" |
36158 | Schwab, too!--was he there? |
36158 | Serve you right,she said,"why will you explain love philosophically to a girl of seventeen? |
36158 | Shall we resume the sitting? |
36158 | Since you are so fidgetty,I said,"why did you not come to see me at Thornton House?" |
36158 | So you come here often? |
36158 | So,he said,"that is what you have been getting pale about, is it?-- and fretting, eh?" |
36158 | Suppose,he said hastily,"you write it to me when I am in Italy-- eh, Daisy?" |
36158 | That you are crying for? |
36158 | The harm? |
36158 | The lanes!--you came by the lanes? |
36158 | The old story, eh? |
36158 | The only one, Daisy? |
36158 | The other course is decidedly more original; is that the point, Cornelius? |
36158 | The what, Ma''am? |
36158 | The young bear-- what brought him back? |
36158 | Then Mr. O''Reilly is come back? |
36158 | Then how will you manage? |
36158 | Then if you are so glad,he answered smiling,"how did you come to risk it?" |
36158 | Then it seems it is quite a settled matter that I must go out with you every day? |
36158 | Then since you are conscious of bad taste, why do n''t you like Mary Stuart? |
36158 | Then there is nothing for me to do? |
36158 | Then what am I to do? |
36158 | Then what are you crying for? |
36158 | Then what does he want me for, Cornelius? |
36158 | Then what should I gain by running away? |
36158 | Then why this meeting of to- day, Cornelius?--why this useless danger? |
36158 | Then you do mean to go? |
36158 | Then, do n''t you see,I replied, triumphantly,"that you have got genius?" |
36158 | Then, if this is no parting after all,I observed rather perplexed,"why were you so grieved, and why have you let me grieve, Cornelius?" |
36158 | There,he said, biting his lip and looking provoked,"do you see her, Kate?" |
36158 | To be sure; but will you just move a bit? |
36158 | To live in it, Kate? |
36158 | To whom else should I tell it? |
36158 | Very modest; but you know whether you like a thing or not;_ ergo_, do you or do you not like Mary Stuart? |
36158 | Was he old? |
36158 | Was he rude or bearish? |
36158 | Was he sure Mary Stuart had a velvet robe on? 36158 Was that what you thought yesterday, Cornelius?" |
36158 | Well, Kate, all I mean to say is this-- if Cornelius has a wife and children, where is the harm, provided he does not settle in Italy? |
36158 | Well, am I not his child? |
36158 | Well, am I? 36158 Well, but am I not to kiss you?" |
36158 | Well, but did you ever taste such water? |
36158 | Well, what about it? |
36158 | Well, what is it? |
36158 | Well, why not? |
36158 | Well,I said, bending down to look at him,"what are you thinking of?" |
36158 | Well,I said, piqued,"am I not to be always with you? |
36158 | Well,at length said Cornelius,"did you give him that promise?" |
36158 | Well,he said, uneasily,"why do you look at me so strangely? |
36158 | Were they not a little crazy, Cornelius? |
36158 | Were your other pictures like this, Cornelius? |
36158 | What about it, Kate? |
36158 | What about that flower, Daisy? |
36158 | What about? |
36158 | What am I to do? |
36158 | What are they all looking at? |
36158 | What are you talking of, child? |
36158 | What are you thinking of? |
36158 | What are you two chatting about? |
36158 | What book is it, Sir? |
36158 | What can attract you to such a wild spot? |
36158 | What condition? |
36158 | What could tempt you to do such a mad thing and to come to such an eyrie as this? |
36158 | What did Armari do to annoy you? |
36158 | What do you call speaking of him as if he were your grandfather, when I do n''t believe he is a bit older than I am? |
36158 | What do you mean? |
36158 | What do you say? |
36158 | What do you think of Daisy morally? |
36158 | What do you think of my eyrie, Cornelius? |
36158 | What do you think of that kneeling woman''s attitude? |
36158 | What do you think of these? |
36158 | What do you, what can you mean by kneeling to me? 36158 What else was it that he came for?" |
36158 | What else? |
36158 | What else? |
36158 | What else? |
36158 | What else? |
36158 | What else? |
36158 | What for, Kate? |
36158 | What for, then? |
36158 | What for? 36158 What for?" |
36158 | What for? |
36158 | What for? |
36158 | What has become of the evil spirit that possessed you? |
36158 | What have I done to be so treated? |
36158 | What have I done? |
36158 | What have I to forgive? |
36158 | What have you done? 36158 What if I do?" |
36158 | What is age-- any one''s age? 36158 What is it then? |
36158 | What is it you mean? |
36158 | What is it, Cornelius? |
36158 | What is it? |
36158 | What is it? |
36158 | What is ten years? |
36158 | What is what, Cornelius? |
36158 | What mistake, Cornelius? |
36158 | What must I not tell her, Cornelius? |
36158 | What of her intellectually? |
36158 | What of her person? |
36158 | What other one, Cornelius? |
36158 | What part of London lies next to us? |
36158 | What put such ideas into your head? |
36158 | What right have you to know? |
36158 | What shall you do? |
36158 | What were your dreams about, Daisy? |
36158 | What would you have? |
36158 | What''s that? |
36158 | What, Sir? |
36158 | What, your old friend Armari? |
36158 | What? |
36158 | When do you come back? |
36158 | When will you come back? |
36158 | Where else should I have bed- rooms? |
36158 | Where is Kate? |
36158 | Where then? 36158 Where will you hang it?" |
36158 | Who is Mignon? |
36158 | Who said you were to go with him? |
36158 | Who wants to interfere with their rights? 36158 Who wants you to help it?" |
36158 | Why did I wander up and down here, but to get a sight of you? |
36158 | Why did not you go with him? |
36158 | Why did she make me take you with me? |
36158 | Why did you let her admire Mary Stuart? |
36158 | Why did you let her in? |
36158 | Why did you never mention his name since my return? |
36158 | Why did you never write to me that Daisy was so much improved? |
36158 | Why did you not ask? |
36158 | Why did you not come to me at once? |
36158 | Why did you not go with him? |
36158 | Why did you not say so sooner? |
36158 | Why did you not tell me sooner that you wished for it? |
36158 | Why did you not undeceive me? |
36158 | Why do you go to Spain? |
36158 | Why do you look so odd, then? |
36158 | Why have I not a crown to lay it at your feet? |
36158 | Why not, Cornelius? |
36158 | Why not? 36158 Why not?" |
36158 | Why not? |
36158 | Why not? |
36158 | Why not? |
36158 | Why part at all? 36158 Why remain?" |
36158 | Why should you be annoyed when I am not? |
36158 | Why so, William? |
36158 | Why so, child? |
36158 | Why so? |
36158 | Why so? |
36158 | Why so? |
36158 | Why so? |
36158 | Why so? |
36158 | Why so? |
36158 | Why speak of him? |
36158 | Why, Daisy,said Cornelius, looking round,"what made you come here? |
36158 | Why, what have I done now? |
36158 | Why, what would you like, Daisy? |
36158 | Why? 36158 Why?" |
36158 | Why? |
36158 | Will it not be better to stay for another day or so, just to be cool with him? |
36158 | Will you begin to- morrow? |
36158 | Will you not come in, Cornelius? |
36158 | Will you really come? |
36158 | Will you soon have done that transcribing? |
36158 | Will you stay? |
36158 | Will you? |
36158 | William,I said sadly,"why did you come back? |
36158 | Wo n''t you put his name? |
36158 | Would you ask me for it? |
36158 | Would you give me your picture, if I were to ask you for it? |
36158 | Yes or no? |
36158 | Yes what? |
36158 | Yes, Kate, it is, but how do you know it? |
36158 | Yes, but birds leave their nests sometimes, do n''t they, Cornelius? |
36158 | Yes, but you are going to sketch that little fall of water? |
36158 | Yes, what else? |
36158 | Yes,I answered,"Miss O''Reilly ca n''t let her house; it is such a pity, is it not?" |
36158 | Yes,I answered,"and you?" |
36158 | Yes; do you not take Daisy with you? |
36158 | You are sure you have forgotten nothing? |
36158 | You are tired of us? |
36158 | You believe that,he replied,"but can I, Daisy?" |
36158 | You can not believe that? |
36158 | You can not weary me,I said again;"will you stay?" |
36158 | You do n''t believe it? |
36158 | You do n''t mean to say that I am to remain here on my back? |
36158 | You do n''t think he will come whilst I am out, Kate? |
36158 | You do not think anything else? |
36158 | You have not quarrelled? |
36158 | You have thought that? |
36158 | You have written to him? |
36158 | You like Spenser? |
36158 | You like him? |
36158 | You like me, Daisy; do n''t you? |
36158 | You must go at once,resolutely said Kate;"can you be ready next week?" |
36158 | You pledged yourself for me, Cornelius? |
36158 | You ridiculous little creature,he said,"why should I ask you if you liked the medicine which I your physician knew to be good for you? |
36158 | You will soil it,--what matter? |
36158 | You, it seems,I resumed,"had nothing to say to me, Cornelius, or you could not have wished to go away thus?" |
36158 | ''"= replaced by= about Nothing''? |
36158 | Absorbed in the engrossing thought"Are they well hung?" |
36158 | Accordingly, the morning, when, after breakfast, Cornelius stepped up to me, and said:"Where is it to be to- day?" |
36158 | After breakfast you mean?" |
36158 | Am I not to be the governess?" |
36158 | And do n''t you think,"she added, sighing as she glanced around her,"that Edward''s wife will be a happy woman?" |
36158 | And who is that girl in the corner?" |
36158 | And why should he not like me? |
36158 | And yet, Daisy, why not Friday?" |
36158 | Are the Italian women so handsome?" |
36158 | Are the other pictures sold?" |
36158 | Are their own pictures well hung? |
36158 | Are there not shops at Ryde?" |
36158 | Are you faint? |
36158 | Are you getting deaf?" |
36158 | Are you too tired to come and see the changes I have made?" |
36158 | As I sat alone sewing one morning in the back parlour, Cornelius came, and leaning on the back of my chair, said:"Where shall we go to- day?" |
36158 | At length Cornelius stopped, and said:"Shall we not rest here awhile?" |
36158 | At length, unable to keep in, I looked up, and said:"Do you not feel dull, Cornelius?" |
36158 | Ay, years had passed since our first meeting; and what had he not been to me since then? |
36158 | Besides, why go?" |
36158 | Besides, why submit to a condition when I have you here without one? |
36158 | Brand gave me a perplexed look, then observed--"Do you really think, my dear, Mr. Thornton is of sound mind?" |
36158 | Brand, joining us,"Edith, dear, are you not afraid of the tooth- ache?" |
36158 | But I am not to obey you now?" |
36158 | But surely, Sir, you will not care to keep an insignificant girl like me?" |
36158 | But what about his age?" |
36158 | But when was generosity appreciated in this world? |
36158 | But why do I speak as if this were over? |
36158 | Can you manage it, Daisy?" |
36158 | Can you write? |
36158 | Cornelius bit his lip, and, giving my forehead an impatient kiss, said, shortly--"There, child, are you satisfied?" |
36158 | Cornelius dropped my hand, and asked, gravely:"Does History say how this advice was received?" |
36158 | Cornelius dropped my hands, and said, abruptly:"Do you not feel chill?" |
36158 | Cornelius stopped short, and looking at me, said earnestly:"Do you object, Daisy?" |
36158 | Cornelius, do you not understand that I can love you better than your good pleasure, and your honour better than you?" |
36158 | Could Cornelius really deliver me from this bondage, or, as I began to fear, had he deceived himself, and deceived me? |
36158 | Could I again be free with him? |
36158 | Could I, Cornelius?" |
36158 | Could not you?" |
36158 | Daisy, how dare you do such a thing? |
36158 | Daisy, why do n''t you take his arm? |
36158 | Daisy, you ask why? |
36158 | Daisy,"he said sorrowfully,"what brought up that unlucky word? |
36158 | Daisy; why do I like you so well? |
36158 | Daughter of the cross, should I dare to repine? |
36158 | Did I not know love was a most exalted feeling? |
36158 | Did I not, Cornelius?" |
36158 | Did he tell you?" |
36158 | Did she find peace in his devoted love, and in fulfilling the duties that fall to the lot of a clergyman''s wife? |
36158 | Did she not like it? |
36158 | Did the law give so much power to Mr. Thornton? |
36158 | Did you come for me from home? |
36158 | Did you rear him, sacrifice your youth to him, and then find yourself cast aside and forsaken, as I am this day?" |
36158 | Do I not like you more than any other creature? |
36158 | Do n''t you find her altered?" |
36158 | Do n''t you know, dear?" |
36158 | Do n''t you see her hour is not come, and that if it were, she would know more than you could tell her?" |
36158 | Do n''t you see that Irishman would have got tired of the young girl, as he once did of the little girl, and sent her off somewhere? |
36158 | Do you confess yourself mistaken, and acknowledge that I am tired of the world?" |
36158 | Do you feel uuwell, Kate?" |
36158 | Do you know the play of Shakespeare entitled''Much Ado about Nothing''?" |
36158 | Do you know what it is you want to make me do?" |
36158 | Do you know whereabouts that unfortunate young man lives?" |
36158 | Do you mind answering that question?" |
36158 | Do you remember how I got up on the table in the studio to get a sight of it? |
36158 | Do you remember yesterday all I told you concerning my acquaintance with William?" |
36158 | Do you see that hollow nook perched up there between earth and sky, close by the fountain?" |
36158 | Do you still think I shall?" |
36158 | Do you think he will, Daisy?" |
36158 | Edward, what do you advise?" |
36158 | Filial reverence, sisterly love, friendship, what had become of ye then? |
36158 | H--?''" |
36158 | Had I then loved Cornelius even as a child? |
36158 | Had he really seen her? |
36158 | Has he not a right to be fond of me, just as I of him and his sister? |
36158 | Has she lost her money? |
36158 | Have I a thought I would not tell you? |
36158 | Have I grown strange?" |
36158 | Have I not acknowledged the woman in you, and that in a hundred ways? |
36158 | Have I not, through all our old familiarity, say, have I not mingled reserve and respect with all my tenderness? |
36158 | Have you forgotten Daisy?" |
36158 | Have you forgotten that, before you went to Italy, you called me your adopted child? |
36158 | Have you not heard me tell you how warmly I love you, yet have you not asked me to stay here in this house ever near you? |
36158 | He asked, impatiently:"What are you waiting for, creature?" |
36158 | He called me by every fond name he could think of; blessed me over and over, and ended by saying eagerly:"Had we not better go at once, my darling?" |
36158 | He did not take it, but replied in a tone overflowing with reproach:"Why did you deceive me, Daisy?" |
36158 | He had stretched his elegant person in an old- fashioned arm- chair, where he read the newspaper, and looked as politely_ ennuy?_ as possible. |
36158 | He hesitated as he replied:"Do n''t you know?" |
36158 | He liked me one way, I liked him another; after that, what can there be between us? |
36158 | He ought to know me, ought he not, Kate? |
36158 | He stopped before the stone steps and said:"It was here I found you lying eight years ago: do you remember, Daisy?" |
36158 | He took my hand in his, and, bending on me a look so keen that I began to feel disconcerted, he said slowly:"What do you mean?" |
36158 | His sister asked if he would not feel glad to have his friends near him? |
36158 | His sister resumed--"Who is that dark- looking fellow in front?" |
36158 | How can I care for a friend who leaves me to go and get wrecked?" |
36158 | How can a man of your age indulge in such whims?" |
36158 | How can you be so imprudent?" |
36158 | How could I, after this, think that Cornelius cared for me? |
36158 | How could I? |
36158 | How could they allow it?" |
36158 | How could you, Cornelius?" |
36158 | How did he bear it? |
36158 | How do you like this place?" |
36158 | How shall I return alone to the home we left together this morning? |
36158 | How, and about what?" |
36158 | I added, somewhat annoyed:"is it not true?" |
36158 | I added, with sudden emotion,"how can daughters leave their father''s house for that of a stranger?" |
36158 | I answered, soothingly:"What can I say, Cornelius, save that only your sensitive conscience could imagine the accusation of selfishness? |
36158 | I ask you to pledge yourself for yourself-- do you object?" |
36158 | I asked;"why so?" |
36158 | I can do for the figure pretty well, I dare say, but the face?" |
36158 | I can not afford to waste my youth, and throw away my happiness; and if you cared for me, would you not feel so, too?" |
36158 | I coloured violently: if he had noticed it, what would Cornelius think? |
36158 | I continued--"Do you see that path, Kate? |
36158 | I continued:"Are you quite sure I can not be of any use to you, Sir?" |
36158 | I cried, quite alarmed,"what is the matter with you?" |
36158 | I cried, starting to my feet,"where is he? |
36158 | I dare not tell you to go to your room, lest it should be too chill; but will you try and sleep here?" |
36158 | I drew back with a laugh that was checked by a voice observing behind me:"Daisy, what are you doing here at this hour?" |
36158 | I drew closer to her, and after a while I said--"Why did you not marry him?" |
36158 | I echoed, laughing in his face,"what about?" |
36158 | I exclaimed desperately,"what shall I do? |
36158 | I exclaimed, laying down my work,"if he were to enter the room now, what should I do?" |
36158 | I felt interested in the play, and when the second act was over, I turned to Cornelius and said--"Do you think Lady Ada will marry her cousin?" |
36158 | I felt very indignant, and reddening, asked:"May I know, Sir, what you want me for?" |
36158 | I gave him a look implying,"Who are you?" |
36158 | I looked at Cornelius, who smiled, and leaning on the back of my chair, said kindly:"Why should you not have a little change and pleasure, my pet? |
36158 | I looked up at him and asked, a little triumphantly:"Cornelius, where was the use of your flying out so?" |
36158 | I mean write a round hand, not the abominable slant of most school- girls?" |
36158 | I need none to bind me to her; and if she will only promise to try and like me--""And why should she?" |
36158 | I promised I would not, then added:"Have you forgiven me, Cornelius?" |
36158 | I replied,"Is she?" |
36158 | I said reproachfully,"you are not as fond of me as Papa was?" |
36158 | I said, looking up, and allowing him again to take my hands in his,"will you not leave that perilous life, and that dangerous sea?" |
36158 | I said,"and tell me if you ever saw such water, even in Italy?" |
36158 | I shall be too happy now, shall I not?" |
36158 | I sighed, and asked:"What shall I do with it, Cornelius?" |
36158 | I summoned strength to ask--"Why must we part, Cornelius?" |
36158 | I think it would be a great loss of time; besides--""Besides, Daisy?" |
36158 | I thought I might have asked,"Well what?" |
36158 | I took one of his hands in mine, and gazing at him through gathering tears:"Cornelius,"I said,"are you still going?" |
36158 | I turned on her triumphantly:"Then do n''t you see,"I said,"that if I am the governess I shall always stay with him?" |
36158 | If I will share your friendship with none, is it not because I mean to take on myself the exclusive care of your happiness? |
36158 | If the women slight and the men neglect her, how can she but mind it?" |
36158 | If you have no faith in yourself, why do you paint at all? |
36158 | In whose kindness and indulgence could I confide, if not in his? |
36158 | Is Cornelius anything so near to you as he is to me? |
36158 | Is anything the matter with you?" |
36158 | Is he in love?" |
36158 | Is he not dead, Bertha?" |
36158 | Is he not making a fool of himself, just because your head aches? |
36158 | Is it not delightful?" |
36158 | Is it not delightful?" |
36158 | Is it not too bad?" |
36158 | Is she still asleep?" |
36158 | Is the house burned down? |
36158 | Is the language in which woman utters such confessions yet invented? |
36158 | Is there anything I like better than to please or amuse you?" |
36158 | It is not sold, is it?" |
36158 | Kate never woke-- how is she?" |
36158 | Kate, why did he go?" |
36158 | Kate, you''ll take care of her whilst I am away?" |
36158 | Langton?" |
36158 | Midge, why do n''t you sit near him as usual? |
36158 | Miss O''Reilly, whose whole thoughts were absorbed in hospitality, did not notice this, but added, with a start:"How long are they to stay?" |
36158 | Must I stay or depart?" |
36158 | My burden was heavy, but was it more than I could bear? |
36158 | My dear girl, have you really no idea of what we are to do for beds and a dinner?" |
36158 | Nay, though I speak now from the very fulness of my heart, do you not stand, your hand in mine, listening to me with patient, quiet grace? |
36158 | O''Reilly?" |
36158 | Oh, Daisy, are you sure you are the same? |
36158 | Perhaps it is scarcely right to betray Bertha to you; but can I help also feeling for you? |
36158 | Ray''s''Chaos and Creation,''perhaps you could find that too, eh?" |
36158 | Rugby-- have you ever heard of Rugby, my dear?" |
36158 | Schwab?" |
36158 | Shall I not?" |
36158 | Shall I tell you why I find you so very, very charming?" |
36158 | Shall we?" |
36158 | She gave a rapid look round the room, and said hastily:"Where is Cornelius?" |
36158 | She proceeded--"I have been thinking of such a series of subjects: what do you say to the battle of Clontarf, or to Bannockburn? |
36158 | She resumed:"Perhaps you would like a subject more pathetic,--The Children in the Tower, eh, Cornelius?" |
36158 | She sat within the meditative shadow of an ill- lit room, reading by an open window-- well, why do you look at me so?" |
36158 | Since you are not going away-- what is it?" |
36158 | Smalley?" |
36158 | Smalley?" |
36158 | Something in my face betrayed me; he took out his cigar, and hastily said:"What is it, Daisy?" |
36158 | That angels loved in Heaven, and that poor mortals could not do better than imitate them on earth? |
36158 | That love was the attribute of the female mind, its charm and its power? |
36158 | That on the very evening of your return, when Kate seemed vexed about it, you were not displeased, though you are so angry now?" |
36158 | The love of a father? |
36158 | Then she suddenly added,"Cornelius, are you not tired?" |
36158 | There was a pause; but Mr. Smalley made an effort and asked--"Is her niece with her?" |
36158 | Thornton?" |
36158 | Thornton?" |
36158 | To Italy? |
36158 | Travelling?" |
36158 | Unconscious of this he continued--"The sooner I go the better, is it not, Kate? |
36158 | Was Miriam such? |
36158 | Was it not agreed before you went to Italy? |
36158 | Was it true? |
36158 | Was not this, perhaps, a parting embrace? |
36158 | Was the word too earthly? |
36158 | We are both very young and ignorant, Cornelius?" |
36158 | Well, what are you doing?" |
36158 | Well, what do you think of it?" |
36158 | Well, why do you smile so?" |
36158 | Well, why do you stare?" |
36158 | Were I not so short- sighted, I should have known you anywhere-- would not you, Edward?" |
36158 | What are railroads and express trains for? |
36158 | What are you going to say now?" |
36158 | What avails it to me that I may prevail against others, when with a word you can render me powerless?" |
36158 | What brings you here, child?" |
36158 | What brought you here?" |
36158 | What could I do but comply, and again go out walking with Cornelius? |
36158 | What did Cornelius mean? |
36158 | What else did he call for?" |
36158 | What for? |
36158 | What for?" |
36158 | What had I ever done for either? |
36158 | What has happened?" |
36158 | What has put you into so mythological a mood?" |
36158 | What have you been doing in my absence? |
36158 | What is it, Cornelius? |
36158 | What is it?" |
36158 | What is that young man to you that his name can not be severed from yours?" |
36158 | What is your friend Armari like?" |
36158 | What more would you have me do? |
36158 | What more would you have?" |
36158 | What proof has she that you will always deserve it, even as much as you do now?" |
36158 | What sense of honour has he who took so shameless an advantage of your ignorance, but who shall account to me for it yet?" |
36158 | What shall I do? |
36158 | What shall I say to Kate-- to Kate who reared you-- when she asks me for her child''? |
36158 | What should I be angry for?" |
36158 | What should they do here?" |
36158 | What should you want to go to Spain for? |
36158 | What sort of a watch has Kate kept over the young girl I left to her care? |
36158 | What sort of a wife did she make to Morton Smalley, in his wild northern home? |
36158 | What will Cornelius care about all this?" |
36158 | What wonder, then, that a father should see some sort of beauty in his daughter''s face?" |
36158 | When I remonstrated and accused him of extravagance, he asked tenderly if he could spend the money better than on his own darling? |
36158 | When do you begin, Cornelius?" |
36158 | When do you mean to have that case opened?" |
36158 | When? |
36158 | Where can the harm be in that? |
36158 | Where there is no resistance, there can be no struggle; but because there is no struggle shall any one dare to say-- there is no victory? |
36158 | Which shall it be, Cornelius, the women praying, or the children by the fountain?" |
36158 | Who have you left there that is so very dear? |
36158 | Why did he object so pertinaciously to a matter like this? |
36158 | Why did you not look before you?" |
36158 | Why have we no party to go to?" |
36158 | Why should she wish to marry me to her brother?" |
36158 | Why then should he not like me?" |
36158 | Why what can it say?" |
36158 | Why will she be so provokingly flighty and slippery?" |
36158 | Why, where did she, once so wan and sallow, get that clear, rosy freshness? |
36158 | William gave me a look, half shy, half pleased, and muttered something that sounded very like:"Did_ I_ care for him?" |
36158 | With his dark hair, his classical features, ivory throat, and collar turned down? |
36158 | Would I not know you among a thousand? |
36158 | Would he not go distracted if anything were to happen to you? |
36158 | Yet who, on beholding you, has not for a moment wished to live and die on your quiet bosom? |
36158 | You do n''t, Cornelius, do you?" |
36158 | You know how your parents married?" |
36158 | Your name is Rose, is it not?" |
36158 | almost angrily interrupted Cornelius,"what do you mean? |
36158 | alone with so gay and gallant a gentleman as Edward Thornton? |
36158 | an Irishman-- an artist-- name Cornelius? |
36158 | and do you really like that rough sailor, a mere boy too? |
36158 | and what have peonies to do with our discourse, unless that you look very like one just now? |
36158 | and, provided he did not ill- use me, would it make me for four years the captive of his pleasure? |
36158 | answered Cornelius, looking down at me with strange anger and tenderness in his gaze;"what can I do to you?" |
36158 | are you sure you like me well enough to marry me?" |
36158 | but go on; what else?" |
36158 | but suppose we stay here?" |
36158 | but what shall I do?" |
36158 | could it be true? |
36158 | dear, no; what can you have been thinking of?" |
36158 | do n''t you see that I tell you to put it on because it is your best, or rather because you look best in it? |
36158 | do you not see I am too selfish to wish to make a present of you to the first boy or man who chooses to take a fancy to you?" |
36158 | do you not think she has improved?" |
36158 | do you then love me so much-- so very much?" |
36158 | exclaimed Kate,"does he think she is still a little girl? |
36158 | for a few months, I suppose?" |
36158 | he added with sudden terror,"has anything happened to you?" |
36158 | he added, pressing me to him with strange and sudden passion,"what can you want with that young man?" |
36158 | he answered, in a tone that, like his look, suddenly softened;"will that sort of magic vex you? |
36158 | he asked, impatiently;"the governess of what?" |
36158 | he asked,"I mean read as you talk, without drawl or singing?" |
36158 | he continued, taking my hands in his, and speaking hesitatingly,"what am I to think of the girl who forgets her friend?" |
36158 | he cried,"are you hurt? |
36158 | he echoed, smiling,"is that the mighty secret?" |
36158 | he exclaimed, with an astonished look that amused me,"and pray how do you get there?" |
36158 | he exclaimed,"do you know what you are doing? |
36158 | he exclaimed,"what do you mean by telling me all this? |
36158 | he exclaimed,"what does this mean?" |
36158 | he exclaimed,"whilst I sat within, sheltered and unconscious, have you, indeed, been exposed to the fury of this pitiless storm-- and for my sake?" |
36158 | he has found it out, has he?" |
36158 | he replied composedly,"and was it not Christian charity made me uneasy about poor Armari? |
36158 | he replied seeming half astonished, half displeased,"what do I want with respect-- your respect?" |
36158 | he replied with a slight grimace;"but how are we to get at even that?" |
36158 | he said again--"Schwab, the woman- hater?" |
36158 | he said at length;"and do you think I will let you leave me? |
36158 | he said with subdued irritation;"why do n''t, you ask to call me''Papa?''" |
36158 | he said, abstractedly,"is old acquaintance so great a sin in your opinion, Daisy?" |
36158 | he said, astonished;"what are you talking and thinking of?" |
36158 | he said, reproachfully,"have you really a wish, and will you not give me the pleasure of gratifying it? |
36158 | he said,"what is the matter with you? |
36158 | he said,"who has put such ideas into your head?" |
36158 | he said,"why? |
36158 | he said;"what do you mean?" |
36158 | how can I undeceive him?" |
36158 | how dare you let him go and not tell me?" |
36158 | if I had found you ill, or in danger of death, what should I have done, what would have become of me?" |
36158 | indignantly asked Cornelius:"do you mean to make a patriarch of me?" |
36158 | interrupted Cornelius, looking fidgetty,"how is Trim?" |
36158 | is it aquiline or Roman? |
36158 | is it not a grand thing?" |
36158 | is not that a great deal?" |
36158 | loved him with that purer part of affection which needs not to wait for the growth of years? |
36158 | observed Kate, who had listened with evident impatience;"do n''t you see this is a very different matter? |
36158 | said Cornelius, looking up from his book,"ca n''t you make that girl hold her tongue?" |
36158 | said I,"shall I sit behind?" |
36158 | shall I ever have another friend like you?" |
36158 | sharply interrupted Cornelius;"what have you done for her to deserve such a promise? |
36158 | sharply said Kate,"what are you talking of? |
36158 | she added, with a half- stifled sigh,"do n''t you see you are the apple of his eye?" |
36158 | she said indignantly,"how dare you think of such a thing? |
36158 | she said, jumping in her chair,"what has put that into your head? |
36158 | she said,"does the little fellow think he knows his own mind? |
36158 | sorrowfully echoed Cornelius;"why should I blame you? |
36158 | suddenly said Cornelius, looking up,"how is it you do not ask me what I had to tell you last night?" |
36158 | that in your letters you addressed me thus? |
36158 | what is change? |
36158 | what is fame?" |
36158 | what is to marry but to be best friends? |
36158 | what of him?" |
36158 | which is easier: to part from you in wrath or in peace?" |
36158 | why go?" |
36158 | will you never leave off fancying that everybody is in love with me?" |
36158 | you are not ashamed of yourself, are you?" |
36158 | you do n''t think I am going to wait a day or two to see your pictures? |
36158 | you do n''t want to be his niece now, do you?" |
12030 | What besides this is the Cause that the wisest Men die with the greatest Æquanimity, the ignorant with the greatest Concern? 12030 Why should not_ Pharamond_ hear the Anguish he only can relieve others from in Time to come? |
12030 | ''... Convivæ prope dissentire videntur, Poscentes vario multum diversa palato; Quid dem? |
12030 | ''... Quis enim bonus, aut face dignus Arcanâ, qualem Cereris vult esse sacerdos, Ulla aliena sibi credat mala?'' |
12030 | ''... Quis talia fando Myrmidonum Dolopumve aut duri miles Ulyssei Temperet a Lachrymis?'' |
12030 | ''... Tantæne Animis coelestibus Iræ?'' |
12030 | ''Admitted to the sight, would you not laugh?'' |
12030 | ''An unreasonable Creature hath the Confidence to ask, Whether it be proper for her to marry a Man who is younger than her eldest Son? |
12030 | ''And dwells such fury in celestial breasts?'' |
12030 | ''And shall the sage your approbation win, Whose laughing features wore a constant grin?'' |
12030 | ''And who can grieve too much? |
12030 | ''But some exclaim: What frenzy rules your mind? |
12030 | ''Comes up a fop( I knew him but by fame), And seized my hand, and call''d me by name----My dear!--how dost?'' |
12030 | ''Dic mi hi si fueris tu leo qualis eris?'' |
12030 | ''He sighs, adores, and courts her ev''ry hour: Who wou''d not do as much for such a dower?'' |
12030 | ''Hoc est quod palles? |
12030 | ''How could you break off so abruptly in your last, and tell me you must go and dress for the Play? |
12030 | ''Illa; Quis et me, inquit, miseram, et te perdidit, Orpheu? |
12030 | ''In Courts licentious, and a shameless Stage, How long the War shall Wit with Virtue wage? |
12030 | ''In what will all this ostentation end?'' |
12030 | ''Is it for this you gain those meagre looks, And sacrifice your dinner to your books?'' |
12030 | ''Jamne igitur laudas quod se sapientibus unus Ridebat?'' |
12030 | ''Jamne igitur laudas, quod de sapientibus alter Ridebat, quoties a limine moverat unum Protuleratque pedem: flebat contrarius alter?'' |
12030 | ''Look round the habitable world, how few Know their own good, or, knowing it, pursue? |
12030 | ''Nosces jocosæ dulce cum sacrum Floræ, Festosque lusus, et licentiam vulgi, Cur in Theatrum Cato severe venisti? |
12030 | ''Quanti emptæ? |
12030 | ''Quantum est in rebus Inane?'' |
12030 | ''Qui fit, Mæcenas, ut nemo, quam sibi sortem Seu ratio dederit, seu fors objecerit, illa Contentus vivat: laudet diversa sequentes? |
12030 | ''Quid Domini facient, audent cum tulia Fures?'' |
12030 | ''Quid Dulcius hominum generi a Natura datum est quam sui cuique liberi?'' |
12030 | ''Quid causæ est, meritò quin illis Jupiter ambas Iratus buccas inflet: neque se fore posthac Tam facilem dicat, votis ut præbeat aurem?'' |
12030 | ''Quid dignum tanto feret hic promissor HIATU?'' |
12030 | ''Quid? |
12030 | ''Quis Desiderio sit pudor aut modus Tam Chari capitis?'' |
12030 | ''Quis non invenit turbâ quod amaret in illâ?'' |
12030 | ''Say while they change on thus, what chains can bind These varying forms, this Proteus of the mind?'' |
12030 | ''Say, will you thank me if I bring you rest, And ease the torture of your troubled breast?'' |
12030 | ''Shou''d not I be a very barbarous Creature, if I did not pity a Man that is always Sighing for my Sake? |
12030 | ''Somnia, terrores magicos, miracula, Sagas, Nocturnos lemures, portentaque Thessala rides?'' |
12030 | ''Spectatum admissi risum teneatis?'' |
12030 | ''Such, whose sole bliss is eating; who can give But that one brutal reason why they live?'' |
12030 | ''To add no more, Is not this Fondness for Novelty, which makes us out of Conceit with all we already have, a convincing Proof of a future State? |
12030 | ''To shun detraction, would''st thou virtue fly?'' |
12030 | ''Tune impune hæc facias? |
12030 | ''Visions and magic spells can you despise, And laugh at witches, ghosts, and prodigies?'' |
12030 | ''Were it not just that Jove, provoked to heat, Should drive these triflers from the hallow''d seat, And unrelenting stand when they entreat?'' |
12030 | ''Were you a lion, how would you behave?'' |
12030 | ''What beauty, or what chastity, can bear So great a price, if stately and severe She still insults?'' |
12030 | ''What chief is this that visits us from far, Whose gallant mien bespeaks him train''d to war?'' |
12030 | ''What correspondence can I hold with you, Who are so near, and yet so distant too?'' |
12030 | ''What could, fond youth, this helpless passion move? |
12030 | ''What doth it cost? |
12030 | ''What duty, what praise, or what honour will he think worth enduring bodily pain for, who has persuaded himself that pain is the chief evil? |
12030 | ''What is there in nature so dear to man as his own children?'' |
12030 | ''What kind of philosophy is it to extol melancholy, the most detestable thing in nature?'' |
12030 | ''What seek we beyond heaven?'' |
12030 | ''What sense of shame in woman''s breast can lie, Inured to arms, and her own sex to fly?'' |
12030 | ''What shall I do to be for ever known, And make the Age to come my own?'' |
12030 | ''What will not masters do, when servants thus presume?'' |
12030 | ''When Mr._ Fondle_ looks upon me for half an Hour together, and calls me_ Angel_, is he not in Love? |
12030 | ''Whether I am not old enough to chuse for my self? |
12030 | ''Whether it would not have been rude in me to refuse a Lock of his Hair? |
12030 | ''Whether you do not think, that if I wo n''t have him, he wo n''t drown himself? |
12030 | ''Whether you would not advise me to run away with the poor Man? |
12030 | ''Who can relate such woes without a tear?'' |
12030 | ''Who can such woes relate, without a tear, As stern Ulysses must have wept to hear?'' |
12030 | ''Who shall decide when doctors disagree, And soundest casuists doubt like you and me?'' |
12030 | ''Will ye not now the pair of sages praise, Who the same end pursued by several ways? |
12030 | ''With how much Skill must the Throne of God be erected? |
12030 | ''Ægritudinem laudare, unam rem maximè detestabilem, quorum est tandem Philosophorum?'' |
12030 | --An me ludit amabilis Insania? |
12030 | --Coelum quid querimus ultra?'' |
12030 | --Does airy fancy cheat My mind well pleased with the deceit? |
12030 | --This deep World Of Darkness do we dread? |
12030 | --What if we find Some easier Enterprise? |
12030 | --Who could fail to find, In such a crowd a mistress to his mind?'' |
12030 | --Why delays His Hand to execute, what his Decree Fix''d on this day? |
12030 | ... Crudelis tu quoque mater: Crudelis mater magis an puer Improbus ille? |
12030 | 163 Thursday, Sept. 6, 1711 Addison''... Si quid ego adjuero, curamve levasso, Quæ nunc te coquit, et versat sub pectore fixa, Ecquid erit pretii?'' |
12030 | 31,& c.][ Footnote 7: The Epitaph was in St. George''s Church at Doncaster, and ran thus:''How now, who is heare? |
12030 | A Friend, with Indignation, asked how so good a Man could live with so violent a Creature? |
12030 | A week before this date, on the 16th of March, he wrote,''Have you seen the''Spectators''yet, a paper that comes out every day? |
12030 | A_ Grotto_ so compleat, with such Design, What Hands, Calypso, cou''d have form''d but Thine? |
12030 | Ac meritricios amores nuptiis conglutinas?'' |
12030 | Accurrit quidam notus mihi nomine tantum; Arreptaque manu, Quid agis dulcissime rerum? |
12030 | Addison''Qui mores hominun multorum vidit?'' |
12030 | After all, cries an old Aunt,( who belongs to the Class of those who read Plays with Spectacles on) what think you, Nephew, of proper Mrs._ Dorothy_? |
12030 | Ah, why should all Mankind, For one Man''s Fault, thus guiltless be condemn''d, If guiltless? |
12030 | Am I against all Acts of Charity? |
12030 | Ambigitur quid enim? |
12030 | An ideo tantum veneras, ut exires? |
12030 | And God said,--What? |
12030 | And are not you ashamed_, reply''d the Cynick,_ to value your self upon that only of which a Piece of Brass is capable? |
12030 | And did no one tell you any thing of the Behaviour of your Lover Mr._ What dye call_ last Night? |
12030 | And from whence can we go about to argue its Impossibility? |
12030 | And how despicable a Creature must that be, who is in Pain for what passes among so frivolous a People? |
12030 | And how does it turn into it self again, more foolishly fond and dejected, at the Disappointment? |
12030 | And how necessary is it to repeat Invectives against such a Behaviour? |
12030 | And how pitiful a Trader that, whom no Woman but his own Wife will have Correspondence and Dealings with? |
12030 | And if there be not such a Thing as what we may call a virtuous and laudable Pride? |
12030 | And ought not his Ambition and Expectations to be greater? |
12030 | And that Power and Preheminence are their inseperable Attendants?) |
12030 | And this you say is your way of Wit? |
12030 | And what a poor Figure would Mr._ Bayes_ have made without his_ Egad and all That_? |
12030 | And what does your Majesty intend next? |
12030 | And what think you if our Board sate for a_ Dutch_ Piece? |
12030 | And what''s the question? |
12030 | And what, Sir, says the Minister is to be the End of all your Expeditions? |
12030 | And whence the Fright that Sinai feels? |
12030 | And where is the Encouragement for marrying? |
12030 | And where is the Violet''s beautiful Blue? |
12030 | And whether they thought him a proper Person to attend one in his Condition? |
12030 | And who can magnify him as he is? |
12030 | And who is it, says the Dervise, that lodges here at present? |
12030 | And who, says the Dervise, was the last Person that lodged here? |
12030 | And who, says the Dervise, will be here after you? |
12030 | And why should Steele have defined his own merits? |
12030 | And will he die to Expiate those very Injuries? |
12030 | And with what Strokes of Nature( I could almost say of Humour) has he described the Behaviour of a treacherous and self- interested Friend? |
12030 | And yet how seldom imitated? |
12030 | And yet is there anything more common, than that we run in perfect Contradiction to them? |
12030 | And, what, I pray, is Natural? |
12030 | Answer me, Let me not burst in Ignorance; but tell Why thy canoniz''d Bones, hearsed in Death, Have burst their Cearments? |
12030 | Are not Spirits capable of Mutual Intelligence, unless immersed in Bodies, or by their Intervention? |
12030 | Are not the Capacities of Man higher than these? |
12030 | Are not these, O_ Mirzah_, Habitations worth contending for? |
12030 | Are such Abilities made for no Purpose? |
12030 | Are their Motions contrary? |
12030 | Are they impar''d in Show or Smell? |
12030 | Are they informed of this? |
12030 | Art thou not more affected with the Prospect of her green Vallies, than thou wouldest be with the Sight of her Person? |
12030 | Art thou of_ Bethlem''s_ noble College free? |
12030 | As I was walking with him last Night, he asked me how I liked the good Man whom I have just now mentioned? |
12030 | As he our Darkness, can not we his Light Imitate when we please? |
12030 | As soon as we arrived at the Inn, the Servant who waited upon me, inquir''d of the Chamberlain in my Hearing what Company he had for the Coach? |
12030 | Ask your self, how would you be pleased to enjoy for ever the Pleasure of having laid an immediate Obligation on a grateful Mind? |
12030 | At Chalybes nudi ferrum, virosaque Pontus Castorea, Eliadum palmas Epirus equarum? |
12030 | Barr? |
12030 | Being in one of my witty, merry Fits, I ask''d him how long he had been in that Condition? |
12030 | Besides, said one whom I overheard the other Day, why must this Paper turn altogether upon Topicks of Learning and Morality? |
12030 | Budgell Quid frustra Simulacra fugacia captas? |
12030 | But I appeal to you, whether this is to be called a Club, because so many Impertinents will break in upon me, and come without Appointment? |
12030 | But alas, I have not yet begun my Story, and what is making Sentences and Observations when a Man is pleading for his Life? |
12030 | But alas, is there any thing in human Life, the Duration of which can be called long? |
12030 | But have I now seen Death? |
12030 | But how carefully ought the true Notions of it to be preserved, and how industrious should we be to encourage any Impulses towards it? |
12030 | But how dye think I served him? |
12030 | But how few Ounces of Wooll do we see upon the Backs of those poor Creatures? |
12030 | But how few are there who seek after these things, and do not rather make Riches their chief if not their only Aim? |
12030 | But how great would be his Astonishment, when he learnt that we were Beings not designed to exist in this World above threescore and ten Years? |
12030 | But how is it, Sir, that my Appetites are increased upon me with the Loss of Power to gratify them? |
12030 | But if the ambitious Man can be so much grieved even with Praise it self, how will he be able to bear up under Scandal and Defamation? |
12030 | But is one day of ease too much to borrow? |
12030 | But is the Sense of Joy and Accomplishment of Desire no way to be indulged or attain''d? |
12030 | But is this then the Saviour? |
12030 | But it may be askd to what good Use can tend a Discourse of this Kind at all? |
12030 | But now What hands commit the beauteous, good, and just, The dearer part of William, to the dust? |
12030 | But now she is gone, and has left me behind, What a marvellous Change on a sudden I find? |
12030 | But perhaps it is nothing to you that he is to be married to young Mrs.--on_ Tuesday_ next? |
12030 | But pray, says he, you that are a Critick, is this Play according to your Dramatick Rules, as you call them? |
12030 | But should there be such a Foe of Mankind now upon Earth, have our Sins so far provoked Heaven, that we are left utterly naked to his Fury? |
12030 | But since Opinions are divided in this Particular, why may not the same Persons make use of both? |
12030 | But to cut short my Story; what can a Man do after all? |
12030 | But was not this a kind of Rape? |
12030 | But what Heart can conceive, what Tongue utter the Sequel? |
12030 | But what brave Man can be wounded into more Patience and Caution? |
12030 | But what can not a great Genius effect? |
12030 | But what did I then do? |
12030 | But what do they mean by all other Places? |
12030 | But what is that? |
12030 | But what shall we say of the Pleasure which a Man takes in the reading of a Defamatory Libel? |
12030 | But when a grave Author, like him above- mentioned, tasked himself, could there be anything more ridiculous? |
12030 | But when will that Time come, says_ Alcibiades_, and who is it that will instruct us? |
12030 | But whither am I strayed? |
12030 | But who,_ says I,_ is my Lady Q- p- t- s? |
12030 | But why do I say Envied? |
12030 | But why do I thus complain? |
12030 | But wo n''t you then take a Jest? |
12030 | But_ Gyges_ cry''d, In a proud Rage, Who can that_ Agla¸s_ be? |
12030 | By the way, who can imagine that the Existence of a Creature is to be circumscribed by Time, whose Thoughts are not? |
12030 | Calido sub pectore mascula bilis Intumuit, quam non extinxerit urna cicutæ? |
12030 | Can a Woman appear lovely in the Eyes of such a one? |
12030 | Can all the Trappings or Equipage of a King or Hero give_ Brutus_ half that Pomp and Majesty which he receives from a few Lines in_ Shakespear_? |
12030 | Can any thing shew your Holiness how unworthily you treat Mankind, more than my being put upon this Difficulty to speak with you? |
12030 | Can he delight in the Production of such abortive Intelligences, such short- lived reasonable Beings? |
12030 | Can not you distinguish between the Eyes of those who go to see, from those who come to be seen? |
12030 | Can not you possibly propose a Mean between being Wasps and Doves in Publick? |
12030 | Can there be a more astonishing Thought in Nature, than to consider how Men should fall into so palpable a Mistake? |
12030 | Can there be a more low and servile Condition, than to be ashamed, or afraid, to see any one Man breathing? |
12030 | Can you exert your self better than on such an Occasion? |
12030 | Can you oblige any Man of Honour and Virtue? |
12030 | Can you visit a sick Friend? |
12030 | Capacities that are never to be gratified? |
12030 | Cui leges imponit, praescribit, jubet, vetat quod videtur? |
12030 | Cur quis non prandeat, Hoc est?'' |
12030 | Cur territa in se refugit anima, cur tremit Attonita, quoties, morte ne pereat, timet? |
12030 | Cæsar had said,''Why might we not as well once more hear a speech from Cicero? |
12030 | Dear Creature, Can you then neglect him who has forgot all his Recreations and Enjoyments, to pine away his Life in thinking of you? |
12030 | Declare at once; and hath he lost or won?'' |
12030 | Did I request thee, Maker, from my Clay To mould me Man? |
12030 | Did not I weep for him that was in trouble? |
12030 | Did not he that made me in the womb, make him? |
12030 | Did you never see the Attendance of Years paid, over- paid in an Instant? |
12030 | Did you so, Sir? |
12030 | Didst thou come in but to go out again?'' |
12030 | Dixerit e multis aliquis, quid virus in angues Adjicis? |
12030 | Dixit adhuc aliquid? |
12030 | Do n''t you think she is in Love with me? |
12030 | Do not such Women deserve all the Misinterpretation which they neglect to avoid? |
12030 | Do not the very cruellest of Brutes tend their young ones with all the Care and Delight imaginable? |
12030 | Do not we observe, that a Lamb sucking a Goat changes very much its Nature, nay even its Skin and Wooll into the Goat Kind? |
12030 | Do they reflect that''tis their Own, and, if we will believe themselves, is not more odious than the Original? |
12030 | Do you ever read the SPECTATORS? |
12030 | Do you never go to Plays? |
12030 | Do you think it nothing to speak with_ Orpheus, Musceus, Homer_, and_ Hesiod_? |
12030 | Do you think that the_ Panicks_, which you_ sow_ about the Parish, will ever_ build_ a Monument to your Glory? |
12030 | Does Life appear miserable, that gives thee Opportunities of earning such a Reward? |
12030 | Does he live like a Gentleman who is commanded by a Woman? |
12030 | Does it not yet come into your Head, to imagine that I knew my Compliance was the greatest Cruelty I could be guilty of towards you? |
12030 | Does not a haughty Person shew the Temper of his Soul in the supercilious Rowl of his Eye? |
12030 | Does ought of its Sweetness the Blossom beguile, That Meadow, those Dasies, why do they not smile? |
12030 | Eja, Quid statis? |
12030 | Ejicit? |
12030 | Else why should Virtue provoke? |
12030 | En quid agis? |
12030 | Ere- while they fierce were coming, and when we, To entertain them fair with open Front, And Breast,( what could we more?) |
12030 | Et quid agam? |
12030 | Fie, my Dear, say I; how can a Woman of your Sense fall into such an intemperate Rage? |
12030 | Fiery? |
12030 | First, tell us, why did any come? |
12030 | For every Subject he has acquired, has he not lost three that were his Inheritance? |
12030 | For how can she be call''d a Mother that will not nurse her young ones? |
12030 | For what Complacency could a Mind, whose Love is as unbounded as his Knowledge, have in a Work so unlike Himself? |
12030 | For what should a poor Creature do that has lost all her Friends? |
12030 | Forlorn of thee, Whither shall I betake me, where subsist? |
12030 | Further, since the Human Frame is broken by Death, tell us what becomes of its Parts? |
12030 | Had he been contented with what he ought to have been, how could, says he, such a one have met with such a Disappointment? |
12030 | Has every impertinent Fellow a Privilege to torment me, who pay my Coach- hire as well as he? |
12030 | Has it at all impoverish''d you? |
12030 | Hast thou a Mind to pass for a_ Bantamite_, or to make us all_ Quakers_? |
12030 | Hath she ever been better pleas''d, than when her Behaviour hath made her Lover ready to hang himself? |
12030 | Have I not Children by thee? |
12030 | Have there not been more unhappy and unnatural Passions than mine? |
12030 | Have these Bones rattled, and this Head So often in thy Quarrel bled? |
12030 | Have we not already as much as we can drink? |
12030 | He casts his Eye to that Corner, and there to Mr. such- a- one; to the other, and when did you come to Town? |
12030 | He had not been long in this Posture before he was discovered by some of the Guards, who asked him what was his Business in that Place? |
12030 | He to whom she gives Law, grants and denies what she pleases? |
12030 | He, Who confining all his Regard to the Gratification of his own Appetites, is capable but of short Fits of Pleasure? |
12030 | Hitherto I have only told you the general Temper of my Mind, but how shall I give you an Account of the Distraction of it? |
12030 | Hold, are you mad? |
12030 | How can I live without thee; how forego Thy sweet Converse and Love so dearly join''d, To live again in these wild Woods forlorn? |
12030 | How can a judicious Man distinguish one thing from another, without saying_ This here_, or_ That there_? |
12030 | How could you entertain such a Thought, as that I should hear of that silly Fellow with Patience? |
12030 | How different are the Lives of_ Aristus_ and_ Aspasia_? |
12030 | How different from this manner of Education is that which prevails in our own Country? |
12030 | How different is the View of past Life, in the Man who is grown old in Knowledge and Wisdom, from that of him who is grown old in Ignorance and Folly? |
12030 | How fair was the Flower, how fresh was the Green? |
12030 | How finely has he described the Art of making Friends, by an obliging and affable Behaviour? |
12030 | How had his Breast glowed with Pleasure, when the whole Compass of Futurity lay open and exposed to his View? |
12030 | How happy then is that Life to be, where the highest Pleasures of Sense are but the lower Parts of its Felicity? |
12030 | How have I been troubled to see some of the finest Features in the World grow pale, and tremble with Party- Rage? |
12030 | How is it possible for those who are Men of Honour in their Persons, thus to become notorious Liars in their Party? |
12030 | How is the Mind of Man ignorant of Futurity, and unable to bear prosperous Fortune with Moderation? |
12030 | How like is this Lady, and how unlike is a_ Pict_, to that Description Dr._ Donne_ gives of his Mistress? |
12030 | How many Accidents have pass''d for Misfortunes, which have turned to the Welfare and Prosperity of the Persons in whose Lot they have fallen? |
12030 | How many Children do we see daily brought into Fits, Consumptions, Rickets,& c., merely by sucking their Nurses when in a Passion or Fury? |
12030 | How many Devices have been made use of, to render this bitter Potion palatable? |
12030 | How many Disappointments have, in their Consequences, saved a man from Ruin? |
12030 | How many Headstrings and Garters had been made accessory, and actually forfeited, only because Folks must needs quarrel with their own Shadows? |
12030 | How many Instances have we of Chastity, Fidelity, Devotion? |
12030 | How many Men of Honour exposed to publick Obloquy and Reproach? |
12030 | How many Persons of undoubted Probity, and exemplary Virtue, on either Side, are blackned and defamed? |
12030 | How many a pretty Gentleman''s Knowledge lies all within the Verge of the Court? |
12030 | How many are there whose whole Reputation depends upon a Punn or a Quibble? |
12030 | How many excellent Speeches and honest Actions are lost, for want of being indifferent where we ought? |
12030 | How many honest Minds are filled with uncharitable and barbarous Notions, out of their Zeal for the Publick Good? |
12030 | How many noble Arguments has Saint Paul raised from the chief Articles of our Religion, for the advancing of Morality in its three great Branches? |
12030 | How much nobler is the Contemplation of Beauty heighten''d by Virtue, and commanding our Esteem and Love, while it draws our Observation? |
12030 | How much, pray? |
12030 | How must a Man have his Heart full- blown with Joy in such an Article of Glory as this? |
12030 | How often have I, deceived by a Lovers Credulity, hearkned if she had not something to whisper me? |
12030 | How often have we found ourselves slighted by the Clergy in their Pulpits, and the Lawyers at the Bar? |
12030 | How often is the ambitious Man cast down and disappointed, if he receives no Praise where he expected it? |
12030 | How prettily does she divide her Discourse between her Woman and her Visitants? |
12030 | How quickly would the Honours of illustrious Men perish after Death, if their Souls performed nothing to preserve their Fame? |
12030 | How reasonable is it from hence to infer its Divine Original? |
12030 | How scandalous( says he) is the Character of Trebonius, who was lately caught in Bed with another Man''s Wife? |
12030 | How shall we be able to magnify him? |
12030 | How should there be Industry in a Country where all Property is precarious? |
12030 | How terrible has he appeared in Battel, how gentle in Victory? |
12030 | How this is to be accounted for I know not? |
12030 | How well disposed must that People be, who could be entertained with Satisfaction by so sober and polite Mirth? |
12030 | How would his Imagination have hurried him on in the Pursuit of the Mysteries of the Incarnation? |
12030 | How, Sir, replied Cyneas, to better than we have now before us? |
12030 | I ca n''t for my Life_, says I,_ imagine who they are the_ SPECTATOR_ means? |
12030 | I desire you would let me know whether you are at leisure or not? |
12030 | I have lived to a Fulness of Days and of Glory; what is there that Cæsar has not done with as much Honour as antient Heroes? |
12030 | I proposed from my Rank and his Estate, to live in all the Joys of Pride, but how was I mistaken? |
12030 | I then put in a young laughing Fop, and, watching for his Return, asked him, with a Smile, how he liked the Place? |
12030 | I was not to see a Penny of Money, for, poor Thing, how could I manage it? |
12030 | I will not say, shall the merciful_ Pharamond_ destroy his own Subjects? |
12030 | I wish, says he, the Captain may be_ Compos Mentis_, he talks of a saucy Trumpet, and a Drum that carries Messages; then who is this_ Charte Blanche_? |
12030 | If Calphurnia''s Dreams are Fumes of Indigestion, how shall I behold the Day after to- morrow? |
12030 | If Gratitude is due from Man to Man, how much more from Man to his Maker? |
12030 | If I did despise the cause of my man- servant or my maid- servant when they contended with me: What then shall I do when God riseth up? |
12030 | If I had laid out that which I profused in Luxury and Wantonness, in Acts of Generosity or Charity? |
12030 | If I were to speak of Merit neglected, mis- applied, or misunderstood, might not I say Estcourt has a great Capacity? |
12030 | If Men would be content to graft upon Nature, and assist her Operations, what mighty Effects might we expect? |
12030 | If Mr._ Such- a- ones_ Lady? |
12030 | If at any time she sees a Man warm in his Addresses to his Mistress, she will lift up her Eyes to Heaven, and cry, What Nonsense is that Fool talking? |
12030 | If he has not Courage to stand it,( you are a great Casuist) is it such an ill thing to bring my self off, as well as I can? |
12030 | If his is allowed to be a Consort, why may n''t mine be a Lecture? |
12030 | If they do everything that is possible to attract our Eyes, are we more culpable than they for looking at them? |
12030 | If thou be brought low he will be against thee, and hide himself from thy Face._[ 2] What can be more strong and pointed than the following Verse? |
12030 | If you asked, Pray, Sir, what says the_ Postman_ from_ Vienna_? |
12030 | In Reason''s Ear they all rejoice, And utter forth a glorious Voice, For ever singing, as they shine,''The Hand that made us is Divine?'' |
12030 | In short, when I consider the Question, whether there are such Persons in the World as those we call Witches? |
12030 | In the City she uttereth her Words, saying, How long, ye simple ones, will ye love Simplicity? |
12030 | In yonder nether World-- where shall I seek His bright Appearances, or Footsteps trace? |
12030 | Into what tragical Extravagancies does_ Shakespear_ hurry_ Othello_ upon the loss of an Handkerchief only? |
12030 | Invidiam placare paras virtute relicta? |
12030 | Is Death to be feared, that will convey thee to so happy an Existence? |
12030 | Is it Cruelty that administers this Sort of Delight? |
12030 | Is it in those who commit, or those who observe it? |
12030 | Is it inconsistent with Self- Love? |
12030 | Is it not Contradiction to say, Illustrious, Right, Reverend, and Right Honourable poor Sinners? |
12030 | Is it not a Question, whether it does more Harm or Good in the World? |
12030 | Is it not an heinous Sin in the Sight of God? |
12030 | Is it possible for Chance to be thus delicate and uniform in her Operations? |
12030 | Is it so indeed, quoth she, good Mr._ Pert_? |
12030 | Is it some Man of endless Wealth? |
12030 | Is it some mighty Gen''ral, that has done Wonders in Fight, and God- like Honours won? |
12030 | Is it sufferable, that the Fop of whom I complain should say, as he would rather have such a- one without a Groat, than me with the_ Indies_? |
12030 | Is not Mrs._ Betty_ exceeding fair? |
12030 | Is not this more than an Intimation of our Immortality? |
12030 | Is some old_ Hero_ of that Name alive, Who his high Race does from the Gods derive? |
12030 | Is the Force of Self- Love abated, or its Interest prejudiced by Benevolence? |
12030 | Is the Goodness, or Wisdom of the divine Being, more manifested in this his Proceeding? |
12030 | Is there any Merit in being the Messenger of ill News? |
12030 | Is there no Power, no Leader, no Genius, that can conduct and animate us to our Death or our Defence? |
12030 | Is this Creature to be accounted the Successor of a Man of Virtue, Wit and Breeding? |
12030 | Is this the Man that is so celebrated for his Conquests? |
12030 | Is this then the great, the invincible_ Lewis?_ This the immortal Man, the_ tout- puissant_, or the Almighty, as his Flatterers have called him? |
12030 | Is this then the great, the invincible_ Lewis?_ This the immortal Man, the_ tout- puissant_, or the Almighty, as his Flatterers have called him? |
12030 | Is this, do you think, no happy Journey? |
12030 | It is pleasant enough to hear this Tragical Genius complaining of the great Mischief Andromache had done him: What was that? |
12030 | It is this fatal Hypocrisie and Self- deceit, which is taken notice of in those Words, Who can understand his Errors? |
12030 | It may be a Matter worth discussing then, Why that which made a Youth so amiable to the Ancients, should make him appear so ridiculous to the Moderns? |
12030 | It was in answer to Marforio''s question, Why he wore a dirty shirt? |
12030 | It was replied, Are you a passionate Man? |
12030 | It was upon this consideration that Epaminondas, being asked whether Chabrias, Iphicrates, or he himself, deserved most to be esteemed? |
12030 | John Hughes? |
12030 | Know ye not then, said Satan, fill''d with Scorn, Know ye not Me? |
12030 | Laudis amore tumes? |
12030 | Les Dieux, dans son bonheur, peuvent- ils légaler? |
12030 | Lest I be full and deny thee, and say, who is the Lord? |
12030 | Let Mr._ Dapperwit_ consider,_ What is that long Story of the Cuckoldom to me_? |
12030 | Make Jordan backward roll his Tide? |
12030 | Minitatur? |
12030 | Most audacious Slave, Dar''st thou an angry Monarch''s Fury brave? |
12030 | Must Dear[ Chloe[ 2]] be called by the hard Name you pious People give to common Women? |
12030 | Must I that am a Beauty be treated with for nothing but my Beauty? |
12030 | Must I then leave thee, Paradise? |
12030 | Must I then live to see you another''s? |
12030 | Must not he imagine that we were placed in this World to get Riches and Honours? |
12030 | Must superior Natures depend on inferior for the main Privilege of sociable Beings, that of conversing with, and knowing each other? |
12030 | Must the_ British_ Nation suffer forsooth, because my Lady_ Q- p- t- s_ has been disobliged? |
12030 | My Friend, reply''d he, canst thou be so Senseless as not to know that one Volume is as imperfect in my Library as in your Shop? |
12030 | My Orra Moor, where art thou laid? |
12030 | Nay, to what ignominy, to what baseness will he not stoop, to avoid pain, if he has determined it to be the chief evil?'' |
12030 | Nay, would not he believe we were forbidden Poverty by Threats of eternal Punishment, and enjoined to pursue our Pleasures under Pain of Damnation? |
12030 | Nil obstat quin trabe vasta Ægæum rapias, nisi solers Luxuria ante Seductum moneat; quo deinde, insane ruis? |
12030 | No more a pleasing, cheerful guest? |
12030 | Non pudet, O Rutuli, cunctis pro talibus unam Objectare animam? |
12030 | Nonne vides, croceos ut Tmolus odores, India mittit ebur, molles sua thura Sabæi? |
12030 | Nor your Cousin_ Such- a- one_? |
12030 | Novel? |
12030 | Now as for the Women; how few of them are there who place the Happiness of their Marriage in the having a wise and virtuous Friend? |
12030 | Now what is become of thy former Wit and Humour? |
12030 | Now what is there of Scandal in this Skill? |
12030 | Now which of these three, says the old Bard, do you think was the Favourite? |
12030 | Now you must understand poor Mr._ Shapely_ has no Estate; but how can he help that, you know? |
12030 | Now, Mr. SPECTATOR, would it not be a Work becoming your Office to treat this Criminal as she deserve[s]? |
12030 | Now, Sir, what I ask of you, as a Casuist, is to tell me how far in these Circumstances I am innocent, though submissive; he guilty, though impotent? |
12030 | O Friends, why come not on those Victors proud? |
12030 | O how shall Words with equal Warmth The Gratitude declare That glows within my ravish''d Heart? |
12030 | O lubricum nimis aspici, Mixtumque dulci Gaudium formidine? |
12030 | Of those who admit it into the most familiar Questions and Assertions, ludicrous Phrases and Works of Humour? |
12030 | One who will divide his Cares and double his Joys? |
12030 | Or are they not in the actual Practice of Guilt, who care not whether they are thought guilty or not? |
12030 | Or could a Society of such Creatures, with no other Bottom but Self- Love on which to maintain a Commerce, ever flourish? |
12030 | Or doth she ever rejoice more, than when she thinks she hath driven him to the very Brink of a purling Stream? |
12030 | Or find some other way to generate Mankind? |
12030 | Or is it a Pleasure which is taken in the Exercise of Pity? |
12030 | Or shall I retire to my House? |
12030 | Or whence this secret Dread, and inward Horror, Of falling into Nought? |
12030 | Or whether such or such Food was the more wholsome for the young Lady to eat? |
12030 | Or would not one be apt to believe that the Author played[ booty[ 10]], and did not make his List of Rhymes till he had finished his Poem? |
12030 | Ought such a one to be trusted in his common Affairs? |
12030 | Peace is despair''d, And who can think Submission? |
12030 | Poscit? |
12030 | Possis ut illum dicere mortuum En Terra jam nunc Quantula sufficit? |
12030 | Pray tell me in what Part of the World your Promontory lies, which you call_ The Lovers Leap_, and whether one may go to it by Land? |
12030 | Pray then how do you justify your Hypothesis of Laughter? |
12030 | Pray, Sir, think of three Years; what inexpressible Scenes of Inquietude, what Variety of Misery must I have gone thro''in three long whole Years? |
12030 | Pray, Sir, was this Love or Spite? |
12030 | Pray, Sir, what can be done in this Case? |
12030 | Pray, Sir, what must I do in this Business? |
12030 | Quam porro quis ignominiam, quam turpitudinem non pertulerit, ut effugiat dolorem, si i d summum malum esse decrevit? |
12030 | Quanta erit mutatio? |
12030 | Quanti ergo? |
12030 | Qui nihil imperanti negare, nihil recusare audet? |
12030 | Quid enim? |
12030 | Quid non dem?'' |
12030 | Quid petis? |
12030 | Quid placet ergo? |
12030 | Quid tibi vis? |
12030 | Quid vult sibi aliud iste redeundi in nihil Horror, sub imis quemque agens precordiis? |
12030 | Quid? |
12030 | Quis novus hic nostris successit sedibus Hospes? |
12030 | Quis orbis novus Manet incolendus? |
12030 | Quo teneam vultus mutantem Protea nodo? |
12030 | Quo? |
12030 | Quod huic Officium, quæ laus, quod Decus erit tanti, quod adipisci cum colore Corporis velit, qui dolorem summum malum sibi persuaserit? |
12030 | Quorsum hæc dulcis Expectatio; Vitæque non explenda melioris sitis? |
12030 | Quoth he, O whither, wicked_ Bruin,_ Art thou fled to my-----Eccho_, Ruin? |
12030 | Quove in tempore? |
12030 | Quæ Terra mox incognita? |
12030 | Quæ demigrabitur alia hinc in corpora? |
12030 | Quæ forma, ut se tibi semper Imputet? |
12030 | Rather, how few are there who do not place their Happiness in outshining others in Pomp and Show? |
12030 | Respect to all kind of Superiours is founded methinks upon Instinct; and yet what is so ridiculous as Age? |
12030 | Rogitas? |
12030 | Rose, what is become of thy delicate Hue? |
12030 | SIR, Is it come to this? |
12030 | SPECTATOR, I am a Woman''s Man, and read with a very fine Lady your Paper, wherein you fall upon us whom you envy: What do you think I did? |
12030 | Say, wouldst thou bear all this, to raise the Store, From Six i''th''Hundred to Six Hundred more? |
12030 | Searoom? |
12030 | Secondly, What was the Motive of her Disobedience? |
12030 | Sed quâ Beata sede? |
12030 | Shall then the base Arts of the_ Frenchman_ be held Polite, and the honest Labours of the_ Russian_ Barbarous? |
12030 | Shall this Obscure Nazarene command Israel, and sit on the Throne of David? |
12030 | Shall we remember the Folly of last Night, or resolve upon the Exercise of Virtue tomorrow? |
12030 | Shame is the greatest of all Evils; what avail Laws, when Death only attends the Breach of them, and Shame Obedience to them? |
12030 | She came early to_ Belinda_ the next Morning, and asked her if Mrs._ Such- a- one_ had been with her? |
12030 | She enquires of him, Whether he has seen pass by that Way any young Woman dressed as she was? |
12030 | Should your People in Tragedy always talk to be understood? |
12030 | Sight so deform, what Heart of Rock could long Dry- eyed behold? |
12030 | Since every Body who knows the World is sensible of this great Evil, how careful ought a Man to be in his Language of a Merchant? |
12030 | So also Minutius Felix,''Adversus Gentes:''"Quam pulchrum spectaculum Deo, cum Christianus cum dolore congueditur? |
12030 | So, tho''I robb''d you of a Kiss, Sweeter than their Ambrosial Dew; Why are you angry at my Bliss? |
12030 | Sollicitando, et pollicitando eorum animos lactas? |
12030 | Sounding Titles, stately Buildings, fine Gardens, gilded Chariots, rich Equipages, what are they? |
12030 | Sparrows for the Opera, says his Friend, licking his lips, what are they to be roasted? |
12030 | Speak, wilt thou_ Avarice_ or_ Pleasure_ choose To be thy Lord? |
12030 | Stark, staring mad, that thou wouldst tempt the Sea? |
12030 | Teach them new wiles and arts? |
12030 | Tell my dearest_ Betty_ thou dost not more depend upon her, than does her_ William_? |
12030 | That Delight and Satisfaction which he takes in the Prosperity and Happiness of another? |
12030 | That inward Pleasure and Complacency, which he feels in doing Good? |
12030 | That secret Rest and Contentedness of Mind, which gives him a Perfect Enjoyment of his present Condition? |
12030 | That thou dead Coarse again in compleat Steel Revisit''st thus the Glimpses of the Moon, Making Night hideous? |
12030 | That which is pleasing and easie: And what are Pleasing and Easie? |
12030 | That while your Petitioners stand ready to receive Passengers with a submissive Bow, and repeat with a gentle Voice, Ladies, what do you want? |
12030 | The Cases are as follow:''_ Q._ Whether_ Amoret_ be bound by a Promise of Marriage to_ Philander_, made during her Husband''s Life? |
12030 | The Earth trembles, the Temple rends, the Rocks burst, the Dead Arise: Which are the Quick? |
12030 | The Fox and Goose may be supposed to have met, but what has the Fox and the Seven Stars to do together? |
12030 | The Friend on the Shore cry''d out, Who''s that is drowned trow? |
12030 | The Question we are all concerned in is this, In which of these two Lives it is our chief Interest to make our selves happy? |
12030 | The Sense of it is as follows: Does a Man reproach thee for being Proud or Ill- natured, Envious or Conceited, Ignorant or Detracting? |
12030 | The Sentence at the Head of this Paper, which is only a warm Interrogation,_ What is there in Nature so dear as a Man''s own Children to him_? |
12030 | The Youth''s Hopes are ill- grounded; for what is more foolish than to place any Confidence upon an Uncertainty? |
12030 | The good Girl strives to comfort me; but how shall I let you know that all the Comfort she gives me is to make my Tears flow more easily? |
12030 | Their Pillars, Trophies, and Monuments of Glory? |
12030 | Then pray do but mind the two or three next Lines? |
12030 | Then what has quell''d thy stubborn Heart? |
12030 | This I know of Tom, but who dare say it of so known a Tory? |
12030 | This set every one upon guessing who was the Esquire''s friend? |
12030 | This was the Character of those holy Men of old, who in that beautiful Phrase of Scripture are said to have_ walked with God?_. |
12030 | This, perhaps, is not a very courtly Image in speaking of Ladies; that is very true: but where arises the Offence? |
12030 | Thou turn''dst thy Back? |
12030 | Thus leave Thee, native Soil, these happy Walks and Shades, Fit haunt of Gods? |
12030 | Tibi torta cannabe fulto Coena sit in transtro? |
12030 | To be cur''d, thou must_, Colin,_ thy Passion remove; But what Swain is so silly to live without Love? |
12030 | To descend lower, are not our Streets filled with sagacious Draymen, and Politicians in Liveries? |
12030 | To run from those th''hadst overcome Thus cowardly? |
12030 | To what End? |
12030 | To what Place betake my self? |
12030 | True, Son_, said the Hermit;_ but what is thy Condition if there is_? |
12030 | Tun''mare transilias? |
12030 | Tune hic homines adolescentulos Imperitos rerum, eductos libere, in fraudem illicis? |
12030 | Upon my asking their Leader, what brought them thither? |
12030 | Ut nummi, quos hic quincunce modesto Nutrieras, pergant avidos sudare deunces? |
12030 | V._ What Phrenzy in my Bosom rag''d, And by what Care to be asswag''d? |
12030 | Veientanúmque rubellum Exhalet vapida læsum pice sessilis obba? |
12030 | Vocat? |
12030 | Was not I the Husband of thy Virginity? |
12030 | Well, what have I got by putting her into good Humour? |
12030 | Were it not more desirable to have worn out my days in Ease and Tranquility, free from Labour, and without Emulation? |
12030 | Were it not rather to be wished we improved in our own Sphere, and approved our selves better Daughters, Wives, Mothers, and Friends? |
12030 | Were that active watchful Being only conscious of her own Existence at such a time, what a painful Solitude would her Hours of Sleep be? |
12030 | Were this one Thought strongly fixed in the Mind, what Calamity would be dreadful? |
12030 | What Actions can express the entire Purity of Thought which refines and sanctifies a virtuous Man? |
12030 | What Advantage then had St._ Paul_ above those of_ Greece_, or_ Rome_? |
12030 | What Good to his Country or himself might not a Trader or Merchant have done with such useful tho''ordinary Qualifications? |
12030 | What Load can Infamy lay upon us when we are sure of the Approbation of him, who will repay the Disgrace of a Moment with the Glory of Eternity? |
12030 | What Man that has a Value for a good Name would like to have it said in a publick Court, that Mr. such- a- one was_ stripp''d, saddled_ or_ hung up_? |
12030 | What Peals of Laughter and Impertinence shall we be exposed to? |
12030 | What Power could make the Deep divide? |
12030 | What Proportion would there be between the Head and the Heart of such a Creature, its Affections, and its Understandings? |
12030 | What Refuse must he be contented with, who chuses the latter? |
12030 | What Remains, what Impressions, what Difference or Distinction, do you see in this Mass of Fire? |
12030 | What Sharpness is there in Pain and Diseases, when they only hasten us on to the Pleasures that will never fade? |
12030 | What Subject will sow his Land that his Prince may reap the whole Harvest? |
12030 | What Wood conceals my sleeping Maid? |
12030 | What a Spur and Encouragement still to proceed in those Steps which had already brought him to so pure a Taste of the greatest of mortal Enjoyments? |
12030 | What a Tax, says he, would they have raised for the Poor, had we put the Laws in Execution upon one another? |
12030 | What a lovely appearance the Trees and the Shade, The Corn- fields and Hedges, and ev''ry thing made? |
12030 | What a perpetual Fund would it have been of obsolete Words and Phrases, unusual Barbarisms and Rusticities, absurd Spellings and complicated Dialects? |
12030 | What an Inundation of Ribbons and Brocades will break in upon us? |
12030 | What are Honour, Fame, Wealth, or Power when compared with the generous Expectation of a Being without End, and a Happiness adequate to that Being? |
12030 | What are these but rank Pedants? |
12030 | What can be more inconsistent, than to see a Bawd at the Sign of the Angel, or a Taylor at the Lion? |
12030 | What can be more sounding and poetical, resemble more the majestic Simplicity of the Ancients, than the following Stanzas? |
12030 | What can engage them to entertain and foment Jealousies of one another upon every the least Occasion? |
12030 | What can make us love and esteem even the most inconsiderable of Mankind more than the Thought that Christ died for him? |
12030 | What can we then think of those who make use of so tremendous a Name in the ordinary Expressions of their Anger, Mirth, and most impertinent Passions? |
12030 | What could I do, But follow streight, invisibly thus led? |
12030 | What could make a stronger Impression, says he, than those Exclamations of_ Gracchus_:''Whither shall I turn? |
12030 | What do I think? |
12030 | What do you think of Gilt Leather for Furniture? |
12030 | What does the Fool mean by his Pickle? |
12030 | What gentle Youth I could allure, Whom in my artful Toiles secure? |
12030 | What good would Sight and Hearing do to a Creature, that can not move it self to, or from the Object, wherein at a distance it perceives Good or Evil? |
12030 | What greater Instance can there be of a weak and pusillanimous Temper, than for a Man to pass his whole Life in Opposition to his own Sentiments? |
12030 | What has any body to do with Accounts of a Man''s being Indispos''d but his Physician? |
12030 | What has he got by his Conquest, but to think meanly of her for whom a Day or two before he had the highest Honour? |
12030 | What has the Merchant done, that he should be so little in the good Graces of Sir ROGER? |
12030 | What have you to do with our Petticoats?'' |
12030 | What if I should own my self in Love? |
12030 | What is a greater Pedant than a meer Man of the Town? |
12030 | What is it but Novelty that awakens Desire, enhances Delight, kindles Anger, provokes Envy, inspires Horror? |
12030 | What is the Difference in the Happiness of him who is macerated by Abstinence, and his who is surfeited with Excess? |
12030 | What is the Reason Homers and Virgil''s Heroes do not form a Resolution, or strike a Blow, without the Conduct and Direction of some Deity? |
12030 | What is the Reason, said I, that the Tide I see rises out of a thick Mist at one End, and again loses itself in a thick Mist at the other? |
12030 | What is there in Ambition, but to make other People''s Wills depend upon yours? |
12030 | What kindled in thee this unpitied love? |
12030 | What may for Strength with Steel compare? |
12030 | What may this mean? |
12030 | What might not that Savage Greatness of Soul which appears in these poor Wretches on many Occasions, be raised to, were it rightly cultivated? |
12030 | What more beautiful than''Pandæmonium'', Paradise, Heaven, Angels,''Adam''and''Eve''? |
12030 | What must I do? |
12030 | What must I do? |
12030 | What must a Man do in that Case? |
12030 | What must be the Architecture of Infinite Power under the Direction of Infinite Wisdom? |
12030 | What must be the Overflowings of that good Will, which prompted our Creator to adapt Existence to Beings, in whom it is not necessary? |
12030 | What right has any Man to make Suppositions of things not in his Power, and then declare his Will to the dislike of one that has never offended him? |
12030 | What shall I do? |
12030 | What shall I say to him the next time he asks me if I will marry him? |
12030 | What sprightly Transitions does she make from an Opera or a Sermon, to an Ivory Comb or a Pincushion? |
12030 | What sting is in Death, when we are assured that it is only the Beginning of Life? |
12030 | What strong Images of Virtue and Humanity might we not expect would be instilled into the Mind from the Labours of the Pencil? |
12030 | What then can be the Standard of Delicacy but Truth and Virtue? |
12030 | What then can weak Woman do? |
12030 | What then? |
12030 | What then? |
12030 | What tho''nor real Voice nor Sound Amid their radiant Orbs be found? |
12030 | What though, in solemn Silence, all Move round the dark terrestrial Ball? |
12030 | What time shall end Our mourning for so dear a friend?'' |
12030 | What unnatural Motions and Counterferments must such a Medley of Intemperance produce in the Body? |
12030 | What will all this end in? |
12030 | What would that Philosopher have said, had he been present at the Gluttony of a modern Meal? |
12030 | What would they have done, had Matter never been created? |
12030 | What would we give now for the least Glimpse of that invisible World, which the first step we take out of these Bodies will present us with? |
12030 | What, said the Philosopher,[ 6] could that Image of yours say for it self if it could speak? |
12030 | When Fancy is sated, and finds all the Promises it[ made[ 2]] it self false, where is now the Innocence which charmed you? |
12030 | When I gave you an Hint of it, you asked me whether a Man is to be cold to what his Friends think of him? |
12030 | When I have seen a pretty Mouth uttering Calumnies and Invectives, what would not I have given to have stopt it? |
12030 | When an Argument is over, how many weighty Reasons does a Man recollect, which his Heat and Violence made him utterly forget? |
12030 | When his Mirth was over, I have often reprehended him out of_ Terence, Tuumne, obsecro te, hoc dictum erat? |
12030 | When is it used to help the Afflicted, to rescue the Innocent, to comfort the Stranger? |
12030 | When one sees there are actually such Pains- takers among our_ British_ Wits, who can tell what it may end in? |
12030 | When the Birth approaches, with how much Nicety and Attention does she help the Chick to break its Prison? |
12030 | When the Mind is thus summed up and expressed in a Glance, did you never observe a sudden Joy arise in the Countenance of a Lover? |
12030 | When this was settled, one asked the other, Will you give Cuts or receive? |
12030 | When walking with_ Phebe,_ what Sights have I seen? |
12030 | When will the Six Weeks be at an End, that lye between me and my promised Happiness? |
12030 | Where are now the great Empires of the World, and their great Imperial Cities? |
12030 | Where can unpolished Nature boast a Piece, In all her Mossie Cells exact as This? |
12030 | Where shall we find the Man who looks out for one who places her chief Happiness in the Practice of Virtue, and makes her Duty her continual Pleasure? |
12030 | Whether she were following the Sport in the Wood, or any other Way employed, according to the Custom of Huntresses? |
12030 | Which are the Dead? |
12030 | While Men are in this Temper( which happens very frequently) how inconsistent are they with themselves? |
12030 | Whither do they carry my Lord, my King, my Saviour, and my God? |
12030 | Whither, ah, whither art thou flying, To what dark, undiscovered shore? |
12030 | Who calls Terra- firma pray? |
12030 | Who can behold an honest Soldier, that bravely withstood the Enemy, prostrate and in Want amongst his Friends? |
12030 | Who can describe the Passion made up of Joy, Sorrow, Love, Desire, Astonishment, that rose in the Indian upon the Sight of his dear_ Yaratilda_? |
12030 | Who can endure to see the great Officers of State, the_ B-- y''s_ and_ T-- t''s_ treated after so scurrilous a Manner? |
12030 | Who can hear the Terrors of the Lord of Hosts described in the most expressive Melody, without being awed into a Veneration? |
12030 | Who can read the Speech with which young''Hamlet''accosts him, without trembling? |
12030 | Who can without Remorse see a disabled Sailor, the Purveyor of our Luxury, destitute of Necessaries? |
12030 | Who could expect such a Requital of such Merit? |
12030 | Who does not here see the main Strokes and Outlines of this great Truth we are speaking of? |
12030 | Who does thy tender Heart subdue, Tell me, my_ Sappho,_ tell me Who_? |
12030 | Who ever beheld the charming Emilia, without feeling in his Breast at once the Glow of Love and the Tenderness of virtuous Friendship? |
12030 | Who ever thought himself mean in Absolute Power,''till he had learned to use it? |
12030 | Who hath seen him, that he might tell us? |
12030 | Who is that yonder buffeted, mock''d, and spurn''d? |
12030 | Who then can bear the Thought of being an Out- cast from his Presence, that is, from the Comforts of it, or of feeling it only in its Terrors? |
12030 | Who were the Persons that lodged in this House when it was first built? |
12030 | Who would Fardles bear, To groan and sweat under a weary Life? |
12030 | Who would have thought that the clangorous Noise of a Smiths Hammers should have given the first rise to Musick? |
12030 | Who, but himself, ever left a Throne to learn to sit in it with more Grace? |
12030 | Whom do they drag like a Felon? |
12030 | Whom shall the Muse from out the shining Throng Select to heighten and adorn her Song? |
12030 | Why am I mock''d with Death, and lengthened out To deathless Pain? |
12030 | Why did ye leap, ye little Hills? |
12030 | Why didst thou fleer at our Friend, who feigned himself asleep? |
12030 | Why do I overlive? |
12030 | Why does not he write it at length, if he means honestly? |
12030 | Why dost thou come, great Censor of the Age, To see the loose Diversions of the Stage? |
12030 | Why else, says he, does_ Cornelia_ always put on a Black Hood when her Husband is gone into the Country? |
12030 | Why he in particular?] |
12030 | Why may not I hope to go on in my usual Work, and, tho unknown to you, be assistant in all the Conflicts of your Mind? |
12030 | Why must I, good Sir, because I have a good Air, a fine Complexion, and am in the Bloom of my Years, be mis- led in all my Actions? |
12030 | Why should People miscall things? |
12030 | Why should a Man be sensible of the Sting of a Reproach, who is a Stranger to the Guilt that is implied in it? |
12030 | Why should it pretend only to Wit, Humour, or the like? |
12030 | Why should not a Female Character be as ridiculous in a Man, as a Male Character in one of our Sex? |
12030 | Why should not every Contributor to the Abuse of Chastity suffer Death? |
12030 | Why should there be Accessaries in Ravishment any more than Murder? |
12030 | Why shrinks the Soul Back on her self, and startles at Destruction? |
12030 | Why sleepst thou Eve? |
12030 | Why the Sepulchre, Wherein we saw thee quietly inurn''d, Hath op''d his ponderous and marble Jaws To cast thee up again? |
12030 | Why was Courage given to Man, if his Wife''s Fears are to frustrate it? |
12030 | Why will any Man be so impertinently Officious as to tell me all this is only Fancy and Delusion? |
12030 | Why will you take pains to appear wise, where you would not be the more esteemed for being really so? |
12030 | Will any Man think of raising Children, without any Assurance of Cloathing for their Backs, or so much as Food for their Bellies? |
12030 | Will it revive him to see you enter, and suspend your own Ease and Pleasure to comfort his Weakness, and hear the Impertinencies of a Wretch in Pain? |
12030 | Will no pitying Power that hears me complain, Or cure my Disquiet, or soften my Pain? |
12030 | Will the Bell never ring for Prayers? |
12030 | Will the Father of his Country murder his People? |
12030 | Will you not hear me, nor regard my woe? |
12030 | Will you not hear me? |
12030 | Will you, Virtuous Men, allow no alteration of Offences? |
12030 | With awful Countenance and Brow severe, What in the Name of Goodness dost thou here? |
12030 | With how many different Circumstances, and with what Variety of Phrases, will they tell over the same Story? |
12030 | With what Confusion is a Man of Figure obliged to return the Civilities of the Hat to a Person whose Air and Attire hardly entitle him to it? |
12030 | With what a Fluency of Invention, and Copiousness of Expression, will they enlarge upon every little Slip in the Behaviour of another? |
12030 | With what glorious Designs is that Habitation beautified, which is contrived and built by him who inspired_ Hyram_ with Wisdom? |
12030 | Would an infinitely wise Being make such glorious Creatures for so mean a Purpose? |
12030 | Would he give us Talents that are not to be exerted? |
12030 | Would it not employ a Beau prettily enough, if instead of eternally playing with a Snuff- box, he spent some part of his Time in making one? |
12030 | Would not he think that it was our Duty to toil after Wealth, and Station, and Title? |
12030 | Would not he think that we are a Species of Beings made for quite different Ends and Purposes than what we really are? |
12030 | Would you do an handsome thing without Return? |
12030 | Would you increase the craft of womankind? |
12030 | You are a stubborn Beast; is this your Gratitude for my giving you Mony? |
12030 | You are therefore to consider which of your Lovers will like you best undressed, which will bear with you most when out of Humour? |
12030 | You were telling of? |
12030 | [ 1] With what Prudence does he caution us in the Choice of our Friends? |
12030 | [ 1]_ SIR_, Why will you apply to my Father for my Love? |
12030 | [ 2] What could I do? |
12030 | [ 5][ Footnote 1: Or Henry Martyn?] |
12030 | [ Footnote 2: Lord Cowper?] |
12030 | [ Footnote 2: Smalridge?] |
12030 | [ Footnote 3:--wiser than they: Is not this the Carpenters Son, is not his Mother called Mary, his Brethren, James, Joseph, Simon and Judas? |
12030 | [ Quis talia fando Temperet à lachrymis? |
12030 | _ An ille mihi liber cui mulier imperat? |
12030 | _ Asterisks,_ says he,_ do you call them? |
12030 | _ Belinda_, see from yonder Flowers The Bee flies loaded to its Cell; Can you perceive what it devours? |
12030 | _ But what a- vengeance makes thee fly From me too, as thine Enemy? |
12030 | _ CATO_ alone,& c.''It must be so--_Plato_, thou reason''st well-- Else whence this pleasing Hope, this fond Desire, This Longing after Immortality? |
12030 | _ Dear Correspondent_, Would you marry to please other People, or your self? |
12030 | _ For what is this Life but a Circulation of little mean Actions? |
12030 | _ In the 788th Year of the Creation._''What have I not suffered, O thou Daughter of_ Zilpah_, since thou gavest thy self away in Marriage to my Rival? |
12030 | _ Is not the Lady she writes against reckoned Handsome_? |
12030 | _ Quid dubius hæret animus usque adeo? |
12030 | _ Quid enim dedisset, Quæ dedit frustra nihil, Æternitatis insitam cupidinem Natura? |
12030 | _ Quid, quod materiam præbet causasque jocorum Omnibus hic idem? |
12030 | _ Socrates_ then asks him, If after[ receiving[ 1]] this great Favour he would be content[ed] to lose his Life? |
12030 | _ Was ever any thing like this?_ Yes, Sir, there have been many things like this. |
12030 | _ What is more obvious and ordinary than a Mole? |
12030 | _ What is the World come to? |
12030 | _ Why hast thou set me as a Mark against thee, so that I am become a Burthen to my self_? |
12030 | _ Will_, who is acquainted with_ Tom''s_ Logick, when he finds him running off the Question, cuts him short with a_ What then? |
12030 | a Creature that should be capable of knowing and conversing with a vast Circle of Objects, and love none but Himself? |
12030 | ah, whither shall I go? |
12030 | and Fools hate Knowledge? |
12030 | and did not one fashion us in the womb? |
12030 | and have the Notions of Good and Ill confounded in my Mind, for no other Offence, but because I have the Advantages of Beauty and Fortune? |
12030 | and have we Appetites given us not to be at all gratify''d? |
12030 | and hope to go to Heav''n? |
12030 | and how often troubled in that very Imagination, at giving her the Pain of being obliged? |
12030 | and how seldom renewed by some few who dare despise sordid Wealth, and imagine themselves fit Companions for so charming a Divinity? |
12030 | and not fill the World at once With Men, as Angels, without Feminine? |
12030 | and of himself for, perhaps, wronging the Man whom of all Men living he himself would least willingly have injured? |
12030 | and that the greatest Part of this busy Species fall short even of that Age? |
12030 | and the Scorners delight in their Scorning? |
12030 | and what Barbarities does_ Desdemona_ suffer from a slight Inadvertency in regard to this fatal Trifle? |
12030 | and when did the Lamb[ 3] and Dolphin ever meet, except upon a Sign- Post? |
12030 | and when he visiteth, what shall I answer him? |
12030 | and yet what more palpable Argument of Providence than she? |
12030 | and your way to this is to ask your self, which of them you value most for his own sake? |
12030 | and, Why in our days there should be Neglect, and even Oppression of young Beginners, instead of that Protection which was the Pride of theirs? |
12030 | concurritur? |
12030 | cum adversus minas, et supplicia, et tormenta componitur? |
12030 | did I sollicite thee From Darkness to promote me? |
12030 | do it for an Infant that is not sensible of the Obligation: Would you do it for publick Good? |
12030 | do it for one who will be an honest Artificer: Would you do it for the Sake of Heaven? |
12030 | do you leave your Money at his Shop? |
12030 | et rabidæ tradis ovile lupæ? |
12030 | he answered,_ Make us thankful, the_ German_ Princes are all well_: What does he say from_ Barcelona_? |
12030 | he cries; What? |
12030 | he was neither extravagant, nor ill- natured, nor debauched? |
12030 | he[ said[ 2]] nothing: but how dost thou know what he containeth? |
12030 | how desirable is it to die? |
12030 | how glad would lay me down, As in my Mothers Lap? |
12030 | how is the whole Prospect changed? |
12030 | how many Days do we know in Life preferable to such a State? |
12030 | how narrow is the Prospect even of such a Mind? |
12030 | how shall we breathe in other Air Less pure, accustomd to immortal Fruits? |
12030 | how wonderfully that Gentleman is improved? |
12030 | if not so, are they not to be used as gently as their Sisters? |
12030 | is not every mortal free to speak? |
12030 | is this the Deliverer? |
12030 | is this the way I must return to native Dust? |
12030 | is_ Dimpple_ spelt with a single or a double_ P_?'' |
12030 | not to mention those who violate it by solemn Perjuries? |
12030 | numerone an viribus æqui Non sumus...? |
12030 | one who will be faithful and just to all, and constant and loving to them? |
12030 | or here place In this delicious Garden? |
12030 | or if he would receive it though he was sure he should make an ill Use of it? |
12030 | or not to dare to be what he thinks he ought to be? |
12030 | or subject himself to the Penalty, when he knows he has never committed the Crime? |
12030 | or treated but as one whose Honesty consisted only in his Incapacity of being otherwise? |
12030 | or who knows whether he is guilty of it or not? |
12030 | or would you have me break my Mind yet or not? |
12030 | quasi magnum Nempe diem donas? |
12030 | said he: None, none of these; who can this Agla¸s be? |
12030 | si quis vultu torvo ferus et pede nudo Exiguæque togæ simulet textore Catonem; Virtutemne repræsentet moresque Catonis?'' |
12030 | that peopled highest Heav''n With Spirits masculine, create at last This Novelty on Earth, this fair Defect Of Nature? |
12030 | the universal peal!-- But has he spoken?--Not a syllable-- What shook the stage, and made the people stare? |
12030 | to lose thyself and me? |
12030 | to what unknown Region? |
12030 | wandering fire, That long hast warm''d my tender breast, Must thou no more this frame inspire? |
12030 | was not my Soul grieved for the poor? |
12030 | what am I going to do, when I am about to tell you that I love you? |
12030 | what signifies one poor Pot of Tea, considering the Trouble they put me to? |
12030 | whither art thou flying? |
12030 | who can neither deny her any thing she asks, or refuse to do any thing she commands_? |
12030 | who defends me? |
12030 | who with Care and Diligence will look after and improve the Estate, and without grudging allow whatever is prudent and convenient? |
12030 | why do I call her so? |
12030 | why do I make a difficulty in speaking of my worthy Ancestor''s Failings? |
12030 | with what Anxiety am I necessitated to adore my own Idol? |
6263 | Abuse? 6263 Ah, he is in England?" |
6263 | Ah, you''ve been here often? |
6263 | Ah-- and who was right, and what was wrong? |
6263 | And since the Egyptian went? |
6263 | And so, from a hatred handed down, your mind has been tuned to shun even when your heart was learning to give me a home-- Faith? |
6263 | And what is greatest in me? |
6263 | And what is thee working for, Soolsby? |
6263 | And what means that to a common mind? |
6263 | And when I bring my wife, sir? |
6263 | And your grandfather? |
6263 | Are all to be monotonous except Lord Eglington? 6263 But answer me, do you want to live?" |
6263 | But is it not like Davy? 6263 But you are going soon? |
6263 | But you will tell-- him, you will write to Egypt and tell your brother? |
6263 | But, think you, I could marry while my life is so tied to him and to our Egyptian? |
6263 | Did the man break down like me? |
6263 | Did thee keep the sovereign? |
6263 | Do I change? |
6263 | Do you forget that you asked me to arrange her papers? |
6263 | Do you know there is more? |
6263 | Do you know what oxygen''s for, Soolsby? |
6263 | Do you like living, Soolsby? |
6263 | Do you mean to do it or not, my lord? 6263 Do you think I was not honest in wanting your friendship?" |
6263 | Do you want to kill me, my lord? |
6263 | Does he know? |
6263 | Does he know? |
6263 | Does thee hear, Faith? 6263 Does thee think I shall like her that will live yonder?" |
6263 | Does thee think that all that happens in''public life''is of consequence? 6263 Doost think I have forgotten how to read since the day I put my hand to a writing you''ve hid so long from them it most concerns? |
6263 | Eglington gambles? |
6263 | Has not Faith told you? |
6263 | Has the Duchess left any rags on the multitude of her acquaintances? 6263 Has thee seen Lord Eglington?" |
6263 | Has your nephew, the new Joseph in Egypt, been giving you instructions in high politics? 6263 Have you?" |
6263 | He is in high place again? |
6263 | He is safe-- he is well and strong again? |
6263 | How did you know- how did you know? |
6263 | How does thee know him, to speak so surely? |
6263 | How does thee know it surely? |
6263 | How does thee know my lord yonder has hurt and not helped him? |
6263 | How is it, then, with you-- inveterate habit or the strain of the ages? 6263 How long is it, friend, since--""Since he went to Egypt?" |
6263 | I can not imagine you tilting at wind- mills--"Or saving maidens in distress? 6263 I may use''thee,''may I not, when I will? |
6263 | I was born in Hamley where he has a place-- thee has been there? |
6263 | In whose interests are you speaking? |
6263 | Is it a genealogical tree you are studying there? |
6263 | Is it true that Jasper Kimber is to stand against him for Parliament? |
6263 | Is it wasting my days to stay with my father? 6263 Is n''t he too clever for that? |
6263 | Is n''t it all inevitable law? 6263 Is that because I am not deep, or because the plough has been at work?" |
6263 | It was hard for you in London at first? |
6263 | Jasper Kimber? 6263 Marry-- who is the blind lass?" |
6263 | Me? 6263 My cause? |
6263 | Nay, since thee--"Since I went to Mass? |
6263 | Not to Jasper Kimber? |
6263 | Now, is that the game of Mister Kimber? 6263 Of what are you thinking? |
6263 | Oh, I am my lord still, am I? |
6263 | Secret? 6263 She is beautiful?" |
6263 | She secretive? 6263 So long? |
6263 | That he can do our man good or ill? |
6263 | That sounds communistic, or is it pure Quakerism? 6263 The fever caught him at Shendy-- that is the place--""He is not dead-- David is not dead?" |
6263 | Thee has kept silent all these years? 6263 Thee made me believe-- ah, how many times did we speak together? |
6263 | Thee remembers what I said that night? |
6263 | Thee remembers what I said to him, that night in Cairo? |
6263 | Thee thinks that-- why? |
6263 | Though, indeed, how could you be, who always work for others and never for yourself? 6263 Was he-- an Englishman?" |
6263 | Was it ever a happy family, or a lucky family? |
6263 | Was it his heart spoke or his tongue-- is there any truth in him? |
6263 | Was it right? |
6263 | Well, if you get that far, will you come with me to the Riviera, or to Florence, or Sicily-- or Cairo? |
6263 | Well, now, what is your experiment? |
6263 | What can the servants think? |
6263 | What do I be working for? 6263 What do you mean?" |
6263 | What end is thee working for, friend? 6263 What has thee to say?" |
6263 | What have you been doing? |
6263 | What is any one to you? |
6263 | What is it? |
6263 | What is our Government doing to help him? |
6263 | What is that? |
6263 | What is the message that comes? |
6263 | What is the office they have given him? |
6263 | What proof have you? |
6263 | What was she really like-- that was n''t her quite, was it? |
6263 | What was your father''s name? |
6263 | What was your real cause, Windlehurst? 6263 What''s this-- what do you want?" |
6263 | When did you know Nahoum? |
6263 | When do you start for Egypt? |
6263 | When will you come back? |
6263 | Where is her lad that was, that the Egyptian rolled like dough in a trough? |
6263 | Who brings the message, Garry? |
6263 | Who is Soolsby? |
6263 | Who is my mistress? |
6263 | Whose secrets did she keep? |
6263 | Why are you so eager for proof? |
6263 | Why did n''t she see through Eglington? |
6263 | Why did you never say all this to me long ago? 6263 Why did you not see me-- dine with me?" |
6263 | Why do you say that? |
6263 | Why do you want to rob yourself? |
6263 | Why does a woman always judge a man after her own personal experience with him, or what she thinks is her own personal experience? |
6263 | Why should I be marrying? |
6263 | Why should you be so keen about Egypt and Claridge Pasha? |
6263 | Will not right be done without my voice? |
6263 | Will thee take her home? |
6263 | Will they call me Hylda? |
6263 | Will you excuse me? |
6263 | With drink, the same as me? |
6263 | Would it be costly to keep the bonnet on your arm? |
6263 | Would you mind? |
6263 | Yet, what has he done, Betty, after all? 6263 You are going so soon-- where?" |
6263 | You are going to Hamley-- we shall meet there? |
6263 | You are with Lady Eglington now, I have heard? |
6263 | You doubt that? 6263 You have had a busy time in Egypt?" |
6263 | You have just come? |
6263 | You know her-- now? |
6263 | You surely do not mean that you-- that the Government will not help him? 6263 You think I will fail? |
6263 | You think that deep natures have most perils? |
6263 | You will not come? |
6263 | You would not wish it? |
6263 | You would not wish me to break his lordship? 6263 You''ve been doing that to Mr. Claridge, my lord?" |
6263 | Your father''s people, you never knew them? |
6263 | Your maid-- Heaver? |
6263 | ''What has he lost, woman?'' |
6263 | ''Where the eagle built shall not the young eagle nest? |
6263 | After a moment he continued:"Do you mind my smoking?" |
6263 | After an instant, while he watched her, she added:"Thee has not heard my lord is to marry?" |
6263 | And Miss Claridge?" |
6263 | And fifteen years ago-- here?" |
6263 | Are you sure you are not pharisaical?" |
6263 | As she came nearer, Luke Claridge said, in a low voice:"How do I find thee in this company, Faith?" |
6263 | As she did not answer the last words of the Duchess, the latter said presently:"When do you expect Eglington?" |
6263 | At last Soolsby said moodily:"What have you come for, my lord?" |
6263 | At last she said:"And Nahoum Pasha?" |
6263 | But I wonder, was the maiden really saved?" |
6263 | But causes? |
6263 | But he-- mind it? |
6263 | But his own heart, did it throb? |
6263 | But if, out of office, thee disregards justice and conscience and the rights of others, can thee be just and faithful in office? |
6263 | But married or single you could help him; so why waste your days here?" |
6263 | But tell me, am I not right about Eglington?" |
6263 | But who''s the man-- the planet?" |
6263 | But you are not a Quaker, Soolsby, so why be too familiar? |
6263 | CHAPTER XXIV THE QUESTIONER"What has thee come to say?" |
6263 | Cairo-- why should Cairo have waked her so? |
6263 | David''s mind, with its equity, its balance, and its fire-- what might it not have accomplished in shepherding such a cause, guiding its activity? |
6263 | Destiny had laid the train of circumstance and accident, and who was stronger than Destiny? |
6263 | Did Faith know? |
6263 | Did he make friends-- true friends? |
6263 | Did n''t you know the way to the stables or the scullery?" |
6263 | Do n''t you see how unreasonable you are? |
6263 | Do n''t you think conviction was easy?" |
6263 | Do you have such days in Egypt?" |
6263 | Do you not see it? |
6263 | Do you think, he did n''t feel it, was it much or little? |
6263 | Does thee care to say?" |
6263 | Does thee think that we did not know thee spoke without principle then, and only to draw notice?" |
6263 | Doost think a straight line could come from the crooked line you drew for him?" |
6263 | Eglington gambles here"--she watched Hylda closely--"why should n''t you gamble there?" |
6263 | Escape-- where? |
6263 | Had he ever said to her:"Hylda, you are a help to me"? |
6263 | Had he meant to say it to her? |
6263 | Had he the right to torture her so? |
6263 | Had it been in his mind? |
6263 | Had one of the vows been kept? |
6263 | Had she made trouble? |
6263 | Had she repelled it all? |
6263 | Has he been writing the Epistles of David to the Quakers?" |
6263 | Hast thou covered up his footsteps with thy flood? |
6263 | Have you news of his safety?" |
6263 | He continued to interrogate her, while she could have shrieked out the question,"What is in yonder document? |
6263 | He had admired her-- but was he singular in that? |
6263 | He had outlived peril so far; might it not be that, after all, he would win? |
6263 | He had saved others, had he saved himself? |
6263 | He was no physical coward, and, in any case, what reason had he for physical fear in the presence of this man weakened by vice and age? |
6263 | He whose life had been flung into this field of labour by an act of her own, who should help him but herself? |
6263 | Herself? |
6263 | His footsteps hast thou covered with thy flood? |
6263 | His friendship was like a shady wood, O Nile that floweth deeply, hast thou not heard his voice? |
6263 | His friendship, it was like a shady wood Whither has he gone?--Who shall speak for us? |
6263 | His word was honey in the prince''s ear Will he return no more?" |
6263 | How can you know, unless you tell him the truth?" |
6263 | How should God meet me in the way and bless him who stood not by his birth right? |
6263 | I am a little a Quaker also, am I not? |
6263 | I was n''t decent enough to stay sober till you had said''Good day,''and''How goes it, Soolsby?'' |
6263 | If Eglington asked, what could she say? |
6263 | If he ever did you a good turn, as you once said to me he did, wo n''t you help him now? |
6263 | If he knew, do you think he''d be in Egypt and you here, my lord?" |
6263 | If you get this, wo n''t you try and make the British Government stand by the Saadat? |
6263 | In England-- had she ever seen one? |
6263 | In Hamley, where his people had been for so many generations, had she found one? |
6263 | In London-- was there one she knew who would cleave to him for love of him? |
6263 | In her own mind she had decided that her mistress was not happy, and who could tell what might happen? |
6263 | Into the gulf of no work and degradation? |
6263 | Intoxication? |
6263 | Is he to have the only patent of change?" |
6263 | Is it a pose or a taste? |
6263 | Is it not like an old memory, his living here in this house, Soolsby, and all that happened then?" |
6263 | Is it not the law?'' |
6263 | Is it not, in truth, vanity which would have me believe in thee? |
6263 | Is it only the mother in me, not the love in me?" |
6263 | Is there no right in the matter?" |
6263 | Is your husband really an amateur scientist, or is he a scientific amateur? |
6263 | It would do him no good and me harm-- Where''s the use? |
6263 | Kaid and Claridge Pasha pursued their course of civilisation in the Soudan, and who could tell what danger might not bring forth? |
6263 | Listen, for mine are the words of one who hath travelled far-- was I not at Damascus and Palmyra and Bagdad, and at Medina by the tomb of Mahomet?" |
6263 | Look at Egyptian David-- what had he but his head and an honest mind? |
6263 | Luke Claridge was gone without speaking, but had Soolsby told Faith? |
6263 | Luke Claridge, if he was up and well, would n''t thank you for it-- have you got any right to give him trouble, too? |
6263 | Must the penance and the redemption be his only? |
6263 | My lady''s illness-- what was it? |
6263 | Now he restrained his cynical intention to deal David a side- thrust, and quietly said:"We shall meet at Hamley, shall we not? |
6263 | O Nile that floweth deeply, hast thou not heard his voice? |
6263 | Or did you meet there, perhaps?" |
6263 | Or do you know-- eh? |
6263 | Or is it merely the way of the old family friend?" |
6263 | Or was it only his brain that throbbed? |
6263 | Or was this, after all, mere animalism, mere superficial vitality, love of health and being? |
6263 | Or, would she be entitled to relate some immaterial incident which would evade the real truth? |
6263 | Perhaps he will win through, by himself, but is it fair to have him run the risk? |
6263 | Policy? |
6263 | See, was it not a good face?" |
6263 | Shall not one cherish that which is his own, which cometh from seed to seed? |
6263 | She leaned towards David, and said eagerly:"But you are satisfied-- you are satisfied with your work for poor Egypt?" |
6263 | She shrank now, as, with a little laugh and glancing suggestively at the despatch- box, he said:"And what do you think of it all?" |
6263 | She would do what would she not do to help him, to serve his interests? |
6263 | Soolsby asked sharply--"that he, yonder, can do that?" |
6263 | Suddenly he caught her hands in both of his and said hoarsely:"Do you love me-- answer me, do you love me with all your heart and soul? |
6263 | Suppose I had n''t, could I have been blamed? |
6263 | Tell me, who helped Egyptian David? |
6263 | The Duchess of Snowdon was in the house; had it anything to do with her? |
6263 | The first words he saw were:"Why did you not tell me that my boy, my baby Harry, was not your only child, and that your eldest son was alive?" |
6263 | Thee has never told any that lives?" |
6263 | Thee remembers that?" |
6263 | Thee sees I also am speaking as they do in Hamley-- am I not bold? |
6263 | Thee wanted help, thee said; and if a word of mine could help thee now and then, should I withhold it, so long as I thought thee honest?" |
6263 | Thee will marry him, friend?" |
6263 | Then, with a change of tone, he added:"Thee is not sorry I am come?" |
6263 | There flashed into it the question, Does Eglington''s heart ever really throb for love of any object or any cause? |
6263 | There was trouble-- well, what was it?" |
6263 | They came, did they? |
6263 | They never do tell-- or shall I say, we never do tell?" |
6263 | They sat for a long time in silence, and at length Faith said:"Thee is happy now with her who is to marry Lord Eglington?" |
6263 | Think you, does he still play the flute-- an instrument none too grave, Luke?" |
6263 | To get the Egyptian back to England-- what else?" |
6263 | To suspect her? |
6263 | Was it all mere force-- mere man and mind? |
6263 | Was it among them that she had seen the name? |
6263 | Was it his business? |
6263 | Was the child to be trusted with him?" |
6263 | Was the man waiting to see what course he himself would take? |
6263 | Was there no soul behind it? |
6263 | Well, and if they came?" |
6263 | Well?" |
6263 | Were they one? |
6263 | What business had thee with him, Faith?" |
6263 | What could it serve? |
6263 | What could she do? |
6263 | What did it mean? |
6263 | What do you know? |
6263 | What do you see?" |
6263 | What good could it do to tell the dark story? |
6263 | What good would it do to bring him back? |
6263 | What had Soolsby been doing in the laboratory at that time of night? |
6263 | What had been the end of the battle? |
6263 | What have we in common with them? |
6263 | What is he there? |
6263 | What is he? |
6263 | What is his origin?" |
6263 | What need of me?" |
6263 | What put it in his head that he thinks he can do it?" |
6263 | What right had he to catechise her-- as though she were a servant or a criminal? |
6263 | What secret? |
6263 | What should such high- placed folk do stooping out of their sphere to us who walk in plain paths? |
6263 | What was it all about? |
6263 | What was it all about? |
6263 | What was the association between the Countess of Eglington and James Fetherdon, the father of David Claridge? |
6263 | What was the cause of this secret meeting? |
6263 | What was the thing without the man? |
6263 | What were their pleasures? |
6263 | When he had passed, I said to a shepherd standing by,''If thou hadst all his wealth, shepherd, what wouldst thou do?'' |
6263 | Where had she heard the name before-- or where had she seen it? |
6263 | Where had she seen it? |
6263 | Where have you been?" |
6263 | Where was he now? |
6263 | Whereupon she turned upon me in bitterness, and said:''Were they not his own as the seed of his father? |
6263 | Who shall contend for us in the gate? |
6263 | Who shall proclaim us in the palace? |
6263 | Who shall save us from the kourbash and the stripes? |
6263 | Whom do you think it is? |
6263 | Why did you not tell me that my boy, my baby Harry, was not your only child, that there had been another wife, and that your eldest son was alive? |
6263 | Why do you speak now after all these years when we are all set in our grooves? |
6263 | Why does n''t some one else help him? |
6263 | Why had Fate placed that hand so near the wire there, and provided the other perfect conditions for tragedy? |
6263 | Why had he deceived her? |
6263 | Why had not Soolsby told the world the truth since? |
6263 | Why should I mind?" |
6263 | Why should he intervene? |
6263 | Why should he intervene? |
6263 | Why should it startle her so? |
6263 | Why should she not see it? |
6263 | Will a man speak so to one older than himself, save in mockery? |
6263 | Will thee do that for me?" |
6263 | Will you not come?" |
6263 | Will you?" |
6263 | With a deep- drawn sigh Hylda said to herself:"If I were dying to- morrow, would I say that? |
6263 | Would he never stop his questioning? |
6263 | Would he see all it suggested? |
6263 | Would she have the right, even if she wished it, to tell the truth, or part of the truth? |
6263 | Would you mind?" |
6263 | Yet if these doings give him stimulant instead of drink, who shall complain?" |
6263 | Yet what would his position be without her? |
6263 | You ask that? |
6263 | You did n''t know that, did you?" |
6263 | You do n''t think he married yonder Queen of Hearts from conviction, do you?" |
6263 | You doubt all I said to you?" |
6263 | You doubt it?" |
6263 | You heard his voice speaking to you sometimes; you understood what he meant to say to you? |
6263 | You should hear him talk with Ebn Ezra Bey-- perhaps you do n''t know of Ezra? |
6263 | You will be there on Sunday?" |
6263 | You wish me to fail?" |
6263 | You would care to go to Egypt, Hylda?" |
6263 | You would not wish it?" |
6263 | You''ve watched some one fighting?" |
6263 | Your Uncle Benn and you-- it was so with you, was it not? |
6263 | he asked,"and why bring it here? |
45424 | A book in the house of a farmer who can not read? |
45424 | A last word, count,said Marie Antoinette,"swear to me that you came back solely on my account? |
45424 | A search, hey? |
45424 | A witness? 45424 Again?" |
45424 | Against me? |
45424 | Ah, madam, do you understand what the power is I had from the master whom you defamed? 45424 Ah, then these birds are to be had for the picking up?" |
45424 | Ah? |
45424 | All alone? |
45424 | All right,returned Billet;"he shall offer his reasons and I will match them with mine?" |
45424 | Am I not brave? |
45424 | Am I not good enough to keep the farm books? |
45424 | Am I sick? |
45424 | Am I the man to found that in France? |
45424 | Am I to let him go? |
45424 | Am I to let him pass? |
45424 | And did she love you as much as I do? |
45424 | And the book? |
45424 | And the casket? 45424 And the casket?" |
45424 | And this lad with me? |
45424 | And what have you in the bag? |
45424 | And where may this nice boy be, prithee? |
45424 | And which is yours between the two? |
45424 | And will you leave us in the midst of anguish? |
45424 | And would you have me treat with rebels and murderers? 45424 And you came to liberate me? |
45424 | Are these gentlemen all bellicose, too? |
45424 | Are we not at an era when it is not enough to say so, but actions should speak? |
45424 | Are you going to take him away? |
45424 | Are you here, Billet, here? |
45424 | Are you hungry? |
45424 | Are you mad, my lord? |
45424 | Are you not a French citizen? |
45424 | Are you of this thinking, prince? |
45424 | As physician or counsellor? |
45424 | As witness, Foulon and his son- in- law Berthier Savigny, accused of complicity in the Great Grain Fraud, and ripped to pieces by the crowd? 45424 At least you are recovered now?" |
45424 | At whose request were you arrested? |
45424 | Because your Majesty was once deceived, is all humanity to be measured by that bushel? 45424 Billet,"he said, after collecting his thoughts,"Have the people overcome despotism?" |
45424 | Bravo, dropped them, eh? |
45424 | Brothers? 45424 Burning powder in my honor?" |
45424 | But do you not know what will be said? |
45424 | But how about eating? |
45424 | But how many men will be killed by us? |
45424 | But if I were to meet misfortune and it was to make me wicked? |
45424 | But if flight is so natural, why do not you and your family take it? |
45424 | But if the little thing should not live? |
45424 | But if the sentinels shot you when they caught you making signs to a prisoner? |
45424 | But in the daytime? |
45424 | But the Bastile? |
45424 | But the game? |
45424 | But the moat? |
45424 | But we can go to church? |
45424 | But we want powder? 45424 But were you unwell that you sent for him?" |
45424 | But what do you expect between whiles? |
45424 | But whence the change? 45424 But who knows what will happen meanwhile?" |
45424 | But who will apprise the King? 45424 But who would know anything about it when I never suspected it myself?" |
45424 | But you have the prize, eh, Master Wolfstep? |
45424 | But, papa, she could not take him back, could she? |
45424 | But, to make it short, what are you looking for? |
45424 | By brothers I mean all mankind,continued the farmer;"are not all men brothers, hey?" |
45424 | By the count,replied the monarch, indicating Charny:"And has he saved you, too?" |
45424 | By virtue of your quackery and charms? 45424 Can she have overheard us?" |
45424 | Charlatan? |
45424 | Charny,repeated Marie Antoinette, blushing in spite of herself;"any relation to Count Charny?" |
45424 | Countess of Charny,read the King on the record sheet;"is it she who wanted you imprisoned? |
45424 | Countess, what casket is this? |
45424 | Cowardice? |
45424 | Dancing? |
45424 | Dead? |
45424 | Dear, dear, is he an outcast? |
45424 | Did I not tell you that they would believe me just such a coward? |
45424 | Did I utter that name? |
45424 | Do n''t you like to work? |
45424 | Do tell me what that is? |
45424 | Do they? 45424 Do you attach much importance to the riot of yesterday?" |
45424 | Do you believe this, dear friend? |
45424 | Do you call business matters pangs? |
45424 | Do you doubt the army and the nobility? |
45424 | Do you forget that I am a man of my word and the engagement I made? |
45424 | Do you hesitate? |
45424 | Do you know the state of affairs, sir? |
45424 | Do you mean to imply that at the second, or third time, you could not merely tell me my bodily ail but a mental one? |
45424 | Do you mean to say? |
45424 | Do you need Greek and Latin? 45424 Do you not know the part the women and children play in civil commotions? |
45424 | Do you see these cannon? 45424 Do you think he will hold out long?" |
45424 | Doctor, doctor, is it you? 45424 Does he need nothing?" |
45424 | Dr. Gilbert''s casket? |
45424 | Eh? 45424 Excited by me? |
45424 | Fire,roared Billet,"why do n''t you fire?" |
45424 | Flesselles? 45424 From madness or malice?" |
45424 | General, what do you advise? |
45424 | Going to the King? |
45424 | Good gracious,cried a sweet voice well- known to the flyer,"wherever are you racing so, Master Ange? |
45424 | Good heavens, what is the matter? |
45424 | Good to eat? |
45424 | Good, that is the truth at last? |
45424 | Had he not better be stopped? |
45424 | Hang it all, have you more to ask? |
45424 | Have a glass of wine? |
45424 | Have you dared? 45424 Have you had your dinner?" |
45424 | Have you incurred the Queen''s disfavor? |
45424 | Have you nothing else to ask father, Pitou? |
45424 | Have you seen her lately? |
45424 | Have you thought the matter over, father? |
45424 | He guesses rightly,muttered the Queen,"how could he tell that?" |
45424 | Hello, is this you, Pitou? |
45424 | Here, gentlemen of the Guards,said a German officer, coming before the squadron thrown into disorder,"do you know you are firing on us?" |
45424 | His fellows? |
45424 | Hold your tongue, you timid creature; and let us read the doctor''s treatise? |
45424 | How could I leave that in his hands? |
45424 | How could you suspect that? |
45424 | How did this advice reach you? |
45424 | How do you conclude that he is a friend of mine? |
45424 | How do you know it is from him? |
45424 | How do you know that, father? 45424 How long since?" |
45424 | How long will it take? |
45424 | How long will you be engaged with the governor? |
45424 | How many powers do you acknowledge in France, my Lord Provost? |
45424 | How must I fall, pray tell me, count? |
45424 | How now? 45424 How so?" |
45424 | Humanity-- which urges you to come a hundred thousand strong against one hundred hapless soldiers immured in these walls and cut their throats? |
45424 | Hurt? 45424 I believe they took that, dad, but not Pitou, who cut away? |
45424 | I ca n''t call that much,answered the vagrant smiling,"but how much better off will we be then?" |
45424 | I do not want to be inquisitive, sir, but I should like to know whose book this is? |
45424 | I mean, are you easily tired out? |
45424 | I only need a word: did your Majesty have anything to do with my arrest? |
45424 | I say, Father Billet, are we to make a long job of this? |
45424 | I should like to know if you would talk like that if your son Sebastian lay there in that young gentleman''s stead? |
45424 | I understand, but where did you get the money to buy holly sap? |
45424 | I was a fool to apply to the_ Kaiserlicks_(_ Kaiserlich_, Imperial Austrian grenadiers)? |
45424 | I was on the square as you did so, and I----"You thought I was giving way to the calls of the crowd? |
45424 | I, distrust you? |
45424 | I, frightened? |
45424 | In short, how are you at work? |
45424 | In short, what does_ your husband_ have to say to me? |
45424 | In your opinion, the City of Paris is a power we ought to obey? |
45424 | Indeed,said Pitou in a low voice,"why does this Charny fop shove in his oar anyhow?" |
45424 | Is he with us, then? |
45424 | Is it on my account that you felt so ill? |
45424 | Is it true,said he,"that you are the author of the Memoirs on Administration and Politics, which much struck me? |
45424 | Is it you, my friend? |
45424 | Is my lord Charny waiting? |
45424 | Is that all? 45424 Is that all? |
45424 | Is there any here who doubt a nobleman? |
45424 | Is this why I have gathered brave men around me? 45424 Is this your advice, Count Charny?" |
45424 | It need be filled up in only one place,responded the beggar''s leader:"and I calculate that we could choke it up altogether, eh, lads?" |
45424 | It would be a great blow-- such a misfortune as seldom happens,responded the gentleman;"Here is the hire settled-- are you satisfied?" |
45424 | Just so; how long shall I wait? |
45424 | Keep me in? 45424 Lime? |
45424 | Look here, I will not merely own up but-- will you stop pulling things about if I tell you where the book is? |
45424 | Lord, doctor, do not you know that nobody in all the wide world can love this poor lone, lorn thing like his own dear fond auntie? |
45424 | Lord, what can be in it? |
45424 | Madam,said the doctor at last,"I have seen Paris, and you have not even been out of the palace to see Versailles, Do you know what Paris is about?" |
45424 | Madman,said the principal, grasping his hands;"how will you get at a prisoner of state?" |
45424 | Me, in custody? |
45424 | Me? 45424 Much obliged: in what manner?" |
45424 | My lord de Flesselles,he repeated;"a noble and no friend of the people?" |
45424 | My name is_ Ax_--do you see? 45424 Necker your friend?" |
45424 | No lying-- where is my casket? |
45424 | Not to strike those who would rob your children of their estate,cried the Queen,"and who wish to break the lilies on your crown?" |
45424 | Not vanquish-- with the Swiss troops-- and the Germans-- and the Lifeguards? |
45424 | Now, who owns this gun? |
45424 | Of the Bastile? 45424 Oh, Balsamo,"he muttered,"is this the emblem of Liberty?" |
45424 | Oh, baron,she said, recognizing Bezenval;"do you come to give us good advice?" |
45424 | Oh, count, my only friend, do you know what Countess Diana is doing? |
45424 | Oh, did I? 45424 Oh, heavens, what was in it, dad?" |
45424 | Oh, it is you, Viscount, always faithful? |
45424 | Oh, orders,he said, with his mouth full:"Will you not be our Egeria in the pinch?" |
45424 | Oh, the King has been pleasant but you would rather not see him again? 45424 Oh, why have you given that branch? |
45424 | Oh, you think it good enough? |
45424 | Oh, you think it our only refuge? |
45424 | Only put here a few days ago? |
45424 | Perhaps you think they are right, Master Philosopher? |
45424 | Pitou? |
45424 | Please, what is the news from Paris? |
45424 | Providence, do you call it? 45424 Real? |
45424 | Really, sir,said the monarch mildly,"is there not selfishness in your dilating on your troubles when I want my own dealt with?" |
45424 | Simple? 45424 Sire, then the crime was done by a boy, not a man, and does he not deserve some indulgence who has for sixteen years deplored his boyish crime?" |
45424 | Sleuth hounds? |
45424 | So I may rely on you? |
45424 | So you are determined to fire on the people? |
45424 | So you do not know how to dance? 45424 So you make yourself lovely to dance with him?" |
45424 | So, countess,said the King,"you wanted to arrest and imprison the doctor?" |
45424 | So, how do you make that out? |
45424 | Spare them? 45424 Steal? |
45424 | Still, why do we find you in the swoon in the next room? |
45424 | Stolen by whom? |
45424 | Strange people:muttered the Austrian:"but what about my Lifeguards-- can you do nothing for them?" |
45424 | Take away Dr. Gilbert''s son into that infernal rumpus? |
45424 | That great man turned out? |
45424 | That is the right kind of talk,said the farmer;"How many have you, Gonchon?" |
45424 | The Bastile is taken and I am free? |
45424 | The King goes hunting? |
45424 | The King? |
45424 | The King? |
45424 | The assassin may be there with his bullet, who will know among a thousand threatening fists, which holds the dagger? |
45424 | The doctor-- what has become of the doctor? |
45424 | The truth? 45424 Then she pocketed Master Gilbert''s money?" |
45424 | Then we are entitled to the promised reward, eh? |
45424 | Then we are to keep the child? |
45424 | Then why this emotion, my dear? |
45424 | Then, if certain what did you keep on running for? |
45424 | They have got the book, anyway? |
45424 | Thunder,muttered Billet, stamping his foot:"why did I not bring my old duck- gun along? |
45424 | To be brief,she said,"what is happening in the capital? |
45424 | To help you out of this? |
45424 | Under what master did you study? |
45424 | Vat next? |
45424 | Was my mother fair? |
45424 | Well, sir,she snapped at him like a pistol- shot,"what are you doing in staring at me instead of telling what ails me?" |
45424 | Well, where are we off to, dear Master Billet? |
45424 | Were you wanting me? |
45424 | What Necker? 45424 What about the casket?" |
45424 | What ails you? |
45424 | What am I to answer? 45424 What am I to do with a paper having no name or address?" |
45424 | What am I to work at? |
45424 | What are these men in uniform? |
45424 | What are we to do in the matter since others rule the roost? |
45424 | What are you doing? |
45424 | What are you driving at, Billet? 45424 What are you looking for, father?" |
45424 | What are you seeking? 45424 What can I say after all the fine things he spoke during the dances?" |
45424 | What did I do to you, lady, that your order threw me into a hideous dungeon? |
45424 | What did I tell you? |
45424 | What did this woman look like? |
45424 | What did you come along for? |
45424 | What do they want with the Bastile? |
45424 | What do you know how to do? |
45424 | What do you mean, count? |
45424 | What do you say to that, my lad? |
45424 | What do you say to this, countess? |
45424 | What do you say? |
45424 | What do you think of this matter, duke? |
45424 | What do you want again? |
45424 | What do you want of him? |
45424 | What do you want of me? |
45424 | What do you want to be good at Greek for? |
45424 | What do you want? |
45424 | What do you want? |
45424 | What do you want? |
45424 | What do you want? |
45424 | What do you want? |
45424 | What doctor is in waiting? |
45424 | What does he say-- that he still is content with you? |
45424 | What does it cost? |
45424 | What does it matter? |
45424 | What for, I should like to know? |
45424 | What gives you this fatal presentiment, my lord? |
45424 | What has become of the countess? |
45424 | What has become of the deputation? |
45424 | What has he done to worry the old bigot this time? |
45424 | What is going on over there? |
45424 | What is that? |
45424 | What is the matter? |
45424 | What is the name of this honest lad? |
45424 | What is there amazing in that, when you are friend of the author and he sent you a copy? |
45424 | What is this Bogey''s Castle, anyhow? |
45424 | What is this? |
45424 | What is to be done? |
45424 | What is wrong? |
45424 | What makes that scented dandy meddle with such matters? 45424 What risk does he run of displeasing me by speaking according to his conscience?" |
45424 | What the deuce do they say? |
45424 | What the deuse am I to do, then? |
45424 | What were you going to do then, had you got out? |
45424 | What will become of you, then? |
45424 | What, again? |
45424 | What, has the Queen corrupted my friends? |
45424 | What, tumbled over the linen? |
45424 | What, would you start for America? |
45424 | What,roared the peasant,"have you got no pickaxes, you Parisians, that you are afraid of stone walls? |
45424 | What? |
45424 | When useful? |
45424 | When will you go snaring hares? |
45424 | Where did you steal them, you little rogue? |
45424 | Where did you study the art? 45424 Where is he?" |
45424 | Where is it? |
45424 | Where is your master? |
45424 | Where will the chase be? |
45424 | Which of the three powers do you belong to? |
45424 | Who are we to attribute it to, then? |
45424 | Who asked for me? |
45424 | Who do you come from then? |
45424 | Who goes there? |
45424 | Who grumbles? |
45424 | Who is he? |
45424 | Who is he? |
45424 | Who is that? |
45424 | Who keeps away from you? |
45424 | Who knows but you will find it the gulf I fear? |
45424 | Who of you is Sebastian Gilbert? |
45424 | Who said so? |
45424 | Who speak thus? |
45424 | Who tells you that I should not feel for you if you met a real grief? |
45424 | Who will fight against me? |
45424 | Why are you so slow to present yourself to me? |
45424 | Why do you doubt it? 45424 Why expose him?" |
45424 | Why have you never spoken of the young man? 45424 Why never?" |
45424 | Why not apply to his father, who, certainly, will not shake you off? |
45424 | Why not say I am out of temper? |
45424 | Why not? |
45424 | Why refuse his protection? 45424 Why should it do me any harm, when it has not brought it on the writer?" |
45424 | Why, it seems to me that Independence and Freedom are much of a muchness? 45424 Why, not? |
45424 | Why, what the mischief is the Bastile to the people? 45424 Why? |
45424 | Will we not liberate his father? |
45424 | Will you not return to the King with me? |
45424 | Will you please tell me what crime the person committed for whom the measure was taken? |
45424 | Will your Majesty excuse me taking away my arm? 45424 Will your Majesty please inquire what age this Gilbert is to- day?" |
45424 | Will your Majesty see in me not the courtier but the man of war? |
45424 | With what? |
45424 | Wound me? |
45424 | Yes, Sire, war? |
45424 | Yes, but can you do it? |
45424 | Yes, but do you believe that I do not see your sorrow and chagrin translated under the form of the deepest respect? |
45424 | Yes; do you want to read it--''Avidus legendi libri''or''legendie historiae?'' |
45424 | Yes; how can I serve you? 45424 Yesterday? |
45424 | You alarm me,said the girl, pulling up in the mid- way;"What is wrong?" |
45424 | You and I, Billet; is not that enough? |
45424 | You can not deny you were in pain; has some mishap befallen you? 45424 You can not hope that I have any such influence?" |
45424 | You do n''t distrust me? |
45424 | You do n''t say so; when? |
45424 | You do n''t tell me that? |
45424 | You have other brothers? |
45424 | You in the Bastile? |
45424 | You love it so as to stoop to serve me, the foreigner? 45424 You mean the King? |
45424 | You say you are sorry for it to- day, why to- day? |
45424 | You say your father has been put in the Bastile? 45424 You say,"said the clerk, imperturbably writing,"that men from Paris took from your dwelling a casket entrusted to you by Dr. Gilbert? |
45424 | You seem to know him? 45424 You speak as if you knew him, and yet he has only been a week in this country from America, and only a day out of the Bastile?" |
45424 | You want arms to take the Bastile? 45424 You will go into the woods at midnight?" |
45424 | You will? 45424 You, a friend of the King?" |
45424 | You, here? |
45424 | Your Majesty alludes to my audacity in requesting him, in token of having read my work with gratification, to show a light in his own study window? 45424 Your Majesty asks if I came back on account of my wife?" |
45424 | Your Majesty hears? 45424 Your Majesty is ailing?" |
45424 | Your book? |
45424 | Your name, sir? |
45424 | Your sister? |
45424 | 4 WHICH SHALL IT BE? |
45424 | 6 MISS OR MRS.? |
45424 | = DO YOU EVER DREAM?= And would you like to know the meaning of any or all of your dreams? |
45424 | ARE YOU A WOMAN? |
45424 | And Do You Want to Get Married? |
45424 | Andrea went up, but almost instantly retreated, turning pale, and gasped in reproach:"To call me to see him?" |
45424 | Anything fresher, my lord?" |
45424 | Because the Bastile is taken, Lord Charny, do you say royalty is abolished? |
45424 | But Charny? |
45424 | But from his habit of doing nothing without consulting with his consort, he asked:"Do you approve?" |
45424 | But were Charny and Gilbert strangers-- one destined to guard the King, the other the Queen? |
45424 | But when he challenged me with the bag, I just answered him:''I am gathering beechmast, father-- it is not forbidden to gather mast, is it?'' |
45424 | But where is Gilbert, whom I do not see?" |
45424 | But you have nothing to say to me about this Dr. Gilbert, whose sight made so profound an impression on you?" |
45424 | Deplorable, I grant, but mean?" |
45424 | Did not your Majesty hear the cannon? |
45424 | Did you not hear the charging cry, the shots, the sword- slashes and the shrieks of the defenseless?" |
45424 | Did you not read in his letter that he was going there? |
45424 | Do I suggest how he should cut his coat? |
45424 | Do you believe that the warrant to arrest and imprison came directly from her Majesty?" |
45424 | Do you know that your threat is high- treason? |
45424 | Do you know the aim of that secret society? |
45424 | Do you persist in removing this powder?" |
45424 | Do you suppose that I am going to pity your fate?" |
45424 | Does he give me advice on the way I should think? |
45424 | Flesselles called for his coach and said loudly:"I suppose, my friends, you are asking nothing more?" |
45424 | Friends,"he called out, as the two stood at the window,"you want to take the Bastile?" |
45424 | Gilbert''s?" |
45424 | Gilbert?" |
45424 | Gilbert?" |
45424 | Gilbert?" |
45424 | Gilbert?" |
45424 | Gilbert?" |
45424 | Gilbert?" |
45424 | Gilbert?" |
45424 | Had she not the defeat of the Fourteenth of July, the Loss of the Bastile, to avenge? |
45424 | Hardly giving it the time to close, the lady grasped the nobleman''s hand with force, and said:"Why have you come here, count?" |
45424 | Have you the Gilbert book?" |
45424 | He bowed very humbly as he spoke, to the Queen, who appeared profoundly touched this time-- by his humility or the reasoning? |
45424 | How much did your aunt give old Fortier?" |
45424 | How much does Master Niquet pay you for his children?" |
45424 | I can mock the birds''songs, eh, Miss Kate?" |
45424 | I know that she was going out-- to meet you? |
45424 | I thank you, viscount; how comes this to be the first time I have the pleasure of seeing you at court?" |
45424 | If you are killed, what about my children?" |
45424 | In what proportion?" |
45424 | Indeed, how suppose that a noble and elevated creature should be vexed over a trifle? |
45424 | Ingrate, would you leave your country''s service just when such a mighty reward was yours?" |
45424 | Is it delirium or hate?" |
45424 | Is it odd that a woman should be so weak when a queen stands in such need of comfort? |
45424 | Is not that about the size of it, boys?" |
45424 | Is not this magnetic sleep to which you oblige her to succumb, doctor?" |
45424 | Is there anybody you want to complain of-- this Gilbert, whom you mentioned, for example?" |
45424 | Is there no man with a heart who will come with me and Pitou to have a go at this Bastile of the King? |
45424 | Is there not a tragedy in which a queen, abandoned by all, is asked: What remains? |
45424 | It is not my place to question the lady; will your Majesty deign to inquire of her ladyship what this infamous man did?" |
45424 | Launay knew him again, also; but folded his arms and looked at Billet as much as to say:"Is it you who will deal me the first stab?" |
45424 | Looking whence the order emanated, he exclaimed:"The warrant to arrest me signed by my friend Necker? |
45424 | March on Paris? |
45424 | My casket?" |
45424 | Oh, what will the doctor say? |
45424 | Oh, why not Kate, or Kitty, or some such silly nickname which you use in your iniquitous familiarity? |
45424 | Once only, will you answer the question? |
45424 | Particularly when the_ Agricoaler_ has a hundred acres of tilled land in the sun and a thousand louis in the shade?" |
45424 | She walked up and down the room, infuriated at being treated like a great child, and, turning, said:"You are Dr. Gilbert? |
45424 | Speak out,"he added, turning to the Swiss,"who are you for?" |
45424 | Tell me the aim of your change?" |
45424 | Tell me the friend''s name?" |
45424 | The soldiers whooped and as the bugles blew the charge-- against what enemy? |
45424 | Then, threatening Billet, he added:"You scoundrel, to come here and gain time under pretence of a parley, do you know that you deserve death?" |
45424 | They love you who slay and mangle and cut the throats of your representatives? |
45424 | Under whose orders are these forty thousand men?" |
45424 | Was it religion that impelled her, or love on her own side for Charny? |
45424 | Were these friends or foes? |
45424 | What about the peasant?" |
45424 | What are the people doing?" |
45424 | What could be done against women who had thrown down their weapons on the road and had scarce the power to drag themselves into the town? |
45424 | What do you say to this, Prince Lambesq?" |
45424 | What do you want with a peaceable and loyal man?" |
45424 | What for?" |
45424 | What good is such a sluggard to his brothers, I want to know?" |
45424 | What had become of them? |
45424 | What has a lovely woman to be worried about? |
45424 | What has happened at my farm at present for him to concern himself-- never having seen or known me?" |
45424 | What is the realm, the universe to me, whom one loving heart suffices?" |
45424 | What is to be done?" |
45424 | What is your name,_ Pal_?" |
45424 | What made you so?" |
45424 | What matters to the heart whether it is clad in steel or rags? |
45424 | What orders for your generals?" |
45424 | What will he think? |
45424 | Whence come you?" |
45424 | Whence this superexcitement?" |
45424 | Where are the books of the jail?" |
45424 | Where are the sleuth- hounds?" |
45424 | Where is he?" |
45424 | Where is the King, and the Queen?" |
45424 | Who are locked up here? |
45424 | Who do you think this woman is?" |
45424 | Who is not interested in children? |
45424 | Who told me so? |
45424 | Why do you not say something, countess?" |
45424 | Why give them the honors of a war and the risks of a battle? |
45424 | Why green cockades, green being the color of Count Artois, the King''s youngest brother? |
45424 | Why not? |
45424 | Will the King please order it to be returned to me?" |
45424 | Will you undertake this rearing?" |
45424 | Yet how would he find Dr. Gilbert in this chaos? |
45424 | You are Dr. Gilbert, who wrote those articles?" |
45424 | You call a successful revolt the ruin of royalty? |
45424 | You have been frightened?" |
45424 | You know the song:"''Oh, my sweet- voiced Sackbut, I love your dear song?''" |
45424 | You thought the state of events serious and held back----""For a more serious one? |
45424 | [ Illustration: RULES OF ORDER FOR BUSINESS MEETINGS] But why go further? |
45424 | and where do you like it? |
45424 | are you perfectly sure? |
45424 | are you tired?" |
45424 | called out Madeline from the threshold:"his name-- what did you say his name is?" |
45424 | cried she, emboldened by the protest from among the gold- laced coat and gold- hilted sword wearers,"nothing? |
45424 | did I fire on the Bastile without provocation?" |
45424 | do I know my own language-- can I read or write? |
45424 | do you catch birds with lime?" |
45424 | do you, a Lorraine prince, tell this to the Queen of France when the people are killing and burning?" |
45424 | exclaimed a young man in Bercheny Hussian uniform,"have we deserved such a slur? |
45424 | gives you orders to rummage my desk and turn my things upside down? |
45424 | has he committed no other crime than this sin of youth?" |
45424 | have they lost him?" |
45424 | have we gone back to the Dark Ages and are you going to rule France with elixirs and jugglery like a Faust?" |
45424 | have you seen him? |
45424 | he inquired:"A reinforcement from Germany? |
45424 | he roared to his horse,"ca n''t you be quiet? |
45424 | how did you know of my arrest?" |
45424 | how do you feel this morning? |
45424 | how wrest from the Bastile the grim secret enshrouded in its womb? |
45424 | inquired the sovereign:"Oh, Charny? |
45424 | is any common man ever shut up herein? |
45424 | is he at peace in the school?" |
45424 | is that what you call them who are bellowing''Down the Bastile, and Death to the Governor?'' |
45424 | is that what you have told?" |
45424 | no bullets for you to shrink from steel? |
45424 | no powder when they fire on you? |
45424 | nothing by word of mouth in addition?" |
45424 | or news from town?" |
45424 | replied the other, shaking with his emaciated hand the plump one of the farmer with a vigor he had not expected;"Wherefore? |
45424 | said Doctor Gilbert;"do you who understand the Christian virtues so well, make such close calculations about a nephew and an orphan?" |
45424 | said the yeoman:"Expose him to some ugly blow? |
45424 | say?" |
45424 | she asked as her companion kept quiet;"why do you not speak to me?" |
45424 | she repeated;"what a mistake when the weather is threatening-- is it not, Andrea?" |
45424 | so you will give the order that the grain shall come into Paris to stop the famine?" |
45424 | that I should depart from the Countess of Charny? |
45424 | that Lady Charny did not write to you? |
45424 | under Mesmer?" |
45424 | was the cry,"How are we to set about it?" |
45424 | what do you mean? |
45424 | what do you want?" |
45424 | what is there to be afraid of?" |
45424 | what, the powerful lady? |
45424 | when do you like it? |
45424 | why I breathed courage into them?" |
45424 | why do you dub him my friend?" |
45424 | why, what have you done to poor Charny?" |
45424 | why?" |
45424 | you are young for such a work?" |
45424 | you confess then?" |
45424 | you do not know about that?" |
57813 | And she was starved, of course,said a young man;"do you rue it?" |
57813 | End is there none? |
57813 | End is there none? |
57813 | Now, my dear children,said the good priest,"where shall we put St. Patrick? |
57813 | --DANIEL WEBSTER_ How many kinds of series are there?_ Two, the commencing and the concluding. |
57813 | --EDWIN M. STANTON,_ in Sickles''trial__ Distrust of Witnesses._ Are they witnesses to be trusted with report of evidence by words? |
57813 | --EMERSON EMPHASIS_ What is emphasis?_ Any impressive utterance that arrests the attention of the listener. |
57813 | --GEORGE W. CURTIS_ Indirect Question._ When, O Catiline, do you mean to cease abusing our patience? |
57813 | A remarkable change has taken place since; but what did the wise and great men of all parts of the country think of slavery then? |
57813 | A series is often composed of qualifying words; as, What though it breaks like lightning from the cloud? |
57813 | Ah, my friends, is not the reason for the change evident to any one who will look at the matter? |
57813 | Am I mistaken in this? |
57813 | Am I of opinion, then, you will ask, that the conspirators should be set free, and that the army of Catiline should thus be increased? |
57813 | An American no longer? |
57813 | And Themistocles and the men who fell at Marathon and Plataea, think you that they are insensible to what is taking place? |
57813 | And has it come to this? |
57813 | And how are you to accomplish this? |
57813 | And how should we regard the events happening now? |
57813 | And how was this to be enumerated among the high crimes which caused the Colonies to sever their connection with the mother country? |
57813 | And is it not plain to every man? |
57813 | And now in what strains did Homer voice this theme? |
57813 | And what do you suppose will be my thoughts, if I find in this very trial any violation of the laws committed in any similar manner? |
57813 | And what is that evidence? |
57813 | And what matters it to you? |
57813 | And when in Manchester I saw those huge placards:"Who is Henry Ward Beecher?" |
57813 | And, what have we to oppose to them? |
57813 | Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? |
57813 | Are my pickaxes and shovels in good order, and am I in good trim myself-- and my sleeves well up to the elbows, and my breath good, and my temper?" |
57813 | Are there not many of us who believe the same thing? |
57813 | Are they the companions of his youth who shared with him the manly toils of the chase or the robust exercises of the palaestra? |
57813 | Are your blandishments more seducing in public than in private, and with other women''s husbands than with your own? |
57813 | As to Gabinius, Statilius, Coeparius, why should I make any remark upon them? |
57813 | Ask of the jurors whether they know Chabrias, Iphicrates and Timotheus, and learn from them why they have honored and erected statues to them? |
57813 | Brothers? |
57813 | But can we, for that reason run ahead, and infer that he will make any particular change, of which he himself has given no intimation? |
57813 | But here you must ask the defendant:"What was your resentment against your country? |
57813 | But how are speakers to do this? |
57813 | But how can a daughter hear that mother''s name without a blush? |
57813 | But how, you may ask, will you decide justly? |
57813 | But if a war should come, what damage must be expected? |
57813 | But if it is, how can he resist it? |
57813 | But what happened directly, almost immediately, afterwards? |
57813 | But when shall we be stronger? |
57813 | But who, it may be asked, will blame any severity that shall be decreed against these parricides of their country? |
57813 | But why at all these tears, these cries, this voice of lamentation? |
57813 | Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? |
57813 | Can he possibly show that it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest? |
57813 | Can he, then, be willing to put his life in jeopardy? |
57813 | Can we safely base our action upon any such vague inference? |
57813 | Children? |
57813 | Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home? |
57813 | DIGGING FOR THE THOUGHT JOHN RUSKIN When you come to a good book, you must ask yourself,"Am I inclined to work as an Australian miner would? |
57813 | Did not God choose David from the sheepfolds to make him ruler of his people Israel? |
57813 | Did you think that I would say nothing of such serious matters as these? |
57813 | Do gentlemen hold the feelings and wishes of their brethren at so cheap a rate that they refuse to gratify them at so small a price? |
57813 | Do not such careers illustrate the prophecy of Solomon,"Seest thou the man diligent in his business? |
57813 | Do the concealments of which I speak still cover animosities, which neither time nor reflection nor the march of events have yet suffered to subdue? |
57813 | Do you ask me to support a government that will tax my property; that will plunder me; that will demand my blood, and will not protect me? |
57813 | Do you undertake the cause of impartiality, of integrity, of good faith and religion? |
57813 | Do you undertake the cause of the tribunals? |
57813 | Does Douglas believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching? |
57813 | Does any of you, Athenians, compute or consider the means by which Philip, originally weak, has become great? |
57813 | Does he lack organ or medium to impart his truths? |
57813 | Does he not perceive the feeling of our city towards him?" |
57813 | Does he really think so? |
57813 | Does not the event show they judged rightly? |
57813 | Does that exclude those whose blood and money paid for it? |
57813 | Does"dispose of"mean to rob the rightful owners? |
57813 | Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine? |
57813 | Finally, why are there so few orators in the world today? |
57813 | For peace? |
57813 | For should we sacrifice them and their children, would this compensate for the murder of your fathers, your sons, and your brothers? |
57813 | For war? |
57813 | For what alliance has come to the state by your procurement? |
57813 | For what purpose could ye have sent for them at that period? |
57813 | For what purpose? |
57813 | For whom else have I to plead for me? |
57813 | Had the Declaration announced that the negroes were free and equal, how was the prince to be arraigned for stirring up insurrection among them? |
57813 | Has Great Britain any enemy, in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies? |
57813 | Have we anything new to offer upon the subject? |
57813 | Have we no tendency to the latter condition? |
57813 | Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love? |
57813 | He met my father going out, who said to him:"Are you the visitor whom the company here expect? |
57813 | Here he is in your jurisdiction: shall not his doom be death? |
57813 | How can he oppose the advance of slavery? |
57813 | How can he refuse that trade in that"property"shall be"perfectly free,"unless he does it as a protection to the home production? |
57813 | How can we best do it? |
57813 | How hast thou spent that money? |
57813 | How is any one of the thirty states to defend itself? |
57813 | How is it now? |
57813 | How is it today? |
57813 | How long is that madness of yours still to mock us? |
57813 | How many modern orators measure up to this standard set by the ancient master? |
57813 | How many of you at this moment are, in fancy, back in the dear old county of Greene? |
57813 | How then? |
57813 | How would the intimation have been received that Warren and his associations should have waited a better time? |
57813 | How, then, is this reproach to be avoided? |
57813 | I ask gentlemen, sir, What means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission? |
57813 | INFLECTION_ What is inflection?_ Inflection is a bending of the voice. |
57813 | If Philip take that city, who shall then prevent his marching here? |
57813 | If my error would thus be criminal, how great would yours be if you should render an unjust verdict? |
57813 | If precedents in bad times are to be implicitly followed, why should we have heard any evidence at all? |
57813 | If the gold standard is a good thing, why try to get rid of it? |
57813 | If the gold standard is the standard of civilization, why, my friends, should we not have it? |
57813 | If we look back to the history of the commerce of this country in the early years of this government, what were our exports? |
57813 | In honoring such an one will you not dishonor yourselves and the gallant men who have laid down their lives for you in the field? |
57813 | In other causes it is usual to ask the accusers:"What is your resentment against the defendants?" |
57813 | In other words, how are you going to compel me? |
57813 | In such a case, does any one talk to me of gentleness and compassion? |
57813 | In what estimation did they hold it at the time when this Constitution was adopted? |
57813 | In what event? |
57813 | Is Philip dead? |
57813 | Is it because thou art a valiant soldier? |
57813 | Is it for his venality, for his cowardice, for his base desertion of his post in the day of battle? |
57813 | Is it not Ctesiphon who is accused, and even for him may not the penalty be moderated by you? |
57813 | Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received? |
57813 | Is it to solicit that their parents, their husbands, children, and brothers may be ransomed from captivity under Hannibal? |
57813 | Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? |
57813 | Is man possessed of talents adequate to the great occasion? |
57813 | Is not the common sentiment, or if not, ought it not to be, of the great mass of our people, North and South? |
57813 | Is the doctrine to be sustained here that it is imprudent for men to aid magistrates in executing the laws? |
57813 | Is there a man so bereft of sense that he will set Leocrates free and so place his own security at the mercy of men who would abandon him? |
57813 | Is there any State in this Union which has contributed so much to the honor and welfare of the country? |
57813 | Is this a body of witnesses that are to be trusted to report words, that are the issues of life, with certainty and accuracy? |
57813 | Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty? |
57813 | Is this the spirit in which this government is to be administered? |
57813 | It is in fact simply this: Has the civil magistrate a right to put down a riot? |
57813 | Men are continually asking each other, had Lovejoy a right to resist? |
57813 | Moreover, consider it[ in this point of view]: if we have been islanders, who would have been more impregnable? |
57813 | Moved not to introduce men who were come for the purpose of conferring with you? |
57813 | Mr. President, has it come to this? |
57813 | My father? |
57813 | Now what is the use of telling us that? |
57813 | On what ground, Dicaeogenes, canst thou ask the jury to give a sentence in thy favor? |
57813 | On what occasion, then, do you show your spirit? |
57813 | Or some other ally? |
57813 | Or tell me, do you like walking about and asking one other, Is there any news? |
57813 | Or was it because scourging is a severer penalty than death? |
57813 | Ought it not to be so? |
57813 | Patrick?" |
57813 | Phocians? |
57813 | QUESTIONS_ How many kinds of questions are there?_ Two. |
57813 | Roll the stone from the grave and what shall we see? |
57813 | Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction? |
57813 | Shall we put him in a boat sailing over the golden lake when the angels are calling? |
57813 | Shall we put him where the golden light plays around the golden city? |
57813 | Shall we put him where the sapphire river rolls around the throne of the Almighty? |
57813 | Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication? |
57813 | Shall we therefore make a law prohibiting the council and the people hereafter from passing bills and decrees? |
57813 | Shall we try argument? |
57813 | Should we abandon these men too, and Philip reduce Olynthus, let any one tell me what is to prevent him marching where he pleases? |
57813 | Should we deprive them of their property, would this indemnify the individuals whom they have beggared, or the State which they have plundered? |
57813 | So thought Palmyra-- where is she? |
57813 | Such being human nature, am I to be tried and judged by the standard of my predecessors? |
57813 | Take God out of the country and what have we? |
57813 | Take God out of the home and what have we? |
57813 | That noble youth suffered for excess of bravery; and do you hesitate what sentence to pass on the most inhuman of traitors? |
57813 | The cowardice, shall I call it? |
57813 | The falling inflection should also be given all direct questions that are earnest appeals; as, Will you_ please_ forgive me? |
57813 | The falling inflection should be given a direct question such as, Has the gentlemen done? |
57813 | The need is here, but where are the orators? |
57813 | The question now is, did he act within the Constitution and the laws? |
57813 | The questions are here, but where are the orators capable of making those questions clear to the masses? |
57813 | Thebans? |
57813 | Then are you not ashamed that the very damage which you suffer, if he had the power, you dare not seize the moment to inflict on him? |
57813 | Then what prevents your being deprived of everything, yea, of the government itself, according to such argument? |
57813 | This last word was scarcely out of his mouth when some one cried out:"The Tammany Tiger?" |
57813 | This might be aptly answered by putting another question, How did other men become public speakers? |
57813 | This right of equality being, then, according to justice and natural equity, a right belonging to all states, when did we give it up? |
57813 | To such indignities, O bravest of men, how long will you submit? |
57813 | Was I further to see three hundred Athenians perish undeservedly, the city involved in calamity, and the citizens suspicious of one another? |
57813 | Was it because the Porcian law forbids it? |
57813 | Was it intended to render you indignant at the conspiracy? |
57813 | Was it my duty to guard the petty interests of the state, and have sold our main interests like these men? |
57813 | Was not the"Lord of life and all the worlds"for thirty years a carpenter at Nazareth? |
57813 | Was this the object of my ambition; and is this the mode by which a tribunal of justice reconciles contradictions? |
57813 | Well, what was the result? |
57813 | Were we not fighting against that majesty? |
57813 | What am I to be? |
57813 | What are the causes? |
57813 | What are we to think then? |
57813 | What are you going to do? |
57813 | What assistance in money have you ever given, either to the rich or the poor, out of public spirit or liberality? |
57813 | What avails it to have conquered them in the field, if you be overcome by them in your councils? |
57813 | What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force? |
57813 | What called forth the Licinian law, restricting estates to five hundred acres, but the unbounded desire of enlarging estates? |
57813 | What can show more evidently the contempt in which he holds you, or the confidence which he reposes in others? |
57813 | What concern, domestic, Hellenic, or foreign, of which you have had the management, has improved under it? |
57813 | What did the Tory party do for the colonies? |
57813 | What do I mean? |
57813 | What do the rebels demand? |
57813 | What does the word country signify? |
57813 | What embassy or agency is there of yours, by which the reputation of the country has been increased? |
57813 | What galleys? |
57813 | What helped him then almost to surprise you in a voluntary snare? |
57813 | What in the world are you good for? |
57813 | What inference can you draw from these facts other than that I am an innocent man? |
57813 | What is it that gentlemen wish? |
57813 | What is to become of the army? |
57813 | What is to become of the navy? |
57813 | What is to become of the public lands? |
57813 | What is to remain American? |
57813 | What malice did you bear your fellow citizens? |
57813 | What motive could I have had? |
57813 | What motive, that even common decency will not allow to be mentioned, is pretended for this female insurrection? |
57813 | What states are to secede? |
57813 | What succors, what acquisition of good will or credit? |
57813 | What terms shall we find, which have not already been exhausted? |
57813 | What the Cineian law, concerning gifts and presents, but that the plebeians had become vassals and tributaries to the senate? |
57813 | What was the effect of this, men of Athens? |
57813 | What was their agreement? |
57813 | What would become of Missouri? |
57813 | What would they have? |
57813 | What, but arguing, some in support of the motion of tribunes; others contending for the repeal of the law? |
57813 | What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution? |
57813 | What, then, Athenians, when will you act as becomes you? |
57813 | What, then, were the statements made by Aeschines, through which everything was lost? |
57813 | What, then, will you take? |
57813 | What, think you, was the reason? |
57813 | When do you shine out? |
57813 | When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force? |
57813 | When is there to be an end of that unbridled audacity of yours, swaggering about as it does now? |
57813 | Where are the men to solve those problems? |
57813 | Where is the eagle still to tower?--or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground? |
57813 | Where is the flag of the Republic to remain? |
57813 | Where is the line to be drawn? |
57813 | Where is the man that dreads a patriot grave? |
57813 | Where is the sting of death when a hero falls for his country? |
57813 | Where then is the man who will vote to clear him? |
57813 | Where, then, was the imprudence? |
57813 | Where? |
57813 | Wherein, then, lie the hopes of the masses? |
57813 | Who can now wonder, judges, that he deceived me, a private individual, when he so notoriously deluded you all in your common assembly? |
57813 | Who could have imagined that four years could make that stupendous difference? |
57813 | Who is he that will show his sympathy with crime that shows malice aforethought? |
57813 | Who is so foolish-- I beg everybody''s pardon-- as to expect to see any such thing? |
57813 | Who that is Greek does not know that they took one Tyrtaeus for their general? |
57813 | Who would dare, however, from this, to accuse the people of Athens of a sordid economy? |
57813 | Who would not prefer the perils of Evagoras to the lot of those who inherited kingdoms from their fathers? |
57813 | Why did you rage with unbridled fury against the state itself?" |
57813 | Why did your fathers give to the land her name? |
57813 | Why do I mention this? |
57813 | Why do I not make a figure, distinguished with gold and purple? |
57813 | Why does he not tell us what he is going to do if he fails to secure an international agreement? |
57813 | Why is he then so disquieted? |
57813 | Why is it that within three months such a change has come over the country? |
57813 | Why stand we here idle? |
57813 | Why this change? |
57813 | Why, could there be greater news than a man of Macedonia subduing Athenians, and directing the affairs of Greece? |
57813 | Why, it may be said, do you mention all this now? |
57813 | Why, what should I have done? |
57813 | Why, what would be the result? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Why? |
57813 | Will it be the next week, or the next year? |
57813 | Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every home? |
57813 | Will she join the_ arrondissement_ of the slave states? |
57813 | Will the gentleman venture that argument before lawyers? |
57813 | Will you behold your villages in flames, and your harvests destroyed? |
57813 | Will you die of hunger on the land which your sweat has made fertile? |
57813 | Will you look on while the Cossacks of the far North tread under foot the bodies of your fathers, mothers, wives, and children? |
57813 | Will you not then punish this scoundrel, now that you have him in your power? |
57813 | Will you not, then, awake to action? |
57813 | Will you see a part of your fellow citizens sent to the wilds of Siberia, made to serve in the wars of tyrants, or bleed under the murderous knout? |
57813 | Would not a man whose life was really upright so speak out; only a knave who assumes the garb of virtue would talk as you do? |
57813 | Would she, had our struggle for liberty failed, have considered that we fought for what we believed to be right? |
57813 | Would that man ever have had a favorable hope of his own safety, if he had not conceived in his mind a bad opinion of you? |
57813 | Would the justice of our opposition have been considered? |
57813 | Would ye have the judges set aside a verdict obtained by fair means, and put me a second time in jeopardy of my life for the same offense? |
57813 | Yet his proposal appears to me, I will not say cruel( for what can be cruel that is directed against such characters? |
57813 | Yet what can be too severe, or too harsh, toward men convicted of such an offence? |
57813 | _ Does it consist of force alone?_ No. |
57813 | _ From what source is the speaker to take his illustrations?_ From all sources: history, books, his own experience, and, best of all, nature. |
57813 | _ How are the contrasts to be brought out?_ By means of inflection and emphasis. |
57813 | _ How can this be accomplished?_ By bringing into use all the muscles that act on the lungs, particularly the abdominal muscles and the diaphragm. |
57813 | _ How is one to breathe properly?_ By inflating the lungs fully from their base to their apex. |
57813 | _ How is one to obtain an effective delivery?_ By close observation, hard study, and diligent practice. |
57813 | _ How is the speaker to make the picture so vivid that it will be immediately seen and comprehended by the listener?_ By seeing it himself. |
57813 | _ How many forms of contrast are there?_ There are three: the single, the double, and the triple. |
57813 | _ How many inflections are there?_ Two. |
57813 | _ Is it placed merely on single words?_ No. |
57813 | _ Is there any difference as to how the two series should be spoken?_ Yes. |
57813 | _ What are they called?_ They are called direct and indirect. |
57813 | _ What does the falling inflection signify?_ The falling inflection, in the main, signifies certainty. |
57813 | _ What does the rising inflection signify?_ The rising inflection, in the main, signifies uncertainty. |
57813 | _ What is a concluding series?_ A series is considered a concluding one when the series is complete with the close of the series. |
57813 | _ What is voice?_ Voice is vocalized breath. |
57813 | and for what end? |
57813 | and for what end? |
57813 | and that, at a crisis of such danger to the republic and my own character, I would consult anything rather than my duty and my dignity? |
57813 | demanded the angel again,"And it is this that awes thy soul?" |
57813 | did you come forward to punish and proclaim what you now charge me with? |
57813 | has he_ completely_ done? |
57813 | his army deserted? |
57813 | his province abandoned? |
57813 | or ordered the Manager not to assign them places at the theatre? |
57813 | shall he not serve warning to others? |
57813 | some man may exclaim; do you move that this be a military fund? |
57813 | that by extending clemency to a traitor he will lay himself open to the retribution of heaven? |
57813 | that out of pity for Leocrates he will take no pity on himself, when his choice may mean death at the hands of the foe? |
57813 | that the consul was plundered and betrayed? |
57813 | the holy nature and obligations imposed on him by lot violated? |
57813 | was such eloquence directed? |
57813 | what ammunition? |
57813 | what arsenals? |
57813 | what cavalry? |
57813 | what repair of walls? |
57813 | when? |
57813 | which of you is so simple as not to know that the war yonder will soon be here if we are careless? |
57813 | will not the judges be influenced by the accusation, by the evidence, by the universal opinion of the Roman people? |
57813 | will you die under the exterminating sword of the savage Russians? |
37621 | ''And why should he not preserve them? 37621 ''And why?'' |
37621 | ''But why recall your origin everywhere you go?'' 37621 ''Did he not receive you well?'' |
37621 | ''Do you know what has happened?'' 37621 ''How old is he?'' |
37621 | ''Is it because he is to be my husband?'' 37621 ''Proud, and why? |
37621 | ''What do you think of it?'' 37621 ''What do you think of my future husband?'' |
37621 | ''What has happened?'' 37621 ''What is faith?'' |
37621 | ''What is it, Father Simon?'' 37621 ''What is the way?'' |
37621 | ''What think you?'' 37621 ''When? |
37621 | ''Who, then, has not had trials? 37621 ''Why not?'' |
37621 | ''You are sorrowful?'' 37621 ''You will cast him in the fire to see if he is gold? |
37621 | A hundred, or a million, what does it matter? 37621 A priest? |
37621 | Afterward? 37621 Against whom, then, are your batteries directed?" |
37621 | All-- what? |
37621 | Am I permitted to ask where you are going? |
37621 | And Alexander I.? |
37621 | And Jacob? |
37621 | And Janus? |
37621 | And Poland? |
37621 | And afterward? |
37621 | And can you not by your magic art draw from him that which is rooted in his heart? |
37621 | And even if he does, with what are we threatened? 37621 And have they the same ideas?" |
37621 | And how do you feel at present? |
37621 | And how do you like Italy? |
37621 | And how does the country seem to you, dear Jacob? |
37621 | And if he himself desired the divorce, would you hinder him? |
37621 | And in what way can we be useful? |
37621 | And it is expressly to buy arms? |
37621 | And the old biblical traditions? |
37621 | And the richest? |
37621 | And the streets of Warsaw did not make you lose your illusions? |
37621 | And this offspring of which you spoke? |
37621 | And we,asked the young man, to tease his father,"have we not enough money?" |
37621 | And what do you think of it, madame? |
37621 | And what took you there? |
37621 | And what will come out of the ruins? |
37621 | And whence comes, monsieur, this suddenly friendly guardianship for my daughter and myself? |
37621 | And where do you come from now? |
37621 | And where is he at present? |
37621 | And why are you opposed to revolutions? |
37621 | And why do you say that? |
37621 | And why shall we not exult over the defeat of our enemies? 37621 And why should we like them?" |
37621 | And why, then, do you not chase the insurgents, and give them up to the authorities? |
37621 | And why, then? |
37621 | And why? |
37621 | And with whom? |
37621 | And you come from a distance? |
37621 | And you desire us to remain inactive and wait for these babes to grow up? 37621 And you expect to be the regenerator?" |
37621 | And you go alone? |
37621 | And you take notice of his judgment? |
37621 | And you were received? |
37621 | And you would submit to Russian brutality when you can avoid it? |
37621 | And you? 37621 And you?" |
37621 | And you? |
37621 | And your health? |
37621 | And,asked Kruder, looking at Jacob,"what are Ivas''feelings? |
37621 | Are the horses ready? |
37621 | Are they alone together? |
37621 | Are they any the less Jews? |
37621 | Are they not rich? |
37621 | Are we neither degenerate nor proud? 37621 Are you curious to have some idea of it? |
37621 | Are you insane, Ivas? |
37621 | Are you suffering? |
37621 | At what place? |
37621 | Before those coffins there will be a national appeal for vengeance against the assassins; and we--"We? |
37621 | Brother,said Jankiel, hastening to take advantage of his softened mood,"what are you going to do with the prisoner?" |
37621 | But he lives, does he not? 37621 But how can I be useful to you?" |
37621 | But how can you? |
37621 | But tell me, where have the Jews had an easier existence relatively than in Poland? 37621 But tell us to what good fortune do we owe your visit?" |
37621 | But there are still traces there of biblical times, are there not? |
37621 | But what are you doing at Genoa? |
37621 | But what is to be done when, in spite of ourselves, the youth and the city rise in arms and draw us in? |
37621 | But what sin have I committed? |
37621 | But where is this law of God? 37621 But why plunge us into these political questions?" |
37621 | But--"Where do you wish to go?" |
37621 | But, Monsieur le Comte, did you not just avow that Russia''s power is in her material force? 37621 But,"said Jacob,"how can they commence a revolution without arms, without money, without leaders or soldiers?" |
37621 | By whom? |
37621 | Can I do anything for you? |
37621 | Can I trust him? |
37621 | Can not we discuss music? |
37621 | Can we not become the instruments of God? 37621 Can you guess, mademoiselle,"asked he in a low voice,"what advice I have just been giving Jacob?" |
37621 | Dear Jacob, why do we always speak of religion and morality? 37621 Dear Monsieur Mann, and what of us?" |
37621 | Dear mamma, do I need these lessons? |
37621 | Did you not say that the Jews ought to observe the law above all things? 37621 Did you not understand me?" |
37621 | Do I know the man? |
37621 | Do n''t you know me? |
37621 | Do you believe it? 37621 Do you believe that the idea of marriage has entered his head?" |
37621 | Do you bring me bad news? |
37621 | Do you know Ivas? |
37621 | Do you know Muse? |
37621 | Do you know any one who can conduct me in safety to the first post station? |
37621 | Do you know the counsellor of state? |
37621 | Do you know the mother? |
37621 | Do you know what your spiritual writer, Rzewuski, said to a Russian general? |
37621 | Do you know, mamma, I have been told that he has been already in love? |
37621 | Do you not know of some house, some friend, in the country? |
37621 | Do you not know that that which is illegal is most attractive to men? |
37621 | Do you not then feel that delicious breath of springtime which promises to all nations a garland of flowers? |
37621 | Do you say that my son may perhaps become steward for a Kronenberg or a Rosen? |
37621 | Do you take me for a spy, an informer? |
37621 | Do you think many will fail to put in an appearance? |
37621 | Do you think they could have taken me alive? 37621 Do you wish a priest?" |
37621 | Do you wish to be convinced with your own eyes? 37621 Does Poland contain many Jews who think and reason like you?" |
37621 | Does she not speak to you of the future? |
37621 | Has he ever spoken of any one else? |
37621 | Has she brought any more of the family? |
37621 | Has the music impressed you thus? |
37621 | Have I come at an inopportune moment? |
37621 | Have I not changed? 37621 Have they passed by here?" |
37621 | Have we not, we who were born on the same soil, received from nature the same rights as these men? 37621 Have you any kindred there?" |
37621 | Have you any reason for saying that? |
37621 | Have you any wish to have carried out, anything to confide in me? |
37621 | Have you been in Dresden? |
37621 | Have you been in the Orient? |
37621 | Have you heard about his mother? |
37621 | Have you heard the news? |
37621 | Have you not accepted my fraternal offer to stay with me? |
37621 | Have you seen Jacob lately? |
37621 | Have you seen the poor man? |
37621 | Have you talked with any of our young men? |
37621 | Have you visited the land of our fathers? |
37621 | Have you, then, the hope of raising yourself to that position? |
37621 | Henri''s conduct is indelicate--"What matters it, when I do not love him?" |
37621 | How can I approve them? |
37621 | How can I be sure that you are worthy of confidence; you are a Russian; what proofs can you give of being worthy of our confidence? |
37621 | How can I guess, monsieur? |
37621 | How can it be agreeable for me to contemplate without ceasing the statue of melancholy? 37621 How can such a word come out of your mouth? |
37621 | How can we? 37621 How could I be anything else? |
37621 | How couldst thou, dearest mother, think me capable of such vile ingratitude, and such forgetfulness of the commandments of God? |
37621 | How do you know that? 37621 How do you return to us, Akiba or atheist?" |
37621 | How do you watch for it? 37621 How does he reconcile this proceeding with his principles?" |
37621 | How explain, then, your mysterious adventure; that woman, who is she? |
37621 | How is that? 37621 How is that?" |
37621 | How is that? |
37621 | How is that? |
37621 | How is your health? 37621 How old are you?" |
37621 | How? 37621 How? |
37621 | How? |
37621 | I am not yet,said Ivas,"completely satisfied with your history; have you no more to tell me? |
37621 | I believe you,said she;"but will others believe it? |
37621 | I suppose you would advise us to wait until the Russians seize us? |
37621 | I thought it was agreed that we travel together? |
37621 | If I admit that, is it any reason why we should imitate them to- day? 37621 If you will permit me?" |
37621 | In contemplating creation,said Jacob,"do you not hear something within you say that we shall live beyond the tomb? |
37621 | In my turn let me ask, how do you know all this? |
37621 | In that case, why this prolonged absence? |
37621 | Is he really a Jew? |
37621 | Is it a safe asylum? |
37621 | Is it necessary, then, that I leave this poor innocent to hirelings? 37621 Is it permitted not to like Paris?" |
37621 | Is it so evident? |
37621 | Is it then very late? |
37621 | Is it your mother alone that keeps you from us? 37621 Is it your prophetic spirit that tells you? |
37621 | Is she young, pretty, blond or brunette, poor or rich, well educated? |
37621 | Is that all you know? |
37621 | Is that all? |
37621 | Is that you? |
37621 | Is this progress or decadence? |
37621 | It is, then, forbidden to hope for a little poetry in this prosaic life? |
37621 | Italy is delightful, is it not? |
37621 | Ivas, have you any relations, any friends? 37621 Ivas,"said Jacob,"tell me, what sum do you require, for yourself?" |
37621 | Love her? 37621 Mamma, would you have any objection to Sofronof, if he declares himself?" |
37621 | Many? 37621 Messieurs,"said she,"will you also accept my invitation?" |
37621 | Mother, you remember Monsieur Samuel, our cousin, and my guardian? |
37621 | My dear child, the honeymoon would be sweet; but afterward would he make you happy? 37621 No one?" |
37621 | Nothing more? |
37621 | Of course I understand you; why not? 37621 Of what?" |
37621 | Of whom, then? |
37621 | On foot? |
37621 | Painful, mademoiselle, in what way? 37621 Pardon, monsieur,"said he;"will you wait a moment? |
37621 | Perhaps you have not yet supped? |
37621 | Pole or Russian? 37621 Rabbi Jacob, tell me why I am honoured by your presence?" |
37621 | Rather, is it not you who repulse them? |
37621 | Really? 37621 Should we, then, be ashamed of our part?" |
37621 | So as to profit equally by our success or our misfortunes? 37621 The Kafarnaum? |
37621 | The right? 37621 The young girl said in reply:--"''Will you permit me to bring here a piece of raw meat?'' |
37621 | Then they are gone? |
37621 | Then we will go to Pisa? |
37621 | Then who is the charitable person? |
37621 | Then why do you remain here? |
37621 | Then you are not a Frenchman? |
37621 | Then you are not jealous? |
37621 | Then you do not think it will be an easy matter? |
37621 | Then you will have the courage of a martyr? 37621 This is no laughing matter; the times are grave and serious? |
37621 | To Pisa? 37621 To whom do they belong, then?" |
37621 | To your house? 37621 To- night? |
37621 | Very well, what has happened? |
37621 | Was not that what you intended to say? |
37621 | We reproach the pagans with love of revenge, and now do we wish to imitate them? 37621 Well, how is it?" |
37621 | Well,cried he,"how do you like Genoa? |
37621 | Well,said Jacob suddenly,"what shall we do now? |
37621 | Well,said he,"have you finished your history? |
37621 | Well? |
37621 | What Henri? |
37621 | What can I do? |
37621 | What can it be? |
37621 | What country is this Galicia? 37621 What do I see? |
37621 | What do they think here of the rebels? |
37621 | What do you mean? 37621 What do you think of him?" |
37621 | What do you think of that horrid Henri? |
37621 | What do you want? |
37621 | What do you wish of me, monsieur? |
37621 | What else can I do? 37621 What good is all this discussion?" |
37621 | What good would that do? 37621 What has come over you?" |
37621 | What has happened now? |
37621 | What has happened? 37621 What has that to do with it? |
37621 | What have you replied to his argument? |
37621 | What idea? 37621 What if I love her?" |
37621 | What is he to you? 37621 What is it, then?" |
37621 | What is it, then? |
37621 | What is it? |
37621 | What is that to you? |
37621 | What is that you are saying there? |
37621 | What is that you are saying? 37621 What is the matter, my child?" |
37621 | What is the matter? |
37621 | What matters it? 37621 What matters it? |
37621 | What matters it? 37621 What need is there,"said he,"of such haste? |
37621 | What news? |
37621 | What remains then for those who thirst for life? |
37621 | What rôle ought we to play at present,--we Jews? |
37621 | What use of speaking of the_ débris_ of a past which will never return? 37621 What would I not do for you, mademoiselle? |
37621 | What would you do with the Tsiganes? |
37621 | What, for example? |
37621 | What, has he dared? |
37621 | What, then, is your proposition? |
37621 | What, then? |
37621 | When did this intrigue commence? |
37621 | When? |
37621 | Where are the serious men, the earnest ones? |
37621 | Where are you two bound? |
37621 | Where can true love be found to- day? |
37621 | Where have you been? |
37621 | Where is the unfortunate? |
37621 | Where shall I go? |
37621 | Where, where? |
37621 | Where? 37621 Who are they?" |
37621 | Who does not love to recall the occurrences of youth, however sad? 37621 Who has dared to accuse me of treason?" |
37621 | Who is this man? |
37621 | Who is this woman? |
37621 | Who next? |
37621 | Who will be your disciples? 37621 Why I, rather than another? |
37621 | Why are you so hopeless? |
37621 | Why are you so quiet? 37621 Why did you leave the country?" |
37621 | Why did you question him? |
37621 | Why do you come here? |
37621 | Why do you dislike him? 37621 Why do you look at me thus? |
37621 | Why do you not respect me now? |
37621 | Why do you say_ us?_asked Simon. |
37621 | Why do you speak of her? |
37621 | Why do you speak thus? |
37621 | Why does he irritate me, then? |
37621 | Why not? 37621 Why not?" |
37621 | Why should I do that? |
37621 | Why should he live with my shame graven on his brow? 37621 Why should not a woman of the upper class who has opinions suit herself?" |
37621 | Why should their story interest us? |
37621 | Why speak of despair? 37621 Why that?" |
37621 | Why the devil do you regard it thus? |
37621 | Why this emotion? |
37621 | Why, madame,replied Samuel,"are you lacking in sincerity, when I come to chat with you in the most confidential manner?" |
37621 | Why, then, do not your brothers think as you? |
37621 | Why? 37621 Why? |
37621 | Why? 37621 Why?" |
37621 | Why? |
37621 | Why? |
37621 | Why? |
37621 | Will you come and sit with us, monsieur? |
37621 | Will you keep silent or not? |
37621 | Will you not come with us? |
37621 | Will you save her by your devotion? |
37621 | Will you then be seated? 37621 Would it not be possible for me to wait, and prove myself innocent?" |
37621 | Would you, then, have a mixture of folly and reason? |
37621 | Would you, then, mock him? |
37621 | You also? 37621 You are heroes,"said Jacob,"and I admire you; but have you counted the cost? |
37621 | You are more astonished to see me here than in Italy? 37621 You are on their side, are you not?" |
37621 | You are surely going there, madame? |
37621 | You believe, then, that the honour of being your wife ought to make me happy? 37621 You belong to them, then?" |
37621 | You go with Gromof? |
37621 | You guess what it is? 37621 You have seen him?" |
37621 | You know all, do you not? 37621 You persist in not sacrificing your personal feelings to the interest of the country?" |
37621 | You reproach me? |
37621 | You say that you are not a revolutionist? |
37621 | You still believe in Providence? 37621 You think, then,"asked Jacob,"that morals should have no part in the government of nations?" |
37621 | You will give us the money? |
37621 | You will permit it? 37621 You wish to say,"asked she,"that you do not find the situation to your taste?" |
37621 | You wish, then, to direct the world? |
37621 | You? 37621 Your heart? |
37621 | A priest for me? |
37621 | After a moment of exaltation she continued:--"Tell me,"said she,"do you really believe in the immortality of the soul and a life beyond the tomb?" |
37621 | After a short silence the colonel wiped his forehead, and said in an angry tone:--"Why do you remain here? |
37621 | Alone, whom can I serve?" |
37621 | Am I not right? |
37621 | Am I not sufficiently rich to buy a property grand enough to make all the neighbouring aristocracy jealous?" |
37621 | Ambitious?" |
37621 | And after getting there, on what resources could we subsist? |
37621 | And could Lia do that? |
37621 | And if society still demands a sort of modified aristocracy, who will replace the nobles? |
37621 | And if the question is not indiscreet, will you tell us whence you came and where you are going?" |
37621 | And ought I to refuse to do my duty for fear of unjust criticism?" |
37621 | And the other arts?" |
37621 | And this young man in revolutionary costume, with his great boots, what was he doing here? |
37621 | And we? |
37621 | And what did those two men want that just left here? |
37621 | And what would you do then with Lia? |
37621 | And you, messieurs, artists who go on foot, where are you going will you permit me to ask?" |
37621 | And you, will you remember?'' |
37621 | And you?" |
37621 | Another?" |
37621 | Are there not other persons, other faces and names, which awaken old memories? |
37621 | Are they rich or poor? |
37621 | Are we not happy as we are? |
37621 | Are you a Catholic?" |
37621 | Are you also a rebel? |
37621 | Are you as serious as ever?" |
37621 | Are you in the secrets of Lord Palmerston? |
37621 | Are you more approachable, more cordial, more charitable, than L. P. K., or many other nobles? |
37621 | Are you then, Rabbi Jacob, one of those madmen who tempt God?" |
37621 | At last Mathilde sighed, and held out her hand to him, murmuring:--"Jacob, we are old and good friends, and nothing more, are we not?" |
37621 | Besides, the Christian religion teaches that, does it not?" |
37621 | Bologne-- Pologne; same thing, is n''t it? |
37621 | But do you not remember that it will soon be time to go to Aqua Sola?" |
37621 | But how can we change now? |
37621 | But how could she resist when he was determined to have his way at any cost? |
37621 | But is the thing certain?" |
37621 | But tell me, is it not possible to delay the insurrection?" |
37621 | But whence comes the abatement of persecution? |
37621 | But where? |
37621 | But why suppose this Russian officer to be a child of Israel? |
37621 | But why the devil do you dream of Lia? |
37621 | But you, Ivas, you do not mistrust me?" |
37621 | Can I prevent this uprising? |
37621 | Can they not at least bury me decently?" |
37621 | Can we believe it?" |
37621 | Can you not acquire the same happiness?" |
37621 | Can you read the future? |
37621 | Colonel Nauke is very fond of Italian music, and as soon as he knows"--"You will introduce me to him?" |
37621 | Could you not arrange for me to meet some of the leaders of the agitation?" |
37621 | Could you not secretly lend me one or two? |
37621 | Did he tell you why he came? |
37621 | Did her heart beat on the way? |
37621 | Did you go to the theatre? |
37621 | Did you hear the cry she gave? |
37621 | Did you say arrested?" |
37621 | Did you see how he looked at her? |
37621 | Do n''t you know that no one can see the prisoner? |
37621 | Do not put on any powder, your complexion does not need it, and he might think you had lost your freshness; and how will you dress?" |
37621 | Do the brutes understand anything? |
37621 | Do the witches of Shakespeare watch at the dark cross- roads, or will the angels lend their aid? |
37621 | Do you accept my proposition? |
37621 | Do you also go to Warsaw?" |
37621 | Do you doubt me?" |
37621 | Do you know anything about penal labour? |
37621 | Do you know her, monsieur?" |
37621 | Do you know how this original romance commenced?" |
37621 | Do you know of a safe place for a few hours?" |
37621 | Do you know that there still remains much to expiate?" |
37621 | Do you know the intentions of the Emperor Napoleon? |
37621 | Do you know to what you are exposed by your opinions? |
37621 | Do you know what exile is? |
37621 | Do you know what it is to be a Russian soldier?" |
37621 | Do you now understand the cause of my solicitude for you?" |
37621 | Do you think of making him a rabbi? |
37621 | Do you think that to sew and embroider can tranquillize a soul?" |
37621 | Do you think that you can unite these scattered people?" |
37621 | Do you understand me?" |
37621 | Do you wish to remain faithful to obsolete prejudices?'' |
37621 | Do you wish to save Jacob? |
37621 | Does not friendship permit me to ask this of you?" |
37621 | Does your head ache still?" |
37621 | Every one says''relations,''but with whom? |
37621 | Flirting with Henri? |
37621 | For what have you returned? |
37621 | For what man has then a perfect ideal?" |
37621 | Has one ever enough? |
37621 | Have I ever made you any promises that I have not kept?" |
37621 | Have they all perished? |
37621 | Have we not gained our rights of equality by humiliations endured during ages?" |
37621 | Have we not the theatre as a last resort?" |
37621 | Have you accepted?" |
37621 | Have you been at Genoa? |
37621 | Have you forgotten their conduct toward our people?" |
37621 | Have you given them your name? |
37621 | Have you heard Muse play Liszt''s last fantasie? |
37621 | Have you heard the prayers of the young men torn from their mothers''arms? |
37621 | Have you lost at the Bourse, or has your dancer left you for the epaulets?" |
37621 | Have you met him anywhere?" |
37621 | Have you not said that you sympathize with Poland, and did you not reproach us for being opposed to it?" |
37621 | Have you received the confidences of the Rothschilds?" |
37621 | Have you remembered the sins of these Philistines, the extortions and the miseries with which they afflicted us? |
37621 | Have you seen Gromof?" |
37621 | Have you seen me play the sorceress? |
37621 | Have you shielded them from shame, misery, and malediction?" |
37621 | Have you slept well?" |
37621 | Have you suffered as I have? |
37621 | Have you witnessed any of the scenes provoked by the nocturnal recruiting, when our men have been seized and forced into the Russian army? |
37621 | He looked at him in astonishment, and asked:--"German Jew?" |
37621 | He will be safe, will he not?" |
37621 | Here it is: What is the better part for us to take in the interest of Poland, our adopted country?" |
37621 | His mother''s visit, then?" |
37621 | How came the country to be abandoned to such authority? |
37621 | How can one be at the same time a patriot, and submit to a foreign yoke? |
37621 | How could she do it? |
37621 | How could we live? |
37621 | How do they live?" |
37621 | How else can we account for the desire for immortality that each one bears within his soul? |
37621 | How is it, madame, that you go to Warsaw?" |
37621 | How long has she known them? |
37621 | How long will this exaltation last? |
37621 | How many are there that feel as you do?" |
37621 | How many? |
37621 | How transport her children thither? |
37621 | How, then, will he preserve his paternal traditions?'' |
37621 | How? |
37621 | I will be gay in spite of"--"Of what?" |
37621 | I wish a living creature? |
37621 | I, who believed his words; I, who loved him so-- perhaps he has sent you?" |
37621 | I? |
37621 | If there is a God, where is he? |
37621 | If this man, so opposite to me, has all your sympathy, what sentiment then have you for your humble servant?" |
37621 | In a sweet voice she asked:"You go to Poland?" |
37621 | In one century, since the first partition of your country, what has been your influence? |
37621 | In that case, what is the Russian spirit, and how shall she inspire others with a spirit which is actually incompatible with strength?" |
37621 | In the books called holy? |
37621 | In what are nobles our superiors? |
37621 | In what language shall I speak to them of the future? |
37621 | Is he a coward?" |
37621 | Is he afraid of the Russians?" |
37621 | Is he rich?" |
37621 | Is heroism folly? |
37621 | Is it a hospital or a tomb? |
37621 | Is it confidence or indifference? |
37621 | Is it not worth while to lean on a normal state rather than on exceptions of short duration?'' |
37621 | Is it possible? |
37621 | Is it the English governess, Miss Burnet? |
37621 | Is it true that in your country it is so cold that sometimes the fowls freeze in winter, and do not thaw out until spring? |
37621 | Is that any reason why I should not love her and cherish her? |
37621 | Is this happiness? |
37621 | It is sad for you beautiful women to descend from the pedestal on which you were elevated, but how can you refuse the evidence of things?" |
37621 | It is some time now since Muse captivated him, but why should we care? |
37621 | It is too soon, too soon, do you hear? |
37621 | It is wrong for them to act thus; and, tell me, what is the object of the societies the nobles are organizing? |
37621 | It was a composition of Schumann''s, and as Jacob was near her she asked him:--"Do you remember our promenades with Mathilde? |
37621 | It would be very easy to awaken in him-- you understand me? |
37621 | Jacob commenced to recite the passage, then, remarking that no one listened to him, turned gayly to his wife and asked:--"Is not Italy beautiful?" |
37621 | Jacob soothed her, and gradually reassured she asked:--"Have you come from my house? |
37621 | Jacob"--"Why, monsieur, why do you speak to me of this philosopher, this savant?" |
37621 | Jacob, will you undertake it?" |
37621 | Jokes about pork were met with, even in the mouths of the masters; what could I do but keep silence? |
37621 | Just then the servant entered, much disturbed, and said:--"One of monsieur''s friends is here; shall I show him in?" |
37621 | La Sontag, did she not become a countess and ambassadress?" |
37621 | Lia spoke at last and said:"Monsieur, what do you wish? |
37621 | Mann sulked awhile, then said to Jacob:--"What news do you bring from Jerusalem? |
37621 | Mathilde grew very pale, and cried:--"Arrested? |
37621 | Mathilde, will you order the tea? |
37621 | Muse drew Mathilde into an obscure corner of the grotto to ask her this question:--"Are you happy?" |
37621 | My father? |
37621 | My will? |
37621 | Next?" |
37621 | No? |
37621 | No? |
37621 | No? |
37621 | Not jealous? |
37621 | Now let me ask you, what will you do with your mother?" |
37621 | Now that you have returned to us, what do you intend to do?" |
37621 | Of me?" |
37621 | Of the Sabbath?" |
37621 | Of what use to me is the wealth that I have amassed by the sweat of my brow? |
37621 | Oh, who knows anything about it?" |
37621 | One does not travel every day with dignitaries, lately granted a_ von_ who knows for what secret service? |
37621 | Other relations? |
37621 | Ought I to rejoice? |
37621 | Ought we not to profit by circumstances? |
37621 | Ought we not to try and accomplish his designs? |
37621 | Ought we to be indifferent lookers on? |
37621 | Ought we to overlook the evils done us by them? |
37621 | Perhaps there is another person who absorbs your time?" |
37621 | Poor child, she believed in him; she was beautiful, but now she is a wreck; so young, what will become of her?" |
37621 | Seeing the child under your protection, what calumnies, think you, will be circulated?" |
37621 | Shall it be on foot or in a carriage?" |
37621 | Shall we rest here or push on farther?" |
37621 | She went up to Ivas, and held out a little hand, elegantly gloved, asking with much solicitude,"_ Va bene?_""Thanks, madame. |
37621 | She? |
37621 | Should we have less compassion for a man, even if he were a pagan?" |
37621 | Take away God and the soul, and what would be the result with our refined civilization? |
37621 | Take her to a ball, or to the theatre? |
37621 | Tell me how you are, and why you left Italy so soon?" |
37621 | Tell me, do you know a more beautiful land?" |
37621 | Tell me, where is Warsaw?" |
37621 | Tell us, is there anything in contemplation?" |
37621 | That which troubles me is the downfall of a man whom"--"The fall of a man? |
37621 | The Poles are much more enlightened than the Russians; could you not have been benefactors? |
37621 | The ancient rulers of the country have not respected us, have they?" |
37621 | The baron asked in a low voice:--"Who is this person?" |
37621 | The baron drew back and, as he was a strict conservative, thought:--"What kind of company have we fallen in with, anyway?" |
37621 | The custom did not really exist; Jankiel had imagined it in pious thought, but how could Colonel Tendemann know about it? |
37621 | The others? |
37621 | The public funds? |
37621 | The younger David began to whistle, and then said:--"Who speaks now of virtue and right? |
37621 | Then addressing Jacob, the Tsigane continued:"Will you accept me as a companion? |
37621 | Then he said to Jacob:--"Madame and yourself are travelling for pleasure, are you not?" |
37621 | Then you are all ready?" |
37621 | There remained the orphan: what should he do with him? |
37621 | There remained to him the choice between flight or prison; but whither should he fly? |
37621 | There was a long silence, which the father broke by asking the young man, who had stretched himself out in a chair:"What do you dream of? |
37621 | They both sighed, and Jacob asked:--"Why do you dream of returning to a country from which you were obliged to flee?" |
37621 | They have completely forgotten me?" |
37621 | They have kept us long enough in the mud at the gates of their palaces; why should we not be glad to see them in their turn humbled before us?" |
37621 | This seems strange, does it not? |
37621 | To bite? |
37621 | To what end have come our navigation companies, or our industrial or commercial associations? |
37621 | To whom can they complain? |
37621 | To whom confide him? |
37621 | To whom will my cherished one give herself? |
37621 | To- day it is the mustard after dinner, is it not? |
37621 | Was he not going to risk his life in order to breathe his native air? |
37621 | Was he not the enemy of the revolution?" |
37621 | Was it really remorse? |
37621 | We are weakened by this cruel oppression; where can we find strength for the struggle?" |
37621 | We can not change anything, can we? |
37621 | We have come here to rest, have we not?" |
37621 | We, who are accustomed to a life of ease and to liberty of action, is it possible for us to become tradesmen? |
37621 | Were we presented to each other yesterday? |
37621 | Were you ever hanged, my Jacob? |
37621 | What are you going to do?" |
37621 | What are you thinking of? |
37621 | What are you waiting for? |
37621 | What attitude shall we take toward the nobles? |
37621 | What can we do for you? |
37621 | What can we do to bring him here?" |
37621 | What can we do? |
37621 | What did he say?" |
37621 | What did it matter? |
37621 | What did they not do here? |
37621 | What do you desire,--to remain here longer, or to proceed on our journey?" |
37621 | What do you intend to do with him?" |
37621 | What do you mean?" |
37621 | What do you think of good old Genoa?" |
37621 | What do you think of my proposition?" |
37621 | What does he want of the Gemara? |
37621 | What further happiness can I have?" |
37621 | What good will it do us to try, like the Titans, by force to pierce the closed heavens? |
37621 | What good? |
37621 | What has become of him? |
37621 | What have the nobles done since 1791? |
37621 | What have we Jews in common with the Poles? |
37621 | What have we to do with the Poles, or Polish complications? |
37621 | What interest have we in the past?" |
37621 | What is it more than other religions? |
37621 | What is it? |
37621 | What is that? |
37621 | What is that?" |
37621 | What is the condition of the Jews there? |
37621 | What is the matter with you?" |
37621 | What matters it to us what happens to them?" |
37621 | What matters it to us?" |
37621 | What more can we wish? |
37621 | What more do you want?" |
37621 | What ought they to do? |
37621 | What song, sweet though it be, can be heard by ears which await a signal which will sound like a thunderclap?" |
37621 | What think you, my friends?" |
37621 | What time is it? |
37621 | What use is it to them? |
37621 | What was the tenor of your conversation with Bavorof, the remembrance of which has made Pikulinski''s very hair stand on end?" |
37621 | What will he tell them of us? |
37621 | What will they do now, after this affair of last night?" |
37621 | What would have been the exasperation of the honest Firpo if he had known that hunger was the cause of the fainting? |
37621 | What would you do with a cursed race without ambition or place? |
37621 | What, then, should be our rôle? |
37621 | When I observe in the world the different personalities, different characters, I think, mademoiselle"--"Why do you call me mademoiselle?" |
37621 | When she returned she said to Jacob:--"Well, how did you like her?" |
37621 | When they were alone, Samuel asked:--"No one can hear us, I hope? |
37621 | When will you return? |
37621 | Where and how did he steal the title of baron? |
37621 | Where are their labours, their efforts, their sacrifices? |
37621 | Where are they going?" |
37621 | Where are you staying?" |
37621 | Where can justice be found? |
37621 | Where can you find as formerly two souls created for each other?" |
37621 | Where else can be found so beautiful a country? |
37621 | Where have you been? |
37621 | Where is the young man? |
37621 | Who are they? |
37621 | Who are they? |
37621 | Who are you?" |
37621 | Who are you?" |
37621 | Who are you?" |
37621 | Who but we?" |
37621 | Who is she?" |
37621 | Who is the object? |
37621 | Who is this beautiful lady with accents so sad that on hearing her we have tears in our eyes? |
37621 | Who knows how many will keep the rendezvous at Aqua Sola?" |
37621 | Who knows where? |
37621 | Who, then, are pure and innocent in the depths of their souls around us? |
37621 | Who, then, now- a- days would paint frescoes for nothing but piety and for the love of God? |
37621 | Why can he not enjoy the same advantages as Christians? |
37621 | Why did you grow so pale?" |
37621 | Why distil your story drop by drop?" |
37621 | Why do you come here? |
37621 | Why do you deceive me now, like the others?" |
37621 | Why do you hinder me?" |
37621 | Why do you not repulse him?" |
37621 | Why do you wish to see the prisoner, and how dare you lie to me?" |
37621 | Why does she not seek to make allies of her own oppressors, when nothing could be easier? |
37621 | Why has my daughter looked towards that dwelling? |
37621 | Why has she given up her place in the government of Russia to the Germans? |
37621 | Why has she not been more politic? |
37621 | Why invest in property that does not return four per cent., when we can now get twenty or thirty?" |
37621 | Why is not our education as well developed as theirs? |
37621 | Why not be frank with a kinsman? |
37621 | Why not profit by it? |
37621 | Why not remain, at least, a day on this beautiful shore? |
37621 | Why not strike out? |
37621 | Why not wait before leaving the social sphere to which they were accustomed? |
37621 | Why should I fear you?" |
37621 | Why should he have employed clandestine means?'' |
37621 | Why should the Jews meddle with politics? |
37621 | Why should we always remain traders? |
37621 | Why should we mix in it?" |
37621 | Why should we suppose that this presentiment, this divination of a future existence, should be an illusion? |
37621 | Why should we thrust ourselves into the quarrel?" |
37621 | Why that iarmulka? |
37621 | Why then stagnate scattered in these little country towns? |
37621 | Why these ear- rings in the ears? |
37621 | Why this mystery? |
37621 | Why was she so agitated on seeing you? |
37621 | Why, then, should we expose ourselves and alienate this favourable disposition, by aiding, our former oppressors, the Poles? |
37621 | Why? |
37621 | Why?" |
37621 | Will he appreciate her? |
37621 | Will he be prudent and obedient? |
37621 | Will he consent to tell us? |
37621 | Will they be worthy of it? |
37621 | Will they understand their advantageous position? |
37621 | Will you give me the money? |
37621 | Will you give me your word of honour that it is not to aid the revolution?" |
37621 | Will you take charge of it?" |
37621 | Will your mother live with you?" |
37621 | Without them, what object in life has a woman? |
37621 | Would you like to know the Paradise or the Hell after the rabbinical conceptions?" |
37621 | Yes or no?" |
37621 | Yet I venture to ask you if it is not permitted to aspire here below to a little joy and happiness? |
37621 | You are a conspirator?" |
37621 | You are in the plot?" |
37621 | You believe in that? |
37621 | You came one Sabbath, did you not? |
37621 | You come to advise with us, do you not?" |
37621 | You must crush or be crushed; which would you rather do?'' |
37621 | You really believe, then, that they exist somewhere?" |
37621 | You remember that old house that I showed you one day in Warsaw? |
37621 | You say you love him? |
37621 | You wish, then, to be incarcerated in the citadel? |
37621 | Your name? |
37621 | _ Chi lo sa?_""I am ready to follow you to the end of the world!" |
37621 | _ Chi lo sa?_""_ Chi lo sa?_"repeated Primate. |
37621 | _ Chi lo sa?_""_ Chi lo sa?_"repeated Primate. |
37621 | _ En route_ and_ Au revoir!_""_ Au revoir!_ but where?" |
37621 | _ Requiescant!_ Is this death? |
37621 | _ Utinam simfalsus vates!_ Can I be a false prophet?" |
37621 | can our younger generation be capable of repulsing you? |
37621 | in a word, to wash our hands of it all?" |
37621 | lately?" |
37621 | that old fool?" |
37621 | there is, then, as I thought, a sad story?" |
37621 | to be a Catholic, and prostrate one''s self before a foreign authority which persecuted Catholicism? |
37621 | to take no part ostensibly in the procession? |
37621 | you dare to deny it?" |
48228 | ''Will you excuse me, Captain Beverley,''returned Averil, in the quietest voice,''if I venture to disturb your game? 48228 Ah, to be sure; little Miss Jones generally has tea with you, does she not, Averil?" |
48228 | Ah, yes, I do so love this sort of entertainment-- don''t you? |
48228 | Am I wrong to come here? |
48228 | And Frank was there? |
48228 | And Lottie Jones-- and who may that be? |
48228 | And Miss Ramsay has been with you ever since her mother''s death? |
48228 | And he has accepted the post? |
48228 | And he married her? 48228 And if he dies?" |
48228 | And she was rich? |
48228 | And the grown- up children-- how many are there who live with my cousin Averil? |
48228 | And they invite him here to dinner in her absence? |
48228 | And why not, may I ask? |
48228 | And why not? |
48228 | And yet what have I said? |
48228 | And you have really made up your mind to have the girl? |
48228 | And you long to play, too? |
48228 | And you must go? |
48228 | And you, my cousin? |
48228 | And your mother? |
48228 | Annette--turning to her cousin"there is no time to dress; will you please take off your hat, and come down into the dining- room?" |
48228 | Annette, do you really mean that you can care for me as well as for him? 48228 Annette, do you see there are two cottages? |
48228 | Are there so many people? |
48228 | Are you alone? 48228 Are you asleep, Annette? |
48228 | Are you going to the concert too, Lottie? |
48228 | Are you quite sure you know me, Maud? 48228 Are you sure you feel fit to go?" |
48228 | Averil, why do n''t you send Roberts to inquire at all the hospitals? 48228 Averil,"exclaimed Maud, at this moment,"I suppose we can have the carriage this afternoon? |
48228 | Books? 48228 Business first, pleasure afterward-- is not that the correct thing?" |
48228 | But are you not going Lottie? |
48228 | But he has many sisters, has he not? 48228 But is it absolutely necessary for Miss Ramsay''s shopping to be done to- day?" |
48228 | But no-- why should I be tired? |
48228 | But she grieved much at leaving her daughter? |
48228 | But surely you have some idea, my darling? |
48228 | But what is to happen on Tuesday? |
48228 | But why does she tire herself so much? |
48228 | But why not? 48228 But why?" |
48228 | But, my cousin, surely Miss Seymour was in the wrong to contradict your orders? |
48228 | But-- yes-- why not? |
48228 | Ca n''t you speak a word to a fellow? |
48228 | DEAR SIR AND GOOD COUSIN,it began,"will you have patience with me while I tell you my sad story? |
48228 | Dear Annette,exclaimed Averil,"will you not come to me and let me wish you joy?" |
48228 | Did my cousin say that? |
48228 | Did not dear Averil think he looked ill? 48228 Did you find this little one also, my cousin?" |
48228 | Did you work at Oxford? 48228 Do n''t you hate me?" |
48228 | Do not people generally congratulate their friends? 48228 Do you know Averil is fitting up a room for us?" |
48228 | Do you know where Louie is, Miss Ramsay? |
48228 | Do you know, Frank and I have good news for you? 48228 Do you mean I am to go home with you?" |
48228 | Do you mean Mr. Harland, Annette? |
48228 | Do you mean Rodney? |
48228 | Do you mean monsieur? |
48228 | Do you mean that you are going to kick me out? |
48228 | Do you mean that? |
48228 | Do you think Annette will make any difference between us? 48228 Do you think Averil could have the heart to refuse us such a treat? |
48228 | Do you think I am the sort of fellow to manage a delicate business like that? 48228 Do you think she does?" |
48228 | Does it matter about the unpacking? |
48228 | Does not Mrs. Willmot recognize the danger? 48228 Does not she look nice?" |
48228 | Does she like her better than this Maud and Georgina? |
48228 | Father, do you want another daughter? |
48228 | Father, shall I bring you and Miss Ramsay some tea out there? |
48228 | For what is it that I can say? |
48228 | HAVE YOU FOUND HIM, FRANK? |
48228 | Halloo, Ave,he said, as he caught sight of her,"what have you and the mater been talking about all this time? |
48228 | Have I been asleep, Miss Ramsay? 48228 Have I considered any one but myself? |
48228 | Have I done wrong? 48228 Have the Lathams really refused, Averil? |
48228 | Have you been unhappy, too, my dearest? |
48228 | Have you slept well, dear? 48228 Have you told her, Ave?" |
48228 | How am I to have faith in such a promise? |
48228 | How can I expect people to trust me after what has happened? |
48228 | How can any one act so dishonorably? |
48228 | How can she contrive to look so ladylike? |
48228 | How can you expect us not to envy you, Averil? 48228 How can you have the heart to refuse?" |
48228 | How could I be so inconsiderate after my cousin''s letter? 48228 How could she have the courage?" |
48228 | How did Maud take it? |
48228 | How do I know he is not made away with by ruffians? |
48228 | How do you do, Miss Ramsay? 48228 How is it possible that I should ever forget him, my cousin? |
48228 | How long? |
48228 | How many more courses? |
48228 | How old are you, Miss Ramsay? |
48228 | I am a lucky fellow, am I not, Averil? 48228 I did not regard him; but what of that? |
48228 | I do hate good- byes; do n''t you, Ave? |
48228 | I do n''t often take up your precious time, do I? |
48228 | I hope your wife is not worse, Jimmy? |
48228 | I mean, should you care to go and make a home for Rodney? |
48228 | I say, Averil, are you very busy? 48228 I told them, ma''am, that half past seven was the hour mentioned, but Miss Maud said--""Do you mean that dinner is actually served?" |
48228 | I told you the truth, my cousin, did I not, when I said I was poor? 48228 I will give you a tanner for the pup;"when, to Frank''s surprise she interfered:"Will you let me have that dog and the puppy? |
48228 | I wonder if Lottie has had a happy day, too? |
48228 | I wonder what these two young workwomen are chattering so busily about? |
48228 | Is a bright, intelligent creature like Lottie to degenerate into a mere lady''s maid? |
48228 | Is he a new friend of yours, Rodney? |
48228 | Is he not a pretty boy? |
48228 | Is he not a wise- looking bird, Annette? 48228 Is he not?" |
48228 | Is it for that you have changed your dress, my cousin? 48228 Is it necessary to find out the beginning of affection? |
48228 | Is it not absurd, Averil, when mother uses that dignified tone? 48228 Is it not very late, Lottie? |
48228 | Is it so? 48228 Is it that monsieur was right and that my cousin would prefer to live alone? |
48228 | Is it that you have your music to practice? |
48228 | Is it that your aunt is so poor? |
48228 | Is it to make things tidy? 48228 Is life to be one fête?" |
48228 | Is she right? 48228 Is that her married name? |
48228 | Is this for me? 48228 Is this not a sweet little nook, Annette? |
48228 | It is, then, dearer to you than Grey- Mount? |
48228 | Look here, missus,addressing Averil,"I am to bring you along of the young gentleman, ai n''t I? |
48228 | Lottie, will you help Annette to some of that omelet? 48228 Lottie, will you please cut me some of that ham? |
48228 | Madame Delamotte, will you come into my room a moment? |
48228 | Madame,interposed Mr. Harland, as soon as he could make himself heard,"will you permit me to put two or three questions?" |
48228 | May I speak to you a moment, ma''am? |
48228 | Miss Willmot, may I implore your assistance with this young lady? 48228 Monsieur, what has there been to fatigue me? |
48228 | Monsieur? 48228 Mr. Frank Harland, why is it that people are so cruel? |
48228 | Mr. Frank, will you tell me what I have done, that I may make amends? 48228 Must I lose thee,_ chérie_? |
48228 | My cousin, what is there that I need to say more? 48228 My dear Lottie, where have you been? |
48228 | My dear old friend,laughed Averil, and she had a pretty, child- like laugh, though it was not often heard,"how often are we to argue on that point? |
48228 | My dear, why have you followed me? |
48228 | My poor child--caressing her--"do you think I do not understand? |
48228 | My sister? |
48228 | Not worthy of me? |
48228 | Oh, Averil, do you really mean it? |
48228 | Oh, Averil, how can you put up with it? 48228 Oh, Averil, how can you speak so calmly?" |
48228 | Oh, my darling, how can I save you when your own mother and sister will not help me? 48228 Oh, that''s the ticket, is it? |
48228 | Oh, the Dodger is spry, is he? |
48228 | Oh, you find it dark? |
48228 | Ought I to have allowed the game to go on, and then have spoken afterward? 48228 Rich? |
48228 | Roberts, will you see my cousin has all she wants? 48228 Rodney-- where is he?" |
48228 | See, I will place myself beside you at that little table, and then you will not jump up every minute; will not that be better, my cousin? |
48228 | Shall I ever see him again? |
48228 | Shall I tell my mother? 48228 Shall we go at once, Averil?" |
48228 | Should you like to go, too, Maud? |
48228 | So the mutual improvement society has begun, eh, Lottie? |
48228 | Step- mother? 48228 Tell me, my cousin-- are your friends grand?" |
48228 | The pensioners are all old then, my cousin? |
48228 | Then you will teach it to me? |
48228 | This rose-- it is one of the last-- will you give it to monsieur? |
48228 | Tim has n''t got into mischief again, has he? |
48228 | Truly; where would_ la petite_ go? 48228 WILL YOU TAKE BACK THOSE WORDS, MAUD?" |
48228 | Was I wrong to say that? |
48228 | Was it for a large amount? |
48228 | Was she ill long? |
48228 | Well, Averil? |
48228 | Well, Carruthers, what is it? 48228 Well, Daddy, where is the Corporal?" |
48228 | Well, I''ll come and tell you about it afterward-- that is, if you are not asleep, Ave."Am I likely to be sleeping? |
48228 | Well, mademoiselle,he said, playfully-- for this was his pet name for her--"what has become of the promised walk?" |
48228 | Well, my dear,in rather a quizzical voice,"have you altered your opinion at all since the morning? |
48228 | Well, my little man, how does the world go with you? |
48228 | Well, what do you think of Mother Midge and the Corporal? 48228 Well,"she asked, breathlessly, as she leaned against a table,"have you found him, Frank?" |
48228 | Well,she said, slowly,"and you are monsieur''s son, are you not?" |
48228 | Well? |
48228 | Well? |
48228 | What are you saying about the Lathams, Averil? |
48228 | What can it mean? |
48228 | What can she have heard? |
48228 | What could she have said last night to offend Mr. Frank so deeply? 48228 What did monsieur desire?" |
48228 | What do you mean by this extraordinary statement, Averil? |
48228 | What do you think of her, eh, Averil? 48228 What does it matter how you look, my cousin? |
48228 | What does it matter if he heard it? 48228 What does it matter if he were not worthy, when I loved him? |
48228 | What does it matter to a man of his caliber if a woman''s heart is damaged more or less? 48228 What does it matter, such a little thing as that? |
48228 | What has become of your sister, Maud? |
48228 | What has happened? 48228 What have I ever done in my life?" |
48228 | What have you been doing with yourself lately, you naughty little person? 48228 What have you done with Frank?" |
48228 | What is it that I want with a carriage? 48228 What is it you mean by''snub?'' |
48228 | What is it you mean, my cousin? 48228 What is it you wish me to understand?" |
48228 | What is the matter, Corporal? |
48228 | What is the use of putting such a question? |
48228 | What is there to do? 48228 What shall you do?" |
48228 | What''s up with you girls? |
48228 | When people do not work, is it a surprising fact that they can not pass an examination? 48228 Where can they be?" |
48228 | Where has that madcap flown? 48228 Where is Miss Lottie?" |
48228 | Where is Miss Willmot, Roberts? |
48228 | Where is it that my cousin lives? |
48228 | Where''s Maud? |
48228 | Who is that distinguished- looking girl in black, Maud? |
48228 | Who is this Townley? |
48228 | Why did you call me Miss Ramsay? 48228 Why do n''t you finish your speech, Miss Ramsay? |
48228 | Why do n''t you turn us out? 48228 Why do you all make my life so miserable?" |
48228 | Why have you stopped playing, Lottie? 48228 Why is Lottie always to be interrupted? |
48228 | Why is it that you are making such haste? |
48228 | Why should Annette be troubled? |
48228 | Why will you say such things? 48228 Why? |
48228 | Will you really? |
48228 | Will you take back those words, Maud? |
48228 | Will you take off your hat, Annette? 48228 Will you tell me how you came to think of it first, my cousin?" |
48228 | With whom, then, does she live? |
48228 | Would you expose her to such an ordeal unprepared? 48228 YOU WILL TRY ME, AVE?" |
48228 | Yes, I know that; but why should you not all go? 48228 Yes; do n''t I tell you so?" |
48228 | You are surprised to see such a very small person, are you not, Annette? 48228 You are very happy, Annette?" |
48228 | You think it a good idea? |
48228 | You want my opinion, Averil? 48228 You will talk to me, will you not?" |
48228 | You will try me, Ave? |
48228 | _ Rue St. Joseph, Dinan._"Well? |
48228 | ''How do you know whether you will like her?'' |
48228 | ''Is it not sad, Clotilde, to be so young and yet so tired? |
48228 | ''Is it so, mother?'' |
48228 | ''What do you want with changes?'' |
48228 | ''You have rooms to let, madame?'' |
48228 | And as she warmly embraced her, Annette whispered,"Are you glad, my cousin? |
48228 | And did you see that water- rat? |
48228 | And how well you are looking-- isn''t she, Averil? |
48228 | And now, if there is nothing else that I can do, will you permit me to retire? |
48228 | And still that is not enough?" |
48228 | And then, dropping her voice a little--"When did Mr. Rodney come home?" |
48228 | And what do you give me in return? |
48228 | And you are his son? |
48228 | Annette will like that much better, will she not?" |
48228 | Annette, do you think you will be dull in my sitting- room? |
48228 | Annette, shall you think me hard if I give you books to read?" |
48228 | Anyhow, you have got her off to- night?" |
48228 | Are all your streets so terribly full, monsieur? |
48228 | Are you a child, to be led by other men? |
48228 | Are you aware?" |
48228 | Are you nearly ready? |
48228 | Are you still as sure that the arrival of my little Frenchified cousin must spoil everything? |
48228 | Are you sure-- are you quite sure, monsieur, that this is what my cousin intends?" |
48228 | Are you working now?" |
48228 | Averil is a darling; we are all so fond of her; but she is just wearing herself out--""Do you think my cousin looks so ill?" |
48228 | Averil looked at her in surprise:"You envy Rodney?" |
48228 | Averil smiled faintly; but as they left the room, she said in a low voice,"How long do you think he will last, Mother Midge?" |
48228 | Averil, do n''t you think Jimmy will be tired of waiting? |
48228 | But perhaps you are not ready to come down?" |
48228 | But she interrupted me very gently:''May we see your rooms? |
48228 | But there is only one obstacle in this charming scheme: How is Lottie to find time for all this?" |
48228 | But to- morrow-- will you tell Averil that I will be here as early as possible? |
48228 | COULD THIS BE AVERIL? |
48228 | Can you who know me so well-- can you begrudge me another object of interest, another friendly being on whom I may bestow a little affection? |
48228 | Come now, Averil, answer that if you can?" |
48228 | Could it be a child''s face, with those hollow, sunken features, those lusterless, staring eyes? |
48228 | Could she save him? |
48228 | Could these few weeks have effected this transformation? |
48228 | Could this be Averil? |
48228 | Dear Maud, will you try my remedy?" |
48228 | Did ever any one hear such ca nt in a modern drawing- room? |
48228 | Did ever any one see such a pitiful sight in a Christian country? |
48228 | Did not my cousin mean to give me this little surprise?" |
48228 | Did not the captain say himself that we had a grand passage? |
48228 | Do n''t you know how one reads of the harpers harping with their harps, and the new song before the throne? |
48228 | Do n''t you remember, their clothes never wore out in the wilderness? |
48228 | Do you care for anything but your own wishes?" |
48228 | Do you care to know how she cured herself? |
48228 | Do you ever consult my taste, my pleasures? |
48228 | Do you hear the boys scampering to the house? |
48228 | Do you imagine that I am sending you away from me for my own good?" |
48228 | Do you know I have quite taken to that little French girl? |
48228 | Do you know she will meet them to- night at the Powells''? |
48228 | Do you know why I am so unhappy? |
48228 | Do you know"--with an amusing air of contrition--"that I was dreadfully cross when Averil told me you were coming to live here? |
48228 | Do you know, I took him for my cousin? |
48228 | Do you see that large red- brick corner house? |
48228 | Do you suppose I am going to let my boy go all that distance? |
48228 | Do you suppose a man of his age has any interest in a boy like Rodney? |
48228 | Do you think I do not know how terribly bad it has been for you?" |
48228 | Do you think I do not know what it is to be lonely?" |
48228 | Do you think I do not see it all plainly now? |
48228 | Do you think I should ever forget my boy, wherever I may be--''in this room or the next?'' |
48228 | Do you think I would begrudge you anything-- when I want the whole world to love you as much as I do?" |
48228 | Do you think you can care for a poor crooked little body like me?" |
48228 | Does not everything belong to her? |
48228 | Does not my cousin Averil live alone? |
48228 | Had she realized how she would miss him? |
48228 | Harland?" |
48228 | Has he answered Mr. Harland''s letter?" |
48228 | Have I done well?" |
48228 | Have I driven him away to worse things?" |
48228 | Have I not heard all those wonderful stories-- Mother Midge, and the two old men, and wee Robbie, even the pensioners? |
48228 | Have they quarreled with my cousin? |
48228 | Have you ever tried really to know me? |
48228 | Have you found her quite as disagreeable as you expected?" |
48228 | Have you had a happy day?" |
48228 | Have you no manliness? |
48228 | He dare not come home, for fear of being arrested; and our difficulty is-- where are we to look for him?" |
48228 | He is careful not to overwork Whitefoot;"and then, as Maud was leaving, she continued, rather nervously:"Do you mind staying a moment? |
48228 | He is not dead, is he sir?'' |
48228 | Her cousin Averil was ill, or did she always look so grave? |
48228 | Home-- he had never hoped to see it again,"But it is not safe, is it, Ave?" |
48228 | How can my cousin Averil be mistress while her step- mother lives? |
48228 | How can they be so ungrateful?--how can they have the heart to treat her so? |
48228 | How can we tell if we shall be permitted to see our dear ones still militant here on earth? |
48228 | How can you let yourself be ruled by a slip of a girl? |
48228 | How could I do it?" |
48228 | How could I help writing when the mater and Maud made such a fuss--""But you would have liked it yourself?" |
48228 | How could I know how you would look, my cousin? |
48228 | How could any one ask such a thing of a widow? |
48228 | How could any one mistake such child- like frankness?" |
48228 | How could conversation be carried on in a crowd? |
48228 | How could he explain to her the manner in which she had hurt him? |
48228 | How could one enjoy one''s friends when civilities had to be exchanged with strangers? |
48228 | How do we know what may be detaining him?" |
48228 | How do you do? |
48228 | How long do you mean to go on like this, living upon"--she was going to say"me,"but hastily substituted the word"mother?" |
48228 | How long do you think it would take you to pack up your things, eh?" |
48228 | How long would such false strength avail her? |
48228 | How many more dresses? |
48228 | I know from what Frank says that Ned Chesterton is in earnest; and what could be better-- a good son and brother, and rising in his profession? |
48228 | I know his friends thought him strait- laced-- even Mr. Harland; but what does that matter? |
48228 | I only wish I were half as good-- eh, Averil?" |
48228 | I shall see you then?" |
48228 | I suppose there is some ice in the house, Ave? |
48228 | I suppose"--looking at her wistfully--"that you would not let me kiss you, Ave?" |
48228 | I suppose, like other girls, you are never weary of admiring smart things?" |
48228 | I thought, Why should not Lydia Bennet make a home for my dear old men? |
48228 | I wonder if she be handsome? |
48228 | I wonder what Captain Beverley thinks of his evening''s amusement? |
48228 | I wonder what Miss Lottie would do without you, not to mention a good many other people?" |
48228 | I wonder what you would say to the traffic there? |
48228 | If I were to consent to break up our mixed household, what would become of poor Lottie?" |
48228 | If I will that thy service be weary and lifeless, and deficient in all earthly reward, and pleasure, what is that to thee, so long as it is My will? |
48228 | If anything happens to your brother, how are we to forgive ourselves?" |
48228 | If she had cared for him, would she have looked at him with a smile, as she did last night?" |
48228 | If you wanted me, why did you not wire, and I would have been with you before the day was out? |
48228 | Is he not an old dear, Annette? |
48228 | Is he not pretty? |
48228 | Is it not so, my cousin?" |
48228 | Is it not so?" |
48228 | Is it possible, monsieur, that people dine like this every day?" |
48228 | Is it that I am too slow, or that you have not taken the trouble to instruct me?" |
48228 | Is it that you will altogether crush me with kindness? |
48228 | Is it your pleasure to come in and wait a little, monsieur, or shall we take our walk now?" |
48228 | Is not the world beautiful?" |
48228 | Is she a girl like myself?" |
48228 | Is that the English fashion, my cousin? |
48228 | Is there anything in this world worth having that can be procured without effort-- without downright labor? |
48228 | Is there then a room for evening?" |
48228 | It amused Averil to see the way Mops looked at her every now and then, as much as to say,"Did you ever see a finer, handsomer puppy?" |
48228 | It is a little un- English, perhaps, but what of that? |
48228 | It was"Lottie, will you do this for me?" |
48228 | Joseph?" |
48228 | Look, monsieur; this rosebud is the first that has blossomed; was it selfish of me to gather it? |
48228 | Maud, what was he saying to you in the garden just after dinner?" |
48228 | Miss Ramsay, are you fond of flowers? |
48228 | Monsieur tells me you have a good heart-- is it not proof that you have written me that letter, that you permit me to call this home? |
48228 | Monsieur, will you tell me the name of this unknown cousin? |
48228 | Mr. Harland, will you do this, or shall I go myself and fetch my cousin?" |
48228 | Mr. Harland, you know all my father''s affairs; can you tell me anything about a cousin of his, Felicia Ramsay?" |
48228 | My cousin, shall we go? |
48228 | My cousin, will you explain? |
48228 | Next Monday-- that is a good day, is it not?" |
48228 | No?" |
48228 | Now what was there in this very ordinary speech-- the mere statement of an obvious fact-- to make Frank suddenly leap to his feet and grasp her hand? |
48228 | Now, what had become of the young man''s brief moodiness? |
48228 | Now, what was there in that little speech to make Lottie change color again? |
48228 | Now, will one of you two girls look after Rodney when he comes down? |
48228 | Now, will you be good, and help me in this?" |
48228 | Now, will you read my letter( you will see it is addressed to my father), and tell me what you think of the writer?" |
48228 | Oh, my cousin-- I mean, Averil-- what does that look mean? |
48228 | Rather a ramshackle affair, is it not, Annette? |
48228 | Rodney was not wrong, for was she not a happy child? |
48228 | Rodney, why did you write to Mr. Harland without speaking to me again? |
48228 | Shall I help you?" |
48228 | Shall I refuse it, because it is so painful, when He carried His for me?'' |
48228 | Shall I tell you about him? |
48228 | Shall it be so between us, dear? |
48228 | Shall we go and see the green- houses? |
48228 | Shall we go up to your room? |
48228 | Shall we move into the next room?'' |
48228 | Shall you be tired? |
48228 | She looks like a little owl, does she not, Annette?" |
48228 | So you and my father are old acquaintances, Miss Ramsay?" |
48228 | Surely he had not forgotten his promise already? |
48228 | That is what we love-- a storybook of talk, do n''t we, Lottchen?" |
48228 | The mater has spared the rod and spoiled the child, do n''t you know? |
48228 | The poor man was stunned by your violence, but not killed; he is better, recovering-- indeed, he will not die; will he, Frank?" |
48228 | The question is, How is Maud to be told?" |
48228 | Then I need not fear to interrupt you?" |
48228 | Then all at once the thought came to me, Why should not Mother Midge take care of them all?" |
48228 | Then aloud,"Mrs. Willmot, are you aware of the advantages you have thrown away? |
48228 | There is no particular hurry, is there?" |
48228 | There were the inn and the cottages, but where could the Dove- cote be? |
48228 | They were both nearly starved, and half dead with cold-- weren''t you, Jack?" |
48228 | Those are the dresses, I suppose?" |
48228 | To a relative I am Annette-- is it not so?" |
48228 | Very well, I hope-- pleasant journey, and all that sort of thing?" |
48228 | Was Rodney conscious of this as he lay tossing feverishly? |
48228 | Was she not encouraging them in habits of extravagance and idleness? |
48228 | We have only this letter; how can we know what the girl is like? |
48228 | Well, what is it?" |
48228 | What are we to do?" |
48228 | What are you frowning at?" |
48228 | What can aunt be thinking about? |
48228 | What do I want to know about Saunders and Townley, or any other of these worthless companions, who are ruining you? |
48228 | What do you mean by it, what do you mean by it, Miss Averil?" |
48228 | What do you say, Maud?" |
48228 | What does it matter that she is not as tall and straight as Lottie, when every one loves her?" |
48228 | What does it matter what she is like? |
48228 | What does she care about her husband''s niece? |
48228 | What does such a little thing signify? |
48228 | What friends are these, my cousin? |
48228 | What has gone wrong to- night? |
48228 | What has she done with herself, Averil?" |
48228 | What if her work were nearly done? |
48228 | What impression could she make on this weak, worldly nature? |
48228 | What is it you fear? |
48228 | What is that, my Lottie?" |
48228 | What is there I can get you? |
48228 | What says the apostle? |
48228 | What shall we do to silence these people? |
48228 | What was there that I lacked? |
48228 | What would Averil say when he told her that? |
48228 | What would become of me if all my customers treated me in this way?" |
48228 | When would that proud spirit humble itself under the chastening Hand? |
48228 | When you have taken off your hat, will you join me there?" |
48228 | Where have you been hiding all this time? |
48228 | Where have you put him, Roberts?" |
48228 | Where is Deb?" |
48228 | Where is the mast, Pierre?" |
48228 | Where was Lottie? |
48228 | While memory lasts who can rob me of her example, her precepts, of the remembrance of her gentle patience? |
48228 | Who are these other boys?" |
48228 | Who are these people? |
48228 | Who can deprive me of those prayers that my mother prayed on her death- bed? |
48228 | Who says Dick is n''t bright, when he can milk Cherry and harness Mike and Floss? |
48228 | Who will be good to old Manon?" |
48228 | Who will read to me when thou art gone,_ ma petite_? |
48228 | Why am I so impatient, so cowardly? |
48228 | Why are some natures so selfish? |
48228 | Why are you looking so glum, Averil? |
48228 | Why do they hurt my cousin, who has the goodness of an angel? |
48228 | Why does she not take Averil''s part? |
48228 | Why had not Mr. Harland prepared her? |
48228 | Why is it you make such a speech to me? |
48228 | Why is our dear Averil so troubled?" |
48228 | Why not?" |
48228 | Why should I have that other, Cousin Averil?" |
48228 | Why should not Lottie love Grey- Mount, when monsieur lived there, and so many charming people? |
48228 | Why should the name we love most grow strange to one''s lips?" |
48228 | Why should there be an accident? |
48228 | Why should we not make the exchange? |
48228 | Why should you be exempt, Rodney, from the common burden of humanity?" |
48228 | Why should you fear me, your sister Averil? |
48228 | Why should you not join us, Annette? |
48228 | Why were you so unkind as to refuse to stay at home, when I asked you as a favor?" |
48228 | Why will you not spare yourself?" |
48228 | Why, Roberts"--interrupting herself--"that is surely not the gong? |
48228 | Will they answer for your sin, Rodney-- for your miserable degradation of last night?" |
48228 | Will you come with me, dear?" |
48228 | Will you go over to Dinan and see this girl? |
48228 | Will you leave the account with me? |
48228 | Will you sit down?" |
48228 | Will you sit in this comfortable chair, Annette? |
48228 | Will you take back that speech, or shall I go to your mother?" |
48228 | Will you take it, Harland?" |
48228 | Will you tell her that her mother''s cousin is dead, and that I am her sole relative? |
48228 | Would it be totally unexpected? |
48228 | Would monsieur intrust her with his name? |
48228 | Would that be a matter of regret? |
48228 | Would that not have been been temporizing with wrong things? |
48228 | Would you like me to stay another day?" |
48228 | Would you like to see it?" |
48228 | Would you rather that I left you alone?" |
48228 | You are very outspoken-- ought you to have told me all this? |
48228 | You have hope, you say? |
48228 | You have prayed to Him? |
48228 | You have robbed me of a brother-- do you think I can own you for one now?" |
48228 | You remember our kind old friend, do you not?" |
48228 | You will not go to the Powells''to- night, Maud?" |
48228 | You will surely shake hands with her?" |
48228 | a little impatiently,"did you come to my room to discuss my cousin''s merits and demerits?" |
48228 | as Mr. Harland laid down the letter--"well, my good friend?" |
48228 | at intervals? |
48228 | clasping her hands, with a gesture of despair,"is it my fate that every one belonging to me must die? |
48228 | do n''t preach, Ave. Who says that I do n''t mean to work?" |
48228 | do you really mean it? |
48228 | had she already a secret fear-- a terrible suspicion-- that Captain Beverley was playing fast and loose with her? |
48228 | her cousin Averil? |
48228 | how it has been all duty and self- sacrifice on your part, and grasping selfishness on ours? |
48228 | if the weary, worn- out frame would soon be at rest? |
48228 | is it indeed my home?" |
48228 | is this your room? |
48228 | regarding her sternly,"that neither she nor Georgina has attempted to pay their dress- maker for the last year and a half?" |
48228 | the mistress of this grand house, whom she had so longed and dreaded to see? |
48228 | then you have found out all about it?" |
48228 | this little creature, who was no bigger than a child? |
48228 | was it for Madame Delamotte or Rodney? |
48228 | was it not touching of her to say there were none for her to_ tutoyer_? |
14484 | ''Tis hard that I, far- toiling voyager, Crossed by some evil wind, Can not the haven find, Nor catch his form that flies me, where? |
14484 | (_ to_ ANTIGONE) And thou,--no prating talk, but briefly tell, Knew''st thou our edict that forbade this thing? |
14484 | --''Faithfulness to whom?'' |
14484 | ... II 2 The cause then of my cry Was coming all too nigh:( Doth the clear nightingale lament for nought?) |
14484 | 1 Where is he? |
14484 | A shepherd wast thou, and a wandering hind? |
14484 | A. Toil upon toil brings toil, And what save trouble have I? |
14484 | Above there, or below? |
14484 | Aias, dear brother, comfort of mine eye, Hast thou then done even as the rumour holds? |
14484 | Aias, my lord, what act is in thy mind? |
14484 | Alas, shalt thou be seen Graced with mine arms amongst Achaean men? |
14484 | Alas, what shall I say to him? |
14484 | Am I a fool, or do I truly hear Lament new- rising from our master''s home? |
14484 | Am I again deceived? |
14484 | Am I not vile? |
14484 | Am I permitted? |
14484 | Am I ruled by Thebes? |
14484 | Am I the man to spurn at Heaven''s command? |
14484 | Am I to speak? |
14484 | Am I undone? |
14484 | Among whom? |
14484 | And Aias was thy foeman? |
14484 | And I, Shall I bide here till thou com''st forth? |
14484 | And Nestor, my old friend, good aged man, Is he yet living? |
14484 | And are thine eyes 2 Sightless? |
14484 | And art thou bent on truth in the reply? |
14484 | And art thou not ashamed, acting alone? |
14484 | And could a mother''s heart be steeled to this? |
14484 | And did they certainly report him dead? |
14484 | And did this prophet then profess his art? |
14484 | And finds the sufferer now some pause of woe? |
14484 | And hadst thou ever hoped the Gods would care For mine affliction, and restore my life? |
14484 | And hadst thou there acquaintance of this man? |
14484 | And hath Creon sent, Pitying my sorrows, mine own children to me Whom most I love? |
14484 | And have they so determined on my life? |
14484 | And have ye dared to give Mine arms to some man else, unknown to me?'' |
14484 | And how is he not here, if all be well? |
14484 | And how was she detected, caught, and taken? |
14484 | And in what modern writing is more of the wisdom of life condensed than in the History of Thucydides? |
14484 | And is he now at hand within the house? |
14484 | And is he still alive for me to see? |
14484 | And is not lying shameful to thy soul? |
14484 | And is there none to succour or prevent? |
14484 | And is this in act? |
14484 | And is this thine intent? |
14484 | And know''st thou not whom thou behold''st in me, Young boy? |
14484 | And may one touch and handle it, and gaze With reverence, as on a thing from Heaven? |
14484 | And now The General''s proclamation of to- day-- Hast thou not heard?--Art thou so slow to hear When harm from foes threatens the souls we love? |
14484 | And now This gory venom blackly spreading bane From Nessus''angry wound, must it not cause The death of Heracles? |
14484 | And now why vaunt the deeds that won the day, When these dear maids will tell them in thine ear? |
14484 | And shall not men be taught the temperate will? |
14484 | And shar''st with her dominion of this realm? |
14484 | And since the event how much of time hath flown? |
14484 | And they, Thy brethren, what of them? |
14484 | And thou, poor helpless crone, didst see this done? |
14484 | And to what Power thus consecrate? |
14484 | And was I then, By mine own edict branded thus, to look On Theban faces with unaltered eye? |
14484 | And was there none, no fellow traveller, To see, and tell the tale, and help our search? |
14484 | And were the eyes and spirit not distraught, When the tongue uttered this to ruin me? |
14484 | And what desire or quest hath brought thee hither? |
14484 | And what hast thou determined for her death? |
14484 | And what hath brought thee, old Tirésias, now? |
14484 | And what was Atreus, thine own father? |
14484 | And when I have gotten this unpolluted draught? |
14484 | And when leaf- shadowed Earth has drunk of this, What follows? |
14484 | And when the father saw him, With loud and dreadful clamour bursting in He went to him and called him piteously:''What deed is this, unhappy youth? |
14484 | And when they banished me, stood''st firm to shield me, What news, Ismene, bring''st thou to thy sire To day? |
14484 | And where didst thou come near him and stand by? |
14484 | And where didst thou inhabit with thy flock? |
14484 | And where is he who rules this country, sirs? |
14484 | And where is his poor body''s resting- place? |
14484 | And where, then, is the promise thou hast given? |
14484 | And wherefore hast thou darted forth? |
14484 | And whither must we go? |
14484 | And who That saw thee hurrying forth to certain death Would not bewail thee, brother? |
14484 | And who is he that I should say him nay? |
14484 | And who the slain? |
14484 | And who will carry that? |
14484 | And who will marry you? |
14484 | And who would dare reject his proffered good? |
14484 | And who, by Heaven, are they? |
14484 | And wilt thou gather the appointed wood? |
14484 | And wilt thou honour such a pestilent corse? |
14484 | And wilt thou sever her from thine own son? |
14484 | And wilt thou then Sail to befriend them, pressing me in aid? |
14484 | And wouldst thou have us gentle to such friends? |
14484 | And yet What am I asking? |
14484 | Another gave me, then? |
14484 | Antigone, child of the old blind sire, What land is here, what people? |
14484 | Are my woes lessening? |
14484 | Are none Mourning for loss of fathers but yourself? |
14484 | Are they set forth To please the Atridae, Phoenix and the rest? |
14484 | Are ye come to add Some monster evil to my mountainous woe? |
14484 | Are ye the men to tell me where to find The mansion of the sovereign Oedipus? |
14484 | Art not ashamed To look on him that sued to thee for shelter? |
14484 | Art not more tender of the life thou hast? |
14484 | Art silent? |
14484 | Art thou Orestes? |
14484 | Art thou he indeed, That didst preserve Orestes and myself From many sorrows? |
14484 | Art thou he? |
14484 | Art thou mad, unhappy one, to laugh Over thine own calamity and mine? |
14484 | Art thou silent? |
14484 | Art thou then so resolved, O brother mine? |
14484 | Art thou to hear it? |
14484 | Art thou to probe the seat of mine annoy? |
14484 | Art thou, too, wroth with the all- pestilent sons Of Atreus? |
14484 | As fearing what reverse Prophetically told? |
14484 | At home, afield, or on some foreign soil? |
14484 | Because you missed me? |
14484 | Both may be equal yonder; who can tell? |
14484 | But I fain would learn What wrong is that you speak of? |
14484 | But I would first Learn from thee who of men hath sent thee forth? |
14484 | But for our errand to- day Behoves thee, master, to say Where is the hearth of his home; Or where even now doth he roam? |
14484 | But grant thy speech were sooth, and all were done In aid of Menelaüs; for this cause Hadst thou the right to slay him? |
14484 | But have my miseries a measure? |
14484 | But how Can this be lawful? |
14484 | But how shall I find matters there within? |
14484 | But how, if they should save thee afterward? |
14484 | But how? |
14484 | But now to hear of thee, who more distressed? |
14484 | But of mortals here That soothsayers are more inspired than I What certain proof is given? |
14484 | But resolve me this: Hast dyed thy falchion deep in Argive blood? |
14484 | But tell Where is the pain- worn wight himself abroad? |
14484 | But tell me first what height Had Laius, and what grace of manly prime? |
14484 | But tell me what request Or what intelligence thou bring''st with thee? |
14484 | But the tale? |
14484 | But they, where are they? |
14484 | But what can I herein Avail to do or undo? |
14484 | But what more fatal than the lapse of rule? |
14484 | But when we ask,''Righteousness in what relation?'' |
14484 | But where did Laius meet this violent end? |
14484 | But where is Aias to receive my word? |
14484 | But where is Teucer? |
14484 | But wherefore ask? |
14484 | But wherefore on the flock this violent raid? |
14484 | But who can hide evil that courts the day? |
14484 | But who could bear to see thee in this mind? |
14484 | But who that hears the deep oracular sound Of his dark words, will dare to follow thee? |
14484 | But who that is a woman could endure To dwell with her, both married to one man? |
14484 | But why come hither? |
14484 | But why desire it so? |
14484 | But why renew thy rage? |
14484 | But why these words? |
14484 | But, I may presume, Ye held an inquisition for the dead? |
14484 | By heaven I pray thee, did my father do this thing, Or was''t my mother? |
14484 | By illness coming o''er him, or by guile? |
14484 | By what certain sign? |
14484 | By whom? |
14484 | Came he near them? |
14484 | Came this device from Creon or thyself? |
14484 | Can aught be still more hateful to be seen? |
14484 | Can he be brought again immediately? |
14484 | Can hour outlasting hour make less or more Of death? |
14484 | Can it be poor Electra? |
14484 | Can it be so, my son, that thou art brought By mad distemperature against thy sire, On hearing of the irrevocable doom Passed on thy promised bride? |
14484 | Can it be well To pour forgetfulness upon the dead? |
14484 | Can it be, the offence of my disease Hath moved thee not to take me now on board? |
14484 | Can the eye so far deceive? |
14484 | Can this be famed Electra I behold? |
14484 | Can this be possible? |
14484 | Can this be truth I utter? |
14484 | Can ye behold this done And tamely hide your all- avenging fire? |
14484 | Can you describe him? |
14484 | Canst thou not Hear, and refuse to do what thou mislikest? |
14484 | Canst thou not be still? |
14484 | Child, art thou here? |
14484 | Child, hast thou heard what holy oracles He left with me, touching that very land? |
14484 | Child, what shall I do? |
14484 | Child, wherefore art thou come? |
14484 | Clear of this mischief, mean''st thou? |
14484 | Come, tell it o''er again,--said you ye brought My brother bound to aid you with his power? |
14484 | Corinthian friend, I first appeal to you: Was''t he you spake of? |
14484 | Could human thought have prophesied My name would thus give echo to mine ill? |
14484 | Could this be ventured by a woman''s hand? |
14484 | Dark instrument Of ever- hateful guile!--What hast thou done? |
14484 | Dates his valour from to day? |
14484 | Daughter Antigone, what is it? |
14484 | Daughter, what is coming? |
14484 | Daughter, what must I think, or do? |
14484 | Daunted by what fear Stayed ye me sacrificing to the God[2] Who guards this deme Colonos? |
14484 | Dead, or at rest in sleep? |
14484 | Dear friends, kind women of true Argive breed, Say, who can timely counsel give Or word of comfort suited to my need? |
14484 | Dear friends, what will ye do? |
14484 | Dear is that shore to me, dear is thy father O ancient Lycomedes''foster- child, Whence cam''st thou hither? |
14484 | Dear lady, by the Gods, Who is the stranger? |
14484 | Dear only saviour of our father''s house, How earnest thou hither? |
14484 | Dear son, whose voice disturbs us? |
14484 | Derived from Labdacus? |
14484 | Did I not tell thee so, long since? |
14484 | Did I not tell you this would come? |
14484 | Did fear of this make thee so long an exile? |
14484 | Did my sons hear? |
14484 | Did she give it thee? |
14484 | Did ye not hear it, friends? |
14484 | Did you not on oath Proclaim your captive for your master''s bride? |
14484 | Did you not say That she, on whom you look with ignorant eye, Was Iolè, the daughter of the King, Committed to your charge? |
14484 | Didst thou, then, recklessly aspire To brave kings''laws, and now art brought In madness of transgression caught? |
14484 | Do I hear Odysseus? |
14484 | Do I see thee with the marvellous bow? |
14484 | Do I talk idly, or is this the truth? |
14484 | Dost hear, Woe- burdened wanderer? |
14484 | Dost not perceive? |
14484 | Dost thou confess to have done this, or deny it? |
14484 | Dost thou find no comfort in my news? |
14484 | Dost thou inquire of him? |
14484 | Dost thou see? |
14484 | Doth he yet live? |
14484 | Doth the mind smart withal, or only the ear? |
14484 | Doth this delight them, or how went the talk? |
14484 | Doth this not argue an insensate sire? |
14484 | Ended he with peace divine? |
14484 | Even here? |
14484 | Farther? |
14484 | Fate- wearied Oedipus? |
14484 | Fate-- not thou-- hath sent My sire and mother to the home of death What wealth have I to comfort me for thee? |
14484 | Fear''st thou not the Achaeans in this act? |
14484 | Feel you not the justice of my speech? |
14484 | Find ye no merit there? |
14484 | First consider one thing well: Who would choose rule accompanied with fear Before safe slumbers with an equal sway? |
14484 | First of thy brother I beseech thee tell, How deem''st thou? |
14484 | Following what service? |
14484 | For if at home I foster rebels, how much more abroad? |
14484 | For some one,--but first tell me, whispering low Whate''er thou speakest,--who is this I see? |
14484 | For tell me, or be patient till I show, What should I gain by ceasing this my moan? |
14484 | For what end, daughter? |
14484 | For what transgression of Heaven''s ordinance? |
14484 | For when the eyes have looked their last How should sore labour vex again? |
14484 | For wherefore should the Centaur, for what end, Show kindness to the cause for whom he died? |
14484 | For whither wandering shall we find Hard livelihood, by land or over sea? |
14484 | For who Can make the accomplished fact as things undone? |
14484 | For whom could he himself be sailing forth? |
14484 | For whom to spend those gifts? |
14484 | Friendly, to hand me over to my foes? |
14484 | From both? |
14484 | From what didst thou release me or relieve? |
14484 | From whom hast thou heard this? |
14484 | Gain for the sons of Atreus, or for me? |
14484 | Gave you this man the child of whom he asks you? |
14484 | Had he scant following, or, as princes use, Full numbers of a well- appointed train? |
14484 | Had he some cause for fear? |
14484 | Had not he, Menelaüs, children twain, begotten of her Whom to reclaim that army sailed to Troy? |
14484 | Hadst thou a share in that adventurous toil? |
14484 | Hadst thou the face To bring thy boldness near my palace- roof, Proved as thou art to have contrived my death And laid thy robber hands upon my state? |
14484 | Hast caught my drift? |
14484 | Hast not even heard my name, Nor echoing rumour of my ruinous woe? |
14484 | Hast thou come, daughter? |
14484 | Hast thou had dealings with him? |
14484 | Hast thou let him go? |
14484 | Hast thou my child? |
14484 | Hast thou my sister for thine honoured queen? |
14484 | Hast thou thy wits, and knowest thou what thou sayest? |
14484 | Hath Phoebus so pronounced my destiny? |
14484 | Hath Trachis a magician of such might? |
14484 | Hath he borne that? |
14484 | Hath it not before oppressed thee? |
14484 | Hath mortal head Conceived a wickedness so bold? |
14484 | Hath thy trouble come? |
14484 | Have Atreus''sons felt thy victorious might? |
14484 | Have I not set my foot as firm and far? |
14484 | Have my arms caught thee? |
14484 | Have none of her companions breathed her name? |
14484 | Have they a lord, or sways the people''s voice? |
14484 | Have they given thee cause to grieve? |
14484 | Have we not Teucer, Skilled in this mystery? |
14484 | Have you no shame, to stir up private broils In such a time as this? |
14484 | Hear ye his words? |
14484 | Hear ye not Aias there, How sharp the cry that shrills from him? |
14484 | Here, or there? |
14484 | His loves ere now Were they not manifold? |
14484 | His own, or Creon''s? |
14484 | Hold fast continually, for who hath seen Zeus so forgetful of his own? |
14484 | Hold, till thou first hast made me clearly know, Is Peleus''offspring dead? |
14484 | How came it, when the minstrel- hound was here, This folk had no deliverance through thy word? |
14484 | How came she in thy charge? |
14484 | How can I do it, when my mother''s death And thy sad state sprang solely from this girl? |
14484 | How can I gainsay what I see? |
14484 | How can I prove a rebel to his mind Who thus exhorts me with affectionate heart? |
14484 | How can he bear it still? |
14484 | How can he range, Whose limb drags heavy with an ancient harm? |
14484 | How can his providence forsake his son? |
14484 | How can it heal to burn thee on the pyre? |
14484 | How can my father be no more to me Than who is nothing? |
14484 | How can one like me Desire of thee to touch an outlawed man, On whose dark life all stains of sin and woe Are fixed indelibly? |
14484 | How canst thou clear that sin? |
14484 | How caused? |
14484 | How could he live, whose life was thus consumed with moan? |
14484 | How could her single thought Contrive the accomplishment of death on death? |
14484 | How could that furrowing of thy father''s field Year after year continue unrevealed? |
14484 | How couldst thou bear Thus to put out thine eyes? |
14484 | How didst thou set forth? |
14484 | How do I know this? |
14484 | How dost thou know it? |
14484 | How durst thou then transgress the published law? |
14484 | How else, when neither war, nor the wide sea Encountered him, but viewless realms enwrapt him, Wafted away to some mysterious doom? |
14484 | How else, when the end Of stormy sickness brings no cheering ray? |
14484 | How first began the assault of misery? |
14484 | How groundless, if I am my parents''child? |
14484 | How if a princess, offspring of their King? |
14484 | How if thy thought be vain? |
14484 | How is it with you, brother? |
14484 | How mean''st thou by that word? |
14484 | How mean''st thou? |
14484 | How must one look in speaking such a word? |
14484 | How now, my son? |
14484 | How righteous, to release what thou hast ta''en By my device? |
14484 | How say you? |
14484 | How say you? |
14484 | How say you? |
14484 | How say''st thou? |
14484 | How shall I dare to front my father''s eye? |
14484 | How shall I speak the dreadful word? |
14484 | How shall ye live when ye have heard? |
14484 | How should I know him whom I ne''er Set eye on? |
14484 | How should I leave this substance for that show? |
14484 | How should this pain me, in pretence being dead, Really to save myself and win renown? |
14484 | How should this plead for pardon? |
14484 | How so? |
14484 | How so? |
14484 | How then can I desire to be a king, When masterdom is mine without annoy? |
14484 | How then should he escape me? |
14484 | How then should they require thee to go near, And yet dwell separate? |
14484 | How then? |
14484 | How to shield me, how to aid me? |
14484 | How was it? |
14484 | How was that? |
14484 | How wert thou so long deceived? |
14484 | How will he once endure to look on me, Denuded of the prize of high renown, Whose coronal stood sparkling on his brow? |
14484 | How with the wise wilt thou care? |
14484 | How, dear youth? |
14484 | How, if his eyes be not transformed or lost? |
14484 | How, stranger? |
14484 | How, then, friends, Can I be moderate, or feel the touch Of holy resignation? |
14484 | How, then? |
14484 | How, when the powers of will and thought are past, Should life be any more enthralled to pain? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | How? |
14484 | I 1 When shall arise our exile''s latest sun? |
14484 | I bid thee show, What journey is Alcmena''s child pursuing? |
14484 | I broke in with my word:''Aias, what now? |
14484 | I call thee daily-- wilt thou never come? |
14484 | I may not look on high, Nor to the tribe of momentary men.-- Oh, whither, then, Should it avail to fly? |
14484 | I pray thee, speak''st thou thus to anger me? |
14484 | I, who in this thy coming have beheld Thee dead and living? |
14484 | II 1 Who more acquainted with fierce misery, Assaulted by disasters manifest, Than thou in this thy day of agony? |
14484 | III 2 Doth not thy sense enlighten thee to see How recklessly Even now thou winnest undeservèd woe? |
14484 | If choice were given you, would you rather choose Hurting your friends, yourself to feel delight, Or share with them in one commingled pain? |
14484 | If honour to such lives be given, What needs our choir to hymn the power of Heaven? |
14484 | If this you do Be noble, why must darkness hide the deed? |
14484 | If thou fearest, Thou hast no cause-- for doubtfulness is pain, But to know all, what harm? |
14484 | If thou wert gone, what were my life to me? |
14484 | Ill boding harbinger of woe, what word Have thy lips uttered? |
14484 | In Greece, or in some barbarous country? |
14484 | In vain? |
14484 | Insolent, art thou here? |
14484 | Into what region are these wavering sounds Wafted on aimless wings? |
14484 | Is all forlorn? |
14484 | Is ancient Polybus not still in power? |
14484 | Is death thy destination for them both? |
14484 | Is he drawing nigh? |
14484 | Is he gone? |
14484 | Is he living, dost thou know? |
14484 | Is he too departed? |
14484 | Is it by chance, or heard she of her son? |
14484 | Is it she or no? |
14484 | Is it some lightning- bolt new- fallen from Zeus, Or cloud- born hail that is come rattling down? |
14484 | Is it thy choice now to go home with me? |
14484 | Is it thy voice? |
14484 | Is it true? |
14484 | Is it well? |
14484 | Is my prayer heard? |
14484 | Is not the city in the sovereign''s hand? |
14484 | Is not this terrible, Laërtes''son Should ever think to bring me with soft words And show me from his deck to all their host? |
14484 | Is not this violence? |
14484 | Is pain upon thee? |
14484 | Is that thy thought? |
14484 | Is that your counsel? |
14484 | Is that, now, clearly spoken, or no? |
14484 | Is the King coming? |
14484 | Is there no help but this abode must see The past and future ills of Pelops''race? |
14484 | Is there none to strike me With doubly sharpened blade a mortal blow? |
14484 | Is there something more? |
14484 | Is''t not Orestes''body that I bear? |
14484 | Is''t not a silly scheme, To think to compass without troops of friends Power, that is only won by wealth and men? |
14484 | Is''t not proved? |
14484 | Is''t possible that thou shouldst grieve for me? |
14484 | Is''t possible we have some kinsman here? |
14484 | Is''t possible? |
14484 | Jocasta, my dear queen, why didst thou send To bring me hither from our palace- hall? |
14484 | Just, that my murderer have a peaceful end? |
14484 | Kind friend, first tell me what I first would know-- Shall I receive my Heracles alive? |
14484 | Kind voice of Heaven, soft- breathing from the height I 1 Of Pytho''s opulent home to Thebè bright, What wilt thou bring to day? |
14484 | Know I not things in Thebes Better than thou? |
14484 | Know ye of one Begotten of Laius? |
14484 | Know ye what thing ye ask? |
14484 | Know''st not into whose hands thou gav''st me once? |
14484 | Know''st thou not Thy silence argues thine accuser''s plea? |
14484 | Know''st thou on what terms I yield it? |
14484 | Know''st thou''tis of thy sovereign thou speak''st this? |
14484 | Know''st thou, is this of whom he speaks the same? |
14484 | LEADER OF CHORUS What portent from the Gods is here? |
14484 | Lady, why tarriest thou I 2 To lead thy husband in? |
14484 | Learn what? |
14484 | Lest from your parents you receive a stain? |
14484 | Lichas, tell, Who is the stranger- nymph? |
14484 | Look, O my lord, to thy path, Either to go or to stay How is my thought to proceed? |
14484 | Lords of Colonos, will ye suffer it? |
14484 | Madly it sounds-- Or springs it of deep grief For proofs of madness harrowing to his eye? |
14484 | Makes he towards us? |
14484 | Mariners, Must ye, too, leave me thus disconsolate? |
14484 | Mark ye the brave and bold, II 1 Whom none could turn of old, When once he set his face to the fierce fight? |
14484 | May I know? |
14484 | May I sit? |
14484 | May I then speak true counsel to my friend, And pull with thee in policy as of yore? |
14484 | May it be told, or must no stranger know? |
14484 | May not men Repent and change? |
14484 | May not persuasion fetch him? |
14484 | May this clear evidence be mine to see? |
14484 | May we not know the reasons of your will? |
14484 | Me miserable, which way shall I turn, Which look upon? |
14484 | Mean''st thou from those same urns whereof thou speakest? |
14484 | Mean''st thou in this the fortune of thy sons Or mine? |
14484 | Mean''st thou that prime misfortune of thy birth? |
14484 | Mean''st thou this? |
14484 | Mean''st thou to Troy, and to the hateful sons Of Atreus, me, with this distressful limb? |
14484 | Meanwhile he needs some comfort and some guide, For such a load of misery who can bear? |
14484 | Methinks thou knowest too, for thou hast seen, My kind reception of the stranger- maid? |
14484 | Methought I heard thee say, King Laius Was at a cross- road overpowered and slain? |
14484 | Mistress, wilt thou go yonder and make known, That certain Phocians on Aegisthus wait? |
14484 | Most hostile to her of all souls that are? |
14484 | Moved by an oracle, or from some vow? |
14484 | Moves he? |
14484 | Must I be taught impiety from thee? |
14484 | Must I endure such words from him? |
14484 | Must I lose thy voice? |
14484 | Must I not even sacrifice in peace From your harsh clamour, when you''ve had your say? |
14484 | Must I not fear my mother''s marriage- bed? |
14484 | Must I still follow as thou thinkest good? |
14484 | Must double vileness then be mine Both shameful silence and most shameful speech? |
14484 | Must not the King be told of what will come? |
14484 | Must the same syllables be thrice thrown forth? |
14484 | Must we endure detraction from a slave? |
14484 | My daughter, why these tears? |
14484 | My daughters, Have ye both heard our friends who inhabit here? |
14484 | My daughters, are ye there? |
14484 | My heart hangs on thy word with trembling awe: What new giv''n law, Or what returning in Time''s circling round Wilt thou unfold? |
14484 | My son, are ye now setting forth? |
14484 | My son, what fairest gale hath wafted thee? |
14484 | My son, what saidst thou? |
14484 | Next inform us of Laërtes''son; How stands his fortune? |
14484 | No more? |
14484 | No more? |
14484 | No right to mourn my brother who is gone? |
14484 | Not dead? |
14484 | Not know? |
14484 | Not know? |
14484 | Nought else beneath the roof? |
14484 | Now if that stranger Had aught in common with king Laius, What wretch on earth was e''er so lost as I? |
14484 | Now, canst thou tell me where we have set our feet? |
14484 | Now, dost thou know on Oeta''s topmost height The crag of Zeus? |
14484 | Now, what remains? |
14484 | O Athens''sovereign lord, what hast thou said? |
14484 | O Father, who are these? |
14484 | O Lemnian earth and thou almighty flame, Hephaestos''workmanship, shall this be borne, That he by force must drag me from your care? |
14484 | O charnel gulf I 2 Of death on death, not to be done away, Why harrowest thou my soul? |
14484 | O my dread lord, therein do I offend? |
14484 | O poor torn limb, what shall I do with thee Through all my days to be? |
14484 | O shameful plea? |
14484 | O ye his daughters, one with me in blood, Say, will not ye endeavour to unlock The stern lips of our unrelenting sire? |
14484 | O, foot, torn helpless thing, What wilt thou do to me? |
14484 | OLD M. Kind dames and damsels, may I clearly know If these be King Aegisthus''palace- halls? |
14484 | OLD M. Lady, why hath my speech disheartened thee? |
14484 | OLD M. May I guess further that in yonder dame I see his queen? |
14484 | Odysseus''voice? |
14484 | Oedipus, wherefore is Jocasta gone, Driven madly by wild grief? |
14484 | Of Laius once the sovereign of this land? |
14484 | Of what country or what race Shall I pronounce ye? |
14484 | Of what wild enterprise? |
14484 | Of whom? |
14484 | Of whom? |
14484 | Oh where? |
14484 | Oh, am I thus dishonoured of the dead? |
14484 | Oh, how shall we commend Such dealings, how defend them? |
14484 | Oh, where, then, lies the stern Aias, of saddest name, whose purpose none might turn? |
14484 | On whose behalf Slew he my child? |
14484 | Only let me hear thy will, Is''t constant to remain here and endure, Or to make voyage with us? |
14484 | Or beguiled she one sweet hour With Apollo in her bower, Who loves to trace the field untrod by man? |
14484 | Or better, where he may himself be found? |
14484 | Or did the Bacchic god, Who makes the top of Helicon to nod, Take thee for a foundling care From his playmates that are there? |
14484 | Or doth some memory haunt you of the deeds I did before you, and went on to do Worse horrors here? |
14484 | Or hath he left the palace? |
14484 | Or how? |
14484 | Or is my voice as vain Now, as you thought it when you planned this thing? |
14484 | Or is the battle still to be? |
14484 | Or is thy love Thy father''s, be his actions what they may? |
14484 | Or peers Fate through the gloom? |
14484 | Or shall kindness fade? |
14484 | Or stood his valour unaccompanied In all this host? |
14484 | Or terrible, but gainful? |
14484 | Or was the God- abandoned father''s heart Tender toward them and cruel to my child? |
14484 | Or was the ruler of Cyllene''s height The author of thy light? |
14484 | Or where for fathers, than their children''s fame? |
14484 | Or wouldst thou tempt me further? |
14484 | Or, hast thou seen them honouring villany? |
14484 | Our land''s chivalry Are valiant, valiant every warrior son Of Theseus.--On they run? |
14484 | Own sister of my blood, one life with me, Ismenè, have the tidings caught thine ear? |
14484 | Polybus in his grave? |
14484 | Return? |
14484 | Saidst thou a slaughtered queen in yonder hall Lay in her blood, crowning the pile of ruin? |
14484 | Sailed he not forth of his own sovereign will? |
14484 | Say then what cruel workman forged the gifts, But Fury this sharp sword, Hell that bright band? |
14484 | Say then, shall Theban dust o''ershadow me? |
14484 | Say what? |
14484 | Say wherefore dost thou crave with such desire The clearness of an undistracted mind? |
14484 | Say, can the mind be noble, where the stream Of gratitude is withered from the spring? |
14484 | Say, dames and damsels, have we heard aright, And speed we to the goal of our desire? |
14484 | Say, dost thou bear my bidding full in mind? |
14484 | Say, for what cause, after so long a time, Can Atreus''sons have turned their thoughts on him, Whom long they had cast forth? |
14484 | Say, for what end? |
14484 | Say, hath not Heaven decreed to execute On thee and me, while yet we are alive, All the evil Oedipus bequeathed? |
14484 | Say, is Aegisthus near while thus you speak? |
14484 | Say, is it well? |
14484 | Say, maidens, how must I proceed? |
14484 | Say, must I tell it with these standing by, Or go within? |
14484 | Say, must we call them back in presence here, Or would''st thou tell thy news to these and me? |
14484 | Say, was she clasped by mountain roving Pan? |
14484 | Seest thou not? |
14484 | Shall I add more, to aggravate thy wrath? |
14484 | Shall I go, then, and find out The name of the spot? |
14484 | Shall I mourn Him first, or wait till I have heard thy tale? |
14484 | Shall I raise the dead again to life? |
14484 | Shall I raise thee on mine arm? |
14484 | Shall I, across the Aegean sailing home, Leave these Atridae and their fleet forlorn? |
14484 | Shall men have joy, And not remember? |
14484 | Shall other men prescribe my government? |
14484 | Shall our age, forsooth, Be taught discretion by a peevish boy? |
14484 | Shall we not sail when this south- western wind Hath fallen, that now is adverse to our course? |
14484 | Shall we stay, And list again the lamentable sound? |
14484 | Single or child- bearing? |
14484 | Slave- born, or rightly of the royal line? |
14484 | Son of Menoeceus, brother of my queen, What answer from Apollo dost thou bring? |
14484 | Sore? |
14484 | Speak you plain sooth? |
14484 | Speak, aged friend, whose look proclaims thee meet To be their spokesman-- What desire, what fear Hath brought you? |
14484 | Speak, any one of you in presence here, Can you make known the swain he tells us of, In town or country having met with him? |
14484 | Speaks he from hearsay, or as one who knows? |
14484 | Stay; whither art bound? |
14484 | Strange in the stranger land, I 1 What shall I speak? |
14484 | Stranger, dost thou perceive? |
14484 | Strive they? |
14484 | Such, mother, is the crime thou hast devised And done against our sire, wherefore let Right And Vengeance punish thee!--May I pray so? |
14484 | Sure thou wast not with us, when at first We launched our vessels on the Troyward way? |
14484 | Tell me the great cause Why thou inveighest against them with such heat? |
14484 | Tell me this; Didst thou, or not, urge me to send and bring The reverend- seeming prophet? |
14484 | Tell me, I pray, what was become of him, Patroclus, whom thy father loved so well? |
14484 | Tell me, my daughter, is the man away? |
14484 | Tell me, what hope is mine of daily food, Who will be careful for my good? |
14484 | Tell us, how ended she her life in blood? |
14484 | That I may not escape thee? |
14484 | That this is well? |
14484 | The sacrificer stands prepared,--and when More keen? |
14484 | The slayer, who? |
14484 | Then am not I the spoiler, as ye said? |
14484 | Then at that season did he mention me? |
14484 | Then how could I endure the light of heaven? |
14484 | Then how not others, like to me? |
14484 | Then if the king shall hear this from another, How shalt thou''scape for''t? |
14484 | Then is not laughter sweetest o''er a foe? |
14484 | Then is the land inhabited of men? |
14484 | Then seest thou not What meed of honour, if thou dost my will, Thou shalt apportion to thyself and me? |
14484 | Then seest thou not how true unto their aim Our father''s prophecies of mutual death Against you both are sped? |
14484 | Then shall I advance Before the Trojan battlements, and there In single conflict doing valiantly Last die upon their spears? |
14484 | Then tell me, who is she thou brought''st with thee? |
14484 | Then why doth he not come, but still delay? |
14484 | Then you require this with an absolute will? |
14484 | Then, am not I third- partner with you twain? |
14484 | They force me? |
14484 | Think you I will yield? |
14484 | Think you he will consider the blind man, And come in person here to visit him? |
14484 | Think you that you bear In those cold gifts atonement for her guilt? |
14484 | Think you the wretch in heartfelt agony Weeps inconsolably her perished son? |
14484 | Think you to triumph in offending still? |
14484 | Think, O my lord, of thy path, Secretly look forth afar, What wilt thou do for thy need? |
14484 | Thou art so resolved? |
14484 | Thou bidst me then let bury this dead man? |
14484 | Thou didst what deed that misbecame thy life? |
14484 | Thou dost not mean thy gift to Heracles? |
14484 | Thou hast full cognizance How things within the palace are preserved? |
14484 | Thou knowest the captive maid thou leddest home? |
14484 | Thou wilt not answer him about the child? |
14484 | Through what dark traffic is the mariner Betraying me with whispering in thine ear? |
14484 | Thy dwelling with us, then, is our great gain? |
14484 | Thy father? |
14484 | Thy mistress, sayest? |
14484 | Thy mother''s bed, Say, didst thou fill? |
14484 | Thy murderer? |
14484 | Thy potent cause for spending so much breath? |
14484 | Till what term wilt thou remain Inactive? |
14484 | To ask simply, as Carlyle once did,''What did they think?'' |
14484 | To bring me back with reasons or perforce? |
14484 | To bury him, when all have been forbidden? |
14484 | To expire On sharp- cut dragging thongs,''Midst wildly trampling throngs Of swiftly racing hoofs, like him, Poor hapless one? |
14484 | To her and me? |
14484 | To him? |
14484 | To lie? |
14484 | To thrust me from the land? |
14484 | To what end? |
14484 | To what end? |
14484 | To whom beyond thyself and me belongs Such consecration? |
14484 | To whom more worthy should I tell my grief? |
14484 | Treason or dulness then? |
14484 | Unhappy man, will not even Time bring forth One spark of wisdom to redeem thine age? |
14484 | Unhappy that ye are, why have ye reared Your wordy rancour''mid the city''s harms? |
14484 | Unto what doom doth my Fate drive me now? |
14484 | Vanished in ruin by a dire defeat? |
14484 | Voices of prophecy, where are ye now? |
14484 | Was Death then so enamoured of my seed, That he must feast thereon and let theirs live? |
14484 | Was all that love unto a foundling shown? |
14484 | Was it so dark? |
14484 | Was not Aias he? |
14484 | Was not Eteocles thy brother too? |
14484 | Was not he the author of my life? |
14484 | Was she unknown, as he that brought her sware? |
14484 | Was this planned against the Argives, then? |
14484 | Was''t for the Argive host? |
14484 | Was''t then before that city he was kept Those endless ages of uncounted time? |
14484 | Was''t your own, or from another''s hand? |
14484 | Wast thou Laius''slave? |
14484 | Well, and what follows to complete the rite? |
14484 | Well, bring it forth.--What? |
14484 | Well, dost remember having given me then A child, that I might nurture him for mine? |
14484 | Well, for thy sake I''d grant a greater boon; Then why not this? |
14484 | Well, have ye found? |
14484 | Well, since''tis so, how can I help thee now? |
14484 | Well, sirs? |
14484 | Were they not there To take this journey for their father''s good? |
14484 | What Power impelled thee? |
14484 | What Theban gave it, from what home in Thebes? |
14484 | What aid of God or mortal can I find? |
14484 | What ails thee now? |
14484 | What ails thee, Dêanira, Oeneus''child? |
14484 | What are the appointed forms? |
14484 | What are these tokens, aged monarch, say? |
14484 | What are they? |
14484 | What are thy purposes against me, Zeus? |
14484 | What art thou doing, knave? |
14484 | What augur ye from this? |
14484 | What benefit Comes to thee from o''erturning thine own land? |
14484 | What bid you then that I have power to do? |
14484 | What blow is harder than to call me false? |
14484 | What boon dost thou desire so earnestly? |
14484 | What boon dost thou profess to have brought with thee? |
14484 | What boon, my children, are ye bent to obtain? |
14484 | What burden through the darkness fell Where still at eventide''twas well? |
14484 | What call so nearly times with mine approach? |
14484 | What can I do for thee now, even now? |
14484 | What can have roused him to a work so wild? |
14484 | What can it profit thee to vex me so? |
14484 | What can life profit me without my sister? |
14484 | What can there be that we have not on board? |
14484 | What canst thou mean? |
14484 | What canst thou mean? |
14484 | What cares oppress thee? |
14484 | What cause Having appeared, will bring this doom to pass? |
14484 | What cause hast thou Thus to arrest my going? |
14484 | What cause have they to laugh? |
14484 | What chance shall win men''s marvel? |
14484 | What change is here, my son? |
14484 | What change will never- terminable Time Not heave to light, what hide not from the day? |
14484 | What charge or occupation was thy care? |
14484 | What charge then wouldst thou further lay on us? |
14484 | What citizen or stranger told thee this? |
14484 | What converse keeps thee now beyond the gates, Dear sister? |
14484 | What could I see, whom hear With gladness, whom delight in any more? |
14484 | What countryman, and wherefore suppliant there? |
14484 | What countrymen? |
14484 | What crave ye, sirs? |
14484 | What dark speech Hast thou contrived? |
14484 | What deed of his could harm thy sovereign head? |
14484 | What destiny, dear girl, Awaits us both, bereaved and fatherless? |
14484 | What do I hear? |
14484 | What do I hear? |
14484 | What do I hear? |
14484 | What dost thou bid me do? |
14484 | What dost thou bid me? |
14484 | What dost thou forbid, old sir? |
14484 | What dost thou mean? |
14484 | What dost thou, stranger? |
14484 | What dost thou? |
14484 | What eager thought attends his presence here? |
14484 | What else were natural? |
14484 | What evil is not here? |
14484 | What evil would thy words disclose? |
14484 | What far land Holds me in pain that ceaseth not? |
14484 | What fault is there in reverencing my power? |
14484 | What fear you? |
14484 | What fine advantage wouldst thou first achieve? |
14484 | What followed? |
14484 | What fool is he That counts one day, or two, or more to come? |
14484 | What friend hath moved her? |
14484 | What friend will carry thee? |
14484 | What further use of thee, When we have ta''en these arms? |
14484 | What fury of wild thought Came o''er thee? |
14484 | What gain I through his coming back to Troy? |
14484 | What good am I, thus lying at their gate? |
14484 | What guile is here? |
14484 | What hand to heal, what voice to charm, Can e''er dispel this hideous harm? |
14484 | What harm can come of hearkening? |
14484 | What hast thou done, that thou canst threaten thus? |
14484 | What hast thou new to add? |
14484 | What hath befallen, my daughter? |
14484 | What hath he now? |
14484 | What hath so suddenly arisen, that thus Thou mak''st ado and groanest o''er thyself? |
14484 | What have I reaped hereof? |
14484 | What help? |
14484 | What hidden lore? |
14484 | What hidden woe have I unwarily Taken beneath my roof? |
14484 | What hide From a heart suspicious of ill? |
14484 | What high law Ordaining? |
14484 | What holy name will please them, if I pray? |
14484 | What hope is yet Left standing? |
14484 | What in her life should make your heart afraid? |
14484 | What intelligence Intends he for our private conference, That he hath sent his herald to us all, Gathering the elders with a general call? |
14484 | What is befallen? |
14484 | What is he you mean? |
14484 | What is hopeless? |
14484 | What is it, O son of Aegeus? |
14484 | What is it? |
14484 | What is our cause for delay? |
14484 | What is that thou fearest? |
14484 | What is the fault, and how to be redressed? |
14484 | What is the matter? |
14484 | What is the present scene? |
14484 | What is the race thou spurnest? |
14484 | What is thine intent? |
14484 | What is thy desire? |
14484 | What is thy new intent? |
14484 | What is wrongly done? |
14484 | What is''t? |
14484 | What joy have I in life when thou art gone? |
14484 | What kept Odysseus back, if this be so, From going himself? |
14484 | What know I? |
14484 | What know I? |
14484 | What knowest thou of our state? |
14484 | What land of refuge? |
14484 | What lasteth in the world? |
14484 | What led your travelling footstep to that ground? |
14484 | What lends him such assurance of defence? |
14484 | What man hath been so daring in revolt? |
14484 | What man of all the host hath caught thine eye? |
14484 | What man than Aias was more provident, Or who for timeliest action more approved? |
14484 | What man that lives hath more of happiness Than to seem blest, and, seeming, fade in night? |
14484 | What matter who? |
14484 | What mean''st thou, aged sir, by what thou sayest? |
14484 | What mean''st thou, boy? |
14484 | What mean''st thou? |
14484 | What means he? |
14484 | What means this prayer? |
14484 | What means thy question? |
14484 | What men are ye that to this desert shore, Harbourless, uninhabited, are come On shipboard? |
14484 | What message have I sent beseeching, But baffled flies back idly home? |
14484 | What message must I carry to my lord? |
14484 | What mission sped thee forth? |
14484 | What mission? |
14484 | What more calamitous stroke of Destiny Awaits me still? |
14484 | What more dost thou require of me? |
14484 | What more of woe, Or what more woeful, sounds anew from thee? |
14484 | What morn shall see thy face? |
14484 | What must I do? |
14484 | What must I do? |
14484 | What must I do? |
14484 | What must I do? |
14484 | What must I do? |
14484 | What must I think? |
14484 | What native country, shall we learn, is thine? |
14484 | What need hath brought thee to the shore? |
14484 | What new affliction heaped on sovereignty Com''st thou to tell? |
14484 | What new command are we to learn Crossing thy former mind? |
14484 | What new plan is rising in thy mind? |
14484 | What new thing is befallen? |
14484 | What news can move us thus two ways at once? |
14484 | What noise again is troubling my poor cave? |
14484 | What now is thine intent? |
14484 | What oracle hath been declared, my child? |
14484 | What pain is there in hearing? |
14484 | What pain o''ercomes thee? |
14484 | What passing touch Of conscience moved them, or what stroke from Heaven, Whose wrath requites all wicked deeds of men? |
14484 | What plea For my defence will hold? |
14484 | What point is lacking for thine errand''s speed? |
14484 | What power will give thee refuge for such guilt? |
14484 | What profit lives in fame and fair renown By unsubstantial rumour idly spread? |
14484 | What punishment Wilt thou accept, if thou art found to be Faithless to her? |
14484 | What quarrel, sirs? |
14484 | What rage, what madness, clutched The mischief- working brand? |
14484 | What region holds him now,''Mong winding channels of the deep, Or Asian plains, or rugged Western steep? |
14484 | What robber would have ventured such a deed, If unsolicited with bribes from hence? |
14484 | What rumour? |
14484 | What saith he, boy? |
14484 | What saith he? |
14484 | What saith the oracle? |
14484 | What say''st thou, daughter? |
14484 | What say''st? |
14484 | What say''st? |
14484 | What saying is this? |
14484 | What seek ye more to know? |
14484 | What shall I do? |
14484 | What shall I do? |
14484 | What shall I do? |
14484 | What shall I do? |
14484 | What shall I do? |
14484 | What shall I say, what think, my father? |
14484 | What shall I say? |
14484 | What shall I speak, or which way turn The desperate word? |
14484 | What shall we do, my lord? |
14484 | What shall we do? |
14484 | What should I utter, O my child? |
14484 | What sight hath fired thee with this quenchless glow? |
14484 | What sign dost thou perceive That proves thine end so near? |
14484 | What sign hath so engrossed thine eye, poor girl? |
14484 | What soil? |
14484 | What sorrow beyond sorrows hath chief place? |
14484 | What source Of bitterness''twixt us and Thebes can rise? |
14484 | What sudden change is this? |
14484 | What then Further engrosseth thee? |
14484 | What then is thy command? |
14484 | What then possessed thee to give up the child To this old man? |
14484 | What then restrained his eager hand from murder? |
14484 | What thing hath passed to make it known to thee? |
14484 | What thought O''ermaster''d thee? |
14484 | What thought of justice should be mine for her, Who at her age can so insult a mother? |
14484 | What torment wilt thou wreak on him? |
14484 | What troubles thee? |
14484 | What urgent cause requires his presence? |
14484 | What valour is''t to slay the slain? |
14484 | What was her death, poor victim of dire woe? |
14484 | What was that thing? |
14484 | What was the fatal cause? |
14484 | What was the man thou noisest here so proudly? |
14484 | What was the sudden end? |
14484 | What was thy fraud in fetching me this robe?'' |
14484 | What were they, mother, for I never knew? |
14484 | What were they? |
14484 | What were thy tidings? |
14484 | What wickedness is this? |
14484 | What wild aim Beckons thee forth in arming this design Whereto thou wouldst demand my ministry? |
14484 | What will ye do, then? |
14484 | What wilt thou do? |
14484 | What wilt thou do? |
14484 | What wilt thou make of me? |
14484 | What wilt thou say? |
14484 | What wilt thou? |
14484 | What witness of such words will bear thee out? |
14484 | What word hath passed thy lips? |
14484 | What word is fallen from thee? |
14484 | What word is spoken, mother? |
14484 | What word of mine agreed not with the scene? |
14484 | What words are these? |
14484 | What words have passed? |
14484 | What would you I should yield unto your prayer? |
14484 | What would you then? |
14484 | What wouldst thou ask me? |
14484 | What wouldst thou do? |
14484 | What wouldst thou do? |
14484 | What wouldst thou have? |
14484 | What wouldst thou when the camp is hushed in sleep?'' |
14484 | What wound Can be more deadly than a harmful friend? |
14484 | What''s this but adding cowardice to evil? |
14484 | What, stranger? |
14484 | What, then, can be thy grief? |
14484 | What, wilt thou threaten, too, thou audacious boy? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | What? |
14484 | When comes the revelation of thine aid? |
14484 | When death is certain, what do men in woe Gain from a little time? |
14484 | When hath not goodness blessed the giver of good? |
14484 | When majesty was fallen, what misery Could hinder you from searching out the truth? |
14484 | When shall the tale of wandering years be done? |
14484 | When shrunk to nothing, am I indeed a man? |
14484 | Whence came the truth to thee? |
14484 | Whence couldst thou hear of succour for my woes, That close in darkness without hope of dawn? |
14484 | Whence learned he this? |
14484 | Whence? |
14484 | Whence? |
14484 | Where Could there be found confession more depraved, Even though the cause were righteous? |
14484 | Where again Shall gladness heal my pain? |
14484 | Where am I? |
14484 | Where am I? |
14484 | Where and when? |
14484 | Where are the proofs of thy prophetic power? |
14484 | Where are the strangers then? |
14484 | Where are those maidens and their escort? |
14484 | Where are ye, O my children? |
14484 | Where are ye, men, whom over Hellas wide This arm hath freed, and o''er the ocean- tide, And through rough brakes, from every monstrous thing? |
14484 | Where are ye, where? |
14484 | Where art thou to lift me and hold me aright? |
14484 | Where art thou told his seat is fixed, my son? |
14484 | Where art thou, O my child? |
14484 | Where art thou? |
14484 | Where can be found a richer ornament For children, than their father''s high renown? |
14484 | Where did the force of woe O''erturn thy reason? |
14484 | Where didst thou find her? |
14484 | Where do ye behold The tyrant? |
14484 | Where is he rumoured, then, alive or dead? |
14484 | Where is that man? |
14484 | Where is the King? |
14484 | Where is thy fear of Heaven? |
14484 | Where is thy voucher of command o''er him? |
14484 | Where mean''st thou? |
14484 | Where must I go? |
14484 | Where must one look? |
14484 | Where of thy right o''er those that followed him? |
14484 | Where shall now be read The fading record of this ancient guilt? |
14484 | Where shall we find refuge? |
14484 | Where upon earth? |
14484 | Where was the scene of this unhappy blow? |
14484 | Where''s Teucer? |
14484 | Where, amongst whom of mortals, can I go, That stood not near thee in thy troublous hour? |
14484 | Where-- where art thou, boy? |
14484 | Where? |
14484 | Where? |
14484 | Where? |
14484 | Where? |
14484 | Where? |
14484 | Whereby then can it furnish joy? |
14484 | Whereby? |
14484 | Wherefore I bid thee declare, What must I do for thy need? |
14484 | Wherefore again, when sorrow''s cruel storm Was just abating, break ye my repose? |
14484 | Wherefore should I stint their flow? |
14484 | Wherefore speak''st thou so? |
14484 | Wherefore that shouting? |
14484 | Wherefore, kind sir? |
14484 | Wherefore, my father? |
14484 | Wherefore? |
14484 | Wherefore? |
14484 | Wherefore? |
14484 | Wherefore? |
14484 | Wherefore? |
14484 | Whereof? |
14484 | Which of us twain, believ''st thou, in this talk Hath more profoundly sinned against thy peace? |
14484 | Which of you know where are the Phocian men Who brought the news I hear, Orestes''life Hath suffered shipwreck in a chariot- race? |
14484 | Which path have I not tried? |
14484 | Which way? |
14484 | Whither am I borne? |
14484 | Whither am I fallen? |
14484 | Whither now turns thy strain? |
14484 | Whither shall I flee? |
14484 | Whither? |
14484 | Who are the men into whose midmost toils All hapless I am fallen? |
14484 | Who art thou, of all damsels most distressed? |
14484 | Who can be mild and gentle, when thou speakest Such words to mock this people? |
14484 | Who can gain profit from the blind? |
14484 | Who can he be that kneels for such a boon? |
14484 | Who can win safety through such help as mine? |
14484 | Who comes here? |
14484 | Who cries there from the covert of the grove? |
14484 | Who does not gain by death, That lives, as I do, amid boundless woe? |
14484 | Who durst declare it[3], that Tirésias spake False prophecies, set on to this by me? |
14484 | Who gave her birth? |
14484 | Who gave me being? |
14484 | Who hath cared for this? |
14484 | Who hath given thine ear The word that so hath wrought on thy belief? |
14484 | Who hath sent thee to our hall? |
14484 | Who hath told That I have wrought a deed so full of woe? |
14484 | Who in heaven Hath leapt against thy hapless life With boundings out of measure fierce and huge? |
14484 | Who in such courses shall defend his soul From storms of thundrous wrath that o''er him roll? |
14484 | Who is it? |
14484 | Who is so fond, to be in love with death? |
14484 | Who is that aged wight? |
14484 | Who is the man, and what his errand here? |
14484 | Who is the wrong- doer, say, and what the deed? |
14484 | Who is this, brother? |
14484 | Who is''t to whom thou speakest? |
14484 | Who may avoid thee? |
14484 | Who professes here to love him? |
14484 | Who shall seize on me Without the will of my protectors here? |
14484 | Who stayed that onset? |
14484 | Who that had a noble heart And saw her father''s cause, as I have done, By day and night more outraged, could refrain? |
14484 | Who then can have decked With all those ceremonies our father''s tomb? |
14484 | Who then that plots against a life so strong Shall quit him of the danger without harm? |
14484 | Who then will tell me, who? |
14484 | Who thus can live on air, Tasting no gift of earth that breathing mortals share? |
14484 | Who to- day Shall dole to Oedipus, the wandering exile, Their meagre gifts? |
14484 | Who told thee this? |
14484 | Who was he That brought you this dire message, O my queen? |
14484 | Who was her sire? |
14484 | Who was their sire? |
14484 | Who was thy father''s father? |
14484 | Who will not give Honour at festivals, and in the throng Of popular resort, to these in chief, For their high courage and their bold emprise?'' |
14484 | Who will not love the pair And do them reverence? |
14484 | Who, dear sovereign, gave thee birth, 2 Of the long lived nymphs of earth? |
14484 | Who, not possessed with furies, could choose this? |
14484 | Whom but Odysseus canst thou mean by this? |
14484 | Whom dost thou mean? |
14484 | Whom fear you? |
14484 | Whom hath the voice from Delphi''s rocky throne I 1 Loudly declared to have done Horror unnameable with murdering hand? |
14484 | Whom have the Heavens so followed with their hate? |
14484 | Whom? |
14484 | Whose being overshadows thee with fear? |
14484 | Whose hand employed he for the deed of blood? |
14484 | Whose hands? |
14484 | Whose murder doth Apollo thus reveal? |
14484 | Whose power compels thee to this sufferance? |
14484 | Whose skill save thine, Monarch Divine? |
14484 | Whose will shall hinder me? |
14484 | Why Not slay me then and there? |
14484 | Why broods thy mind upon such thoughts, my king? |
14484 | Why did I leave thy sacred dew And loose my vessels from thy shore, To join the hateful Danaän crew And lend them succour? |
14484 | Why didst thou receive me? |
14484 | Why do ye summon me? |
14484 | Why dost thou bring a mind so full of gloom? |
14484 | Why dost thou groan aloud, And cry to Heaven? |
14484 | Why dost thou stand aghast, Voiceless, and thus astonied in thine air? |
14484 | Why doubt it? |
14484 | Why drive you me within? |
14484 | Why fondle vainly the fair- sounding name Of mother, when her acts are all unmotherly? |
14484 | Why hast thou robbed My bow of bringing down mine enemy? |
14484 | Why hast thou set thy heart on unavailing grief? |
14484 | Why must it keep This breathing form from sinking to the shades? |
14484 | Why not destroy me out of hand? |
14484 | Why not for my own line? |
14484 | Why not have listened to Carlyle''s rough demand,''Tell us what they thought; none of your silly poetry''? |
14484 | Why pay So scanty heed to her who fights for thee? |
14484 | Why should I fear Thy frown? |
14484 | Why should I fear, when I see certain gain? |
14484 | Why should man fear, seeing his course is ruled By fortune, and he nothing can foreknow? |
14484 | Why should''st thou demand? |
14484 | Why silent? |
14484 | Why so intent on this assurance, sire? |
14484 | Why so strange? |
14484 | Why so? |
14484 | Why sounds again from hence your joint appeal, Wherein the stranger''s voice is loudly heard? |
14484 | Why speak''st thou so? |
14484 | Why starest thou at the sky? |
14484 | Why steal''st thou forth in silence? |
14484 | Why such a question? |
14484 | Why then delay? |
14484 | Why then did he declare me for his son? |
14484 | Why this remonstrance? |
14484 | Why through deceit? |
14484 | Why thus delay our going? |
14484 | Why thus uncalled for salliest thou? |
14484 | Why vex thy heart with what is over and done? |
14484 | Why was he dumb, your prophet, in that day? |
14484 | Why will not men the like perfection prove? |
14484 | Why wilt thou ruin me? |
14484 | Why, hath not Creon, in the burial- rite, Of our two brethren honoured one, and wrought On one foul wrong? |
14484 | Why, is not she so tainted? |
14484 | Why? |
14484 | Why? |
14484 | Why? |
14484 | Will Telamon, my sire and thine, receive me With radiant countenance and favouring brow Returning without thee? |
14484 | Will he come, or still delay? |
14484 | Will he find me alive, My daughters, and with reason undisturbed? |
14484 | Will he ne''er Come from the chase, but leave me to my doom? |
14484 | Will shame withhold her from the wildest deed? |
14484 | Will some one go and bring the herdman hither? |
14484 | Will some one of your people bring him hither? |
14484 | Will ye forsake me? |
14484 | Will ye not pity me? |
14484 | Will ye then ask him for a wretch like me? |
14484 | Will you be certified your fears are groundless? |
14484 | Will you not drive the offender from your land? |
14484 | Will you not hear me? |
14484 | Wilt not speak? |
14484 | Wilt them be counselled? |
14484 | Wilt thou join hand with mine to lift the dead? |
14484 | Wilt thou lay thy hold On me? |
14484 | Wilt thou ne''er be ruled? |
14484 | Wilt thou not answer, but with shame dismiss me Voiceless, nor make known wherefore thou art wroth? |
14484 | Wilt thou not learn after so long to cease From vain indulgence of a bootless rage? |
14484 | Wilt thou not listen? |
14484 | Wilt thou not tell me why thou art hurrying This backward journey with reverted speed? |
14484 | Wilt thou remain? |
14484 | Wilt thou say He slew my daughter for his brother''s sake? |
14484 | Wilt thou say Thus thou dost''venge thy daughter''s injury? |
14484 | Wilt thou share The danger and the labour? |
14484 | Wilt thou speak so? |
14484 | Wilt thou still Speak all in riddles and dark sentences? |
14484 | Wilt thou thus fight against me on his side? |
14484 | Wilt thou yet hold That silent, hard, impenetrable mien? |
14484 | Wilt thou, too, vanish? |
14484 | With leaves or flocks of wool, or in what way? |
14484 | With what commission? |
14484 | With what contents Must this be filled? |
14484 | With whom could I exchange a word? |
14484 | Won he to his goal? |
14484 | Wouldst thou aught more of me than merely death? |
14484 | Wouldst thou have all the speaking on thy side? |
14484 | Wretched one, is she dead? |
14484 | Yet more? |
14484 | Yet tell me, doth he live, Old sir? |
14484 | Yet where could I have found a fairer fame Than giving burial to my own true brother? |
14484 | You did not find me? |
14484 | You think me likely to seek gain from you? |
14484 | Your purchase, or your child? |
14484 | [_ Pointing to his eyes_ For why should I have sight, To whom nought now gave pleasure through the eye? |
14484 | _''A wounded spirit who can bear? |
14484 | against the word of Creon? |
14484 | am I not now Lame and of evil smell? |
14484 | and am I labouring to an end? |
14484 | and must I be debarred thy fate? |
14484 | and what means his word? |
14484 | and where, oh where On Trojan earth, tell me, is this man''s child? |
14484 | and why not Hyllus first, Whom most it would beseem to show regard For tidings of his father''s happiness? |
14484 | and will you not be counselled? |
14484 | are you alone in grief? |
14484 | art thou hopeful from the fear I spake of? |
14484 | brother, who, when thou art come, Could find it meet to exchange Language for silence, as thou bidst me do? |
14484 | but how shall I escape Achaean anger? |
14484 | by main force, or by degrading shames? |
14484 | can check thy might? |
14484 | can it be that you are come to bring Clear proofs of the sad rumour we have heard? |
14484 | from this discoloured blade, Thy self- shown slayer? |
14484 | has that rascal knave Sworn to fetch me with reasons to their camp? |
14484 | how can I look to Heaven? |
14484 | how shall ye vaunt Before the gods drink- offering or the fat Of victims, if I sail among your crew? |
14484 | is there none so bold? |
14484 | is this he, whom I, of all the band, Found singly faithful in our father''s death? |
14484 | know you not your speech offends even now? |
14484 | know''st thou not that Heaven Hath ceased to be my debtor from to- day? |
14484 | knowest thou not Thou hast been taking living men for dead? |
14484 | must I give way? |
14484 | no provision for a dwelling- place? |
14484 | on whom Call to befriend me? |
14484 | or do thine accents idly fall? |
14484 | or for what? |
14484 | or must I turn and go? |
14484 | say, wilt thou bide aloof? |
14484 | that deep groan? |
14484 | weep Before the tent? |
14484 | were they so? |
14484 | what canst thou so mislike in me? |
14484 | what dost thou? |
14484 | what is it, man? |
14484 | what is''t you would know? |
14484 | what means this universal doubt? |
14484 | what old evil will thy words disclose? |
14484 | what saidst thou? |
14484 | what shall I say? |
14484 | when I have seen it with mine eyes? |
14484 | where art thou? |
14484 | where is wisdom? |
14484 | where? |
14484 | wherefore? |
14484 | which way? |
14484 | whither should I go and stay? |
14484 | who considereth? |
14484 | who? |
14484 | why go where thou wilt find thy bane? |
14484 | why this curse upon thyself? |
14484 | why this talk in the open day? |
14484 | wilt thou kill thy son''s espousal too? |
14484 | woe is me, doubly unfortunate, Forlorn and destitute, whither henceforth For wretched comfort must we go? |
4928 | Ah, Tristram''far away from me, Art thou from restless anguish free? 4928 Ah, lady,"said Geraint,"what hath befallen thee?" |
4928 | Am I on earth,he exclaimed,"or am I in Paradise? |
4928 | Am I, then,said Sacripant,"of so little esteem with you that you doubt my power to defend you? |
4928 | And art thou certain that if that knight knew all this, he would come to thy rescue? |
4928 | And how can I do that? |
4928 | And is it thus they have done with a maiden such as she, and moreover my sister, bestowing her without my consent? 4928 And what dost thou here?" |
4928 | And what has Gan been plotting with Marsilius? |
4928 | And what may that be? |
4928 | And what weapon hast thou,said he,"if thy lance fail thee?" |
4928 | And who is he? |
4928 | And who was it that slew them? |
4928 | And you, wherefore come you? |
4928 | But,she added,"thou hast not death''s hue on thee; why then ridest thou here on the way to Hel?" |
4928 | By what means will that be? |
4928 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
4928 | Cruel wall,they said,"why do you keep two lovers apart? |
4928 | Damsel,said Sir Perceval,"who hath disinherited you? |
4928 | Did he meet with thee? |
4928 | Did you hear the horn as I heard it? |
4928 | Didst thou hear what Llywarch sung, The intrepid and brave old man? 4928 Didst thou inquire of them if they possessed any art?" |
4928 | Do you do this as one of the best knights? |
4928 | Do you hear that? |
4928 | Dost thou know him? |
4928 | Dost thou know how much I owe thee? |
4928 | Fair brother, when came ye hither? |
4928 | Fair damsel,said Sir Launcelot,"know ye in this country any adventures?" |
4928 | Fair knight,said he,"how is it with you?" |
4928 | Geraint,said Guenever,"knowest thou the name of that tall knight yonder?" |
4928 | Hapless youth,he said,"what can I do for you worthy of your praise? |
4928 | Has he not given it before the presence of these nobles? |
4928 | Hast thou heard what Avaon sung, The son of Taliesin, of the recording verse? 4928 Hast thou heard what Garselit sung, The Irishman whom it is safe to follow? |
4928 | Hast thou heard what Llenleawg sung, The noble chief wearing the golden torques? 4928 Hast thou hope of being released for gold or for silver, or for any gifts of wealth, or through battle and fighting?" |
4928 | Hast thou not received all thou didst ask? |
4928 | Have you any tidings? |
4928 | Have you come at last,said he,"long expected, and do I behold you after such perils past? |
4928 | Have you heard anything of Arion? |
4928 | Heaven prosper thee, Geraint,said she;"and why didst thou not go with thy lord to hunt?" |
4928 | How can a fool have such strength? |
4928 | How know you that? |
4928 | How now, Thor? |
4928 | How now, cousin,cried Orlando,"have you too gone over to the enemy?" |
4928 | How shall I need them,said Rinaldo,"since I have lost my horse?" |
4928 | I come, lord, from singing in England; and wherefore dost thou inquire? |
4928 | I put the case,said Palamedes,"that you were well armed, and I naked as ye be; what would you do to me now, by your true knighthood?" |
4928 | I stand in need of counsel,he answered,"and what may that counsel be?" |
4928 | I will gladly,said he;"and in which direction dost thou intend to go?" |
4928 | In the name of Heaven,said Manawyddan,"where are they of the court, and all my host beside? |
4928 | Is it known,said Arthur,"where she is?" |
4928 | Is it thus I find you restored to me? |
4928 | Is it time for us to go to meat? |
4928 | Is not that a mouse that I see in thy hand? |
4928 | Is that the horse they presume to match with Marchevallee, the best steed that ever fed in the vales of Mount Atlas? |
4928 | Is this, then,she said,"the fruit of all my labors? |
4928 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair? 4928 Know ye,"said Arthur,"who is the knight with the long spear that stands by the brook up yonder?" |
4928 | Knowest thou his name? |
4928 | Lady,he said,"wilt thou tell me aught concerning thy purpose?" |
4928 | Lady,said he,"knowest thou where our horses are?" |
4928 | Lady,said they,"what thinkest thou that this is?" |
4928 | Lord,said Kicva,"wherefore should this be borne from these boors?" |
4928 | Lord,said she,"didst thou hear the words of those men concerning thee?" |
4928 | Lord,said she,"what craft wilt thou follow? |
4928 | Most undutiful and faithless of servants,said she,"do you at last remember that you really have a mistress? |
4928 | My men,said Pwyll,"is there any among you who knows yonder lady?" |
4928 | My son,said she,"desirest thou to ride forth?" |
4928 | My soul,said Gawl,"will thy bag ever be full?" |
4928 | My soul,said Pwyll,"what is the boon thou askest?" |
4928 | Now where did he overtake thee? |
4928 | Now, fellow,said King Arthur,"canst thou bring me there where this giant haunteth?" |
4928 | Now,quoth Owain,"would it not be well to go and endeavor to discover that place?" |
4928 | Now,said Arthur,"where is the maiden for whom I heard thou didst give challenge?" |
4928 | O Bujaforte,said he,"I loved him indeed; but what does his son do here fighting against his friends?" |
4928 | O Pyramus,she cried,"what has done this? |
4928 | O my friend,said he,"must then the body of our prince be the prey of wolves and ravens? |
4928 | O my lord,said she,"what dost thou here?" |
4928 | Say ye so? |
4928 | Seest thou yonder red tilled ground? |
4928 | Shall I not believe my own eyes and ears? |
4928 | Shall such wickedness triumph? |
4928 | Sir knight,said Arthur,"for what cause abidest thou here?" |
4928 | Sir, what penance shall I do? |
4928 | Sir,said Geraint,"what is thy counsel to me concerning this knight, on account of the insult which the maiden of Guenever received from the dwarf?" |
4928 | Sir,said Sir Bedivere,"what man is there buried that ye pray so near unto?" |
4928 | Sir,said Sir Bohort,"but how know ye that I shall sit there?" |
4928 | Sir,said Sir Galahad,"can you tell me the marvel of the shield?" |
4928 | Sir,said she,"when thinkest thou that Geraint will be here?" |
4928 | Sir,said the king,"is it your will to alight and partake of our cheer?" |
4928 | Sirs,said Sir Galahad,"what adventure brought you hither?" |
4928 | Suppose they will not trust themselves with me? |
4928 | Tell me, I pray you,he said,"what benefit will accrue to him who shall get the better in this contest? |
4928 | Tell me, good lad,said one of them,"sawest thou a knight pass this way either today or yesterday?" |
4928 | Tell me, tall man,said Perceval,"is that Arthur yonder?" |
4928 | Tell me,said Sir Bohort,"knowest thou of any adventure?" |
4928 | Tell me,said the knight,"didst thou see any one coming after me from the court?" |
4928 | That will I not, by Heaven,she said;"yonder man was the first to whom my faith was ever pledged; and shall I prove inconstant to him?" |
4928 | Then Bacchus( for it was indeed he), as if shaking off his drowsiness, exclaimed,''What are you doing with me? 4928 Then Perceval told him his name, and said,"Who art thou?" |
4928 | There is; wherefore dost thou call? |
4928 | They are already united by mutual vows,she said,"and in the sight of Heaven what more is necessary?" |
4928 | This is indeed a marvel,said he;"saw you aught else?" |
4928 | This will I do gladly; and who art thou? |
4928 | Traitor knight,said Queen Guenever,"what wilt thou do? |
4928 | Truly,said Pwyll,"this is to me the most pleasing quest on which thou couldst have come; and wilt thou tell me who thou art?" |
4928 | Verily,said she,"what thinkest thou to do?" |
4928 | Well,cried the hero,"what news?" |
4928 | What are we to do,said he,"now that daylight has left us?" |
4928 | What are ye? |
4928 | What discourse,said Guenever,"do I hear between you? |
4928 | What doth my knight the while? 4928 What fault of mine, dearest husband, has turned your affection from me? |
4928 | What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? 4928 What harm is there in that, lady?" |
4928 | What has become,said they,"of Caradoc, the son of Bran, and the seven men who were left with him in this island?" |
4928 | What hast thou there, lord? |
4928 | What have ye seen? |
4928 | What heart had I left me, during all this, or what ought I to have had, except to hate life and wish to be with my dead subjects? 4928 What herb has such a power?" |
4928 | What is the forest that is seen upon the sea? |
4928 | What is the lofty ridge, with the lake on each side thereof? |
4928 | What is the meaning of this? |
4928 | What is there about him,asked Arthur,"that thou never yet didst see his like?" |
4928 | What is this? |
4928 | What is thy craft? |
4928 | What is your lord''s name? |
4928 | What is your name? |
4928 | What is your name? |
4928 | What kind of a thief may it be, lord, that thou couldst put into thy glove? |
4928 | What knight is he that thou hatest so above others? |
4928 | What manner of thief is that? |
4928 | What manner of thief, lord? |
4928 | What new trial hast thou to propose? |
4928 | What sawest thou there? |
4928 | What sawest thou there? |
4928 | What say ye to this adventure,said Sir Gawain,"that one spear hath felled us all four?" |
4928 | What saying was that? |
4928 | What sort of meal? |
4928 | What then wouldst thou? |
4928 | What thinkest thou that we should do concerning this? |
4928 | What treatment is there for guests and strangers that alight in that castle? |
4928 | What was that? |
4928 | What wight art thou,the lady said,"that will not speak to me? |
4928 | What wilt thou more? |
4928 | What work art thou upon? |
4928 | What wouldst thou with Arthur? |
4928 | What,exclaimed the woman,"have all things sworn to spare Baldur?" |
4928 | Whence came these stories? 4928 Where are my pages and my servants? |
4928 | Where is Cuchulain? |
4928 | Where is he that seeks my daughter? 4928 Where is the Earl Ynywl,"said Geraint,"and his wife and his daughter?" |
4928 | Where,said she,"are thy companion and thy dogs?" |
4928 | Wherefore came she to me? |
4928 | Wherefore comes he? |
4928 | Wherefore not? |
4928 | Wherefore not? |
4928 | Wherefore wilt thou not? |
4928 | Wherefore,said Evnissyen,"comes not my nephew, the son of my sister, unto me? |
4928 | Which way went they hence? |
4928 | Who is the loser now? |
4928 | Who may he be? |
4928 | Who would not have been moved with these gentle words of the goddess? 4928 Whose are the sheep that thou dost keep, and to whom does yonder castle belong?" |
4928 | Why dost thou ask my name? |
4928 | Why should I not prove adventures? |
4928 | Why should you wish to behold me? |
4928 | Why withdrawest thou, false traitor? |
4928 | Why, who is he? |
4928 | Why,said Sir Lionel,"will ye stay me? |
4928 | Why? |
4928 | Will nothing satisfy you but my life? |
4928 | Will she come here if she is sent to? |
4928 | Will this please thee? |
4928 | Willest thou this, lord? |
4928 | Wilt thou follow my counsel,said the youth,"and take thy meal from me?" |
4928 | Wilt thou follow the counsel of another? |
4928 | Yes, in truth,said she;"and who art thou?" |
4928 | ''What hope for us,''resumed the king,''if he brings with him a greater host than that?'' |
4928 | ''Why do you refuse me water?'' |
4928 | A prince of the house of Guienne, must he not blush at the cowardly abandonment of the faith of his fathers?" |
4928 | Aeneas, horror- struck, inquired of his guide what crimes were those whose punishments produced the sounds he heard? |
4928 | Aeneas, wondering at the sight, asked the Sibyl,"Why this discrimination?" |
4928 | After having disobeyed my mother''s commands and made you my wife, will you think me a monster and cut off my head? |
4928 | Ah, noble sir,"he added,"tell me, I beseech you, of what country and race you come?" |
4928 | Alcinous says to Ulysses:"Say from what city, from what regions tossed, And what inhabitants those regions boast? |
4928 | And Arthur said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4928 | And Gawain was much grieved to see Arthur in his state, and he questioned him, saying,"O my lord, what has befallen thee?" |
4928 | And Gwernach said to him,"O man, is it true that is reported of thee, that thou knowest how to burnish swords?" |
4928 | And Kilwich said to Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is thy daughter mine now?" |
4928 | And Sir Launcelot heard him say,"O sweet Lord, when shall this sorrow leave me, and when shall the holy vessel come by me whereby I shall be healed?" |
4928 | And after twenty- four days he opened his eyes; and when he saw folk he made great sorrow, and said,"Why have ye wakened me? |
4928 | And as they came in, every one of Pwyll''s knights struck a blow upon the bag, and asked,"What is here?" |
4928 | And can any other woman dare more than I? |
4928 | And his father inquired of him,"What has come over thee, my son, and what aileth thee?" |
4928 | And is Lorenzo''s salamander- heart Cold and untouched amid these sacred fires?" |
4928 | And now, wilt thou come to guide me out of the town?" |
4928 | And shall I let you go into such danger alone? |
4928 | And share with him-- the unforgiven-- His vulture and his rock?" |
4928 | And the earl said to Enid,"Alas, lady, what hath befallen thee?" |
4928 | And the maiden bent down towards her, and said,"What aileth thee, that thou answereth no one to- day?" |
4928 | And the queen said,"Ah, dear brother, why have ye tarried so long? |
4928 | And the woman asked them,"Upon what errand come you here?" |
4928 | And then he said to the man,"Canst thou tell me the way to some chapel, where I may bury this body?" |
4928 | And they spoke unto him, and said,"O man, whose castle is that?" |
4928 | And they went up to the mound whereon the herdsman was, and they said to him,"How dost thou fare, herdsman?" |
4928 | And thinking that he knew him, he inquired of him,"Art thou Edeyrn, the son of Nudd?" |
4928 | And what cowardice makes thee sink under this last danger who hast been so miraculously supported in all thy former?" |
4928 | And what is it, pray, that brings you into these parts? |
4928 | And what work art thou upon, lord?" |
4928 | And what, lord, art thou doing?" |
4928 | And when meat was ended, Pwyll said,"Where are the hosts that went yesterday to the top of the mound?" |
4928 | And whence dost thou come, scholar?" |
4928 | And who will proceed with thee, since thou art not strong enough to traverse the land of Loegyr alone?" |
4928 | And with this they put questions one to another, Who had braver men? |
4928 | And ye also, who are ye?" |
4928 | And, by the way, pray tell me, are you not that Orlando who makes such a noise in the world? |
4928 | Are there any birds perched on this tree? |
4928 | Art thou awake, Thor? |
4928 | As no one came, Narcissus called again,"Why do you shun me?" |
4928 | Asked Gwyddno,"Art thou able to speak, and thou so little?" |
4928 | Bethink thee how thou art a king''s son, and a knight of the Table Round, and how thou art about to dishonor all knighthood and thyself?" |
4928 | Bradamante, addressing the host, said,"Could you furnish me a guide to conduct me to the castle of this enchanter?" |
4928 | But Alardo said,"Brother, let Bayard live a little longer; who knows what God may do for us?" |
4928 | But Psyche said,"Why, my dear parents, do you now lament me? |
4928 | But a voice from the tower said to her,"Why, poor unlucky girl, dost thou design to put an end to thy days in so dreadful a manner? |
4928 | But how is mythology to be taught to one who does not learn it through the medium of the languages of Greece and Rome? |
4928 | But how to send Atlas away from his post, or bear up the heavens while he was gone? |
4928 | But how? |
4928 | But if I am unworthy of regard, what has my brother Ocean done to deserve such a fate? |
4928 | But may not the requisite knowledge of the subject be acquired by reading the ancient poets in translations? |
4928 | But shall he then live, and triumph, and reign over Calydon, while you, my brothers, wander unavenged among the shades? |
4928 | But tell me, pilgrim, who is that man who stands beside you?" |
4928 | But what has become of my glove?" |
4928 | But what if I offer him to yield up Helen and all her treasures and ample of our own beside? |
4928 | But what trace or mark shall point out the perpetrator from amidst the vast multitude attracted by the splendor of the feast? |
4928 | But what was to attack this terrible and unapproachable monster? |
4928 | But why ask the gods to do it? |
4928 | But, O fair nephew, what be these ladies that hither be come with you?" |
4928 | Byron also employs the same allusion, in his"Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte":"Or, like the thief of fire from heaven, Wilt thou withstand the shock? |
4928 | Can they be mortal women who compose that awful group, and can that vast concourse of silent forms be living beings? |
4928 | Could you keep your course while the sphere was revolving under you? |
4928 | Crying out,"What are the emperor''s engagements to me?" |
4928 | Cupid, beholding her as she lay in the dust, stopped his flight for an instant and said,"O foolish Psyche, is it thus you repay my love? |
4928 | Death seems his only remedy; but how to die? |
4928 | Did he fall by the hands of robbers or did some private enemy slay him? |
4928 | Do I indeed behold a chevalier of my own country, after fifteen years passed in this desert without seeing the face of a fellow- countryman?" |
4928 | Do you ask me for a proof that you are sprung from my blood? |
4928 | Do you ask me why?" |
4928 | Do you forget the battle of Albracca, and how, in your defence, I fought single- handed against Agrican and all his knights?" |
4928 | Do you not see that even in heaven some despise our power? |
4928 | Do you prefer to rob me of my ring rather than receive it as a gift? |
4928 | Does she ever come hither, so that she may be seen?" |
4928 | Dost thou bring any new tidings?" |
4928 | Dost thou not know that the shower to- day has left in my dominions neither man nor beast alive that was exposed to it?'' |
4928 | Dying now a second time, she yet can not reproach her husband, for how can she blame his impatience to behold her? |
4928 | Euryalus, all on fire with the love of adventure, replied,"Would you, then, Nisus, refuse to share your enterprise with me? |
4928 | For how could Achilles require the aid of celestial armor if be were invulnerable?] |
4928 | Had I imagined that this hard bark covered a being possessed of feeling, could I have exposed such a beautiful myrtle to the insults of this steed? |
4928 | Had he lost there a father, or brother, or any dear friend? |
4928 | Has earth no more Such seeds within her breast, or Europe no such shore?" |
4928 | Hast thou perchance seen him pass this way?" |
4928 | Have I not cause for pride? |
4928 | Have they a foundation in truth or are they simply dreams of the imagination?" |
4928 | Have you learned to feel easy in the absence of Halcyone? |
4928 | Have you not learned enough of Grecian fraud to be on your guard against it? |
4928 | He said to his mother,"Mother, what are those yonder?" |
4928 | He saw her hair flung loose over her shoulders, and said,"If so charming in disorder, what would it be if arranged?" |
4928 | He talked with the supposed spirit:"Why, beautiful being, do you shun me? |
4928 | He was loath to give his mistress to his wife; yet how refuse so trifling a present as a simple heifer? |
4928 | He, starting from his sleep, cried out,"My daughters, what are you doing? |
4928 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
4928 | His father cried,"Icarus, Icarus, where are you?" |
4928 | How can we describe the conflict that agitated the heart of Tristram? |
4928 | How could he suspect that falsehood and treason veiled themselves under smiles and the ingenuous air of truth? |
4928 | How could you fly from a single arm and think to escape?" |
4928 | How fares it with thee, Thor?" |
4928 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
4928 | I am a poor man, have you not something to give me?" |
4928 | I only wished I might have died With my poor father; wherefore should I ask For longer life? |
4928 | I think we shall be conquered; and if that must be the end of it, why should not love unbar the gates to him, instead of leaving it to be done by war? |
4928 | I value not life compared with honor, and if I did, do you suppose, dear friend, that I could live without you? |
4928 | If you can not defend them against me, how pray will you do so when Orlando challenges them?" |
4928 | Is it for this that I have supplied herbage for cattle, and fruits for men, and frankincense for your altars? |
4928 | Is it of those who are to conduct Geraint to his country?" |
4928 | Is it treachery to punish affronts like these? |
4928 | Is it well for thee to mourn after that good man, or for anything else that thou canst not have?" |
4928 | Is this the reward of my fertility, of my obedient service? |
4928 | Journeying on from break of day, Feel you not fatigued, my fair?" |
4928 | Just then came along some country people, who said to one another,"Look, is not that the great horse Bayard that Rinaldo rides? |
4928 | Leaning over the bed, tears streaming from his eyes, he said,"Do you recognize your Ceyx, unhappy wife, or has death too much changed my visage? |
4928 | Men asked,"Why does not one of his parents do it? |
4928 | My lord,"he added,"will it be displeasing to thee if I ask whence thou comest also?" |
4928 | Next follow some moral triads:"Hast thou heard what Dremhidydd sung, An ancient watchman on the castle walls? |
4928 | Nisus said to his friend,"Do you perceive what confidence and carelessness the enemy display? |
4928 | One day the youth, being separated from his companions, shouted aloud,"Who''s here?" |
4928 | Or have you rather come to see your sick husband, yet laid up of the wound given him by his loving wife? |
4928 | Out upon the wharfs they came, Knight and burgher, lord and dame, And round the prow they read her name,''The Lady of Shalott''"Who is this? |
4928 | Rinaldo replied,"Are you making sport of me? |
4928 | Rogero exclaimed as he came near,"What cruel hands, what barbarous soul, what fatal chance can have loaded thee with those chains?" |
4928 | Sadly needing help, how could he yet venture, naked as he was, to discover himself and make his wants known? |
4928 | Said Gurhyr Gwalstat,"Is there a porter?" |
4928 | Said Gurhyr,"Who is it that laments in this house of stone?" |
4928 | Said Yspadaden Penkawr,"Is it thou that seekest my daughter?" |
4928 | Say, knowest thou aught of Mabon, the son of Modron, who was taken from his mother when three nights old?" |
4928 | Seeing the prince Orlando, one said to the rest,"What bird is this we have caught, without even setting a snare for him?" |
4928 | Shaking her ambrosial locks with indignation, she exclaimed,"Am I then to be eclipsed in my honors by a mortal girl? |
4928 | Shall I for the horse''s life provoke the anger of the king again?" |
4928 | Shall I trust Aeneas to the chances of the weather and the winds?" |
4928 | Shall OEneus rejoice in his victor son, while the house of Thestius is desolate? |
4928 | Shall we be told that answers to such queries may be found in notes, or by a reference to the Classical Dictionary? |
4928 | Skirnir having reported the success of his errand, Frey exclaimed:"Long is one night, Long are two nights, But how shall I hold out three? |
4928 | Skrymir, awakening, cried out,"What''s the matter? |
4928 | So desperate was he that he took off his armor and his spurs, saying,"What need have I of these, since Bayard is lost?" |
4928 | So the porter went in, and Gwernach said to him,"Hast thou news from the gate?" |
4928 | Spoke the youth:"Is there a porter?" |
4928 | Stretching out her trembling hands towards it, she exclaims,"O dearest husband, is it thus you return to me?" |
4928 | Struck with the ingratitude which could thus recompense his services, he exclaimed:"Thankless beauty, is this then the reward you make me? |
4928 | Suppose I should lend you the chariot, what would you do? |
4928 | The Sphinx asked him,"What animal is that which in the morning gees on four feet, at noon on two, and in the evening upon three?" |
4928 | The Trojans heard with joy and immediately began to ask one another,"Where is the spot intended by the oracle?" |
4928 | The dwarf, approaching Huon, said, in a sweet voice, and in Huon''s own language,"Duke of Guienne, why do you shun me? |
4928 | The king said to Malagigi,"Friend, where did you get that beautiful cup?" |
4928 | The old man took the spurs, and put them into his sack, and said,"Noble sir, have you nothing else you can give me?" |
4928 | The parents consent( how could they hesitate?) |
4928 | The traitor smiled at seeing her thus suspended, and, asking her in mockery,"Are you a good leaper?" |
4928 | The voice said,''Why do you fly, Arethusa? |
4928 | Then Guenever said to Arthur,"Wilt thou permit me, lord, to go to- morrow to see and hear the hunt of the stag of which the young man spoke?" |
4928 | Then Sir Tristram cried out and said,"Thou coward knight, why wilt thou not do battle with me? |
4928 | Then a third time he said to Rinaldo,"Sir, have you nothing left to give me that I may remember you in my prayers?" |
4928 | Then at noon came a damsel unto him with his dinner, and asked him,"What cheer?" |
4928 | Then cried Sir Colgrevance,"Ah, Sir Bohort, why come ye not to bring me out of peril of death, wherein I have put me to succor you?" |
4928 | Then he asked of Geraint,"Have I thy permission to go and converse with yonder maiden, for I see that she is apart from thee?" |
4928 | Then he cried:"Ah, my lord Arthur, will ye leave me here alone among mine enemies?" |
4928 | Then he overtook a man clothed in a religious clothing, who said,"Sir Knight, what seek ye?" |
4928 | Then he said to the other,"And what is the cause of thy grief?" |
4928 | Then said Arthur,"Which of the marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4928 | Then said Perceval,"Tell me, is Sir Kay in Arthur''s court?" |
4928 | Then said the good man,"Now wottest thou who I am?" |
4928 | Then said the steward of the household,"Whither is it right, lord, to order the maiden?" |
4928 | Then the hoary- headed man said to him,"Young man, wherefore art thou thoughtful?" |
4928 | Then they took counsel, and said,"Which of these marvels will it be best for us to seek next?" |
4928 | They can not in the course of nature live much longer, and who can feel like them the call to rescue the life they gave from an untimely end?" |
4928 | Think not to avoid it by shutting your eyes, for how then will you be able to avoid his blows, and make him feel your own? |
4928 | Thinks he by flight to escape us? |
4928 | This is alluded to by Byron, where, addressing the modern Greeks, he says:"You have the letters Cadmus gave, Think you he meant them for a slave?" |
4928 | To what new miseries do you doom me? |
4928 | To which question the river- god replied as follows:"Who likes to tell of his defeats? |
4928 | To whom do these ships belong, and who is the chief amongst you?" |
4928 | Tristram believed it was certain death for him to return to Ireland; and how could he act as ambassador for his uncle in such a cause? |
4928 | Was it not clear that Providence led him on, and cleared the way for his happy success? |
4928 | Were you ever in love? |
4928 | What advantage have you derived from all your high deserts? |
4928 | What could Jupiter do? |
4928 | What evil have I done to thee that thou shouldst act towards me and my possessions as thou hast this day? |
4928 | What has become of them?" |
4928 | What have I done that you should treat me so? |
4928 | What have the cranes to do with him?" |
4928 | What is the good of a gentleman''s poring all day over a book? |
4928 | What is this fighting about? |
4928 | What shall he do? |
4928 | What shall he do?--go home to seek the palace, or lie hid in the woods? |
4928 | What should he do? |
4928 | When Enid saw this, she cried out, saying,"O chieftain, whoever thou art, what renown wilt thou gain by slaying a dead man?" |
4928 | When wilt thou that I should present to thee the chieftain who has come with me hither?" |
4928 | Where are my attendants? |
4928 | Where are you going to carry me?'' |
4928 | Where could we go to escape from Periander, if he should know that you had been robbed by us? |
4928 | Where is that love of me that used to be uppermost in your thoughts? |
4928 | While they hesitate, Laocoon, the priest of Neptune exclaims,"What madness, citizens, is this? |
4928 | Who brought me here? |
4928 | Who could have believed that you would become the slave of a base enchantress? |
4928 | Who had fairer or swifter horses or greyhounds? |
4928 | Who had more skilful or wiser bards than Maelgan? |
4928 | Who lived when thou wast such? |
4928 | Why do you hang round my neck and still entreat me? |
4928 | Why hast thou murdered this Duchess? |
4928 | Why have you thought evil of me? |
4928 | Why hidest thou thyself within holes and walls like a coward? |
4928 | Why should Latona be honored with worship, and none be paid to me? |
4928 | Why should any one hereafter tremble at the thought of offending Juno, when such rewards are the consequence of my displeasure? |
4928 | Why should he alone escape? |
4928 | Why tarry the horses of Rinaldo and Ricciardetto? |
4928 | Why will you not take a lesson from the tree and the vine, and consent to unite yourself with some one? |
4928 | Why, therefore, should either of us perish? |
4928 | Will any one deny this? |
4928 | Will you insure me this, as ye be a true knight?" |
4928 | Will you kill your father?" |
4928 | Will you now turn back, now you are so far advanced upon your journey? |
4928 | Will you prefer to me this Latona, the Titan''s daughter, with her two children? |
4928 | Wilt thou shame thyself? |
4928 | Would you rather have me away?" |
4928 | Yet can ye relieve my grief? |
4928 | Yet what could be done against foes without number? |
4928 | Yet where is your triumph? |
4928 | You surround him, and who receives tribute then?" |
4928 | a chiding voice was heard of one approaching me and saying:''O knight, what has brought thee hither? |
4928 | and what is here? |
4928 | asked the king,"and will he come to the land?" |
4928 | could not verse immortal save That breast imbued with such immortal fire? |
4928 | couldst thou so one moment be, From her who so much loveth thee?" |
4928 | darest thou maintain in arms the lie thou hast uttered?" |
4928 | did he say?" |
4928 | dost thou reproach Arthur? |
4928 | exclaimed Bradamante,"what can be the cause of this sudden alarm?" |
4928 | exclaimed Rinaldo,"do you make me your sport?" |
4928 | exclaimed he,"how could I, dear Medoro, so forget myself as to consult my own safety without heeding yours?" |
4928 | hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts?" |
4928 | haughty their array, Yet of their number no one dares to die?" |
4928 | have you any wish ungratified? |
4928 | he exclaimed,"do you dare to insult me at my own table? |
4928 | he exclaimed,"was there ever such a resemblance? |
4928 | he said;"have you any doubt of my love? |
4928 | how can you foresee his fate when you could not foresee your own? |
4928 | inquired Malagigi;"and what is to come of it?" |
4928 | master, how can I do that? |
4928 | my dear nephew,"exclaimed the Holy Father,"what harder penance could I impose than the Emperor has already done? |
4928 | said Aeneas,"is it possible that any can be so in love with life as to wish to leave these tranquil seats for the upper world?" |
4928 | said Arthur,"what hast thou done, Merlin? |
4928 | said Arthur;"and whence do you come?" |
4928 | said Geraint,"how is it that thou hast lost them now?" |
4928 | said Geraint;"and whence dost thou come?" |
4928 | said Rhiannon,"wherefore didst thou give that answer?" |
4928 | said Sir Launcelot,"why have ye betrayed me?" |
4928 | said Sir Tristram,"what have I done? |
4928 | said Sir Tristram;"art thou not Sir Palamedes?" |
4928 | said he,"is it Geraint?" |
4928 | said he;"have you any news?" |
4928 | said the Abbot of Cluny;"slaughter a Saracen prince without first offering him baptism?" |
4928 | said the pilgrim;"is Bayard there?" |
4928 | said they;"what is the mountain that is seen by the side of the ships?" |
4928 | she cried;"whither do you fly? |
4928 | the cause? |
4928 | through a marble wilderness? |
4928 | to what deed am I borne along? |
4928 | to whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise; What was thy pity''s recompense? |
4928 | was then the rumor true that you had perished? |
4928 | was this the end to which old quarrels were made up?" |
4928 | what availed it you to possess so many virtues and such fame? |
4928 | what will he profit thee?" |
4928 | who hath proven him King Uther''s son? |
4928 | why hast thou slain my husband?" |
4928 | why should I fear his rage? |
12900 | ''Would you like an old gentleman of seventy- two?'' 12900 A feast in honor of the return of the prodigal father?" |
12900 | A girl well known to you? |
12900 | A green monkey? |
12900 | A home off your own? |
12900 | A lawyer? |
12900 | A service of plate? |
12900 | A sheet will be wanted to lay him out.--Where is there a sheet? |
12900 | Ah, my dear Pons, how comes it that we never see you now? 12900 All sorts of horrors?" |
12900 | Am I not worthy of respect then, heh? |
12900 | Am I trembling? |
12900 | Am I your legal adviser or am I not, I say? 12900 Amusing? |
12900 | And I hear she has come round my Crevel, and little Steinbock, and a gorgeous Brazilian? |
12900 | And I played my part very badly, did I not? |
12900 | And Lisbeth? |
12900 | And a sculptor? |
12900 | And about my lover? |
12900 | And are you very fond of Monsieur Vyder? |
12900 | And can you read and write? |
12900 | And did she say anything else? |
12900 | And do you suppose, you great baby of a Machiavelli, that I will cast off Henri? 12900 And do you think that she loves him?" |
12900 | And ears? |
12900 | And for my part, I give you back the promise you made me when you gave me the hand of my dear Celestine--"What promise? |
12900 | And for whom are you so magnanimous? |
12900 | And has Heaven kept its word? |
12900 | And have I not always told you,said Lisbeth,"that women like a burly profligate like you?" |
12900 | And he came to Paris when the rebellion was quelled? |
12900 | And he is in love with you? |
12900 | And his Christian name-- is it a pretty name? |
12900 | And how about my business? |
12900 | And how can you tell that this is by Wat-- what do you call him? |
12900 | And how could you do it? |
12900 | And how do you know the Frankenthal ware when you see it? |
12900 | And how have I cheated you? |
12900 | And how is M. Pons going on, good man? |
12900 | And how may that be? |
12900 | And how much does he want for it? |
12900 | And how? 12900 And how?" |
12900 | And if he is to have the twelve hundred francs, what am I to get? 12900 And if you who had the honor of being intimate with Camille Maupin can pronounce such a verdict,"replied Stidmann,"what are we to think?" |
12900 | And if your brother were to die, who would maintain your wife and daughter? 12900 And is it you?" |
12900 | And is that desire the reason why you no longer visit Madame Hulot? |
12900 | And is there a good dinner to- day? |
12900 | And is this the way you take yourself off? |
12900 | And is your lady pretty at any rate? |
12900 | And it will go on----? |
12900 | And meantime what is the justice of the peace doing here with his wax candles and his bits of tape? |
12900 | And monstrously droll? 12900 And now for the next thing.--What about Coquet''s place?" |
12900 | And on what, in such a place, could you spend so much? |
12900 | And small hands? |
12900 | And so he counts on that of Mademoiselle Hortense Hulot? |
12900 | And so, thanks to you, mademoiselle, the Baron has wanted nothing? |
12900 | And that is? |
12900 | And the cause of such a disease? |
12900 | And the disease is inevitably fatal? |
12900 | And the flowers fresh? |
12900 | And the furniture? |
12900 | And the police agents, and the judges, and the assizes, and all the set- out? |
12900 | And the tea? |
12900 | And to whom? |
12900 | And upon what grounds? |
12900 | And was_ I_ in charge of the pictures? |
12900 | And what am I to do in Algiers? |
12900 | And what are you to get for such a job? |
12900 | And what did Wenceslas think of her? |
12900 | And what do you think of sculpture? |
12900 | And what do you want to do? |
12900 | And what does he live on? |
12900 | And what is Wenceslas doing now? |
12900 | And what is the cause of this deep- seated evil? |
12900 | And what is the use of talking? |
12900 | And what is wrong with her? |
12900 | And where did you get all this splendor? |
12900 | And where did you get this gangrene? |
12900 | And where is he now? |
12900 | And who slandered me so? |
12900 | And why did n''t she marry him when she owed her fortune to him? |
12900 | And why did you hide it? |
12900 | And why has she deserted us for that stupid creature? |
12900 | And why not? |
12900 | And why, madame? |
12900 | And why? |
12900 | And why? |
12900 | And would you have said as much, monsieur,asked Madame Hulot, looking Crevel steadily in the face,"if I had been false to my duty?" |
12900 | And yesterday? |
12900 | And yet you say you love me? |
12900 | And you are going just as you are to M. Pons''funeral? 12900 And you have few pleasures?" |
12900 | And you have walked from the Rue des Tournelles? |
12900 | And you will keep my secret? |
12900 | And you? |
12900 | And your name? |
12900 | And_ her_ cousin? |
12900 | Are the rooms done? |
12900 | Are you alone? 12900 Are you his heir?" |
12900 | Are you on the lookout to better yourself somewhere else? |
12900 | Are you rich? |
12900 | Are you speaking of Valerie? |
12900 | Are you talking Greek? |
12900 | Are you then truly in love? |
12900 | Are you tired? |
12900 | Are you villing to take me for ein poarder? 12900 Be honest, my Wenceslas; Stidmann was there, Claude Vignon, Vernisset.--Who else? |
12900 | Bet? |
12900 | Bless me, do you think it is all a fable? 12900 But Josepha?" |
12900 | But as to throwing two hundred thousand francs into a holy- water shell, or lending them to a bigot-- cast off by her husband, and who knows why? 12900 But did you not know that it was very wicked to run away from your father and mother to go to live with an old man?" |
12900 | But do you know what Monsieur le Maire''s answer was? |
12900 | But he is not a Pole; he comes from Liva-- Litha----"Lithuania? |
12900 | But he sees her every day; will he try to find her a husband among his good- for- nothing sluts? |
12900 | But how about the great fortune that you spoke of? |
12900 | But how did you steal away my lover? |
12900 | But how? |
12900 | But if I die before I am rich? |
12900 | But if a great artist could find a demand? |
12900 | But if you have a lover, why do n''t you marry him, Lisbeth? |
12900 | But if you knew about the affair, why did you let me chatter away like a magpie? |
12900 | But if you should lose your place? |
12900 | But is it possible, Ma''am Fontaine? |
12900 | But is it the last? |
12900 | But mit vat kann you rebroach him? |
12900 | But she would still be cheating us; for, my burly friend, what do you say to this Brazilian? |
12900 | But to give you a gem which cost him six months of work, he must be under some great obligations to you? |
12900 | But what about my_ rentes_, what am I to do to get them, and--"And feel no remorse? |
12900 | But what ails you? 12900 But what are Lisbeth''s two thousand francs? |
12900 | But what has that unhappy Hulot done? |
12900 | But what is his name? |
12900 | But what is there about the man-- that old bulldog of a Baron? |
12900 | But when? |
12900 | But where is the use of the seals if M. Schmucke is in his own house and everything belongs to him? |
12900 | But who is die prite? |
12900 | But who is he? 12900 But why did you go?" |
12900 | But why should you? 12900 But why, if you love me, do you not leave everything for my sake?" |
12900 | But you must eat-- and who is to cook for you now? |
12900 | But you will marry, all the same? |
12900 | But you will tell me, old wretch? |
12900 | But your wife loves you, I imagine? 12900 But, after all, Roger, what is it that is wrong? |
12900 | But, cousin, has anything happened since the last time that I had the pleasure of dining here? 12900 But, mein friend, your Montame Dobinard is ver''nice; you shall marry her, is it not so? |
12900 | But, my good man, how come you to be out in the street without a roof over your head or a penny in your pocket, when you are the sole heir? 12900 By your life eternal?" |
12900 | Can a man with a nose like that,she went on,"have any secrets from his_ Vava-- lele-- ririe_?" |
12900 | Can a mother sit still and see her child pine away before her eyes? 12900 Can despair possess virtue?" |
12900 | Can the application be withdrawn? |
12900 | Can they be seen? |
12900 | Can we be alone? |
12900 | Can you doubt it, mademoiselle? |
12900 | Can you forgive, my dearly- beloved Adeline? |
12900 | Can you hinder the marriage? |
12900 | Come, now, my old friend, what is it? 12900 Come, what is it, Adeline?" |
12900 | Could you send for the girl to come here? |
12900 | Cousin Betty, I will be as mute!----"As a fish? |
12900 | Cousin Betty,he said in her ear,"have you heard the news? |
12900 | Dat used to komm to see du blav und sit peside you in der orghestra? |
12900 | Dey summoned us to der court--"_ Summoned?_. 12900 Diamonds?" |
12900 | Did I not hear you talking to Lisbeth of that Brazilian, Baron Montes? |
12900 | Did Madame Marneffe ever speak to you of this cousin of hers? |
12900 | Did n''t I tell you so? |
12900 | Did no one ever tell you what was right or wrong? |
12900 | Did you mention that it was the day when we all dine together here? |
12900 | Did you not come here, sir, to ask for my granddaughter? |
12900 | Did you see him go? |
12900 | Did your parents ever take you to church? 12900 Do I know him?" |
12900 | Do n''t you know that God has Paradise in store for those who obey the injunctions of His Church? |
12900 | Do you feel equal to undertaking a statue nine feet high? |
12900 | Do you feel sure that M. Leboeuf will give M. de Marville and M. le Comte Popinot a good account of you? |
12900 | Do you find a positive drawback in an immense advantage? 12900 Do you know English?" |
12900 | Do you know Monsieur Samanon? |
12900 | Do you know that you are turning the universal legatee out of doors, and as yet his right has not been called in question? |
12900 | Do you know the persons concerned? |
12900 | Do you know the purpose of my visit? |
12900 | Do you know what the collection is worth? |
12900 | Do you know what the_ grand jeu_ means? |
12900 | Do you know, madame, how Master Hulot and I first made acquaintance? 12900 Do you not know about our adventure with that Brunner, who had the audacity to aspire to marry Cecile? |
12900 | Do you not know what it is to love a woman that will do anything for her lover? 12900 Do you really believe that?" |
12900 | Do you really think that these things that we have just seen are worth a great deal of money? |
12900 | Do you see that little wretch? |
12900 | Do you suppose I could buy such a thing, or order it? 12900 Do you think he will get over it?" |
12900 | Do you think so? 12900 Do you think that a daughter''s duty is less binding than a doctor''s?" |
12900 | Do you think that you will frighten me with your sour looks and your frosty airs? 12900 Do you understand?" |
12900 | Do you want to be flirting? 12900 Do you want to rid me of him?" |
12900 | Does a man ever pull up on the road he has taken? 12900 Does heat disagree with you?" |
12900 | Does that face look as if it belonged to a happy man? 12900 Does your conscience tell you nothing?" |
12900 | Fifty, did I shay? 12900 Fine eyes is the truth,"said the Baron;"you have as fine eyes as I have ever seen----""Come, what are you here for? |
12900 | Fond of him? |
12900 | For his pleasure what would he not do? |
12900 | For how much? |
12900 | For what jeweler? |
12900 | For whom are you making this pretty thing? |
12900 | For you have swallowed not a few bitter pills!--in these three years-- hey, my beauty? |
12900 | Go at once, and take comfort to your family.--By the way,added the Prince, as he shook hands with Victorin,"your father has disappeared?" |
12900 | Go on, go on,said Schmucke;"I shall pe allowed to die in beace, I bresume?" |
12900 | Gone? 12900 Good- day, cousin; so now you are to be called Thorec, I suppose? |
12900 | Had you some violent shock a couple of days ago? |
12900 | Has Josepha thrown him over, packed him off, turned him out neck and crop? 12900 Has M. Schmucke ordered something? |
12900 | Has he a moustache? |
12900 | Has nobody been to speak to you about M. Pons and his gimcracks? |
12900 | Have I dipped my hands into a cash box intrusted to my care? |
12900 | Have you Vitel''s resignation? |
12900 | Have you any message, madame, for M. Leboeuf? 12900 Have you been speaking, my dear?" |
12900 | Have you come to dinner? |
12900 | Have you done anything? |
12900 | Have you forgotten me? |
12900 | Have you not had a good genius to keep an eye on you? |
12900 | Have you nothing on your conscience but the fact that you were concerned for both parties? |
12900 | Have you the papers that prove your identity? |
12900 | He famous? |
12900 | He has delicate health? |
12900 | He is a sort of Pole-- a refugee----"A conspirator? |
12900 | He is going to make a statue, my dear, did you say? |
12900 | He must be uncommonly fond of the woman? |
12900 | He robbed the State, he will rob private persons, commit murder-- who knows? |
12900 | Hector knew it? |
12900 | Heir? 12900 Here is the portress of the house where the gentleman lives; she does for him, and I have arranged with her--""Who is the owner?" |
12900 | His name? |
12900 | How about her walk in the Tuileries? |
12900 | How are you getting on? |
12900 | How are you, my good fellow? |
12900 | How can we make them love us? |
12900 | How can you expect God to protect you if you trample every law, human and divine, under foot? |
12900 | How can you load a poor girl, a pretty, innocent creature, with such a weight of enmity? 12900 How could one find out how much the things yonder in my gentlemen''s rooms are worth?" |
12900 | How did he come to your house? |
12900 | How do these women do it? |
12900 | How do they manage it? 12900 How do you know all this when I have heard nothing about it?" |
12900 | How does the gentleman wish''it''to be made? 12900 How far have they got?" |
12900 | How is she any better than I am? |
12900 | How long will it take you? |
12900 | How much have you had? |
12900 | How much to I owe you for this little trifle? |
12900 | How much to you want of me? |
12900 | How shall we get them? |
12900 | How should I not love you? |
12900 | How the devil do you manage it? 12900 How?" |
12900 | I am going to be married--"How? |
12900 | I am in your way, my dears? |
12900 | I am quite disposed, Madame-- Madame----? |
12900 | I am very willing,said the bewildered Baron,"but can I take the girl?" |
12900 | I do n''t love you, Valerie? |
12900 | I know Gerard and David and Gros and Griodet, and M. de Forbin and M. Turpin de Crisse--"You ought--"Ought what, sir? |
12900 | I know all those sharpers,continued Pons,"so I asked him,''Anything fresh to- day, Daddy Monistrol?'' |
12900 | I say, Marneffe, what would you say to being a second time a father? |
12900 | I say, Valerie-- is it the fact? |
12900 | I shall only worry him more.--I will wait.--Are you going to be at home this evening? |
12900 | I told the fellow Vauvinet to call on me to- morrow,replied Victorin,"but will he be satisfied by my guarantee on a mortgage? |
12900 | I was a pretty fool not to listen to Lisbeth--"What did she say? |
12900 | I will now pay a debt of gratitude that I owe you for my appointment to the mairie--"We go shares? |
12900 | I will tell you everything----"What, is there more to come? |
12900 | I, monsieur? |
12900 | I? 12900 I?" |
12900 | If he were of noble birth? |
12900 | Impossible, my dear Hector? |
12900 | In short, one can trust him, child, eh? |
12900 | In what way? |
12900 | In what? |
12900 | Indeed, monsieur? |
12900 | Indeed; how? |
12900 | Instead of thinking over your ideas you must work.--Now, what have you done while I was out? |
12900 | Is M. Pons really seriously ill, sir? |
12900 | Is Marneffe, the head- clerk, out there? |
12900 | Is Wenceslas gone out already? |
12900 | Is Wenceslas in the studio? |
12900 | Is he a foreigner? |
12900 | Is he a prince? |
12900 | Is it possible that M. Pons has such a fortune, living as he does? 12900 Is it possible? |
12900 | Is my brother coming to dinner? |
12900 | Is n''t she clever? |
12900 | Is n''t this really fine? |
12900 | Is she alone? |
12900 | Is she bad to you, then? |
12900 | Is that a face to bring in to your little Duchess? 12900 Is that what you have to say?" |
12900 | Is the matter to take its course? 12900 Is the will sealed?" |
12900 | Is there any hereditary lunacy in the family? |
12900 | Is there anything that I can do for them? |
12900 | Is this creature obstinate, I ask you? 12900 Is this gentleman the son, brother, or father of the deceased?" |
12900 | Is this the way you receive me when I come like a Pope with my hands full of Indulgences? 12900 Is true love to be found in Paris?" |
12900 | Is your lover in it too? |
12900 | It is a criminal offence if you carry off a will and suppress it, but it is only a misdemeanor to look at it; and anyhow, what does it amount to? 12900 It is beautiful, is n''t it, mamma?" |
12900 | It is dry then on the boulevards and the Place de la Concorde and the Rue de Bourgogne? 12900 Josepha?" |
12900 | Kann you pe chealous of him? |
12900 | Lisbeth is not in a fit state to admit you.--Are you afraid of catching cold in the street? 12900 Lisbeth,"said he,"they will not tell me what state my wife is in; you have just seen her-- how is she?" |
12900 | Lisbeth? |
12900 | Listen, dear little father; would you forbid my marrying a great artist? |
12900 | Listen,said Hulot;"can you put me up for a few days in a servant''s room under the roof? |
12900 | Living in the Rue Barbet- de- Jouy? |
12900 | Livonia? |
12900 | Look at madame; she is legally married--"Will it make it more amusing? |
12900 | Look here, vat tid de toctor say? |
12900 | Look here; can you stand six hundred thousand francs which this house and furniture cost? 12900 M. Poulain,"she began,"how can you refuse to say a word or two to save me from want, when you helped me in the affair of my accident?" |
12900 | Madame Olivier? |
12900 | Madame is not at home? |
12900 | Madame, papa wanted to make me do something of the kind you speak of, but mamma would not have it--"Your mother? |
12900 | Madame,said he,"we intend to try a powerful remedy which may save you--""And if you save my life,"said she,"shall I be as good- looking as ever?" |
12900 | Mademoiselle Fischer living with a young man? |
12900 | Mariette, my child,said Lisbeth to the woman who opened the door,"how is my dear Adeline to- day?" |
12900 | Marneffe, like all dying wretches, who always take up some last whim, has a revived passion for me----"That cur? |
12900 | Men have not even time to make a fortune; how can they give themselves over to true love, which swamps a man as water melts sugar? 12900 Mennseir,"Schmucke began diplomatically,"mine friend Bons is chust recofering from an illness; you haf no doubt fail to rekognize him?" |
12900 | Mine goot Bons? |
12900 | Mitouflet, how is the Prince? |
12900 | Monsieur Crevel? 12900 Monsieur le Comte, do you love my daughter as well as I loved her mother?" |
12900 | Monsieur,said Victorin to Bianchon,"have you any hope of saving Monsieur and Madame Crevel?" |
12900 | Murder? |
12900 | Must I place her in a convent? |
12900 | My brother? |
12900 | My dear child,said she, for they called each my dear,"why have you never introduced your lover to me? |
12900 | My dearest Valerie,said he,"do you not see how miserable I am? |
12900 | My good M. Schmucke, let us suppose that you pay me nothing; you will want three thousand francs, and where are they to come from? 12900 My name is Grasset, sir, successor to Louchard, sheriff''s officer----""What then?" |
12900 | No, I am ein boor man, dot lof his friend and vould gif his life to save him--"But the money? |
12900 | No, by your happiness in this world? |
12900 | No, my child; but why do you ask? |
12900 | Not so many words, my good woman,said Hulot,"but deeds----""What can I do, sir?" |
12900 | Now then,said the Baroness to her daughter,"what does all this mean?" |
12900 | Now, can anything be more absurd than explanations? |
12900 | Now, do you understand my claim? 12900 Now, my dear little Cousin Betty,"said Madame Marneffe, in an insinuating voice,"are you capable of devoted friendship, put to any test? |
12900 | Of what? |
12900 | Oh, I say, are_ you_ going to worry me? |
12900 | Oh, Monsieur Crevel, if you would indeed be my friend and give up your ridiculous notions----"Ridiculous? 12900 Oh, come, what is the matter now?" |
12900 | Oh, do you think so? |
12900 | Oh, happy? 12900 Oh, he gives lessons?" |
12900 | Oh, what can I do for you? 12900 Old folk are sensitive,"replied the worthy musician;"they make the mistake of being a century behind the times, but how can it be helped? |
12900 | On the contrary, sir, it is because I have the honor to remember you that I ask you, Where are you going? |
12900 | One word, my little duck? |
12900 | Onkel? |
12900 | Or had some one to back him? |
12900 | Ought any great artist to marry? 12900 Ought the beautiful Madame Hulot to be living amid such squalor?" |
12900 | Pons is a bachelor,said they;"he is at a loss to know what to do with his time; he is only too glad to trot about for us.--What else would he do?" |
12900 | Poor little man? |
12900 | Pray, why? |
12900 | Really and truly? |
12900 | Really and truly? |
12900 | Really, eh? |
12900 | Really? |
12900 | Really? |
12900 | Seventy- two? |
12900 | Several? 12900 Shall he speak to me?" |
12900 | She has been so every minute of every day for six- and- twenty years; but I am not like her, it is not my nature.--How can I help it? 12900 She ought not to be ungrateful, for she owes her beauty to you,"replied Josepha;"but why did she not come to see me? |
12900 | Shpout? |
12900 | So I have been telling you very dreadful things, have I? |
12900 | So it amuses you? |
12900 | So my next- of- kin have sent you to me, have they? |
12900 | So that is how you take it? 12900 So that,"said she, standing face to face with the Baron, and pointing to Cydalise--"that is the other side of your fidelity? |
12900 | So this was your secret? |
12900 | So you have no mind to be cashier at the theatre? 12900 So you have thought things over?" |
12900 | So, my copper- colored Baron, it is our Valerie that you love; and you are not disgusted? |
12900 | So-- it was at-- at Madame Marneffe''s that you dined-- and not-- not with Chanor? |
12900 | Speak low.--What is it? |
12900 | Suppose that she does not care for you? |
12900 | Tell me, madame, is a man of fifty- two likely to find such another jewel? 12900 Tell me, my little Betty, do you not despise me?" |
12900 | That needs some consideration.--Cydalise, child, are you fond of the blacks? |
12900 | That will be enough, I suppose, to take you to Africa? |
12900 | The day when I was robbed of Josepha I was like a tigress robbed of her cubs; in short, as you see me now.--Your daughter? 12900 The responsibility rests with you,"the Presidente answered solemnly,"so you ought to have full powers.--But is M. Pons very ill?" |
12900 | The unexpressed factor is part of my revenge; what can I do? 12900 Then Cousin Pons is learned?" |
12900 | Then I am to forgive you? |
12900 | Then I am to sacrifice myself for you? |
12900 | Then I will take this girl and carry her away--"Where? |
12900 | Then between two old daddies, such friends as-- as we were, what more natural than that we should think of our children marrying each other? 12900 Then did you live with him?" |
12900 | Then he means to make his will in favor of this Schmucke? |
12900 | Then he ought to be chief mourner,said the master of the ceremonies.--"Have you a black coat?" |
12900 | Then it was Monsieur le Prefet--? |
12900 | Then it was she who told you about the candle in the window? |
12900 | Then it will not be easy to marry her? |
12900 | Then the banns are cried? |
12900 | Then the people of whom you buy things of this kind are very stupid, are they? |
12900 | Then what do you call happiness? |
12900 | Then what is the matter with my poor Cibot? |
12900 | Then you have four hundred thousand francs? |
12900 | Then you mean that you really have a lover? |
12900 | Then you never saw a church? 12900 Then you see no obstacle?" |
12900 | Then you will not oppose my marrying your brother? |
12900 | Then you will stay, will you not? 12900 Then, do you tell me, that if I leave you to act, and put my interests in your hands, I shall get something without fear?" |
12900 | Then, sir, you meant to lend that old horror the two hundred thousand francs due for my hotel? 12900 Then, what did he say?" |
12900 | Then, where did you find this? |
12900 | Then, where-- where is----? |
12900 | There is a husband he has pushed----"Where did he push him? |
12900 | There, there, old lady,said Fraisier, with odious familiarity,"you will go a very long way!--""You take me for a thief, I suppose?" |
12900 | These gentlemen must draw up their report as eyewitnesses to the fact; without that, the chief evidence in my case, where should I be? 12900 They have raised the price of the house?" |
12900 | This, perhaps, is the first money your works have brought you? |
12900 | To be exact, thirteen hundred; you will lend me the odd hundred? |
12900 | To be sure, what is he doing? |
12900 | To chustify it? |
12900 | To see what a man can be like who can love the Nanny Goat? |
12900 | To what account shall I post this item? |
12900 | Too shtrong? |
12900 | Torments? |
12900 | Twelve hundred francs? |
12900 | Two hundred thousand francs? 12900 Und how vill you dat I go?" |
12900 | Und vy? |
12900 | Valerie, do you love me? |
12900 | Valerie, where are you off to? |
12900 | Vat ees it now? |
12900 | Vat is de matter mit you, mein goot friend? |
12900 | Vat is it, mine boor friend? |
12900 | Vere? |
12900 | Very well, my sonny--"Zonny? |
12900 | Very well; and you? |
12900 | Vice under arms to meet virtue!--Poor woman, what can she want of me? 12900 Was n''t it a shame that she did not marry him after he had gained two thousand francs a year for her?" |
12900 | Water out of the pools, I suppose? |
12900 | We have not had the pleasure of seeing you at dinner lately; how is it? |
12900 | We will leave Paris and go----"Where? |
12900 | Well and good, you will let me alone, wo n''t you? |
12900 | Well, and how is the dear fellow? |
12900 | Well, and what did the young people say about me? |
12900 | Well, and what then? |
12900 | Well, but then you were really in love with this young man? |
12900 | Well, child, am I to go to your house? 12900 Well, child, what can bring you here so early of a morning?" |
12900 | Well, child,she said, in a totally different voice,"are you satisfied?" |
12900 | Well, could we hoodwink you, you, one of the shining lights of the law? |
12900 | Well, cousin, and how is the Inferno of the Rue Barbet going on? |
12900 | Well, dear M. Schmucke, and how is our dear, adored patient? |
12900 | Well, is that her writing? |
12900 | Well, madame, where are these gentlemen? |
12900 | Well, my child,said he, kissing her forehead,"so there are troubles at home, and you have been hasty and headstrong? |
12900 | Well, my dear M. Fraisier, what is to be done? |
12900 | Well, my dear lady,said he,"how are we getting on?" |
12900 | Well, my dear monsieur,asked she,"how are you feeling?" |
12900 | Well, neighbor, and how are things going on upstairs? |
12900 | Well, old boy, so we are not very well? 12900 Well, shall I find a pigeon- hole for you? |
12900 | Well, sir, did M. Pons remember me? |
12900 | Well, suppose then I go up to Lisbeth''s rooms? |
12900 | Well, then, my child, why should not Daddy Vyder be your husband? |
12900 | Well, then, you promise me? |
12900 | Well, then,said Madame Marneffe, with a breath of relief,"if you only love him in that way, you will be very happy-- for you wish him to be happy?" |
12900 | Well, what is the matter? |
12900 | Well, what the deuce are you doing here? |
12900 | Well, why do you stop? |
12900 | Well, you do not cry off the expenses? |
12900 | Well,he said,"are things going as you wish?" |
12900 | Well,said Lisbeth to the Pole, as she beheld him fascinated,"what do you think of Valerie?" |
12900 | Well? |
12900 | Well? |
12900 | Well? |
12900 | Well? |
12900 | Well? |
12900 | What are you about? |
12900 | What are you going to do with her? |
12900 | What are you talking about? |
12900 | What are you talking about? |
12900 | What are you thinking of, my darling? |
12900 | What can I do for you, missus? |
12900 | What can I do to become a Madame Marneffe? |
12900 | What can I say, my darling? 12900 What can one do? |
12900 | What did I tell her when she behaved so badly to him, and he as mild as milk, poor old fellow? 12900 What did he die of?" |
12900 | What did the old thing do to move you to compassion? 12900 What did your pretty cousin say?" |
12900 | What do I want with other folk? |
12900 | What do you know about it? |
12900 | What do you say to Africa? |
12900 | What do you say to my scheme for sending this note to the studio at a time when our dear Hortense is there by herself? |
12900 | What do you say to this programme for your friend Brunner? |
12900 | What do you think of it all, my darling? |
12900 | What do you want for her? |
12900 | What do you want of me, my dear fellow? |
12900 | What do you want with him? |
12900 | What do you want, Remonencq? |
12900 | What does he want so much money for? |
12900 | What does your friend think of_ my_ cousin''s condition? |
12900 | What for? |
12900 | What good would that do? |
12900 | What had you to say to me? |
12900 | What has become of all the ladies and gentlemen? |
12900 | What has happened to you? |
12900 | What has happened? |
12900 | What has happened? |
12900 | What has he left to me? |
12900 | What has that got to do with it? |
12900 | What have I said? 12900 What have you to say against your brother? |
12900 | What interest can you have in hindering my cousin''s marriage? 12900 What is Frankenthal ware?" |
12900 | What is his name? |
12900 | What is it all about? |
12900 | What is it, Louise? |
12900 | What is it, Victorin? |
12900 | What is it? |
12900 | What is my duty? 12900 What is that that you are mumbling in German?" |
12900 | What is that? 12900 What is that?" |
12900 | What is that? |
12900 | What is that? |
12900 | What is the matter, my dear Victorin? |
12900 | What is the matter, my dear? |
12900 | What is the matter? 12900 What is the matter?" |
12900 | What is the meaning of all this? |
12900 | What is there in Paradise? 12900 What is this? |
12900 | What is to be done? |
12900 | What is to be done? |
12900 | What is to be said? 12900 What is to become of me?" |
12900 | What is to become of us? |
12900 | What is your business, madame? |
12900 | What is your name, my dear? |
12900 | What luck for you!--Has he had any adventures? |
12900 | What maggot is that in your brain? |
12900 | What men? 12900 What message did she send me?" |
12900 | What oath can a Jew swear? |
12900 | What of him? |
12900 | What philtre do those baggages give you to rob you of your wits? |
12900 | What proof have you of such a conspiracy? |
12900 | What respectable life can ever procure so much in so short a time, or so easily? |
12900 | What shall we come to? |
12900 | What shall we do without her? |
12900 | What the devil brought you here this morning? |
12900 | What the devil can that worthy Baronne Hulot want of me? |
12900 | What then? |
12900 | What then? |
12900 | What way is that? |
12900 | What were you saying about sitting? |
12900 | What will you do, left alone with your dead friend? |
12900 | What would he give for it? |
12900 | What, buy my daughter''s fortune at the cost of----? 12900 What, do not I love you, Josepha?" |
12900 | What, is my father your patient? |
12900 | What, killing? |
12900 | What, the famous singer? |
12900 | What, then, can I do? |
12900 | What, you have had the money for the statue and the bas- reliefs for Marshal Montcornet''s monument, and you have not paid them yet? |
12900 | What-- here? |
12900 | What? 12900 What?" |
12900 | What? |
12900 | When I said to you,''You shall be mine,''what object had I in view? 12900 When did you hear that?" |
12900 | Where are the relatives, the friends? |
12900 | Where are the witnesses? |
12900 | Where are you going, sir? |
12900 | Where can that be turned into money? |
12900 | Where is Valerie? |
12900 | Where is he? |
12900 | Where is it? 12900 Where is it?" |
12900 | Where the devil has she been so early? |
12900 | Where will he find the money? |
12900 | Which Faubourg did you live in? |
12900 | Which shall I be when the time comes-- Madame Crevel, or Madame Montes? |
12900 | Which? |
12900 | Who brought the master''s note? |
12900 | Who but a Pole would wish to make a wife of a devoted mistress? |
12900 | Who carved this? |
12900 | Who else? 12900 Who has endowed you with this strength of ingratitude-- you who are a man of papier- mache? |
12900 | Who is amusing you? 12900 Who is he?" |
12900 | Who is the man you always stand at attention to salute? |
12900 | Who is the man? |
12900 | Who is the young man in whom you take so much interest? |
12900 | Who is this gentleman? |
12900 | Who is your gentleman, child? |
12900 | Who on earth told you--? |
12900 | Who put that into your head? |
12900 | Who told you she was pretty? |
12900 | Who told you so? |
12900 | Who was the queer customer that took the fourth corner? |
12900 | Whom do you call''One Steinbock''? 12900 Whom do you want, sir?" |
12900 | Whom have I the honor of addressing? |
12900 | Whose family? |
12900 | Why I went? |
12900 | Why are you here? |
12900 | Why do you apply to me for two hundred thousand francs? 12900 Why do you keep him in hiding?" |
12900 | Why does n''t the old man marry her? |
12900 | Why give yourself so much bother, my dear old veteran? |
12900 | Why have you come here, Pere Chardin? |
12900 | Why not? |
12900 | Why should you send me to Clichy? 12900 Why, if you had your own way, you would be man and wife within the legal period-- in eleven days----""Must we wait so long?" |
12900 | Why, what is the matter, dear? |
12900 | Why, what is this that your porter has been telling me? 12900 Why, you ask my advice? |
12900 | Why,said Hulot, talking to himself--"why is it that out of ten pretty women at least seven are false?" |
12900 | Why? |
12900 | Will you be good to her? 12900 Will you come home to us?" |
12900 | Will you do whatever I bid you? |
12900 | Will you pay fifty thousand francs? |
12900 | Will you still stand me out? |
12900 | Will you write? 12900 Will you, sir, abandon me?" |
12900 | Worthy Madame Florent--"You said the Rocher de Cancale.--Were you at the Florents''? |
12900 | Would they take them themselves at that price? |
12900 | Would you believe it, my cherub? |
12900 | Would you give your daughter such a mother- in- law? 12900 Would you like me to disclose any more hideous mysteries that are kept from you?" |
12900 | Would you like me to go for him? |
12900 | Would you undertake a bronze statue? |
12900 | Would you wish to be present, sir, when the seals are affixed in the next room? |
12900 | Yes, Crevel, and, do you know? 12900 Yes, but which?" |
12900 | Yes, madame, with old Monsieur Thoul, but he is very old and broken--"But what have you done with him? 12900 Yes; letters which prove that you are the father of the child my wife expects to give birth to.--You understand? |
12900 | Yesterday, yesterday, he could dine with that woman, after having read my letter?--Are other men made so? 12900 You answer for the result?" |
12900 | You are Monsieur Wenceslas, Count Steinbock? |
12900 | You are Monsieur de Paron Hulot? |
12900 | You are as limp as a rag--"Vat dos it matter vere von dies? |
12900 | You are coming to us to- morrow, I hope, Mademoiselle Fischer? |
12900 | You are employed at a theatre, and your name is--? |
12900 | You are hearty? |
12900 | You are laughing at me.--The Baron has already found consolation? |
12900 | You are not laughing at me, Remonencq, are you? |
12900 | You are very sweet on the little lady, Monsieur le Baron? |
12900 | You can not go without sleep much longer, and who will take your place? 12900 You did not take a coach to come home?" |
12900 | You do n''t seem best pleased at it? |
12900 | You fancy that you are not the father of our little Crevel? |
12900 | You had an amusing dinner last night? |
12900 | You have no company? |
12900 | You hope so-- why? 12900 You look as if you only half believed it,"added Lisbeth, turning to the Baron,"and that would be a shame----""Why?" |
12900 | You love me, really? 12900 You loved him then?" |
12900 | You never ask about him now? |
12900 | You old profligate,cried Lisbeth,"you have not even asked me how your children are? |
12900 | You owe all this to me, you old villain; now what will you do for me? |
12900 | You truly love him? |
12900 | You want Baron Hulot to be told that you have robbed him of his mistress, to pay him out for having robbed you of Josepha? 12900 You want me to so something for you?" |
12900 | You were so good- looking? |
12900 | You will be thinking of ordering the funeral service at the church, sir, no doubt? |
12900 | You will come back in time to make tea for us, my Betty? |
12900 | You will love your kind old Cibot like a mother, will you not? 12900 You wish to know how you may come to the guillotine?" |
12900 | Your own self? |
12900 | _ Combed your hair?_"He gave me a scolding for meddling in your affairs. 12900 _ I?_ Ein fein vordune?" |
12900 | _ I?_ Ein fein vordune? |
12900 | _ I_, cousin? 12900 _ It_, what?" |
12900 | _ What?_. |
12900 | _ Will_ you listen to me? 12900 _ You_ sold them?" |
12900 | ''Very clean and neat, and who does not take snuff, who is as sound as a bell, and as good as a young man? |
12900 | ''Was it very expensive, madame?'' |
12900 | ''We shall see?''" |
12900 | --"A cup of tea?" |
12900 | --"Whom can Cecile be going to marry?" |
12900 | --"Will you have some tea?" |
12900 | --Baron Hulot was in love with Valerie?" |
12900 | --However, he is ageing; his face shows it.--He has taken up with some little milliner?" |
12900 | --I disgust you no doubt, and what I am saying is horribly immoral, you think? |
12900 | --Now, come; am I to go without a hope?" |
12900 | --The doctor, to feel my pulse, as it were, and see if sickness had subdued me--''You saw Monsieur l''Abbe?'' |
12900 | --What can I say? |
12900 | --What does he live on? |
12900 | --What was my aim? |
12900 | --You perhaps will not believe me, but if I had my pocket- book about me, it would have been yours.--Come, do you really want such a sum?" |
12900 | .?" |
12900 | A lover? |
12900 | A man is not a traveler in perfumery for nothing; I had blamed myself.--If I should lose her, what would become of me? |
12900 | All of a sudden the sick man''s voice rang through the room; the tones vibrated like the strokes of a bell:"Who is there?" |
12900 | Aloud he said,"How much do you want? |
12900 | Am I deficient in intelligence? |
12900 | Am I not a little mad already?" |
12900 | Am I not a prisoner here out of gratitude?" |
12900 | Am I not wrinkled?" |
12900 | Am I to give account of myself to you? |
12900 | Am I your bond- slave? |
12900 | And Schmucke? |
12900 | And besides, Cecile is tired of waiting, poor child, she suffers--""In what way?" |
12900 | And besides--she is in debt.--How much do you owe?" |
12900 | And do not these gentlemen tell us"--and she looked at the priest--"that God is revenged, and that His vengeance lasts through all eternity?" |
12900 | And even now if I liked-- Look here, sir, you know that little scrubby marine store- dealer downstairs? |
12900 | And how old is he?" |
12900 | And is it by chance the object of your affections who is fretting you? |
12900 | And my gentleman tells me that in a few months now he will be famous and rich----""Then you often see him?" |
12900 | And now, how much for your board-- three francs a day?" |
12900 | And on what pretext?" |
12900 | And what the devil put the notion of going to the theatre into your head?" |
12900 | And what was ten thousand francs for the furniture of the young folks''apartment, considering the demands of modern luxury? |
12900 | And who does not know an idiot at once by an impression the exact opposite of the sensation of the presence of genius? |
12900 | And who would make me such a present? |
12900 | And why do you fly into a passion? |
12900 | And why?" |
12900 | And will not you and mamma accept him as my husband when you see that he is a man of genius? |
12900 | And would you leave your property to_ them_? |
12900 | And, after all, at our time of life what do we want of these swindling hussies, who, to be honest, can not help playing us false? |
12900 | Are not you much handsomer than I am?" |
12900 | Are the hatreds and jealousies of democracy incomprehensible after this? |
12900 | Are there playhouses?" |
12900 | Are two admirers of the fair sex to quarrel for ever over a petticoat? |
12900 | Are you going to give the thousand crowns per annum?" |
12900 | Are you going to talk about the guillotine again? |
12900 | Are you listening?" |
12900 | Are you so short of cash? |
12900 | Are you still here, monster of ingratitude?" |
12900 | Are you, like all these men,"and she indicated the guests,"madly in love with that creature? |
12900 | As for music, it was his profession, and where will you find the man who is in love with his means of earning a livelihood? |
12900 | As it happens, for the last six months, Bijou, who works for me-- his-- what shall I say--?" |
12900 | As to the young man himself, my dear cousin, you remember what you told me? |
12900 | At what would you value a copy of a Raphael? |
12900 | Be calm; do not cry, Adeline--it is only for a month--""Where will you go? |
12900 | Bless me, could they not sit by a man without doing wrong? |
12900 | Brisetout a fine courtesy, and heard Gaudissart remark to his mistress:"Can Garangeot do the dance- music for the_ Mohicans_ in twelve days? |
12900 | But as to helping you, as to using the Police as an instrument of private feelings, and interests, how is it possible? |
12900 | But between ourselves, madame, when one has a right to expect seven or eight hundred thousand francs-- or a million, it may be( how should I know?) |
12900 | But do you know that your monster of a husband took Jenny Cadine in hand at the age of thirteen?" |
12900 | But do you know what your brother is?" |
12900 | But how do you expect to make a tiger drop his piece of beef? |
12900 | But in the matter of wills, there are wills so drafted that they can not be upset--""In what way?" |
12900 | But that is not all.--Monsieur Crevel?" |
12900 | But the doctor has given him up----""What is the matter with him?" |
12900 | But then you will be mine alone henceforth?" |
12900 | But we had to part!--Was it wicked?" |
12900 | But what can a doctor do, no matter how clever he is, with such complications?" |
12900 | But what can a poor relation do against a rich family? |
12900 | But what is a man that can not put two ideas together in French? |
12900 | But where can he get the money from? |
12900 | But you, no doubt, set great store by a certain letter written by that woman with regard to the child?" |
12900 | Camusot''s position will not do the same? |
12900 | Camusot,"deprive him of one of his dinners?" |
12900 | Can I still be desirable? |
12900 | Can it be that the fortitude which upholds a great criminal is the same as that which a Champcenetz so proudly walks to the scaffold? |
12900 | Can not that dreadful woman be content with having my father, and with all your tears? |
12900 | Can not they see you?" |
12900 | Can we be more wretched than we are already?" |
12900 | Can you discover no more?" |
12900 | Can you do all this by yourself? |
12900 | Can you do it by patting his back and saying,''Poor Puss''? |
12900 | Cantinet left the unhappy man in peace; but an hour later she came back to say:"Have you any money, sir, to pay for the things?" |
12900 | Cecile to change her habits and ideas? |
12900 | Cecile''s petulant gesture replied,"So are you-- who could help liking you?" |
12900 | Celestine and her husband, as a hint to their father, glanced at the old maid, who audaciously asked, in reply to Crevel:"Indeed-- whose?" |
12900 | Cibot, I believe?" |
12900 | Cibot, why should you worry yourself like that? |
12900 | Cibot,"cried Pons,"for what do you take me? |
12900 | Cibot;"then I do not love you, I suppose?" |
12900 | Cibot?" |
12900 | Cibot?" |
12900 | Cibot?" |
12900 | Cibot?" |
12900 | Could so depraved a creature as La Cibot exist? |
12900 | Could such a woman as I am be what I am if she revealed her ways and means? |
12900 | Could we live at all but for that? |
12900 | Could you lend me a few hundred francs? |
12900 | Could you not tell me in confidence? |
12900 | Cousin Betty had on several occasions answered in the same tone--"And who says I have not a lover?" |
12900 | Deal, plain oak, or oak lead- lined? |
12900 | Did I do wrong? |
12900 | Did Madame Marneffe''s cousin never go to see her when she was living in the Rue du Doyenne?" |
12900 | Did not those few words deny all merit to the pains taken for her by the cousin whose one offence lay in the fact that he was a poor relation? |
12900 | Did she show you--what?--her-- her religion?" |
12900 | Did you never think of going into one?" |
12900 | Do any of us know how such a timid creature is cast down by an unjust judgment? |
12900 | Do they cover your eyes with walnut- shells? |
12900 | Do you ask how I came to look for fans in the Rue de Lappe, among an Auvergnat''s stock of brass and iron and ormolu furniture? |
12900 | Do you ask to what Parisian tribe this manner of man belongs? |
12900 | Do you ask why? |
12900 | Do you know him?" |
12900 | Do you know that I have made nearly a hundred thousand francs in ten years? |
12900 | Do you know that by one single phrase that woman has endangered my mother''s life and reason? |
12900 | Do you know that within a short time he has become famous?" |
12900 | Do you know the law- courts? |
12900 | Do you know what you are? |
12900 | Do you know your Catechism?" |
12900 | Do you mean a young Livonian who was a pupil of mine?" |
12900 | Do you really see nothing? |
12900 | Do you recognize him?" |
12900 | Do you remember those little frames full of enameled copper on crimson velvet, hanging among the portraits? |
12900 | Do you see that young man in the box yonder? |
12900 | Do you see? |
12900 | Do you suppose that I have no soul, no beliefs, no religion? |
12900 | Do you suppose that it is for two sous''worth of polish on your boots that I love you? |
12900 | Do you think that we are made of iron? |
12900 | Do you understand?" |
12900 | Do you want a hundred thousand francs? |
12900 | Do you want to drive us raging mad? |
12900 | Do you want to go trotting after petticoats? |
12900 | Do you want to have a hand in the master''s affairs, and swindle him, eh?" |
12900 | Does it not rather result from the tyranny of a woman whom, as you told me, you can no longer love? |
12900 | Does not Society imitate God? |
12900 | Exactly as the question might have been put to the Chamber,"Will the estimates pass or not pass?" |
12900 | Finally, she displaced the Attorney- General, M. de Granville--""That lived in the Rue Vieille- du- Temple, at the corner of the Rue Saint- Francois?" |
12900 | Florimond the haberdasher in the Rue Vieille- du- Temple out of a fix in that matter of her friend''s legacy?" |
12900 | For the last ten days I have thought of nothing but these cases-- for there are two, a husband and wife.--Are they not connections of yours? |
12900 | For we, neither of us, will have anything more to say to Madame Marneffe?" |
12900 | For you, madame, are surely Monsieur Crevel''s daughter?" |
12900 | For your india- rubber belt, your strait- waistcoat, and your false hair? |
12900 | Fraisier?" |
12900 | Get this well into your head.--You want two hundred thousand francs? |
12900 | Give me some proof.--Have you a key, as I have, to let yourself in?" |
12900 | Good Heavens!--Why do you not answer me?" |
12900 | Had we better tell my mother?" |
12900 | Has God taken pity on our family?" |
12900 | Has he taken the hook?" |
12900 | Have n''t you nothing to reproach yourself with? |
12900 | Have you a hobby? |
12900 | Have you any? |
12900 | Have you been to your first Communion? |
12900 | Have you ceased to trust me-- your good genius? |
12900 | Have you come to sleeping with Adeline to drink her tears while she is asleep?" |
12900 | Have you ever heard me say a word I ought not on such a subject?" |
12900 | He brings me bonbons and burnt almonds, and chocolate almonds.--Aren''t they good? |
12900 | He has queer ideas, has the worthy man.--Well, what do you say to it?" |
12900 | He is hiding, and I wish he could be free--""Why?" |
12900 | He is ten years younger than the Baron, to be sure, and was only a tradesman; but how can it end? |
12900 | He might have actually heard the conference between Fraisier and the portress:"Did I not guess exactly how it would be?" |
12900 | He was paying his court to a little person--""Whom?" |
12900 | His discretion was well known; indeed, was he not bound over to silence when a single imprudent word would have shut the door of ten houses upon him? |
12900 | His early fame, his important position, the delusive eulogies that the world sheds on artists as lightly as we say,"How d''ye do?" |
12900 | Home is the grave of glory.--Consider now, are you the Wenceslas of the Rue du Doyenne? |
12900 | Homo duplex, said the great Buffon: why not add Res duplex? |
12900 | How are you to write music in the state that you are in? |
12900 | How are you, my dear Hector?" |
12900 | How can I excuse myself?" |
12900 | How can any woman throw you over who is so happy as to be loved by you?" |
12900 | How can you suppose I should ever break that rule of conduct? |
12900 | How could a woman so clever as Valerie fail to ask herself to what end these two representatives of the Church remained with her? |
12900 | How could he forget me when he used to give us as much as three or four thousand- franc notes at once, from time to time?" |
12900 | How could it have occurred to me?" |
12900 | How could she have forgotten him? |
12900 | How could you, so clear- sighted as you are, dream of competing with millions?" |
12900 | How did you get on without me?" |
12900 | How did you send us der bonus?" |
12900 | How do, my jewel!--And the brat? |
12900 | How is he to know?" |
12900 | How is it that you have never made anything in wax for me? |
12900 | How long is it since I-- Lieutenant Cottin-- had a mistress?" |
12900 | How much did the eight pictures fetch?" |
12900 | How much do you want to be comfortable? |
12900 | How much do you want?" |
12900 | How should a man not worship a beautiful and intellectual creature whose soul can soar to such manifestations? |
12900 | How was he now to remember the scene of the morning when his weeping children had knelt at his feet? |
12900 | How would you like to be Madame la Presidente? |
12900 | I am ignorant enough, as you know, of--""_ You!_ One of Servin''s best pupils, and you do n''t know Watteau?" |
12900 | I am killing you, am I? |
12900 | I am murdering you, am I?" |
12900 | I do n''t know why, but I was always being quarreled over by my father and mother--""Did you ever hear of God?" |
12900 | I may do some good, but I must act with caution.--Who is the old man?" |
12900 | I might die; where would you be without me? |
12900 | I only want a hundred francs--""Cibot,--going to die?" |
12900 | I say, Topinard, have you independent means?" |
12900 | I shall say to her,''Look here, little one, would you like to have a friend of--''How old are you?" |
12900 | I shall stay till the last.--I can, I suppose?" |
12900 | I think I have found the man, the possible husband, answering to mamma''s prospectus----""There?--in the Place du Carrousel?--and in one morning?" |
12900 | I will kill her as I would smash a fly--""And how about the gendarmes, my son?" |
12900 | I will run round to- day to all your pupils and tell them that you are ill; is it not so? |
12900 | I would crush that woman like a viper if I could!--What, does she attack my mother''s life, my mother''s honor?" |
12900 | I? |
12900 | Idamore was one of the sort who are bound to find their way into the police courts, and from that to Melun-- and the-- who knows--?" |
12900 | If I can get two thousand francs per annum for you, are you willing? |
12900 | If I had abandoned myself to fury like you, what would have happened? |
12900 | If I were to die to- morrow, what would they find? |
12900 | If any social event can prove the influence of environment, is it not this? |
12900 | If my children were ruining themselves for their own benefit, I would help them out of the scrape; but as for backing your husband, madame? |
12900 | If nobody comes to the funeral, who is to fill the corners? |
12900 | If the Emperor had been here, things would have been very different, would n''t they, sir? |
12900 | If you delay too long, if you give any one a hold against you, I can answer for nothing.--Now, am I to go?" |
12900 | If you mean to be revenged, you must eat the leek, seem to be in despair, and allow her to bully you.--Do you see?" |
12900 | If you work harder, the merchant will pay you more in proportion; but what does the State do for its crowd of obscure and devoted toilers? |
12900 | In short, it was good fun?" |
12900 | In that shop, my child?" |
12900 | In what other country is such help to be found, and generous hearts even in such a garret as this? |
12900 | Is Lisbeth likely to die? |
12900 | Is a little bit of a porter the man to make a woman rich-- a fine woman like you? |
12900 | Is he a Frenchman?" |
12900 | Is he a creditor?" |
12900 | Is he better?" |
12900 | Is he spoiled, too?" |
12900 | Is he well?" |
12900 | Is he with you? |
12900 | Is it always to be like this?" |
12900 | Is it not odd that we should never have known that till to- day, and now find it out by chance?" |
12900 | Is it paid for?" |
12900 | Is it possible? |
12900 | Is it so difficult to design a pin, a little box-- what not, as a keepsake?" |
12900 | Is it this lady? |
12900 | Is not our attachment to life based on its alternations of good and evil? |
12900 | Is not the soldier in time of war brought face to face with spectacles even more dreadful than those we see? |
12900 | Is she better fun than I am?" |
12900 | Is that all you know of life and of business, my beauty? |
12900 | Is that being good to me?" |
12900 | Is that nothing?" |
12900 | Is that the conduct of a weak woman? |
12900 | Is the furniture worth so much? |
12900 | Is this possible?" |
12900 | Is this scorn? |
12900 | Is this your wish?" |
12900 | Is your man a heavy sleeper?" |
12900 | It is a duel, eye to eye; and who has such eyes as a Jew or an Auvergnat?" |
12900 | It is a grind.--Do you know what it is to--?" |
12900 | It is a holograph will, and consequently very easy to upset.--Do you know where our man has put it?" |
12900 | It is not doing good, sir, is it? |
12900 | It was a heartless speech, was it not? |
12900 | Just ask his name-- is it a man or a gentleman? |
12900 | Let us see now, has one of them come here to see you in twenty years? |
12900 | Let us see now-- how is he?" |
12900 | Let us see, now; what have you done that this simple German should be hiding in the room?" |
12900 | Look here, do you want me to tell you what all this comes to? |
12900 | Look here, the family have never settled an allowance on you?" |
12900 | M. Schmucke will send for you, sir, is not that so? |
12900 | Madame Marneffe, Crevel''s woman? |
12900 | Madame Marneffe, of course, was aware of what that pocketbook contained?" |
12900 | Many old men take up with a Josepha, a Jenny Cadine, why should not one be found who is ready to make a fool of himself under legal formalities? |
12900 | Monsieur Grenouville consented to marry her, on condition of her giving us all up, and we agreed--""For a handsome consideration?" |
12900 | No, upon my word, the world is turned upside down; what is the use of making a Revolution? |
12900 | Now that the principal agent is dead, will it not be better to smother up the affair and sentence the storekeeper in default? |
12900 | Now you understand, my good man?" |
12900 | Now, you that are in business, my dear sir, do you advise me to got to a lawyer?" |
12900 | Nucingen would simply laugh at me!--Vauvinet? |
12900 | Oh, great God!--Why did I not take the veil rather than marry? |
12900 | Old Fischer? |
12900 | Old and ugly and poor-- is not this to be thrice old? |
12900 | On my honor, you are horribly ugly, my dear Marneffe----""Do you know that you are very uncivil?" |
12900 | One picture or another, what difference does it make?" |
12900 | Papa Schmucke, do you call that tobacco? |
12900 | Pons exclaimed indignantly,"and sent the best judge and expert in all Paris with you to show you the way? |
12900 | Poor man, he would give his life for you, and do you want to be the death of him? |
12900 | Poulain?" |
12900 | Poulain?" |
12900 | Sabatier, a woman of thirty- six that used to sell slippers at the Palais Royal-- you remember the Galerie at the Palais that they pulled down?" |
12900 | Say, now, has it come to seek out your sublime virtue, priced at two hundred thousand francs?" |
12900 | Schmucke?" |
12900 | Shall I say no more?" |
12900 | Shall we henceforth be sisters? |
12900 | She at once said to herself,"Can it be that Hortense wants my lover?" |
12900 | She looked at herself closely and sadly, wondering to herself:"Am I still handsome? |
12900 | She was so genuinely innocent, that she could say to her mother:"What do they mean, mamma, by calling me a beautiful girl when I am with you? |
12900 | So let us understand each other, Brazil!--I like Brazil, it is a hot country.--What is to become of my niece?" |
12900 | So what is there to fear?" |
12900 | So you are going to marry Cecile?" |
12900 | So--""Are you talking of Mouchieu Ponsh?" |
12900 | Somebody ought to take him away for a change--""How is he to go?" |
12900 | Take a drink and be good--""Then was there no one in the room just now, when I waked? |
12900 | Tell a lie?" |
12900 | The Baron, who was reading the news, held out a Republican paper to his wife, pointing to an article, and saying:"Is there time?" |
12900 | The Prince went up to his old comrade, looked him in the face, and shouted in his ear as he grasped his hand:"Are you a man?" |
12900 | The fat tradesman--""A Crevel?" |
12900 | The man may make money then?" |
12900 | The widow of a Marshal gets at least six thousand francs pension, does n''t she? |
12900 | Then you knew that you were in Monsieur le Maire''s private snuggery?" |
12900 | There were--""Were there no ladies?" |
12900 | This Fraisier can not take large views.--What debt is this, my good man? |
12900 | This perfect union of all her family made Madame Hulot say to herself,"This, after all, is the best kind of happiness, and who can deprive us of it?" |
12900 | To be unfaithful to me? |
12900 | To belong wholly to my husband.--He is a dying man, and what am I doing? |
12900 | To have to work at my age? |
12900 | Two thousand five hundred francs in gold!--a sum with which she had intended to purchase an annuity; and what was there to show for it? |
12900 | Und you are not to pe ein zuper any more--you are to pe de cashier at de teatre--""_ I_?--instead of old Baudrand?" |
12900 | Upon my word, do you know what I should do in your place? |
12900 | Valerie went up to Hulot, and he whispered in her ear:"There is nothing left for us but to fly, but how can we correspond? |
12900 | Vat must I do for dat?" |
12900 | Very well, next Sunday? |
12900 | Vill you not oonderstand that I lof nopody but Bons?" |
12900 | Was it her cousin?" |
12900 | We have our own little tricks, we savages!--Cydalise,"said he, looking at the country girl,"is the animal I need.--How much does she owe?" |
12900 | We saw you at the first performance of_ The Devil''s Betrothed_, and our anxiety became curiosity?" |
12900 | We shall have to dine at home now.--Let us see,"she added, seeing that the"dear puss"wore a piteous face;"must we get rid of him for good?" |
12900 | Well, and are we very good children, I wonder? |
12900 | Well, how are we getting on?" |
12900 | Well, then, how much have you saved?" |
12900 | Well, there is one up there that will die soon, eh? |
12900 | Well, there is something about her quite inexplicable----""What?" |
12900 | Well, why do n''t you float a company? |
12900 | What are you going to do for Adeline? |
12900 | What are your yearly expenses? |
12900 | What can I do? |
12900 | What can I say? |
12900 | What can you mean, sir? |
12900 | What could I do? |
12900 | What could I try to do? |
12900 | What could the world have to say? |
12900 | What do you expect, Crevel? |
12900 | What do you mean? |
12900 | What do you think of Livonia? |
12900 | What do you want with them? |
12900 | What do you want? |
12900 | What does he do?" |
12900 | What does she do, I say? |
12900 | What does that mean?" |
12900 | What fiend drove you to do it?" |
12900 | What had du Tillet or Popinot twenty years since? |
12900 | What has hurt you? |
12900 | What has my husband done to you?" |
12900 | What is a bank for those that begin in these days? |
12900 | What is all this?" |
12900 | What is happening? |
12900 | What is his wife after all? |
12900 | What is it, my great pet? |
12900 | What is the good of all the fine things you may have in your soul if you can make no use of them? |
12900 | What is the use of them? |
12900 | What is to assure me that it is not a forgery? |
12900 | What is to be done with women who cry?" |
12900 | What is to be done? |
12900 | What is to be the fate of that splendid creature, as strong in her pure life under her mother''s care as she is by every gift of nature? |
12900 | What is to hinder me from dividing my legacy with you?" |
12900 | What man, on the wrong side of forty, is rash enough to work after dinner? |
12900 | What mercy can I expect at God''s hands? |
12900 | What more could I do? |
12900 | What must be must; and we must take things as we find them, eh?" |
12900 | What patient could put faith in the skill of any unknown doctor who could not even furnish his house? |
12900 | What post does she want?" |
12900 | What the devil are your doing here? |
12900 | What will become of you? |
12900 | What will he find left of his Valerie? |
12900 | What will you do? |
12900 | What would become of you if I were to fall ill? |
12900 | What would have become of poor Lili? |
12900 | What would he say if he found you in such a way? |
12900 | What would the War Minister say? |
12900 | What would you have? |
12900 | What, you still indulge--? |
12900 | When once she had invited me, should I have got the money at all if I had responded to her civility with a rude refusal?" |
12900 | When shall I have ceased to suffer?" |
12900 | When will he be able to take his orchestra again, do you think? |
12900 | Where are the relatives and friends?" |
12900 | Where are those relations of yours now? |
12900 | Where are your senses? |
12900 | Where can I find them? |
12900 | Where does Madame Nourrisson-- yes, that was her name-- pick up such actors?" |
12900 | Where does it all go?" |
12900 | Where is everybody gone?" |
12900 | Where was the money to come from? |
12900 | Where, then had the Baron found the thirty thousand francs he had just produced? |
12900 | Who asked anything of you? |
12900 | Who but has once in his life been a guest at a wedding- ball? |
12900 | Who could have any possible interest in Cibot''s death? |
12900 | Who dares to bid farewell to old habit? |
12900 | Who is this at your heels? |
12900 | Who is to pay you?" |
12900 | Who knows men? |
12900 | Who may you be?" |
12900 | Who owes you anything? |
12900 | Who summoned us?" |
12900 | Who was it?" |
12900 | Who will believe that that German was right in his mind? |
12900 | Who will ever paint all that the timid suffer? |
12900 | Who will take care of you now that you are no longer young? |
12900 | Who would have expected such a trick from a relative, an old friend of the house that had dined with us twice a week for twenty years? |
12900 | Whom are they for?" |
12900 | Why do they have silk epaulettes in the army? |
12900 | Why do you think of men of eight- and- forty?" |
12900 | Why have you come meddling here? |
12900 | Why have you not taught me to be what you want? |
12900 | Why take my Wenceslas? |
12900 | Why take us on show to my father''s mistress, a woman who is ruining him and is the cause of troubles that are killing my heroic mother?" |
12900 | Why, henceforth, should we be at any unnecessary expense? |
12900 | Why, how long since--?" |
12900 | Why, what had I? |
12900 | Why, where have you dropped from that I should tell you the news? |
12900 | Why, with a nose shaped like that-- for you have a fine nose--how did you manage it, poor cherub? |
12900 | Will the angel pray for the devil? |
12900 | Will you be kind?" |
12900 | Will you hand over thirty thousand francs to have the whole thing taken off your hands? |
12900 | Will you have the glass and see? |
12900 | Will you let me give you a little piece of advice? |
12900 | Will you make her a home?" |
12900 | Will you play a game of piquet?" |
12900 | Will you play off the tie by hook and by crook? |
12900 | With the means at his command, the man would have been formidable, an underlying fate--""But in my place?" |
12900 | Within a week, as we say at the courts?" |
12900 | Would it be better to make no profit out of M. Pons''dinner and keep him here at home? |
12900 | Would you like to see me go there?" |
12900 | You are giving forty- six thousand francs for four pictures, are you not?" |
12900 | You are his daughter?" |
12900 | You do not want to blight my later years with bitterness and regret?" |
12900 | You have made me what I am; you have often been stern, you have made me very unhappy----""I?" |
12900 | You here?" |
12900 | You knew him, no doubt?" |
12900 | You know your Moliere? |
12900 | You old bachelors are not all like that--""_ I!_"cried Schmucke, springing to his feet,"vy!--""Come, then, you have none to come after you either, eh? |
12900 | You say you love a woman, you treat her like a duchess, and then you want to degrade her? |
12900 | You see my tears; they are dropping on the paper and soaking it; can you read what I write, dear Hector? |
12900 | You shall have the nomination this morning, and your man shall get his promotion in the Legion of Honor.--How old are you now?" |
12900 | You want to be head- clerk of your room and officer of the Legion of Honor?" |
12900 | You were like my own child to me; did anybody ever see a child revolt against its mother? |
12900 | You will hark back?" |
12900 | You would not believe he could look so different, would you?" |
12900 | Your Valerie, whom you believe to be a saint, is the cause of this miserable separation; can I remain with such a woman? |
12900 | Your needle- woman, madame, is settled in life; she is married--""More or less?" |
12900 | Your son is a pleader; has he never found himself compromised by the client for whom he held a brief?" |
12900 | a thousand crowns for a bronze group?" |
12900 | an annuity of a thousand francs, is that too much, I ask you? |
12900 | an honest woman-- never to mention my name or to say that it was I who betrayed the secret?" |
12900 | and as she met the Brazilian, she whispered:"You are my relation-- or all is at an end between us!--And so you were not wrecked, Henri?" |
12900 | and to my divine friend Schmucke? |
12900 | and why? |
12900 | and yet have you such vices as this?" |
12900 | are you going to move?" |
12900 | are you learning German?" |
12900 | asked Gaudissart,"are you really_ La Belle Ecaillere_ of whom my father used to talk?" |
12900 | asked she,"if I get him to sell them to you, what will you give me?" |
12900 | but vat did der doctor say?" |
12900 | but wicked? |
12900 | by the by, why is he never to be seen nowadays?" |
12900 | can it be true?" |
12900 | de Marville does not altogether answer the description--""And why not?" |
12900 | did anybody ever see the like? |
12900 | did n''t she just give it him hot?--Olympe was perverted, madame?" |
12900 | do you not see that it is his work?" |
12900 | especially when I come to beg for peace, admitting that all the wrong has been on our side? |
12900 | exclaimed Remonencq;"why, what things can be more important?" |
12900 | have you put them in pawn? |
12900 | here he comes; on my honor, he is beginning to be like me!--Good- day, Hulot-- quite well? |
12900 | how could I put him out of the door?" |
12900 | how haf I offended against Hefn?" |
12900 | how simple he is? |
12900 | if my life were to be your life, what would I not do? |
12900 | interrupted the doctor;"what are you thinking about? |
12900 | is this your mother, sir? |
12900 | it is his fault and not mine; why does he delay coming so long? |
12900 | la Presidente, but is not the reward that I expect for my complete devotion a pledge of my success?" |
12900 | now, you would not abuse a woman at your age, great blackguard--""Placard? |
12900 | old Chardin? |
12900 | or shall I not?" |
12900 | perhaps you know something?" |
12900 | said Hulot to himself as he finished this letter,"tears which have blotted out her name.--How is she?" |
12900 | said Lisbeth in an undertone to Hortense,"what can you do?" |
12900 | said Lisbeth,"or merely a farce?" |
12900 | said Madeleine,"a little sooner or a little later-- what difference does it make? |
12900 | said Pons,"what would have become of me if it had not been for you and Schmucke?" |
12900 | said Valerie.--"Come, tell me, my big puss, have_ Rives Gauches_ gone down?" |
12900 | said one,"the musician, you know--""Who can the pall- bearers be?" |
12900 | said she, turning suddenly, like a woman who has just come to some vehement decision,"you are Monsieur le Baron Hulot, I believe?" |
12900 | said the Baroness to herself,"what monster can have had the heart to betray such perfect, such holy innocence? |
12900 | say yourself whether some hindrance has not come in the way every day; some obstacle or business?" |
12900 | she asked of Schmucke,"has this cherub of ours had plenty to drink? |
12900 | she said,"are you come back to us? |
12900 | some poor little bit of a fault or other?" |
12900 | still?" |
12900 | that I look upon you with horror? |
12900 | the Marechale Hulot, the Comtesse de Frozheim?" |
12900 | the man went on,"that she is deceiving you?" |
12900 | then you were courting my fair cousin?" |
12900 | thought Gaudissart, foreseeing the probable end of the unequal contest.--"Listen,"he began,"do you know what you ought to do in this business?" |
12900 | was there not a gentleman here just now, saying that my relatives had sent him?" |
12900 | what do you think of that?" |
12900 | what fault of mine is this, Adeline?" |
12900 | where art thou?" |
12900 | who can have vexed him? |
12900 | who is that gentleman?" |
12900 | who?" |
12900 | why should I deprive you of your illusions?" |
12900 | why--?" |
12900 | with the story of the two hundred thousand francs and his mamma?" |
12900 | you are without most things.--Are you also_ sans culotte_?" |
12900 | you haf a lodging someveres, eh?" |
12900 | you here? |
58944 | A dead body, a mummy? |
58944 | A papyrus, of course? |
58944 | A scholar, then? |
58944 | A tall, thin man-- the eyes set far apart in the skull? |
58944 | And Belleville? |
58944 | And Miss Ottley? |
58944 | And Sir Robert? |
58944 | And afterwards-- how will you treat her? |
58944 | And are you quite engaged? 58944 And cool? |
58944 | And from all this you conclude? |
58944 | And is that a reason why you should believe it, too? 58944 And now?" |
58944 | And she? |
58944 | And some of his ribs were broken? |
58944 | And that? |
58944 | And the dead Arab? |
58944 | And the mummy? |
58944 | And the other papyri and the ivory stele? |
58944 | And the shadow? |
58944 | And what then? |
58944 | And what''s to prevent me? |
58944 | And where did you see him out of dreams? |
58944 | And who is benefiting from it at this moment, I should like to know? |
58944 | And why did you murder him? |
58944 | And why least of all? |
58944 | And you are an honest man? |
58944 | And you here? |
58944 | And you will refuse to risk that for his happiness and mine? |
58944 | And you? |
58944 | And you? |
58944 | And you? |
58944 | And-- if not? |
58944 | Anything? |
58944 | Are you afraid of her, my boy? |
58944 | Are you afraid-- are you then a coward? |
58944 | Are you minded for the experiment? |
58944 | Are you satisfied? |
58944 | Are you sure? |
58944 | At-- any cost? |
58944 | Belleville,I called out,"can I help you?" |
58944 | Belleville,I said at last-- I forced myself to say it, for his face had grown ink- black,"are you not wasting precious time? |
58944 | But her father''s? |
58944 | But not in need a friend, eh? 58944 But tell me, Lady Helen, just why you employed him to say that to your husband?" |
58944 | But what on earth do you want that done for? |
58944 | But what then shall I do? |
58944 | But what''s the game? |
58944 | But where do you come in? |
58944 | But why did n''t you break me up while you were about it? 58944 But why on earth deceive your husband?" |
58944 | But why? |
58944 | But you are still angry with us? |
58944 | But you have nothing definite to go upon? |
58944 | But you will have to let her see her relatives, eh? |
58944 | By Jove,said the Captain,"it is really wonderful-- but wait-- you had a visitor, Doctor?" |
58944 | Can electricity unbuckle straps without machinery? 58944 Can human creatures make themselves invisible at will?" |
58944 | Can you tell me? |
58944 | Captain Weldon? |
58944 | Dare you walk there-- with me for a companion? |
58944 | Death? |
58944 | Did I not tell you I was not to be disturbed? |
58944 | Did anyone else see him? |
58944 | Did he answer you? |
58944 | Did he offer to attack you? |
58944 | Did he recover his Arab? |
58944 | Did you doubt it? |
58944 | Did you ever hear such a lot of rubbish talk? |
58944 | Did you see it? |
58944 | Did you see that door? |
58944 | Did you speak to Belleville about it? |
58944 | Did you wish to see my father? |
58944 | Do I know her, Hubbard? |
58944 | Do n''t be a fool,she retorted stormily;"what aroused you? |
58944 | Do n''t they join hands at a séance? |
58944 | Do n''t you feel it? |
58944 | Do you bear malice still? |
58944 | Do you believe in God? |
58944 | Do you dispute my right? |
58944 | Do you hear me, man? |
58944 | Do you mean to tell me that you found the mummy in the sarcophagus? |
58944 | Do you mind? |
58944 | Do you want all that fire? |
58944 | Do you want to see the shadow''s face? |
58944 | Do you wish to be amused? |
58944 | Does he? |
58944 | Does it matter? 58944 Dr. Pinsent,"said Miss Ottley,"is it really you?" |
58944 | Eh? |
58944 | Father,said Miss Ottley,"how can Dr. Pinsent''s foolish sarcasm affect you? |
58944 | For better or worse? 58944 Generous?" |
58944 | Had this shadow a voice? |
58944 | Has that wretched Arab-- worried you at all-- since I left, Miss Ottley? |
58944 | He is in London? |
58944 | He is the willing but unwitting victim of a wicked, wicked man-- but, oh, what am I saying? 58944 He threatened you?" |
58944 | He was insensible? |
58944 | How can I ever repay you, Pinsent, for your extreme kindness to me? |
58944 | How can we? 58944 How did Belleville treat you?" |
58944 | How did he explain his accident? |
58944 | How much did you pay Navarro for that last? |
58944 | How? |
58944 | How? |
58944 | How? |
58944 | Hugh-- where are you, dear? |
58944 | I do n''t like the fellow, do you? |
58944 | I have humanised him, just a little, do n''t you think? |
58944 | I must conclude, then, that you like me? |
58944 | I suppose you are wondering why you''re still alive, eh? |
58944 | I suppose you forgave him? |
58944 | In Egypt, of course? |
58944 | In English? |
58944 | In spirits? |
58944 | Indeed, and how? |
58944 | Is he in trouble, too? |
58944 | Is it not enough that she has most unwarrantably caused you a great deal of unhappiness? |
58944 | Is it possible that you are all the heartless scoundrel you pretend? 58944 Is it possible?" |
58944 | Is it wonderful that a woman should wish to be happy and that she should fight for that with every weapon she can find? |
58944 | Is not that a tent? |
58944 | Is that his fault? |
58944 | Is there no hope? |
58944 | Is there not a big jar of yellow spirit near the coffin somewhere? |
58944 | Is your father subject to fits? |
58944 | It reappeared? |
58944 | It served us right, eh? |
58944 | It was you-- really then? 58944 Just stand aside till I load your little beastie, will you?" |
58944 | May be, my fine gentleman-- but would you say''Dixon''was synonymous with''Darby''? |
58944 | May one not be lighthearted when all goes well? |
58944 | Mentally? |
58944 | Might one ask how? |
58944 | My dear old chap,I answered solemnly,"have I known you all these years for nothing? |
58944 | Needless? |
58944 | No fears? |
58944 | No? |
58944 | Of a chimera? |
58944 | Ottley sent me a message? |
58944 | Patient awake? |
58944 | Scottish, are you not? |
58944 | She has confided in you? |
58944 | Should a dutiful wife regard with indifference the sudden desertion of her husband by the only friend he possesses? 58944 Should you-- Dr. Pinsent-- do you think?" |
58944 | Sir Robert well and strong again? |
58944 | So? |
58944 | Steam up, Captain? |
58944 | Swept the room, you said, and gave you a drink? |
58944 | That atones? |
58944 | That-- she cares for me? |
58944 | The mummy? |
58944 | The robbery, you mean? |
58944 | Then are you not superstitious, too? 58944 Then you dislike me; why?" |
58944 | Then you''ll forgive me? |
58944 | There are living people in the room, are there not? |
58944 | They consoled themselves, no doubt? |
58944 | They enabled you doubtless to locate the real tomb that holds the body? |
58944 | To the opera? |
58944 | Truly? |
58944 | Was there need? |
58944 | Weldon is better? |
58944 | Well, what is it? |
58944 | Well,said I, in tones husky with throat dryness and apparent admiration,"that makes two-- Weldon and Navarro?" |
58944 | What Arab? |
58944 | What are you doing here; what do you want? |
58944 | What are you doing here? 58944 What are you doing, Pinsent?" |
58944 | What are you doing? |
58944 | What curse? |
58944 | What did you? |
58944 | What did your father say to it? |
58944 | What do you want? |
58944 | What does he say? |
58944 | What else? |
58944 | What has he promised you? |
58944 | What has he told them? |
58944 | What in Hell----? |
58944 | What is it? |
58944 | What is it? |
58944 | What is the matter with the thing-- here? |
58944 | What is the matter? |
58944 | What is the meaning of all this? |
58944 | What is there to forgive? |
58944 | What made you think the shadow wished to kill me? |
58944 | What made you? |
58944 | What matter if he shares it with his slaves? |
58944 | What next, master? |
58944 | What now? |
58944 | What reason have you to despise her? |
58944 | What sound reason have you for despising me? |
58944 | What the deuce are you doing here, whoever you are? |
58944 | What then? |
58944 | What was it? |
58944 | What was this mummy like? |
58944 | What''s a spook- hunter, Captain? |
58944 | What''s the matter with you? |
58944 | What''s the matter, Hubbard? |
58944 | What? |
58944 | What? |
58944 | What? |
58944 | When do you wish to be aroused? |
58944 | Where are you going? |
58944 | Where are you, Pinsent? 58944 Where is the sarcophagus?" |
58944 | Where the devil is your mouth? |
58944 | Where? |
58944 | Which? |
58944 | Who calls? |
58944 | Who is it-- who is it? |
58944 | Who nominated him? |
58944 | Who? |
58944 | Why did n''t you shy a boot at my head? |
58944 | Why did you come-- of all times to- night? |
58944 | Why did you let him in? |
58944 | Why did you not wake me? |
58944 | Why do you hate your sex? |
58944 | Why not? |
58944 | Why? |
58944 | Why? |
58944 | Will he regain his senses? |
58944 | Will you be my courier? |
58944 | Will you not dismount? |
58944 | Will you not fear to stay alone in that great room of magic, Ptahmes? |
58944 | Will you put me in a cab? |
58944 | With such a cavalier as Frankfort Weldon? |
58944 | Would it be permissible to kiss your hand? |
58944 | Would you sit there trussed up like a chooky skewered for the table if you had the power you pretend? |
58944 | Wretches,I cried,"have you nothing else to do?" |
58944 | Yet you disapprove? |
58944 | You are going out? |
58944 | You are leaving me? |
58944 | You are returning to your camp? |
58944 | You are sure you are doing right? |
58944 | You are surprised? |
58944 | You are then unaware what is discovered? |
58944 | You are very busy, eh? |
58944 | You asked my Arab for a drink? |
58944 | You find me changed, Pinsent? |
58944 | You have n''t spoken to him yet? |
58944 | You intend to murder me, I suppose? |
58944 | You know me and ask that? |
58944 | You know that your friend, Dr. Belleville, has come? |
58944 | You mean? |
58944 | You quarrelled? |
58944 | You think I grow crooked? |
58944 | You think so? 58944 You think so?" |
58944 | You think you can bluff me? |
58944 | You will forgive me? |
58944 | You will go and make friends soon, will you not? 58944 You will go home?" |
58944 | You''ll stand by us, Pinsent? |
58944 | ''How have you treated the son of your bastard son? |
58944 | A fit? |
58944 | A voice that thrilled me, asked within the room,"Who is there?" |
58944 | After all, had I fallen asleep against my will and dreamed the whole thing, as Weldon believed? |
58944 | After one long glance into his gloating eyes I lowered mine and asked in a voice I strove to render civil:"What is it you want me to do for you?" |
58944 | And can you be sure it erred? |
58944 | And even should I escape their jaws again, what could I do on the river? |
58944 | And how had Weldon become possessed of it? |
58944 | And how had he come? |
58944 | And if he had wished Weldon to die, would it not have been easy for him-- because invisible-- to help Weldon to die? |
58944 | And now you are here, and no one knows, eh? |
58944 | And of me? |
58944 | And the thing he had given me to keep-- where was it now? |
58944 | And who would dare the oracle? |
58944 | And why should he be so anxious to conceal himself? |
58944 | And you? |
58944 | Are marriages made in Heaven? |
58944 | Are you answered?" |
58944 | Are you sure that you stopped up the chisel hole securely?" |
58944 | Belleville?" |
58944 | But even were the reverse the case with her, as you suspect, what odds? |
58944 | But had it----? |
58944 | But how describe it? |
58944 | But how many pots have encountered that experience? |
58944 | But how?" |
58944 | But the Captain asked me with eyes aglow how could one want to keep all the good things of life to benefit a single class? |
58944 | But what do you infer?" |
58944 | But what had cast the shadow? |
58944 | But what of the morrow? |
58944 | But wherefore such extraordinary caution? |
58944 | But you? |
58944 | Can I help you?" |
58944 | Can you really find pleasure in the notion of winning the woman you are presumed to love-- by a trick so infamous and despicable?" |
58944 | Can you? |
58944 | Could you not come to me to- night? |
58944 | Did Weldon still cling to it after he was dead?" |
58944 | Did she really believe this rascal Navarro capable of predicting events? |
58944 | Did you hear me call?" |
58944 | Did you see the face?" |
58944 | Do n''t you see you are his only friend? |
58944 | Do n''t you think I''m right? |
58944 | Do n''t you?" |
58944 | Do you agree?" |
58944 | Do you covet them?" |
58944 | Do you feel able to engage in conversation? |
58944 | Do you see daylight now?" |
58944 | Do you suppose he has n''t guessed at the reason of the success of your enormous transactions on''Change?'' |
58944 | Does it appear impossible that we might have contemplated a friendly call?" |
58944 | Every few minutes I administered a stimulant, yet each time asked myself what use? |
58944 | Fetch me a glass of water, will you?" |
58944 | Finally he said:"You are not certain the sarcophagus does contain the body, though?" |
58944 | For why? |
58944 | From what mummy torn? |
58944 | Had he been warned? |
58944 | Had he forgotten it? |
58944 | Had the whole thing been a dream? |
58944 | Have I-- though still I''m here? |
58944 | Have n''t we the formula, and has n''t it nobly stood the test of practical experience? |
58944 | Have you a curiosity to know your future? |
58944 | Have you ever seen a St. Bernard hurt a spaniel?" |
58944 | Have you forgotten Navarro''s words?" |
58944 | Have you?" |
58944 | He was manifestly posted there as sentinel, but why? |
58944 | How are you feeling now?" |
58944 | How can a man fight with an enemy he can not see? |
58944 | How comes it he is dead?" |
58944 | How could I blame him? |
58944 | How could I let her know I knew her father to be a confounded old rascal? |
58944 | How could I or anybody bring such a man to justice? |
58944 | How did you ever manage it? |
58944 | How is Miss Ottley?" |
58944 | How long ago? |
58944 | How shall I possibly withstand him?" |
58944 | How then could he breathe? |
58944 | How will you like that?" |
58944 | How, then, can we better tempt old Ptahmes from his tomb?" |
58944 | Hungry?" |
58944 | I should stand aside?" |
58944 | I stammered,"Why have you been searching for me?" |
58944 | I suppose you do not wish to be regarded as a social reformer?" |
58944 | If so-- why such uneconomic expenditure of a valuable mineral? |
58944 | In what fashion does Belleville threaten Weldon?" |
58944 | Is it a king?" |
58944 | Is it not better to use its brain than its body? |
58944 | Is it not so?" |
58944 | Is it too much to ask?" |
58944 | Is that plain?" |
58944 | Is there not something I can get to counteract the acid? |
58944 | Lie down and rest while you smoke one, wo n''t you? |
58944 | No one knows?" |
58944 | Now, what can be fairer than that?'' |
58944 | Now, who could help liking a man of that stamp? |
58944 | Now, whose hand was it? |
58944 | Or are you too dazed-- or perhaps too angry?" |
58944 | Pardon me-- is he very much attached to you?" |
58944 | Pinsent?" |
58944 | Pinsent?" |
58944 | Pish-- what but myself? |
58944 | Seen the''Japanese Marriage''yet, Lady Helen? |
58944 | She said nothing about it to you?" |
58944 | So I got up steam again and called out,"Nothing wrong, I hope?" |
58944 | That is something, eh?" |
58944 | That''s curious, is n''t it?" |
58944 | The big man answers very quickly,''And are you brave enough to tackle Pinsent? |
58944 | The body of Pthames? |
58944 | The poor old gentleman was purple in the face, spluttering:"Has- has- has that man Coen been can- can- canvassing you?" |
58944 | The question remained: Would I be justified in solemnly swearing to compass Belleville''s death? |
58944 | This donkey has a bad pace, do n''t you think?" |
58944 | To put his own thoughts of me into words?" |
58944 | Was I going mad? |
58944 | Was it possible that Belleville''s Arab servant could be a professor of the language of Sesostris? |
58944 | Was my sight diseased or what? |
58944 | Was she becoming superstitious? |
58944 | Was the interspace filled with lead? |
58944 | We might induce him to confess-- don''t you think?" |
58944 | Well, then, who else is there to reproach me to his ears? |
58944 | Well-- what is it to be?" |
58944 | Well?" |
58944 | Well?" |
58944 | Were her nerves giving way under the strain of Dr. Belleville''s threats? |
58944 | Were they one and the same man or not? |
58944 | What I mean is are you perfectly collected? |
58944 | What agency had been at work to disturb us? |
58944 | What could have induced Miss Ottley to arrange this séance? |
58944 | What could have opened the door? |
58944 | What do you propose?" |
58944 | What do you say?" |
58944 | What do you think?" |
58944 | What do you want?" |
58944 | What for?" |
58944 | What has the poor man done to you?" |
58944 | What if Belleville had really determined to assassinate his rival? |
58944 | What if Navarro had not been acting, but had really been clairvoyant? |
58944 | What if Sir Robert Ottley and Dr. Belleville had really discovered some wonderful secret of Nature? |
58944 | What if he does call himself Fortescue? |
58944 | What if underneath the treasure it contained another chamber overlaid with lead? |
58944 | What if-- as the medium had hinted-- they had found a way to make themselves invisible? |
58944 | What if-- in that act-- he purposed to make me appear to be the criminal? |
58944 | What is the meaning of it all? |
58944 | What more do you want? |
58944 | What next? |
58944 | What right had those old"stick- at- homes"to appropriate the credit of the exertions of the energetic? |
58944 | What stopped you?" |
58944 | What then? |
58944 | What to do? |
58944 | What was it? |
58944 | What was its secret? |
58944 | What was the meaning of his strange act? |
58944 | What will he do?" |
58944 | What will you do?" |
58944 | What will you have for breakfast?" |
58944 | What would you make of it, Pinsent?" |
58944 | When?" |
58944 | Where had my Arab gone? |
58944 | Which was alive-- which was dead? |
58944 | Who has been here?" |
58944 | Who knows? |
58944 | Who shall dare to define the limits of the possible? |
58944 | Who would be the first? |
58944 | Who, then, or what, had set me free? |
58944 | Whom else? |
58944 | Why had he not chosen? |
58944 | Why not in stone? |
58944 | Why not see Sir Robert at once? |
58944 | Why not? |
58944 | Why should imperishable treasures, gold, silver, and precious stones be enclosed in lead? |
58944 | Why the deuce did you not remind me? |
58944 | Why, indeed, unless he had wished Weldon to die? |
58944 | Why-- who knows? |
58944 | Why? |
58944 | Why?" |
58944 | Why?" |
58944 | Why?" |
58944 | Will God punish us for that?" |
58944 | Will you come? |
58944 | Will you like that?" |
58944 | Wo n''t you come in and have a glass of brandy? |
58944 | Would I wait? |
58944 | Would, then, he give me a shakedown in his own bedroom, just for a week? |
58944 | You are no doubt aware that it is one of my ambitions to marry Miss Ottley?" |
58944 | You doubt me?" |
58944 | You have heard, I suppose, of his latest doings?" |
58944 | You have no doubt a fairly keen intelligence-- but Miss Ottley has placed you on an alabaster pedestal-- pedestal do I say? |
58944 | You pushed him over the platform?" |
58944 | You think you despise her now, but you are sure you have no other feeling deep at heart? |
58944 | You were his friend, were you not, Pinsent? |
58944 | You will forgive my plain speaking?" |
58944 | You will help me, will you not?" |
58944 | You would n''t have me bear malice, would you? |
58944 | You''ll share my diggings, wo n''t you? |
58944 | Your father is pining to open the tomb of Ptahmes, I suppose, Miss Ottley?" |
58944 | are you hurt?" |
58944 | he cried,"where are you?" |
58944 | he said to me-- then added in English, speaking to himself,"Where the deuce did I put that glass rod? |
58944 | he says very angrily,''do you forget that these things here--''he points to the body of Ptahmes--''will soon wear out? |
58944 | he suddenly exclaimed--"not Pinsent-- Ptahmes-- what''s this?" |
58944 | how could I?" |
58944 | it has a face now, eh?" |
58944 | or even follow him? |
58944 | said the Englishman,"and how would he go about it?" |
58944 | she cried,"you saw a shadow, too?" |
58944 | that you care for him despising you?" |
34542 | ''Gloomy?'' 34542 All alo- an? |
34542 | Alone? |
34542 | Am I afraid of him? 34542 Am I afraid of him?" |
34542 | Am I not to be allowed even five minutes''sleep without being broken in upon by some intruder or other? |
34542 | Am I so beautiful, or so admired or beloved, that a man who has not seen me half a dozen times should fall in love with me? 34542 And Belinda, mother dear?" |
34542 | And all this was without result? |
34542 | And before then? |
34542 | And can I see him? |
34542 | And he could do nothing? |
34542 | And he has never been here since? |
34542 | And how about the other luggage, sir,--the portmanteaus and hat- boxes? |
34542 | And in the meantime you take possession of this estate? |
34542 | And it has been said that she-- that she was drowned? |
34542 | And nothing can part us now? |
34542 | And now my darling, my foolish run- away Polly, what is to be done with you? |
34542 | And she has never been seen since? |
34542 | And she was never seen again? |
34542 | And she went out with Mr. Arundel? 34542 And they found nothing?" |
34542 | And they have gone there? |
34542 | And what did this man, this Mr. Weston, say? |
34542 | And where''s-- your patient? |
34542 | And you will do that, mother darling? |
34542 | And you will forgive Olivia, dear? |
34542 | And you will not reject my appeal? |
34542 | And you''ll put it in the western drawing- room at the Towers, wo n''t you, Polly? |
34542 | And you, Hester,--you knew my wife better than any of these people,--where do you think she went? |
34542 | And-- you-- you think she went out of this house with the intention of-- of-- destroying herself? |
34542 | Any letters for me, Dick? |
34542 | Are you all alone here? |
34542 | Are you mad, or drunk? 34542 Are you mad?" |
34542 | Because I am so-- childish? |
34542 | Because of what, my treasure? |
34542 | But Mr. Marchmont, my dear,--surely he loves and admires you? |
34542 | But afterwards, darling, when you were better, stronger,--did you make no effort then to escape from your persecutors? |
34542 | But is there nothing else I can do, sir? |
34542 | But shall you like her when you''ve known her longer? 34542 But what if people did say this?" |
34542 | But what then? |
34542 | But what will you do, Paul? |
34542 | But when shall we see you again, Paul? 34542 But wo n''t to- morrow mornin''do? |
34542 | But you remember, Edward,--you remember what I said about never seeing the Sycamores? 34542 But you wo n''t leave me alone with my stepmother, will you, Edward?" |
34542 | But, good heavens, Olivia, what do you mean? |
34542 | By whom? |
34542 | Can anything be more miserable to me than the prevarication which I meet with on every side? |
34542 | Can you find no words that are vile enough to express your hatred of me? 34542 Captain Arundel, I believe?" |
34542 | Cookson, from Kemberling, will be there, I suppose,he said, alluding to a brother parson,"and the usual set? |
34542 | Did George Weston tell me the truth just now? |
34542 | Did I suffer so little when I blotted that image out of my heart? 34542 Did I?" |
34542 | Did he really say what, darling? |
34542 | Did papa dislike Mr. Paul Marchmont? |
34542 | Did papa say that, Edward? |
34542 | Did you ever notice a peculiar property in stationery, Polly? |
34542 | Do n''t you think you could manage it for me, you know? 34542 Do people say that?" |
34542 | Do they say that of me? |
34542 | Do you consider that it is my duty to do this? |
34542 | Do you imagine that_ I_ will let this marriage take place? |
34542 | Do you know if Mr. Paul Marchmont has gone down to the boat- house? |
34542 | Do you know if anybody has lived here lately? |
34542 | Do you mean to tell me it''s_ you_? |
34542 | Do you really think, Letitia, that your brother''s wife committed suicide? |
34542 | Do you remember that poor foolish German woman who believed that the spirit of a dead king came to her in the shape of a blackbird? 34542 Do you think I have toiled for nothing to do the duty which I promised my dead husband to perform for your sake? |
34542 | Do you think that fellow would go to Australia, Lavinia? |
34542 | Do you think, Miss Lawford, that it is necessary to sit at a man''s dinner- table before you know what he is? 34542 Do you understand me, my dear?" |
34542 | Do_ you_ like her, then? |
34542 | Does she wear shabby frocks? |
34542 | Edward Arundel!--what about Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Even yet I am a mystery to you? |
34542 | Everybody says that Livy''s handsome; but it''s rather a cold style of beauty, is n''t it? 34542 For only bringing you the news, Paul?" |
34542 | Forgotten what-- forgotten whom? 34542 Glad to have any one who''d take papa''s love away from me?" |
34542 | Go,she said;"why should we keep up a mockery of friendliness and cousinship? |
34542 | Had she any money? |
34542 | Has Paul Marchmont been in this house? |
34542 | Has she ill- treated the girl, or is she plotting in some way or other to get hold of the Marchmont fortune? 34542 Has she said''yes''?" |
34542 | Hates you, darling? |
34542 | Have I any clothes that I can hunt in, Morrison? |
34542 | Have you any-- particular reason for thinking so? |
34542 | Have you anything more to say to me? |
34542 | Have you been here long? |
34542 | Have you nothing more to tell me? |
34542 | He has taken possession, then? |
34542 | He is very desperate about his wife, then, this dashing young captain? |
34542 | He used to like hot rolls when I was at Vernon''s,John thought, rather more hopefully;"I wonder whether he likes hot rolls still?" |
34542 | How dare you come here to insult me, Edward Arundel? |
34542 | How did she disappear? |
34542 | How do you know what other people think? 34542 How do you like my cousin, Polly?" |
34542 | How do you mean? |
34542 | How long? |
34542 | How often do you mean to dance with Captain Arundel, Miss Marchmont? |
34542 | How should I benefit by her death? |
34542 | How should he love her? |
34542 | How should you, you fortunate Polly? 34542 How soon will it come?" |
34542 | How was it? |
34542 | I am your wife now, Edward, am I not? |
34542 | I had some difficulty in inducing her to return here; but after hearing of your accident--"How was the news of that broken to her? |
34542 | I have the honour of speaking to my cousin''s widow? |
34542 | I know she is very good, papa,Mary cried;"but, oh, why, why do you marry her? |
34542 | I shall come and see you again, Ned,Miss Arundel cried, as she shook the reins upon her horse''s neck;"and so will Belinda-- won''t you, Belinda?" |
34542 | I suppose you are not aware that my future brother- in- law is a major? |
34542 | I suppose you are not aware that you have been talking to Major Arundel, who has done all manner of splendid things in the Punjaub? 34542 I want you to get me some vehicle, and a lad who will drive me a few miles, Morrison,"the young soldier said;"or you can drive me yourself, perhaps?" |
34542 | I''m to go to Australia, am I? 34542 If it was n''t for whom, old fellow?" |
34542 | Immediately? |
34542 | Insult you? 34542 Is it because he has blue eyes and chestnut hair, with wandering gleams of golden light in it? |
34542 | Is it likely, then, that he cares for anything but her fortune? 34542 Is it necessary that she should be present?" |
34542 | Is it true? |
34542 | Is it useless to be obedient and submissive, patient and untiring? 34542 Is my life always to be this-- always, always, always?" |
34542 | Is my uncle in the house? |
34542 | Is n''t he like you, Edward? |
34542 | Is there neither truth nor justice in the dealings of God? |
34542 | Is there no cure for this disease? |
34542 | Is there no making this man answer for his infamy? |
34542 | Is there no relief except madness or death? |
34542 | Is there no way of making him suffer? |
34542 | Is this true that George Weston tells me? |
34542 | Is this true? |
34542 | Is this what you have to say to me? |
34542 | Is what true? |
34542 | Is your clock right? |
34542 | It ai n''t particularly jolly, is it, Martin? |
34542 | It is quite decided, then? |
34542 | It''s not a pretty house, is it, Miss Marchmont? |
34542 | John Marchmont, the poor fellow who used to teach us mathematics at Vernon''s; the fellow the governor sacked because----"Well, what of him? |
34542 | Look at the rain,she said;"hark at it; do n''t you hear it, drip, drip, drip upon the stone? |
34542 | Mary has gone, I hope? |
34542 | Mary is not up yet, I suppose? |
34542 | May I come into your house? 34542 Mentally deficient? |
34542 | Miss Marchmont,--my cousin, Mary Marchmont, I should say,--bears her loss pretty well, I hope? |
34542 | Mr. Arundel has come home? |
34542 | My dear Mrs. John, what is it you want of me? |
34542 | My dressing- case? |
34542 | My own one, my pretty one, my wife, when shall I get to you? |
34542 | My wife was ill, then? |
34542 | Need you ask me the question, Paul? 34542 No; I came here, as your kinsman, to ask you what you mean to do now that Paul Marchmont has taken possession of the Towers?" |
34542 | Not to- night, sir, surely? |
34542 | Not yet? |
34542 | O my God,she cried,"is this madness to undo all that I have done? |
34542 | O sir, is that true? |
34542 | O sir, what can I think, what can I think except that? 34542 O yes, dear; but had n''t you better take any thing of value yourself?" |
34542 | Of course it must n''t,answered Mr. Weston;"did n''t I say so just now? |
34542 | Oh, Mr. Arundel, how could you think so? |
34542 | Oh, is it you, Mr. Arundel? 34542 Olivia,"cried the young man,"are you mad?" |
34542 | Olivia,said Edward Arundel very earnestly,"what is it that makes you unhappy? |
34542 | P.S.--By- the- bye, do n''t you think a situation in a lawyer''s office would suit you better than the T. R. D. L.? 34542 Papa''s cousin-- Mr Marchmont the artist?" |
34542 | Polly,cried the young man,"do you think Jupiter liked Hebe any the less because she was as fresh and innocent as the nectar she served out to him? |
34542 | Richard Paulette has been here? |
34542 | Shall I ever have courage to stop till it comes? |
34542 | Shall I go and see Lucas? |
34542 | Shall I invite him to Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | Shall you go to London? |
34542 | She assigned no reason to_ you_, my dear Mrs. Marchmont; but she assigned a reason to somebody, I infer, from what you say? |
34542 | She has not been found, then? |
34542 | She, who is so good to all her father''s parishioners, could not refuse to be kind to my poor Mary? |
34542 | Should I have received that confirmation? |
34542 | Since when has my wife been at Kemberling? |
34542 | So you do n''t know my cousin Olivia? |
34542 | Sorry you came back? |
34542 | Telling him the reason of her departure? |
34542 | That he left me to you as a legacy? |
34542 | That poor Miss Mary was your lawful wedded wife? |
34542 | That? |
34542 | The door in the lobby? |
34542 | The gentleman is waiting to see me, I suppose? |
34542 | The letter to Mr. Paulette and to your father? |
34542 | The mystery of her death? |
34542 | Then it was not a fable? |
34542 | To clean up what? |
34542 | To her-- to Mary-- my wife? |
34542 | To let what be? |
34542 | To which of these people am I to look for an account of my poor lost girl? 34542 To you know if he''s on in ze virsd zene?" |
34542 | WHEN SHALL I CEASE TO BE ALL ALONE? |
34542 | WHEN SHALL I CEASE TO BE ALL ALONE? |
34542 | Was she seen by no one else? |
34542 | Was that the tenderest face that looked down upon my darling as she lay on her sick- bed? |
34542 | Was there any other reason for supposing that-- that my wife fell into the river? |
34542 | Was this found by the river- side? |
34542 | We could have haddocks every day at Marchmont Towers, could n''t we, papa? |
34542 | Well, Lavinia? |
34542 | Well; and when you went----? |
34542 | What am I that an empty- headed soldier should despise me, and that I should go mad because of his indifference? 34542 What am I to do?" |
34542 | What can I do to him? |
34542 | What can I give him to eat? |
34542 | What change? |
34542 | What compensation can they give me for an accident that shut me in a living grave for three months, that separated me from----? 34542 What compensation?" |
34542 | What could I do with money, if----? |
34542 | What did they dare to say against her or against me? |
34542 | What did they say? |
34542 | What do I love him for? |
34542 | What do you mean by an important mission, Edward? |
34542 | What do you mean, Edward? |
34542 | What do you mean, papa? 34542 What do you mean?" |
34542 | What do you mean? |
34542 | What do you mean? |
34542 | What do you mean? |
34542 | What do you think, Livy? |
34542 | What do you think? 34542 What does it matter to you whether it is true or not? |
34542 | What does it matter to you? |
34542 | What does_ he_ want at Marchmont Towers, I wonder? |
34542 | What else should we do? 34542 What for?" |
34542 | What have I done that I should suffer like this? |
34542 | What have you ever seen that should make you think any one loved me? |
34542 | What is it to you, or to any one, how I look? 34542 What is it, Barbara?" |
34542 | What is it, darling? |
34542 | What is it? |
34542 | What is the matter with you, Mary? |
34542 | What is the matter, darling? |
34542 | What is the question you came here to ask me? |
34542 | What is the secret of that woman''s life? |
34542 | What is there in her pale unmeaning face that should win the love of a man who despises me? |
34542 | What money have you, Lavinia? |
34542 | What on earth could have induced this woman to marry my cousin? |
34542 | What opinion? |
34542 | What question? |
34542 | What right have I to be happy amongst these people? |
34542 | What shall I do with you, Miss Marchmont? |
34542 | What then? 34542 What was not a fable?" |
34542 | What was that? |
34542 | What was there for me beyond that place? 34542 What will become of you?" |
34542 | What''s that? |
34542 | What, darling? 34542 What, dear?" |
34542 | What, mother? |
34542 | When was he here? |
34542 | When-- what, Livy? |
34542 | Where are all the rest of the servants? |
34542 | Where are my mother and Clarissa? |
34542 | Where is my wife? |
34542 | Where is my wife? |
34542 | Where was she before then? |
34542 | Where was this? |
34542 | Where, in Heaven''s name, have you been hiding yourself, woman? |
34542 | Where? |
34542 | Where? |
34542 | Who are you, girl? |
34542 | Who are you, girl? |
34542 | Who can come to see us on such a day? |
34542 | Who cares whether I am well or ill? |
34542 | Who does not know him? |
34542 | Who has despised you, Olivia? |
34542 | Who is it? |
34542 | Who is your wife? |
34542 | Who should dare to say that she spoke other than the truth? 34542 Who will help me to look for my missing love?" |
34542 | Who will tell me the truth about my lost darling? |
34542 | Who would n''t let you? |
34542 | Who? |
34542 | Whose child? |
34542 | Whose child? |
34542 | Why are you wicked? |
34542 | Why did n''t you go away with the rest? |
34542 | Why did she stop here? |
34542 | Why did the other servants leave the place? |
34542 | Why do n''t you have a gardener, Ned? |
34542 | Why do n''t you speak to me? |
34542 | Why do people worry me so? |
34542 | Why do you do this, Marchmont? |
34542 | Why do you marry her then? |
34542 | Why do you not answer my question? |
34542 | Why is it that you shut yourself from the sympathy of those who have a right to care for you? 34542 Why is that woman so venomous a creature in her hatred of my innocent wife? |
34542 | Why not? |
34542 | Why not? |
34542 | Why should I take any care of the place? |
34542 | Why should I try to escape from them? |
34542 | Why should they say my darling committed suicide? |
34542 | Why should this Mr. Marchmont think all this of me? |
34542 | Why should you prevent it? |
34542 | Why was my wife doubted when she told the story of her marriage? |
34542 | Why, do n''t you know who he is, mate? |
34542 | Why, my pet? |
34542 | Why? |
34542 | Will God ever forgive my sin? 34542 Will it never come?" |
34542 | Will it never come? |
34542 | Will she go there and knock them up, I wonder? 34542 Will you be sorry when I am married, Edward Arundel?" |
34542 | Will you come there presently? 34542 Will you go back to the Towers to- morrow morning?" |
34542 | Will you go with me to India, then, Mary? |
34542 | Woman, do you think duty is a thing to be measured by line and rule? 34542 Would you like to know, Edward Arundel?" |
34542 | Yes; where else should you stay? |
34542 | You believe that, I suppose? |
34542 | You can answer for Captain Arundel''s heart, I suppose, then, as well as for your own? 34542 You deny, then, that you were guilty of causing this poor deluded child''s flight from this house?" |
34542 | You did n''t know I was in Lincolnshire, did you? |
34542 | You did not see Olivia, then, all this time? |
34542 | You did, did n''t you? 34542 You disbelieved in that marriage?" |
34542 | You do n''t love me any the less because of that, do you, Edward? |
34542 | You do not think, then, that she is dead? |
34542 | You got my letter, then? |
34542 | You know my father? |
34542 | You know what we said to- day, Edward? |
34542 | You mean to let this be, then? |
34542 | You mean to say you found out what had driven your cousin''s widow mad? |
34542 | You persist in declaring, then, that the man with the weak legs is our old mathematical drudge? 34542 You really wish it?" |
34542 | You say that your stepdaughter is neither weak- minded nor strong- minded? |
34542 | You sometimes fear----? |
34542 | You think Miss Marchmont strong- minded, then, perhaps? |
34542 | You think her perfectly able to take care of herself? |
34542 | You think it worth something, then, mother? |
34542 | You think like these other people,--you think that she went away to destroy herself? |
34542 | You think our money is worth something to us? 34542 You think,"he gasped hoarsely, after a long pause,--"you think-- that-- she is-- dead?" |
34542 | You will sleep here to- night, of course? |
34542 | You will take an interest in her, wo n''t you? 34542 You wish me to many Mr. Marchmont, then, papa?" |
34542 | You wo n''t go to the Towers, papa dear? |
34542 | You would hardly wish to benefit by Mary''s death, would you, Olivia? |
34542 | You would have stood by Arundel''s poor little wife, my dear? |
34542 | You would stand by her_ now_, if she were alive, and needed your friendship? |
34542 | You would wish to hear the reading of the will? |
34542 | You''re not going to engage a governess for me, papa? |
34542 | Your cousin, Miss Arundel? |
34542 | _ Am_ I happier? |
34542 | _ Must_ you tell my stepmother of our marriage? |
34542 | _ What_ can I do to him? 34542 _ What_ have you done?" |
34542 | _ When_ shall I get there? |
34542 | _ Why_ did she leave this place? 34542 ''He has despised your love,''you said:''will you consent to see him happy with another woman?'' 34542 ''draughty?'' 34542 ''dreary?'' 34542 A little hand knocked lightly at the door of his room while he was thinking this, and a childish voice said,May I come in, papa?" |
34542 | Ai n''t you, Linda? |
34542 | All my plots, my difficulties, my struggles and victories, my long sleepless nights, my bad dreams,--has it all come to this? |
34542 | Am I a fool, that people can prevaricate and lie to me like this? |
34542 | Am I never to be loved and admired; never to be sought and chosen? |
34542 | Am I to wait for an answer?" |
34542 | And I think I have surprised you, have n''t I? |
34542 | And Paul Marchmont, again,--what have I learned from him? |
34542 | And did any revulsion of feeling arise in her breast? |
34542 | And now may I ask the reason----?" |
34542 | And now--? |
34542 | And yet what was it that he had lost, after all? |
34542 | And you and he are stanch allies, I suppose?" |
34542 | And you wish me to be your wife in order that you may have a guardian for your child? |
34542 | And, oh sir, bein''a poor lone woman, what was I to do?" |
34542 | Another voice in her breast seemed to whisper,"Why do you reproach me for not having loved this girl? |
34542 | Are they honourable and honest towards one another, I wonder, that they can entertain such pitiful doubts of our honour and honesty?" |
34542 | Are you going to open the gate and let us in, or do you mean to keep your citadel closed upon us altogether, Mr. Edward Arundel?" |
34542 | Are you idiotic and besotted enough to believe that it is anything but your fortune this man cares for? |
34542 | Are you turned to stone, Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Are_ you_ going away?" |
34542 | Arundel?" |
34542 | Arundel?" |
34542 | Arundel?" |
34542 | At what time does he come to his painting- room?"'' |
34542 | Because I have profited by the death of John Marchmont''s daughter, this impetuous young husband imagines-- what? |
34542 | Besides, what_ should_ come? |
34542 | But Hester was not alone; close behind her came a lady in a rustling silk gown, a tall matronly lady, who cried out,--"Where is she, Edward? |
34542 | But I think----""You think what?" |
34542 | But I''ll teach you the game, if you like?" |
34542 | But did the still evening hour bring peace to that restless spirit? |
34542 | But how was he to win this woman''s friendship for his darling? |
34542 | But how was it that, for all her goodness, Olivia Arundel won so small a share of earthly reward? |
34542 | But how-- but how? |
34542 | But how? |
34542 | But if he should die, mother, and leave his little girl destitute, you''ll look after her, wo n''t you?" |
34542 | But just at first, and before you know her very well, you will be kind to her, wo n''t you, Olivia? |
34542 | But now ruin had come to him, what was he to do? |
34542 | But still the great question was unanswered-- How was he to kill himself? |
34542 | But tell me what you are going to do yourself, and where you are going?" |
34542 | But that''s past now, is n''t it, my dear? |
34542 | But was Marchmont Towers quite as beautiful as that fairy palace of Mary''s day- dream? |
34542 | But was Olivia Arundel the woman to do this? |
34542 | But was there any chance? |
34542 | But we can soon set that right, ca n''t we, Polly?" |
34542 | But what am I to do? |
34542 | But what are we to do, Paul? |
34542 | But what can a man expect when he''s obliged to put his trust in a fool?" |
34542 | But what of that? |
34542 | But what reason could the woman have for her hatred of this innocent girl? |
34542 | But who could have calculated upon the railway accident; and who could have foreseen a separation in the first blush of the honeymoon? |
34542 | But you are not sorry, are you?" |
34542 | But you wo n''t love her quite the same way that you loved me, will you, dear? |
34542 | But you''ll take something-- wine, tea, brandy- and- water-- eh?" |
34542 | But, my darling, why did you make no effort to escape?" |
34542 | By what means did he drive my darling to her despairing flight?" |
34542 | Ca n''t you speak, woman? |
34542 | Can God ever forgive these people for their cruelty to you? |
34542 | Can He pity, can He forgive, such guilt as mine? |
34542 | Can it be wondered that he urged his daughter to accept this altered lot? |
34542 | Can it be wondered, then, that the Rector of Swampington thought the prospect offered to his child a very brilliant one? |
34542 | Can you imagine a woman with a wicked heart steadfastly trying to do good, and to be good? |
34542 | Can you play chess?" |
34542 | Can you wonder, then, if I feel confirmed in an opinion that I formed upon the day on which I heard the reading of my cousin''s will?" |
34542 | Could John Marchmont be a Christian, and yet feel this horrible dread of the death which must separate him from his daughter? |
34542 | Could he disbelieve his cousin? |
34542 | Could he ever dream for one brief moment of such a horrible cruelty? |
34542 | Could it be possible that Edward Arundel might ever come to love this girl? |
34542 | Could it be that this girl, to whom nature had given strength but denied grace, envied the superficial attractions of the young man at her side? |
34542 | Could she ever find rest in the grave, knowing this? |
34542 | Could there be any possible extinction that would blot out her jealous fury? |
34542 | Could there be anything more piteous than that degrading spectacle? |
34542 | Did Edward Arundel love the pale- faced girl, who revealed her devotion to him with such childlike unconsciousness? |
34542 | Did I do wrong when I offered to be your wife?" |
34542 | Did any corresponding transformation in her own heart bear witness to the baseness of her love? |
34542 | Did he love Olivia Arundel? |
34542 | Did n''t I always say so, now? |
34542 | Did n''t I always tell him he''d come into the Lincolnshire property? |
34542 | Did she tell you that I looked to you to account to me for the disappearance of my wife?" |
34542 | Did you ever see such an awkward set of fellows in all your life? |
34542 | Do I commit a sin in marrying John Marchmont in this spirit, papa?" |
34542 | Do n''t you smell it?" |
34542 | Do those who know me estimate me so much, or prize me so highly, that a stranger should think of me? |
34542 | Do you hear, woman? |
34542 | Do you know that sometimes I am almost sorry I ever came back to Marchmont Towers?" |
34542 | Do you know which way they went?" |
34542 | Do you love her so very, very much?" |
34542 | Do you remember how you played upon my misery, and traded on the tortures of my jealous heart? |
34542 | Do you remember that which I must restore to her when I give her back this house and the income that goes along with it? |
34542 | Do you remember what her highest right is? |
34542 | Do you remember what you said to me? |
34542 | Do you remember_ how_ you tempted me? |
34542 | Do you think I can go back to the old life? |
34542 | Do you think I have n''t consulted your happiness before my own? |
34542 | Do you think I shall love you less because I take this step for your sake? |
34542 | Do you think after hearing this, that I am the woman to be a second mother to your child?" |
34542 | Do you think anybody but Peter Paul could have painted that? |
34542 | Do you think he has not had women fifty times your superior, in every quality of mind and body, at his feet out yonder in India? |
34542 | Do you think that I am blind, or deaf, or besotted; that you defy me and outrage me, day by day, and hour by hour, by your conduct?" |
34542 | Do you think there has been nothing in all this to warp my nature? |
34542 | Do you want him?" |
34542 | Does any one think that, by any unhappy accident, by any terrible fatality, she lost her way after dark, and fell into the water? |
34542 | Does my meerschaum annoy you? |
34542 | Does she know that Edward''s there? |
34542 | Edward Arundel, do you hate me so much that you refuse to share the same shelter with me, even for a night?" |
34542 | Edward, if I ask you a favour, will you grant it?" |
34542 | Edward, is it real? |
34542 | Edward?" |
34542 | Edward?" |
34542 | From long ago, when you were little more than a boy-- you remember, do n''t you, the long days at the Rectory? |
34542 | Had Olivia ever been in love? |
34542 | Had he been to the Grange? |
34542 | Had he not done his duty to the dead; and was he not free now to begin a fresh life? |
34542 | Had not_ she_ perilled her soul upon the casting of this die? |
34542 | Had she not endured the worst long ago, in Edward Arundel''s contempt? |
34542 | Had she sought me out?--had she followed me to Dangerfield? |
34542 | Had this Marchmont-- always rather unnaturally reserved and eccentric-- gone suddenly mad? |
34542 | Had_ she_ not flung down her eternal happiness in that fatal game of hazard? |
34542 | Has all my care of you been so little, that I am to stand by now and be silent, when I see what you are? |
34542 | Has all my life been a great mistake, which is to end in confusion and despair?" |
34542 | Has my brain no sense, and my arm no strength, that I can not wring the truth from the false throats of these wretches?" |
34542 | Has the person I left in your care, whom you were paid, and paid well, to take care of,--have you let her go? |
34542 | Have n''t I heard it demonstrated by cleverer men than I am? |
34542 | Have n''t I looked at it in every light, and weighed it in every scale-- always with the same result? |
34542 | Have you yet to learn that Christianity is cosmopolitan, illimitable, inexhaustible, subject to no laws of time or space? |
34542 | He is brave, I dare say, and generous; but what of that? |
34542 | He looked forward with a shudder to see-- what? |
34542 | He sprang up from the table directly he had finished his meal, and cried out impatiently,"What can make Mary so lazy this morning? |
34542 | He''s an old friend of mine,--one of the supernu-- what''s- its- names?" |
34542 | Her thoughts wandered away to that awful question which had been so lately revived in her mind-- Could she be forgiven? |
34542 | His mother ca n''t love him, can she? |
34542 | How am I to be avenged upon the wretch who caused my darling''s death?" |
34542 | How can I ever forget that, Edward? |
34542 | How can I ever love you enough to repay you for that?" |
34542 | How can you ask such a question?" |
34542 | How could he tell which of these ways Olivia might have chosen? |
34542 | How could she grieve him by telling him of her sorrows, when his very presence brought such unutterable joy to her? |
34542 | How could the young man answer this question except by clasping his betrothed to his heart? |
34542 | How did you find my wife? |
34542 | How did you induce her to come back to this place? |
34542 | How have_ you_ learned to school your rebellious heart?" |
34542 | How should I know the effect that report would have upon my unhappy cousin?" |
34542 | How should he die? |
34542 | How should he love her? |
34542 | How should_ she_ protect herself against her enemies? |
34542 | How was he to kill himself? |
34542 | How was it, then? |
34542 | How will you endure Edward Arundel''s contempt for you? |
34542 | How will you tolerate his love for Mary, multiplied twentyfold by all this romantic business of separation and persecution? |
34542 | How would you like a stepmamma? |
34542 | How would you like your papa to marry again?" |
34542 | I daresay you remember old Colonel Tollesly, at Halburton Lodge? |
34542 | I may come again, may I not, now that the ice is broken, and we are so well acquainted with each other? |
34542 | I must trust this brave- hearted boy, for I have no one else to confide in; and who else is there who would not ridicule my fear of my cousin Paul?" |
34542 | I thought Miss Marchmont was in her room?" |
34542 | I wonder whether Marchmont Towers is insured? |
34542 | I wonder why the people in novels are always dark? |
34542 | I''d rather you spoke to him, though,"added the surgeon thoughtfully,"because, you see, it would come better from you, would n''t it now?" |
34542 | If I am to marry at all, who should I choose for a wife? |
34542 | If I separated her from her husband-- bah!--was that such a cruelty? |
34542 | If it should be thus: if, on going down to Marlingford, he obtained no tidings of his friend''s daughter, what was he to do? |
34542 | If such and such a course of diet is fatal to the body''s health, may not some thoughts be equally fatal to the health of the brain? |
34542 | If the day ever comes in which my little girl should have to struggle with this man, will you help her to fight the battle? |
34542 | If there is one spark of womanhood in your nature, I appeal to that; I ask you what has happened to my wife?" |
34542 | Is Marchmont Towers a prison, that you shut your gates as if they were never to be opened until the Day of Judgment?" |
34542 | Is he in the drawing- room?" |
34542 | Is it all real?" |
34542 | Is it anywhere near Swampington?" |
34542 | Is it because he has a dashing walk, and the air of a man of fashion? |
34542 | Is it because he has gentlemanly manners, and is easy and pleasant, genial and light- hearted? |
34542 | Is it for this I have shared your guilty secrets? |
34542 | Is it for this that I have sat night after night in my father''s study, poring over the books that were too difficult for him? |
34542 | Is it for this that I have sold my soul to you, Paul Marchmont? |
34542 | Is it madness, or the infernal cruelty of a fiend incarnate?" |
34542 | Is it not so?" |
34542 | Is it really you?" |
34542 | Is it that, in some hour of passion, you consented to league yourself with Paul Marchmont against my poor innocent girl? |
34542 | Is it thus with Mary Marchmont? |
34542 | Is it true that Edward Arundel is going to be married to- morrow?" |
34542 | Is it true, Olivia?" |
34542 | Is it-- is it? |
34542 | Is my life to be all of one dull, grey, colourless monotony; without one sudden gleam of sunshine, without one burst of rainbow- light?" |
34542 | Is she already marked out for some womanly martyrdom-- already set apart for more than common suffering? |
34542 | Is she still with the stepdaughter she loves so dearly?" |
34542 | Is that why you are silent?" |
34542 | Is the black shadow upon your life a guilty secret? |
34542 | Is the burden that you carry a burden on your conscience? |
34542 | Is the cause of your unhappiness that which I suspect it to be? |
34542 | Is there anything due to you?" |
34542 | Is there no one sentiment of womanly compassion left in your breast? |
34542 | Is this folly to be the climax of my dismal life? |
34542 | Is this the recompense for my long years of obedience? |
34542 | Is your love worth no more than this? |
34542 | Is_ this_ frail life all that stands between me and eleven thousand a year?" |
34542 | It seems so long ago; but it was only last night, was it? |
34542 | It was as if she said,--"Are you the devil, that you hold out this temptation to me, and twist my own passions to serve your purpose?" |
34542 | It''s all brotherly kindness, of course, and friendly interest in my welfare-- that''s what it''s_ called_, Mrs. J. Shall I tell you what it_ is_? |
34542 | It_ is_ a relationship, is it not, although such a very slight one?" |
34542 | Jobson?" |
34542 | John?" |
34542 | Leaving nothing else-- positively nothing? |
34542 | M.''s?" |
34542 | Marchmont?" |
34542 | Marchmont?" |
34542 | May I speak to your father? |
34542 | May I venture to urge your proceeding there in search of her without delay? |
34542 | Might not these things even yet come to pass? |
34542 | Mr. Arundel is here, is he not?" |
34542 | My dear Edward, what_ do_ you mean?" |
34542 | No; what injury can he inflict upon me worse than that which he has done me from the very first? |
34542 | No? |
34542 | Nothing but despair? |
34542 | Now what, in Heaven''s name, could that miserable little Mary have done with eleven thousand a year, if-- if she had lived to enjoy it?" |
34542 | Now, I ask you what motive Mary Marchmont can have had for running away from this house?" |
34542 | Now, will you tell me the chances are not six to six he dies unmarried? |
34542 | O, by- the- bye, you have never heard any thing of that Paul Marchmont, I suppose?" |
34542 | Of course I am not fond of Scotch shepherdesses now, you know, dear; but how should Mrs. Pimpernel know that? |
34542 | Oh, the relentless devil, the pitiless devil!--what can be the motive of her conduct? |
34542 | Or a gentleman who could enter with any warmth of sympathy into his friend''s feelings respecting the auburn tresses or the Grecian nose of"a sister"? |
34542 | Or am I only dreaming? |
34542 | Or do you mean to keep me out here for ever?" |
34542 | Or, escaping all this, what was there for him? |
34542 | Paul, Paul, what are we to do? |
34542 | Shall I never be put out of this horrible suspense?" |
34542 | Shall I repent, and try to undo what I have done? |
34542 | Shall I take my horse round to the stables? |
34542 | Shall I tell you what it is to love? |
34542 | Shall I thrust myself between others and Mr. Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Shall I wake presently and feel the cold air blowing in at the window, and see the moonlight on the wainscot at Stony Stringford? |
34542 | Shall we ever go to Dangerfield, I wonder, papa and I? |
34542 | Shall we ever see him again?" |
34542 | Shall we postpone the wedding?" |
34542 | Shall_ I_ make myself the ally and champion of this gallant soldier, who seldom speaks to me except to insult and upbraid me? |
34542 | Shall_ I_ take justice into my hands, and interfere for my kinsman''s benefit? |
34542 | She has been used to great indulgence; she has been spoiled, perhaps; but you''ll remember all that, and be very kind to her?" |
34542 | She has been very unkind to you?" |
34542 | She has used you very badly, then, this woman? |
34542 | She will be one- and- twenty in three years; and what are three years? |
34542 | Should he go upstairs and cut his throat? |
34542 | Something may happen, perhaps, to prevent----""What should happen?" |
34542 | That''s the sort of thing, is n''t it, Polly?" |
34542 | The battles in India have been dreadful, have they not?" |
34542 | The hand of death was upon her; what could it matter how she died? |
34542 | The question she should have asked was this,"Do I commit a sin in marrying one man, while my heart is racked by a mad passion for another?" |
34542 | The sceptical artist may have thought,"What if there should be some reality in the creed so many weak fools confide in? |
34542 | Then Paul Marchmont went with you to Hampshire?" |
34542 | There was no possibility that Olivia should waver in her purpose; for had she not brought with her two witnesses-- Hester Jobson and her husband? |
34542 | There''s a nice opening in the medical line, is there? |
34542 | Was ever bridegroom more indulgent, more devoted, than Edward Arundel? |
34542 | Was he thinking,"Is_ this_ fragile creature the mistress of Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | Was it beautiful? |
34542 | Was it likely that she was to find her adversary and her conqueror here, in the meek child who had been committed to her charge? |
34542 | Was it likely, was it possible, that this pale- faced girl would enter into the lists against her in the great battle of her life? |
34542 | Was it reasonable to imagine that you would have married, and yet have left your mother in total ignorance of the fact?" |
34542 | Was it some hopeless attachment, some secret tenderness, which had never won the sweet return of love for love? |
34542 | Was it such a great advantage, after all, this annihilation, the sovereign good of the atheist''s barren creed? |
34542 | Was it true that Edward Arundel had never really loved his young bride? |
34542 | Was it within the compass of heavenly mercy to forgive such a sin as hers? |
34542 | Was not this even more likely than that she should seek refuge with her kinsfolk in Berkshire? |
34542 | Was she to be for ever insulted by this humiliating indifference? |
34542 | Was she to sit quietly by and hear a stranger lie away her kinsman''s honour, truth, and manhood? |
34542 | Was there any truth in that which Paul Marchmont had said to her? |
34542 | Was there anything in her mind; or was she only a human automaton, slowly decaying into dust? |
34542 | Was there anything upon earth that she feared now? |
34542 | Was there to be no end to this unendurable delay? |
34542 | Was this frank expression of regard for Mary Marchmont a token of_ love_? |
34542 | Was this the boyish red- coated dandy she had despised? |
34542 | Was this the man she had called frivolous? |
34542 | Was_ she_ never to be anything? |
34542 | We have talked of you so often; and I-- we-- have been so unhappy sometimes, thinking that----""That I should be killed, I suppose?" |
34542 | Weston?" |
34542 | Weston?" |
34542 | What am I to do with myself all this night, racked with uncertainty about Mary?" |
34542 | What are you going to do? |
34542 | What are you going to do?" |
34542 | What can I do to him? |
34542 | What can I do? |
34542 | What could have happened to throw him into that state? |
34542 | What could she do to keep this torture away from her? |
34542 | What course would this desperate woman take in her jealous rage? |
34542 | What did it all mean? |
34542 | What did it all mean? |
34542 | What did it matter that Edward Arundel repudiated and hated her? |
34542 | What did it matter to me whether I was there or at Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | What did it matter? |
34542 | What did it matter? |
34542 | What did it matter? |
34542 | What did my mother say?" |
34542 | What do I care for any one''s opinion-- now?" |
34542 | What do I know of Edward Arundel that should lead me to think him better or nobler than other men? |
34542 | What do you advise? |
34542 | What do you care whom I marry, or what becomes of me?" |
34542 | What do you think has become of her?" |
34542 | What do you think has become of my lost girl?" |
34542 | What does it matter what people say of me? |
34542 | What else should she say, after refusing all manner of people, and giving herself the airs of an old- maid? |
34542 | What good have my looks done me, that I should worry myself about them?" |
34542 | What had he to do with any catastrophe except that which had fallen upon his innocent young wife? |
34542 | What had she done, this girl, who had never known what it was to fight a battle with her own rebellious heart? |
34542 | What had she done? |
34542 | What has been the matter with you?" |
34542 | What has not been done by unhappy creatures in this woman''s state of mind? |
34542 | What have I done, Edward, that she should hate me?" |
34542 | What have I made of myself in my pride of intellect? |
34542 | What have we to live for? |
34542 | What have you done to show yourself worthy of my faith in you?" |
34542 | What have you done with your savings?" |
34542 | What if Mary had gone to Oakley Street? |
34542 | What if he had needlessly curtailed the short span of his life? |
34542 | What if he were to die soon-- before Olivia had learned to love her stepdaughter; before Mary had grown affectionately familiar with her new guardian? |
34542 | What if he were to die, and leave his only child unmarried? |
34542 | What if there_ is_ a God who can not abide iniquity?" |
34542 | What if this helpless girl had been detained by force at Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | What inducement had she ever had to cast off that sombre attire; what need had she to trick herself out in gay colours? |
34542 | What is Bill Sykes''broken nose or bull- dog visage to Nancy? |
34542 | What is her mystery-- what is her secret, I wonder? |
34542 | What is it that''s drove her away from her''ome, sir, and such a good''ome too? |
34542 | What is the favour I am to grant?" |
34542 | What is the mystery of your life?" |
34542 | What is the use of my fortune if you wo n''t share it with me, if you wo n''t take it all; for it is yours, my dearest-- it is all yours? |
34542 | What loving eyes would be charmed by her splendour? |
34542 | What more likely than that she lost the track, and wandered into the river? |
34542 | What more likely than that she should turn instinctively, in the hour of her desolation, to the humble friends whom she had known in her childhood? |
34542 | What more natural than that she should go back to the familiar habitation, dear to her by reason of a thousand associations with her dead father? |
34542 | What mystery are these people hiding amongst themselves; and what should_ he_ have to do with it?" |
34542 | What need had she to build castles, now that he could no longer inhabit them? |
34542 | What other motive could you have had for doing this deadly wrong? |
34542 | What other person?" |
34542 | What reason have you to fear my cousin Olivia?" |
34542 | What reward have I won for my patience?" |
34542 | What shall I say to Paulette? |
34542 | What should he do? |
34542 | What then? |
34542 | What vengeance could he wreak upon the head of that wretch who, for nearly two years, had condemned an innocent girl to cruel suffering and shame? |
34542 | What was he to do with that man? |
34542 | What was he to do? |
34542 | What was he to do? |
34542 | What was it in Olivia Arundel''s handsome face from which those who looked at her so often shrank, repelled and disappointed? |
34542 | What was it to her that she was sole heiress of that great mansion, and of eleven thousand a year? |
34542 | What was it to him if famine- stricken Ireland were perishing, and the far- away Indian possessions menaced by contumacious and treacherous Sikhs? |
34542 | What was it to him if the glory of England were in danger, the freedom of a mighty people wavering in the balance? |
34542 | What was it to him if the heavens were shrivelled like a blazing scroll, and the earth reeling on its shaken foundations? |
34542 | What was it worth, this fine house, with the broad flat before it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was it? |
34542 | What was she that she should be patient? |
34542 | What was the clue to the mystery of this letter, which had stunned and bewildered him, until the very power of reflection seemed lost? |
34542 | What was the clue to the mystery? |
34542 | What was the dreadful secret which had transformed this woman? |
34542 | What was the emotion which had now blanched his cheeks? |
34542 | What was the extent of the sin she had committed? |
34542 | What was the good of wealth, if it could not bring this young soldier home to a safe shelter in his native land? |
34542 | What was the nature of his crime, and what penalty had he incurred? |
34542 | What was there for this man even then? |
34542 | What was to be gained by any show of respect to her, whose brain was too weak to hold the memory of their conduct for five minutes together? |
34542 | What will become of him in that dreadful country? |
34542 | What would become of her, with her dangerous gifts, with her fatal dowry of beauty and intellect and pride? |
34542 | What would she do? |
34542 | What would the world say of me, Mary? |
34542 | What''s the good of your coming if you bring me no help?" |
34542 | What''s the number, old fellow?" |
34542 | What, in Heaven''s name, can it mean?" |
34542 | Whatever villany this man might be capable of committing, Olivia must at least be guiltless of any deliberate treachery? |
34542 | When would art earn him eleven thousand a year? |
34542 | Where are they-- my mother and Letitia?" |
34542 | Where are you going, Ned?" |
34542 | Where had she gone? |
34542 | Where is Olivia, by- the- bye? |
34542 | Where is she? |
34542 | Where was he to look for her next? |
34542 | Where was she likely to go in her inexperience of the outer world? |
34542 | Where''s John? |
34542 | Where''s Peterson?" |
34542 | Where?" |
34542 | Who could be better than Olivia Arundel? |
34542 | Who could there be in Lincolnshire with the right to call to him thus by his Christian name? |
34542 | Who could think that sorrow would come between us so soon?" |
34542 | Who else would dare accuse a Dangerfield Arundel of baseness? |
34542 | Who gave you leave to let that woman go? |
34542 | Who saw her there?" |
34542 | Who should dare to disbelieve her?" |
34542 | Who was it who drove Mary Marchmont from this house,--not once only, but twice, by her cruelty? |
34542 | Who was it who first sinned? |
34542 | Who----?" |
34542 | Why did he for ever goad her to blacker wickedness by this parade of his love for Mary? |
34542 | Why did he force her to remember every moment how much cause she had to hate this pale- faced girl? |
34542 | Why did n''t he take to her, I wonder? |
34542 | Why did she leave this house?" |
34542 | Why did she marry John Marchmont? |
34542 | Why did you not write to tell her of Mary''s flight?" |
34542 | Why do you come here with your idiotic fancies? |
34542 | Why does not God have pity upon me, and take the bitter burden away? |
34542 | Why does she say,''You wo n''t take another egg, will you, Edward?'' |
34542 | Why had she ever consented to go there, when she had again and again expressed such terror of her stepmother? |
34542 | Why had she not rather followed her husband down to Devonshire, and thrown herself upon his relatives for protection? |
34542 | Why had she remained at Marchmont Towers? |
34542 | Why have you been so changed to me lately? |
34542 | Why is it that, whether I threaten, or whether I appeal, I can gain nothing from her-- nothing? |
34542 | Why should I be afraid? |
34542 | Why should I prevent it?" |
34542 | Why should existence be so bright and careless to him; while to her it was a terrible fever- dream, a long sickness, a never- ceasing battle? |
34542 | Why should he slave at his easel, and toil to become a great painter? |
34542 | Why should she fail in this? |
34542 | Why should we keep her in ignorance of it? |
34542 | Why, then, should I make myself a slave for the sake of winning people''s esteem? |
34542 | Why?" |
34542 | Will he ever forgive you, do you think, when he knows that his young wife has been the victim of a senseless, vicious love? |
34542 | Will you accept my help?" |
34542 | Will you come and open the gate for me, please? |
34542 | Will you come into the wood with me?" |
34542 | Will you come upstairs with me? |
34542 | Will you go?" |
34542 | Will_ you_ be that protector, Edward Arundel? |
34542 | With George Weston and Olivia, Betsy Murrel the servant- girl, and Hester Jobson to bear witness against him, what could he hope? |
34542 | Wo n''t you, Hoskins?" |
34542 | Wo n''t you, Polly?" |
34542 | Would he be sorry that she was not there? |
34542 | Would he be sorry? |
34542 | Would he enjoy himself very, very much? |
34542 | Would he love her any better then than he had loved her two years ago? |
34542 | Would she go straight to Edward Arundel and tell him----? |
34542 | Would such a thing ever come to pass? |
34542 | Would the new furnace through which she was to pass be more terrible than the old fires? |
34542 | Would the pretty girls in blue be there? |
34542 | Would there be anything more after to- morrow? |
34542 | Yes, it is a conspiracy, if you like; if you are not afraid to call it by a hard name, why should I fear to do so? |
34542 | Yes, she had been his help and comfort since her earliest infancy, and she was not unused to self- sacrifice: why should she fail him now? |
34542 | Yes, this was most likely; for how else could she hope to prevent the marriage? |
34542 | You are happier here than you were in Charlotte Street, eh, mother?" |
34542 | You can get your things together; there''s a boy about the place who will carry them for you, I suppose?" |
34542 | You can let me in at the little door in the lobby, ca n''t you, Mrs. John? |
34542 | You can perhaps give me the address of some place in London where your cousin is in the habit of staying?" |
34542 | You do n''t know what that word''love''means, do you? |
34542 | You do n''t suppose I''m going to lay down my sword at seven- and- twenty years of age, and retire upon my pension? |
34542 | You have heard of my relative, Mrs. John Marchmont,--my cousin''s widow?" |
34542 | You have managed him for fifteen years: surely you can go on managing him now without annoying_ me_ about him? |
34542 | You have n''t asked them, I suppose?" |
34542 | You have no doubt heard that she is-- mad?" |
34542 | You have ruined me; do you hear? |
34542 | You know Stanfield, of course?" |
34542 | You mean to undertake it, then? |
34542 | You must live a fortnight somewhere, Polly: where shall it be?" |
34542 | You must want money, Paul?" |
34542 | You remember me, perhaps? |
34542 | You remember the way he went on that day down in the boat- house when Edward Arundel came in upon us unexpectedly? |
34542 | You want the dressing- case carried to Mrs. Weston''s house, and I''m to wait for you there?" |
34542 | You will let it take place?" |
34542 | You will let me smoke out of doors, wo n''t you, Polly? |
34542 | You will see them together-- you will hear of their happiness; and do you think that_ he_ will ever forgive you for your part of the conspiracy? |
34542 | You wo n''t leave me-- you wo n''t leave me, will you?" |
34542 | You would not surely have me be less than true to myself, Mary darling? |
34542 | You''d like to go, Olivia?" |
34542 | You''ll accept the shelter of our spare room until to- morrow morning?" |
34542 | You''ll come, wo n''t you, Livy?" |
34542 | You''ll stop here for the rest of the night? |
34542 | You''re surely not going to renew your acquaintance with him?" |
34542 | You''ve heard me talk of Belinda Lawford, my dearest, dearest friend? |
34542 | Your taste, I suppose, Olivia? |
34542 | _ Could_ such a thing be possible? |
34542 | _ He_ had wished her to obey; what should she do, then, but be obedient? |
34542 | and did you see much of him?" |
34542 | and would he dance with them? |
34542 | are you weak enough to be deluded by a fortune- hunter''s pretty pastoral flatteries? |
34542 | cried Edward Arundel;"he makes himself at home at Marchmont Towers, then?" |
34542 | cried Mrs. Arundel;"but surely you----?" |
34542 | cried the lawyer;"what can you want to go out for at this time in the morning? |
34542 | cried the young man,"what, in mercy''s name, has brought you here?" |
34542 | demanded John Marchmont sadly,"in a darned pinafore and a threadbare frock?" |
34542 | did n''t you recognise him? |
34542 | do you think I came down here to stand all night staring through these iron bars? |
34542 | exclaimed Mr. Marchmont, decisively;"who is Mr. Gormby, that he should give orders as to who comes in or stops out? |
34542 | exclaimed the boy, in a breathless whisper;"do n''t you see, Martin? |
34542 | has my love so little the aspect of truth that she_ can_ doubt me?" |
34542 | he asked;"and what brings you to this place?" |
34542 | he cried, in a fierce agony of mental or bodily uneasiness;--"how long? |
34542 | he cried,"are you possessed by a thousand fiends? |
34542 | he cried,"not gone to bed yet?" |
34542 | he muttered;"how was it? |
34542 | he thought;"why did n''t she come to me? |
34542 | how had he looked? |
34542 | if she wants me to have one? |
34542 | is he now? |
34542 | is the lot of other women never to be mine? |
34542 | may I say that you have given me a hope of your ultimate consent?" |
34542 | may I tell him that I have spoken to you? |
34542 | may not a monotonous recurrence of the same ideas be above all injurious? |
34542 | murmured Mary;"what if I were not rich?" |
34542 | or how shall we hear of you?" |
34542 | or that-- O God, that would be too horrible!--does any one suspect that she drowned herself?" |
34542 | said Edward Arundel;"Mary, my poor sorrowful darling-- alive?" |
34542 | said Edward Arundel;"you believe, then, that she is dead?" |
34542 | said the soldier;"you call those things frocks, do n''t you? |
34542 | she asked; and then, as her eyes rested on the cards, she added, angrily,"Have n''t I told you that I would not see any callers to- day? |
34542 | she cried suddenly, with a disdainful gesture of her head;"do you think your pitiful face has won Edward Arundel? |
34542 | she cried,"what is it?" |
34542 | she murmured;"will you be sorry?" |
34542 | she said, piteously appealing to the young man,"papa would never, never, never marry again,--would he?" |
34542 | she said;"O Captain Arundel, is it really you?" |
34542 | she said;"_ is_ it? |
34542 | she thought; would the blank days and nights go monotonously on when the story that had given them a meaning and a purpose had come to its dismal end? |
34542 | she whispered;"did he really say that?" |
34542 | that''s the son of the present possessor?" |
34542 | the girl cried suddenly, clasping her hands and looking imploringly at Captain Arundel,"were the cruel things she said true? |
34542 | what are we to do?" |
34542 | what do you mean?" |
34542 | what had he talked about? |
34542 | what had she done, that all this wealth of love and happiness should drop into her lap unsought,--comparatively unvalued, perhaps? |
34542 | what have I done to offend you?" |
34542 | what of her? |
34542 | whispered Martin Mostyn peevishly;"why do n''t you look at the stage? |
34542 | who else would be vile enough to call my father''s son a liar and a traitor? |
34542 | why didst Thou so abandon me, when I turned away from Thee, and made Edward Arundel the idol of my wicked heart?" |
34542 | why do I reason with myself?" |
34542 | why do I waste my breath in talking to such a creature as this? |
34542 | why do you look at me like that? |
34542 | why should he love her in preference to every other woman in the world? |
34542 | why, why do they let him go? |
34542 | will God ever have pity upon me? |
34542 | will this journey never come to an end? |
34542 | would he be sorry if she married John Marchmont? |
34542 | you know,--you must know, dearest,--that I shall never see that place?" |
34542 | you mean to consider my offer? |
6171 | A day''s respite? 6171 A mere dispute about words"is a phrase which we hear daily; and why? |
6171 | And the place? |
6171 | And to whom? |
6171 | And what now hath his serenity been doing? 6171 And which way has the Swedish army retreated?" |
6171 | And who,said Paulina,"is your master?" |
6171 | As how? |
6171 | As, for example, this-- does the Lady Paulina recognize this particular paper? |
6171 | Ay, sir, that will I, be you well assured-- the Landgrave is my sovereign--"Since when? 6171 But why here?" |
6171 | But, again I ask you, sir, will you on any terms grant immunity to these young men? |
6171 | How mean you by that, captain? 6171 Martial law, gentlemen, I say; how will you relish the little articles of that code? |
6171 | Nor grant a day''s respite to him who may appear, on examination, the least criminal of the whole? |
6171 | Once more-- you refuse? |
6171 | Shall we ascend and rehearse our parts? |
6171 | The Lady Paulina, then, distinguishes between the power and the right? 6171 The whole? |
6171 | Then all grace is hopeless? |
6171 | Then you refuse? |
6171 | Then you refuse? |
6171 | Then, what brings him to Klosterheim? 6171 This babbler,"said the Landgrave, making an effort to recover his coolness,"reminds me well; that adventurer, young Maximilian-- who is he? |
6171 | What Simon? 6171 What is it, mysterious being, that you would reveal? |
6171 | What prince is it you speak of? 6171 Wherefore should you fear me?" |
6171 | Who should now make it doubtful? 6171 Will they_ transact_ with God?" |
6171 | Will your highness spare none? |
6171 | You did? 6171 Yourself.--Prince, it would seem that you have me at your mercy: wherefore, then, the coward haste of this Venetian hound? |
6171 | ( There is, however, a disingenuous vagueness in the very word_ ekleloipenai_),_ ed''allote pote ex aionos_--and when? |
6171 | --By the way, whence comes this odd- looking word? |
6171 | Accordingly, he asked me,"What I had been lately reading?" |
6171 | Again I ask, then, who is to pay the three shillings? |
6171 | Am I_ never_ to be contradicted? |
6171 | And for which of his merits is it that you would have me contradict him? |
6171 | And in what way could such a polemic interest be evoked except through political partisanship? |
6171 | And is it possible that any such mighty magic can lurk in the simple substitution of_ quantity_ for_ value_? |
6171 | And now I consider-- what''s the meaning of your saying"by possibility"? |
6171 | And now answer me: what part of their own product will these eight producers deduct for their own wages? |
6171 | And now, having reviewed the incidents of the story, in what respect is it that we object to the solution of the Sphinx''s riddle? |
6171 | And now, nearly a hundred years after Warburton, what is the opinion of scholars upon this point? |
6171 | And that reminds me to ask, gentlemen, have any of you heard that Gustavus Horn is expected at Falkenberg? |
6171 | And this idea, to what is it applied? |
6171 | And this lower scale, it will be said-- how do you account for that? |
6171 | And to whom do these twenty- four quarters go? |
6171 | And we must go to Rome: where else could we get absolution? |
6171 | And what in the case Alpha? |
6171 | And what is the choice of diction? |
6171 | And what objection does Mr. Malthus make to gold as a standard? |
6171 | And what quantity of labor will be necessary to produce these ninety- six quarters? |
6171 | And what, may I ask, is the particular ground of your opposition to Mr. Ricardo? |
6171 | And when these modes of pleasurable relaxation had been subtracted from ancient life, what could remain? |
6171 | And where is, then, your assurance of the whole?" |
6171 | And who could pretend to calculate the hour of his visit? |
6171 | And why had he been of late so unaccountably silent? |
6171 | And why is that? |
6171 | And yet, for a service of that nature, could she reasonably rely upon me? |
6171 | And, therefore, the argument from which it flows, I presume, is false? |
6171 | Another question, and a more interesting question to men in general, is this,--What is the motive to virtue? |
6171 | Are my doctrines true, are they demonstrable? |
6171 | Are we, then, angry on behalf of Julian? |
6171 | As the billows closed over her head, did she perhaps attempt to sting with her dying words? |
6171 | As victor? |
6171 | At last the Landgrave mastered his emotion sufficiently to say,"Well, sir, what next?" |
6171 | Ay, what is it that causes them, as you say? |
6171 | Ay, what is it? |
6171 | Because a man attends to the darning of his horse''s stockings, why must he be meditating murder? |
6171 | Because barouches have altered in value, that is no reason why besoms should_ not_ have altered? |
6171 | Because the_ quantity_ of producing labor varies? |
6171 | But allow me to ask; if that principle is not proposed as a measure of value, in what character_ is_ it proposed? |
6171 | But could these advantages anticipate a higher civilization? |
6171 | But how shall I know_ that_, until I know what you cloak under the symbol of C? |
6171 | But how shall_ that_ vary? |
6171 | But how? |
6171 | But in writing have you dispersed nothing calculated to alienate the attachment of my subjects?" |
6171 | But is it possible that Mr. Ricardo can require me to abjure an inference so reasonable as this? |
6171 | But no matter; how do you understand the distinction? |
6171 | But of course you deny that the valuation is correct? |
6171 | But of what use is anger or argument in a duel with female criticism? |
6171 | But of what? |
6171 | But the question is still but one step removed; for, how came_ veterana_ by that acceptation in rural economy?] |
6171 | But was it dangerous? |
6171 | But was it not possible that even this sum might by economy be made to meet the necessities of the case? |
6171 | But was the Bible intelligible at the first glance? |
6171 | But what are we to think of Achilles and Patroclus, when described as being( or_ not_ being)"under convictions of sin"?] |
6171 | But what came of the London lady''s or of Mrs. Schreiber''s Spartan discipline? |
6171 | But what good purpose is attained by such caprices? |
6171 | But what is it that I assert? |
6171 | But what next? |
6171 | But where is the absurdity? |
6171 | But wherein lies the difference? |
6171 | But why can not my head remain stationary, whilst my trunk grows heavier? |
6171 | But yet, though faithful to her, might he not be ill? |
6171 | But, admitting that Mr. Malthus has proceeded on the misconception you state, what is the specific injury which has thence resulted to Mr. Ricardo? |
6171 | But, then, might not all this blow over? |
6171 | But_ à propos_ of ransoms, what now might be Holkerstein''s ransom for a farmer''s barns stuffed with a three years''crop?" |
6171 | By what impulse, law, or motive, am I impelled to be virtuous rather than vicious? |
6171 | By what road, or in what direction, had he disappeared? |
6171 | By whom? |
6171 | Ca n''t you give us a sixth, X.? |
6171 | Can this be affirmed of the continent, either generally, or, indeed, partially? |
6171 | Could_ that_ be reckoned an anodyne for the torment connected with a course of Schreiber? |
6171 | Cowper, in his"Task,"puts the question,--"Is India free? |
6171 | Did the Sphinx follow with her cruel eye this fatal tissue of calamity to its shadowy crisis at Colonus? |
6171 | Did the wicked Sphinx labor in vain, amidst her parting convulsions, to breathe this freezing whisper into the heart of him that had overthrown her? |
6171 | Do I mention this in disparagement of Oxford? |
6171 | Does anybody deny it? |
6171 | Does it_ therefore_ purchase more than it did before of B? |
6171 | Doth he meditate to abolish Burgundy? |
6171 | Doubtless: but what is your inference? |
6171 | For even in dreams would it have seemed reasonable, or natural, that Laxton, with its entire society, should transfer itself to Manchester? |
6171 | For example, the sentinel at your own door-- doubtless you marked him? |
6171 | For how does Mr. Malthus obtain this invariable value of ten? |
6171 | For how shall it vary? |
6171 | For how will Adam Smith reply to him who urges the double money value as an argument of a double real value? |
6171 | For what is it that he would trouble the repose of this city?" |
6171 | For whom do you take me? |
6171 | For, as fast as wages increase, what is to hinder price from increasing_ pari passu_? |
6171 | Had I, then, really all that originality on this subject which for many years I secretly claimed? |
6171 | Had he been a parricide? |
6171 | Had the king, had her majesty, only one room? |
6171 | Has your highness the courage to trample on such terrors?" |
6171 | Have you any answer to these deductions? |
6171 | He may; but in that case will the result be true, or will it not be true? |
6171 | He seemed to have committed the most atrocious crimes; he was a murderer, he was a parricide, he was doubly incestuous, and yet how? |
6171 | Honors, beauty of the first order, wealth, and the power which follows wealth as its shadow-- what could these do? |
6171 | How could that languor be due to Christianity, which far anticipated the very birth of Christianity? |
6171 | How much, then, shall we assume as the total charge on account of Oxford? |
6171 | How so, X.? |
6171 | How so, X.? |
6171 | How so? |
6171 | How so? |
6171 | How so? |
6171 | How so? |
6171 | How was it any natural preparation for a vast spiritual revolution, that men should first of all acknowledge any special duty of repentance? |
6171 | How, in fact, does the university proceed? |
6171 | How, then, has either risen? |
6171 | If the doctrine you would force upon me be a plain, broad, straightforward truth, why fetter it with such a suspicious restriction? |
6171 | If, then, connected with the spiritual world, was it with the good or the evil in that inscrutable region? |
6171 | In both cases, this is conveyed by what is termed"lecturing;"--but what is the meaning of a lecture in Oxford and elsewhere? |
6171 | In relation to what? |
6171 | In this second case, Phædrus, how much will be paid to the laborer? |
6171 | In what instance? |
6171 | In what instance? |
6171 | In what lay their inferiority? |
6171 | In what way do you suppose that Adam Smith came to make so great an oversight, as I now confess it to be? |
6171 | Incestuous had he been? |
6171 | Is it Saxon exclusively, or is it Saxon by preference? |
6171 | Is it a case of such daily occurrence to hear men disputing about mere verbal differences? |
6171 | Is it possible that you can ask such a question? |
6171 | Is it to some ideal, or to some existing and known reality? |
6171 | Is that footing peculiar_ to them_? |
6171 | Is this an absurdity, Phædrus? |
6171 | Is this the unparadoxical Ricardo? |
6171 | It will be true, therefore, of B, that, by doubling its own value, it will command a double quantity of A? |
6171 | Little use? |
6171 | Meantime my second remark was substantially this which follows: What is a religion? |
6171 | Meantime the question arises, Did he mean his Squire Western for a_ representative_ portrait? |
6171 | Meantime, what is it you allude to? |
6171 | Meantime, what was it that made him an object of peculiar interest to Lady Carbery? |
6171 | Might he not be languishing in some one of the many distresses incident to war? |
6171 | Might he not even have perished? |
6171 | Might one not screw the neck of this base prince, who abuses the confidence of cavaliers so perfidiously? |
6171 | More than it did? |
6171 | Neither, in fact, does any other university in Europe; and why, then, notice the case? |
6171 | Next, it seems, we must ask, what are its uses? |
6171 | Now came the question of time,--_when_ was the revolt to begin? |
6171 | Now perish yourself.--Look there: is that the form of one who lives and breathes?" |
6171 | Now tell me, Philebus, what more than their own wages do the whole eight produce? |
6171 | Now, how much labor will be required to produce the remaining twenty- four quarters for profits? |
6171 | Now, if A have risen, by your own admission I am entitled to infer that profits have risen: but what are profits in the case Iota? |
6171 | Now, is it not possible that some such mode of argument may be applied to the case of variations in the_ quantity_ of labor? |
6171 | Now, seriously, you will hardly maintain that the hat could not rise to the price of nineteen shillings-- or of any higher sum? |
6171 | Now, tell me, Phædrus, will this rise in the value of corn affect the hatter''s wages only, or will it affect wages in general? |
6171 | Now, these words, these"dictionary"words, what are they? |
6171 | Now, what in effect is your answer? |
6171 | Now, what is the answer? |
6171 | Now, what is the common principle which ranks these several species under the same genus? |
6171 | Now, what is there which can always be obtained by the same quantity of labor? |
6171 | Now, when such representations are made, to what standard of a just discipline is it that these writers would be understood as appealing? |
6171 | Now, when the hat sold for eighteen shillings, on Mr. Ricardo''s principle why did it sell for that sum? |
6171 | Of these several relations of value, what is the sufficient cause? |
6171 | On this supposition the price of the hat will now be-- what? |
6171 | Or again,_ had_ he been silent? |
6171 | Or how defend herself before a tribunal where all alike-- judge, evidence, accuser--- were in effect one and the same malignant enemy? |
6171 | Or is it in your serene highness that I see both?" |
6171 | Or who is it that you now believe interested in your revelations?" |
6171 | Or, peradventure, will he forbid laughing,--his highness being little that way given himself?" |
6171 | Prince, dare you receive my revelations?" |
6171 | Reasonable inference? |
6171 | Saw any man yet such an orthodox fellow, In the morning when sober, in the evening when mellow? |
6171 | Shall it vary, then, because the_ value_ of the producing labor varies? |
6171 | Shall we drink his health, gentlemen?" |
6171 | Simon Peter?" |
6171 | So that, if A rise, it will irresistibly argue profits to have risen? |
6171 | Some mighty caliph, or lamp- bearing Aladdin, might have worked such marvels: but else who, or by what machinery? |
6171 | Such is the opinion held of this great poet in 1835; but what were those of 1805- 15,--nay, of 1825? |
6171 | Suppose I say, it is not? |
6171 | Suppose I say, it is? |
6171 | Tell me, then, Phædrus, when the value of labor rises-- in other words, when wages rise-- what is it that causes them to rise? |
6171 | That is your meaning? |
6171 | The case which your argument respects is that in which wages are supposed to rise? |
6171 | Then, in what way had the guardians of the jails come to be connected with any even imaginary offence? |
6171 | Therefore, for instance, in gloves; having previously been worth four pair of buckskin gloves, the hat will now be worth four pair+_ y_? |
6171 | They must be paid, but from what fund? |
6171 | Think you that none better could be had?" |
6171 | This being so, how could he possibly make an election between two things which he constantly confounded and regarded as identical? |
6171 | This wrath, how came it to sink so low as to collapse at the echo of a word from a friendless stranger? |
6171 | This wrath, how durst it tower so high as to measure itself against the enmity of a nation? |
6171 | Thus far there was a reasonable foundation laid for suspicion; but suspicion of what? |
6171 | Thus far, you can have nothing to object? |
6171 | Thus, for instance, in the Eleusinian mysteries, what was the main business transacted? |
6171 | Thus, might a divine say: Will he arrest the judgments of God by a_ demurrer_? |
6171 | To satisfy them, the Oracle should resemble a modern coach- office-- where undoubtedly you would suspect fraud, if the question"How far to Derby?" |
6171 | To this I_ do_ assent; and what next? |
6171 | Twelve and five tenths of what? |
6171 | Under what circumstances? |
6171 | Upon what ground did that suspicion arise? |
6171 | Upon what object is this idea of spiritual transfiguration made to bear? |
6171 | Upon which of these three did any judgment descend? |
6171 | Was he not of some impassive nature, inaudible, invisible, impalpable? |
6171 | Was it for a prince to countenance a robbery of that nature, or to appropriate its spoils?" |
6171 | Was it for death? |
6171 | Was it young or old, handsome or plain? |
6171 | Was the reader sensible, in the practical effect upon his ear, of any beauty attained? |
6171 | Was there a burgomaster amongst the citizens who had made himself conspicuously a tool of the Landgrave, or had opposed the imperial interest? |
6171 | We read in French memoirs innumerable of_ the king''s apartment_, of_ the queen''s apartment_, etc., and for us English the question arises, How? |
6171 | Well, all I shall say is this,--am I in a world where men stand on their heads or on their feet? |
6171 | Well, but on what separate principle can this raw material be valued? |
6171 | Were it possible that any should find in my conduct here a motive to a personal vengeance upon myself, which of you is not near enough? |
6171 | What are one hundred quarters worth in the case Iota? |
6171 | What bars had yet been found sufficient to repel him? |
6171 | What could people so circumstanced propose to themselves as a suitable resolution for their situation? |
6171 | What do you think of it? |
6171 | What does a standard mean? |
6171 | What does_ that_ describe? |
6171 | What else than a jailer is he that sits watch upon the prison- doors of honorable cavaliers?" |
6171 | What evasion could they imagine here? |
6171 | What followed? |
6171 | What for? |
6171 | What hand can deliver from this extremity even you, Sir Masque?" |
6171 | What is a university almost everywhere else? |
6171 | What is the_ lexis_? |
6171 | What matter, as regarded the moral guilt, if his father( and by the fault of that father) were utterly unknown to him? |
6171 | What matters it that his wages gave him a great deal of corn, until we know whether corn bore a high or a low value? |
6171 | What other functions remain to a university? |
6171 | What other prayer, what other image, is ever at my heart?" |
6171 | What remains? |
6171 | What say you to this, my dear Philebus? |
6171 | What was Mr. Ricardo''s answer? |
6171 | What was his height? |
6171 | What was its relation to the public welfare of Greece? |
6171 | What was my uncle the captain like? |
6171 | What was the Priory like? |
6171 | What was the great practical inference from the new distinction which I offered? |
6171 | What was the relation of that same Oracle to the absolute truth? |
6171 | What was the relation of the Oracles( and we would wish to be understood as speaking particularly of the Delphic Oracle) to the credulity of Greece? |
6171 | What was to be done? |
6171 | What, then,_ was_ the fact? |
6171 | What, without reimbursement? |
6171 | Whatever, therefore, is true of A, will be true of B? |
6171 | When are wages, for example, at a high real value? |
6171 | Whence came her monstrous nature, that so often renewed its remembrance amongst men of distant lands, in Egyptian or Ethiopian marble? |
6171 | Whence came her wrath against Thebes? |
6171 | Whence is the motive derived which should impel me to one line of conduct in preference to the other? |
6171 | Wherefore must my share be so small? |
6171 | Wherefore, then, and to what end, are the vast systems of building, the palaces and towers of Oxford? |
6171 | Wherefore, then, is the_ visible_ Oxford? |
6171 | Whither was her lover withdrawn from her knowledge? |
6171 | Who can say? |
6171 | Who could endure to break it? |
6171 | Who knew his motives, or the principle of his mysterious warfare-- which, at any rate, in its mode had latterly been marked by bloodshed? |
6171 | Who make the effort which was forever to fix the fate of Maximilian? |
6171 | Who was Lady Carbery? |
6171 | Who was he? |
6171 | Who, and on what errand? |
6171 | Who, then, is my accuser, who my judge? |
6171 | Whose gold was it that armed thy hand against one who had injured neither thee nor thine?" |
6171 | Why am I to suppose this? |
6171 | Why not allow of demoniac powers, excelling man in beauty, power, prescience, but otherwise neutral as to all purposes of man''s moral nature? |
6171 | Why should they? |
6171 | Why then, more than at any other time? |
6171 | Why"repentance"? |
6171 | Why, now, for instance, take the case Alpha, and what is the error you detect in that? |
6171 | Why, then, is the phrase in every man''s mouth, when the actual occurrence must be so very uncommon? |
6171 | Why, then, should_ he_ court danger and disreputability? |
6171 | Why? |
6171 | Will it do? |
6171 | Will the grave not hold its own? |
6171 | With what fury would I often exclaim: He who loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how shall he love God whom he hath not seen? |
6171 | Without a succession of wars and martial glories in reserve for the army, what interest had_ they_ in Napoleon? |
6171 | Witnesses in exculpation, whom could she produce? |
6171 | Would I undertake an Oxford life upon such terms? |
6171 | Would he keep his promise, and appear? |
6171 | Would it have been wise, or would it have been intellectually just, to quote this as the text of an eulogium on Lucian? |
6171 | Would it soon restore him to her society? |
6171 | Yet surely any man may use the principle of his antagonist, in order to extort a particular result from it? |
6171 | Yet what is the fact? |
6171 | You confess? |
6171 | Young or old, handsome or plain? |
6171 | Z., and to begin as near as possible to the end-- is there any one principle in Political Economy from which all the rest can be deduced? |
6171 | _ Did_ he die? |
6171 | _ Wanted!_ for what? |
6171 | and does she wear her plumed And jewelled turban with a smile of peace, Or do we grind her still?" |
6171 | and for how long a time? |
6171 | and the little court of guard-- you have seen_ that?_ and Colonel von Aremberg, how think you of him?" |
6171 | and the little court of guard-- you have seen_ that?_ and Colonel von Aremberg, how think you of him?" |
6171 | and why? |
6171 | and yet believe it not; else why do they fancy themselves able to evade it? |
6171 | are you the man that would have us suffer those things tamely which the Landgrave has begun?" |
6171 | ay, but how? |
6171 | by whom authorized?" |
6171 | did you hear that?" |
6171 | do you know me so little as to apprehend my jesting in a serious sense? |
6171 | does he mean to say, then, that the laborer always obtains the same wages? |
6171 | exclaimed Maximilian,"can this be possible?" |
6171 | exclaimed Paulina;"wherefore do you alarm me thus? |
6171 | is there to be no end to this? |
6171 | least of all, about the use of_ the_ leading truth? |
6171 | may he not, even at this very moment, thought each person, secretly be near me-- or even touching myself-- or haunting my own steps? |
6171 | might he not be there already? |
6171 | might he not even now be moving amongst them? |
6171 | or on what other principle than that on which the hat itself was valued? |
6171 | said an officer of dragoons,"how know you that our payments are light? |
6171 | should he, the delegate of God, and the standard- bearer of the true religion, proclaim himself officially head of the false? |
6171 | still less, about the use of a leading truth? |
6171 | they exclaimed;"and trebly armed: will your highness approach him too nearly?" |
6171 | was it for judgment? |
6171 | was it for some wilderness of pariah eternities? |
6171 | what chance has brought you hither?" |
6171 | what was her present position, and what had been her original position, in society? |
6171 | what_ had_ they done? |
6171 | when-- when have I forgot that? |
6171 | whence comes he? |
6171 | who could have believed it?" |
6171 | your eyes are wild and fierce; say, is it money that you want?" |
962 | Did the strangers come around you, in the far- off foreign land? 962 Ere you quit this ancient casement, tell me, is it well to yearn For the evanescent visions, vanished never to return? |
962 | In the sound of many footfalls, did you falter with regret For a step which used to gladden in the time so vivid yet? 962 Is there a ravelled riddle left That you would have undone? |
962 | Is there never a peace for the sinner Whose sin is in this, that he mars The light of his worship of Beauty, Forgetting the flower for the stars? |
962 | Lovely Being, can a mortal, weary of this changeless scene, Cross these cloudy summits to the land where man hath never been? 962 Or who knows but that some secret lies beneath yon dismal mound? |
962 | Past sight, out of mind, alienated,Said the Dream to me, wearily sighing,"Ah, where is the Winter you mated To Love, its decline and its dying? |
962 | Wahina, why linger,Annatanam said,"When the tent of a chieftain is lonely? |
962 | Wahina, why weep o''er a handful of dust, When the souls of the brave are approaching? 962 Was it well, O you wandering wailer, Abandoned in terrible space, To halt on the highway to Heaven Because of a glittering face?" |
962 | Where are all the springs you talked of? 962 Will it end all this watching, and doubting, and dread? |
962 | Will you reside with me, my dear? |
962 | You ebber see dat fellow go? |
962 | A Birthday Trifle Here in this gold- green evening end, While air is soft and sky is clear, What tender message shall I send To her I hold so dear? |
962 | A dull cloud creepeth close to the moon, And the winter winds pass with a shuddering croon-- Oh, why was he snatched from his brothers so soon? |
962 | Alcyone''s tears, or the sight to discover Of Sisyphus pallid for thee by the blue, bitter lights of the deep-- Pallid, but patient for sorrow? |
962 | And across a burnt body, as black as an adder, Sits the sprite of a sheep- dog( was ever sight sadder?) |
962 | And are you so near me at last? |
962 | And does the gleam on Ocean''s wave Tide gladness now to me and you? |
962 | And is it not His will That deeply injured Right Should overthrow the iron rule And reign instead of Might? |
962 | And shall Australia, framed and set in sea, August with glory, wait in vain for thee? |
962 | And, lying alone, do you look from the drouth Of a thirsty Life with a pleading mouth? |
962 | Are not the grasses round your grave Yet springing green and fresh to view? |
962 | Are ye not the sad memorials, telling of a mighty grief-- Dark with records ground and lettered into caverned rock and reef? |
962 | As she lay, the helpless maiden, caught and bound in fast eclipse, Did the lips of god drain pleasure from her sweet and swooning lips? |
962 | As they looked on the haven before them, Already high looming and near, What else but a joy could invade them, Or what could they feel but a cheer? |
962 | As those long hours glided past him, till the east with light was fraught, Who may know the mournful secret-- who can tell us what he thought? |
962 | Back again? |
962 | Because of this, how fares the Leader dead? |
962 | Before he was caught in the breach-- in the pits of iniquity grim, Did ever the Deity reach the hand of a Father to him? |
962 | Bells, beyond the forest chiming, where is all the inspiration now That was wo nt to flush my forehead, and to chase the pallor from my brow? |
962 | But I have not leapt to the level Where light and the shadows dissever? |
962 | But Zeus is immutable Master, and these are the walls the immortals Build for our sighing, and who may set lips at the lords and repine? |
962 | But shall we never see Your happy face, my brave lad, any more? |
962 | But the lips of the flower of the rose Said,"where is the ending hereof? |
962 | But when I bless your world with light, Who makes it dark? |
962 | But, folded in sunset, how long have you slept By the Roses all reeling with colours? |
962 | Can he live for that horrible chaos Of flame and perpetual rain?" |
962 | Can the fond delusion linger still, When the Evening withers o''er me, and the night is creeping up the hill? |
962 | Can you bear the faint day as it closes And dies into twilighted hours? |
962 | Can you look at the red of the roses; Are you friend of the fields and the flowers? |
962 | Can you think of all the dangers you and I are living through With a soul so weak and fearful, with the doubts_ I_ never knew? |
962 | Comrade, wherefore tarry here? |
962 | Cui Bono? |
962 | Dark thoughts live when tears wo n''t gather; Who can tell us what she felt? |
962 | Dear old place, are we so near you? |
962 | Did I hear a low echo of footfalls about, Whilst watching those forest trees stark? |
962 | Did a lonely phantom wail, Pent amongst those tangled branches barring out the moonlight pale? |
962 | Did beauty wax dim while watching for him Who passed through the threshold no more? |
962 | Did ever a moment supreme Illumine his face with a strange ineffably beautiful dream? |
962 | Did ever his countenance change? |
962 | Did my Spirit yearn in vain; And amidst this holy splendour can a moody heart remain? |
962 | Did the sweet winds come and lull him with the music of the sea? |
962 | Did they lead you out of sorrow, with kind face and loving hand? |
962 | Do these sorrows die out with our breath? |
962 | Do you hear her, Ulmarra? |
962 | Do you hear her, Ulmarra? |
962 | Do you hear her, Ulmarra? |
962 | Do you know that she watches the rain, and the main, And the waves which are moaning there? |
962 | Do you love the low notes of the ballad She sang in her darling old fashion?" |
962 | Dost thou know of the cunning of Beauty? |
962 | Dost thou not remember that the thorns are clustered with the rose, And that every Zin- like border may a pleasant land enclose? |
962 | Doth a devil deceive them? |
962 | Doth it trouble his head? |
962 | Down amongst the hills of tempest, where the elves of tumult roam-- Blown wet shadows of the summits, dim sonorous sprites of foam? |
962 | Drowned at Sea Gloomy cliffs, so worn and wasted with the washing of the waves, Are ye not like giant tombstones round those lonely ocean graves? |
962 | Far in the falls of the day, Down in the meadows of myrrh, What has she left you to say Filled with the beauty of her? |
962 | Flying splendours, singing streams, Lutes and lights, May they be as happy dreams: Sounds and sights; So that Time to Love may say,"Wherefore weep? |
962 | For Ever Out of the body for ever, Wearily sobbing,"Oh, whither?" |
962 | For are they not between us saved, The words my darling used to say, What time the western waters laved The forehead of the fainting day? |
962 | For how can you find a repose in the toss of the tangle and weed? |
962 | For this heroic Irish heart We miss so much to- day, Whose life was of our lives a part, What words have I to say? |
962 | For who may brave the gods? |
962 | For who may brave the gods? |
962 | For who that has masculine flame, Or who that is thorough at all, Can help feeling joy in the fame Of this king of the kings of the stall? |
962 | Gleesome children were we not? |
962 | Had they pleasant ways to court you-- had they silver words to bind? |
962 | Had they souls more fond and loyal than the soul you left behind? |
962 | Has Richmond more wonderful eyes, Or Melbourne that spring in his tread? |
962 | Hath he not followed a star through the darkness, Ye people who sit at the table of Jephthah? |
962 | Hath he not seen the fierce ghost of a hag in it? |
962 | Have I no word at all for him Who used down fetid lanes to slink, And squat in tap- room corners grim, And drown his thoughts in dregs of drink? |
962 | Have I not an ample reason So to long for-- sick of treason-- Something of the grand old season, Just to be where Mooni is? |
962 | Have I not with pleading mouth Looked to Heaven through a silence stifled in the crimson drouth? |
962 | Have I not, with lips unsated, watched to see the fountains burst, Where I searched the rocks for cisterns? |
962 | Have not our hours of meeting gone, Like fading dreams on phantom wings? |
962 | Have the blights Of many winters left it on a faded tomb? |
962 | Have you faith at all in omens? |
962 | Have you hidden the ways of this Woman, Her whispers, her glances, her power To hold you, as demon holds human, Chained back to the day and the hour? |
962 | He that went happy and healthy and human there-- Where shall the white leper fly to be cleaned? |
962 | He, catching there at some phantasmic help, Sat upright on the bolster with a cry Of"Where is Jesus? |
962 | Head whereon the white is stealing, Heart whose hurts are past all healing, Where is now the first pure feeling? |
962 | Hear I not a dreamy echo, soughing through the rafters of the tree; Like a sound of stormy rivers, or the ravings of a restless sea? |
962 | Hear ye not, across the ocean, Echoes of the distant fray, Sounds of loud and fierce commotion, Swiftly sweeping on the way? |
962 | Heard maledictions that startle the stars? |
962 | Hold you not some strange tradition coupled with this strange lament? |
962 | I pluck at a rose and I stir To think of this sweet- hearted maiden-- what name is too tender for her? |
962 | I tell ye that I_ love_ the storm, for think we not of_ thoughts_ of yore, When, streaming down the lattices, the rain comes sobbing to the door? |
962 | If the days were days of toil Wherefore should we mourn; There were shadows near the shine, Flowers with the thorn? |
962 | If the men of other nations Dash their fetters to the ground; When the foeman seeks your stations, Will you willing slaves be found? |
962 | In my vision, once so glorious, did we find that aught was changed; Or that ONE whom WE remembered was forgotten or estranged? |
962 | In your life of light and music, tell me did you ever see, Shining in a holy silence, what was as a flame in me? |
962 | Is it sad to be emptied of love?" |
962 | Is it sweet with you, life, at the close? |
962 | Is it well that I should with to leave this dreary world behind, Seeking for your fair Utopia, which perchance I may not find? |
962 | Is it well to hold a reed Out for drowning men to clutch at in the moments of their need? |
962 | Is it well, thou friendly Being, well to wish for such a change?" |
962 | Is not the kindness of our Lord too great to think upon? |
962 | Is she maiden or marvel of marble? |
962 | Is the sleep of your Sorrow a witness She is passed all the roads of returning? |
962 | Is there no absent face to love That you must live alone? |
962 | Is there no deed of yours at all With beauty shining through it? |
962 | Is this the old, old tale? |
962 | Is this worn cap I hold The only thing you''ve left us of yourself? |
962 | Koola, our love and our light, What have they done unto you? |
962 | Let me ask, where none can hear me-- When you passed into the shine, And you heard a great love calling, did you know that it was mine? |
962 | Let the sailor sing the story of the ancient ocean''s glory, Forests golden, mountains hoary-- can he look and love like we? |
962 | Look towards that flaming crescent-- look beyond that glowing space-- Tell me, sister of the angels, what is beaming in thy face?" |
962 | Love is Love, and never dies"And another asketh, doubting that my brother speaks the truth,"Can we love in age as fondly as we did in days of youth? |
962 | Men that laugh and men that weep Call thee Music-- shall I follow, choose their name, and turn and sleep? |
962 | Men that laugh and men that weep Call thee Music-- shall I follow, choose their name, and turn and sleep? |
962 | Nor catch you up to mischief with your knife Amongst the apple trees? |
962 | Nor find you out A truant playing on the road to school? |
962 | Nor hear you whistling in the fields at eve? |
962 | Nor meet you, boy, in any other guise You used to take? |
962 | Not a ragged blade of verdure-- not one root of moss is there; Who hath torn the grasses from it-- wherefore is that barrow bare? |
962 | Now that these and all Love''s treasures blushed, before the spoiler, bare, Was the wrong that shall be nameless done, and seen, and suffered there? |
962 | Now where the land''s worn face is grey And storm is on the wave, What flower is left to bear away To Edward Butler''s grave? |
962 | O darling of mine, do you ever yearn For a something lost, which will never return? |
962 | O darling of mine, on the grave of dead Hours, Do you feel, like me, for a handful of flowers? |
962 | Oh, can she not from yonder sky That gleams above her, borrow A single ray, or find a way To check the tear of sorrow? |
962 | Oh, where are the tracks of her lover? |
962 | Oh, why do you moan, in this wide world alone, When so much affection here blooms? |
962 | Oh, why dost thou slumber, Kooroora? |
962 | Or was it a dream that I hurried without To clutch at and grapple the dark? |
962 | Or which of us can bear to stand and see The white affliction of a faded face, Made old by you and me? |
962 | Passing through a gloomy forest, scaling steeps like prison walls, Where the scanty sunshine wavers and the moonlight seldom falls? |
962 | Past the waste of thorny terrors, did he reach a sphere of rills, In a region yet untravelled, ringed by fair untrodden hills? |
962 | Pytheas Gaul whose keel in far, dim ages ploughed wan widths of polar sea-- Gray old sailor of Massilia, who hath woven wreath for thee? |
962 | Safely housed at last from rack-- Far from pain; Who would wish to have him back? |
962 | Saturn''s son is high and just: Did he come between her beauty and the fierce Far- darter''s lust? |
962 | Say, where have you buried her sweetness, Her coldness for youth and its yearning? |
962 | See, behind us gleams a green plot, shall we thither turn and rest Till a cold wind flutters over, till the day is down the west? |
962 | Shall more than Tempe''s beauty be unsung Because its shine is strange-- its colours young? |
962 | Shall we yearn, and we so feeble?" |
962 | She lifted her eyes to the glimmering hill, Then spoke, with a voice like a musical rill,"The time is too short; can I sojourn here still?" |
962 | Should I loiter here to listen, while this fitful wind is on the wing? |
962 | Silent Tears What bitter sorrow courses down Yon mourner''s faded cheek? |
962 | Sir, Will you oblige me by reading this letter, and the accompanying verses? |
962 | Slake your thirst, but stay and tell me: did your heart with terror beat, When you stepped across the bare and blasted hillock at your feet? |
962 | Some one saith,"Oh, you that mock at Passion with a worldly whine, Would you change the face of Nature-- would you limit God''s design? |
962 | Surrounded by pillars and spires whose summits shone out in the glare Of the high, the omnipotent fires, who knows what was seen by them there? |
962 | Thanks, spirits departed!--heard I not your voices Faint rolling along on the breath of the gale? |
962 | The rotten leaf falleth, the forest rain calleth; And what is the end of the whole? |
962 | The tender message Hope might send Sinks fainting at the lips of speech, For, are you lover-- are you friend, That I would reach? |
962 | The windy hills stared at the black, heavy clouds coming over the wave; My girl was expecting me back, but where was my power to save? |
962 | The"few"will try to beat it down, But can they stop the flood-- Bind up the pinions of the light, Or check the will of God? |
962 | Think ye, in the time of danger, When that threatening moment comes-- Will ye let the heartless stranger Drive your kindred from their homes? |
962 | This was his history, friend-- Ragged, unhoused, and alone; How could the child comprehend Love that he never had known? |
962 | Through a mist of many voices, listening for sweet accents fled, Heard we hints of lost affection, or of gentle faces dead? |
962 | Through the glens of the Past, do you wander along, Like a restless ghost that hath done a wrong? |
962 | Upon his brow what leaves of laurel, say? |
962 | VII The Stanza of Childe Harold Who framed the stanza of Childe Harold? |
962 | Was it well while there to mourn; When the loved-- the loving, crowding, came to welcome our return? |
962 | Was she left with her beauty, O lover, And the shreds of your passion about her, Beyond reach and where none can discover? |
962 | Was the spot where last he rested pleasant as an old- world lea? |
962 | Was there help for Ladon''s daughter? |
962 | Wept it for that gleam of glory wasting from the forest aisles; For that fainting gleam of glory sad with flickering, sickly smiles? |
962 | Were ye not like maddened demons while young children faint with fear Cried and cried and cried for succour, and no helping hand was near? |
962 | What act like his of days gone by-- The grand old Asian thinker? |
962 | What awful lyre of marvellous power and range Upraised this Ilion-- wrought this dazzling change? |
962 | What care have I ever to know His owner by sight or by name? |
962 | What could she do but obey, Even when suffering Faith Had n''t the power to pray? |
962 | What dream is this on lawny spaces set? |
962 | What golden shroud is at his funeral spread? |
962 | What great mute majesty is this that takes The first of morning ere the song- bird wakes? |
962 | What have you done to edify, You clammy chapel tinker? |
962 | What kind of mourners weep for him to- day? |
962 | What might mean that muffled sobbing? |
962 | What miracle of dome and minaret? |
962 | What odds if assumption has sealed His soulless hereafter abode, So long as he shows to his"field"The gleam of his hoofs, and the road? |
962 | What other doubts are there to sift?" |
962 | What rose of song with breath like myrrh, And leaf of dew and fair pure beams Shall I select and give to her-- The lady of my dreams? |
962 | What sort of"gospel"do you preach? |
962 | What strange, sweet harp of highest god took flame And gave this Troy its life, its light, its name? |
962 | What sun is this that beams and broadens west? |
962 | What tender rose of song is here That I may pluck and send Across the hills and seas austere To my lamented friend? |
962 | What wonder this, in deathless glory dressed? |
962 | What words of light, what high resplendent phrase Have I for all the lustre of her days? |
962 | What"Bible"is your Bible? |
962 | When I talk of what we will be, and new aspirations throng, Why are you so sadly silent, dark- haired Maid of Gerringong?" |
962 | When shall I reach you from a depth of darkness which is real? |
962 | When the rain''s on the roof, and the gales are abroad, Do you wash with your tears the feet of your God? |
962 | When the sun was as a menace, glaring from a sky of brass, Did he ever rest, in visions, on a lap of German grass? |
962 | When they left you in the night- hours, did you lie awake like me, With the thoughts of what we had been-- what we never more could be? |
962 | When, streaming down the lattices, The rain comes sobbing to the door? |
962 | Where are the valleys of the flashing wing, The dim green margins and the glimmering spring? |
962 | Where are the woods that, ninety summers back, Stood hoar with ages by the water- track? |
962 | Where have all those fancies fled to? |
962 | Where is the fiend with the face of desire? |
962 | Where moulders the traveller''s clay? |
962 | Where now the warrior of the forest race, His glaring war- paint and his fearless face? |
962 | Wherefore stay to talk of fainting, when the sun, with sinking fire, Smites the blocks of broken thunder, blackening yonder craggy spire? |
962 | While the moon is on the hill Gleaming through the streaming fogs, Do n''t you hear the yapping of the dogs-- The yapping and the yelping of the dogs? |
962 | Who amongst the world''s high singers ever breathed the tale sublime Of the man who coasted England in the misty dawn of time? |
962 | Who can look beyond the darkness; who can see so he may tell Where the sunsets all have gone to; where the souls that leave us dwell? |
962 | Who hath a portion, Alcyone, like her? |
962 | Who knows of their faith-- of its power? |
962 | Who knows-- if souls in bliss can leave the borders of their Eden- home-- But that some loving one may now about the ancient threshold roam? |
962 | Why comes your voice, you lonely One, Along the wild harp''s wailing strings? |
962 | Why was our delight so fickle? |
962 | Why were you away so long, When you knew who waited for you, dark- haired Maid of Gerringong? |
962 | Will dead faces always haunt us, in the time of faltering breath? |
962 | Will it ever, ever, ever fly to me, By this surging sea, By this surging, sooming sea, By this wailing, wild- faced sea? |
962 | Will she ever, ever, ever hither come? |
962 | Will they pass from our souls like a nightmare,"I said,"While we glide through the mazes of Death? |
962 | Will to- morrow bring The hours of pleasant rest? |
962 | Will you ever fly back to this city of ours With your harp and your voice and your beauty? |
962 | With all his sense and scholarship, How could he face his fading wife? |
962 | You know the place? |
962 | You saw it, Father? |
962 | You sit and hug a sorry hope-- Yet who will dare to say, The sweetness of October Is not for Ellen Ray? |
962 | You that have loved her so much, Loved her asleep and awake, Trembled because of her touch, What have you said for her sake? |
962 | You, having read the Holy Writ-- The Book the angels foster-- Say have you helped us on a bit, You overfed impostor? |
962 | am I asleep-- or abroad and awake? |
962 | her heart it is wasted with crying-- Do you hear her, Ulmarra? |
962 | how can we wittingly trust? |
962 | in his life, had he mother or wife, To wait for his step on the floor? |
962 | is this the trusting girl I swore to love, to shield, to cherish so But ten years back? |
962 | knowing what you''ve loved and lost, I ask where shall we find its like, and when? |
962 | lost to thyself and thy lover, Cast, like a dream, out of thought, with the moons which have passed into sleep, What shall avail thee? |
962 | saith she, wildly moaning Where the grass- grown silence lies,"Is there rest from sobs and groaning-- Rest with you beyond the skies? |
962 | was it a daughter Of sorrow and sin, That they threw it so madly Down into the lynn? |
962 | when will you meet with that soul of your choice, Who will lead you down here from the mountains? |
962 | where are thy mourners, Kooroora? |
962 | where doth her chieftain lie shaded? |
962 | where is her warrior sleeping? |
962 | where was my power, when Death was glaring at me from the reef? |
962 | where you sit and wait?" |
962 | who would come and say to me, With the eyes of far- off friendship,"You are as you used to be"? |
962 | why should I stay To think and dream of joys unknown? |
962 | wilt thou float and float to me Facing winds and sleets and waters, flying glimpses of the sea? |
962 | wilt thou float and float to me, Facing winds and sleets and waters, flying glimpses of the sea? |
8909 | _ If, then, it be enquired of him,_ can not God give to matter the faculty of thought?_ he will answer,_no! |
8909 | ARE NOT TRAITORS DISTINGUISHED BY PUBLIC HONORS? |
8909 | Adopting this supposition, it may be inquired, why Nature does not produce under our own eyes new beings-- new species? |
8909 | An unfaithful wife, does she outrage his heart? |
8909 | Are his organs sound? |
8909 | Are nations reduced to despair? |
8909 | Are these animals so indispensably requisite to Nature, that without them she can not continue her eternal course? |
8909 | Are these bonds cut asunder? |
8909 | Are they completely miserable? |
8909 | Are they not promised eternal salvation for their orthodoxy? |
8909 | Are they not the incessant dupes to their prejudices? |
8909 | Are we acquainted with the mechanism which produces attraction in some substances, repulsion in others? |
8909 | Are we in a condition to explain the communication of motion from one body to another? |
8909 | As soon as they are enriched by the means which you censure, are they not cherished, considered, and respected? |
8909 | At the same time nature refuses him every happiness, she opens to him a door by which he quits life; does he refuse to enter it? |
8909 | But does it depend on man to be sensible or not? |
8909 | But does not a profound sleep help to give him a true idea of this nothing? |
8909 | But has truth the power to injure him? |
8909 | But how can he foresee effects of which he has not yet any knowledge? |
8909 | But how can he, without experience, assure himself of the accuracy, of the justness of this association? |
8909 | But how has he become sensible? |
8909 | But in this case, does not the theologian, according to his own assertion, acknowledge himself to be the true atheist? |
8909 | But is not this organization itself the work of Nature? |
8909 | But it will be asked, and not a little triumphantly, from whence did she derive her motion? |
8909 | But it will be urged, has man always existed? |
8909 | But the question is, what gives birth to this idea in his brain? |
8909 | But what is the end? |
8909 | But what is the general direction, or common tendency, we see in all beings? |
8909 | But, how is he to acquire experience upon ideal objects, which his senses neither enable him to know nor to examine? |
8909 | But, what is it that constitutes climate? |
8909 | By what authority, then, do you object to my amassing treasure? |
8909 | Can I alter the received opinions of the world? |
8909 | Can any moral good spring from such blind assurance? |
8909 | Can be, with his dim optics, with his limited vision, fathom the human heart? |
8909 | Can he prevent his eyes, cast without design upon any object whatever, from giving him an idea of this object, from moving his brain? |
8909 | Can it not be perceived they are inherent in his nature? |
8909 | Can man at last flatter himself with having arrived at a fixed being, or must the human species again change? |
8909 | Can this imagination in one individual ever be the same as in another? |
8909 | Chagrin, remorse, melancholy, and despair, have they disfigured to him the spectacle of the universe? |
8909 | Do I not ardently love my God? |
8909 | Do I not behold, that no one is ashamed of adultery but the husband it has outraged? |
8909 | Do not nations unceasingly suffer from their follies? |
8909 | Do not thy follies, thy shameful habits, thy debaucheries, damage thine health? |
8909 | Do not thy vices every day dig thy grave? |
8909 | Do they not assure me that zeal is pleasing to him; that sanguinary inhuman persecutors have been his friends? |
8909 | Do they not know that they are hateful and contemptible? |
8909 | Do they wish to be undeceived? |
8909 | Do we not ourselves change? |
8909 | Does disgrace hold him out to the finger of scorn; does indigence menace him in an obdurate world? |
8909 | Does he not, in fact, circumscribe the attributes of the Deity, and deny his power, to suit his own purpose? |
8909 | Does it not appear to annihilate the universe to him, and him to the universe? |
8909 | Does it not furnish its disciples with the means of extricating themselves from the punishments with which it has so frequently menaced them? |
8909 | Does not Mahometanism cut off from all chance of future existence, consequently from all hope of reaching heaven, the female part of mankind? |
8909 | Does not all change around us? |
8909 | Does not either his happiness or his misery depend on the part he plays? |
8909 | Does not listlessness punish thee for thy satiated passions? |
8909 | Does not that deprive him of every thing? |
8909 | Dost thou not behold in those eccentric comets with which thine eyes are sometimes astonished, that the planets themselves are subject to death? |
8909 | Dost thou not know the Sesostris''s, the Alexanders, the Caesars are dead? |
8909 | Dost thou not linger out life in disgust, fatigued with thine own excesses? |
8909 | Each idea is an effect, but however difficult it may be to recur to the cause, can we possibly suppose it is not ascribable to a cause? |
8909 | Every time thou hast stained thyself with crime, hast thou dared without horror to return into thyself, to examine thine own conscience? |
8909 | From whence came these elements? |
8909 | From whence comes these opinions, which according to the theologians are so displeasing to God? |
8909 | Has any or the whole of them rendered him better, more enlightened to his duties, more faithful in their performance? |
8909 | Has he placed his happiness exclusively on some object which it is impossible for him to procure? |
8909 | Has not thy vigour, thy gaiety, thy content, already yielded to feebleness, crouched under infirmities, given place to regret? |
8909 | Has the human species existed from all eternity; or is it only an instantaneous production of Nature? |
8909 | Hast thou not dreaded the scrutiny of thy fellow man? |
8909 | Hast thou not found remorse, error, shame, established in thine heart? |
8909 | Have I not seen my fellow- citizens envy them-- the nobles of my country sacrifice every thing to obtain them? |
8909 | Have the Jews exalted no one to the celestial regions, save the virtuous? |
8909 | Have there been always men like ourselves? |
8909 | Have there been, in all times, males and females? |
8909 | Have they led him to the least acquaintance with the great_ Cause of Causes?_ Alas! |
8909 | Have they not remorse? |
8909 | Have they not, then, a consciousness of their own iniquities? |
8909 | He adds from himself,"who knows, if to live, be not to die; and if to die, be not to live?" |
8909 | His ignorance, his prejudices, his imbecility, his vices, his passions, his weakness, are they not the inevitable consequence of vicious institutions? |
8909 | His physical evils, are they violent? |
8909 | How can a being without extent be moveable; how put matter in action? |
8909 | How can a substance devoid of parts, correspond successively with different parts of space? |
8909 | How can he judge whether there objects be favorable or prejudicial to him? |
8909 | How can it cease to think? |
8909 | How could man occupy himself with a perishable world, ready every moment to crumble into atoms? |
8909 | How dream of rendering himself happy on earth, when it is only the porch to an eternal kingdom? |
8909 | How is he to assure himself of the existence, how ascertain the qualities of beings he is not able to feel? |
8909 | How much pain, how much anxiety, has he not endured in this perpetual conflict with himself? |
8909 | How, if he does not reiterate this experience, can he compare it? |
8909 | However this may be, the sensibility of the brain, and all its parts, is a fact: if it be asked, whence comes this property? |
8909 | I agree to it without any difficulty: but in reply, I again ask, Is his nature susceptible of this modification? |
8909 | If his senses are vitiated, how is it possible they can convey to him with precision, the sensations, the facts, with which they store his brain? |
8909 | If however it be asked, what is a spirit? |
8909 | If it be enquired how, or for why, matter exists? |
8909 | If it be inquired, whence proceeds the motion that agitates matter? |
8909 | If it was asserted,"All men naturally desire to be rich; therefore all men will one day be rich,"how many partizans would this doctrine find? |
8909 | If our country is attacked, do we not voluntarily sacrifice our lives in its defence? |
8909 | If the calendar of the Romish saints was examined, would it be found to contain none but righteous, none but good men? |
8909 | If we can only form ideas of material substances, how can we suppose the cause of our ideas can possibly be immaterial? |
8909 | If, again, it be asked, what origin we give to beings of the human species? |
8909 | If, then, it be demanded, whence came man? |
8909 | If, therefore, it be asked, whence came matter? |
8909 | In a passage reported by Arrian, he says,"but where are you going? |
8909 | In attributing to spirits the phenomena of Nature, as well as those of the human body, do we, in fact, do any thing more than reason like savages? |
8909 | In fact, will not every thing conduct to indulgence the fatalist whom experience has convinced of the necessity of things? |
8909 | In the country I inhabit, do I not see all my fellow- citizens covetous of riches? |
8909 | In the puissant Nature that environs thee, shalt thou pretend to be the only being who is able to resist her power? |
8909 | In thy actual being, art not thou submitted to continual alterations? |
8909 | In what moment is he a free agent? |
8909 | Indeed what is his soul, save the principle of sensibility? |
8909 | Indeed, how can we flatter ourselves we shall ever be enabled to compass the true principle of that gravity by which a stone falls? |
8909 | Indeed, what right have we to hate or despise man for his opinions? |
8909 | Is death any thing more than a profound, a permanent steep? |
8909 | Is erring, feeble man, with all his imbecilities, competent to form a judgment of the heavenly deserts of his fellows? |
8909 | Is he master of feeling or not feeling pain? |
8909 | Is he not obliged to play a part against his will? |
8909 | Is he not sufficiently punished by the multitude of evils that afflict him on every side? |
8909 | Is he the master of desiring or not desiring an object that appears desirable to him? |
8909 | Is he the master of preventing the qualities which render an object desirable from residing in it? |
8909 | Is he the master of willing, not to withdraw his hand from the fire when he fears it will be burnt? |
8909 | Is it consistent with sound doctrine, with philosophy, or with reason? |
8909 | Is it in his power to add to these consequences all the weight necessary to counterbalance his desire? |
8909 | Is it not evident that the whole universe has not been, in its anterior eternal duration, rigorously the same that it now is? |
8909 | Is it not this divine being who chooses and rejects? |
8909 | Is it possible that evil can result to man from a correct understanding of the relations he has with other beings? |
8909 | Is man more the master of his opinions? |
8909 | Is not God the absolute master of their destiny? |
8909 | Is not Mahomet himself enthroned in the empyrean by this superstition? |
8909 | Is not Nature herself a vast machine, of which the human species is but a very feeble spring? |
8909 | Is not audacious crime encouraged? |
8909 | Is not compassion laughed to scorn? |
8909 | Is not cunning vice rewarded? |
8909 | Is not honesty contemned? |
8909 | Is not its descent the necessary effect of its own specific gravity? |
8909 | Is not love of the public weal taxed as folly; exactitude in fulfilling duties looked upon as a bubble? |
8909 | Is not man brought into existence without his own knowledge? |
8909 | Is not subtle intrigue eulogized? |
8909 | Is not virtue discouraged? |
8909 | Is their condition happy? |
8909 | Is there any thing in the world that perishes totally?" |
8909 | Is there one wicked individual who enjoys a pure, an unmixed, a real happiness? |
8909 | Is this species without beginning? |
8909 | Is virtue in this situation amongst men? |
8909 | It may be asked of man, is he any thing more than matter combined, of which the former varies every instant? |
8909 | It ought not to excite surprise if such a system is of no efficacy; what can reasonably be the result of such an hypothesis? |
8909 | It will be asked, perhaps, by what road has man been conducted to form to himself these gratuitous ideas of another world? |
8909 | Justice, does she hold her scales with a firm, with an even hand, between all the citizens of the state? |
8909 | Let us see if it is a barren speculation, that his not any influence upon the felicity of the human race? |
8909 | Might it not be a question to the Malebranchists, was it in the Divinity that SPINOZA beheld his system? |
8909 | Mistaken the laws of Nature, did I say? |
8909 | Nevertheless, how many persons say they are, and even believe themselves, restrained by the fears of the life to come? |
8909 | On the other hand, does not superstition itself, does not even religion, annihilate the effects of those fears which it announces as salutary? |
8909 | Or has he the power to take away from fire the property which makes him fear it? |
8909 | Perfidious friends, do they forsake him in adversity? |
8909 | Rebellious, ungrateful children, do they afflict his old age? |
8909 | Religion, which alone pretends to regulate his manners, does it render him sociable-- does it make him pacific-- does it teach him to be humane? |
8909 | Society, or those who represent it, do they use him with harshness, do they treat him with injustice, do they render his existence painful? |
8909 | Suppose the argument retorted on them; would it be believed? |
8909 | That those who do not think as I do are his enemies? |
8909 | The arbiters, the sovereigns of society, are they faithful in recompensing, punctual in rewarding, those who have best served their country? |
8909 | The examples spread before him, are they suitable to innocence and manners? |
8909 | The laws, do they never support the strong against the weak-- favor the rich against the poor-- uphold the happy against the miserable? |
8909 | The motion or impulse to action, of which he is susceptible, is that not physical? |
8909 | The question then arises, how can we conceive such a substance, which is only the negation of every thing of which we have a knowledge? |
8909 | The species itself, is it indestructible, or does it pass away like its individuals? |
8909 | The_ choleric_ man vociferates,--You advise me to put a curb on my passions; to resist the desire of avenging myself: but can I conquer my nature? |
8909 | Thou pretendest to exist for ever; whit thou, then, that for thee alone eternal Nature shall change her undeviating course? |
8909 | Thus the organic structure once destroyed, can it be reasonably doubted the soul will be destroyed also? |
8909 | Thus, when even the soul should be admitted to be immaterial, what conclusion must be drawn? |
8909 | Thus, when it shall be inquired, what is man? |
8909 | Was Constantine, was St. Cyril, was St. Athanasius, was St. Dominic, worthy beatification? |
8909 | Was the animal anterior to the egg, or did the egg precede the animal? |
8909 | Was there a first man, from whom all others are descended? |
8909 | Were Jupiter, Thor, Mercury, Woden, and a thousand others, deserving of celestial diadems? |
8909 | What absurdity then, or what want of just inference would there be, to imagine that the man, the horse, the fish, the bird, will be no more? |
8909 | What are these, but notions which he must necessarily put aside, in order that human association may subsist? |
8909 | What benefit could arise from education itself? |
8909 | What did I say? |
8909 | What did I say? |
8909 | What do I say? |
8909 | What do I say? |
8909 | What does it present to the mind, but a substance which possesses nothing of which our senses enable us to have a knowledge? |
8909 | What does the man in power, except shew to others, that he is in a state to supply the requisites to render them happy? |
8909 | What harmony, what unison, then, can possibly exist between them, when they discourse with each other, upon objects only known to their imagination? |
8909 | What is it that represents the word_ intelligence_, if he does not connect it with a certain mode of being and of acting? |
8909 | What is it, to think, to enjoy, to suffer; is it not to feel? |
8909 | What is life, except it be the assemblage of modifications, the congregation of motion, peculiar to an organized being? |
8909 | What is the aim of man in the sphere he occupies? |
8909 | What is the object that unites all these qualities? |
8909 | What is the visible and known end of all their motion? |
8909 | What is there that is terrible or grievous in that? |
8909 | What it is that authorizes them to believe this sterility in Nature? |
8909 | What moral reliance ought we to have on such people? |
8909 | What motive, indeed, except it be this, remains for him in the greater part of human societies? |
8909 | What the scale by which to measure who has the best regulated imagination? |
8909 | What, then, must be the diversity of these ideas, if the objects meditated upon do not act upon the senses? |
8909 | What, then, shall be, the common standard that shall decide which is the man that thinks with the greatest justice? |
8909 | When Samson wished to be revenged on the Philistines, did he not consent to die with them as the only means? |
8909 | When a theologian, obstinately bent on admitting into man two substances essentially different, is asked why he multiplies beings without necessity? |
8909 | When the father either menaces his son with punishment, or promises him a reward, is he not convinced these things will act upon his will? |
8909 | When to resolve these problems, man is obliged to have recourse to miracles or to make the Divinity interfere, does he not avow his own ignorance? |
8909 | Where are now the priests of Apollo, of Juno, of the Sun, and a thousand others? |
8909 | Wherefore is it not exacted that all men shall have the same features? |
8909 | Will it also be without end? |
8909 | Will the assertion be ventured, that the stone and earth do not act? |
8909 | Will there always be such? |
8909 | Will you have me renounce my happiness? |
8909 | With respect to those who may ask why Nature does not produce new beings? |
8909 | You call my pleasures disgraceful; but in the country in which I live, do I not witness the most dissipated men enjoying the most distinguished rank? |
8909 | and what is its end? |
8909 | but do I not also witness that they are little scrupulous in the means of obtaining wealth? |
8909 | do not I see men making trophies of their debaucheries, boasting of their libertinism, rewarded, with applause? |
8909 | does not every thing tell me, that in this world money is the greatest blessing; that it is amply sufficient to render me happy? |
8909 | dost thou not see all the threads which enchain thee? |
8909 | has he the power either to prevent it from presenting itself, or from renewing itself in his brain? |
8909 | his experience will be true: are they unsound? |
8909 | how prove its truth? |
8909 | in punishing those who have pillaged, who have robbed, who have plundered, who have divided, who have ruined it? |
8909 | that it is impossible, in its posterior eternal duration, it can be rigidly in the same state that it now is for a single instant? |
8909 | we may enquire of them in turn, upon what foundation they suppose this fact? |
8909 | what advantage will he discover in restraining the fury of his passions? |
8909 | what right have you to prevent my using means, which although you call them sordid and criminal, I see approved by the sovereign? |
8909 | wilt thou never conceive, that thou art but an ephemeron? |
6021 | ''"Threading the eye of a yellow star,"eh?'' |
6021 | ''A box from Scotland? |
6021 | ''A box?'' |
6021 | ''A little alteration,''he suggested hopefully,''and it would be all right-- don''t you think?'' |
6021 | ''A most singular thing, is n''t it, Henry?'' |
6021 | ''A what?'' |
6021 | ''Ah, beyond le Vallon Vert? |
6021 | ''Ah, did she really?'' |
6021 | ''Ah, you take it that way, do you?'' |
6021 | ''Ai n''t forgot the rhyme,''ave yer?'' |
6021 | ''Am_ I_ too big---?'' |
6021 | ''And I do believe you''ve felt it too, have n''t you?'' |
6021 | ''And have you answered it?'' |
6021 | ''And how much change have you left out of the five francs? |
6021 | ''And how will you take it back?'' |
6021 | ''And if I do, how shall I ever get in again? |
6021 | ''And is it romantic or just silly?'' |
6021 | ''And the gods turned''em into stars, was n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''And the story-- was it not about our little Bourcelles?'' |
6021 | ''And these people whom you caught,''whispered Rogers from his corner, listening to a tale he knew as well as she did,''you kept them prisoners?'' |
6021 | ''And what_ is_ the difference?'' |
6021 | ''And where''s Tante Anna?'' |
6021 | ''And you''re to be my secretary, are you?'' |
6021 | ''And you''ve got it still, I mean?'' |
6021 | ''And"wumbled,"''she asked solemnly as though the future of everybody depended on it,''what_ is_ wumbled, really? |
6021 | ''And, similarly, the thought I deemed my own might have come in its turn from the mind of some one else?'' |
6021 | ''And_ we_?'' |
6021 | ''Are we going_ much_ further--?'' |
6021 | ''Are you cold?'' |
6021 | ''Are you getting excited now?'' |
6021 | ''At what?'' |
6021 | ''Be quiet, will you?'' |
6021 | ''Beautiful, is n''t it? |
6021 | ''Bonjour Mesdames, bonjour Mademoiselle, bonjour, bonjour,''she bowed and smiled, washing her hands in the air;''et comment allez- vous ce matin?'' |
6021 | ''But did you get the mauve ribbon, child?'' |
6021 | ''But it ca n''t be a real place?'' |
6021 | ''But it''s a real letter,''objected Jinny;''it''s correspondence, is n''t it, Daddy?'' |
6021 | ''But really,''asked Jimbo,''it''s only--_crepuscule, comme ca,_ is n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''But what does it do, I mean, and why is it good for people to have it in them-- on them-- whatever it is?'' |
6021 | ''But what is a wedge, exactly? |
6021 | ''But when you''re in it-- in the Cavern,''asked Monkey impatiently;''what happens then?'' |
6021 | ''But where''s my Haystack friend?'' |
6021 | ''But who are you? |
6021 | ''But who is there like that here? |
6021 | ''But who_ are_ you?'' |
6021 | ''But why did it suddenly grow small?'' |
6021 | ''But you know why, do n''t you?'' |
6021 | ''But you_ are_--''''Could n''t we go there now? |
6021 | ''But_ how_ thin, Daddy?'' |
6021 | ''Ca n''t you be serious for a moment?'' |
6021 | ''Ca n''t you have your long discuss with me instead?'' |
6021 | ''Ca n''t you wait?'' |
6021 | ''Can you tell me if this house is occupied?'' |
6021 | ''Charming, all that, is n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''Children, you''re not sitting on the cold stone, are you?'' |
6021 | ''Could n''t you read it to us, Daddy?'' |
6021 | ''Cousinenry, do you sleep very tightly at night, please?'' |
6021 | ''Cousinenry,_ will_ you answer or will you_ not_? |
6021 | ''Daddy, is n''t she awful?'' |
6021 | ''Did you get my tobacco, Jinny?'' |
6021 | ''Do I know a what?'' |
6021 | ''Do n''t you see? |
6021 | ''Do you think he''ll raise your salary again soon?'' |
6021 | ''Does it happen every night like this?'' |
6021 | ''Does not every letter you write begin with_ dear_?....'' |
6021 | ''Does your Mother know you''re"out"?'' |
6021 | ''Eh? |
6021 | ''Even if the spirit does go out, it could n''t think apart from the brain, could it now, eh?'' |
6021 | ''Excuse me, Daddy, but have you been inside one? |
6021 | ''Excuse me, Mother, but is he a clergyman?'' |
6021 | ''Excuse me, Mother, shall I wash up?'' |
6021 | ''Forgive me, Madame, but you do forget sometimes, do n''t you?'' |
6021 | ''Had n''t we better get on?'' |
6021 | ''Have we?'' |
6021 | ''Have you got that feeling too?'' |
6021 | ''He''s not an author, is he?'' |
6021 | ''Hear that?'' |
6021 | ''Herbert,''she said, with a growing excitement,''why are you so full of poetry to- night? |
6021 | ''Here''s my life''--she held up her needles--''and that''s the soul of prosaic dulness, is n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''How did I come to this?'' |
6021 | ''How did you get it?'' |
6021 | ''How do you find the way?'' |
6021 | ''How fast does it go? |
6021 | ''How many?'' |
6021 | ''How_ will_ they know which is which?'' |
6021 | ''I beg your pardon,''he stammered,''but I was only thinking-- how wonderful you-- how wonderful it all is, is n''t it? |
6021 | ''I have helped a little, have n''t I?'' |
6021 | ''I meant-- would you like one? |
6021 | ''I see,''said Mother, gazing open- mindedly into his face;''but where does_ my_ help come in, please?'' |
6021 | ''I suppose if she went to London she''d know the King-- visit him, like that?'' |
6021 | ''I wonder what I shall do when my hair goes up?'' |
6021 | ''I wonder when it came to me, then, and how?'' |
6021 | ''I''m all through it, then?'' |
6021 | ''Is Monkey with you? |
6021 | ''Is he a company promoter then?'' |
6021 | ''Is n''t it lovely?'' |
6021 | ''Is n''t it time to start now?'' |
6021 | ''Is that why bats fly in such a muddle? |
6021 | ''It did n''t disturb you?'' |
6021 | ''It is welcome sometimes, is n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''It must have come to me in sleep----''''In sleep,''exclaimed the other;''you dreamt it, then?'' |
6021 | ''It will be a wonderful story, wo n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''It_ is_ like a great play, is n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''Jimbo, boy, pass me the hammer and the chisel, will you?'' |
6021 | ''Mais oui,''was the reply,''je pourrai faire ca au meme temps, n''est- ce pas?'' |
6021 | ''Married?'' |
6021 | ''May I come, too?'' |
6021 | ''May I drive it with you?'' |
6021 | ''Monkey,''he added,''do you know what it really is? |
6021 | ''Mood?'' |
6021 | ''Mother, what_ are_ you saying?'' |
6021 | ''Mother, where_ did_ you put the washing- up rag?'' |
6021 | ''Mummie, what_ is_ a plagiarist?'' |
6021 | ''My married daughter-- you remember May?'' |
6021 | ''Of course, yes-- some big figure-- like a priest or prophet, you mean? |
6021 | ''Of course,''he answered;''and wo n''t it be a lark? |
6021 | ''Oh no, Mother, for how could anybody know? |
6021 | ''Oh, excuse me, Mother,''she said, feeling the same thing in herself and a little frightened;''but I do believe they''re conspiring, are n''t they?'' |
6021 | ''Oh, is the washing- up finished?'' |
6021 | ''Oh, what''s the good of_ me_?'' |
6021 | ''One must know the language, though,''said Minks,''in order to enjoy the people and understand them, I suppose?'' |
6021 | ''Only she could n''t write it?'' |
6021 | ''Only where else can we go?'' |
6021 | ''Out?'' |
6021 | ''People might recognise a touch of their own childhood in it, eh?'' |
6021 | ''Ready for supper, Henry?'' |
6021 | ''Shall I put some peat on, Mother?'' |
6021 | ''Shall I turn head over heels for you, then?'' |
6021 | ''Shall we rest a moment?'' |
6021 | ''She loves children then, evidently?'' |
6021 | ''Shows what?'' |
6021 | ''Somebody''-- he looked suspiciously round the room--''has been reading my notes or picking out my thoughts while I''m asleep, eh?'' |
6021 | ''Sort of inspiration, eh?'' |
6021 | ''Start where?'' |
6021 | ''Thank you very much; it came by this morning''s post, did it?'' |
6021 | ''That''s why your books are wumbled, is it?'' |
6021 | ''The Spell of Blue, was n''t it, or something like that?'' |
6021 | ''The excitement?'' |
6021 | ''The what?'' |
6021 | ''Then how long are you going to stay--_really_?'' |
6021 | ''Then we can manage the other school, perhaps, for Frank?'' |
6021 | ''Then what I_ think_ is known-- like that-- all over the place?'' |
6021 | ''Then why are you here?'' |
6021 | ''Then your story,''Rogers interrupted,''will show the effect in the daytime of what we do at night? |
6021 | ''There''s Tante Jeanne grand- cieling as usual,''Mother would say to her husband, who, being a little deaf, would answer,''What?'' |
6021 | ''They say---''''Yes, what do they say?'' |
6021 | ''Thought is dynamic, then, they hold?'' |
6021 | ''Waking!--what is it?'' |
6021 | ''We are all in it, are n''t we? |
6021 | ''What are you up to?'' |
6021 | ''What can you see?'' |
6021 | ''What did_ you_ dream, Cousinenry?'' |
6021 | ''What do you know about the Pleiades? |
6021 | ''What do you know about thought? |
6021 | ''What does a few weeks matter out of a whole strenuous life?'' |
6021 | ''What for, dear? |
6021 | ''What in the world are you thinking about?'' |
6021 | ''What is he exaccurately?'' |
6021 | ''What is it? |
6021 | ''What is it? |
6021 | ''What is star- stuff really then?'' |
6021 | ''What time does the post go, I wonder? |
6021 | ''What was that?'' |
6021 | ''What will he think of Tante Jeanne?'' |
6021 | ''What''s that? |
6021 | ''What_ can_ be in it?'' |
6021 | ''What_ has_ come over the old lady?'' |
6021 | ''Whatever makes you think that, child?'' |
6021 | ''Where are the trains, the Starlight Expresses?'' |
6021 | ''Where are you at now?'' |
6021 | ''Where are you off to, Jimbo?'' |
6021 | ''Where are you? |
6021 | ''Where is he?'' |
6021 | ''Where is it now?'' |
6021 | ''Where is it, please?'' |
6021 | ''Where to?'' |
6021 | ''Where would you like to go first?'' |
6021 | ''Where?'' |
6021 | ''Which direction?'' |
6021 | ''Which is right,"further"or"farther"?'' |
6021 | ''Who is there?'' |
6021 | ''Who knows? |
6021 | ''Who thought us out so wonderfully?'' |
6021 | ''Who wrote it? |
6021 | ''Who''ll stick your stamps on?'' |
6021 | ''Who''s loading it?'' |
6021 | ''Who_ is_ Cousinenry? |
6021 | ''Why do n''t they take more exercise, then?'' |
6021 | ''Why do n''t you play with the others, child?'' |
6021 | ''Why do you ask?'' |
6021 | ''Why not?'' |
6021 | ''Why not?'' |
6021 | ''Why not?'' |
6021 | ''Why not?'' |
6021 | ''Will you be back to tea?'' |
6021 | ''Will you have a cold- water bandage then-- for your head-- or anything?'' |
6021 | ''Will you please carry the samovar for me?'' |
6021 | ''Will you show me the way, then?'' |
6021 | ''Wo n''t my flowers just shine and dazzle''em? |
6021 | ''Would n''t it?'' |
6021 | ''You feel lighter, eh? |
6021 | ''You know about the Star Cavern, I suppose--?'' |
6021 | ''You love her?'' |
6021 | ''You mean a woman?'' |
6021 | ''You mean it?'' |
6021 | ''You mean when we sleep?'' |
6021 | ''You mean---?'' |
6021 | ''You or me?'' |
6021 | ''You really think so?'' |
6021 | ''You really think_ that_?'' |
6021 | ''You wo n''t forget the sweeping too, Jinny?'' |
6021 | ''You''ve begun it already?'' |
6021 | ''You''ve had no pain?'' |
6021 | ''Zizi, tu as beaucoup de fluide ce soir, oui?'' |
6021 | ... And did this explain a little the spell that caught him in this Jura village, perhaps? |
6021 | A sort of Chairman, President, eh?'' |
6021 | A sort of cathedral, you mean?'' |
6021 | All well, I hope?'' |
6021 | And had their intercourse been running on for years, neither of them aware of it in the daytime? |
6021 | And how''s everything?'' |
6021 | And if he_ had_ accomplished this, how was it done? |
6021 | And is n''t one of''em lost or something?'' |
6021 | And is she safe?'' |
6021 | And she kept asking who Orion was-- that''s you, of course-- and why you were n''t here---''''And the Den too?'' |
6021 | And that woman he had once dreamed might mother his own children-- where was she? |
6021 | And then-- what gold can buy it? |
6021 | And these sweet, viewless channels-- who keeps them clean and open? |
6021 | And this fairyland, what and where was it? |
6021 | And to see the old place and-- your old friends?'' |
6021 | And what are your eyes worth until a star has flitted in and made a nest there?'' |
6021 | And what''s this about success and poison all of a sudden?'' |
6021 | And which of them had set the ball a- rolling? |
6021 | And who shall challenge the accuracy of his vision, or call its sudden maturity impossible? |
6021 | And why did Jimbo use that phrase of beauty about star- ladders? |
6021 | And your Song of the Blue- Eyes Fairy,''he added slyly, almost mischievously,''you remember that, I wonder?'' |
6021 | And''--turning to his cousin--''you''re taking starlight as the symbol of sympathy? |
6021 | And-- can they last?'' |
6021 | And-- let me see- I''ve got your notes with me, have n''t I? |
6021 | Another time she would have answered, though not bitterly,''Meanwhile I''ll go on knitting stockings,''or''Why not? |
6021 | Anything-- eh?'' |
6021 | Are n''t there, Monkey?'' |
6021 | Are there accidents and collisions?'' |
6021 | Are we not all potential splendours? |
6021 | Are your"baggages"registered?'' |
6021 | At least, one would_ think_ so, would n''t one?'' |
6021 | Awfully good of them, is n''t it? |
6021 | Both parents realised vaguely that it was something their visitor had brought, but what could it be exactly? |
6021 | Bourcelles accepted her at once then?'' |
6021 | But his sister instantly asked,''What is it-- the Scaffolding of the Night? |
6021 | But if with so- called real people such an error was possible, how could he be sure of anything? |
6021 | But is n''t it odd? |
6021 | But now tell me,''she added,''where would you like to go first? |
6021 | But whence, in the name of all the stars, do they come? |
6021 | But where? |
6021 | But who else? |
6021 | But will others see it? |
6021 | But you refer to deliberate experiments, do n''t you?'' |
6021 | CHAPTER XVIII What art thou, then? |
6021 | CHAPTER XXVI Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, Or loose the bands of Orion? |
6021 | CHAPTER XXXIV How many times do I love thee, dear? |
6021 | Ca n''t it wait till then?'' |
6021 | Could his cousin mean that some such woman might read his story and come to claim the position, play the vacant role? |
6021 | Daddy could have helped her, only he would say''What?'' |
6021 | Denied the little garden he once had planned for it, did it seek to turn the whole big world into a garden? |
6021 | Did the children really intend to visit him at night? |
6021 | Did they never pause to reflect who would fill the places they thus vacated? |
6021 | Did you think they ate the stuff, just to amuse themselves?'' |
6021 | Do n''t you feel it too?'' |
6021 | Do n''t you recognise it? |
6021 | Do n''t you remember? |
6021 | Do n''t you see the guy ropes?'' |
6021 | Do n''t you see? |
6021 | Do n''t you? |
6021 | Do n''t you? |
6021 | Do you know what I mean? |
6021 | Do you really think--?'' |
6021 | Do you remember? |
6021 | Does vivid thinking, I wonder, make pictures everywhere?... |
6021 | Does yours?'' |
6021 | Eh? |
6021 | Eh?'' |
6021 | Floating up as near as he could, he spoke--''Where do you come from-- from what star?'' |
6021 | Goodness, how did_ she_ know the rhyme? |
6021 | Had he also, then, the gift of making others feel and believe it too...? |
6021 | Had he betrayed himself already? |
6021 | Had he read it somewhere perhaps? |
6021 | Had her thought been feeding him perhaps since childhood even? |
6021 | Had she read it from his eyes or manner? |
6021 | Have you got a hot- water bottle?'' |
6021 | Have you never noticed it before?'' |
6021 | He ca n''t do that kind of rhyme a bit, but it''s an indication---''''You think he''s got a fine big story this time?'' |
6021 | He had enjoyed himself and let himself go, rather foolishly perhaps, but how much after all had he actually accomplished? |
6021 | He half expected-- what? |
6021 | He put the oblong note- book carefully in his pocket, and stood by the table in an attitude of''any further instructions, please?'' |
6021 | Help the world, yes-- but what was''the world''? |
6021 | His heart beat faster....''Who wants me in such a hurry?'' |
6021 | How Joan helped you too-- or was it May? |
6021 | How are you, by the by?'' |
6021 | How are you? |
6021 | How can there be? |
6021 | How could he manage one without inventing something artificial? |
6021 | How could he tell that this little soft being with the quiet unobtrusive manners had noble and great beauty of action in her anywhere? |
6021 | How d''you account for that, pray?'' |
6021 | How did it come into the mind of a little boy? |
6021 | How in the world could he ever have forgotten it-- let it go out of his life? |
6021 | How in the world would these wild fragments weave together into any intelligible pattern? |
6021 | How in the world, though, was he to keep it up, and provide definite result at the end? |
6021 | How many times do I love again? |
6021 | I remember, several years ago----''''Starlight Express, was n''t it?'' |
6021 | I wonder where?'' |
6021 | I''ll read it out to you bit by bit, and you''ll tell me where I''ve dropped a stitch or used the wrong wool, eh?'' |
6021 | I''ve got an express train here on purpose----''''The"Rapide"?'' |
6021 | If ever signs were sure, I know she waits; If not, what means this sweetness in the wind, The singing in the rain, the love in flowers? |
6021 | If not forthcoming, where would his position be? |
6021 | Is he stiff, I wonder?'' |
6021 | Is it a fact?'' |
6021 | Is it proved? |
6021 | Is n''t it all grand and splendid?'' |
6021 | Is n''t it curious sometimes how a practical mind may suggest valuable material to the artist? |
6021 | Is n''t it delightful? |
6021 | Is n''t it wonderful?'' |
6021 | Is that it? |
6021 | Is that it?'' |
6021 | Is that it?'' |
6021 | Is there anything you want-- a hot- water bottle, or a box of matches, or some of my marmalade for your breakfast? |
6021 | It ca n''t be right to feel so frivolous and jumpy- about at my age, can it?'' |
6021 | It can wait till to- morrow, really-- only I wanted-- but, there now, I forgot; you have to get down to Sydenham, have n''t you? |
6021 | It could never pass, for instance, whereas....''Ai n''t yer forgotten the nightcap?'' |
6021 | It is so, is it not, sir?'' |
6021 | It links everybody in the world with everybody else---''''Objects too, you say?'' |
6021 | It makes one feel young and hopeful-- jolly; does n''t it? |
6021 | It was connected with the Pleiades, but how, where, why? |
6021 | It''s so aromantic, is n''t it?'' |
6021 | Its fulfilment now, I suppose, lies well within your reach? |
6021 | Jimbo would gravely inquire in a pause-- of a stranger, if possible, if not, of the table in general--''Have you ever seen a fairy?'' |
6021 | Life is such a business, is n''t it?'' |
6021 | Like a puzzle?'' |
6021 | Minks?'' |
6021 | Minks?'' |
6021 | Now what did_ that_ mean, I wonder?'' |
6021 | O children, open your eyes to me, And tell me your visions too; Who squeezes the sponge when the salt tears flow To dim their magical blue? |
6021 | O children, open your hearts to me, And tell me your wonder- thoughts; Who lives in the palace inside your brain? |
6021 | Of each day your nights redeem? |
6021 | Oh, why did I come at all?'' |
6021 | One never knows, does one?'' |
6021 | Or does thy huge and ponderous heart object The advances of my passion, and reject My love because it''s airy and elect? |
6021 | Or had he only_ thought_ it? |
6021 | Or perhaps he has a telegram for me, do you think?'' |
6021 | Or was it part of the Story his cousin had wumbled into his ear when he only partly listened? |
6021 | Our daily doings are but the little bits that emerge, tips of acts and speech that poke up and out, masquerading as complete? |
6021 | Over the forests and into the Cave That is the way we must all behave---''Please, Daddy, will you move? |
6021 | Pretty long time, eh?'' |
6021 | Rogers, did you have a nice journey, and do you like Bourcelles?'' |
6021 | See? |
6021 | See? |
6021 | Shall I come with you to the carpenter''s?'' |
6021 | Shall we go for him?'' |
6021 | She''s doing a most astonishing work in Austria, it seems, with children... the Montessori method, and all that....''''By George, now; is it possible? |
6021 | Something everlasting lay within call, an ever- ready help in trouble; and all day she was vaguely conscious that her life lay hid with-- with what? |
6021 | Strong thought is bound to realise itself sooner or later, eh? |
6021 | Stupendous Maiden, sweetest when oblong, Does inner flame Now smoulder in thy soul to hear my song Repeat thy name? |
6021 | Sympathy the great solvent? |
6021 | That''s all we have to- day, is n''t it?'' |
6021 | The Cave, I mean?'' |
6021 | The critics, of course, will blame me for not giving''em the banal thing they expect from me, but what of that?'' |
6021 | The stars would bring it-- starlight do n''t you see? |
6021 | The unchanging village, the forests, the Pension with its queer people, the Magic Box--''''Like a play in a theatre,''he interrupted,''is n''t it?'' |
6021 | The very meaning of the word, eh, John?'' |
6021 | Then why seek to explain the amazing sense of intimacy, the certainty that he had known her always? |
6021 | There''s no such thing, is there?--In life, I mean?'' |
6021 | These tendernesses of the Day and Night? |
6021 | They feel them, eh?'' |
6021 | Was he forty years of age, or only fifteen? |
6021 | Was his love for the world of suffering folk, after all, but his love for a wife and children of his own transmuted into wider channels? |
6021 | Was it an inspiration coming, he wondered? |
6021 | Was it any wonder that she drew a special, brilliant supply from the Starlight Cavern, when she had so much to give? |
6021 | Was it belief and vision that he brought into their lives, though unconsciously, because these qualities lay so strongly in himself? |
6021 | Was it everywhere? |
6021 | Was it the Spirit of some unknown Star they had attracted from beyond the Milky Way? |
6021 | Was it, then, simply by being, thinking, feeling it? |
6021 | Was that it? |
6021 | Was the Message-- the Prophet''s Vision--- merely the more receipt of it than most? |
6021 | Was there, then, some absolute communion of thought between the two of them such as his cousin''s story tried to show? |
6021 | Was this a precursor of the Brother with the Beard, he wondered? |
6021 | Was this intimate knowledge due to long acquaintance? |
6021 | Was this the arrival of a dragon, or Mother coming after them? |
6021 | Was this the beginning of that glory which should prove it a suburb of Bourcelles? |
6021 | Was this the confession coming? |
6021 | Was this the explanation of the effect he produced upon their little circle-- the belief and wonder and joy of Fairyland? |
6021 | Was thought running loose like wireless messages to be picked up by all who were in tune for acceptance? |
6021 | We''ll write this great fairy- tale of mine together, eh?'' |
6021 | Were these children, weaving a network so cunningly about his feet, merely scouts and pilots? |
6021 | What could it mean? |
6021 | What d''ye mean by that precisely?'' |
6021 | What did it matter when? |
6021 | What did the pronunciation of a word matter at such a time? |
6021 | What in the world could they mean? |
6021 | What in the world had happened to him that he should behave in this ridiculous fashion? |
6021 | What in the world was this absurd sweetness running in his veins? |
6021 | What is a puddle worth until a Star''s wee golden face shines out of it? |
6021 | What is it?'' |
6021 | What mean these whispers in the air, This calling from the hills and from the sea? |
6021 | What must she think of him? |
6021 | What on earth could have seemed good enough to take its place? |
6021 | What was it that had changed? |
6021 | What was it? |
6021 | What was the good of questions? |
6021 | What''s it like? |
6021 | What''s that you said, Henry?'' |
6021 | Whence came the singular certainty that she shared this knowledge with him, and might presently explain it, all clear as daylight and as simple? |
6021 | Where do you come from?'' |
6021 | Where had he heard them? |
6021 | Where had he met this little foreign visitor? |
6021 | Where was the boundary crossed?'' |
6021 | Which after all, he asked himself, was real? |
6021 | Which needed his help most? |
6021 | While praising the''cleverness''he asked plainly between the lines of his notice''What does it mean?'' |
6021 | Who among them all was the original sponsor? |
6021 | Who brushes the fringe of their lace- veined lids? |
6021 | Who draws up their blinds when the sun peeps in? |
6021 | Who ever foretold the instant when a butterfly would shoot upwards and away? |
6021 | Who ever saw a cuckoo when it''s talking? |
6021 | Who ever would have thought it?'' |
6021 | Who fastens them down at night? |
6021 | Who hides in the hours To- morrow holds? |
6021 | Who in the world were they? |
6021 | Who knows? |
6021 | Who plays in its outer courts? |
6021 | Who sleeps in your yesterdays? |
6021 | Who tiptoes along past the curtained folds Of the shadow that twilight lays? |
6021 | Who trims their innocent light? |
6021 | Who would have guessed, for instance, the anxiety that just now gnawed her very entrails? |
6021 | Who''s it from? |
6021 | Whom will you help? |
6021 | Why did I ever come? |
6021 | Why did it mitigate his discontent and lessen the dissatisfied feeling? |
6021 | Why did n''t she buy the things a size or two larger?'' |
6021 | Why do n''t you stay and play here?'' |
6021 | Why must it vanish so entirely? |
6021 | Why not?'' |
6021 | Why was it pleasant, even flattering? |
6021 | Without the Guide, Interpreter, Pioneer, how shall the world listen or understand, even the little world of Bourcelles?'' |
6021 | Would he hear now that his chief was going to be married? |
6021 | Would nothing exciting ever happen? |
6021 | Yet how could he know all this? |
6021 | You can tell---''''How can you tell?'' |
6021 | You get my idea-- the great Network?'' |
6021 | You have the means to carry it out, eh? |
6021 | You might think it out a bit yourself, perhaps, meanwhile, and give me your ideas, eh? |
6021 | You will excuse me?'' |
6021 | You will never bury it, will you?'' |
6021 | You''re like a star--''''But how-- like a star?'' |
6021 | You''ve got an improvement, you mean?'' |
6021 | actually create a mental picture which in turn might slip into another''s mind, while that other would naturally suppose it was his own?'' |
6021 | and their faces were grave and sometimes awed; and when Jimbo asked,''But what does THAT mean?'' |
6021 | and which was that?'' |
6021 | asked her sister with a hush in her voice;''you feel the cold air-- all of a sudden?'' |
6021 | he added,''do you hear that?'' |
6021 | he asked;''do you mean in a picture?'' |
6021 | he concluded with vehemence,''eh?'' |
6021 | he exclaimed;''but how the devil did you guess it?'' |
6021 | he said a moment later,''blue, the colour of beauty in flowers, sea, sky, distance-- the childhood colour par excellence?'' |
6021 | he said,''ca n''t you hear it coming?'' |
6021 | was the rejoinder, as though he would fain have added,''And was that wise?'' |
8861 | And is it thus a brother hails A brother''s fond remembrance here? 8861 Bravely, old man, this health has sped; But why does Allan trembling stand? |
8861 | Ill starr''d,[ 3] though brave, did no visions foreboding Tell you that fate had forsaken your cause? |
8861 | Mathon of Lochlin sleeps: seest thou his spear? 8861 Orla,"said the son of Mora,"could I raise the song of Death to my friend? |
8861 | Semper ego auditor tantum? 8861 Up, up, my friend, and clear your looks, Why all this toil and trouble? |
8861 | What Form rises on the roar of clouds? 8861 What were the chase to me alone? |
8861 | While all around is mirth and joy, To bless thy Allan''s happy lot, Say, hadst thou ne''er another boy? 8861 Why dost thou bend thy brow, chief of Oithona?" |
8861 | Wilt thou leave thy friend afar? 8861 Years have rolled on;--in all the lists of Shame, Who now can parallel a Jefferies''name? |
8861 | ''Blest paper credit;''[ 20] who shall dare to sing? |
8861 | ''Imitations and Translations'', 1809, p. 200 And wilt Thou weep when I am low? |
8861 | ''Seek''st thou the cause? |
8861 | ''Tis morn:--from these I turn my sight: What scene is this which meets the eye? |
8861 | --"And shalt thou fall alone?" |
8861 | --"Calmar,"said the chief of Oithona,"why should thy yellow locks be darkened in the dust of Erin? |
8861 | 110 But which deserves the Laurel-- Rhyme or Blank? |
8861 | 2. Who blames it but the envious fool, The old and disappointed maid? |
8861 | 210 Is there no cause beyond the common claim, Endear''d to all in childhood''s very name? |
8861 | 300 Shall fair EURYALUS,[16] pass by unsung? |
8861 | 4 Dost thou repeat, in childish boast, The words man utters to deceive? |
8861 | 40 Am I by thee despis''d, and left afar, As one unfit to share the toils of war? |
8861 | 420 Or prune the spirit of each daring phrase, To fly from Error, not to merit Praise? |
8861 | 5 Shall man confine his Maker''s sway To Gothic domes of mouldering stone? |
8861 | 5 While now amongst thy female peers Thou tell''st again the soothing tale, Canst thou not mark the rising sneers Duplicity in vain would veil? |
8861 | 6 Shall man condemn his race to Hell, Unless they bend in pompous form? |
8861 | 6 These tales in secret silence hush, Nor make thyself the public gaze: What modest maid without a blush Recounts a flattering coxcomb''s praise? |
8861 | 610 Hast thou no wrath, or wish to give it vent? |
8861 | 7 Shall each pretend to reach the skies, Yet doom his brother to expire, Whose soul a different hope supplies, Or doctrines less severe inspire? |
8861 | 710 Or( since some men of fashion nobly dare To scrawl in verse) from Bond- street or the Square? |
8861 | 8 Shall these, by creeds they ca n''t expound, Prepare a fancied bliss or woe? |
8861 | 9. Who can conceive, who has not prov''d, The anguish of a last embrace? |
8861 | 960 Shall hoary Granta call her sable sons, Expert in science, more expert at puns? |
8861 | ? |
8861 | A glance from thy soul- searching eye Can raise with hope, depress with fear; Yet, I conceal my love,--and why? |
8861 | And must the Bard his glowing thoughts confine,[ lxii] Lest Censure hover o''er some faulty line? |
8861 | And must we own thee, but a name, And from thy hall of clouds descend? |
8861 | And shall I here forget the scene, Still nearest to my breast? |
8861 | And shall we own such judgment? |
8861 | And what do you think? |
8861 | And wilt thou weep when I am low? |
8861 | Angus said:"Is he not here?" |
8861 | Are there no fools whose backs demand the scourge? |
8861 | Are there no sins for Satire''s Bard to greet? |
8861 | Arraign''d before thy beauty''s throne, What punishment wilt thou decree? |
8861 | As rolls the Ocean''s changing tide, So human feelings ebb and flow; And who would in a breast confide Where stormy passions ever glow? |
8861 | Ask''st thou the difference? |
8861 | At length young Allan join''d the bride;"Why comes not Oscar?" |
8861 | But how can my numbers in sympathy move, When I scarcely can hope to behold them again? |
8861 | But say, what nymph will prize the flame Which seems, as marshy vapours move, To flit along from dame to dame, An ignis- fatuus gleam of love? |
8861 | But thou, perhaps, may''st now reject Such expiation of my guilt; Come then-- some other mode elect? |
8861 | But what is shame, or what is aught to him? |
8861 | But when did Pallas teach, that one retreat Retrieved three long Olympiads of defeat? |
8861 | But where is Cuthullin, the shield of Erin? |
8861 | But where is Oscar? |
8861 | But wherefore weep? |
8861 | But who is he, whose darken''d brow Glooms in the midst of general mirth? |
8861 | But why this vain advice? |
8861 | But, who was last of Alva''s clan? |
8861 | Can I forget-- canst thou forget, When playing with thy golden hair, How quick thy fluttering heart did move? |
8861 | Can I sing of the deeds which my Fathers have done, And raise my loud harp to the fame of my Sires? |
8861 | Can anything be more full of pathos? |
8861 | Can guilt like man''s be e''er forgiven? |
8861 | Can heavenly Mercy dwell with earthly Zeal? |
8861 | Can the lips sing of Love in the desert alone, Of kisses and smiles which they now must resign? |
8861 | Can they speak of the friends that I lived but to love? |
8861 | Can vice atone for crimes by prayer? |
8861 | Can we reverse the general plan, Nor be what all in turn must be? |
8861 | Could I give his fame to the winds? |
8861 | Could I see thee die, and not lift the spear? |
8861 | Dear d-- d contemner of my schoolboy songs, Hast thou no vengeance for my Manhood''s wrongs? |
8861 | Deceit is a stranger, as yet, to my soul; I, still, am unpractised to varnish the truth: Then, why should I live in a hateful controul? |
8861 | Did Nathan ever read that line of Pope? |
8861 | Dost thou think six families of distinction can share this in quiet? |
8861 | Ere scenes were played by many a reverend clerk,[ l][ 27]( What harm, if David danced before the ark?) |
8861 | For this, can Wealth, or Title''s sound atone, Made, by a Parent''s early loss, my own? |
8861 | From whence? |
8861 | Have I not heard the exile''s sigh, And seen the exile''s silent tear, Through distant climes condemn''d to fly, A pensive, weary wanderer here? |
8861 | Have we no living Bard of merit?--none? |
8861 | Hear''st thou the accents of despair? |
8861 | Hence the question,"My Moira, what say you?"] |
8861 | His life a votive ransom nobly give, Or die with him, for whom he wish''d to live? |
8861 | How came it there?" |
8861 | How now? |
8861 | How view the column of ascending flames Shake his red shadow o''er the startled Thames? |
8861 | I ne''er have told my love, yet thou Hast seen my ardent flame too well; And shall I plead my passion now, To make thy bosom''s heaven a hell? |
8861 | I questioned him, why he had altered his declamation? |
8861 | If ancient Virgins croaking''censures''raise? |
8861 | If thus affection''s strength prevails, What might we not expect from fear?" |
8861 | If unprovoked thou once could bid me bleed, Hast thou no weapon for my daring deed? |
8861 | If you can add a little, say why not, As well as William Pitt, and Walter Scott? |
8861 | In one, and one alone deceiv''d, Did I my error mourn? |
8861 | Is it an exculpation? |
8861 | Is it for this on Ilion I have stood, And thought of Homer less than Holyrood? |
8861 | Is it not better to gibbet his body on a heath, than his soul in an octavo? |
8861 | Is it so bad to unearth his bones as his blunders? |
8861 | Is this a time for delay?" |
8861 | Let Pastoral be dumb; for who can hope To match the youthful eclogues of our Pope? |
8861 | Loud rings in air the chapel bell;''Tis hush''d:--what sounds are these I hear? |
8861 | Mary, what home could be mine, but with you? |
8861 | Mathon starts from sleep: but did he rise alone? |
8861 | Mr. Hornem, ca n''t you see they''re valtzing?" |
8861 | Must all the fame, the peril, be thine own? |
8861 | No jest on"minors,"quibbles on a name,[ 57] Nor one facetious paragraph of blame? |
8861 | No prowling robber lingers here; A wandering baby who can fear?" |
8861 | No wit for Nobles, Dunces by descent? |
8861 | Nor blaze with guilty glare through future time, Eternal beacons of consummate crime? |
8861 | Nor find a Sylph in every dame, A Pylades[ 1] in every friend? |
8861 | Now for a wager-- What coloured beard comes next by the window? |
8861 | Once I beheld a splendid dream, A visionary scene of bliss: Truth!--wherefore did thy hated beam Awake me to a world like this? |
8861 | Or Marmion''s acts of darkness, fitter food For SHERWOOD''S outlaw tales of ROBIN HOOD? |
8861 | Or doom the lover you have chosen, On winter nights to sigh half frozen; In leafless shades, to sue for pardon, Only because the scene''s a garden? |
8861 | Or dwell with delight on the hours that are flown? |
8861 | Or pupil of the prudish school, In single sorrow doom''d to fade? |
8861 | Or, in itself a God, what great desire? |
8861 | Or, should some limner join, for show or sale, A Maid of Honour to a Mermaid''s tail? |
8861 | Pray, Mr. Bayes, who is that Drawcansir? |
8861 | Query: Which of Mr. Southey''s will survive?] |
8861 | Remove whate''er a critic may suspect, To gain the paltry suffrage of"Correct"? |
8861 | Say with what eye along the distant down Would flying burghers mark the blazing town? |
8861 | Say, can Ambition''s fever''d dream bestow So sweet a balm to soothe your hours of woe? |
8861 | Say, what dire penance can atone For such an outrage, done to thee? |
8861 | Say, why should Oscar be forgot?" |
8861 | See''st thou yon camp, with torches twinkling dim, Where drunken slumbers wrap each lazy limb? |
8861 | Shall Peers or Princes tread pollution''s path, And''scape alike the Laws and Muse''s wrath? |
8861 | Shall gentle COLERIDGE pass unnoticed here,[ 37] To turgid ode and tumid stanza dear? |
8861 | Shall reptiles, groveling on the ground, Their great Creator''s purpose know? |
8861 | Shall these approach the Muse? |
8861 | Shall these no more confess a manly sway, But changeful woman''s changing whims obey? |
8861 | Stalks not gigantic Vice in every street? |
8861 | Such is the common lot of man: Can we then''scape from folly free? |
8861 | Swift is the shaft from Allan''s bow; Whose streaming life- blood stains his side? |
8861 | Tell us that all, for one who fell, Must perish in the mingling storm? |
8861 | The Romans had a proverb,"Clodius accuset Moechos?" |
8861 | The blood of Mathon shall reek on mine: but shall I slay him sleeping, Son of Mora? |
8861 | The immortal wars which Gods and Angels wage, Are they not shown in Milton''s sacred page? |
8861 | The prospect lengthen''d o''er the distant down, Lakes, meadows, rising woods, and all your own? |
8861 | The song is glory''s chief reward, But who can strike a murd''rer''s praise? |
8861 | The wise sometimes from Wisdom''s ways depart; Can youth then hush the dictates of the heart? |
8861 | The word"Julia"(?) |
8861 | These might the boldest Sylph appall, When gleaming with meridian blaze; Thy beauty must enrapture all; But who can dare thine ardent gaze? |
8861 | These times are past, our joys are gone, You leave me, leave this happy vale; These scenes, I must retrace alone; Without thee, what will they avail? |
8861 | Thine image, what new friendship can efface? |
8861 | Think''st thou to gain thy verse a higher place, By dressing Camoëns[ 42] in a suit of lace? |
8861 | Though none, like thee, his dying hour will cheer, Yet other offspring soothe his anguish here: But, who with me shall hold thy former place? |
8861 | To Germany, and Highnesses serene, Who owe us millions-- don''t we owe the Queen? |
8861 | To Germany, what owe we not besides? |
8861 | To what unknown region borne, Wilt thou, now, wing thy distant flight? |
8861 | Was this worthy of his sire? |
8861 | What Brother springs a Brother''s love to seek? |
8861 | What Sister''s gentle kiss has prest my cheek? |
8861 | What child has she of promise fair, Who claims a fostering Mother''s care? |
8861 | What does it signify whether a poor dear dead dunce is to be stuck up in Surgeons''or in Stationers''Hall? |
8861 | What force, what aid, what stratagem essay, Back to redeem the Latian spoiler''s prey? |
8861 | What friend for thee, howe''er inclin''d, Will deign to own a kindred care? |
8861 | What is death to me? |
8861 | What minstrel grey, what hoary bard, Shall Allan''s deeds on harp- strings raise? |
8861 | What then? |
8861 | What though from private pique her anger grew, And bade her blast a heart she never knew? |
8861 | When cold is the beauty which dwelt in my soul,[ ii] What magic of Fancy can lengthen my song? |
8861 | When fierce conflicting passions urge The breast, where love is wo nt to glow, What mind can stem the stormy surge Which rolls the tide of human woe? |
8861 | When shall a modern maid have swains like these? |
8861 | When shall the sleep of many a foe be o''er? |
8861 | When thus devoted to poetic dreams, Who will peruse thy prostituted reams? |
8861 | Where confidence and ease the watch disdain, And drowsy Silence holds her sable reign? |
8861 | Which gave a lustre to its blue, Like Luna o''er the ocean playing? |
8861 | Who breaks a Butterfly upon a wheel?" |
8861 | Who inflicts again More books of blank upon the sons of men? |
8861 | Who lies upon the stony floor? |
8861 | Who shoot not flying rarely touch a gun: Will he who swims not to the river run? |
8861 | Who will arise?" |
8861 | Who will debase his manly mind, For friendship every fool may share? |
8861 | Who will speed through Lochlin, to the hero, and call the chief to arms? |
8861 | Who would share the spoils of battle with Calmar? |
8861 | Whose Innocence requires defence, Or forms at least a smooth pretence, Thus to disturb a harmless Boy, His humble hope, and peace annoy? |
8861 | Whose dark Ghost gleams on the red streams of tempests? |
8861 | Whose yellow locks wave o''er the breast of a chief? |
8861 | Why bend to the proud, or applaud the absurd? |
8861 | Why crouch to her leaders, or cringe to her rules? |
8861 | Why did I quit my Highland cave, Marr''s dusky heath, and Dee''s clear wave, To seek a Sotheron home? |
8861 | Why did my childhood wander forth From you, ye regions of the North, With sons of Pride to roam? |
8861 | Why do the injured unresisting yield The calm possession of their native field? |
8861 | Why grows the moss on Alva''s stone? |
8861 | Why is Epic degraded? |
8861 | Why not? |
8861 | Why not?--shall I, thus qualified to sit For rotten boroughs, never show my wit? |
8861 | Why search for delight, in the friendship of fools? |
8861 | Why should her voice curse Orla, the destroyer of Calmar? |
8861 | Why should his harmless censure seem offence? |
8861 | Why should my anxious breast repine, Because my youth is fled? |
8861 | Why should tears dim the azure eye of Mora? |
8861 | Why should thy doating wretched mother weep Her only boy, reclin''d in endless sleep? |
8861 | Why should you weep, like_ Lydia Languish_, And fret with self- created anguish? |
8861 | Why tamely thus before their fangs retreat, Nor hunt the blood- hounds back to Arthur''s Seat? |
8861 | Why waste, upon folly, the days of my youth? |
8861 | Why, Pigot, complain Of this damsel''s disdain, Why thus in despair do you fret? |
8861 | Why, Pratt, hadst thou not a puff left? |
8861 | Why, let the world unfeeling frown, Must I fond Nature''s claims disown? |
8861 | Will not the laughing boy despise Her who relates each fond conceit-- Who, thinking Heaven is in her eyes, Yet can not see the slight deceit? |
8861 | Willis?" |
8861 | Wilt thou forbear, who never spared a foe? |
8861 | With equal ardour fir''d, and warlike joy, His glowing friend address''d the Dardan boy:--"These deeds, my Nisus, shalt thou dare alone? |
8861 | With toads, asps, onions, ornament the shrine, And reptiles own and pot- herbs things divine?" |
8861 | With vests or ribands-- decked alike in hue, New troopers strut, new turncoats blush in blue: So saith the Muse: my----,[ 21] what say you? |
8861 | Without a wondrous share of Wit, To judge is such a Matron fit? |
8861 | Would aught to her impede his way? |
8861 | Would you teach her to love? |
8861 | Yet it could not be Love, for I knew not the name,-- What passion can dwell in the heart of a child? |
8861 | Yet what avails the sanguine Poet''s hope, To conquer ages, and with time to cope? |
8861 | Yet why should I mingle in Fashion''s full herd? |
8861 | Yet, why should I alone with such delight Retrace the circuit of my former flight? |
8861 | [ 121] 770 If chance some wicked wag should pass his jest,''Tis sheer ill- nature-- don''t the world know best? |
8861 | [ 128]"Why slumbers GIFFORD?" |
8861 | [ 129] 820 Are there no follies for his pen to purge? |
8861 | [ 39] But why to brain- scorched bigots thus appeal? |
8861 | [ 3] wherefore dost thou weep? |
8861 | [ 45] Am I not wise, if such some poets''plight, To purge in spring-- like Bayes[ 46]--before I write? |
8861 | [ 47] Thou first, great oracle of tender souls? |
8861 | [ 54] who''ll buy? |
8861 | [ 90] Shall sapient managers new scenes produce 590 From CHERRY,[ 91] SKEFFINGTON,[ 92] and Mother GOOSE? |
8861 | [ Footnote 14: Poor Crib was sadly puzzled when the marbles were first exhibited at Elgin House; he asked if it was not"a stone shop?" |
8861 | [ Footnote 157: A friend of mine being asked, why his Grace of Portland was likened to an old woman? |
8861 | [ Footnote 3:"''Hoarse Fitzgerald''.--"Right enough; but why notice such a mountebank?" |
8861 | [ Footnote civ:''Besides how know ye? |
8861 | [ Footnote i.:''But Where''s the beam of soft desire? |
8861 | [ Footnote ii:_ The memory of that love again._[ MS. L.]] AND WILT THOU WEEP WHEN I AM LOW? |
8861 | [ Footnote xcvi:''But what are these? |
8861 | [ Footnote xii:''Where is the restless fool, would wish for more?'' |
8861 | [ i] What disgust to life hast thou? |
8861 | [ i] Why dost thou build the hall, Son of the winged days? |
8861 | [ ii]"What God,"exclaim''d the first,"instils this fire? |
8861 | [ iii] Or low Dubost[ 2]--as once the world has seen-- Degrade God''s creatures in his graphic spleen? |
8861 | [ iii] Yet wilt thou weep when I am low? |
8861 | [ l] If things of Ton their harmless lays indite, Most wisely doomed to shun the public sight, What harm? |
8861 | [ lxxxviii] Then if your verse is what all verse should be, And Gods were not ashamed on''t, why should we? |
8861 | [ vi]-- With_ souls_ you''d dispense; but, this last, who could bear it? |
8861 | [ x] Or all the labours of a grateful lay? |
8861 | [ xli][ 84] And common- place and common sense confounds? |
8861 | [ xlii]-- 570 Tires the sad gallery, lulls the listless Pit; And BEAUMONT''S pilfered Caratach affords A tragedy complete in all but words? |
8861 | [ xliii] Who but must mourn, while these are all the rage The degradation of our vaunted stage? |
8861 | [ xlv][ 89] On those shall Farce display buffoonery''s mask, And HOOK conceal his heroes in a cask? |
8861 | [ xlvi][ 93] While SHAKESPEARE, OTWAY, MASSINGER, forgot, On stalls must moulder, or in closets rot? |
8861 | [ xvi] 360 Yet, why for him the needless verse essay? |
8861 | [ xxii] What can his friend''gainst thronging numbers dare? |
8861 | [ xxiii] Which holds on Helicon the higher rank? |
8861 | a long farewell-- Yet why to thee adieu? |
8861 | and by whom? |
8861 | and dare I thus blaspheme? |
8861 | and if he did, why not take it as his motto? |
8861 | are so faithful as thou? |
8861 | are ye dead to shame, 610 Or, kind to dulness, do you fear to blame? |
8861 | at a first and transient view, Condemned a heart she never knew.-- Can such a verdict then decide, Which springs from disappointed pride? |
8861 | can Sporus feel? |
8861 | can no more your scenes paternal please, Scenes sacred long to wise, unmated ease? |
8861 | can pangs like these be just?" |
8861 | does the fell disease[ i] Which racks my breast your fickle bosom please? |
8861 | from thy native heaven, What heart, unfeeling, would despise The sweetest boon the Gods have given? |
8861 | give thy talents scope; Who dares aspire if thou must cease to hope? |
8861 | have I not heard your voices Rise on the night- rolling breath of the gale?" |
8861 | in solitude to groan, To mix in friendship, or to sigh alone? |
8861 | is all sense of shame and talent gone? |
8861 | must deserted Poesy still weep Where her last hopes with pious COWPER sleep? |
8861 | must he rise unpunish''d from the feast, Nor lash''d by vengeance into truth at least? |
8861 | must he rush, his comrade''s fate to share? |
8861 | not a word!--and am I then so low? |
8861 | nunquamne reponam, Vexatus toties, rauci Theseide Codri?" |
8861 | o''er those boards shall Folly rear her head, Where GARRICK trod, and SIDDONS lives to tread? |
8861 | once was asked in vain; Why slumbers GIFFORD? |
8861 | once your own, When Probus fill''d your magisterial throne? |
8861 | or must he be content to rival Sir RICHARD BLACKMORE in the quantity as well as quality of his verse? |
8861 | or of himself? |
8861 | our brains are gone, What nobler substitute than wine? |
8861 | perhaps thou hast a_ Soul_, But where have_ Demons_ hid thy_ Heart_? |
8861 | say, How first to Albion found thy Waltz her way? |
8861 | see''st thou not a lonely tomb, Which rises o''er a warrior dead? |
8861 | sure''tis late: Is this a bridegroom''s ardent flame? |
8861 | the anguish''d Sire rejoin''d,"Nor chase, nor wave, my Boy delay; Would he to Mora seem unkind? |
8861 | the self- same blunder Pope has got, And careless Dryden--"Aye, but Pye has not:"-- 100 Indeed!--''tis granted, faith!--but what care I? |
8861 | thy endless blaze, Which far eclipse each minor Glory''s rays? |
8861 | to whom?" |
8861 | vagula, Blandula, Hospes, comesque corporis, Quæ nunc abibis in Loca-- Pallidula, rigida, nudula, Nec, ut soles, dabis Jocos? |
8861 | what may not authors do, Whose Postscripts prate of dyeing"heroines blue"? |
8861 | what was to be done? |
8861 | when shall my soul wing her flight from this clay? |
8861 | when shall the grave hide for ever my sorrow? |
8861 | when, my ador''d, in the tomb will they place me, Since, in life, love and friendship for ever are fled? |
8861 | where is KENNEY''S wit? |
8861 | where is Lethe''s fabled stream? |
8861 | where_ would be_ my Heaven?_ February, 1803. |
8861 | wherefore should we turn To what our fathers were, unless to mourn? |
8861 | whither bear you this? |
8861 | who is yon Misanthrope, shunning mankind? |
8861 | who would take their titles with their rhymes? |
8861 | who''ll buy? |
8861 | why do dark''ning shades conceal The hour when man must cease to be? |
8861 | why early thus in arms? |
8861 | why not on brother Nathan too? |
8861 | why should the Bard, at once, resign[ xxxiii] His claim to favour from the sacred Nine? |
8861 | why that pensive brow? |
8861 | why thus disclose What ne''er was meant for other ears; Why thus destroy thine own repose, And dig the source of future tears? |
8861 | why thus doth a tear steal its way, Down a cheek which outrivals thy bosom in hue? |
8861 | wilt thou then resign A Muse and heart by choice so wholly thine? |
17718 | A copybook, pen, and ink? |
17718 | A young girl would not suit you, sir; but there must be noble middle- aged ladies whom you could admire, and trust, and love? |
17718 | After a while? 17718 All in the dark? |
17718 | All my hair cut off? 17718 And for me? |
17718 | And he dared you-- under penalty of his everlasting wrath-- to break down? 17718 And if I will not excuse you?" |
17718 | And if you fail-- woefully, as fail you must? |
17718 | And in your estimation, that constitutes''imprudence''? |
17718 | And my conscience, Olga? |
17718 | And suspicion rested on my mother? |
17718 | And you fully reciprocate the prejudice? |
17718 | And you? 17718 Are n''t you ready, miss? |
17718 | Are not brave noble men called heroes? 17718 Are the telegraph wires working south?" |
17718 | Are there two of your name? 17718 Are you afraid of me?" |
17718 | Are you an orphan? |
17718 | Are you crying? 17718 Are you feverish, Olga? |
17718 | Are you ill? 17718 Are you in the habit of coming here alone? |
17718 | Are you naughty to- day, and in penance? |
17718 | Are you not quite willing to trust yourself with me? |
17718 | Are you sure that it is for me? |
17718 | Are you sure, Lily, that you have not changed since you came to live in New York? |
17718 | Are you sure, Lily? |
17718 | Are you sure? 17718 Are you sure? |
17718 | Are your favourite divinities those before whom Marcellus bent his knee? |
17718 | Ask him if he will not be so kind as to wait till morning? 17718 At least, Regina, I venture the hope that he came properly and honestly into your heart and hands?" |
17718 | At what time of day did you practise when you were a young girl? |
17718 | Because you know that your object is improper? |
17718 | Because you love him? |
17718 | Because you prefer country to city life? 17718 Because you think I would not''Sympathize with you? |
17718 | Before your mother left? |
17718 | Between you? 17718 But how could the burglars have overlooked the money and jewellery?" |
17718 | But if anything should happen? 17718 But is this her usual, every- day expression?" |
17718 | But she is not in Washington? |
17718 | Ca n''t you reach it? |
17718 | Can I help it? |
17718 | Can any hazard deter me when the reward will be the privilege, the right to fold you in my arms? 17718 Can my daughter cordially welcome her unhappy and unworthy father?" |
17718 | Can you tell me to what place she was going? |
17718 | Can you tell me why she does not openly bring suit against her husband for bigamy? |
17718 | Can you, my crippled snow- bird? 17718 Could I censure any man for surrendering to charms which have so completely vanquished me? |
17718 | Could I have gone without the sight of my precious baby? 17718 Could I refuse you anything, my beautiful brown- eyed empress? |
17718 | Could you contrive to appear a little less solemn? |
17718 | Dear Olga, is your mind quite clear again? |
17718 | Did it occur to you to threaten to break down entirely, burst into tears, and disgrace things generally, if forced to sing before such an audience? 17718 Did she buy a return ticket?" |
17718 | Did you answer her? |
17718 | Did you come to see me? |
17718 | Did you find her? |
17718 | Did you furnish that address with the expectation of conducting a clandestine correspondence? |
17718 | Did you mesmerize her? |
17718 | Did you observe how pale she grew toward the last, and so hollow- eyed, as if utterly worn out in the passionate struggle? |
17718 | Did you say the library window wide open? 17718 Did you sleep well? |
17718 | Did you speak to me? |
17718 | Did you speak to me? |
17718 | Did you tell her that Dr. Hargrove is absent? |
17718 | Did your guardian tell you he has just won that great''Migdol''case that created so much interest? |
17718 | Do I offer sacrifices? |
17718 | Do I? 17718 Do n''t I look very pale and jaded?" |
17718 | Do n''t you know that I sell the eggs? 17718 Do n''t you think, dear, that you ought to be well cared for, when you have two guardians-- two adopted fathers, Mr. Palma and I-- to watch over you? |
17718 | Do not ladies generally stamp their own monograms when marking articles that compose their wardrobes? |
17718 | Do the initials''_ O O_''represent her name? |
17718 | Do you believe that I successfully mask my heart? 17718 Do you dislike him?" |
17718 | Do you ever hear from that legal sphinx-- Erle Palma? 17718 Do you imagine that she perambulates about the sacred precincts of''Five Points,''or the purlieus of Chatham Street?" |
17718 | Do you imagine the colour of your garments will change the complexion of your heart and mind? 17718 Do you know anything about the loss of a valuable paper, once in Mr. Hargrove''s possession?" |
17718 | Do you mean that she has come? |
17718 | Do you mean that some one has died, and left you a fortune? |
17718 | Do you not consider obedience to my wishes part of your duty? |
17718 | Do you not enjoy going into society? |
17718 | Do you not live here? |
17718 | Do you not regard this as strong evidence against her? 17718 Do you notice what a curious, outlandish smell it has? |
17718 | Do you prefer it to the piano? |
17718 | Do you really find yourself possessed of any sentiment of gratitude toward me? 17718 Do you refer to the_ contretemps_ of the masks at the Grand Ball?" |
17718 | Do you regard me as a monster of cruelty? |
17718 | Do you still doubt that you are my child? |
17718 | Do you suppose I am ignorant of what has recently occurred? |
17718 | Do you take me for a fool? 17718 Do you think I could hide my bliss from her? |
17718 | Do you think I read your letter? |
17718 | Do you think I would keep you even if I could from him? 17718 Do you think so? |
17718 | Do you think you burden me? |
17718 | Do you think your mother would consent to your taking so grave a step? |
17718 | Do you understand the peculiar circumstances that attended her marriage? |
17718 | Does General Laurance provide for your maintenance? |
17718 | Does Mrs. Carew permit that child to sit up so late? |
17718 | Does it concern only yourself? |
17718 | Does my Lily know why I crossed the Atlantic? |
17718 | Does my Lily love me best? |
17718 | Does my darling know what an awful risk she ran? 17718 Does my little mother know that she is spoiling her boy by inches; making a nursery darling, instead of a hardy soldier of him? |
17718 | Does my uncle continue to teach her? |
17718 | Does my very observant ward approve of my homage to the Roman deities? |
17718 | During my absence has any one been kidnapped or garrotted in broad daylight? |
17718 | Elise, how can you jest? 17718 Erle Palma?" |
17718 | Even though it cost you the heavy, galling burden of marriage vows, an exorbitant price, which only necessity extorts? 17718 Had she a package or box, when she returned and asked for her satchel?" |
17718 | Hannah, are you afraid of me? |
17718 | Hannah, did my mother ever injure you, ever harm you, in any way? |
17718 | Happier than a residence under my roof has been? 17718 Has he come?" |
17718 | Has he finished his supper? 17718 Has it borne you one inch away from the gods of your life- long worship?" |
17718 | Has mademoiselle left her card with Jean? |
17718 | Has she given you her real name? |
17718 | Has your nurse run away and left you? 17718 Have I a heart of steel, and a soul of flint? |
17718 | Have I been unpardonably presumptuous in interpreting favourably this permission to see you once more? 17718 Have I not told you that I dread above every other ordeal the critical Parisian audience?" |
17718 | Have n''t I? 17718 Have they got her?" |
17718 | Have you been informed who is Regina''s father? |
17718 | Have you caprices? 17718 Have you come to the Salem- witches yet?" |
17718 | Have you consulted Erle on the subject? |
17718 | Have you ever suspected the truth? |
17718 | Have you fever? 17718 Have you found it successful?" |
17718 | Have you had any breakfast? |
17718 | Have you heard the last joke at Count T----''s expense? |
17718 | Have you no relatives? |
17718 | Have you studied mythology at all? 17718 He gives them to you? |
17718 | He? 17718 Heart- ache, so early? |
17718 | Hellene is gone to buy candy,said the dwarf, timidly,"My dear, what is your name?" |
17718 | Honey, did you see me? |
17718 | How are your wounds? |
17718 | How could I dislike my mother''s best friend? 17718 How could I ever forget you? |
17718 | How could I question a servant concerning my mother''s secrets? 17718 How did Mr. Palma guess that I wanted a dog?" |
17718 | How do you propose to make money? |
17718 | How is he? |
17718 | How long since Regina left the house? |
17718 | How long will he stay with us? |
17718 | How long will you be absent? |
17718 | How old is your child? |
17718 | How soon can I go? |
17718 | How, then are you and the babe supported? |
17718 | Husband-- my husband? 17718 I am heartily glad, but it really is no more than I expected; for when did you ever fail in anything of importance?" |
17718 | I do, Hannah; and how much more merciful is God? |
17718 | I hope Dr. Hargrove has been prepared for my visit, and understands its object? |
17718 | I presume her mother writes to her occasionally? |
17718 | I sent you a dog? 17718 I thought my sister had long since learned that borrowing trouble necessitated the payment of usurious interest? |
17718 | I thought you promised to go very early to Mrs. St. Clare''s and assist Valeria in arranging her bridal veil? |
17718 | I thought you were in Philadelphia? 17718 I? |
17718 | I? |
17718 | Idolatrous? 17718 If I ask you it question, will you answer it truly?" |
17718 | If I should chance to open mine, do you think that by any accident you would rush into them? |
17718 | If I should die before we meet again, you will not allow them to trample upon my child? |
17718 | If any change occurs, you will call me instantly? |
17718 | If we had one in the library, do you suppose you would ever sing for me? |
17718 | In daylight? 17718 In that event, may I venture to wonder where and how you and Douglass stand in your own estimation? |
17718 | In the advancement of her scheme, do you believe her capable of committing a theft? |
17718 | In the box of clothing that arrived several days ago, there is a white cashmere suit with blue silk trimmings? |
17718 | In what era? |
17718 | In writing to her, did you mention the facts? |
17718 | Indeed I you must have married when a mere child? |
17718 | Indeed, dear, how can I tell? 17718 Is General Laurance pleading abstractly for forgiveness for his vain and presumptuous sex?" |
17718 | Is Mr. Palma here? |
17718 | Is all that huge sum going to India to the missionaries? |
17718 | Is it indeed so striking and unmistakable a likeness? 17718 Is it not mine? |
17718 | Is it? 17718 Is not Mr. Hargrove also?" |
17718 | Is not the portrait for me? 17718 Is superiority in years and wisdom the only obstacle you can imagine?" |
17718 | Is that all, Lily? 17718 Is that the sole cause of the disturbance?" |
17718 | Is that true? 17718 Is this little Maud?" |
17718 | Is your acceptance of that man contingent only on her consent and approval? |
17718 | Is your discourse confidential? 17718 Is your eternal salvation dependent on church going?" |
17718 | Is your mother asleep? |
17718 | Leave you alone in the house-- with a corpse? |
17718 | Lily, if I ask a foolish trifle of you, will you grant it, as a farewell gift to your guardian? |
17718 | Lily, where did you get those lovely white hyacinths? 17718 Little girl, am I such a stony- hearted ogre?" |
17718 | Little girl, are you very angry? |
17718 | Little snow- statue, why will you not trust me? 17718 Llora, how came you out of bed? |
17718 | Lonely, sir? 17718 May I ask, sir, if you are at all related to Regina?" |
17718 | May I inquire how long it has been in your possession? |
17718 | May I know the nature of that promise? |
17718 | May not this interview at least be sacred from the presence of your keepers? |
17718 | Merciful God!--not my Peyton? |
17718 | Minnie, is this indeed_ our child?_ Your daughter-- and mine? |
17718 | Minnie, is this indeed_ our child?_ Your daughter-- and mine? |
17718 | Minnie? 17718 Mother, do you intend us to understand that Regina is very tender, and very verdant?" |
17718 | Mother, what did you say to her, by way of a dose of orthodoxy to antidote the metempsychosis poison? |
17718 | Mother, what reply did you make to her? 17718 Mr. Hargrove, are all the classic names so ugly?" |
17718 | Mr. Palma, I hope you brought Llora also with you? |
17718 | Mr. Palma, do you want to throw her back into delirium by this cruel excitement? 17718 Mr. Palma, may I ask whether Regina''s mother has unreservedly communicated her history to you?" |
17718 | Mr. Palma, shall I kiss you good- night? |
17718 | Mr. Palma, were you not in a carriage at that square on Tuesday? |
17718 | Mr. Palma, when shall I see my mother? |
17718 | Mr. Palma, will you please give me my picture? |
17718 | Mr. Palma, you have no objection, I hope, to my carrying mother''s portrait with me? |
17718 | Mr. Roscoe, where did you secrete yourself? 17718 My cousin influenced you adversely?" |
17718 | My darling girl, who could have been so cruel as to distress you with such matters? 17718 My daughter, are you really sick?" |
17718 | My daughter, do you desire to be present at this last earthly interview? |
17718 | My daughter, what do we not owe to Erle Palma? 17718 My daughter, what possible connection can Mrs. Carew or anybody else find between the habit of sycophancy and baskets of figs?" |
17718 | My dear boy, are sudden and violent changes always synonymous with advancement? 17718 My dear girl, what is the matter? |
17718 | My dear, are you threatened with ophthalmia, that you can not see a man three yards distant, who measures six feet two inches? 17718 My dear, uncontaminated innocent, do n''t you see that society, and mamma, and Erle Palma have all conspired to make an Isaac of me? |
17718 | My desk? 17718 My heart? |
17718 | My little girl, have you too deceived and forsaken your unfortunate mother? |
17718 | No matter; what were they? 17718 Not quite; still I should like to know what good fortune has rendered you so happy?" |
17718 | Not that Mr. Congreve who dined here last week, and who is so deaf? |
17718 | Not to mamma, not to your guardian? 17718 Nothing unpleasant, I trust?" |
17718 | Of what do you suspect, or accuse me? |
17718 | Olga, do you love him? |
17718 | Olga, is he ill? 17718 Olga, why are you not up and dressed? |
17718 | Penance? 17718 Perhaps a cup of tea will strengthen you?" |
17718 | Peyton, do you miss anything? |
17718 | Peyton, surely you do not share the unjust opinion so fashionable nowaday, that women are unworthy of being entrusted with a secret? 17718 Peyton, were the stolen papers of a character to benefit that person,--or indeed any one but yourself, or your family?" |
17718 | Peyton, what kept you so late? |
17718 | Pray, what do you know about the heathens? |
17718 | Proving that you are my mother''s legal husband? |
17718 | Regina, are you ill, that you obstinately absent yourself when you know there is company to dinner? |
17718 | Regina, are you ready? 17718 Regina, did n''t you hear Sister Gonzaga calling you just now?" |
17718 | Regina, do you interpret that the River of Death? |
17718 | Regina, have you never guessed? 17718 Regina, have you not entered upon your sixteenth year?" |
17718 | Regina, how could you deceive me so shamefully? |
17718 | Regina, is this the way home? |
17718 | Regina, what is the matter? |
17718 | Regina, what was that song you sang for little Llora Carew the night before she left us? 17718 Regina, where have you been? |
17718 | Shall we not return to Naples? 17718 She? |
17718 | Stuart, has Elliott brought back the papers? |
17718 | Suppose my stone god demanded my heart? |
17718 | Surely the world can not have erred in according to my own country the honour of your nationality? |
17718 | Surely, Elise, you are as usual, jesting? |
17718 | Tell me, is he better? |
17718 | That amounts to the same thing, does it not? |
17718 | That night seemed the crisis of my destiny; if I failed, what would become of my baby? 17718 That you will do exactly----""As I please?" |
17718 | The honour of a Laurance? 17718 The name of Laurance? |
17718 | The name startled me, and the master of the house asked,''Of whom are you speaking?'' 17718 The textile fabrics, the silk and lace? |
17718 | Then after mature deliberation you still peremptorily refuse to become more closely related to me? 17718 Then he went away with the expectation that you would correspond with him?" |
17718 | Then how did you get here? 17718 Then of course you regret the necessity which brought you to reside here?" |
17718 | Then why did you absent yourself? |
17718 | Then why do you not ask me to go with you? |
17718 | Then why will you go away? 17718 Then will you please select a piano, and order it to be sent up to- day or to- morrow? |
17718 | Then you are n''t here on charity? |
17718 | To keep me from dying? 17718 To see Beelzebub? |
17718 | To send you from the shelter of my roof? 17718 To whom does your heart cling most closely?" |
17718 | To whom does''our''refer? |
17718 | Too late? 17718 Unavoidable that you should systematically deceive me?" |
17718 | Uncle Orme, are you awake? |
17718 | Uncle Orme, ca n''t you wait till to- morrow? 17718 Unhappy? |
17718 | Upon what do you base your supposition? 17718 Valuable articles? |
17718 | Was it of your own free will, without advice or bias, that you refused the interview I asked you to grant me? |
17718 | Was the lady who visited you last night in any manner interested in that suit, or its result? |
17718 | Well, Farley, what is your proposition? |
17718 | Well, Regina, how do you like travelling on the cars? |
17718 | Well-- suppose you try my arms awhile? 17718 Well? |
17718 | Were they valuable? |
17718 | What are you smiling at? |
17718 | What caused it? 17718 What claim had she on you, when the promise was extorted?" |
17718 | What could he do indeed? 17718 What did you pay for your rabbits? |
17718 | What do you denominate a theft? |
17718 | What do you mean, Olga? 17718 What do you think of New York?" |
17718 | What do you want with it? |
17718 | What does it involve? |
17718 | What dreadful thing has occurred? 17718 What else is left me? |
17718 | What interest can such a trifle possess for you, sir? |
17718 | What is conscience? |
17718 | What is her name? |
17718 | What is his name? |
17718 | What is his name? |
17718 | What is it, Hero? 17718 What is it? |
17718 | What is the matter with your cheek? |
17718 | What is the matter, Aunt Hannah? 17718 What is the matter, Regina?" |
17718 | What is the matter? 17718 What is the matter? |
17718 | What is the matter? 17718 What is the matter? |
17718 | What is the use? 17718 What is true? |
17718 | What name? |
17718 | What peculiar circumstances marked my former acquaintance with you? 17718 What reward will you offer for the recovery of such precious relics of fraternal affection? |
17718 | What unusual occurrence has stimulated your interest and curiosity concerning your parentage? |
17718 | What use do you intend to make of the license? 17718 What value can it possess now?" |
17718 | Whatever it may be, will you let me fix it to suit myself on the Bishop''s bureau? |
17718 | When a man''s happiness for all time is at stake does he loiter on his way to receive the verdict? 17718 When can I see it? |
17718 | When can you give me some money? 17718 When did you see her last?" |
17718 | When did you see him last? |
17718 | When do you want the money? |
17718 | When may I read the_ MS_? 17718 Where are the matches?" |
17718 | Where are you going? |
17718 | Where are you, Hannah? 17718 Where did you leave her? |
17718 | Where do you suppose you are going? |
17718 | Where is Hero? 17718 Where is he now?" |
17718 | Where is the paper? |
17718 | Where is your husband? 17718 Where is your husband?" |
17718 | Who gave you permission to come into our chapel? 17718 Who is in that carriage yonder?" |
17718 | Who keeps the poultry book? 17718 Why did not his owner change it for something handsome, after he performed such service?" |
17718 | Why did you not wait, and invite me to come out and inspect your pretty pets? |
17718 | Why do n''t you pump the child? |
17718 | Why do you ask? |
17718 | Why do you not go at once to my guardian, and demand me? |
17718 | Why do you not inquire? |
17718 | Why do you not speak, Regina, and assure her of your safety? |
17718 | Why have you not a light? |
17718 | Why is it necessary to prove your marriage? 17718 Why not phrase it Mrs. Lindsay and her son? |
17718 | Why not? 17718 Why not? |
17718 | Why then do you hesitate? |
17718 | Why then have you never worn it? |
17718 | Why will you persist in using words that have been out of style as long as huge hoop- skirts, coal- scuttle bonnets, and long- tailed frock- coats? 17718 Why, my darling?" |
17718 | Why, she has not Lucretia- coloured tresses like my own lovely- spun gold? 17718 Why, then, will you let him go?" |
17718 | Why? 17718 Why? |
17718 | Why? |
17718 | Will it be necessary to trouble Mr. Palma with the matter? 17718 Will you answer me one question, if I ask it?" |
17718 | Will you be so kind as to lend me twenty- five dollars, until I receive my remittance? |
17718 | Will you be sorry, Sister Angela? |
17718 | Will you come, in, Erle? 17718 Will you do me the favour to put aside for future contingencies this small tribute to your child? |
17718 | Will you live for ever? 17718 Will you oblige me with the remarks, and the name of the author?" |
17718 | Will you promise not to betray me? |
17718 | Will you promise to keep secret whatever I may tell you? |
17718 | Will you tell me the circumstances of his death? |
17718 | Will you tell me the truth, if I ask you? |
17718 | Will you? 17718 Will your conscience allow you to say,''My guardian, I am glad to see you''?" |
17718 | Wo n''t you eat your supper? 17718 Wo n''t you please let me bury Bunnie and Snowball before I go upstairs to penance? |
17718 | Would you help me to escape from the misery of this fine marriage? 17718 Would you mind taking my dog up there with you? |
17718 | Yes, sir; but----"But-- what? 17718 Yes-- or no-- this time; is there no one you love better?" |
17718 | Yes; he is so good, how can I help feeling attached to him? |
17718 | You are certain that the young missionary will not prove the obstacle to your becoming more closely related to your guardian? 17718 You are not going to- night? |
17718 | You are resolved not to appoint me your confessor? |
17718 | You certainly do not expect to carry him in the carriage? |
17718 | You consider her strictly honest and truthful? |
17718 | You did not know your affections had travelled to India, until the gentleman formally asked for them? 17718 You do n''t mean that you would ever trust me, ever believe in me again?" |
17718 | You do not intend to marry him? |
17718 | You do not know my guardian? |
17718 | You go there? 17718 You had no fever, no headache, no fainting- spell?" |
17718 | You have established a system of signal service with those antique ogres, griffons? 17718 You have followed her then?" |
17718 | You have not lived in moral Constantinople long enough to comprehend the terms of traffic? 17718 You love him next to your mother?" |
17718 | You mean that conscience is merely education? 17718 You mean that you would have been happier with them than with me?" |
17718 | You persist in believing that they must inevitably be horrid? |
17718 | You positively refuse to sell him to me? |
17718 | You promise that? |
17718 | You recite a lesson in history every day, do n''t you? |
17718 | You refuse me the privilege of a confidential talk with you? |
17718 | You regard me as a dullard in comprehending canine qualities? |
17718 | You saw the minister then? 17718 You say that your name is Peleg Peterson; why did you never come openly to the parsonage and claim me? |
17718 | You thought, you understood what? 17718 You wear this, as a pledge of betrothal? |
17718 | You wicked woman, do you want to kill me? 17718 You will not let me go?" |
17718 | You would give yourself away, sooner than that unlucky dog? |
17718 | Your impression is, that I will not please to do exactly right? |
17718 | Your white dove? 17718 Your wife, sir?" |
17718 | _ A propos!_ what do you think of my charming fair client? |
17718 | _ Par parenthèse!_ from the beginning of time have not discord, mischief, trouble-- been personified by females? 17718 ''Were not Mr. Hargrove''s friends mistaken in believing he had never married?'' 17718 ( I wonder if even the old toothless gossips in Sparta were ever laconic?) 17718 A different pedigree from that offered us by Moses and the Prophets, Christ and the Apostles; but does it light up the Hereafter? 17718 A frown clouded the lawyer''s brow; then with a half smile he asked:Of the two ministers, who did you love best? |
17718 | A month hence when you are on your way to India, what difference can it possibly make to you, whether she is as brown as a quail or black as a crow? |
17718 | A promise of implicit obedience to your guardian? |
17718 | A shadow that prevails for a while? |
17718 | About what?" |
17718 | Adopts and makes you his heiress? |
17718 | After a few seconds, she added:"Where is mamma?" |
17718 | After all, had he utterly mistaken her feeling, flattered himself falsely? |
17718 | After all, were you hurt?" |
17718 | After all, what is your bit of_ petit larceny_, your thin slice of theft, in comparison with my black work? |
17718 | After almost twenty years of neglect, injustice, and wrong, can the husband of your youth, and the father of your child, hope for pardon?" |
17718 | After to- day will the world ever look quite the same to me? |
17718 | Am I a boy to climb peach trees this time of the day, for your amusement? |
17718 | Am I a brute, or a stone? |
17718 | Am I handsome? |
17718 | Am I not the complete impersonation of sunshine? |
17718 | Am I so very frightful that you dare not question me?" |
17718 | And Mr. Lindsay smiled in his mother''s face, and said only for her ear:"Do not her eyes entitle her to be called Glaukopis?" |
17718 | And Regina is so inexperienced?" |
17718 | And has she not yet learned that a pastor''s duty knows neither heat nor cold, neither fatigue nor bodily weaknesses?" |
17718 | And now, where is my revenge? |
17718 | And since when did you successfully trace my pedigree to its amiable source in--''Gorgons and hydras and chimeras dire''? |
17718 | Are Americans as truly free to- day as they certainly were fifty years ago? |
17718 | Are not these proportions values capable of rise and fall, of valuation and tariff? |
17718 | Are people ever prepared for trouble like this?" |
17718 | Are people ever so utterly mad as that? |
17718 | Are wars less bloody, or is crime less rampant? |
17718 | Are we lower than the bees, who wisely discriminate between pure honey and poisonous sweets? |
17718 | Are you approaching your dotage?" |
17718 | Are you brave enough to meet your guardian''s black frown and freezing censure? |
17718 | Are you consumed by curiosity?" |
17718 | Are you dreaming? |
17718 | Are you drunk, or mad?" |
17718 | Are you fully resolved that I shall never be related to you, except as your guardian?" |
17718 | Are you going away now?" |
17718 | Are you going to a party or a ball?" |
17718 | Are you going to have a spasm? |
17718 | Are you going to wear that dress?" |
17718 | Are you hungry?" |
17718 | Are you ill?" |
17718 | Are you in league with the thieves, that you must needs try to devour the signs and tell- tales they dropped in the track of their dirty work? |
17718 | Are you not going to church this afternoon?" |
17718 | Are you not my own?" |
17718 | Are you quite willing to tell me why he seems so deeply interested in me?" |
17718 | Are you ready to let me carry you upstairs?" |
17718 | Are you really happy, little snowbird, nestling in the down of mother- love, which-- like the veritable baby you are-- you so pined for? |
17718 | Are you satisfied?" |
17718 | Are you widowed so early?" |
17718 | As her mind cleared, she recalled what had passed, and said almost in a whisper:"Did I dream, or did you tell me that horrible man is not my father?" |
17718 | As if I dared play this heavy fish an instant, with such a frail line? |
17718 | As minister- extraordinary, may I venture to remind Mr. Laurance of his errand?" |
17718 | Ask Mr. Palma why I am opposed to smuggling figs, especially rose- coloured figs?" |
17718 | At length she ventured the question:"Did you leave your family in California?" |
17718 | Because Euterpe did not preside when I was lucklessly ushered into this dancing gilt bubble that we call the world, were all good gifts denied me? |
17718 | Because it was wasted, and all-- all is lost, can I mourn the less?" |
17718 | Bending his haughty head, he asked:"Will you be reasonable?" |
17718 | Born in a. hospital, owning that repulsive countenance there beside her as parent? |
17718 | But had she a right to betray Hannah to her employer? |
17718 | But how long since General Laurance believed me incapable of-- worse than trifling?" |
17718 | But how or whence sprang the laws of''Protein''? |
17718 | But may I ask why you so sternly taboo that social world which you are so pre- eminently fitted to grace and adorn? |
17718 | But was it the bare church, or the minister, or my ward''s sensitive conscience?" |
17718 | But was there even then a magnetic recognition, dim and vague, of the person whom she regarded as the inveterate enemy of her happiness? |
17718 | But what are you doing here? |
17718 | But what music is there that would suit a poem, which henceforth will seem as holy as a psalm to me?" |
17718 | But where is the economy of credulity? |
17718 | But why deal in recrimination? |
17718 | But why have you so long allowed us to believe you were lost on that vessel?" |
17718 | But, my child, why did you come here?" |
17718 | By what infallible criterion shall criticdom decide the boundaries of the Actual and the Ideal? |
17718 | Ca n''t you bring her on at once? |
17718 | Ca n''t you change your mind?" |
17718 | Ca n''t you persuade Mr. Palma to go to the party, or ball, or whatever it may be?" |
17718 | Ca n''t you place me at school? |
17718 | Ca n''t you stay, and serve God as well by being a minister in this country? |
17718 | Can I forget my helpless baby, whose sole dower just now promises to be her mother''s spotless name? |
17718 | Can I go?" |
17718 | Can I move the dishes and table?" |
17718 | Can I persuade you to join our party? |
17718 | Can I trust you?" |
17718 | Can my fastidious lover refuse the first boon I ever craved?" |
17718 | Can we exhibit any marvels of architecture that excel the glory of Philæ, Athens, Pæstum, and Agra? |
17718 | Can you ask me to do more than this for you?" |
17718 | Can you bear it a little while longer?" |
17718 | Can you do so? |
17718 | Can you find me? |
17718 | Can you give me a pencil and piece of paper? |
17718 | Can you not contribute something toward my support, until I can collect some money due me? |
17718 | Can you not postpone the consummation of our marriage?" |
17718 | Can you recollect that lovely green and white cameo pin set with diamonds that Tiffany had last spring? |
17718 | Can you tell me my darling''s name?" |
17718 | Certainly, they are worth that trifle?" |
17718 | Chesley?" |
17718 | Congreve?" |
17718 | Could I oblige her by consenting to serve the visitors at table? |
17718 | Could any other than the simple ancient churchyard of bygone days have suggested that sweetest, purest, noblest elegy in our mother tongue? |
17718 | Could his presence have been accidental? |
17718 | Could it be possible after all? |
17718 | Could my mother commit such a loathsome, awful crime against God, and nature?" |
17718 | Could she bear even to think of them in coming years? |
17718 | Could she bear to deceive the brave loyal heart that trusted her so completely? |
17718 | Could she deny that his voice and the touch of his hand on hers magnetized, thrilled her, as no one else had power to do? |
17718 | Could she ever be as happy here as in the humble yet hallowed library at the dear old parsonage? |
17718 | Could that satin- cheeked, grey- eyed Circe with pale yellow hair and lashes, hold him in silken bonds at her feet? |
17718 | Could the unbridled thirst for revenge have dragged her on into a monomania that would finally have ended in downright madness? |
17718 | Cowering among the bedclothes, she trembled and said, in a husky yet audible whisper:"Will you hide us a little while? |
17718 | Cuthbert bowed profoundly, and answered contemptuously:"They have, I presume, already been transferred in the form of a marriage contract? |
17718 | Cuthbert grasped his father''s hand, and murmured:"Do n''t you know the college? |
17718 | Cuthbert, did you only notice how she looked right at me? |
17718 | Dare you deny it?" |
17718 | Did he come from Nova Zembla, or Hammerfest, or directly from''Greenland''s icy mountains''?" |
17718 | Did he command your attendance at this''Cantata''?" |
17718 | Did he give you the papers we shall require?" |
17718 | Did he intentionally torture her? |
17718 | Did he know all, and would he love her less, if that bold bad man should prove his paternal claim to her? |
17718 | Did he suspect her secret folly? |
17718 | Did not Mr. Hargrove say last week that Philo Smith was a hero, when he jumped into the mill- pond and saved Lemuel Martin from drowning? |
17718 | Did not you and Mr. Hargrove believe that mother took-- stole that box?" |
17718 | Did not you tell me that you read nearly the whole of Sallust by spreading the book open on the dairy shelf while you churned, thus saving time? |
17718 | Did you ask Mother?" |
17718 | Did you ever hear of Argus?" |
17718 | Did you ever hear of Moloch?" |
17718 | Did you ever know it to rest for an instant from its snarling, snapping, grinning round? |
17718 | Did you ever meet Mrs. Carew until to- day?" |
17718 | Did you ever read the account of Iduna''s captivity in the castle of Thiassi in Jötunheim?" |
17718 | Did you ever see a hyena caged in a menagerie? |
17718 | Did you have a satisfactory interview with him on Tuesday last? |
17718 | Did you learn from Hannah the character of the paper?" |
17718 | Did you leave it in the car? |
17718 | Did you mean it even then? |
17718 | Did you meet her?" |
17718 | Did you not one May morning marry in this room Minnie Merle to Cuthbert Laurance?" |
17718 | Did you notice how her voice trembled?" |
17718 | Did you really think me a ghost?" |
17718 | Did you succeed?" |
17718 | Did you thank me for the present?" |
17718 | Do I translate correctly your gracious diction?" |
17718 | Do I weary you with my babble? |
17718 | Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?'' |
17718 | Do men who marry under such circumstances honour and trust the women, who as a_ dernier ressort_ bear their names? |
17718 | Do n''t you know it? |
17718 | Do n''t you know that Cilician geese outwit even the eagles? |
17718 | Do n''t you know that Erle Palma would have been engaged for the prosecution? |
17718 | Do n''t you know that God will ultimately overrule all, and evangelize the world?" |
17718 | Do n''t you know that I would not leave you here an instant, if it could be avoided? |
17718 | Do n''t you know the dampness will destroy it? |
17718 | Do n''t you mean to undress yourself?" |
17718 | Do n''t you remember that when St. Francis went walking about the fields, the rabbits jumped into his bosom, because he loved them so very much? |
17718 | Do not our own highly charged nervous batteries occasionally give the first premonition of coming thunderstorms? |
17718 | Do surprises gravitate into groups, or are certain facts binary? |
17718 | Do you attend church from a conviction that penance conduces to a sanitary improvement of the soul?" |
17718 | Do you believe me capable of betraying your confidence? |
17718 | Do you come for defiance, or capitulation?" |
17718 | Do you expect me to believe that?" |
17718 | Do you hear how the thunder keeps bellowing down yonder, under that dark line crossing the south? |
17718 | Do you hear that bell? |
17718 | Do you imagine any fair young girl could brave my grey hairs and wrinkles?" |
17718 | Do you know him?" |
17718 | Do you know my papa?" |
17718 | Do you know where you were born? |
17718 | Do you know why Cleopatra is coming here?'''' |
17718 | Do you mean it? |
17718 | Do you mean that you were unprepared for the demand, because the mother had forfeited the conditions under which you gave the promise?" |
17718 | Do you not find that here in Parthenope you rapidly drift into the classic tide that strands you on Paganism?" |
17718 | Do you propose to adopt her? |
17718 | Do you propose to lock him up always in your own chamber? |
17718 | Do you really know beyond doubt who was-- or is-- my father?" |
17718 | Do you regard her in all respects as a worthy, true, good woman?" |
17718 | Do you require any medicine? |
17718 | Do you scout oneiriomancy as a heathenish fable? |
17718 | Do you see how tall the China geese have grown? |
17718 | Do you still desire your letter forwarded?" |
17718 | Do you suppose I have gone crazy, and lost the power of computing rents and dividends? |
17718 | Do you suppose I would stoop to read your letter clandestinely? |
17718 | Do you suspect the nature of my errand to East---- Street?" |
17718 | Do you think I could see her beggared, reduced to poverty that really pinched, in order that I might usurp her place as the Laurance heiress? |
17718 | Do you think I do not love my child? |
17718 | Do you think I will live and let them taunt me with my folly, my failure? |
17718 | Do you think a child ever mistook another for her own mother? |
17718 | Do you think you can scare me with such wild desperate threats? |
17718 | Do you think your name is Orme? |
17718 | Do you understand that scriptural paradox:''To him that hath shall be given, but from him that hath not shall be taken,''etc., etc? |
17718 | Do you understand, Elliott?" |
17718 | Do you understand? |
17718 | Do you wish her to freeze? |
17718 | Do you wish to insult the memory of the great Athenian?" |
17718 | Do you wish to make me jealous?" |
17718 | Do you wish to pay your passage to Europe?" |
17718 | Do you wish to see me?" |
17718 | Do you wonder if the world is coming to its long- predicted end? |
17718 | Do you wonder that I hate him? |
17718 | Do you wonder that Laurance is a synonym for all that is cruel, wicked? |
17718 | Does Cleopatra''s fondness for figs enable her to appreciate my worldly wisdom?" |
17718 | Does Mr. Palma know it?" |
17718 | Does a lion relent with his paw upon his prey?" |
17718 | Does he ever write you?" |
17718 | Does he reside here?" |
17718 | Does it not rather by contrast with symmetry and perfect proportion heighten the power and charm of the latter? |
17718 | Does knowledge exert an acidulating influence upon female temper, or produce an ossifying effect on female hearts? |
17718 | Does my ward believe that it will conduce to her future happiness to leave my roof, and find a residence elsewhere?" |
17718 | Does not my history call Leonidas a hero? |
17718 | Does she not correspond with the saints in Oude?" |
17718 | Does that feel like ordinary fever?" |
17718 | Does the contemplation of physical monstrosities engender a predilection or affection for deformity? |
17718 | Does the mind emit gloomy sombre thoughts at night, as plants exhale carbonic acid? |
17718 | Does the steel Law Mill of Progressive Development grind us either tonic or balm for the fatal hours of sorest human trial? |
17718 | Does this wise and simple pabulum cure spiritual starvation? |
17718 | During the year I have not found fault with you, have I?" |
17718 | Eggleston?" |
17718 | Elise, were you not with me at the time?" |
17718 | Elise, will you and Hannah please give me my breakfast as soon as possible, that I may go into town at once?" |
17718 | Elliott, what do you think of her?" |
17718 | Elliott, will you ride down with us, and look at the portrait?" |
17718 | Faded flowers, perfumed with choice Oriental reminiscences?" |
17718 | Father, where is my child?" |
17718 | Forbade you at your peril, to allow your frightened heart to beat the long- roll, or the tattoo?" |
17718 | General Laurance turned and whispered:"For God''s sake, what is the matter? |
17718 | Genius? |
17718 | Had clouds and shadows flown for ever from the world, leaving only heavenly sunshine and Mr. Palma? |
17718 | Had he been sadly bored, and did he repent the sacrifice made to gratify her caprice? |
17718 | Had he died while she sang, and was his spirit already with God when she repeated the words"Far away in the regions of the blest"? |
17718 | Had it the power to chant to rest that sombre past which memory kept as a funeral theme for ever on its vibrating strings? |
17718 | Had she been robbed, or had she dropped her_ porte- monnaie_ in the carriage? |
17718 | Had she been utterly mad in resolving to stain her own pure hand by the touch of René Laurance? |
17718 | Had she purchased a sufficient reprieve to keep him quiet until she could hear from her mother, and receive the expected summons to join her? |
17718 | Had she relented, would she pardon him now? |
17718 | Hannah, will you please help me back to the house? |
17718 | Has Madame''s beauty dazed you as utterly as poor Count T----?" |
17718 | Has anything happened?" |
17718 | Has he been sick?" |
17718 | Has it ever occurred to you that the green goggles you wear at present may accidentally lend an unhealthy tinge to your vision?" |
17718 | Has it waked up again? |
17718 | Has liberty of action kept pace with liberty of opinion? |
17718 | Has there been a serious_ imbroglio_ since the days of Troy without some vexatious Helen? |
17718 | Have a cigar? |
17718 | Have not I lived here a year?" |
17718 | Have not you boxed my ears, because, when stumbling through the''Anabasis,''my Greek pronunciation tortured your fastidious and correct taste? |
17718 | Have they all come home?" |
17718 | Have they sent you anything to eat?" |
17718 | Have you a copy of Jean Ingelow?" |
17718 | Have you at last learned to multiply fractions?" |
17718 | Have you been anointing yourself with a whole vial of Lubin''s extract of-- Ah!--delicious-- what is it?" |
17718 | Have you been subjected to any annoyances from the members of my household?" |
17718 | Have you done me the honour to ponder the contents of my letter?" |
17718 | Have you had your supper?" |
17718 | Have you no choice?" |
17718 | Have you no fear that you are seizing with bare fingers a glittering thirsty blade, which may flesh itself in the hand that dares to caress it?" |
17718 | Have you not forfeited your guardian''s confidence?" |
17718 | Have you recently joined the''Microscopical Society''? |
17718 | Have you seen your uncle?" |
17718 | Have you the checks for your baggage?" |
17718 | He bent his white head, and whispered:"Such, for instance, as Mrs. Carew, who converts all places into Ogygia?" |
17718 | He dropped her hands, looked at his watch, and took up his gloves; adding, in an entirely altered and indifferent voice:"What have you lost to- day?" |
17718 | He had evinced no surprise, had asked no explanation of her conduct, but would he abstain in future? |
17718 | He kissed her on cheek and lips, and added:"Regina, ca n''t you contrive to say you are a little glad to see me?" |
17718 | He only smiled, patted her head, and said cheerfully as he put on his hat:"Is the little girl wiser than her guardian? |
17718 | He seemed bewildered, and his son exclaimed:"Who is responsible for the separation from my wife? |
17718 | He stooped close to her, and even then she noted how laboured was his breathing, and that his mouth quivered:"Answer me; do you mean to marry him?" |
17718 | He wiped the tears from her cheek, and after some hesitation she said brokenly:"How can you care at all what becomes of me? |
17718 | Hearts- ease from the man who had bruised, trampled, broken her heart? |
17718 | Hearts? |
17718 | Her sands of life seamed ebbing fast,--the end might not be distant; who could tell? |
17718 | His fine eyes sparkled, and, drawing her hand across his cheek, he said eagerly:"Do you really wish it? |
17718 | His wife pinched his arm, but without heeding her he looked quite past her into the laughing eyes of the minister, and asked:"Do you know her? |
17718 | Holding it out, he asked:"Did you ever see this?" |
17718 | How can I be happy in this house? |
17718 | How can you be so cruel as to torment that afflicted child?" |
17718 | How can you think so meanly of the people with whom you associate intimately?" |
17718 | How can you tolerate such schism in your household? |
17718 | How can you? |
17718 | How could I consent to defer what I regard as the crowning happiness of my life? |
17718 | How could I fail to love him?" |
17718 | How could she exult in trampling upon a bruised worm which made no attempt to crawl from beneath her heel? |
17718 | How could she without exciting suspicion obtain the money she had so positively promised? |
17718 | How could you know?'' |
17718 | How dare you? |
17718 | How deeply his heart must be engaged, when his stem, cold, noncommittal face crimsoned? |
17718 | How devoted he is to''duty''? |
17718 | How did she impress you?" |
17718 | How did you coax or conjure that honeysuckle into blooming before its appointed time?" |
17718 | How fervently she should pray for continued peace with China, and low tariff on Pekoe? |
17718 | How had Olga discovered the secret which he believed so securely locked in his own heart? |
17718 | How is Maud?" |
17718 | How is her education to be conducted in future?" |
17718 | How is my brother?" |
17718 | How long did you expect me to wait here, with the cold eating into my vitals?" |
17718 | How long does Abbie expect to remain in Nice? |
17718 | How many have you left?" |
17718 | How much longer must we be separated? |
17718 | How much will you give for a letter that has travelled half around the world, and had as many adventures as Robinson Crusoe, or Madame Pfeiffer?" |
17718 | How often subtle analogies in physical nature whisper interpretations of vexing psychological enigmas? |
17718 | How old is this darling, who steals so many of your thoughts?" |
17718 | How rapidly Regina has grown, since she came among us? |
17718 | How shall I address it?" |
17718 | How should I?" |
17718 | How should she commence? |
17718 | How the words grated on her husband''s ear, grown strangely sensitive within an hour? |
17718 | How they looked down into hers? |
17718 | How those maddening white teeth of his glittered, as he smiled approvingly at the proposition? |
17718 | How vividly we of the nineteenth century exemplify the wisdom of the classic aphorisms? |
17718 | How would it suit you, reverend sir, to take the rivet out of my tongue, and repair your clerical scissors?" |
17718 | I believe I Also met a son of General Laurance in Paris? |
17718 | I believe it involves a very large fee?" |
17718 | I guess something has happened?" |
17718 | I have a fine colour to- day,_ ergo_ the''German''is superior to any of the patent chemical cosmetics? |
17718 | I have not heard you moving about? |
17718 | I hope Miss Orme is satisfied?" |
17718 | I hope it is not a severe attack this time?" |
17718 | I hope you are feeling quite well, and bright as this delicious sunshine? |
17718 | I might be murdered, but they would never dare to molest you,--and if I should die, you would not allow them to rob my baby of her name?" |
17718 | I presume you are aware of the fact that we have a joint guardianship over this child?" |
17718 | I suppose I have been delirious?" |
17718 | I thought you were crippled? |
17718 | I want to know why my heart is drawn so steadily and so powerfully toward Mr. Chesley, and why something in his face reminds me tenderly of you? |
17718 | I will pay you-- let me see-- thirty- five, forty-- well, say fifty dollars? |
17718 | I wonder if in all the wide borders of America there are any more like him? |
17718 | I wonder if some day you will be as steadfast and faithful in your devotion to your husband, as you have been in your loving defence of your mother? |
17718 | If I never saw her again in this world, could I fail to recognise her in heaven? |
17718 | If it were true, could she hear it, and live? |
17718 | If she could leave New York before his return, and never see him again, would it not be best? |
17718 | If she had been more patient, might not this fearful discovery have been averted? |
17718 | If she married Douglass and he afterward discovered the truth, could he be happy, could he ever trust her again? |
17718 | If she were Douglass Lindsay''s wife, would she not find it far easier to forget her guardian? |
17718 | If so, will you do me a favour?" |
17718 | If still implacably vindictive, would she have continued the advertisement, which so powerfully tempted him to reveal himself? |
17718 | If you get into trouble, or need anything, will you write to me? |
17718 | In Paris, where illness curtailed my engagement, I wish to make my parting bow, and I trust you will not oppose so innocent a pleasure? |
17718 | In a low voice the artist said, as he selected some brushes from a neighbouring stand:"How old is she? |
17718 | In birth, fortune, and beauty could he find her superior? |
17718 | In morals, public or private-- religion, national or individual-- or in civil polity, have we advanced? |
17718 | In the universal canticle which nature sends up to its Creator, shall humanity, the noblest of the marvellous mechanism, alone be silent? |
17718 | In what portion of the United States did you reside?" |
17718 | In æsthetics do we surpass Phidias and Praxiteles, Raphael and Michael Angelo? |
17718 | Indeed there were two, one with the other without an accompaniment?" |
17718 | Intercede for me, will you not?" |
17718 | Involuntarily he shrank back into the depths of his chair, and mutely questioned as on the previous night,"Where have I heard that voice before?" |
17718 | Is Minnie ill?" |
17718 | Is Mr. Lindsay dearer to you than all else in the world?" |
17718 | Is Peyton ill?" |
17718 | Is a Laurance safely bound by vows?" |
17718 | Is a woman sweeter, more gentle, more useful to her family and friends, because she is unlearned? |
17718 | Is any one dead?" |
17718 | Is anything else considered in it but the proper proportions? |
17718 | Is he black, brown, striped, or spotted?" |
17718 | Is he dead?" |
17718 | Is her husband living?" |
17718 | Is hope, radiant warm sunny hope, only one of those"beings woven of air by light,"whereof Moleschott wrote? |
17718 | Is ignorance an inevitable concomitant of refinement and delicacy? |
17718 | Is it Beauty? |
17718 | Is it a poodle?" |
17718 | Is it any of your business where I go? |
17718 | Is it historic?" |
17718 | Is it needful that I recross the ocean to bow before the reigning muse? |
17718 | Is it not conceded that the brightest, loveliest planet in Parisian skies, brought all her splendour from my western home?" |
17718 | Is it not premature when your mother is in ignorance of your purpose? |
17718 | Is it possible that you would ever do such a thing? |
17718 | Is it strange that at times I loath the sight of your face, which mocks me with the assurance that you are his as well as mine? |
17718 | Is it the shadow of a tower, or of a tree? |
17718 | Is it waiting for you?" |
17718 | Is it you, Regina?" |
17718 | Is my mother''s name Minnie?" |
17718 | Is n''t he beautiful?" |
17718 | Is not marriage an affair? |
17718 | Is not your wife at Como?" |
17718 | Is our music more perfect than Pergolesi''s or Mozart''s? |
17718 | Is she Merle, Peterson, or Laurance?" |
17718 | Is she dead?" |
17718 | Is she the same straightforward, guileless child I left her?" |
17718 | Is she well?" |
17718 | Is that Minnie''s child?" |
17718 | Is the intellectual machinery at all in consonance with the refined perfection of the external physique?" |
17718 | Is the woman dead?" |
17718 | Is there an inherent antagonism between learning and womanliness?" |
17718 | Is there anything you wish to say to me?" |
17718 | Is there no corner safe from peeping Doubt?" |
17718 | Is there no hope?" |
17718 | Is there not a fatality even in symbols? |
17718 | Is transition inevitably improvement? |
17718 | It can not bring back the lost; and does memory ever die? |
17718 | It is a bargain?" |
17718 | It is now half- past five, and I think you told me you commenced at one? |
17718 | It might be a comfort to him, and if he should die? |
17718 | It?" |
17718 | It?" |
17718 | Laurance?" |
17718 | Laurance?" |
17718 | Laying her wrinkled hand on the golden hair, the faithful old woman asked:"Did you hear from your baby?" |
17718 | Let that iron fiend show his white teeth, and triumph over me? |
17718 | Lily, what have you done that you blush to confess to me?" |
17718 | Lindsay?" |
17718 | Lindsay?" |
17718 | Lindsay?" |
17718 | Love to fondle white rabbits, and pigeons, and stand ankle deep in clover blooms?" |
17718 | Mason?" |
17718 | May I attend you to- day? |
17718 | May I fasten it in your hair?" |
17718 | May I hope, Madame, that the value of the contents will successfully plead the pardon of the audacious, yet sufficiently rebuked messenger?" |
17718 | May I not at least see him before I go?" |
17718 | May I not hope that my husband will consent to see me on my wedding day in that_ rôle_? |
17718 | May I sing you a song always associated with your portrait, an invocation sacred to my lovely mother?" |
17718 | May I?" |
17718 | Might there not be some defence, some extenuating circumstance, that would lessen his crime? |
17718 | Mother, tell me, were you disappointed in your daughter?" |
17718 | Mr. Hargrove had not moved from the posture in which she left him, and she said very softly:"Are you asleep?" |
17718 | Mr. Hargrove sat down, and, keeping his arm around her, said tenderly:"Are you so unwilling to come and live under my care? |
17718 | Mr. Hargrove, or the young missionary?" |
17718 | Mr. Palma drew off his gloves, put them in his pocket, and just touched the opal, saying coldly:"Is that a recent gift from your mother? |
17718 | Mr. Palma, will you grant me a great favour?" |
17718 | Mrs. Lindsay has a dear friend-- the widow of a minister-- living in New York, and perhaps she would take me to board in her house? |
17718 | Mrs. Orme, will you allow me the favour of presenting my friend General Laurance, who requests the honour of an introduction?" |
17718 | Mrs. Orme, will you have your coffee now?" |
17718 | Mrs. Palma appeared quite harsh to you to- day?" |
17718 | Mrs. Palma stirred the coals with the poker, and at last asked abruptly:"Miss Orme, I presume you have breakfasted?" |
17718 | Mrs. Waul, what brings you here so early?" |
17718 | My child, do you understand me?" |
17718 | My dear young lady, is it not melancholy to find a confirmed old bachelor, verging fast upon decrepitude, with no one to look after or care for him? |
17718 | My dear,_ have_ you seen Elliott Roscoe''s little tinted- paper poem? |
17718 | My father alive and safe-- really folding me to his heart? |
17718 | My own uncle? |
17718 | My son Cuthbert? |
17718 | My son, what ails you? |
17718 | Nearing the Villa gate General Laurance asked:"What is the character of your drama? |
17718 | Needham?" |
17718 | Never even heard of the Ellewomen? |
17718 | Next to her mother, did she not owe him more than any other human being? |
17718 | Not in that cold, dark parlour, I hope?" |
17718 | Now do n''t scold me, if in this case I conjecture,--He? |
17718 | Now do you wonder that Circassia is so jubilant?" |
17718 | Now that your poor tortured heart is easy, can you not go to sleep?" |
17718 | Now to the masses who are pardonably curious concerning this problem of existence, is this result perfectly satisfactory? |
17718 | Now what do you expect of me?" |
17718 | Now what do you suppose she answered? |
17718 | Now will you grant me a similar boon? |
17718 | Now you comprehend what brings me here at this unseasonable hour? |
17718 | Now, Peyton, how do you relish the flavour of your philosophical salad?" |
17718 | Of course it is no secret to you that my mother is an actress? |
17718 | Of course you desire that I shall present your affectionate regards to your future guardian?" |
17718 | Of course you have heard your guardian quote Emerson? |
17718 | Of course you may, but what help do you imagine you can render, you useless piece of prettiness? |
17718 | Of my proud unsullied name I am fastidiously careful, and can even you demand or hope a nobler one than that I now lay at your feet?" |
17718 | Olga, how soon will Mr. Palma be married?" |
17718 | Olga, what are you laughing at?" |
17718 | Olga, what would you do with your past?" |
17718 | Olga, where is your shawl?" |
17718 | Once nominally the wife of the man whom she so thoroughly abhorred, would not reason have fled before the horrors to which she linked herself? |
17718 | One asked in unmistakable New- England English:"Laurance, where is your father?" |
17718 | One to kiss, to hold in my arms, to love even better than I love myself? |
17718 | Only give me this hand, and I will take your heart Can a lover ask less, and hazard more?" |
17718 | Or was it attributable to the fact that his thoughts were concentrated upon the lady with whose name people were associating his? |
17718 | Or was this but an illusive relief, a mere momentary lull in the tempest of humiliation that was muttering and darkening around her? |
17718 | Or was your pastor- guardian afraid of paganizing you? |
17718 | Orme?" |
17718 | Pale as marble she coolly met the undisguised ardent admiration in his gaze, and bending forward he asked pleadingly:"Not to- morrow? |
17718 | Palma?" |
17718 | Palma?" |
17718 | Palma?" |
17718 | Palma?" |
17718 | Pardon me, sir; but may I inquire whom you design to fill my mother''s place?" |
17718 | Peyton Hargrove?" |
17718 | Plymley?" |
17718 | Pressing her tightly to her heart, Mrs. Laurance turned to Mr. Palma, and said sternly:"Is there indeed no such thing as honour left among men? |
17718 | Prosperous as ever?" |
17718 | Really would you go, sir?" |
17718 | Regina knocked timidly at the door of the parsonage guest''s chamber, and Mrs. Lindsay answered from within:"Come in? |
17718 | Riches?" |
17718 | Ringold, how is Palma? |
17718 | Roscoe?" |
17718 | Said I:''What upon earth do you mean?'' |
17718 | Shall I accompany you?" |
17718 | Shall I bring your slippers?" |
17718 | Shall I direct the bearer to wait?" |
17718 | Shall I read it to you, or are you sufficiently advanced to be able to spell it out without my assistance?" |
17718 | Shall I ring for your wrappings? |
17718 | Shall I tell Elliott that he was dreaming, and did not see you?" |
17718 | Shall the splendour of her high- born aristocratic beauty gild the crime that gave her being? |
17718 | Shall we enter into an alliance-- offensive and defensive?" |
17718 | She had been absent for a few minutes during the recital of the accident, and now asked:"Where were you, that you could not get home before the storm? |
17718 | She had given no one a clue in her movements, and how could he have followed her circuitous route after leaving Mrs. Brompton''s? |
17718 | She had never asked a cent from her guardian, and the necessity of appealing to him was inexpressibly mortifying; but to whom could she apply? |
17718 | She is my mother, do you hear me? |
17718 | She looked at him intently, and interpreting the expression he added:"You wish to ask me something? |
17718 | She looked up, saw a few persons ascending the broad steps, and her soul rose in rebellion;"What possible harm can overtake me in God''s house? |
17718 | She made a grimace, whereat he smiled, kissed her again, and answered very gently:"Will you permit me to put an appendix to your creed? |
17718 | She made an effort to shake off his hand, but it closed firmly upon her, and he asked:"Do you know who I am?" |
17718 | She motioned it away, and exclaimed:"Can you too have forgotten me?" |
17718 | She must have sent it to me?" |
17718 | She should be called''_ Sulitelma_,''which I believe means-- Cuthbert, what did you tell me it meant?" |
17718 | She spoke so earnestly that he smiled, and added:"Can you recommend one to me? |
17718 | She turned her sallow cheek for the salute, and Victorine said:"Is mademoiselle a relative? |
17718 | She turned toward the door, and Dr. Hargrove asked:"Where is your home?" |
17718 | She was leaning heavily upon her womanly pride; how long would it sustain her? |
17718 | She? |
17718 | She? |
17718 | Should she reject the priestly hand and loyal heart of the young missionary, would not Mr. Palma suspect the truth? |
17718 | Should your mother give her consent, does Miss Regina Orme intend to become my cousin?" |
17718 | So-- we are at peace once more? |
17718 | Something must have happened?" |
17718 | Spare him till his sister comes?" |
17718 | Speaking of Hannah, how I shall miss her? |
17718 | Starting into a sitting posture she exclaimed:"Who is there?" |
17718 | Suppose I call for you and Olga about nine?" |
17718 | Suppose I do choose to come here and say my prayers among the dead, while other folks are sound asleep in their beds, who has the right to hinder me?" |
17718 | Suppose I forbid all communication?" |
17718 | Suppose I have a different use for my strong arms?" |
17718 | Suppose the lightning had struck you as well as the tree where you hid the stolen paper, what do you think would have become of your poor wicked soul? |
17718 | Suppose we enter into negotiations and compromise matters between Mrs. Palma and you? |
17718 | Suppose you get it now?" |
17718 | Suppose you pay tithes to the extent of counting me out of this nest of persecutors? |
17718 | Suppose you state the case?" |
17718 | Suppose you trust your pet to me for a few days, until matters can be settled? |
17718 | Surely they are not relatives?" |
17718 | Tarrant''s?" |
17718 | Tell me truly, do you cling to him so fondly, because some schoolboy sweetheart, some rosy- cheeked lad in V---- gave him to you as a love token? |
17718 | Tell me what has so suddenly changed the soft white Lily- bud of yesterday into this hollow- eyed, defiant young woman?" |
17718 | Tell me, Regina, do n''t you feel inclined to fall at my feet and worship me?" |
17718 | Tell me, my ward, tell me, do you not rather keep it here to stimulate your flagging sense of duty? |
17718 | Tell me, you beardless Gamaliel, where you accumulated your knowledge relative to the education of girls? |
17718 | Tell me-- do you know-- whom I am? |
17718 | That after living single all these years, I am at last foolish enough to want a wife? |
17718 | That is fashionable homage to my genius-- it is? |
17718 | The day I came,--how long ago? |
17718 | The time has passed( did it ever really exist?) |
17718 | Then I may infer you paid me the tribute of your presence last evening?" |
17718 | Then whom did you see?" |
17718 | Then you considered the feigned sickness a''pious fraud,''and did not condemn me? |
17718 | They turned and walked back in silence until they reached the door, and he asked:"Are the pews free?" |
17718 | Think you mere habits of domesticity, or skill in herbalism, would arrest and fix their fancy?" |
17718 | Thirty- three years have brought me swiftly to the last fatal page; and shall the hand falter that writes_ finis_?" |
17718 | To her guardian? |
17718 | To strengthen you to adhere to your rash resolve?" |
17718 | To- day buried beneath the tide of sorrow, to- morrow shining clear and imperishable? |
17718 | Trembling with anxiety she said:"Are you not better? |
17718 | True he had disowned them, but could that face deliberately hide premeditated treachery? |
17718 | Turning her head, she said in an altered and elevated tone:"Mrs. Waul, may I disturb you for a moment?" |
17718 | Upon what plea?" |
17718 | Upon your arrival you did not find her quite as cordial as you anticipated?" |
17718 | Was Erle Palma an animated, human fluor- spar? |
17718 | Was I guilty of so foolish a thing? |
17718 | Was Mr. Chesley her father? |
17718 | Was Mr. Palma displeased, because she had gone visiting without waiting for his consent? |
17718 | Was he married, and in his happiness as a husband had he for a time forgotten the existence of the friends in Europe? |
17718 | Was he pleased with her success, and would he deem to give her a morsel of commendation? |
17718 | Was he-- was my father-- a gentleman? |
17718 | Was her sorrow part of the wages of her disobedient haste? |
17718 | Was his promise to trust her the cause of his forbearance? |
17718 | Was it Providence that brought them here to talk over their wicked schemes where I could hear them? |
17718 | Was it actual bodily sickness, physical pain, that kept you in your room during dinner, at which I particularly desired your attendance?" |
17718 | Was it contrition for your manifold transgressions?" |
17718 | Was it for strength to prosecute to the bitter end, or for grace to forgive? |
17718 | Was it infected with small- pox or leprosy?" |
17718 | Was it possible that after all the lawyer''s heart had been seriously interested? |
17718 | Was it the least of alternate horrors to accept this man, acknowledging his paternal claim, and thereby defend her mother''s name? |
17718 | Was it the mercy of God, or the grim decree of fatalism, or the merest accident that provided this door of escape, when she was growing desperate? |
17718 | Was it the weird fingering of the sacrilegious cyclone that concentrated its rage upon the venerable sanctuary? |
17718 | Was it to gratify Mrs. Carew''s extravagant taste that he had sold this elegant house, and designed the purchase of one yet more costly? |
17718 | Was not your hair very dark when you were married?" |
17718 | Was she legally married when very young?" |
17718 | Was she not contemplating similar treachery? |
17718 | Was she too growing delirious with brain fever? |
17718 | Was she? |
17718 | Was that grey- eyed Cleopatra with burnished hair, low smooth brow, and lips like Lamia''s, resting in her guardian''s arms-- his wife? |
17718 | Was the world really coming to an end? |
17718 | Was there a possibility that she would decline an alliance with that proud patrician, whose future seemed dazzling? |
17718 | Was there at last a file for the serpent, that had so long made its lair in her distorted and envenomed nature? |
17718 | Was there, she wondered, any conclusion so shameful as the truth, which at all hazard she was resolved for her mother''s sake to hide? |
17718 | Watching her, Mr. Palma came to her side, and asked:"Whom can it be?" |
17718 | Waul?" |
17718 | Waul?" |
17718 | We have been apart so long, do take me into your heart fully; tell me why you look at me, and turn aside and shiver?" |
17718 | Well, what then? |
17718 | Were you ever at the seashore? |
17718 | What Antony awaits your smiles?" |
17718 | What a hopeless pagan you are, Elise? |
17718 | What ailed the birds that trilled their passionate strains so joyously as she ran down the garden walk, and into the rose- arbour? |
17718 | What answer have you given''Brother Douglass''?" |
17718 | What answer shall he take back?" |
17718 | What are they? |
17718 | What are you laughing at?" |
17718 | What are you tracking me for?" |
17718 | What can I do for you, madam? |
17718 | What can be the matter? |
17718 | What cause Hath my behaviour given to your displeasure, That thus you should proceed to put me off, And take your good grace from me? |
17718 | What could he expect to accomplish by such a claim, unless he intended, and felt fully prepared, to establish it by irrefragable facts? |
17718 | What could she do? |
17718 | What did his irony relative to India portend? |
17718 | What did it mean? |
17718 | What do you suppose she blandly asked me one day, in the child''s presence? |
17718 | What else have you to give? |
17718 | What else, I pray you, are the good friends, the near relations who take tie field, except obliging, sometimes official brokers?'' |
17718 | What gave you heart- ache?" |
17718 | What had become of her purse? |
17718 | What has happened? |
17718 | What has my history to do with this honeysuckle?" |
17718 | What has so suddenly imbued you with distrust of the sister who has always shared your cares, and endeavoured to divide your sorrows? |
17718 | What have you done to render him so unmanageable? |
17718 | What hope has after a while? |
17718 | What hour?" |
17718 | What is Mrs. Pru''s latest grievance?" |
17718 | What is it? |
17718 | What is more useful and justifiable than a Bourse for affairs? |
17718 | What is the matter, Mrs. Orme? |
17718 | What is the matter? |
17718 | What is the matter?" |
17718 | What is there, think you, that Erle Palma worships?" |
17718 | What is your name? |
17718 | What man could shut his arms and heart against such a lovely babe who owed him her being? |
17718 | What more sacred pledge could I possibly desire?" |
17718 | What name shall I give when she comes home?" |
17718 | What ought I to do?" |
17718 | What possible attraction do you imagine such folly could offer me?" |
17718 | What remains for me?" |
17718 | What right has a nameless, homeless waif to think of love? |
17718 | What shall we do without our Bishop?" |
17718 | What spot so peculiarly suited for"God''s acre"as that surrounding God''s temple? |
17718 | What subtle connection exists between a cheerful spirit, and the amount of oxygen we inhale in golden daylight? |
17718 | What suggests such an idea?" |
17718 | What then?" |
17718 | What was her business?" |
17718 | What was the mystery, and upon whom must rest the blame, possibly the lifelong shame? |
17718 | What was there in the soft brown eyes, and shape of the brow that was so familiar, that made her heart beat so fiercely? |
17718 | What would Mr. Lindsay think, if he could see that coarse brutal man claiming her as his daughter? |
17718 | What would the members of the household think when they discovered how mistaken all had been in her real character? |
17718 | When did you arrive?" |
17718 | When he is at home it seems always summer- time, do n''t you think so?" |
17718 | When her mother came back, she turned her face toward the wall, and Mrs. Palma eagerly exclaimed:"My darling, do you know me? |
17718 | When my erudition creates a panic, why am I like those who dwelt about Chemmis, when the tragical fate of Osiris was accomplished?" |
17718 | When she came on tiptoe, and asked,"Are you asleep?" |
17718 | When will Mrs. Palma and Miss Neville come home?" |
17718 | When you get to heaven, do n''t you reckon you will sit in the choir? |
17718 | When? |
17718 | Whence do all those delectable odours come? |
17718 | Where can I find General Laurance? |
17718 | Where did you find my purse?" |
17718 | Where did you get him?" |
17718 | Where did you meet him?" |
17718 | Where has the child been living?" |
17718 | Where have Mrs. Palma and Olga gone?" |
17718 | Where is Hannah now?" |
17718 | Where is Minnie now?" |
17718 | Where is Olga?" |
17718 | Where is my revenge? |
17718 | Where is my triumph? |
17718 | Where is she?" |
17718 | Where is that worthless, black- eyed chattering monkey Giulio? |
17718 | Where is your lantern?" |
17718 | Where were the witnesses? |
17718 | Where you not there to- day?" |
17718 | Where?" |
17718 | Wherefore? |
17718 | Who are you?" |
17718 | Who brought that animal here?" |
17718 | Who disputes it?" |
17718 | Who do you suppose is your father? |
17718 | Who else would travel around with a match and a loaded fuse in the same pocket? |
17718 | Who knows the Past? |
17718 | Who knows what the end may be? |
17718 | Who lives in the next house?" |
17718 | Who wants a piano locked up, like that hideous old china and heavy glass that your grandfather''s fifth cousin brought over from Amsterdam?" |
17718 | Whose child did she say you were?" |
17718 | Whose domestic record is more lovely in its pure womanliness than Hannah More''s, or Miss Mitford''s, or Mrs. Browning''s? |
17718 | Why are the sick always encouraged, and the grief- laden rendered more cheerful by the coming of dawn? |
17718 | Why did n''t you say I was engaged with my son?" |
17718 | Why did you come and ask for me?" |
17718 | Why did you not wait?" |
17718 | Why did you sit up all night, and alone?" |
17718 | Why do sad thoughts like corporeal suffering and disease grow more intense, more tormenting, with the approach of evening''s gloom? |
17718 | Why do you always travel with that grim body- guard? |
17718 | Why does not some friendly hand strangle you right now, before the pack open on your trial? |
17718 | Why is the house all lighted up? |
17718 | Why should I live? |
17718 | Why should I? |
17718 | Why should he care? |
17718 | Why should they? |
17718 | Why was her own history a sealed volume-- her father a mystery-- her mother a wanderer in foreign lands? |
17718 | Why? |
17718 | Widowed did you say? |
17718 | Will Cleopatra or Antony answer my conundrum? |
17718 | Will he hold me always such a dainty sacred treasure, safe from censure and aspersion? |
17718 | Will it be safe for me to confide in you? |
17718 | Will my child see her own father want bread and clothing, and refuse to assist him? |
17718 | Will she come?" |
17718 | Will she not nobly forgive errors committed in ignorance of the peculiar sensitiveness of her nature, the mimosa delicacy of her admirable character?" |
17718 | Will that suit you?" |
17718 | Will the time ever come when the only earthly rest that remains for me can be taken in her soft clinging arms? |
17718 | Will you be at Mrs. Delafield''s reception to- night?" |
17718 | Will you be contented and happy?" |
17718 | Will you be first bridesmaid?" |
17718 | Will you be so kind as to gather them for me? |
17718 | Will you corroborate my statement?" |
17718 | Will you direct Octave to prepare a cup of coffee?" |
17718 | Will you have some flowers? |
17718 | Will you help us?" |
17718 | Will you let me sleep here with you to- night? |
17718 | Will you not contribute the charm of your presence to the pleasure of our excursion? |
17718 | Will you not please use your influence with her?" |
17718 | Will you oblige me?" |
17718 | Will you permit me to read it?" |
17718 | Will you please direct Hattie to bring my opera hat, cloak, and glasses?" |
17718 | Will you promise never to forget your friend Douglass?" |
17718 | Will you receive her among your music pupils?" |
17718 | With whom have you arranged this disgraceful clandestine correspondence?" |
17718 | Without removing her fascinated eyes she asked:"When did it come?" |
17718 | Wo n''t you please let me stay awhile? |
17718 | Wot ye the moulding power ye wield, ye mothers of America? |
17718 | Would Douglass take her for his wife, if he knew that Mr. Palma had become dearer to her than all the world beside? |
17718 | Would General René Laurance have pardoned him, and received me as his sister, or his daughter?" |
17718 | Would Mrs. Carew sing them for him when she was far away, utterly forgotten by her guardian? |
17718 | Would he accord her the shelter of his roof, were he aware of all that had occurred that day? |
17718 | Would it be right for me to disgrace her in her old age, by telling Mr. Hargrove what I accidentally overheard? |
17718 | Would it be sinful to promise her hand to one, while her heart stubbornly enshrined the other? |
17718 | Would it snap presently, and let her down for ever into the dust of humiliation? |
17718 | Would she be permitted to explore the contents of those book shelves, where hundreds of volumes invited her eager investigation? |
17718 | Would you approve of my attending the theatre and opera? |
17718 | Would you be willing to leave all, and help me among the heathens?" |
17718 | Would you give up your lover, for the sake of your poor desolate mother?" |
17718 | Would you like to go to your room, Miss Orme?" |
17718 | Would you like to hear it?" |
17718 | Would you mind giving me the two that smell so deliciously in your hair? |
17718 | Would you murder yourself?" |
17718 | Would you object to having a hired piano in the house? |
17718 | Would you too have been proud of me? |
17718 | Wrapped in his dressing- gown he opened the door, saying benignly:"Is there an earthquake or a cyclone? |
17718 | You accepted the invitation to''lunch''with Mrs. St. Clare, and what excuse can I possibly frame?" |
17718 | You are fifteen?" |
17718 | You are not afraid to go alone?" |
17718 | You are not so weak, so egregiously vain, as to delude yourself for one instant with the supposition that I could ever love you?" |
17718 | You are quite ready?" |
17718 | You can not intend to accept him?" |
17718 | You certainly can not consent to see me stranded here, where my position and_ menage_ have been so proud?" |
17718 | You declined Mr. Lindsay''s offer?" |
17718 | You deem me relentless and vindictive? |
17718 | You did n''t know that I made up the Sally Lunn for tea?" |
17718 | You have heard of Brunella Carew, the richest woman in the Antilles? |
17718 | You have heard of Dirce and Damiens dragged by wild beasts? |
17718 | You love him so well you wish to be his wife?" |
17718 | You pretty, sober, solemn, demure blue- eyed Annunciation lily, is there such a thing among flowers? |
17718 | You promise?" |
17718 | You say, sir, that you can not help me-- why not? |
17718 | You seem to like my library?" |
17718 | You understand me, do you not?" |
17718 | You will not betray me, even to my child?" |
17718 | You will not come? |
17718 | You will not try to start, after this dreadful storm?" |
17718 | You, father, or I?" |
17718 | Your cheeks are such a brilliant scarlet?" |
17718 | Yourself?" |
17718 | _ A propos!_ I asked him to- night if he would loosen his martinet rein upon you, and permit you to make your_ début_ in society as my bridesmaid? |
17718 | _ Think you my unshod feet would shrink from glowing ploughshares, if crossing them I found the sacred shelter of my husband''s name? |
17718 | and who can judge us right?" |
17718 | are you quite sure?" |
17718 | ca n''t you stand it any longer? |
17718 | could we bear to have two oceans swelling between our Bishop and us?" |
17718 | do n''t you see?" |
17718 | do n''t you wish we were going with him to India?" |
17718 | do you know at last, that the Minnie of your youth, the bride of your boyhood has never, never ceased to love her faithless, erring husband?" |
17718 | dost blanch before the storm of condemnation, which has no terrors for a wife''s brave heart? |
17718 | has my mother come?" |
17718 | how could she help giving him her heart? |
17718 | how lovely-- face that bent over my cradle ever-- ever be forgotten? |
17718 | is it indeed? |
17718 | is it not hard that your beauty should sting like a serpent the mother whose blood filled your veins? |
17718 | is that you?" |
17718 | is your mantle of charity cut to cover only your own sex? |
17718 | knowest thou this woman?" |
17718 | or shall I try to come to you?" |
17718 | was he indeed verily"Asleep in Jesus"? |
17718 | were you an artist, would you desire a finer model for an Egeria? |
17718 | what is the matter? |
17718 | what is the matter?" |
17718 | what solemn shameful shams are masked beneath thy celestial garments? |
17718 | when our hands are tied, and we are so helpless we ca n''t do any more mischief, who believes in our repentance?" |
17718 | where are you?" |
17718 | who wears deathless laurels more modestly than Rosa Bonheur? |
17718 | why did not a merciful God order us both out of the world then, before it persecuted and bruised us so cruelly? |
17718 | why do n''t you go?" |
17718 | will she lend lustre to the family name? |
17718 | would you accept a homestead in your contemplated''Reservation''?" |
42332 | A day or two? |
42332 | A failure? 42332 A gamble? |
42332 | A pet of mine,--he answered, smiling slightly--"Did you ever see anything like it before?" |
42332 | A very good man,--you could not have a better--he said complacently--"And this book of yours,--when does it come out?" |
42332 | All women? |
42332 | Alone? 42332 Am I not fully aware of that?" |
42332 | Am I? |
42332 | An exception? 42332 And after you die?" |
42332 | And are the dancers here? |
42332 | And have you been thinking? |
42332 | And now what do you say-- shall we mention it Bentham?--or shall we not mention it? |
42332 | And physical ailments are the only ones worth troubling about, you think? |
42332 | And the woman? |
42332 | And what does Lady Sibyl say? |
42332 | And what of the critics? |
42332 | And what was it? |
42332 | And what would you have me do? |
42332 | And you,--I interrupted him suddenly, and with some warmth--"do you know what_ you_ look? |
42332 | And you? |
42332 | And your rival, Mavis Clare? 42332 And... the prince... does he like her?" |
42332 | Anyhow,resumed Miss Chesney"you''re young enough, to enjoy your wealth are n''t you?" |
42332 | Are you a democrat, prince? |
42332 | Are you a worker of miracles? |
42332 | Are you growing weary of the voyage Geoffrey? |
42332 | Are you miserable, for instance? |
42332 | Are you not cold, Miss Chesney? |
42332 | Are you really? 42332 Are you so blind that you can not perceive why?" |
42332 | Are you too blind to see that I am? |
42332 | Are_ you_ in the dumps now Lucio? |
42332 | Assist me? 42332 But are you not making up your mind rather suddenly? |
42332 | But he did know--I said--"Did you not say you exchanged cards?" |
42332 | But he seemed to recognise you,--I said--"Have you met him before?" |
42332 | But how? |
42332 | But surely you are taking too much personal trouble,--I said--"Can''t I help in any way?" |
42332 | But there are two other owls in the cage--I said--"What are their names?" |
42332 | But why do you do such things? |
42332 | But why? |
42332 | But why? |
42332 | But you--I began--"you say you believe in the soul?" |
42332 | But your people--he said--"Your family-- are they literary?" |
42332 | But-- who was She? |
42332 | By a reliable authority? |
42332 | Can I assist you sir? |
42332 | Can I be of any service? |
42332 | Can he ride? |
42332 | Can you ask? 42332 Can you be happy with_ me_?" |
42332 | Changed? 42332 Did I not say you would change, Sibyl?" |
42332 | Did I? 42332 Did I?" |
42332 | Did I? |
42332 | Did you give me old Tokay? |
42332 | Did you though? |
42332 | Did you wish me to be impressed? |
42332 | Did you? 42332 Did you?" |
42332 | Do n''t use impossible comparisons;--he replied--"Have you ever heard an angel sing?" |
42332 | Do n''t you admire her? |
42332 | Do n''t you find that people look at you very often as you pass, Lucio? |
42332 | Do you believe in hell? |
42332 | Do you believe in him? |
42332 | Do you call that course of procedure honest? |
42332 | Do you consider me empty- headed? |
42332 | Do you know Me now, man whom my millions of dross have made wretched?--or do you need me to tell you WHO I am? |
42332 | Do you like her? |
42332 | Do you mean to tell me McWhing will take that five hundred? |
42332 | Do you mean to tell me,I said earnestly"that what I saw just now was the mere thought of your brain conveyed to mine?" |
42332 | Do you not feel the world already at your feet? |
42332 | Do you not? 42332 Do you not? |
42332 | Do you play? |
42332 | Do you really mean it? |
42332 | Do you take me for such a callous creature as all that? |
42332 | Do you want the human race to be perfect? |
42332 | Do you want to become her lover? |
42332 | Do you? |
42332 | Does not everyone approve and admire you? |
42332 | Dull then? |
42332 | Exactly!--How is it possible? 42332 Excuse me sir,"--he then observed--"but I daresay you''ve noticed that there''s something unpleasant- like about the prince''s valet, Amiel?" |
42332 | Famous? |
42332 | For you? |
42332 | From_ me_? |
42332 | Funny? |
42332 | Give it way? 42332 Grateful to-- whom did you say?" |
42332 | Has the prince retired? |
42332 | Has this a good sale? |
42332 | Have you dined? |
42332 | Have you got a room for Mr Tempest? |
42332 | Have you not heard? |
42332 | He has a red lamp in his window has he not? |
42332 | He is a great friend of yours? |
42332 | He is surely a very singular man,--said Mavis thoughtfully--"Do you remember how strangely my dogs behaved to him? |
42332 | Heard? 42332 Honest? |
42332 | How do you know I am not one? |
42332 | How do you know all this you tell me of? |
42332 | How so? |
42332 | I believe,I said suddenly, addressing the Earl--"you used to live in Warwickshire at Willowsmere Court did you not?" |
42332 | I confess I am tired,--I said, and an unconscious sigh escaped me--"And you?" |
42332 | I perceive you are a cynic,--I said--"Yet surely you believe that there are some things wealth can not buy,--honour and virtue for example?" |
42332 | I suppose you know,--I began with harsh abruptness--"that the sleeping- draught story is a polite fiction? |
42332 | I suppose--I said slowly,"you, in your pursuit of science, would infer from this that nothing actually perishes completely?" |
42332 | I? 42332 I? |
42332 | If that is so,he answered,"why in Heaven''s name do you not let the other planets alone? |
42332 | If you do not mean to be her friend, you should tell her so,--I said presently--"You heard what she said about pretended protestations of regard?" |
42332 | Is Amiel with you? |
42332 | Is Miss Clare at home? |
42332 | Is it alive? |
42332 | Is it? 42332 Is it?" |
42332 | Is not----may not this be a mistaken surmise of yours? |
42332 | Is that your humour? |
42332 | Is the book such wretched stuff as you make it out to be? |
42332 | Is there anything I can do for you sir? |
42332 | Is this your first visit to Willowsmere Court? |
42332 | It is a pity you should appeal to it then;--he responded with a smile--"If you think so little of the public why give it anything of your brain? |
42332 | It is best to be frank, is it not? |
42332 | Just now,--when you kissed me? |
42332 | Lady Elton would like to hear you sing, prince--she said--"Will you give us that pleasure? |
42332 | Listen, my friend,I said earnestly--"You know I have been busy for the last fortnight correcting the proofs of my book for the press,--do you not?" |
42332 | Look at this--I said--"Does_ she_ pay five hundred pounds to David McWhing''s charity?" |
42332 | Many people would be glad to accept such responsibilities and change places with me--I said with a flippant air--"You yourself, for example?" |
42332 | May I come and inquire about you all to- morrow? |
42332 | May I come and talk to you sometimes? |
42332 | May I keep these? |
42332 | Melodramatic? |
42332 | Miss Clare, are you going to name a pigeon after Mr Tempest? |
42332 | Mr Tempest is going to marry the daughter of the former owner of Willowsmere,--put in Lucio,--"No doubt you have seen it announced in the papers?" |
42332 | Mr Tempest? |
42332 | My dear fellow, how else should they be done? |
42332 | My name? |
42332 | My worst enemy? |
42332 | No? 42332 No?" |
42332 | Nor give? |
42332 | Nothing can happen to you against your will--he replied;"I suppose you wish to imply that I am to blame for introducing you to the club? |
42332 | Of whom are you speaking, Mavis? |
42332 | Oh there is nothing either to fear or to hope--I said with some violence--"_She did it._ And can you guess why she did it? |
42332 | Oh, are you so blind,she cried,"as not to see what this means? |
42332 | Oh, is that the way these things are done? |
42332 | Oh, why? |
42332 | Oh, you are happy then? |
42332 | Oh, you did, did you? |
42332 | Pardon me,I interposed somewhat wearily--"but are you sure you judge the public taste correctly?" |
42332 | Perhaps you are in love? |
42332 | Perhaps--he continued,"as we''re so near home, you''ll let me know your name? |
42332 | Perhaps,I said,"he has not really killed himself? |
42332 | Rather an odd name, Mavis, is n''t it? |
42332 | Really? 42332 Rimânez? |
42332 | Sale? |
42332 | Seriously? |
42332 | Shall I give you some music now, Madame? |
42332 | Shall I see you if I come? |
42332 | Shall I tell you? 42332 Shall we try?" |
42332 | She? 42332 So I heard,"--she said, still observing me curiously--"And you are satisfied with it?" |
42332 | So he will never marry? |
42332 | So you''re the famous Mr Tempest? |
42332 | Surely sir,said Miss Charlotte Fitzroy severely--"you believe in Heaven?" |
42332 | Take? 42332 Tell me,"I said with a half- smile--"Do you know how to love yet?" |
42332 | Tell me,--quick-- what is wrong? |
42332 | That is your christian name--? |
42332 | That is your opinion? |
42332 | That_ was_? |
42332 | The devil? 42332 The end?" |
42332 | The paralysed Helen of a modern Troy? 42332 The sun is too strong for you I fear?" |
42332 | Then he hates me? |
42332 | Then you know the dear Canon? |
42332 | Think I''m irreverent, do n''t you? |
42332 | Think so? 42332 This must be very bad for your health,"--I said, drawing my chair closer to hers--"Can you not get away for a change?" |
42332 | To what article do you allude, Miss Clare? |
42332 | Tricksy, what_ is_ the matter? |
42332 | True!--but may not inspiration refuse to flow from a full purse and an empty head? |
42332 | Two critics? |
42332 | Upon my word I think I would rather go to bed than anything--I confessed--"But what about my room?" |
42332 | Upon my word, you put me in a very awkward position Geoffrey,--what is to be done? 42332 Was it because you desired to make me happy out of pure love for me?" |
42332 | Was she''rapid''? |
42332 | We dine at the Eltons''to- night, do we not? |
42332 | We shall be delighted,--he mumbled--"when do you take possession?" |
42332 | We shall do our best for you, Mr Tempest, shall we not Bentham? |
42332 | Well sir, the prince has a_ chef_ of his own has n''t he? |
42332 | Well, how old are you really? |
42332 | Well? 42332 Well?" |
42332 | Well? |
42332 | What am I to do? |
42332 | What did you feel then? |
42332 | What did you marry me for? |
42332 | What do you know about it? |
42332 | What do you mean, Sibyl? |
42332 | What do you think of her? |
42332 | What do you want to do that for, with your immense position? |
42332 | What does he do with the other servants? |
42332 | What does money do for you? |
42332 | What for? |
42332 | What has she done in literature? |
42332 | What has the poor little planet done? |
42332 | What have your teachers done with me and my eternal sorrows? |
42332 | What is it? |
42332 | What is it? |
42332 | What is it? |
42332 | What is that? |
42332 | What is? 42332 What is?" |
42332 | What strange song is that? |
42332 | When did you arrive in England? |
42332 | When, Sibyl? |
42332 | Where are you off to? |
42332 | Where is Diana? |
42332 | Where is she? |
42332 | Where is_ your_ friend? |
42332 | Who is that? |
42332 | Why Lucio, I thought you hated women? |
42332 | Why be mortified? |
42332 | Why do n''t you read Mavis Clare''s books? |
42332 | Why do you join the procession then? |
42332 | Why do you now seem to tremble at a mere sentimental idea? 42332 Why do you say that now?" |
42332 | Why do you sigh? |
42332 | Why should they choose Mavis Clare? |
42332 | Why should you imagine he does not? |
42332 | Why, what did he do? |
42332 | Why, what has happened to you since we parted? |
42332 | Why, what''s the matter? |
42332 | Why? 42332 Why? |
42332 | Why? |
42332 | Why? |
42332 | Why? |
42332 | Why? |
42332 | Why? |
42332 | Why? |
42332 | Why? |
42332 | Will you continue your literary career now you have this little fortune left you? |
42332 | Will you make up another game with me? |
42332 | Will you sit here Geoffrey? |
42332 | Will you take a composing draught if I mix it for you? |
42332 | With Sibyl? |
42332 | With alarm? |
42332 | Worries? |
42332 | Would you? |
42332 | Wrong? 42332 Yes, you-- why not? |
42332 | Yes,--it does seem strange,--doesn''t it? |
42332 | You are a great friend of Prince Rimânez? |
42332 | You are a ruling power then? |
42332 | You are a very young man to be a millionaire,--were her next words, uttered with evident difficulty--"Are you married?" |
42332 | You are to be married in June? |
42332 | You begin to hate her----you?--and why? |
42332 | You find it stupid perhaps? |
42332 | You have been thinking of your wife? |
42332 | You have perceived that, then, Sibyl? |
42332 | You know its contents? |
42332 | You know the Prince? |
42332 | You know the trite saying-- appearances are deceptive? |
42332 | You like your purchase? |
42332 | You look tired Lady Sibyl,--I said gently--"Are you not well?" |
42332 | You love me,--yes, I know, but how? 42332 You never work at night?" |
42332 | You speak a trifle bitterly, prince--I said--"But no doubt you have had a wide experience among men?" |
42332 | You speak sarcastically of course? |
42332 | You think so? |
42332 | You think so? |
42332 | You understand I suppose, that I shall only issue two hundred and fifty copies at first? |
42332 | You will come, will you not? 42332 You will tell Prince Rimânez the news?" |
42332 | You will? |
42332 | You would wish to be thanked? |
42332 | You? 42332 Your book? |
42332 | Your face seems familiar to me,--she said, speaking now, as it seemed, with greater ease--"Have I ever met you before?" |
42332 | Your fun? |
42332 | _ What_ is he? |
42332 | ''Originally''? |
42332 | ''Originally''an author? |
42332 | ''You are not--_hic_--a poet yourself?'' |
42332 | --and his eyes sparkled half maliciously--"Can it be a case of genius after all? |
42332 | --and yet remain unspoilt and innocent? |
42332 | --replied Lucio, carefully drawing on his gloves as he spoke--"Where''s a copy of your book? |
42332 | ... or what is this terrible misgiving that is taking possession of me? |
42332 | ... what gem of his land was thus tenderly enshrined? |
42332 | ... when you know WHO I am?" |
42332 | ...""Have you one to give?" |
42332 | ...""That the dead Egyptian dancer resembled your late wife?" |
42332 | ..._ The_ Mr Tempest?----the great millionaire that_ was_?" |
42332 | 2075/ V PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN THE SORROWS OF SATAN I Do you know what it is to be poor? |
42332 | A few years, and we all die, and are forgotten even by those who loved us,--why should we lose such joys as we may have for the mere asking? |
42332 | A genius? |
42332 | A good woman? |
42332 | A saint? |
42332 | Afterwards however, when he had gone, she turned to me with a grin and remarked--"You saw me kiss Bertie, did n''t you? |
42332 | Again I asked myself-- Was there no happiness possible in all the world? |
42332 | Almost yourself again, eh?" |
42332 | Am I so repugnant to you? |
42332 | An angel? |
42332 | And I? |
42332 | And Sibyl only smiled, that patent ice- refrigerator smile of hers, and asked--''would you prefer to live with Mrs Catsup?'' |
42332 | And also about this gentleman, Mr Geoffrey Tempest?" |
42332 | And another thing I want to know is this-- what does he do with the other servants?" |
42332 | And are you not satisfied? |
42332 | And betray the club and all its members? |
42332 | And do you not owe me at least some duty?" |
42332 | And love-- of course you will fall in love if you have not already done so,--have you?" |
42332 | And perhaps a music- hall afterwards if you feel inclined,--what do you say?" |
42332 | And should we master it?--or would it master us? |
42332 | And so we are to be friends?" |
42332 | And that snowy palanquin, carried by lily- crowned girls, that followed his train,--who occupied it? |
42332 | And there are others again who get kicked and buffeted and mocked and derided----""Like Christ?" |
42332 | And there we have it-- how can one feel, when one''s self is so thoroughly comfortable as to be without any other feeling save that of material ease? |
42332 | And this is all that the culture and training of nineteenth- century civilization can do for you? |
42332 | And what else have you done with yourself?" |
42332 | And why should you wish to comfort folks who, out of their own sheer stupidity generally, get into trouble? |
42332 | And why? |
42332 | And you found him humorous, did you?" |
42332 | Any more of the crew afloat?" |
42332 | Are you cold, Sibyl?" |
42332 | Are you not going to entertain the Prince of Wales?--and shall anyone be more''eagerly- desired''than he? |
42332 | Are you not loaded with jewels?--have you not greater luxuries and liberties than a queen? |
42332 | Are you not one of the richest men living?" |
42332 | As for''despising''you, have I not said that I admire you? |
42332 | As indeed why should they not?" |
42332 | As long as no public scandal is made, what harm is done? |
42332 | At night, as soon as I had an opportunity of speaking to Rimânez alone, I asked him..."Did you see,----did you not recognize? |
42332 | At that very instant she turned to me and said--"You are the famous Mr Tempest, are you not?" |
42332 | At what hour would I dine? |
42332 | Because it''s true? |
42332 | Because they are able to exist independently? |
42332 | Besides, are you not always trying to do good?" |
42332 | Besides, was not I as willing to be degraded as she was to degrade me?--a very victim to my brute passions? |
42332 | But I am not sure whether she will receive you,--"the maid replied--"Unless you have an appointment?" |
42332 | But I do not think he ever quite dispossessed himself of the idea itself, did he Bentham?" |
42332 | But I will think about it-- where will a letter find you?" |
42332 | But I wish you would not analyse yourself so pitilessly,--you have such strange ideas--""You think them strange?" |
42332 | But I wonder where he''s going? |
42332 | But do you know I think your article was even cleverer?" |
42332 | But do you know what your music suggests?" |
42332 | But do you think these antics of his are mischievous?" |
42332 | But how to do it? |
42332 | But is it of much avail to be virtuous? |
42332 | But on this matter of Mavis Clare, can you not imagine that badness may hate goodness? |
42332 | But what a singularly marked antipathy, is it not? |
42332 | But what would you have me be? |
42332 | But when are we to make this sensation?" |
42332 | But would n''t you like to secure it for yourself?" |
42332 | But you, Sibyl-- why do you read such stuff?--how can you read it?" |
42332 | But,--where and how to send in my account with him? |
42332 | By the way, have you noticed how the legended God still appears to protect the house of Israel? |
42332 | By- the- by, where are all the''artistes,''--the musicians and dancers?" |
42332 | Can it be that I am losing reason and courage together? |
42332 | Can you not realize this, even by way of a legendary story?" |
42332 | Can you not understand? |
42332 | Can you put them in order, Amiel?" |
42332 | Can you reject me when I pray to you thus?--when I offer you all myself,--all that I am, or ever hope to be? |
42332 | Can you tell? |
42332 | Come along-- come and see the little American, eh? |
42332 | Come and dine with us, Mr Tempest,--Lucio, you bring him along with you, eh? |
42332 | Death? |
42332 | Did you ever imagine that a human being or a human conscience existed that could not be bought? |
42332 | Do sit down, wo n''t you?" |
42332 | Do you know Geoffrey, when the Judgment Day arrives, who will be among the first saints to ascend to Heaven with the sounding of trumpets?" |
42332 | Do you know I used to watch you playing about on the lawns at Willowsmere when I was quite a little girl?" |
42332 | Do you know what_ I_ felt?" |
42332 | Do you know, it quite frightened me?" |
42332 | Do you like her?" |
42332 | Do you mean to tell me you have no belief in a future life?" |
42332 | Do you mind that?" |
42332 | Do you not know your worst enemy?" |
42332 | Do you not recognise it?" |
42332 | Do you not think so, Geoffrey?" |
42332 | Do you think that ever a man was born like you?" |
42332 | Do_ their_ griefs affect_ you_? |
42332 | Does this redound to your credit? |
42332 | For was it possible I should ever hate him? |
42332 | From this point of view, am I wrong in calling my kingdom vast?--is it not almost boundless?" |
42332 | From what kingdom does he come?--to what nation does he belong? |
42332 | Genius thrives in a garret and dies in a palace,--is not that the generally accepted theory?" |
42332 | Good God!--what are such women as you made of? |
42332 | Had n''t you better inspect the property first? |
42332 | Has our dear railway papa''bust up''?" |
42332 | Have I grudged you anything? |
42332 | Have n''t I got_ you_ as security?" |
42332 | Have you never heard of it, Geoffrey? |
42332 | Have you never heard that?" |
42332 | Have you never thought out any reason why he should be the one flaw,--the one incomplete creature in a matchless Creation?" |
42332 | Have you no shame?" |
42332 | Have you no wider ambitions? |
42332 | Have you not the same base passions as I?--and do you not give way to them as basely? |
42332 | He is a born scoundrel,--and has never seen his way to being anything else,--why should you compassionate him? |
42332 | He paused a moment, then added--"I wonder how we have managed to get on such an absurd subject of conversation? |
42332 | He seeks to soar beyond the furniture man,--and who shall blame him? |
42332 | He smiled, a little ironically I thought, then resumed--"Well, in what, at present does your idea of enjoying your heritage consist?" |
42332 | Her eyes were wistful,--her face was pensive and expectant; she seemed to say,"Will the world ever know that I am here?" |
42332 | Here I pause and ask myself,--Was not I also a libertine? |
42332 | History repeats itself,--why should not lovely women repeat themselves? |
42332 | Honest?" |
42332 | How came I to write the book at all, seeing that it was utterly unlike me as I now knew myself? |
42332 | How can I do otherwise if I believe in heaven? |
42332 | How do you feel?" |
42332 | How should I begin the jesuitical business of committing evil that good, personal good, might come of it? |
42332 | How was it that Mavis Clare had telegraphed to me? |
42332 | How was it? |
42332 | Hullo, what''s this?" |
42332 | I am here to make friends with you if you permit,--and to put an end to ceremony, will you accompany me back to my hotel where I have ordered supper?" |
42332 | I answered laughing--"What do you say that for?" |
42332 | I ask again, will you love me, do you think? |
42332 | I asked him jestingly--"Do you mean it?" |
42332 | I asked him suddenly--"And in Satan, the Arch- Enemy of mankind?" |
42332 | I asked, amused--"Why do you hate the Earth? |
42332 | I asked, getting impatient--"Did he want to bring out some patent?--a new notion for a flying- machine, and get rid of his money in that way?" |
42332 | I asked--"What would you advise?" |
42332 | I can do nothing for you-- you will not have my aid-- you reject my service? |
42332 | I did not believe in a God; why should I inconsistently feel regret that she shared my unbelief? |
42332 | I did not know you had written one?" |
42332 | I echoed amazed--"You surprise me, Mavis,--what have I, or my enemies or friends to do with my wife''s last confession? |
42332 | I exclaimed with some astonishment--"Yours is not a title of honour only?" |
42332 | I exclaimed--"How can you do such an impossible thing?" |
42332 | I exclaimed--"Poor man!--a weak spot in his brain somewhere evidently,--or perhaps he used the expression as a mere figure of speech?" |
42332 | I exclaimed--"Surely he does not keep a boarding- house?" |
42332 | I exclaimed--"_Who_ is she?" |
42332 | I fancy Lady Sibyl has powerfully impressed you?" |
42332 | I feel most keenly----""What do you feel?" |
42332 | I have read all those books,--and what can you expect of me? |
42332 | I hope he has not hurt you?" |
42332 | I hope it is improper?" |
42332 | I hope you do not think me too proud?" |
42332 | I listened in silence till he had finished,--then I asked him--''Love, I suppose, is not to be considered in the matter?'' |
42332 | I may do what I choose with you, you say? |
42332 | I murmured,--somehow the idea pleased me--"Yes,----why not?" |
42332 | I peered into her face,--then at the reflection of that face in the mirror,--and again I grew perplexed,--was it, could it be Sibyl after all? |
42332 | I please your fancy, do I not?" |
42332 | I repeated bewilderedly--"What on earth do you mean?" |
42332 | I repeated bitterly--"How has it been obtained? |
42332 | I repeated slowly--"or a devil? |
42332 | I repeated--"What do you mean?" |
42332 | I said roughly--"You can be frank with me, you know,--angel or devil-- which?" |
42332 | I said warmly--"I really am surprised that Lord Elton should condescend----""Condescend to what?" |
42332 | I said''Are n''t you going too?'' |
42332 | I said, pleased at the friendly familiarity he displayed in thus calling me by my Christian name--"What have you got there?" |
42332 | I said--"Would He,--the Divine Brother and Friend of man,--reject me?" |
42332 | I said--"You do not really believe what you say?" |
42332 | I said--"You yourself are unusually rich,--are you sorry for it?" |
42332 | I stared at the twain with dry burning eyes,--what did this portend? |
42332 | I started up listening, every nerve strained----Ahrimanes?--or Rimânez? |
42332 | I suppose my looks expressed my thoughts, for Rimânez, who had observed me intently, presently added--"Did he not tell you of his luck? |
42332 | I suppose you were-- originally I mean-- an author by profession?" |
42332 | I suppose you''re one of the richest men about just now, are n''t you?" |
42332 | I thought of Sibyl and her incomparable beauty----Sibyl, who had told me she could not love,--had we both to learn a lesson? |
42332 | I took possession of this one myself in rather a weird fashion,--will the story bore you?" |
42332 | I watched him for a moment,--then with sudden irrelevance I said--"Put that abominable''sprite''of yours away, will you? |
42332 | I whispered--"Sibyl, what is wrong with us both? |
42332 | I wonder how she does it, Geoffrey?" |
42332 | I wonder why it is that some women are so fond of playing the hypocrite in love? |
42332 | I? |
42332 | I?" |
42332 | If I offer you a chance to turn an honest penny shall your paid pack of''readers''prevent your accepting it? |
42332 | If I seem churlish I''m sorry-- but the fact is I am disgusted...""At what?" |
42332 | If a lady has lovers, and her husband beams benevolence on the situation what can be said? |
42332 | If we do things that shame our sex, is it not because you set us the example? |
42332 | If you have finished your tea, will you come and see them?" |
42332 | If you remember, you promised to explain it to me----""Are you ready to receive such an explanation?" |
42332 | In the same bitter school, under the same formidable taskmaster? |
42332 | In these''matters scientific''you have not tested my skill,--yet you ask--''how can I know?'' |
42332 | Innocent?--ignorant? |
42332 | Is Morris disgusted or alarmed?" |
42332 | Is it well or ill for us I wonder, that the future is hidden from our knowledge? |
42332 | Is there a more flagrant example of topsy- turveydom than yourself for instance? |
42332 | Is there a time on which you can look back, and looking, see my face, not here but elsewhere? |
42332 | It is Nature''s revenge on the outraged body,--and do you know, Eternity''s revenge on the impure Soul is extremely similar?" |
42332 | It may be only an attempt?" |
42332 | It was very good of him to lend it to me,--you had better have it as security for this pocket- book,--by- the- bye how much is there inside it?" |
42332 | Know you not that the changeless, yet ever- changing Essence of Immortal Life can take a million million shapes and yet remain unalterably the same? |
42332 | Love and joy? |
42332 | Madame"--here he addressed Lady Elton;"are you fond of music?" |
42332 | May I stay a little?" |
42332 | May I your study?" |
42332 | May we ask whether you require any cash advances immediately?" |
42332 | My darling, what do you take me for?--what is all this nonsense in your mind about buying and selling? |
42332 | No? |
42332 | Now I make no pretences of the kind,--I have only one faith--""And that is?" |
42332 | Now as to this five hundred"--"Keep it, man, keep it"--he interposed impatiently--"What do you talk about security for? |
42332 | Now, how had this happened, I asked myself? |
42332 | Or are you tired, and would you prefer a long night''s rest?" |
42332 | Or could this startling, this stupendous piece of information be really true? |
42332 | Or found a newspaper? |
42332 | Or in other words how do you mean to begin spending your money?" |
42332 | Or,--did she mean to bewitch and subjugate Lucio? |
42332 | Papa, are you an extemporized fire- screen?" |
42332 | Particularly the''base usurer''who is allowed to get the unhappy Christian into his clutches nine times out of ten? |
42332 | People must look after themselves you know-- eh?" |
42332 | Reform her? |
42332 | Reform myself? |
42332 | Shall I enumerate them for your consideration?" |
42332 | Shall I read your petition for forgiveness here?" |
42332 | Shall we see what she is like?" |
42332 | She looked at me in the same way again and said--''To the_ Catsups_? |
42332 | She writes with inspiration,--and always has something so new to say--""That of course all the critics are down upon her?" |
42332 | Should my present apartment be retained?--or was it not satisfactory? |
42332 | Should we steer our ways clearer from evil if we knew its result? |
42332 | Six weeks ago, what were you? |
42332 | Such a love as yours!--what is it? |
42332 | Surely_ you_ know that?" |
42332 | Take Mavis Clare----""Oh, you were thinking of Mavis Clare, were you?" |
42332 | Tell me,--think for a moment!--can you remember me? |
42332 | That I did this very melodramatically I hope you will admit? |
42332 | That is what I do occasionally,--you would not think it of me, would you?" |
42332 | That the confirmed drunkard may hate the sober citizen? |
42332 | That the outcast may hate the innocent maiden? |
42332 | The remark they usually made to me wherever I went was--"You have written a novel, have n''t you? |
42332 | The sooner I interview them the better,--don''t you think so?" |
42332 | Then he glanced up at me with a half- smile--"Would you like to see a city resuscitated?" |
42332 | Then turning to us, she went on--"Isn''t he a lovely owl? |
42332 | Then, if you are alive, where are you, Sibyl?----where are you?" |
42332 | This is the end of March,--will you be ready to marry me in June?" |
42332 | Thursday shall it be?" |
42332 | To kill the poor thing who managed to find life in the very bosom of death, is a cruel suggestion, is it not? |
42332 | Was I going mad, or sickening for a fever? |
42332 | Was I not one still? |
42332 | Was I to be given credit for nothing but my banking- book? |
42332 | Was he afraid I might trouble him for further loans? |
42332 | Was he-- my friend-- a traitor? |
42332 | Was human nature as base and abandoned as this man declared it to be? |
42332 | Was it indeed my wife?--this frozen statue of a woman, watching her own impassive image thus intently? |
42332 | Was it my fancy, or had his musical voice the faintest touch of a sneer as he uttered the last words? |
42332 | Was it my fancy-- or did I hear peals of wild laughter circling round the brilliant pavilion and echoing away, far away into distance? |
42332 | Was it then merely a vision I had seen?--a ghastly sort of nightmare? |
42332 | Was she Mavis Clare? |
42332 | Was she,--was Sibyl-- more to blame than I myself for all the strange havoc wrought? |
42332 | Was she-- my wife-- false? |
42332 | Was there no God but Lust? |
42332 | We have more knowledge you will say,--but how can we be sure of that? |
42332 | We''ve got three or four hours to spare before we take the train back to town,--suppose we take a saunter through the grounds?" |
42332 | Well!--millionaire as you are, and acknowledged lion of society as you shortly will be, there is no objection I hope, to the proposed supper? |
42332 | Well, I flared up, and said of course I thought it possible,--why should n''t it be possible? |
42332 | Well, what are you going to do?" |
42332 | Well,--after all, why should I expect him to be different to other men? |
42332 | Well,--and are you not famous?" |
42332 | Were men and women lower and more depraved in their passions and appetites than the very beasts? |
42332 | What are you?--why do you talk to me so strangely? |
42332 | What belongs to the earth tends earthwards,--surely you realize that? |
42332 | What can be done against her? |
42332 | What could I do with a woman such as she to whom I was now bound for life? |
42332 | What dark cloud is on your mind? |
42332 | What did she mean? |
42332 | What do you mean? |
42332 | What do you propose to make of your life? |
42332 | What do you take me for?" |
42332 | What does it mean?" |
42332 | What had I done, I demanded indignantly of myself, to deserve this wretchedness which no wealth could cure?--why was fate so unjust? |
42332 | What had I done? |
42332 | What had I missed out of life? |
42332 | What has the poor little planet done to merit your abhorrence?" |
42332 | What have I seen in you from day to day that I should take you as an example? |
42332 | What have_ you_ done for your fellow- men? |
42332 | What have_ you_ done, you as my husband, to change those ideas? |
42332 | What if death were not what the scientists deem it,--suppose it were another form of life? |
42332 | What is it worth?" |
42332 | What is it? |
42332 | What is your story about? |
42332 | What more do you want of Fate or Fortune? |
42332 | What pleasure comes from goodness?--what gratification from self- denial? |
42332 | What shall we do with the rest of the evening? |
42332 | What should I do then? |
42332 | What was it all about? |
42332 | What was the''something alarming''that had happened? |
42332 | What will you take to bring it out?" |
42332 | What_ can_ there be wrong about you, Tempest? |
42332 | When I asked if you were the famous Mr Tempest, I meant to say were you the great millionaire who has been so much talked of lately?" |
42332 | When the thunder crashes down a second after the lightning, does it not seem to you that the very clouds combine in the holy war? |
42332 | When would I be pleased to lunch? |
42332 | Where are you off to?" |
42332 | Where in the world did you study?" |
42332 | Where were you wrecked? |
42332 | Where?" |
42332 | Which would you say she is?--you, who sometimes declare that you believe in Heaven,--and Hell?" |
42332 | Whither were we bound? |
42332 | Who is your presenter?" |
42332 | Who will believe that anything so strange and terrific ever chanced to the lot of a mortal man? |
42332 | Who will credit it? |
42332 | Whom do you mean?" |
42332 | Why could I not answer? |
42332 | Why did I not start a theatre? |
42332 | Why did you not come out of the shadow of that elm- tree and see the play to a better advantage?" |
42332 | Why did you stop so long in front of the daïs?" |
42332 | Why do you strive to fathom their mysteries and movements? |
42332 | Why had I thus invited the public to accept me at a false valuation? |
42332 | Why should n''t a book get noticed on its own merits without any appeal to cliquism and influential wire- pulling on the press?" |
42332 | Why should the wicked flourish like a green bay- tree? |
42332 | Why should they? |
42332 | Why should you call curses down upon me? |
42332 | Why then should I be blamed or my desires considered criminal? |
42332 | Why was it? |
42332 | Why, in Heaven''s name do you not give it way?" |
42332 | Why, the very love that now consumes me is----""What?" |
42332 | Why, what harm has this Mavis Clare done to you? |
42332 | Will they be taught, I wonder, the lesson I have learned? |
42332 | Will you come on to my club and dine with me?" |
42332 | Will you come?" |
42332 | Will you come?" |
42332 | Will you give me the name and address of the agents?" |
42332 | Will you risk that non- existent quantity for the chance of winning a thousand pounds?" |
42332 | Wilt thou serve Self and Me? |
42332 | Win fame,--true fame,--after all? |
42332 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
42332 | Would I prefer a''suite''similar to that occupied by his excellency? |
42332 | Would you believe it, that before we reached Chamounix we had become the best friends in the world? |
42332 | Would you have me tell humbugs that I know them as such?,--and liars that I discern their lies? |
42332 | Would you have them all the slaves of man''s lust or convenience? |
42332 | Yet of what use is it to pray against eternal Law? |
42332 | Yet what she said was in no way contrary to my own theories,--how then could I complain? |
42332 | You can fancy a''swagger''lady of Elizabeth''s time asking a friend--''O do you mind, my dear, if I bring one Master William Shakespeare to see you? |
42332 | You dare to talk of love? |
42332 | You expected to see an old man you say? |
42332 | You have lately spoken of buying a country estate-- what say you to Willowsmere Court in Warwickshire? |
42332 | You imply that I assert my wealth in my face; do you know what_ you_ assert in your every glance and gesture?" |
42332 | You know Who it was that said''Bless them that curse you, and do good to them that hate you''? |
42332 | You know that my wife poisoned herself intentionally?" |
42332 | You know the words,''Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil''? |
42332 | You know they do not,--you know you never think of them,--why should you? |
42332 | You look incredulous? |
42332 | You remember what Shelley wrote of critics? |
42332 | You seem to take a perverse delight in running yourself down!--but you know the old adage,''the devil is not so black as he is painted''?" |
42332 | You shudder?--the thought of her hideousness is repellent to your self- conscious beauty? |
42332 | Your house- party is fixed for September, I believe?" |
42332 | Your''cursed luck''you think, has caused Lynton''s death? |
42332 | _ She_ thought as I do,--and with reason,--for what has God done for her? |
42332 | _ You_ are going to buy Willowsmere?" |
42332 | and I felt distinctly annoyed--"You do n''t think my book original enough to stand alone?" |
42332 | and I stopped to gaze intently into her fair face--"And how did you learn?" |
42332 | and he laughed bitterly--"Have you not found that out yet? |
42332 | and he pointed to a mass of white bloom in one of the windows--"Are they not far more beautiful creatures than men and women? |
42332 | and he smiled apologetically--"a little brusque? |
42332 | and he smiled;"Can you not explain?" |
42332 | and her blue eyes danced with fun as she handed me my cup of tea--"You really do n''t suppose I was hurt by your critique, do you? |
42332 | and she drew a flower from the knot at her bosom, and began fastening it in my coat--"Geoffrey what is the good of pretence? |
42332 | and she raised her arms with a tragic gesture;"Is there any flaw in the piece of goods you wish to purchase? |
42332 | are you not?" |
42332 | asked Sibyl suddenly, apparently to change the subject--"Why does he so seldom come here now?" |
42332 | continued Lady Sibyl, in accents of studied courtesy--"Would you not like to come nearer the fire?" |
42332 | echoed Lady Sibyl,--"Do you believe the world will ever come to an end?" |
42332 | echoed Mavis surprisedly--"Does he hate women? |
42332 | echoed Sibyl--"But you surely will not leave us so soon? |
42332 | exclaimed Lord Elton at this juncture--"You do n''t look it, does he Charlotte?" |
42332 | exclaimed Lord Elton--"you do n''t call this play low or immoral do you? |
42332 | have they had supper?" |
42332 | he answered, his accents vibrating with intense melancholy--"Can you think I am happy? |
42332 | he asked derisively--"Is it not already disposed of? |
42332 | he asked--"Weary of those two suggestions of eternity-- the interminable sky, the interminable sea? |
42332 | he demanded somewhat impatiently--"Do you think_ anything_ in the world is done without money? |
42332 | he exclaimed cheerfully--"Why do n''t you light up?" |
42332 | he exclaimed with a laugh--"Why so cruel to her Geoffrey? |
42332 | he exclaimed--"You do n''t mean to tell me you have written a novel Mr Tempest?" |
42332 | he queried half playfully, half ironically--"Like a football, waiting to be kicked? |
42332 | he responded--"Shall I enter a horse for you?" |
42332 | he retorted--"and do I not speak for myself? |
42332 | he said still smiling--"you really think so? |
42332 | he said--"Do you want to be called up to identify? |
42332 | he said--"Nothing but perfect beauty will suit you, eh? |
42332 | he said--"Will you love me then?" |
42332 | he went on--"Going to try and place that unlucky novel? |
42332 | he went on--"Have not they, and the unthinking churches, proclaimed a lie against me, saying that I rejoice in evil? |
42332 | inquired Lucio--"Condescend to take two thousand guineas a year? |
42332 | now?" |
42332 | or God only?" |
42332 | or some- one sent to say that the novelist could not receive us? |
42332 | pursued Sibyl--"Or because you wished to add dignity to your own position by wedding the daughter of an Earl? |
42332 | queried Lucio, laughing--"Or with disgust?" |
42332 | said Lucio with an air of pious rapture--"and why? |
42332 | said Mavis, addressing the spiteful- looking creature in the sweetest of accents--"Haven''t you found any mice to kill to- day? |
42332 | save repent,--and could repentance at so late an hour fit the laws of eternal justice? |
42332 | she asked laughing,--such a delicious little low laugh--"Because I tell you the truth? |
42332 | she cried--"Is this the prince''s idea?" |
42332 | she demanded--"For my sake or your own?" |
42332 | she exclaimed, laughing also,"Why, you do n''t suppose you can give any sort of big entertainment without them do you? |
42332 | she murmured--"Have you a heart? |
42332 | she rejoined, with a faint mocking smile--"And why, being made as I am, was I born an Earl''s daughter? |
42332 | she repeated wonderingly--"Do I not know? |
42332 | she said laughing--"Are they not pretty creatures? |
42332 | she said quickly, her eyes flashing as she spoke--"My ideas have been repugnant to you, you say? |
42332 | she said, surveying me critically--"Why, it''s simply splendid for you is n''t it? |
42332 | what else did you expect? |
42332 | what shall I say?" |
38802 | ''Have we not eaten and drank in thy presence? 38802 And did you do all this for my glory?" |
38802 | Did you believe the Bible, the miracles-- that I was God, that I was born of a virgin and kept money in the mouth of a fish? |
38802 | Did you believe the Bible, the miracles? 38802 Did you endeavor to convert your fellow- men?" |
38802 | Did you ever hear anything so wonderful? |
38802 | Did you seek to convert your fellow- men? |
38802 | Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto you? |
38802 | INSPIREDMARRIAGE Is there an orthodox clergyman in the world, who will now declare that he believes the institution of polygamy to be right? |
38802 | Love God with all thy heart? |
38802 | Love thy neighbor as thyself? |
38802 | Return good for evil? |
38802 | Then, why do you not change it? |
38802 | Well, what is it? |
38802 | Were you a Christian? |
38802 | Were you a Christian? |
38802 | What did you do? |
38802 | What do you mean by that? |
38802 | What is your name? |
38802 | Which is the one prayer which in greatness, goodness, and beauty is worth all that is between heaven and earth and between this earth and the stars? 38802 --Neither was the man created for the woman, but the woman for the man?" |
38802 | --Do you believe that he would have even suspected that the creator of the universe was talking? |
38802 | A gentleman was telling some wonderful things and the listeners, with one exception, were saying, as he proceeded with his tale,"Is it possible?" |
38802 | About how long is it before this kingdom is to be established? |
38802 | After all, how many men did Christ convince with his miracles? |
38802 | After all, is it not possible to live honest and courageous lives without believing these fables? |
38802 | After the Canaanites were driven out, could he not have employed the hornets to drive out the wild beasts? |
38802 | Again I ask, where did he go? |
38802 | Again he heard the question:"Who is there?" |
38802 | Again he mounted the three steps, again knocked at the doors of Paradise, and again the voice asked:"Who is there?" |
38802 | Again, I ask what and who was this serpent? |
38802 | All of it? |
38802 | And for what? |
38802 | And here let me ask, why was not the ascension in public? |
38802 | And here let me ask: Why should there have been more than one correct account of what really happened? |
38802 | And how are you to get to this heaven? |
38802 | And how can we be made in the image of something that has neither body, parts, nor passions? |
38802 | And how could the confusion of tongues prevent its construction? |
38802 | And how long do you suppose the church fought that? |
38802 | And if Joseph was not his father, why did they not give the genealogy of Pontius Pilate or of Herod? |
38802 | And if a god has made us, knowing that we are totally depraved, why should we go to the same being to be"born again?" |
38802 | And if he is infinite how can they comprehend him? |
38802 | And let me ask, why was not the miracle substantiated by some of the multitude? |
38802 | And what am I to go by? |
38802 | And what does that prove? |
38802 | And what is the next thing? |
38802 | And what right has a man to charge an infinite being with wickedness and folly? |
38802 | And what shall we say of Greece? |
38802 | And what would be our feelings if the savage king sent for his sorcerers and had them perform the same feat? |
38802 | And when we get to the New Testament, what do we find? |
38802 | And why did he, after the menagerie had passed by, pathetically exclaim,"But for Adam there was not found an helpmeet for him"? |
38802 | And why does this same God tell me how to raise my children when he had to drown his? |
38802 | And why, after he had eaten, was he thrust out? |
38802 | And why? |
38802 | And why? |
38802 | And yet we are told, in this creed, that"_ we believe in the ultimate prevalence of the Kingdom of Christ over all the earth._"What makes you? |
38802 | And yet what is this Old Testament that was written by an infinitely good God? |
38802 | And you deserted them? |
38802 | Another listener said to him"Did you hear that?" |
38802 | Another man''s oracle? |
38802 | Are all the investigators in perdition? |
38802 | Are the charitable clothed? |
38802 | Are the honest fed? |
38802 | Are the virtuous shielded? |
38802 | Are we better, purer, and more intelligent than God was four thousand years ago? |
38802 | Are we bound to believe it without knowing what the meaning is? |
38802 | Are we indebted to polygamy for our modern homes? |
38802 | Are we to be saved because we are good, or because another was virtuous? |
38802 | But what shall we say of God? |
38802 | But what was the result? |
38802 | But where is the new Eden? |
38802 | By whom? |
38802 | Can God then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two persons? |
38802 | Can absurdities go farther than this? |
38802 | Can any believer in the Bible give any reasonable account of this process of creation? |
38802 | Can any one conceive of music without human love? |
38802 | Can any one imagine what objection God would have to the building of such a tower? |
38802 | Can any reason be given for not allowing man to eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge? |
38802 | Can anybody believe that, under such circumstances, the danger from wild beasts could be very great? |
38802 | Can anything be more infamous? |
38802 | Can epilepsy certify to divinity? |
38802 | Can it be necessary to believe a story like this? |
38802 | Can it be possible that he knew anything about the stars beyond the mere fact that he saw them shining above him? |
38802 | Can not God forgive me for being honest? |
38802 | Can there be Methodist mathematics, Catholic astronomy, Presbyterian geology, Baptist biology, or Episcopal botany? |
38802 | Can there be goodness in this? |
38802 | Can we assist him? |
38802 | Can we believe in this, the Nineteenth Century, that these infamous passages were inspired by God? |
38802 | Can we believe that God made lashes upon the naked back, a legal tender for labor performed? |
38802 | Can we believe that any such command was ever given by a merciful and intelligent God? |
38802 | Can we believe that such laws and ceremonies were made and instituted by a merciful and intelligent God? |
38802 | Can we believe that the inspired writer had any idea of the size of the sun? |
38802 | Can we believe that the real God, if there is one, ever ordered a man to be killed simply for making hair oil, or ointment? |
38802 | Can we believe that the stick was changed into a real living serpent, or did it assume simply the appearance of a serpent? |
38802 | Can we believe this story? |
38802 | Can we conceive of the Almighty granting letters of marque and reprisal to hornets? |
38802 | Can we demand of all the same result? |
38802 | Can you imagine anything more absurd than an infinite intelligence in infinite nothing wasting an eternity? |
38802 | Could he not compete with Baal? |
38802 | Could he not see them from where he lived or from where he was? |
38802 | Could the missionary maintain an action of replevin, and if so, what would the cannibal do for a body? |
38802 | Could the most revengeful fiend, the most malicious vagrant in the gloom of hell, sink to a lower moral depth than this? |
38802 | Could there be any progress, even in heaven, without intellectual liberty? |
38802 | Could they, by giving the genealogy of Joseph, show that he was of the blood of David if Joseph was in no way related to Christ? |
38802 | Did God create hornets for that especial purpose, implanting an instinct to attack a Canaanite, but not a Hebrew? |
38802 | Did God destroy the memory of mankind at that time, and if so, how? |
38802 | Did God object to education then, and does that account for the hostile attitude still assumed by theologians toward all scientific truth? |
38802 | Did God put it in the cloud simply to keep his agreement in his memory? |
38802 | Did God simply by his creative fiat cause a rib slowly to expand, grow and divide into nerve, ligament, cartilage and flesh? |
38802 | Did God teach it to him, or did he happen to overhear God, when he was teaching Adam and Eve? |
38802 | Did Satan remain in the body of the serpent, and in some mysterious manner share his punishment? |
38802 | Did fits pretend to be the owner of the whole earth? |
38802 | Did he at once proceed to make a woman? |
38802 | Did he come in the daytime, or in the night? |
38802 | Did he come simply to tell us that we should not revenge ourselves upon our enemies? |
38802 | Did he come to give a rule of action? |
38802 | Did he come to tell us of another world? |
38802 | Did he know anything about Saturn, his rings and his eight moons? |
38802 | Did he know of the next, that is thirty- seven billion miles distant? |
38802 | Did he know of the one hundred and four planets belonging to our solar system, all children of the sun? |
38802 | Did he know that it would require about seventy- two years for light to reach us from this star? |
38802 | Did he know that light travels one hundred and eighty- five thousand miles a second? |
38802 | Did he know that some stars are so far away in the infinite abysses that five millions of years are required for their light to reach this globe? |
38802 | Did he know that the volume of the earth is less than one- millionth of that of the sun? |
38802 | Did he not know exactly just what he was making? |
38802 | Did he not know that when he made us? |
38802 | Did he pull out the linch- pins, or did he just take them off by main force? |
38802 | Did he rest on that day? |
38802 | Did he walk or fly? |
38802 | Did it ever occur to you that he fell a victim to his own tyranny, and was destroyed by his own hand? |
38802 | Did the giraffe, hippopotamus, antelope and orang- outang journey from Africa in search of the ark? |
38802 | Did the kangaroo swim or jump from Australia to Asia? |
38802 | Did the polar bear leave his field of ice and journey toward the tropics? |
38802 | Did the rainbow originate in this way? |
38802 | Did the"fall"produce a change in the climate? |
38802 | Did this God have to resort to force to make converts? |
38802 | Did wisdom perish with the dead? |
38802 | Did you believe in eternal punishment? |
38802 | Did you believe in the rib story? |
38802 | Did you believe that? |
38802 | Did you believe the rib story? |
38802 | Did you belong to any church? |
38802 | Did you belong to any church? |
38802 | Did you ever run away with any money? |
38802 | Did you have a wife and children of your own? |
38802 | Did you meet there the friends you had lost? |
38802 | Did you pay your debts? |
38802 | Did you run away with any money? |
38802 | Did you take anything else with you? |
38802 | Do away with human love and what are we? |
38802 | Do the angels all discuss questions on the same side? |
38802 | Do the good succeed? |
38802 | Do they really wish me to make more converts? |
38802 | Do we not know that every word was suggested in some way by the experience of men? |
38802 | Do you account for the snake- worship in Mexico, Africa and India in the same way? |
38802 | Do you also believe that God told Pharaoh,"It you do not let these people go, I will fill all your houses and cover your country with flies?" |
38802 | Do you believe God makes such threats as this? |
38802 | Do you believe God would make this threat? |
38802 | Do you believe that God was the author of this infamous law? |
38802 | Do you believe that any man was ever crucified who was the master of death? |
38802 | Do you believe that he baited the dungeon of servitude with wife and child? |
38802 | Do you believe that the loving father of us all, turned the dimpled arms of babes into manacles of iron? |
38802 | Do you believe the rib story yet? |
38802 | Do you believe this? |
38802 | Do you believe this? |
38802 | Do you doubt his power, his wisdom or his justice? |
38802 | Do you judge from the manner in which you are getting along now? |
38802 | Do you mean the Adam and Eve business? |
38802 | Do you suppose they are going to die without a struggle? |
38802 | Do you think any one would wish to crucify him? |
38802 | Does God delight in causing pain? |
38802 | Does any Christian believe that if the real God were to write a book now, he would uphold the crimes commanded in the Old Testament? |
38802 | Does any intelligent man now believe that God made man of dust, and woman of a rib, and put them in a garden, and put a tree in the midst of it? |
38802 | Does anybody believe that, who has the courage to think for himself? |
38802 | Does anybody believe this? |
38802 | Does anybody now believe in the story of the serpent? |
38802 | Does belief depend upon evidence? |
38802 | Does he need human sympathy? |
38802 | Does it tend to the elevation of the human race to speak of"God"as a butcher, tanner and tailor? |
38802 | Does such a threat sound God- like? |
38802 | Does the Bible teach man to enslave his brother? |
38802 | Does this sound reasonable? |
38802 | HE came, they tell us, to make a revelation, and what did he reveal? |
38802 | Has Jehovah improved? |
38802 | Has he done anything in the way of creation since Saturday evening of the first week? |
38802 | Has infinite mercy become more merciful? |
38802 | Has infinite wisdom intellectually advanced? |
38802 | Has the promise and hope of forgiveness ever prevented the commission of a sin? |
38802 | Hast thou not preached in our streets?'' |
38802 | Have you heard of them since? |
38802 | He knocked and a voice said:"Who is there?" |
38802 | He said,"Who is reading this?" |
38802 | Here is a man, for instance, that weighs 200 pounds and gets sick and dies weighing 120; how much will he weigh in the morning of the resurrection? |
38802 | How can any book be a standard, when the standard itself must be measured by human reason? |
38802 | How can any man accept as a revelation from God that which is unreasonable to him? |
38802 | How can it be established that some evil spirits could talk while others were dumb, and that the dumb ones were the hardest to control? |
38802 | How can we get along without the revelation that no one understands? |
38802 | How can we now prove that a certain person more than eighteen hundred years ago was possessed by seven devils? |
38802 | How could God make known his will to any being destitute of reason? |
38802 | How could any man now, in any court, by any known rule of evidence, substantiate one of the miracles of Christ? |
38802 | How could eight persons have distributed this food, even if the ark had been large enough to hold it? |
38802 | How could language be confounded? |
38802 | How could we prove, for instance, the miracle of the loaves and fishes? |
38802 | How deep did the water get? |
38802 | How did God convey the information to the serpents, that he wished them to go to the desert of Sinai and bite some Jews? |
38802 | How did he do it? |
38802 | How did he know where the ark was? |
38802 | How did it happen that so many miracles convinced so few? |
38802 | How did it happen that they needed coats of skins, when they had been perfectly comfortable in a nude condition? |
38802 | How did the animals get back to their respective countries? |
38802 | How did the serpent learn the same language? |
38802 | How did these waters happen to run up hill? |
38802 | How did they get there? |
38802 | How did they get there? |
38802 | How did they know the way to go? |
38802 | How did you like it? |
38802 | How did you treat your family? |
38802 | How do they answer all this? |
38802 | How do they know about this Infinite Being? |
38802 | How do we know that there were three million at the end of two hundred and fifteen years? |
38802 | How do you account for Russia? |
38802 | How do you account for Siberia? |
38802 | How do you account for it? |
38802 | How do you account for the existence of martyrs? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that babes were sold from the arms of mothers-- arms that had been reached toward God in supplication? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that people have been swallowed by earthquakes, overwhelmned by volcanoes, and swept from the earth by storms? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that the world has been filled with pain, and grief, and tears? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that this God allows people to be burned simply for loving him? |
38802 | How do you account for the fact that whole races of men toiled beneath the master''s lash for ages without recompense and without reward? |
38802 | How high did he go? |
38802 | How is it possible to sanctify a space of time? |
38802 | How large a country was that? |
38802 | How long did it rain? |
38802 | How long is it since you converted a Chinaman? |
38802 | How long since you have had an intelligent convert in India? |
38802 | How long was he in the ark? |
38802 | How many are you converting a year, really, truthfully? |
38802 | How many millions of Christians are in the uniform of forgiveness, armed with the muskets of love? |
38802 | How many millions of Christians are now armed and equipped to destroy their fellow- Christians? |
38802 | How many people are being born a year? |
38802 | How many people were in the promised land already? |
38802 | How many trees can live under miles of water for a year? |
38802 | How many walked beneath the standard of the master of Nature? |
38802 | How much did it rain a day? |
38802 | How much? |
38802 | How was it ever possible to prove a thing like that? |
38802 | How was it possible for Lucretius to get along without the Bible?--how did the great and glorious of that empire? |
38802 | How was man created simply from dust? |
38802 | How was the ark kept clean? |
38802 | How was the woman created from a rib? |
38802 | How were some portions of the ark heated for animals from the tropics, and others kept cool for the polar bears? |
38802 | How were the animals from the tropics kept warm? |
38802 | How were the animals kept from freezing? |
38802 | How were the animals preserved after leaving the ark? |
38802 | How were the animals watered? |
38802 | How were the tender plants and herbs preserved? |
38802 | How were these flocks supported? |
38802 | How were they supported until the world was again clothed with grass? |
38802 | How were those animals taken care of that subsisted on others? |
38802 | How would the hornets know a Canaanite? |
38802 | How would you keep Sunday then? |
38802 | How? |
38802 | I again ask the old question, Of what did he make it? |
38802 | I am the one you endeavored to kill, but Death is my slave"? |
38802 | I ask again, how were Adam and Eve created? |
38802 | I ask the Christian world to- day, was it right for the heathen to sell their children? |
38802 | I said,"Do you think the people who were drowned believed in special providence?" |
38802 | I would say,"Where were you when you got the notice to come back? |
38802 | IF we abandon myth and miracle, if we discard the supernatural and the scheme of redemption, how are we to civilize the world? |
38802 | If Christ was in fact God, why did he not plainly say there is another life? |
38802 | If Christ wished to convince his fellow- men by miracles, why did he not do something that could not by any means have been a counterfeit? |
38802 | If he takes a book as a standard, does he so take it because it is to him reasonable? |
38802 | If he wanted to raise the dead, why did he not raise some man of importance, some one known to all? |
38802 | If he wished miraculously to increase the population, why did he not wait until the people were free? |
38802 | If he wished to do away with the idolatry of the Canaanites, why did he not appear to them? |
38802 | If he wished to keep man and this tree apart, why did he put them together? |
38802 | If it does, is it not blasphemous to say that it is inspired of God? |
38802 | If it is a revelation, what does it reveal? |
38802 | If it is all an allegory, what truth is sought to be conveyed? |
38802 | If it was the fact, if the dead Christ rose from the grave, why did he not appear to his enemies? |
38802 | If miracles were necessary to convince men eighteen centuries ago, are they not necessary now? |
38802 | If the Bible is not obscene, what book is? |
38802 | If the book and my brain are both the work of the same Infinite God, whose fault is it that the book and the brain do not agree? |
38802 | If the devil had written upon the subject of slavery, which side would he have taken? |
38802 | If the devil told a man to kill his wife, would you be shocked? |
38802 | If the devil upheld polygamy, would you be surprised? |
38802 | If the devil wanted to kill men for differing with him would you be astonished? |
38802 | If the flood was simply a partial flood, why were birds taken into the ark? |
38802 | If the words are not inspired, what is? |
38802 | If there is any difference between days, ought not that to be considered best in which the most useful labor has been performed? |
38802 | If there is no devil, who was the original tempter in the garden of Eden? |
38802 | If there is no hell, from what are we saved; to what purpose is the atonement? |
38802 | If they are right, then how long was the seventh day? |
38802 | If this is so, why should the law have been given? |
38802 | If this is so, why should the serpent have been cursed? |
38802 | If this is true, why did he"come down to see the city and the tower?" |
38802 | If this was the order of God, what, under the same circumstances, would have been the command of a devil? |
38802 | If we think that God is kinder than he really is, will our poor souls be burned for that? |
38802 | If you have it, why seek it? |
38802 | If you knew the devil had written a work on human slavery, in your judgment, would he uphold slavery, or denounce it? |
38802 | In that eternity what was this God doing? |
38802 | In the New Testament we find that in giving the genealogy of Christ it says,"who was the son of Joseph?" |
38802 | In the light shed upon this question by the telescope, I again ask, where was he going? |
38802 | In what way did he overcome the intense cold? |
38802 | In what way is the human reason to be ignored? |
38802 | In what way would God put it in the mind of a hornet to attack a Canaanite? |
38802 | In what? |
38802 | Instead of healing a withered arm, why did he not find some man whose arm had been cut off, and make another grow? |
38802 | Instead of turning them out, why did he not keep him from getting in? |
38802 | Is Christ to be praised for resisting such a temptation? |
38802 | Is a god who will burn a soul forever in another world, better than a Christian who burns the body for a few hours in this? |
38802 | Is a man to be eternally rewarded for believing according to evidence, without evidence, or against evidence? |
38802 | Is credulity the mother of virtue? |
38802 | Is falsehood a reforming power? |
38802 | Is he in trouble? |
38802 | Is he in want? |
38802 | Is he unhappy? |
38802 | Is innocence always acquitted? |
38802 | Is it conceivable that fits wanted Christ to fall down and worship them? |
38802 | Is it easy to account for famine, for pestilence and plague if there be above us all a Ruler infinitely good, powerful and wise? |
38802 | Is it necessary to believe that God is a kind of prestigiator-- a sleight- of- hand performer, a magician or sorcerer? |
38802 | Is it not a little curious that no priest of one religion has ever been able to astonish a priest of another religion by telling a miracle? |
38802 | Is it not a little curious that the priests of one religion never believe the priests of another? |
38802 | Is it not a little strange that the believers in sacred books regard all except their own as having been made by hypocrites and fools? |
38802 | Is it not a strange coincidence that there should be contradictory accounts mingled in both the Babylonian and Jewish stories? |
38802 | Is it not altogether more probable that some ignorant Hebrew would write the vulgar words? |
38802 | Is it not far better and wiser to take the good and throw the bad away? |
38802 | Is it not humiliating to know that our ancestors believed these things? |
38802 | Is it not strange that a Chinaman should find out by his own exertions more about the material universe than Moses could when assisted by its Creator? |
38802 | Is it not wonderful that while God told his people what animals were fit for food, he failed to give a list of plants that man might eat? |
38802 | Is it not, after all, barely possible that a man acting like Christ can be saved? |
38802 | Is it on account of that transaction in the Garden of Eden, that all the descendants of Adam and Eve known as Jews and Christians hate serpents? |
38802 | Is it possible for any sane and intelligent man to believe this story? |
38802 | Is it possible for this God to prevent it? |
38802 | Is it possible for us to believe that an infinite being would resort to such expedients in order to drive the Canaanites from their country? |
38802 | Is it possible not to hate and despise him? |
38802 | Is it possible that God is intolerant? |
38802 | Is it possible that God would make a successful rival? |
38802 | Is it possible that Matthew saw this, the most miraculous of miracles, and yet forgot to put it in his life of Christ? |
38802 | Is it possible that a God capable of doing the miracles recounted in the Old Testament could not, in some way, have disposed of the wild beasts? |
38802 | Is it possible that a being of infinite purity-- the author of modesty, would smirch the pages of his book with stories lewd, licentious and obscene? |
38802 | Is it possible that any one now believes that the whole world would be of one speech had the language not been confounded at Babel? |
38802 | Is it possible that fits can talk? |
38802 | Is it possible that fits carried Christ himself to the pinnacle of a temple? |
38802 | Is it possible that he could not see whether the waters had gone? |
38802 | Is it possible that of all these, the Bible only is the work of God? |
38802 | Is it possible that seventy people could increase to that extent in two hundred and fifteen years? |
38802 | Is it possible that the Infinite could not overwhelm with waves this atom called the earth? |
38802 | Is it possible that the Pentateuch could not have been written by uninspired men? |
38802 | Is it possible that the sacrifice of a perfect being was acceptable to God? |
38802 | Is it possible to conceive of a more perfectly childish way of ascertaining whether the earth was dry? |
38802 | Is it possible to imagine what was really done? |
38802 | Is it possible to love a God who would make such laws? |
38802 | Is it really necessary to believe this account in order to be happy here, or hereafter? |
38802 | Is it the church? |
38802 | Is it true that man was once perfectly pure and innocent, and that he became degenerate by disobedience? |
38802 | Is it true that when we kill a snake we also destroy an evil spirit, or is there but one devil, and did he perish at the death of the first serpent? |
38802 | Is justice always done? |
38802 | Is not such a course dishonorable to both? |
38802 | Is not such a course far more reasonable than to insist that all these things are true and must stand though every science shall fall to mental dust? |
38802 | Is orthodox Christianity on the increase? |
38802 | Is rest holier than labor? |
38802 | Is that because we are depraved? |
38802 | Is the freedom of the future to exist only in perdition? |
38802 | Is then the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it? |
38802 | Is there a Christian woman, civilized, intelligent, and free, who believes in the institution of polygamy? |
38802 | Is there a land without a grave, and where good- bye is never heard?" |
38802 | Is there a solitary Christian nation that will trust any other? |
38802 | Is there a standard of a standard? |
38802 | Is there a world without death, without pain, without a tear? |
38802 | Is there an honest man who does not regret that God commanded a husband to stone his wife for suggesting the worship of some other God? |
38802 | Is there any saving grace in hypocrisy? |
38802 | Is there any saving grace in the impossible and absurd? |
38802 | Is there any sense in that? |
38802 | Is there any theologian who will contend that man was created directly from the earth? |
38802 | Is there anything in the New Testament as beautiful as this?--"Shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? |
38802 | Is there anything in the New Testament more beautiful than the story of the Sufi? |
38802 | Is there anything in the literature of the world more nearly perfect than this thought? |
38802 | Is there anything that can be more perfectly absurd than that a space of time can be holy? |
38802 | Is there no intellectual liberty in heaven? |
38802 | Is there one who will now say that, under such circumstances, the wife ought to have been killed? |
38802 | Is there one who will publicly declare that, in his judgment, that institution ever was right? |
38802 | Is there wisdom in this? |
38802 | Is there, in all the history of war, a more infamous thing than this? |
38802 | Is there, in the civilized world, to- day, a clergyman who believes in the divinity of slavery? |
38802 | Is this belief necessary unto salvation? |
38802 | Is this established by the history of nations? |
38802 | It will be the same to- morrow, will it not? |
38802 | Let another read him who knows nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what does he get? |
38802 | Lover-- husband-- wife-- mother-- father-- child-- home!--? |
38802 | Must I be false to my understanding? |
38802 | Must a man be born a second time before this account seems reasonable? |
38802 | Must not the reason be convinced? |
38802 | Must the civilized accept the religion of savages? |
38802 | Must we believe anything that can not in any way be substantiated? |
38802 | Must we believe that God called some of his children the money of others? |
38802 | Must we regard the auction block as an altar? |
38802 | Must we, in order to be good, gentle and loving in our lives, believe that the creation of woman was a second thought? |
38802 | Now, I ask, whether it was unreasonable for the Jews to suggest that a little meat would be very gratefully received? |
38802 | Now, after concluding to make"an helpmeet"for Adam, what did the Lord God do? |
38802 | Of art, or joy? |
38802 | Of what did he make it? |
38802 | On which of the six days was he created? |
38802 | Ought a god to take any credit to himself for making depraved people? |
38802 | People ask me, if I take away the Bible what are we going to do? |
38802 | Robert Collyer suggests,"nourish a bank of violets"? |
38802 | Science passed its hand above it and beneath it, and where was the old heaven and where was the hell? |
38802 | Shall I take another man''s word-- not what he thinks, but what he says some God has said to him? |
38802 | Should we imagine that he was divinely inspired because he gave to the Jews what the Egyptians had given him? |
38802 | Suppose a man came into this city and should meet a funeral procession, and say,"Who is dead?" |
38802 | Suppose nothing had been in the Old Testament except laws in favor of these crimes, would it still be insisted that it was inspired? |
38802 | Suppose nothing had been in the Old Testament upholding these crimes, would the modern Christian suspect that it was not inspired on that account? |
38802 | Suppose the compasses were not constant to the pole-- no two compasses exactly alike-- would you expect all ships to reach the same harbor? |
38802 | Suppose we invent something that can go one thousand miles an hour? |
38802 | That Jehovah really endeavored to induce Adam to take one of the lower animals as an helpmeet for him? |
38802 | That all his bones were formed as they now are, and all the relations of nerve, ligament, brain and motion as they are to- day? |
38802 | The Christians tell me that God is the author of these vile and stupid things? |
38802 | The Euphrates still journeys to the gulf, but where are Pison, Gihon and the mighty Heddekel? |
38802 | The Recording Secretary, or whoever does the cross- examining, says to a soul: Where are you from? |
38802 | The hail experiment having accomplished nothing, do you believe that God murdered the first- born of animals and men? |
38802 | The next question is, how many beasts, fowls and creeping things did Noah take into the ark? |
38802 | The question, then arises, whether within the last six thousand years there have been such upheavals and displacements? |
38802 | The religion of Jesus Christ, as preached by his church, causes war, bloodshed, hatred, and all uncharitableness; and why? |
38802 | Then what became of the body that died? |
38802 | Then which day would you keep? |
38802 | Then why did he say anything upon these subjects? |
38802 | Then why does not God give me the evidence? |
38802 | There were plenty of other loaves and other fishes in the world? |
38802 | Thereupon, Moses returned unto the Lord and said,"Lord, wherefore hast thou so evil entreated this people? |
38802 | They said to the priests:"Where is your New Jerusalem?" |
38802 | This God, waiting around Eden-- knowing all the while what would happen-- having made them on purpose so that it would happen, then does what? |
38802 | This is what happens--"What is your name?" |
38802 | Unless the Lord God was looking for an helpmeet for Adam, why did he cause the animals to pass before him? |
38802 | Until then, I will remain and suffer where I am?" |
38802 | Upon what food did he subsist before his conversation with Eve? |
38802 | WILL any one claim that the passages upholding slavery have liberated mankind? |
38802 | WILL the unknown, the mysteries of life and itiations of the mind, forever furnish food for superstition? |
38802 | Was God at that time governing the world? |
38802 | Was he endeavoring to spread his gospel? |
38802 | Was he envious of the success of the Egyptian magicians? |
38802 | Was he so ignorant of the structure of the human mind as to believe all honest doubt a crime? |
38802 | Was it not possible for him to make such a convincing display of his power as to silence forever the voice of unbelief? |
38802 | Was it right for God not only to uphold, but to command the infamous traffic in human flesh? |
38802 | Was religious liberty born of that infamous verse in which the husband is commanded to kill his wife for worshiping an unknown God? |
38802 | Was that, too, a geologic period covering thousands of ages? |
38802 | Was the Lord God compelled to take a part of the man because he had used up all the original"nothing"out of which the universe was made? |
38802 | Was the fish"spiritual?" |
38802 | Was the slave- pen a temple? |
38802 | Was there a time when the institution of polygamy was the highest expression of human virtue? |
38802 | Was there ever a time in the history of the world when it was right to treat woman simply as property? |
38802 | Was there in the garden a tree of life, the eating of which would have rendered Adam and Eve immortal? |
38802 | Was there not room outside of the garden to put his tree, if he did not want people to eat his apples? |
38802 | Was this the work of the most merciful God, the father of us all? |
38802 | We are told that God made man; and the question naturally arises, how was this done? |
38802 | We know how it was ventilated; but what was done with the filth? |
38802 | We know that after that he lived upon dust, but what did he eat before? |
38802 | We should have said to him,"What do you propose to give us in place of that angel? |
38802 | We would have asked that man whether he knew more than all the great minds of his country, whether he was so much wiser than his fathers? |
38802 | Well, what else? |
38802 | Well, why? |
38802 | Were blood hounds apostles? |
38802 | Were the stealers and whippers of babes and women the justified children of God? |
38802 | Were these parts, so worn away, perpetually renewed, or was the nature of things so changed that they could not wear away? |
38802 | Were they better than other nations? |
38802 | What are the Christian nations doing to- day in Europe? |
38802 | What are they to do? |
38802 | What are we going to do if we have no Bible to quarrel about What are we to do without hell? |
38802 | What are we going to do with our enemies? |
38802 | What are we going to do with the people we love but do n''t like? |
38802 | What are we to do without the Bible? |
38802 | What are you doing in the missionary world? |
38802 | What argument did he make in favor of immortality? |
38802 | What became of the Jews who had a Bible? |
38802 | What became of the birds that devoured other birds? |
38802 | What became of the birds that fed on worms and insects? |
38802 | What became of the soil washed, scattered, dissolved, and covered with the_ debris_ of a world? |
38802 | What became of them? |
38802 | What becomes of those who hear and do not believe? |
38802 | What can the orthodox minister say to relieve the bursting heart of that woman? |
38802 | What consolation has the orthodox religion for the widow of the unbeliever, the widow of a good, brave, kind man? |
38802 | What consolation have they? |
38802 | What could heaven be without human love? |
38802 | What did God make him for? |
38802 | What did he do after he got rested? |
38802 | What did he do with his body? |
38802 | What did he do? |
38802 | What did he do? |
38802 | What did he use for the purpose? |
38802 | What did the writer mean by the word firmament? |
38802 | What did they drink? |
38802 | What did they eat while in the ark? |
38802 | What did they eat? |
38802 | What do they teach to- day? |
38802 | What does he get from him? |
38802 | What does that prove? |
38802 | What does that prove? |
38802 | What effect has this religion had upon the nations of the earth? |
38802 | What else can they do? |
38802 | What facts did he furnish? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What for? |
38802 | What good is it to believe in something that you know you do not understand, and that you never can understand? |
38802 | What had he been doing? |
38802 | What had the God been doing for the eternity he had been living? |
38802 | What had the beasts, and the creeping things, and the birds done to excite the anger of God? |
38802 | What had these animals to eat while on the journey? |
38802 | What had these children done? |
38802 | What has become of the millions who have died since, without having heard of the atonement? |
38802 | What has religion to do with facts? |
38802 | What have the nations been fighting about? |
38802 | What is the man to do? |
38802 | What is the next thing I find in this creed? |
38802 | What is the next thing in this great creed? |
38802 | What is the use of sending them to hell by enlightening them? |
38802 | What kind of a country is it? |
38802 | What kind of a man were you? |
38802 | What kind of opening there for a young man? |
38802 | What kind of tree was that? |
38802 | What objection could God have had to the immortality of man? |
38802 | What part of the Bible? |
38802 | What particular ones would naturally come together if nobody understood the language of any other person? |
38802 | What right has a god to fill a world with fiends? |
38802 | What right would this God have to complain of a crucifixion suffered in accordance with his own command? |
38802 | What should I obey? |
38802 | What star of hope did he put above the darkness of this world? |
38802 | What was the Thirty Years''War in Europe for? |
38802 | What was the form of the serpent when he entered the garden, and in what way did he move from place to place? |
38802 | What was the next blow that this church received? |
38802 | What was the war in Holland for? |
38802 | What was your business? |
38802 | What would be thought of a physician now, who would give a prescription like that? |
38802 | What would become of National Thanksgiving? |
38802 | What would we be in another world, and what would we be here? |
38802 | What would you say to me if I stood by and saw a ruffian beat out the brains of a child, when I had full and perfect power to prevent it? |
38802 | When does that mean? |
38802 | Where are these four rivers now? |
38802 | Where are they? |
38802 | Where are you from? |
38802 | Where can words be found bitter enough to describe a god who would kill wives and babes because husbands and fathers had failed to keep his law? |
38802 | Where could he have obtained his flax? |
38802 | Where did he come down from? |
38802 | Where did he get his words? |
38802 | Where did the Lord God get those skins? |
38802 | Where did the bees get honey, and the ants seeds? |
38802 | Where did the serpent come from? |
38802 | Where did the tenants of the ark get food? |
38802 | Where did the water come from? |
38802 | Where did these serpents come from? |
38802 | Where did they get it? |
38802 | Where did this serpent come from? |
38802 | Where was he going? |
38802 | Where was he going? |
38802 | Where were meadows and pastures for them? |
38802 | Where were these people going? |
38802 | Where were those people going? |
38802 | Which had the greater and the grander government? |
38802 | Which of those nations produced the greatest poets, the greatest soldiers, the greatest orators, the greatest statesmen, the greatest sculptors? |
38802 | Which way did he go? |
38802 | Who are the men in Europe crying against war? |
38802 | Who can over estimate the progress of the world if all the money wasted in superstition could be used to enlighten, elevate and civilize mankind? |
38802 | Who is the blasphemer; the man who denies the existence of God, or he who covers the robes of the Infinite with innocent blood? |
38802 | Who made him? |
38802 | Who made the devil? |
38802 | Who protects the insane? |
38802 | Who saw this miracle? |
38802 | Who selected these? |
38802 | Who wishes to have the nations disarmed? |
38802 | Who, and what was this serpent? |
38802 | Why allow the earth to be peopled with depraved and monstrous beings, each one of whom must be re- made, re- formed, and born again? |
38802 | Why are the wife- beaters protected, and why are the wives and children left defenceless if the hand of God is over us all? |
38802 | Why call back to life people so insignificant that the public did not know of their death? |
38802 | Why did Adam and Eve disobey? |
38802 | Why did God tell Moses, while in the desert, to make curtains of fine linen? |
38802 | Why did God wait until the cool of the day before looking after his children? |
38802 | Why did he do his miracles in the obscurity of the village, in the darkness of the hovel? |
38802 | Why did he fill the world with his own children, knowing that he would have to destroy them? |
38802 | Why did he go dumbly to his death and leave the world in darkness and in doubt? |
38802 | Why did he leave his children to find out the hurtful and the poisonous by experiment, knowing that experiment, in millions of cases, must be death? |
38802 | Why did he make animals that he knew he would destroy? |
38802 | Why did he not again enter the temple and end the old dispute with demonstration? |
38802 | Why did he not call upon Caiaphas, the high priest? |
38802 | Why did he not confront the Roman soldiers who had taken money to falsely swear that his body had been stolen by his friends? |
38802 | Why did he not defend his children? |
38802 | Why did he not give them the tables of the law? |
38802 | Why did he not make another triumphal entry into Jerusalem? |
38802 | Why did he not put Adam and Eve on their guard about this serpent? |
38802 | Why did he not tell Adam and Eve about this serpent? |
38802 | Why did he not tell him that a nation founded upon slavery could not stand? |
38802 | Why did he not tell us something about it? |
38802 | Why did he not turn the tear- stained hope of immortality into the glad knowledge of another life? |
38802 | Why did he not visit Pontius Pilate? |
38802 | Why did he not watch the devil, instead of watching Adam and Eve? |
38802 | Why did he only make known his will to a few wandering savages in the desert of Sinai? |
38802 | Why did he put it in the midst of the garden? |
38802 | Why did he repent having made them? |
38802 | Why did he say"And every living substance that I have made will I destroy from off the face of the earth"? |
38802 | Why did he tell him to make things of gold, and silver, and precious stones, when they could not have been in possession of these things? |
38802 | Why did not the Lord God take him by the tail and snap his head off? |
38802 | Why did they give a supposed genealogy? |
38802 | Why did"the Lord come down to see the city and the tower"? |
38802 | Why do all these religions die hard? |
38802 | Why do they not send missionaries there with copies of the Old Testament? |
38802 | Why do we make so many mistakes? |
38802 | Why does Providence permit insanity? |
38802 | Why does he desire worship? |
38802 | Why does not the Congregational Church tell us? |
38802 | Why does special providence allow all the crimes? |
38802 | Why is a miracle any more necessary to account for yesterday than for to- day or for to- morrow? |
38802 | Why is it that England persecutes Ireland even to this day? |
38802 | Why is it that thou hast sent me? |
38802 | Why not purify the fountain of all human life? |
38802 | Why over_ running_ water? |
38802 | Why should Christians try to deprive God of the glory of having wrought the most stupendous of miracles? |
38802 | Why should God allow an inspired book to be interpolated? |
38802 | Why should God be so jealous of the wooden idols of the heathen? |
38802 | Why should God curse the serpent for what had really been done by the devil? |
38802 | Why should God hate to see a man happy? |
38802 | Why should God miraculously increase the number of slaves? |
38802 | Why should God object to that fruit being eaten by man? |
38802 | Why should a Christian hesitate to kill a man that his God is waiting to damn? |
38802 | Why should a Christian not destroy an infidel who is trying to assassinate his soul? |
38802 | Why should a Christian pity an unbeliever-- one who has rejected the Bible-- when he knows that God will be pitiless forever? |
38802 | Why should a God care about such things? |
38802 | Why should a believer in God hate an atheist? |
38802 | Why should a book take its place, unless the reason has been convinced that the book is the proper standard? |
38802 | Why should a mother be declared unclean? |
38802 | Why should a son who has examined a subject, throw away his reason and adopt the views of his mother? |
38802 | Why should a woman ask pardon of God for having been a mother? |
38802 | Why should an infinite God care whether mankind made ointments and perfumes like his or not? |
38802 | Why should barbarian Jews who went down to death and dust three thousand years ago, control the living world? |
38802 | Why should giving birth to a daughter be regarded twice as criminal as giving birth to a son? |
38802 | Why should he destroy them? |
38802 | Why should he insist on having buttons sewed in certain rows, and fringes of a certain color? |
38802 | Why should he make experiments that he knows must fail? |
38802 | Why should he make those whom he knew would be criminals? |
38802 | Why should it excite his wrath to see a family in the woods, by some babbling stream, talking, laughing and loving? |
38802 | Why should men be imprisoned simply for imitating God? |
38802 | Why should men in the name of religion try to harmonize the contradictions that exist between Nature and a book? |
38802 | Why should philosophers be denounced for placing more reliance upon what they know than upon what they have been told? |
38802 | Why should that be considered a crime in Exodus, which is commanded as a duty in Genesis? |
38802 | Why should that day be filled with gloom instead of joy? |
38802 | Why should the Creator of all things threaten to kill a priest who approached his altar without having washed his hands and feet? |
38802 | Why should the babes in the cradle be destroyed on account of the crime of Pharaoh? |
38802 | Why should the bird be killed in an_ earthen_ vessel? |
38802 | Why should the cattle be destroyed because man had enslaved his brother? |
38802 | Why should the innocent maiden and the loving mother worship the heartless Jewish God? |
38802 | Why should they, with pure and stainless lips, read the vile record of inspired lust? |
38802 | Why should this be a period of probation? |
38802 | Why should we be damned for laughing at Samson and his foxes, while others, holding the Nebular Hypothesis in utter contempt, go straight to heaven? |
38802 | Why should we imprison Mormons, and worship God? |
38802 | Why should we in this age of the world be dominated by the dead? |
38802 | Why should we look sad, and think about death, and hear about hell? |
38802 | Why should we object to the Darwinian doctrine of descent after this? |
38802 | Why should we, looking at some ancient daub of angel, saint or virgin, say its painter must have been assisted by a god? |
38802 | Why then should we not place greater confidence in Nature than in a book? |
38802 | Why was he not kept out of the garden? |
38802 | Why was he not on hand in the morning? |
38802 | Why was it that England persecuted Scotland? |
38802 | Why was the Garden of Eden planted? |
38802 | Why was the experiment made? |
38802 | Why were Adam and Eve exposed to the seductive arts of the serpent? |
38802 | Why were four gospels necessary? |
38802 | Why were not the maidens also killed? |
38802 | Why were they spared? |
38802 | Why were we not given better brains? |
38802 | Why would the confounding of the language make them separate? |
38802 | Why would they not stay together until they could understand each other? |
38802 | Why, in this instance, did they separate? |
38802 | Why, then, should a sectarian college exist? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Why? |
38802 | Will I be sorry that I did not say I was a Christian when I was not? |
38802 | Will I be sorry when I come to die that I did not live a hypocrite? |
38802 | Will anybody now contend that man was a direct and independent creation, and sustains and bears no relation to the animals below him? |
38802 | Will darkness forever be the womb and mother of the supernatural? |
38802 | Will he accept the agony of innocence for the punishment of guilt? |
38802 | Will he release Barabbas and crucify Christ? |
38802 | Will men become clean in speech by believing that God is unclean? |
38802 | Will men make better husbands, fathers, neighbors, and citizens, simply by giving credence to these childish and impossible things? |
38802 | Will some Christian give us an explanation of this matter? |
38802 | Will some gentleman skilled in theology give us an explanation? |
38802 | Will some kind clergymen tell us upon what kind of food Adam subsisted during these immense periods? |
38802 | Will some minister when he answers the"Mistakes of Moses"tell us where these rivers are or were? |
38802 | Will some minister, some graduate of Andover, tell us what this means? |
38802 | Will some theologian explain this? |
38802 | Will some theologian have the kindness to answer these questions? |
38802 | Will some theologian, versed in the machinery of the miraculous, tell us in what way God confounded the language of mankind? |
38802 | Will the agony of the damned increase or decrease the happiness of God? |
38802 | Will the fact that I was honest put a thorn in the pillow of death? |
38802 | Will the penitent thief, winged and crowned, laugh at the honest folks in hell? |
38802 | Will there be, in the universe, an eternal_ auto da fe?_ XXIX. |
38802 | Will they be kind enough to tell us what the fountains of the great deep are? |
38802 | Wives, submit yourselves unto your husbands as unto the Lord?" |
38802 | Would a partial, local flood have fulfilled these threats? |
38802 | Would it not be far better to admit that the Bible was written by barbarians in a barbarous, coarse and vulgar age? |
38802 | Would it not be far better to treat this atheist, at least, as well as he treats us? |
38802 | Would it not be safer to charge Moses with vulgarity, instead of God? |
38802 | Would it not have been a greater wonder if Christ had_ created_ instead of multiplied the loaves and fishes? |
38802 | Would it not have been better to change Noah and his people, so that after that a second birth would not have been necessary? |
38802 | Would it not have been much better to have made another Adam and Eve? |
38802 | Would the charm be broken if the vessel was of wood? |
38802 | Would we not regard such a performance as beneath the dignity even of a President? |
38802 | Would you expect to find that book in favor of liberty? |
38802 | Would you regard it as any evidence that he ever wrote it, if it upheld slavery? |
38802 | You may ask, and what of all this? |
38802 | You may say that it was a miracle; but what need was there of working a miracle? |
38802 | and if he did say anything, why did he not give the facts? |
38802 | and when he had concluded, there was a kind of chorus of"Is it possible?" |
38802 | and"Can it be?" |
38802 | and, if so, is not the reason of each man the final arbiter of that man? |
38802 | no enemies?" |
38802 | that God approved not only of human slavery, but instructed his chosen people to buy the women, children and babes of the heathen round about them? |
38802 | that the assistance of God was necessary to produce these books? |
38802 | upon Herod? |
5241 | ''Run where?'' 5241 A precaution against robbers?" |
5241 | All, you ass? 5241 Am I sportman?" |
5241 | And good God, where d''you suppose Miss Vanderman is? |
5241 | And he believed that? |
5241 | And if I were to go with you to Tarsus, what then? |
5241 | And is it possible you did not see the conflagration? 5241 And that man beside you-- who is he?" |
5241 | And what did they say? |
5241 | And who else can do it? 5241 And you left your friend to help me?" |
5241 | And you on the plains? |
5241 | And you? |
5241 | Any young woman--"Of course? |
5241 | Are n''t you afraid to travel with all that mob of women and cattle? |
5241 | Are they all Armenians in Zeitoon? |
5241 | Are they your men? |
5241 | Are you Maga Jhaere? |
5241 | Are you a fool? |
5241 | Are you her father? |
5241 | Are you that man? |
5241 | Are you the party who talked with me at my construction camp? |
5241 | Are you the rascal who did that? |
5241 | Are you waiting here for us? |
5241 | Aw, what''s the use? 5241 Aw-- what''s eating you, Monty?" |
5241 | But a woman-- scarcely a white woman? |
5241 | But could they stop it, once started? |
5241 | But how about you rear while all that''s going on? 5241 But how can we, sir? |
5241 | But if I am your servant-- if I must obey you for two piasters a day, how shall I serve my nation? |
5241 | But just where do you come in? |
5241 | But now you know me surely? 5241 But what nationality?" |
5241 | But what''s the immediate excuse for massacre? |
5241 | Ca n''t you guess? |
5241 | Ca n''t you see crusading is dead as a dead horse? |
5241 | Can I not question him? |
5241 | Can you never see? |
5241 | Can you ride? |
5241 | Che arz kunam? |
5241 | Che arz kunam? |
5241 | Chicken, eh? |
5241 | Come on, what are we waiting for? |
5241 | Come----how soon? |
5241 | Could n''t we shake those ruffians off the ladder, and climb up it and escape? |
5241 | D''you get the idea? |
5241 | D''you mean to say,demanded Fred,"that they''re going to be shot like bottles off a wall without rhyme or reason?" |
5241 | D''you mean you used our predicament as a club to drive him with? |
5241 | D''you mean you''re willing to leave a woman behind alone in that forest? |
5241 | D''you mean you''ve got cartridges here? |
5241 | D''you see Turks now? |
5241 | D''you suppose they''d dare molest an Englishwoman? |
5241 | D''you suppose those gipsies are really of that Armenian''s party? |
5241 | Did n''t I tell you the man has''verted to Crusader days? |
5241 | Did you ever hear tell of the Eye of Zeitoon? |
5241 | Did you get them? |
5241 | Did you hear the martyred biped suggest rebellion to her? 5241 Did you never see men try to cover a secret before?" |
5241 | Did you shoot Maga? |
5241 | Did you suppose I could n''t smell camel and khan the moment you came in? |
5241 | Do n''t I talk American to beat the band? |
5241 | Do n''t the Armenians know what''s in store for them? |
5241 | Do you deny Kagig''s right to question prisoners? |
5241 | Do you know your friend so little, and think so ill of me? 5241 Do you mean I should leave him?" |
5241 | Do you never sleep? |
5241 | Do you think you can watch her if I tie her feet? |
5241 | Do you understand why you''ve been kicked? |
5241 | Do you, or do n''t you? |
5241 | Do? |
5241 | Does he know anything? |
5241 | Eagle scream? |
5241 | Ever go fishing as a boy? |
5241 | Fight? |
5241 | First, what kind of Americans can you possibly be? 5241 For whom?" |
5241 | Four Eenglis sportman? |
5241 | Four? |
5241 | Good enough? 5241 Granted,"said I,"but what next?" |
5241 | Had you acted beforehand in the manner I advised? |
5241 | Has any one seen him? |
5241 | Has he been writing down all our sins in a new book? |
5241 | Has n''t that Turk a harem? |
5241 | Have you a horse? |
5241 | Have you an American lady named Miss Vanderman with you? |
5241 | Have you an American lady with you? |
5241 | Have you any idea what can have happened to Miss Vanderman? |
5241 | Have you guys taken root? |
5241 | Have you had supper, Rustum Khan? 5241 Have you seen Maga Jhaere anywhere?" |
5241 | Have you then a plan you never told to us? |
5241 | He says that the Indian-- what is his name? 5241 He sent you to find me?" |
5241 | He? 5241 Hide, and have them hunt for us, eh?" |
5241 | His love- affairs? |
5241 | Honest, Fred, I--"Have I known you all these years to be fooled now? 5241 How about Maga Jhaere''s way, when she and Will and the Vanderman meet?" |
5241 | How about permits to travel? |
5241 | How about the bears? |
5241 | How are the ribs? |
5241 | How can I help it? 5241 How did he know where I was?" |
5241 | How did sunshine come into the garden? 5241 How did you do all that in time?" |
5241 | How did you get here? |
5241 | How did you get into the grounds? |
5241 | How did you manage? |
5241 | How do you know the Turks will walk into the trap? |
5241 | How do you know we are not agents of the Turkish government? |
5241 | How do you know what is in his diary? |
5241 | How do you know? |
5241 | How do you watch? 5241 How does it feel, old man"asked Will at last,"standing on ramparts where your ancestors once ruled the roost?" |
5241 | How far away is the fighting? |
5241 | How far to Zeitoon? |
5241 | How have I lived? 5241 How long are we four loafers going to sit here and leave a white woman in danger on the road ahead?" |
5241 | How long have ye dealt with Turks, and how long with me, that ye take a Turk''s word against mine? |
5241 | How long have you been here? |
5241 | How many of you? |
5241 | How much food have you? 5241 How much truth is there in your assertion that you saw her lover?" |
5241 | How much would you ask for your services? |
5241 | How not? |
5241 | How so? |
5241 | How so? |
5241 | How so? |
5241 | I reckon you''ll be Miss Vanderman?'' 5241 I suppose we or the Americans could land marines at a pinch, and protect whoever asked for protection?" |
5241 | I suppose you know that''s filibustering, to fly your private banner on foreign soil? |
5241 | I tell you, that girl Maga--"Two of''em, eh? 5241 I, sahib? |
5241 | If not to that,said Monty blandly,"then what agreements do you keep?" |
5241 | In case of trouble up above here, but not otherwise, will you do that? |
5241 | In the name of God, effendim, what manner of sportmen are you? 5241 In which direction did they take Miss Gloria?" |
5241 | Inch goozek? |
5241 | Is he good- looking? |
5241 | Is he your husband? |
5241 | Is n''t it bad enough to be prayed for? 5241 Is she not beautiful?" |
5241 | Is that Rustum Khan? |
5241 | Is that not much? 5241 Is that true?" |
5241 | Is the poor devil hurt? |
5241 | Is there nothing but hunting at Zeitoon? |
5241 | Kagig-- what will he say? |
5241 | Kagig-- where is Kagig? |
5241 | Kagig? 5241 Look in there, and see, and tell me-- do the Turks treat Armenian prisoners that way?" |
5241 | May n''t I fight? |
5241 | Me? 5241 Me? |
5241 | Meanin''? |
5241 | Men, women and children-- how many of you are there? |
5241 | Miss Vanderman? 5241 Monty, too?" |
5241 | My agreement with Kagig? |
5241 | Next? |
5241 | Neye geldin? |
5241 | No ancient buildings? |
5241 | No? |
5241 | Not tell you before? 5241 Now,"demanded Fred, who knew the signs,"what special quixotry do you mean springing?" |
5241 | Obey, do you? |
5241 | Oh, Kagig-- how shall they reich Zeitoon? 5241 Oh, do n''t you know?" |
5241 | Oh, do they all love him? |
5241 | Oh, very well,he said,"what is the use of making a scene?" |
5241 | One plan? 5241 Or give it away?" |
5241 | Otherwise, how should he have told us such a thing? |
5241 | Perhaps you have bargained for your share of all loot? 5241 Precipitated? |
5241 | Qualms at the last moment? |
5241 | Really? |
5241 | Remember Peter at the fireside? 5241 See here, Fred--""Look? |
5241 | See what, Ermenie? |
5241 | Send Miss Vanderman to Zeitoon with an escort and we three--"What did I tell you? |
5241 | Shall I kill him? |
5241 | Shall I live to see Turks fling thy carcass to the birds? 5241 Shall a man keep watch over a nation, and sleep?" |
5241 | Should I have them vote on it? |
5241 | Should I leave Zeitoon,Kagig answered slowly, unless I left a better man in charge behind me? |
5241 | Since when have Eenglis sportmen waited on the weather? 5241 So that''s it, eh? |
5241 | Surely not all? |
5241 | Surely you are not cowards? |
5241 | Tell about Armenian atrocities? |
5241 | Tenekelis? 5241 That''s where the rest of us are,"said Will"Where''s Miss Vanderman?" |
5241 | The chilabi are staying here? |
5241 | The horses? |
5241 | The name God gave me? |
5241 | Then do n''t you see that if you were gone, and I told them you had gone to bring Kagig, they would let us go rather than face Kagig''s wrath? |
5241 | Then if a Turk liked me, you''d doubt my social fitness? |
5241 | Then what you want with''i m? |
5241 | Then what? |
5241 | Then why did you''urt two of them so badly that they run away? 5241 Then why think about it?" |
5241 | Thought you were due to be sick for another week? |
5241 | To what extent? |
5241 | Use? |
5241 | Was? |
5241 | Well,Fred grumbled,"what are your plans for us?" |
5241 | Well? 5241 Well?" |
5241 | Were n''t the States good enough for you? |
5241 | Were those six jingaan in the common room your men? |
5241 | Were you on the roof? |
5241 | What Tony''s? |
5241 | What about him? |
5241 | What about the United States papers? |
5241 | What are they? |
5241 | What are we waiting for? 5241 What are you waiting for?" |
5241 | What are your plans? |
5241 | What brought it back to memory? |
5241 | What brought you here? |
5241 | What care I for my belly, sahib, if you break my heart? |
5241 | What countryman are you? |
5241 | What did she say to that?'' 5241 What did you do to the Turks?" |
5241 | What did you say? |
5241 | What did you see, Rustum Khan? |
5241 | What do you fellows say? 5241 What do you know about God?" |
5241 | What do you know of Miss Vanderman''s where- abouts? |
5241 | What do you know, sirdar? |
5241 | What do you make of him? |
5241 | What do you mean? |
5241 | What do you mean? |
5241 | What do you mean? |
5241 | What do you propose to get out of it? |
5241 | What do you suppose is that man''s nationality? |
5241 | What do you suppose it is? |
5241 | What do you want here? |
5241 | What does he say, Fred? |
5241 | What does he say? |
5241 | What does she know about fighting? 5241 What else did you hear?" |
5241 | What else would the roadside robbers like them to bring? |
5241 | What else? |
5241 | What else? |
5241 | What else? |
5241 | What happened? |
5241 | What has Peter Measel got to do with it? |
5241 | What has become of our horses? |
5241 | What have you been doing? |
5241 | What have you done with the German? |
5241 | What have you done with the ammunition? |
5241 | What have you heard about Kagig? |
5241 | What if I propose a different quarry? |
5241 | What in hell''s keeping you, man? 5241 What is it about Will that makes all women love him?" |
5241 | What is it now? |
5241 | What is it, Eflaton? |
5241 | What is the difference? 5241 What is the thumping?" |
5241 | What is your name? |
5241 | What is your real name? |
5241 | What next? |
5241 | What next?'' |
5241 | What of the Turkish owner and his seven sons? |
5241 | What the devil does he mean? |
5241 | What then? |
5241 | What were you doing there? |
5241 | What you do with me? |
5241 | What you know about eagles? 5241 What''s happening on top of the keep?" |
5241 | What''s that got to do with it? |
5241 | What''s the matter with Armenians? |
5241 | What''s the matter? |
5241 | What''s the straw for? |
5241 | What''s the use of cavalry four abreast? |
5241 | What-- are you that man-- Kagig? |
5241 | What-- the Battery, New York--? |
5241 | When and where shall the start be? |
5241 | Where are the men? |
5241 | Where are the rest of you? |
5241 | Where else? 5241 Where is Kagig?" |
5241 | Where is Lord Montdidier now? |
5241 | Where is Maga? |
5241 | Where is Miss Vanderman? |
5241 | Where is Miss Vanderman? |
5241 | Where is he? |
5241 | Where is the book? |
5241 | Where the devil''s Monty? |
5241 | Where they hold you to ransom? |
5241 | Where''s Kagig bound for? |
5241 | Where''s Monty? |
5241 | Where''s Peter Measel? 5241 Where''s Peter Measel?" |
5241 | Wherefore didst thou come? 5241 Which Turk is n''t?" |
5241 | Which of these men shall I pick to command the rest? |
5241 | Who are you that says so? |
5241 | Who are you? |
5241 | Who are you? |
5241 | Who are you? |
5241 | Who art thou, Armenian, to frame a test for thy betters? |
5241 | Who can refuse a beautiful young woman? |
5241 | Who clipped the wings of a kite, and sold it for ten pounds to a fool for an eagle from Ararat? |
5241 | Who gave thee leave to order him searched, Armenian? |
5241 | Who is this who is arrogant? |
5241 | Who is with you? |
5241 | Who is your own man? 5241 Who knows? |
5241 | Who knows? 5241 Who said who was afraid?" |
5241 | Who searched him? |
5241 | Who sold the horse to the German from Bitlis? |
5241 | Who the devil made it for you? |
5241 | Who was Umm Kulsum? |
5241 | Who''d have thought it? |
5241 | Who''ll follow me? |
5241 | Who''s sneering? 5241 Why all that quantity?" |
5241 | Why are you beating him? |
5241 | Why did n''t she murder him? |
5241 | Why did n''t you become a citizen? |
5241 | Why did you follow her? 5241 Why did you leave Armenia in the first place?" |
5241 | Why do they call you the Eye of Zeitoon? |
5241 | Why do you travel with Armenian servants? |
5241 | Why in thunder should she want it believed? |
5241 | Why not go into Tarsus and claim protection at the British consulate? |
5241 | Why not? 5241 Why not? |
5241 | Why on earth--? |
5241 | Why should I not listen, since my heart is in the matter? 5241 Why should Kagig choose just this time to guide a hunting party? |
5241 | Why should Zeitoon need such special watching? |
5241 | Why should we need an escort to safety? |
5241 | Why should you obey him? |
5241 | Why should you tell us all this? |
5241 | Why wo n''t this one work? 5241 Why wo n''t you go?" |
5241 | Why you wait so long? 5241 Why?" |
5241 | Why? |
5241 | Will the sahib permit? 5241 Will they?" |
5241 | Will you be good enough,he asked blandly,"to call off your men from meddling with our mounts?" |
5241 | Will you burn that book of yours, Measel, if we protect you from further assault? |
5241 | Will you bury him in that same hole with them two? |
5241 | Will you leave a good woman in the hands of Turks, Kagig? 5241 Will you?" |
5241 | Would it help,I suggested,"if we were to be taken prisoner by outlaws and held for ransom?" |
5241 | Would you have gone to Tarsus except on my account? |
5241 | Would you know the man if you saw him again, Will? |
5241 | Would you think of holding me to that? |
5241 | Yes, but when? |
5241 | You coming to Zeitoon? |
5241 | You dance? |
5241 | You fellows agreeable? |
5241 | You fool, Kagig, what you fill this castle full of wood for? |
5241 | You forgive her for my sake? |
5241 | You forgive her, effendim? |
5241 | You have the news, sahib? |
5241 | You hear that? |
5241 | You know about pistols? |
5241 | You married? |
5241 | You mean you will not go to Tarsus? |
5241 | You mean,said I,"that the German government is inciting to massacre?" |
5241 | You mean,said Monty,"that you''d like us to engage Kagig and make the trip, and to remain out in case of-- ah-- vukuart until we''re rescued?" |
5241 | You not believe? 5241 You said Monty is in Zeitoon-- alive or dead? |
5241 | You say, Colonel sahib, there will be no further use for cavalry? |
5241 | You sing? |
5241 | You summon me to lead? 5241 You take me to''i m?" |
5241 | You understan''? |
5241 | Your kingdom? |
5241 | Your wife? 5241 s''Why did n''t you take refuge in the mission?'' |
5241 | ............................. 243 XVI"What care I for my belly, sahib, if you break my heart?" |
5241 | ................................... 128 IX"And you left your friend to help me?" |
5241 | Against whom? |
5241 | Air you agreeable?" |
5241 | All about what the Turks have done to us, and how much about us ourselves? |
5241 | Am I Kagig, and do I not know who advised dismissing all Armenians from the railway work? |
5241 | Am I Kagig, and do I not know why? |
5241 | Am I wind that I should babble into heedless ears each thought that comes to me for testing? |
5241 | Am I without honor, that my offer is refused?" |
5241 | And I am to run with nineteen men to the rape of Tarsus and Adana?" |
5241 | And has all happened as I, Kagig, warned you it would happen?" |
5241 | And what are Armenians to you?" |
5241 | And who buried them?" |
5241 | And who is friend? |
5241 | And who shall stand Since hireling tongue and alien hand Kill nobleness in all this land? |
5241 | Are bribery and rich largesse Fair props for fat forgetfulness, Or anodynous of distress? |
5241 | Are the clouds thy throne? |
5241 | Are there any orders?" |
5241 | Are you Kagig, whom they call the Eye of Zeitoon?" |
5241 | Are you the lucky man?"'' |
5241 | Are you the only spy in Asia? |
5241 | As Kagig''s wife what good would she be?" |
5241 | As for quixotism-- is there any one here not willing to fight in the last ditch to help Kagig and these Armenians?" |
5241 | Bear me witness whether Zeitoon trusted me or not? |
5241 | Besides, I delivered the valedictory-- say, what are we waiting here for?" |
5241 | But Turks are coming presently, and they keel Kagig-- keel heem, you understan''? |
5241 | But can you see Will Yerkes, for instance, riding off and leaving you to play Don Quixote? |
5241 | But how did you know?" |
5241 | But how shall I marry Miss Gloria? |
5241 | But how should they know it?" |
5241 | But if you four men--""Yes-- go on-- what?" |
5241 | But we must concede him something, or how shall he satisfy ambition? |
5241 | But what about Miss Vanderman?" |
5241 | But why do you make the proposal? |
5241 | But, do you get the idea? |
5241 | By whose leave came the wind?" |
5241 | By whose leave came the wind?" |
5241 | By whose leave came the wind?" |
5241 | CONTENTS Chapter Page I Parthians, Medes and Elamites.............................. 1 II"How did sunshine get into the garden? |
5241 | CUI BONO? |
5241 | Can you contrive to let us talk for a few minutes alone?" |
5241 | Chapter Nine"And you left your friend to help me?" |
5241 | Chapter Sixteen"What care I for my belly, sahib, if you break my heart?" |
5241 | Chapter Two"How did sunshine get into the garden? |
5241 | Come-- how soon?" |
5241 | Could a man want more?" |
5241 | Could it be simpler?" |
5241 | D''you blame him? |
5241 | D''you know that girl was willing to be a murderess? |
5241 | D''you notice how this rock is covered by that other one a quarter of a mile to the right? |
5241 | D''you suppose she does n''t know we''re waiting?" |
5241 | Damn you, Didums, ca n''t you see--?" |
5241 | Days when the upright dared be few Are they departed, friend o''mine? |
5241 | Did I know the very wording of the letters in your private box for nothing? |
5241 | Did I tell you? |
5241 | Did men name me Eye of Zeitoon for nothing? |
5241 | Did n''t Cleopatra ride?" |
5241 | Did not you shoot that other one? |
5241 | Did waiting for the massacre like chickens waiting for the ax delay the massacres a day? |
5241 | Did you find her, America?" |
5241 | Did you observe his noble rescue work? |
5241 | Do n''t you suppose he''s her father?" |
5241 | Do you all use such extraordinary accents, and such expressions?" |
5241 | Do you hear me? |
5241 | Do you think I''d consent to your leaving your fine friend in pawn while you dance attendance on me? |
5241 | Do you understand?" |
5241 | Does he-- is he-- is there wickedness between them?" |
5241 | Found it, have you? |
5241 | Fred?" |
5241 | Good of''em, what? |
5241 | Gray are your days, drab are your ways, Strong are your fashioned bars, But, ye who ask if service pays-- Who polishes the stars? |
5241 | Guess what is Kagig''s hold over the girl-- can you?" |
5241 | Have ye not much to lose? |
5241 | Have you a ring?" |
5241 | Have you fallen in love with a woman, or taken the belly- ache, or fallen down a well, or gone to sleep again, or all of them, or what?" |
5241 | Have you heard of Kurds? |
5241 | Have you horses? |
5241 | Have you seen? |
5241 | Have you watched them at prayer?" |
5241 | He thought to--""Dupes?" |
5241 | How can we? |
5241 | How could I leave them? |
5241 | How is it your affair to drag that whimpering fool through Asia at your tail-- you a German and he English?" |
5241 | How many have you?" |
5241 | How many men did you kill, and he kill? |
5241 | How many of you are there left to lead?" |
5241 | How much ammunition have you left now?" |
5241 | How much ammunition?" |
5241 | How much backing have I had? |
5241 | How then?" |
5241 | How''s Gloria? |
5241 | How? |
5241 | I bring him food? |
5241 | I give orders-- yes?" |
5241 | I? |
5241 | If thy memories and honor urge thee to come the way I take, is there no room for two of us?" |
5241 | If you come without a''usband-- I will keel you-- do you understand?" |
5241 | Is all thy freedom good for thee alone? |
5241 | Is earth thy footstool? |
5241 | Is it truly you?" |
5241 | Is that the pretty scheme?" |
5241 | Kagig says,''Can you send us reenforcements?'' |
5241 | Must I get into the papers, too, as heroine of a scandal?" |
5241 | No? |
5241 | Not for my sake, but for the good work she has so often done, and for the work she shall do-- you forgive her?" |
5241 | Not going to die, then? |
5241 | Observe my house-- is it not empty? |
5241 | Oh, what shall I do? |
5241 | Oh-- do you remember Abraham-- in the Bible-- yes? |
5241 | Once in a harem, who would ever know? |
5241 | One sportman to another-- do you understand?" |
5241 | Or has he promised to make you Duke of Zeitoon?" |
5241 | Or shall I serve my nation in its agony?" |
5241 | Perhaps you do not believe all this?"'' |
5241 | Quite a sportsman-- what? |
5241 | Remember what Byron did for Greece? |
5241 | Seen her, either? |
5241 | Seen him anywhere? |
5241 | Shall I keep my word to you? |
5241 | Shall I say what they did to the women?" |
5241 | Shall I speak of Zeitoon? |
5241 | Shall other peoples reach thy hand to take That gladdens only thee for thine own sake? |
5241 | Shall we let him come with us?" |
5241 | Shall we ride back and break in on the party?" |
5241 | Since when has a crack on the shin made a baby of you? |
5241 | So that was the way you took us into confidence? |
5241 | Some, yes; but yours? |
5241 | Sung it in school? |
5241 | Suppose she does not want me?" |
5241 | Surely you are not the men to let brave Kagig be tempted away from his post of danger at Zeitoon? |
5241 | Surely you have n''t promised them to make us prisoner?" |
5241 | That Fred? |
5241 | That is easy, is n''t it? |
5241 | The Turk must have worked his way around Beirut Dagh on former occasions-- or how else could he ever have built and held that dismantled fort? |
5241 | Then Fred gave tongue:"That you, Kagig? |
5241 | Then you dance-- then I dance-- to- night-- you understan''? |
5241 | Then, when Gloria had said the last prayer:"What next, Kagig?" |
5241 | There was only one burden to their lamentation:"What are you going to do with us? |
5241 | They would electrocute me in New York-- for slaying the man who-- have you heard me tell what happened to my mother, before my very eyes? |
5241 | To cackle like a barren hen that sees another laying? |
5241 | To me forever he is Monty, my brother-- my--""Where''s Miss Vanderman?" |
5241 | To whose advantage? |
5241 | Twixt Thessaly and Locris when Leonidas''thousand men Died scornful of the proffered peace Of Xerxes the accurst? |
5241 | WHERE TWO OR THREE Oh, all the world is sick with hate, And who shall heal it, friend o''mine? |
5241 | We have mothers, sisters, wives--""Nothing to me, is it? |
5241 | Well-- what does it matter how many you are? |
5241 | Were n''t you afraid?" |
5241 | What Turk tells the truth?" |
5241 | What altruism for defeat atones? |
5241 | What am I? |
5241 | What are her relations with Kagig? |
5241 | What are you doing here, Rustum Khan?" |
5241 | What could I do? |
5241 | What did they know? |
5241 | What did you say?" |
5241 | What do I know of women? |
5241 | What do you say if we go and dine at the hotel?" |
5241 | What do you suppose?" |
5241 | What do you take me for? |
5241 | What have you learned?" |
5241 | What is he to thee? |
5241 | What is that to do with you-- or with him? |
5241 | What owe ye to the past? |
5241 | What right had he to write that people in France should pray for me in church?" |
5241 | What shall I do? |
5241 | What shall I do?" |
5241 | What shall hinder me from burning you alive this minute?" |
5241 | What shall we do-- what shall we do?" |
5241 | What were they depending on in addition to their weight of numbers? |
5241 | What would Kagig do in that case?" |
5241 | What would be the use?" |
5241 | What''ll you bet me Kurds do n''t show up in pursuit before the day''s an hour old?" |
5241 | What''s behind it?" |
5241 | What''s the matter with you?" |
5241 | What''s to stop him from doing it again?" |
5241 | What? |
5241 | When he stopped:"Has any one seen Peter Measel?" |
5241 | When they finish getting that woman, then I send for you an''you come quick-- understan''?" |
5241 | Where did you get the drink?" |
5241 | Where is Kagig?" |
5241 | Where is it now?" |
5241 | Where shall we stow our guests?" |
5241 | Where''s Lord Montdidier?" |
5241 | Where''s Maga Jhaere? |
5241 | Where''s Miss Vanderman?" |
5241 | Where''s Monty? |
5241 | Who carried your honor''s letter to Adrianople in time of war, and received a bullet, but brought the answer back?" |
5241 | Who else is there?" |
5241 | Who has counted? |
5241 | Who has not seen how a cow will follow the calf in a wagon? |
5241 | Who listened to me? |
5241 | Who urged you to send your women there long ago?" |
5241 | Who was it urged you in season and out of season-- day and night-- month in, month out-- to come to Zeitoon and help me fortify the place? |
5241 | Who would care to help such miserable- minded men and women? |
5241 | Why did he do it? |
5241 | Why did n''t you tell us that before?" |
5241 | Why did you not act, then, when I risked life and limb a thousand times to urge you?" |
5241 | Why do you do this? |
5241 | Why do you throw your life into the hot cauldron of Zeitoon? |
5241 | Why labor the point? |
5241 | Why not? |
5241 | Why not?" |
5241 | Why should I listen to you?" |
5241 | Why should it concern you?" |
5241 | Why were you beating this man?" |
5241 | Why?" |
5241 | Will not each of you take a dozen men and go and destroy those cursed Turks?" |
5241 | Will you help me?" |
5241 | Wo n''t you go to Lord Montdidier and tell him about it, and ask him to decide? |
5241 | Wo n''t you listen?" |
5241 | You get my meaning?" |
5241 | You go now-- go to''i m, or else''e is get suspicious-- understan''? |
5241 | You know Poor Blind Joe, eh? |
5241 | You know this country? |
5241 | You not believe?" |
5241 | You speak to me of Lord what- is- it? |
5241 | You think''e is busy at the fortifying? |
5241 | You understan''?" |
5241 | You would not have me be revengeful-- not toward my wife, I think?" |
5241 | You''ear me? |
5241 | You, effendi, you understand my-- necessity?" |
5241 | demanded one of them( What would you like? |
5241 | the Turk answered meekly, meaning"What petition shall I make?" |
5241 | thundered Rustum Khan,"who gave camp- followers the right to impose advice?" |
3746 | ''Physician heal thyself''was the old command, was n''t it? 3746 A child-- she is living?" |
3746 | A hero-- you mean me? 3746 A lady? |
3746 | Ah, the middle place-- then you are in purgatory? |
3746 | Ah,he said at length,"she has returned to Durban, then?" |
3746 | Ai n''t there work in Souf Afriker-- maybe not in the army itself, y''r gryce? 3746 Ai n''t you never goin''to sing again?" |
3746 | Al''mah, must I tell Mrs. Byng that? |
3746 | Al''mah-- it is Al''mah? |
3746 | Am I in time? |
3746 | Am I not going to South Africa? |
3746 | Am I not mad? |
3746 | Am I your daughter, your own daughter-- me? 3746 And after all he has done, and left undone, you want to try and save him now?" |
3746 | And for yourself-- how much? |
3746 | And how much did you get for the garments you had worn twice, and then seen them suddenly grow aged in their extreme youth? |
3746 | And killed himself with it? |
3746 | And me-- you followed me-- you saw me, also? |
3746 | And the verdict-- you approve? |
3746 | And what are you doing these days? |
3746 | And what becomes of them then? |
3746 | And what form does your suspicion take now? |
3746 | And what made you think I was at the hospital, Jigger? |
3746 | And what might those consequences be, Ian, and shall I let you face them? 3746 And when it all stops?" |
3746 | And while you were indulging material tastes, the cloak hid itself-- or went out and hanged itself? |
3746 | And who gave her that name? 3746 And whom does Fleming-- or you-- suspect?" |
3746 | And you do n''t believe it now? |
3746 | Anything I can do for you, Stafford? |
3746 | Are you in sweet spiritual partnership with the Trinity? |
3746 | Are you interested in Blantyre? |
3746 | Are you known as Nurse Grattan? |
3746 | Are you suggesting that his death was not natural? |
3746 | Are you the General''s orderly, then? |
3746 | Blantyre''s sketches? 3746 But Oom Paul flayed you at Vleifontein; tied you up and skinned you with a sjambok.... That did n''t matter, eh? |
3746 | But are you really interested? |
3746 | But tell me,she added, presently--"for it''s one of the reasons why I''m here now-- what happened at the inquest to- day? |
3746 | But what are you-- a prisoner-- doing here at Brinkwort''s Farm? |
3746 | But what should you be doing in purgatory? 3746 But wo n''t you be far away from the centre of things in Wales?" |
3746 | Ca n''t he see? 3746 Can you ride?" |
3746 | Coffee''s good, is n''t it? 3746 Coming home with me, darling?" |
3746 | Coming home with me--? |
3746 | Could n''t I be a scene- shifter or somefink at the opery w''ere you sing? |
3746 | Could n''t you give us some idea how it can be done, this smooth passage of the Styx? |
3746 | Could you not tell by examining the body? |
3746 | Did Count Landrassy tell you that? |
3746 | Did you kill Adrian Fellowes? 3746 Did you see any mark of the needle on the body?" |
3746 | Did you tell the General''s orderly that? |
3746 | Did you wish to see him, sir? |
3746 | Did''e say that-- did''e? |
3746 | Did-- did they cut him up, to see if he''d taken morphia, or an overdose of laudanum or veronal or something? 3746 Diversion or continuity?" |
3746 | Do n''t you remember the protest in Macbeth,''Time was, when the brains were out the man would die''? |
3746 | Do n''t you see? 3746 Do you know how he died?" |
3746 | Do you know what you have said? |
3746 | Do you like the perfume? 3746 Do you realize what you have said, and, saying it, have you thought of all it means to me? |
3746 | Do you remember my showing you all at Glencader a needle which had on its point enough poison to kill a man? |
3746 | Do you remember that you all looked at it with interest, and that Mr. Fellowes examined it more attentively than any one else? |
3746 | Do you think that would influence me? 3746 Do you think that would mend anything?" |
3746 | Do you think you can defy them? |
3746 | Do you trust me-- now-- again? |
3746 | Do you wish to remain with me, Lablanche? |
3746 | Does Blantyre know? |
3746 | Does it matter to you now? 3746 Does it matter which? |
3746 | Does she care a snap for anybody? |
3746 | Earned by your voice? |
3746 | Every year-- much? |
3746 | Fear of-- you? 3746 Freedom from me? |
3746 | From what? |
3746 | From what? |
3746 | Had your breakfast? |
3746 | Have you been using this sjambok on Mennaval? |
3746 | Have you no consideration? 3746 Have you no fear-- of me?" |
3746 | He did not say one word to put me right? |
3746 | He died-- heart failure, eh? |
3746 | He is soldiering, then? |
3746 | He''s not dead? |
3746 | Heard anything? |
3746 | His life is in danger-- an operation? |
3746 | His life showed--? |
3746 | His wife is a nurse? |
3746 | Hoping to find the needle again? |
3746 | How are you concerned? 3746 How did he die?" |
3746 | How did you come by these? |
3746 | How did you kill him? |
3746 | How did you know? |
3746 | How do I know? 3746 How do you know she did that?" |
3746 | How do you know? |
3746 | How long ago did Rudyard leave? |
3746 | How long was he there? |
3746 | How many papers have you got left? |
3746 | How you know that? |
3746 | How-- from me? |
3746 | I ai n''t got no stiddy job here, and there''s work in Souf Afriker, ai n''t they? 3746 I know it is silly in a way, but do n''t you remember how interested Mr. Fellowes was in that needle? |
3746 | I know where they are, but--"You think they are-- dead? |
3746 | I saw him steal it-- and you? |
3746 | I suppose Mr. Mappin was n''t present? |
3746 | I thought Mr. Mappin went with the others to the Glen? |
3746 | I''m going to sing again, am I? |
3746 | I? 3746 If I had gone to South Africa would you have remembered my name for a month?" |
3746 | If I had not gone till noon,he said aloud, in a nerveless voice--"if I had not gone till noon... Fellowes-- did she-- or was it Byng?" |
3746 | If Rhodes should fall, if the stamps on the Rand should cease--? |
3746 | If it had been necessary, when would you have gone? |
3746 | If my mother had lived, what would I have been? |
3746 | If not, why, then, did she write it? 3746 If one is untrue to one, why not to a thousand?" |
3746 | If one is untrue-- once, why be true at all ever? |
3746 | If she resents the subterfuge? |
3746 | In the Row? |
3746 | Is Colonel Byng in the camp? |
3746 | Is he all right again? |
3746 | Is it a bad chill? |
3746 | Is it all right? |
3746 | Is it all right? |
3746 | Is it dangerous? |
3746 | Is n''t it for Byng to hear? |
3746 | Is n''t it strange, Ian, that I who can do wrong so easily still know so well and value so well what is right? 3746 Is n''t that what they are doing with Dr. Jameson, perhaps?" |
3746 | Is n''t this work? |
3746 | Is n''t work the secret of life? 3746 Is she dangerously ill?" |
3746 | Is that all, sir? |
3746 | Is that all? |
3746 | Is that the way you talk in diplomatic circles-- cryptic, they call it, do n''t they? |
3746 | Is the coffee hot? |
3746 | It''s none of my business,he retorted,"but it''s a good deal of Adrian Fellowes''business--""What is a good deal of Adrian Fellowes''business?" |
3746 | It''s what''ladyship,''Gleg? |
3746 | Jasmine, do you mean that you will-- that you are coming, too? |
3746 | Jasmine, you are not crazy, are you? |
3746 | Jigger-- what? |
3746 | Kill him-- why? |
3746 | Krool? |
3746 | Ladies who wear them? |
3746 | Madame is going away? |
3746 | Madame, I have heard, I have read, I--"Yes, but did you love Krool so? |
3746 | Matrimony? |
3746 | May I come to you for a few days, Jasmine? |
3746 | May n''t he? |
3746 | Money? 3746 Monsieur Mennaval?" |
3746 | Mrs. Byng is with him? |
3746 | Mrs. Byng-- you saw her go in? |
3746 | Must one always be a saint to do a saintly thing? |
3746 | My word goes? |
3746 | Myself and the porter of Fellowes''apartments, his banker, his doctor--"And Al''mah? |
3746 | No chance--? |
3746 | No, why should you? |
3746 | Nor what you expected? |
3746 | Not yet? |
3746 | Nothing more in the cables? |
3746 | Now how do you suppose you lost that needle? |
3746 | Now that does n''t look very dangerous, does it? |
3746 | Now, the collie-- were you sufficiently a fatalist to let him live, or did you prepare another needle, or do it in the humdrum way? |
3746 | Now, what''s your name? |
3746 | Oh, he makes you comfortable enough, but--"But he makes you uncomfortable, Barry? 3746 Oh, is it announced?" |
3746 | One of my men? 3746 One you''ve been attending?" |
3746 | Or as old as Cain? |
3746 | Or so-- why''or so?'' |
3746 | Please, will you telephone me when you arrive at your castle? 3746 Prisoner-- who is a prisoner?" |
3746 | Rhodes? 3746 Ruddy-- where are you, Ruddy?" |
3746 | Rudyard did not kill him? |
3746 | Rudyard will be up to his ears for a few days, and that''s a chance for you and me to do some shopping, and some other things together, is n''t it? |
3746 | Rudyard-- where are you, Ruddy? |
3746 | Shall I tell the maid you want her? |
3746 | Shall we have Krool in without Byng''s permission? 3746 Shall we not go for a walk,"she intervened--"before I drive to the station for Al''mah?" |
3746 | She knew, then, that he was a spy? |
3746 | She knows Byng is here? |
3746 | She was upset and anxious about Byng, I suppose? |
3746 | She''s not so particular where the eggs come from, is she? |
3746 | So it was n''t strange that you should be ravished by Al''mah''s singing last night was it? |
3746 | So that''s the lady, is it? |
3746 | Some bad case? |
3746 | Some mistake, some hitch? |
3746 | South.... And how are you getting on with your hospital- ship? |
3746 | Strangers come to the outer wall--( Why do the sleepers stir?) 3746 Sugar-- what?" |
3746 | Tell me,she said, in a strange, cold tone,"tell me, did Adrian Fellowes-- did he protect me? |
3746 | That is the clock- time, but what time is it really-- for you, for instance? |
3746 | That way out? |
3746 | That''s what you want to see, is it, Mr. Blasphemous Barry Whalen? 3746 The Baas went-- you saw him?" |
3746 | The Baas-- where the Baas? |
3746 | The Climbers? 3746 The Jameson Raid-- and all the rest?" |
3746 | The collie was n''t killed by the poison? |
3746 | The hour, madame? |
3746 | The little business at Wortmann''s Drift? |
3746 | Their trenches should not be more than a few hundred yards on, eh? |
3746 | Then what do they do with them-- after the two times? |
3746 | Then why so exercised? 3746 Then why try to save him? |
3746 | They let you come without a guard? |
3746 | They will take Dr. Jim''s life? |
3746 | To end in the Twilight of the Gods? |
3746 | To sjambok you again? |
3746 | Useful person, eh? |
3746 | Was it Jasmine? |
3746 | Was n''t it rather late for that? |
3746 | Was there enough? |
3746 | We''ll meet at eight, then? |
3746 | Well, at twenty- one I was studying hard, and he was painting--"Blantyre? |
3746 | Well, if you do n''t know, Ian, who does? 3746 Well, what do you think she wants? |
3746 | Well, what is it? 3746 Well, what is it?" |
3746 | Well, what''s to become of you? |
3746 | Well-- well? |
3746 | Well? |
3746 | Were n''t there any cables? 3746 Were you thinking that when you breakfasted with her?" |
3746 | What I betray? |
3746 | What I tell? |
3746 | What about Adrian Fellowes? |
3746 | What are you going to do when you get back to England? |
3746 | What arm-- the artillery? |
3746 | What business is it of yours, anyhow? 3746 What can be done to Krool?" |
3746 | What did Krool do? 3746 What did he mean to do with it?" |
3746 | What did she do before yesterday? |
3746 | What did you expect? |
3746 | What did you say to her? |
3746 | What did you say to him that stopped him? |
3746 | What do you mean by''not directly''? |
3746 | What do you think the chances are? |
3746 | What does one know of one''s self in the midst of all this-- of everything that has nothing to do with love? |
3746 | What does this mean? |
3746 | What else? |
3746 | What has happened? |
3746 | What has upset you? 3746 What is Fleming going to say-- or bring up, you call it?" |
3746 | What is it you''ve got to say? |
3746 | What is it, Jigger? |
3746 | What is it, Krool? |
3746 | What is it-- why this Euripidean air in my simple home? 3746 What is my way?" |
3746 | What is my work? |
3746 | What is the cost? |
3746 | What is the matter? |
3746 | What is the mystery? |
3746 | What is this formidable instrument? 3746 What is?" |
3746 | What letter? |
3746 | What motive in this case? |
3746 | What particular form of reproach do you apply to Glencader? |
3746 | What right had you to enter my room? |
3746 | What shall I do abroad? |
3746 | What the devil... why should I listen to you? |
3746 | What was the one thing to say? |
3746 | What were you doing in the country? |
3746 | What will you do? |
3746 | What witnesses were called? |
3746 | What would be Krool''s object in betraying us, even if he knew all we say and do? |
3746 | What you have come about? |
3746 | What''s her name? |
3746 | What''s the matter? |
3746 | What''s the sense in saying things like that to a servant? |
3746 | What''s the use of waiting? |
3746 | What''s your father''s or your mother''s name? |
3746 | What? |
3746 | What? |
3746 | What? |
3746 | When did you think of going? |
3746 | When do you start for South Africa? |
3746 | When is he to be buried? |
3746 | When may I come again? |
3746 | When shall we begin, sir? |
3746 | When the stamps pound no more, and the power is withdrawn? 3746 When was that?" |
3746 | When-- she-- kissed you-- good- bye? |
3746 | When-- where? |
3746 | Where did he think he''d find me? |
3746 | Where is Byng? |
3746 | Where is Byng? |
3746 | Where is he? 3746 Where is he?" |
3746 | Where is your home? |
3746 | Where proof? |
3746 | Where will you get the money? |
3746 | Where? |
3746 | Which? |
3746 | Who are not Climbers? |
3746 | Who is that leaving his room? |
3746 | Who is the lady? |
3746 | Who is the traitor? 3746 Who killed him?" |
3746 | Who killed him? |
3746 | Who put it in the fire? |
3746 | Who said I was a diplomatist? |
3746 | Who the traitor is? 3746 Who''s for it, mates?" |
3746 | Who''s going wi''me? |
3746 | Whose minds are you trying to heal? |
3746 | Why did he go to South Africa? 3746 Why did n''t you come and be introduced?" |
3746 | Why did you come here? |
3746 | Why did you not use it on me? |
3746 | Why did you prevent it-- you? |
3746 | Why do n''t you use it now? 3746 Why have you come here-- to this room?" |
3746 | Why is it my duty to see you, Alice? |
3746 | Why should I look so well? |
3746 | Why should you listen to me? 3746 Why should you look so well? |
3746 | Why was he not at dinner? |
3746 | Why, then, do you think he stole the needle? |
3746 | Why, what else are you but a robber? |
3746 | Why, what else would they do? 3746 Why, where else would my cloak be?" |
3746 | Why,''of course,''And what does a ball gown cost-- perhaps? |
3746 | Why-- in God''s name, why? |
3746 | Why? |
3746 | Why? |
3746 | Why? |
3746 | Will she come? |
3746 | Will you come to me when you have finished your business? |
3746 | Will you come with me? |
3746 | Will you not go? |
3746 | Will you, and all of you here, come down to my place in Wales next week? |
3746 | Without Byng''s permission? |
3746 | Without breakfast? |
3746 | Wo n''t you see her here? |
3746 | Wot,''ere-- brekfist wiv y''r gryce''ere? |
3746 | Would n''t it be better he should go? 3746 Would n''t you like to call me Alice,''same as ever,''in the days of long ago? |
3746 | Yes, he and-- and some one else? 3746 Yes, what is the matter? |
3746 | You are going to see her, then? |
3746 | You are going to the Front-- you? |
3746 | You are going to throw up a great career to go to the Front? 3746 You are really going?" |
3746 | You ask that, you who know that in the armory of life there''s one all- powerful weapon? |
3746 | You count me among your friends? |
3746 | You defend it-- tell me, you defend it? |
3746 | You did not think a scientific examination necessary? |
3746 | You do n''t mean to say you are going to scourge yourself? |
3746 | You do n''t mind my coming to see you? |
3746 | You do not suggest that you are in heaven? |
3746 | You do trust me, Ian? |
3746 | You find London has changed much since you went away-- in three years only? |
3746 | You got money from Oom Paul for the man-- Fellowes? |
3746 | You have no trace of the needle itself? |
3746 | You have not-- not her? |
3746 | You know I come and go-- you say me that? |
3746 | You know what I am going to do with you? |
3746 | You prevented him-- why? |
3746 | You promise? |
3746 | You read it? |
3746 | You remember the needle-- Mr. Mappin''s needle? 3746 You saved the Baas by killing Piet Graaf-- have you told the Baas that? |
3746 | You saw her? |
3746 | You say the Baas sent for you? |
3746 | You say you will do what you like, in spite of the Baas? |
3746 | You think I did? |
3746 | You think there''s been trouble between them? |
3746 | You trust me now? |
3746 | You understand, there must be no attempt to communicate here.... You will observe this? |
3746 | You wanted me, madame? |
3746 | You were over- confident then? |
3746 | You will hurt the Baas, eh? 3746 You will not repent of this? |
3746 | You would have done her harm, if you could? |
3746 | You''ve seen her to- day, then? |
3746 | You-- Barry? |
3746 | You-- are you insane? |
3746 | You? 3746 You?" |
3746 | Your voice-- what happened to it? |
3746 | Zambesi-- why Zambesi? 3746 Zo you stink ze law of England would help you-- eh?" |
3746 | ''Why, my dear fellow,''I said,''you know you want to do it?'' |
3746 | ... Are they really happy who believe in God and live like-- like her?" |
3746 | A Boer?" |
3746 | A shiver of pain, of remorse, went through her frame now, as he held her at arm''s length and looked at her.... Had she started right? |
3746 | After all, what harm had he done her, that he should be treated so? |
3746 | After all, what has brought things to this pass? |
3746 | After the autopsy the authorities said evidence was unnecessary, and--""You arranged that, probably?" |
3746 | Against whom? |
3746 | Ai n''t I goin''wiv you, y''r gryce?" |
3746 | Al''mah''s? |
3746 | All this in the dark, in the safe dusk of her own room.... Where was her dressing- gown? |
3746 | Am I just one of the crude human things who lived a million years ago, and who lives again as crude as those; with only the outer things changed? |
3746 | Am I so very late?" |
3746 | And I shall never see her, I who never saw her with eyes that recall.... And if I could see her, would I? |
3746 | And Mr. Chamberlain-- you have seen him? |
3746 | And again, what have you come to see me about, anyhow? |
3746 | And had things been different, might not he and Jasmine have been of the radiant few? |
3746 | And he says, why should n''t you do it here, or why should n''t you be the man who will guide it all in England? |
3746 | And what is to come of it, or what will become of me? |
3746 | And when they knew it, what would they say? |
3746 | And would n''t I stay to breakfast? |
3746 | And you have done so? |
3746 | And you-- dear lover, tell me truly what kind of man are you? |
3746 | Are all my finer senses dead? |
3746 | Are you flagellating the saints?" |
3746 | Are you glad to see me?" |
3746 | Are you going to be my guide in manners? |
3746 | Are you so very far away? |
3746 | Arranged it all, eh? |
3746 | As she yielded to him the puzzle- box, which she had refused to the nurse, she said:"And pray who sets the example? |
3746 | As the flask was at Rudyard''s lips, Barry Whalen said to Krool,"What do you stay here as-- deserter or prisoner? |
3746 | Barry looked at him curiously; then, as though satisfied, he said:"Early morning visitor, eh? |
3746 | But Rudyard, will he approve?" |
3746 | But could you think me so inhuman and unwomanly as not to have asked about her?" |
3746 | But did it matter? |
3746 | But did you think that was magnanimous-- when you had got a woman''s love, then to kill yourself in order to cure her? |
3746 | But did you, after all? |
3746 | But directly, knowingly abetted Fellowes? |
3746 | But do you not wonder what would become of me, if either of these alternatives is followed? |
3746 | But even then, would it be all over? |
3746 | But how many of his own class is taking it on?" |
3746 | But how should it be done? |
3746 | But how? |
3746 | But how? |
3746 | But how? |
3746 | But must one always be a sinner to do a wicked thing? |
3746 | But perhaps you have not come to play?" |
3746 | But the cost? |
3746 | But was it so that there was a man whose senses could not be touched when all else failed? |
3746 | But what is the history of this instrument of torture?" |
3746 | But when did you return? |
3746 | But who was her destiny-- which of the two who loved her? |
3746 | But why should he talk as though she was a fly and he an eagle? |
3746 | But with a voice strangely calm, she said,"You mean Adrian Fellowes?" |
3746 | But you will come, then--?" |
3746 | Byng?" |
3746 | CHAPTER II THE UNDERGROUND WORLD"What''s that you say-- Jameson-- what?" |
3746 | CHAPTER XVI THE COMING OF THE BAAS"The Baas-- where the Baas?" |
3746 | CHAPTER XVII IS THERE NO HELP FOR THESE THINGS? |
3746 | CHAPTER XXVII KROOL"A message from Mr. Byng to say that he may be a little late, but he says will you go on without him? |
3746 | CHAPTER XXXV AT BRINKWORT''S FARM"What are you doing here, Krool?" |
3746 | Ca n''t a saint do a wicked thing, and a sinner do a good thing without being called the one or the other?" |
3746 | Ca n''t you speak and have it over?" |
3746 | Card of thanks for kind services au theatre, eh?" |
3746 | Colonel Rudyard Byng?" |
3746 | Come, what is it, Ian?" |
3746 | Could n''t I get a job holdin''horses, or carryin''a flag, or cleanin''the guns, or nippin''letters about-- couldn''t I, y''r gryce? |
3746 | Could n''t I have me chanct out there? |
3746 | Could she face that look now and through the years to come? |
3746 | Could she help Ian? |
3746 | Could she help him? |
3746 | Could she help him? |
3746 | Could you not see the difference in the needles?" |
3746 | Did Krool steal from the Baas? |
3746 | Did he ask her in order to see if she had any suspicion of himself? |
3746 | Did he defend me?" |
3746 | Did he fancy that he heard a word breathing through her sigh-- his name, Ian? |
3746 | Did he let them"--he nodded towards the hospital--"know he was your husband?" |
3746 | Did he stand up for me? |
3746 | Did he to you-- to any of you?" |
3746 | Did he understand more of women than she thought? |
3746 | Did her outward appearance, then, bear such false evidence? |
3746 | Did his heart cry out for it either in pity-- or in love? |
3746 | Did n''t she say she was glad I posted it?" |
3746 | Did she give evidence?" |
3746 | Did she want to see Rudyard happy, no matter at what cost to Jasmine? |
3746 | Did this elegant and diplomatic person think that all he had to do was to speak, and she would succumb to his blandishment? |
3746 | Did you think I would or could consent to that? |
3746 | Did you think of me in that? |
3746 | Do n''t you see, Jasmine, dearest?" |
3746 | Do n''t you want to?" |
3746 | Do the Boojers fire at him? |
3746 | Do you ever feel that?" |
3746 | Do you hear?" |
3746 | Do you know?" |
3746 | Do you love me still? |
3746 | Do you love me, Jasmine? |
3746 | Do you love me? |
3746 | Do you mind my having a little toast while we talk? |
3746 | Do you remember the day I went to see you when Mr. Mappin came? |
3746 | Do you remember the day you first said to me that something was wrong with it all,--the day that Ian Stafford dined after his return from abroad? |
3746 | Do you remember when I sang for you on the evening of that day he died? |
3746 | Do you think Jasmine would ever forgive you for suspecting her? |
3746 | Do you think that the Baas would want his life through the killing of Piet Graaf by his friend Krool, the slim one from the slime?" |
3746 | Do-- do I love him even now, as we were to- day with his arms round me, or is it only beauty and pleasure and-- me? |
3746 | Does breeding only consist in having clothes made in Savile Row and eating strawberries out of season at a pound a basket?" |
3746 | Does n''t he see-- anything?" |
3746 | Does that look as though there was some one else that mattered-- that mattered?" |
3746 | Fellowes is dead-- does it matter so infinitely, whether by his own hand or that of another?" |
3746 | Fellowes-- when?" |
3746 | Fellowes?" |
3746 | Fellowes?" |
3746 | Had Adrian Fellowes, the rank materialist, the bon viveur, the man- luxury, the courage to kill himself by his own hand? |
3746 | Had he done it? |
3746 | Had he drawn Krool''s eyes to his-- the master- mind influencing the subservient intelligence? |
3746 | Had he not always loved her-- before any one came, before Rudyard came, before the world knew her? |
3746 | Had he-- had he killed Jasmine? |
3746 | Had her Other Self, waking from sleep in the eternal spaces, bethought itself and come to whisper and warn and help? |
3746 | Had her moment come when she could force him to smother his scorn and wait at her door for bounty? |
3746 | Had it brought her happiness, or content, or joy? |
3746 | Had she any glimmering of the real situation? |
3746 | Had she ever given their natures a chance to discover each other? |
3746 | Had she not a comfortable fortune of her own? |
3746 | Had she not said so, shown it, but a moment before? |
3746 | Had the time come when she could pay her debt, the price of ransom from the captivity in which he held her true and secret character? |
3746 | Happily, fate had taken him away for a few hours; and who could tell what might not happen in a few hours? |
3746 | Has any one told the Baas that? |
3746 | Has it come to that?" |
3746 | He believed in you, was so pitifully eager to believe in you even when the letter--""Where is the letter?" |
3746 | He could paint a bit-- don''t you think so?" |
3746 | He fastened the gloomy eyes of the man before him, that he might be able to see any stir of emotion, and said:"It did not come out as you expected?" |
3746 | He is lying there now, and--""Jigger?" |
3746 | He was not man enough to take his own life-- who had killed him? |
3746 | Her eyes flashed-- was it anger, or pique, or hurt, or merely the fire of intellectual combat? |
3746 | How can I send Ian Stafford away? |
3746 | How did it come that Jasmine was so worldly wise, and yet so marvellously the insouciant child? |
3746 | How do you propose to help him? |
3746 | How had he died? |
3746 | How long do you remain in England?" |
3746 | How many years-- or centuries-- was it since he had been in that harvest of death? |
3746 | However, it would look foolish to advertise for a needle which had traces of atric acid on it, would n''t it?" |
3746 | I am a pagan-- would I try to be like her, if I could? |
3746 | I conjecture right, do I?" |
3746 | I did not know that you were here, and--""If you had known I was here, you would not have come?" |
3746 | I do n''t know; but perhaps we could find out if we put our heads together-- eh?" |
3746 | I never saw it there-- did you? |
3746 | I saw her with my own eyes at Cumae, hanging in a jar; and when the boys asked her,''What would you, Sibyl?'' |
3746 | I still believe I have, but cui bono?" |
3746 | I was being tortured with Mr. Mappin''s needle horribly by-- guess whom? |
3746 | I will get him down now, I--""Ian Stafford is here-- in this house?" |
3746 | I will send them myself, and your letters and private papers will not be read.... You feel you can rely on me for that-- eh?" |
3746 | I wonder.... Not then, not then when I deserted him and married Rudyard, but now-- now? |
3746 | I''ll get you something to do, or--""Or bust, y''r gryce?" |
3746 | I''m quite sure the world thinks I''m one of your spent flames, and there never was any fire, not so big as the point of a needle, was there? |
3746 | If I take my own way in the pleasures of life, why should I not take it in the duties and the business of life?" |
3746 | If any one killed Mr. Fellowes, why not you? |
3746 | If it''d make''i m die happy, you''d come, y''r gryce, would n''t y''r?" |
3746 | If not, who killed him? |
3746 | If she could do some great service for him, would not that wipe out the unsettled claim? |
3746 | If she could help to give him success, would not that, in the end, be more to him than herself? |
3746 | In any, or each, or all? |
3746 | In her heart? |
3746 | In her peace? |
3746 | In her pride? |
3746 | In her senses? |
3746 | In love? |
3746 | In the hospital?" |
3746 | Is Rhodes overwhelmed? |
3746 | Is it Krool? |
3746 | Is it agreed? |
3746 | Is it agreed?" |
3746 | Is it not good and glad? |
3746 | Is it not so? |
3746 | Is it not thrilling?" |
3746 | Is it so?" |
3746 | Is it the man that tries to save his homeland from the wolf and the worm? |
3746 | Is it the same as me in my sleep?" |
3746 | Is it wise?" |
3746 | Is n''t there one of you that can be absolutely true? |
3746 | Is that what you want to say?" |
3746 | Is there anything that''s skulking at our heels to hurt us?" |
3746 | It has been arranged, has it, that Rudyard is to believe in me?" |
3746 | It is empty and desolate-- and frightening?" |
3746 | It is not a sudden impulse?" |
3746 | It is, that if we only really knew, we could take our own lives or other people''s with such ease and skill that it would be hard to detect it?" |
3746 | It pleased him prodigiously to feel Stafford lay a firm hand on his arm and say:"Can you, perhaps, dine with me to- night at the Travellers''Club? |
3746 | It was n''t like saving a child from the top of a burning building, was it?" |
3746 | It was rather badly singed, was n''t it?" |
3746 | It''s all guzzle and feed and finery, and nobody cares a copper about anything that matters--""About Cape to Cairo, eh?" |
3746 | Jasmine felt Ian hold his breath for a moment, then he said in a low tone,"M. Mennaval-- you know him well?" |
3746 | Krool to be called into consultation?" |
3746 | Laugh before breakfast and cry before supper, that''s the proverb, is n''t it? |
3746 | Lone and sick are the vagrant souls--( When shall the world come home?)" |
3746 | M. Mennaval had played his game for his own desire, and he had lost; but what had she gained where M. Mennaval had lost? |
3746 | Mappin?" |
3746 | May I dine with you to- night? |
3746 | May I?" |
3746 | Mr. Fellowes is quite right.... Fellowes, wo n''t you go and say that Madame Al''mah will be there in five minutes?" |
3746 | My bonny boy, do you think I wear my gowns for years?" |
3746 | My grandfather? |
3746 | Night or noon? |
3746 | No blood, no wound, just a tiny pin- prick, as it were; and who would be the wiser? |
3746 | No one knows who you are?" |
3746 | No? |
3746 | Not by an effort of the will, as they do in the East, I suppose?" |
3746 | Nothing changed? |
3746 | Now how did I know? |
3746 | Now what about breakfast? |
3746 | Now, did she want to see him-- the last time before he rode away again forever, on that white horse called Death? |
3746 | Now, what does a gown cost, one like that you have on?" |
3746 | Oh, I am so glad, Ian, that our friendship has always been so much on the surface, so''void of offence''--is that the phrase? |
3746 | One kiss, a wrong? |
3746 | One or the other-- but which? |
3746 | Or did he die by his own hand? |
3746 | Or have you only come with a drop of water to cool the tongue of Dives?" |
3746 | Or is it that I am to end here with the war?" |
3746 | Or is it that you are all alike, you women? |
3746 | Or was it Ian Stafford who had done it? |
3746 | Or was it Penalty, or Nemesis, or that Destiny which will have its toll for all it gives of beauty, or pleasure, or pride, or place, or pageantry? |
3746 | Or was it that his deeper Other Self had whispered something to his mind about Krool-- something terrible and malign? |
3746 | Or was it that the catastrophe had come? |
3746 | Out of the agony of conflict would all come right-- for Boer, for Briton, for Rudyard, for Jasmine, for himself, for Al''mah? |
3746 | Please tell me, what was the verdict?" |
3746 | Pride-- what pride had she now? |
3746 | She looks respectable?" |
3746 | She was disturbed-- in her vanity? |
3746 | Sixty thousand pounds-- why?" |
3746 | So it is coming, is it, Johnny Bull; and you do know all about his guns, do you? |
3746 | So it''ll be Cape to Cairo in good time, dear lad, and no damnation, if you please.... Why, what''s got into you? |
3746 | So they let Blantyre into the game, did they?" |
3746 | Some made kindly jests, cheffing each other--"Your fancy, old sly- boots? |
3746 | Somewhat unconventional, was n''t it? |
3746 | Soon, however, he said brusquely,"I hope your friend Jigger is going on all right?" |
3746 | Stafford got and held his visitor''s eyes, and with slow emphasis said:"You think that Fellowes committed suicide with your needle?" |
3746 | Stafford was silent for an instant, then he said:"You have had a look for the little instrument of passage?" |
3746 | Strangers enter the Judgment House--( Why do the sleepers sigh?) |
3746 | Suddenly Byng said with a voice of almost guttural anger:"You dropped that letter on my bedroom floor-- that letter, you understand?... |
3746 | Suppose some one did kill Adrian Fellowes? |
3746 | Tell me, Ian, are you ill, or is it only the reaction after all you''ve done?" |
3746 | Tell me, have you ever sold your clothes to the Mart, or whatever the miserable coffin- shop is called?" |
3746 | That she must go to him? |
3746 | The footman, having delivered himself, turned to withdraw, but Barry Whalen called him back, saying,"Is Mr. Krool in the house?" |
3746 | The last time I saw you in London-- do you remember when it was? |
3746 | The letter-- that letter--""This letter-- this letter, Byng-- are you a fool? |
3746 | The light was gone from the evening sky: but was it gone forever? |
3746 | The mess of pottage at the last? |
3746 | The sjambok for the traitor, eh? |
3746 | The white violets? |
3746 | Then he added, slowly:"Do you remember Mr. Mappin and his poisoned needle at Glencader?" |
3746 | Then he added, with a kind of query in the question apart from the question itself:"Where is the great man-- where''s Stafford to- night?" |
3746 | Then he added:"Tell me, if he does not die, and if-- if he is pardoned by any chance, do you mean to live with him again?" |
3746 | Then he said at last:"Why have you come here? |
3746 | Then she added hastily, with an effort to bear herself with courage:"Where is he? |
3746 | Then, suddenly turning towards him again, she said:"But you are interested in Moravia-- do you find it worth the time?" |
3746 | There was a pause, while Stafford looked composedly at his visitor, and then he said:"Why did n''t it work with the collie?" |
3746 | There was a silence for a moment after he had ended, then some one said:"You think it''s best that you should go? |
3746 | There was, then, more than beauty and wit and great social gift, gaiety and charm, in this delicate personality? |
3746 | There''s my opera- cloak and the breakfast in the prima donna''s boudoir, and--""But, how did you know it was Al''mah?" |
3746 | They were all enraged at Byng because he had disregarded all warnings regarding Krool; but what could they do? |
3746 | Think of how much happiness and how much pain you can give, just by trilling a simple little song with your little voice oh, madame la cantatrice?" |
3746 | Think there''s poison in it?" |
3746 | This was what he had done; but what did he propose to do? |
3746 | To do-- what? |
3746 | To go to her? |
3746 | To which she had responded,"Dear me, are you going to Uganda?" |
3746 | Twelve at noon; twelve at night; the light and the dark-- which will it be for us, Ian? |
3746 | Warning? |
3746 | Was Al''mah there? |
3746 | Was Mr. Mappin there?" |
3746 | Was he in our lines-- a Boer spy?" |
3746 | Was he mistaken in thinking that Krool flashed a look of secret triumph and yet of obscure warning? |
3746 | Was he the sinner? |
3746 | Was he to be her master-- was that the end of it all? |
3746 | Was her work done also? |
3746 | Was it Rudyard? |
3746 | Was it all pity and humanity? |
3746 | Was it for the same reason that brought me here? |
3746 | Was it her husband, after all? |
3746 | Was it her husband-- was it Ian Stafford? |
3746 | Was it her own soul? |
3746 | Was it his desire? |
3746 | Was it not that he loves me, and that he wanted to be deceived, wanted to be forced to do what he has done? |
3746 | Was it not, then, chastened? |
3746 | Was it only luck which had given Rudyard Byng those three millions? |
3746 | Was it possible that she was really interested in him, perhaps because he was different from the average Englishman and not of a general pattern? |
3746 | Was it something you wanted to forget there, some one you wanted to help here?" |
3746 | Was it that which was working in his mind, and making him say hard things about their own two commendable selves? |
3746 | Was it the ancient tyrannical soul in her which would make a thousand women sacrifice themselves for the man she herself set above all others? |
3746 | Was it the everlasting feminine in her which would make a woman sacrifice herself for a man, if need be, in order that he might be happy? |
3746 | Was it very trying? |
3746 | Was it you?" |
3746 | Was it-- was it Jasmine?" |
3746 | Was it...? |
3746 | Was she here to find the solution of all her own problems-- like Stafford-- like Stafford? |
3746 | Was that also in part the cause of her anxiety for Rudyard, and of her sharp disapproval of Jasmine? |
3746 | Was that his duty? |
3746 | Was that the thought in her mind-- that she must go to him? |
3746 | Was there ever a time when she did not want to master us? |
3746 | Was there not also a look of aversion? |
3746 | Well, she owed you a breakfast, at least, did n''t she?" |
3746 | Well?" |
3746 | Were all the household so pained?" |
3746 | Were there, then, some unexplored regions in his nature, where things dwelt, of which she had no glimmering of knowledge? |
3746 | Were you so pained at his punishment? |
3746 | What am I to do?" |
3746 | What are you going to do after the war?" |
3746 | What battery? |
3746 | What can to do?" |
3746 | What could be said or done? |
3746 | What could she do if Rudyard was dead? |
3746 | What did Al''mah''s look mean? |
3746 | What did Krool do? |
3746 | What did he do? |
3746 | What did she see? |
3746 | What do you know of the galleys of Toulon or the days of slavery?" |
3746 | What else should be in war? |
3746 | What else was there to do? |
3746 | What else, Krool?" |
3746 | What had become of Jigger? |
3746 | What had been the governing influence in their marriage where she was concerned? |
3746 | What has come to me? |
3746 | What has happened? |
3746 | What has happened? |
3746 | What has happened?" |
3746 | What have you come to see me about?" |
3746 | What is it you want me to do? |
3746 | What is it? |
3746 | What is it? |
3746 | What is it? |
3746 | What is the matter? |
3746 | What is there left to do? |
3746 | What jury in the world but would convict you on your own evidence? |
3746 | What might the next few days bring forth? |
3746 | What of the future? |
3746 | What right had he to resent this abominable tirade, this loathsome charge by such a beast? |
3746 | What rights have you got in Mrs. Byng''s letters?" |
3746 | What shall I do when the war ends? |
3746 | What should be the means? |
3746 | What should we be doing with ladies here, Gleg?" |
3746 | What sort of thing has been given away to Brother Boer?" |
3746 | What to do? |
3746 | What to do? |
3746 | What to do? |
3746 | What was she going to do when she arrived? |
3746 | What was there to show for the three years? |
3746 | What would happen to Jameson and Willoughby and Bobby White and Raleigh Grey? |
3746 | What would happen to the conspirators of Johannesburg? |
3746 | What would she do? |
3746 | What would she say? |
3746 | What''s the matter, anyhow? |
3746 | What''s the result? |
3746 | What''s''the Mart''?" |
3746 | When Ian Stafford looked at her from the shadow of the railway- station, the question had flashed into his mind, Did she kill him? |
3746 | When do you go down?" |
3746 | When shall I see you again?" |
3746 | When the howitzers with their nice little balls of lyddite physic get opening their bouquets to- morrow--""Who says to- morrow?" |
3746 | When will he be back?" |
3746 | When would the world know that Adrian Fellowes lay dead in the room on the Embankment? |
3746 | When you have got your foot at the top of the ladder, you climb down?" |
3746 | Where are you going, dear?" |
3746 | Where do you come in?" |
3746 | Where was Jasmine? |
3746 | Where was Jigger? |
3746 | Where was Rudyard? |
3746 | Where was Rudyard? |
3746 | Where was her dressing- gown? |
3746 | Where was her maid? |
3746 | Where was the room for pride or vanity? |
3746 | Which?" |
3746 | Who did it? |
3746 | Who did it? |
3746 | Who drank deep, long draughts-- who of all the men and women he had ever known? |
3746 | Who else was there beside herself-- and Jigger? |
3746 | Who else?" |
3746 | Who goes there?" |
3746 | Who had had the primrose path without the rain of fire, the cinders beneath the feet, the gins and the nets spread for them? |
3746 | Who had killed Adrian Fellowes? |
3746 | Who killed him-- Rudyard-- Ian-- who? |
3746 | Who killed him? |
3746 | Who was it killed him? |
3746 | Who was it? |
3746 | Who was to go to South Africa to help in holding things together, and to prevent the worst happening, if possible? |
3746 | Who were her godfathers and godmothers?" |
3746 | Why did he leave me here alone?" |
3746 | Why did he not take me with him? |
3746 | Why did n''t you come to Mr. Scovel''s at midnight, as I told you?" |
3746 | Why did n''t you make me be good? |
3746 | Why did she not hasten to Brinkwort''s Farm? |
3746 | Why did the sight of Krool vex him so? |
3746 | Why did you not say noon, Ian? |
3746 | Why did you not say noon-- noon-- twelve of the clock? |
3746 | Why did you not want to hurt me?" |
3746 | Why had he never suspected her? |
3746 | Why had he not come to her, Why had he not eaten the breakfast which still lay untouched on the table of his study? |
3746 | Why had it not all seemed insincere before? |
3746 | Why had she chosen this song? |
3746 | Why not? |
3746 | Why not? |
3746 | Why not? |
3746 | Why not?" |
3746 | Why should Rudyard insist on his reading it? |
3746 | Why should he be made to seem the one needing forgiveness? |
3746 | Why should he deny himself the pleasure of her society? |
3746 | Why should he make the eternal concession? |
3746 | Why should it be so hard for her? |
3746 | Why should n''t he dine with you a deux? |
3746 | Why should she? |
3746 | Why should this be exacted of him, this futile penalty? |
3746 | Why should you complicate things? |
3746 | Why should you discard motive for his killing himself?" |
3746 | Why so agitated?" |
3746 | Why was it that at that moment he could, with joy, have taken Krool by the neck and throttled him? |
3746 | Why?" |
3746 | Will Rudyard-- can you afford it?" |
3746 | Will let you let me win back your trust-- Ian?" |
3746 | Will the wronger, at this last of all, Dare to say,''I did wrong,''rising in his fall? |
3746 | Will there be trouble?" |
3746 | Will you not live it all out to the end? |
3746 | Wo n''t you come to- morrow at six?" |
3746 | Would Adrian volunteer? |
3746 | Would have chastened? |
3746 | Would you like to put it into the fire also?" |
3746 | Yet might it not be that here and there people were permanently happy? |
3746 | Yet what was the end to be? |
3746 | You are a woman in a million, and--""May I come and breakfast with you some morning?" |
3746 | You are prepared to fulfil it?" |
3746 | You did n''t by any chance find the needle, I suppose?" |
3746 | You did think it all out in the second, did n''t you?" |
3746 | You do n''t mind that from an old friend, do you? |
3746 | You do not want it? |
3746 | You have done this for me, but what have I done for you? |
3746 | You have n''t heard to the contrary, I hope? |
3746 | You have tried to think of what is best, I know, but have you thought of me? |
3746 | You never heard that sound? |
3746 | You remember how La Tosca killed Scarpia? |
3746 | You remember how she felt? |
3746 | You understand why I did what I did?" |
3746 | You want me to begin again with Rudyard: and you do not want me to begin again-- with you?" |
3746 | You want to go to Johannesburg?" |
3746 | You were married to Blantyre?" |
3746 | You will let me make all England envious of me, wo n''t you? |
3746 | You will not turn a cold shoulder on me, will you? |
3746 | You will tell me to- morrow at five, will you not, belle amie? |
3746 | You would n''t, perhaps, tell us what the poison is, Mr. Mappin? |
3746 | You''ll do what I say?" |
3746 | Your tongue will get you into trouble some day.... You''ve seen Wallstein this morning-- and Fleming?" |
3746 | he asked almost musingly; then, as if recalling what she had said, he added:"Do you mind telling me exactly what is your interest in Blantyre?" |
3746 | he asked, and when she nodded and smiled, he added,"''E''s''appy now, ai n''t''e?" |
3746 | where?" |
46856 | ''''Twas I, poor I'', the fainting virgin said,''Why was I forced from Rhadamanthus''hall?'' |
46856 | ''Ah me,''quoth she,''and is it truth I hear? |
46856 | ''Am I an infidel? |
46856 | ''Anywhere?'' |
46856 | ''Are you so dainty- toothèd,''quoth mine host,''That country victuals will not down with you? |
46856 | ''But is he dead?'' |
46856 | ''Can this be The voice of my Bellame? |
46856 | ''Could one fancy Milton parodying_ Lycidas_?'' |
46856 | ''Devil or friar, whatsoe''er thou art, What taunting language dost thou give to me? |
46856 | ''Disdain?'' |
46856 | ''Dost call for mercy,''says Albino,''now? |
46856 | ''Fore''?] |
46856 | ''Have I'', says he,''such Crassian heaps of gold, Condemned to sleep in iron- ribbèd chests? |
46856 | ''How long Hast tink''ring used?'' |
46856 | ''How now? |
46856 | ''How rested ye amidst those gloomy shades?'' |
46856 | ''Lilies''equalling''cheeks''? |
46856 | ''Madam, what passion does untune your mind? |
46856 | ''Madam,''says he,''why pay you reverence? |
46856 | ''Peace, good my lord,''Don Rivelezzo says,''What uncouth passion doth your soul entrance? |
46856 | ''Smart?'' |
46856 | ''Speak truth, Bellama, has thy heart, as voice, Decreed that youthful monk thine only choice?'' |
46856 | ''Well,''quoth Bellama,''will you me discard, 3510 When for your sake I''ve run through all disasters? |
46856 | ''Well,''quoth mine host,''but pray your worship, hark, May not two men be like? |
46856 | ''What tipsied fellows at my door do beat Thus early,''quoth mine host,''is this your manners? |
46856 | ''Where dwell''st thou?'' |
46856 | ''Who was''t, quoth he,''that, with commanding air, Snatch''d me forth''arms of Proserpina fair?'' |
46856 | ''Why, lovely maid, did ever I behold Before this time'', quoth he,''your comely face?'' |
46856 | ''Why,''says Bellama,''has a ghost no lips? |
46856 | ''Wouldst thou rub alabaster with hands sable,''Or spread a diaper cloth on dirty table? |
46856 | ''came''--from the rhyme an obvious misprint, but why''lanky''? |
46856 | ''ladies''?] |
46856 | ''s( it is surely not Boethius?) |
46856 | ''tis poor, why do I question so? |
46856 | ( If you be sober) Is it valour, say, To overcome, and then to run away? |
46856 | ( but who can him forget?) |
46856 | ----------------But who can comprehend The raptures of thy voice, and miracles of thy hand? |
46856 | 10 And twice my aims by thy assistance raise, Conferring first the merit, then the praise? |
46856 | 10 By Scotch invasion to be made a prey To such pigwiggin myrmidons as they? |
46856 | 10 Can wedlock know so great a curse As putting husbands out to nurse? |
46856 | 10 Could all thy oaths, and mortgag''d trust, Vanish? |
46856 | 10 Go, get some ratsbane!--''twill not do, Nay, drink some aqua- fortis too: No witch shall take thy life away; Who dares say, Go, when I bid Stay? |
46856 | 10 In whom assistance shall I find? |
46856 | 10 Was Nature fond of its large character And those divine impressions graven there? |
46856 | 10 What hopes that I to pity should incline Another''s breast, who can move none in thine? |
46856 | 10 What pleasure is there in a kiss To him that doubts the heart''s not his? |
46856 | 10 Who reconciled the Covenant''s doubtful sense, The Commons''argument, or the City''s pence? |
46856 | 10 Why is the clearest and best judging mind In her own ills''prevention dark and blind? |
46856 | 10 Why should we the heart deny As many objects as the eye? |
46856 | 100 Resolve me now what spirit hath delight, If by full feed you kill the appetite? |
46856 | 100 Who would not laugh at one will naked go,''Cause in old hangings truth is pictur''d so? |
46856 | 1090 Must I vail bonnet unto ermine men? |
46856 | 10_ Orph._ Why comes not then Eurydice? |
46856 | 110 He is demanded why he thus does bawl''Gainst soaring wits, not worms that earthly crawl? |
46856 | 110 How did you fawn upon, and court the rout, Whose clamour carried your whole plot about? |
46856 | 120 Was not the King''s dishonour your intent, By slanders to traduce his Government? |
46856 | 130 What tribute to thy precious memory pay? |
46856 | 1800 Suspect a friend, deceit with friendship rest? |
46856 | 2._[ 11?] |
46856 | 20 Could not the winds to countermand thy death With their whole card of lungs redeem thy breath? |
46856 | 20 How can thy fortress ever stand If''t be not manned? |
46856 | 20 Who would not think that head a pair That breeds such factions in the hair? |
46856 | 20_ Shepherd._ Alas what cunning could decline What force can love repel? |
46856 | 2130 Felice, smiling at the porter, said,''Hath time with iron jaws eat out this part Which now these masons do repair by art?'' |
46856 | 30 For wants he heat, or light? |
46856 | 30 How should that plant, whose leaf is bath''d in tears, Bear but a bitter fruit in elder years? |
46856 | 30 Is not the universe strait- laced When I can clasp it in the waist? |
46856 | 30 O could not all thy purchas''d victories Like to thy fame thy flesh immortalize? |
46856 | 30 What is''t I envy not? |
46856 | 3120 Why didst thou not at my loud summons rise? |
46856 | 3240 And all thy thoughts erstwhile triumphant rid? |
46856 | 3540 What symptoms of affections did I show? |
46856 | 3560 Did not thine own voice that saint- secret seem? |
46856 | 40 But was he dead? |
46856 | 40 How could success such villanies applaud? |
46856 | 40 When wilt th''ha''done? |
46856 | 440 The press successively gives birth to verse, Shall steely tombs outlive the buckram hearse? |
46856 | 50 What need we baths, what need we bower or grove? |
46856 | 50 What? |
46856 | 530 Only t''enrich themselves? |
46856 | 590 Did I delight in vestments coarse and old, Wherein Anthropophages have dug them nests? |
46856 | 60 The ghastly King, what has he done? |
46856 | 90 When did great Julius, in any clime, Achieve so much, and in so small a time? |
46856 | 980 I tell thee there''s not one small worth of hers But loudly says that foppish Nature errs In other beauties: nor is this all, for why? |
46856 | :_ Non nasci, aut quam citissime mori._]_ The Dirge._ What is th''existence of Man''s life But open war, or slumber''d strife? |
46856 | =''_ armoured_ by fear against the briars''?] |
46856 | A strange induction: call all ladies lewd,''Cause Flora and some few to Venice went? |
46856 | A weeping evening blurs a smiling day, Yet why should heads of gold have feet of clay? |
46856 | Albin'', encount''ring her, says,''Lovely maid, Was''t your small voice that did Albino call?'' |
46856 | Albino says,''What frenzy damps thy reason? |
46856 | Albino, is your doublet grown Too straight'', says she,''that you do puff and swell? |
46856 | An decus, ingenium, tua laus, tua facta, peribunt? |
46856 | And am I sure I wake? |
46856 | And does Jehovah think on such a one, Does he behold him from his mighty Throne? |
46856 | And dost thou now, venerable oak, Decline at Death''s unhappy stroke? |
46856 | And drown my fortunes? |
46856 | And dubbed me by your knot the Red- rose Knight? |
46856 | And now at last what''s the result of all? |
46856 | And shall I him, hail''d by unworthy pelf, Take to rule me, who can not rule himself? |
46856 | And shall I melt my heart with secret grief? |
46856 | And since that is already thine, what need I to re- give it by some newer deed? |
46856 | And that gay thing the Diadem? |
46856 | And that great piece of sense, As rich in loyalty as eloquence, Brought to the test, be found a trick of state? |
46856 | And truth it was, Felice, Folco''s heir, Flying the disaster of an hated tede, Couched in disguises at a cottage bare( But how? |
46856 | And virtue by the herald be controlled? |
46856 | And were''t not pity But both should serve the yardwand of the City? |
46856 | And what can suns give more? |
46856 | And what is verse, but an effeminate vent Either of lust or discontent? |
46856 | And where your soul, what more divine?) |
46856 | And where''s the stoic can his wrath appease, To see his country sick of Pym''s disease? |
46856 | And who so just that does not sometimes try To turn pure painter and deceive the eye? |
46856 | And why a tenant to this vile disguise Which who but sees, blasphemes thee with his eyes? |
46856 | And''gainst Bardino levied all your spite? |
46856 | And, after this sad purgatory, must My hopes be laid i''th''dust for want of dust? |
46856 | Are not the floated meadows ever seen To flourish soonest, and hold longest green? |
46856 | Are the monks thirsty? |
46856 | Are thy strong lines and mighty cart- rope things Now spun so small, they''ll twist on fiddle strings? |
46856 | Are you Sir Thomas and Sir Martin too? |
46856 | Are you a virgin?'' |
46856 | At home, you were already crown''d with bays: Why foreign trophies do you seek to raise? |
46856 | Ay, marry sir, when have you had any yet? |
46856 | Because of mortifications? |
46856 | Bellama craved a blessing, they it gave; Then Rivelezzo he did softly ask If the monastic roof should be her grave? |
46856 | Bellama slights, what then? |
46856 | Bid sleep goodnight, quiet and rest adieu, 1860 Made myself no self to entitle you? |
46856 | But I must chide thee, friend: how canst thou be A patron, yet a foe to poetry? |
46856 | But after all why should she_ not_?] |
46856 | But are we tantalized? |
46856 | But can a knighthood on a knighthood lie? |
46856 | But can his spacious virtue find a grave Within th''imposthumed bubble of a wave? |
46856 | But do the brotherhood then play their prizes Like mummers in religion with disguises, Out- brave us with a name in rank and file? |
46856 | But does he love? |
46856 | But grasping only air she shrilly cried,''Art fled, Albino, from thy sweetheart''s side?'' |
46856 | But hold-- Why do these tears steal from my eyes? |
46856 | But if such moving powers my accents have, Why first my own redress do I not crave? |
46856 | But in 57- 8 The text, which is_ 1677_, is better than_ 1653_: Or can the sight be deaf_ if she but speak_, A well- tuned face, such moving rhetoric? |
46856 | But in a fit of lunacy did rave As though thy wit had ta''en some new disguise? |
46856 | But is this bigamy of titles due? |
46856 | But name the sum, and I obey: Say: Wilt thou for my ransom take An hecatomb? |
46856 | But peace, Bellama, dost thou think it fit To value at so mean a price thy pearl? |
46856 | But since w''are all called Papists, why not date Devotion to the rags thus consecrate? |
46856 | But stay: does greatness use to be denied? |
46856 | But what repair wilt thou, unhappy Thames, Afford our loss? |
46856 | But whence, fair soul, this passion? |
46856 | But whether Cleveland''s or his vindicators''who shall say?] |
46856 | But why do I upon the Ela raise Thy noble worth, and yet intend to woo? |
46856 | But why, my Muse, like a green- sickness girl, Feed''st thou on coals and dirt? |
46856 | But, as has been so frequently asked,''Why not?'' |
46856 | But, prithee, what is Rhadamanthus fell, And she whom thou didst Proserpina call?'' |
46856 | But, since th''eternal Law will have it so, That Monarchs prove at last but finer clay, What can their humble vassals do? |
46856 | But-- why should suspicion steal into my breast? |
46856 | By the way, did Butler borrow this''iron''and''environ''rhyme from Cleveland?] |
46856 | Can I bestow it, or will woe Forsake me, when I bid it go? |
46856 | Can a groan Be quavered out by soft division? |
46856 | Can ghost have natural sons? |
46856 | Can it be''oathèd''--be sworn either to the commission of the peace or something else that gave the title''Esquire''? |
46856 | Can not your chops a boneless pudding chew? |
46856 | Can thy proud fancy stoop to penny rimes? |
46856 | Can your eyes want nose When from each cheek buds forth a fragrant rose? |
46856 | Canst think I''ll choose a pebble, slight a pearl, Marry a threadbare cowl and scorn an earl? |
46856 | Canst thou give credit to his zeal and love That went to Heaven, and to those flames above, Wrapt in a fiery chariot? |
46856 | Canst thou prove Ballad- poet of the times? |
46856 | Clothing his face with impudence, his looks With pride, and with high self- conceit( his books, So are his words, he speaks in print)''Why? |
46856 | Could not all these protect thee? |
46856 | Could not thy early trophies in stern fight Torn from the Dane, the Pole, the Moscovite? |
46856 | Daunt? |
46856 | Demanding how coy Fortune dealt with him, And who she was that was so passing trim? |
46856 | Did not you in mysterious postures woo me? |
46856 | Did not your wish glue feathers on your feet To thread a casement when I paced the street? |
46856 | Did she, lest we should spoil''t( to waive that sin),''Cause''twas the best edition, call it in? |
46856 | Did thy cloy''d appetite urge thee to try If any other man could love as I? |
46856 | Did you for this_ Lift up your hands on high_, To kill the King, and pluck down Monarchy? |
46856 | Didst ever see an eye Which checked the beams of awful majesty? |
46856 | Do I dread The starry Throne and Majesty Of that high God, Who batters kingdoms with an iron rod, And makes the mountains stagger with a nod? |
46856 | Does it refer to Wessex or Devonshire dialect of the day, or to old West Saxon? |
46856 | Dost scold?'' |
46856 | Dost see 950 Yon house of little worth, and lesser height? |
46856 | Dost see yon tender webs Arachne spins, Through which with ease the lusty bumbles break, But to the feeble gnats that mesh their gins? |
46856 | Dost see yon tow''ring hills, yon spreading trees, Which wrap their lofty heads in clouds? |
46856 | Dost think a jewel of ten thousand weight Can dwell within that sooty carcanet? |
46856 | Dost think an earth- born beauty can be found, Which darts forth lustre from the sullen ground-- 960 To kiss the glorious skies? |
46856 | Dost think humility resides with me? |
46856 | Dost think the gaudy sun each night does set And riseth from yon roof? |
46856 | Dost think the moon, With double horn and glitt''ring tapers, soon Will issue thence? |
46856 | Dost think? |
46856 | Doth not each look a flash of lightning feel Which spares the body''s sheath, and melts the steel? |
46856 | Durst touch the hallowed water, spittle, salt, The cross or pax, and yet attempt this fault? |
46856 | Fair maid, what hatred frosteth your desires? |
46856 | Far more than this? |
46856 | For tankard stands?] |
46856 | For what tongue ever durst, but ours, translate Great Tully''s eloquence, or Homer''s state? |
46856 | For who shall say to thy dead clay, I love thee? |
46856 | For, can you want a palate in your eyes, When each of hers contains a double prize, Venus''s apple? |
46856 | Hard- hearted Parthenissa, why? |
46856 | Have I made envious art admire thy worth, Touched the Ela of praise t''emblazon''t forth? |
46856 | Have I not cause t''exclaim on Poesy? |
46856 | Have they usurped what Royal Judah had, And now must Levi too part stakes with Gad? |
46856 | Have you beheld a hound in sudden fright, Whom powder feared, or else the staff did beat, How oft he turns, and looks, yet keeps on flight? |
46856 | Have you beheld the stately- pacing stag, Flying the echoes of some deep- mouthed hounds? |
46856 | Have you forgot? |
46856 | Have you not heard the abominable sport A Lancaster grand- jury will report? |
46856 | Have you not seen how the divided dam Runs to the summons of her hungry lamb; But when the twin cries halves, she quits the first? |
46856 | Have you not seen my gentle lad, Whom every swain did love, Cheerful, when every swain was sad, Beneath the melancholy grove? |
46856 | He that has these perfections, needs no more; What treasures can be added to his store? |
46856 | He that the noble Percy''s blood inherits, Will he strike up a Hotspur of the spirits? |
46856 | How camest thou to lack This sign in thy prophetic almanac? |
46856 | How can I speak that twice am checked By this and that religious sect? |
46856 | How can he turn religious, and adore That God he so devoutly mock''d before? |
46856 | How did you thank seditious men that came To bring petitions which yourselves did frame? |
46856 | How does a dropsy melt him to a flood, Making each vein run water more than blood? |
46856 | How is the faint impression of each good Drown''d in the vicious channel of our blood? |
46856 | How is''t he''scapes your inquisition free Since bound up in the Bible''s livery? |
46856 | How long dwell here? |
46856 | How long, Lord, must I stay? |
46856 | How many ages has those Greeks survived( Than all their predecessors longer lived), Which showed their noble worths at Ilium''s grave? |
46856 | How many melting kisses skip''Twixt thy male and female lip-- Twixt thy upper brush of hair And thy nether beard''s despair? |
46856 | How should Love''s zealot then forbear To be your silenced minister? |
46856 | How stopp''st thine ears? |
46856 | How would thy centre take my sense When admiration doth commence At the extreme circumference? |
46856 | How, Providence? |
46856 | I cannot----_ Orph._ And why wilt thou not draw near? |
46856 | I have not wealth( nor do I want), what then? |
46856 | I in bright tissues, thou in armour shine? |
46856 | I saw, when last I clos''d my eyes, Celinda stoop t''another''s will; If specious Apprehension kill, What would the truth without disguise? |
46856 | I vow her service, but she slights me, why? |
46856 | I wonder if Gray knew the piece, especially Stanza III?] |
46856 | I''th''name of Rabbi Abraham, what art? |
46856 | If Argus, with a hundred eyes, not one Could guard, hop''st thou to keep thine, who hast none? |
46856 | If Hymen''s slaves, whose ears are bored, Thus constant by compulsion be, Why should not choice endear us more Than them their hard necessity? |
46856 | If not, why is Thy thunder slow to strike The cursed authors? |
46856 | If now she grievèd for Don Fuco''s task? |
46856 | If thy friend have wronged thee, how canst thou say, thou art not able to endure his company, when imprisonment might constrain thee to it? |
46856 | If, after two years''bondage, now she would 2000 Answer more kindly to the voice of gold? |
46856 | Is all this meat Cooked by a limner for to view, not eat? |
46856 | Is it all one, to please, and to provoke? |
46856 | Is it in vain to make your altar smoke? |
46856 | Is it not a shame Our Commonwealth, like to a Turkish dame, Should have an eunuch guardian? |
46856 | Is it not time to polish then our Welsh When hinds and peasants such invectives belch? |
46856 | Is not my daughter Maudge as fine a maid? |
46856 | Is there no order in the work of Fate? |
46856 | Is there no pleasure dwells in spirits''veins? |
46856 | Is there such odds? |
46856 | Is there within these courts a shade so dear As he that calls thee? |
46856 | Is''t come to this? |
46856 | Is''t not enough vainly to hope and woo, That thou shouldst thus deny that vain hope too? |
46856 | It apparently must be as in text:''skill''t''for''skill''st''=''dost thou[ or''does it''] signify?''] |
46856 | It would make an interesting examination question,''How much must a man drink in a day in order to hasten his death thereby twelve years afterwards?'' |
46856 | Keep the stars order still? |
46856 | Know they how not to err? |
46856 | Let the Swede beat the Dane, Or be beaten again, What am I in the crowd of the Nations? |
46856 | Like chemists''tinctures, proved adulterate? |
46856 | Like pris''ners, why do we those fetters shake; Which neither thou, nor I can break? |
46856 | Make me a town- talk? |
46856 | Man of business, why so muddy? |
46856 | Many a time she made me die, Yet( would you think''t?) |
46856 | Marry come up!--Shall thy bold pride The mysteries of the Gods deride? |
46856 | Mine weep down pious beads, but why should I Confine them to the Muse''s rosary? |
46856 | Mr. Simpson, however, quotes R. Fletcher in_ Ex Otio Negotium_, 1656, p. 202,''The model of the new Religion'': How many Queere- religions? |
46856 | Must Hymen stoop unto the nods of gold? |
46856 | Must I be doomèd to the barren willow? |
46856 | Must all are to thy hell condemn''d sustain A double torture of despair and pain? |
46856 | Must now thy poems be made fidlers''notes, Puffed with Tobacco through their sooty throats? |
46856 | Must slights and_ nescios_ now be my reward? |
46856 | Must thou be whirled away? |
46856 | Must thou likewise be As disputable in thy pedigree? |
46856 | Must we abjure all youth, born, bury this? |
46856 | My lovely Ligurinus, why? |
46856 | Nay, by Barraba sent invitements to me? |
46856 | Nay, what''s that sun but, in a different name, A coal- pit rampant, or a mine on flame? |
46856 | Nay, wish''d there were no tavern- juice, or sports, Or change of fashions, but in princes''courts? |
46856 | Nearchus understands his game, If he resolves to quit his fame, What''s that to you? |
46856 | No quite forgotten hold, to lie Obscur''d, and pass the reck''ning by? |
46856 | Nor claim''d the Church as then a greater part In me than others, bate my title Art-- But now the scene is changed? |
46856 | Nor rule, but blindly to anticipate Our growing seasons? |
46856 | Now which of these is to be preferred? |
46856 | O wherefore is the most discerning eye Unapt to make its own discovery? |
46856 | O wherefore since we must in order rise, Should we not fall in equal obsequies? |
46856 | On palaces why should I set my mind, Imprison''d in this body''s mould''ring clay? |
46856 | One naturally asks''beach''? |
46856 | Only to gild with rays his proper sphere? |
46856 | Or are ye given unto Venus play? |
46856 | Or by what hidden influence Of powers in one combin''d, Dost thou rob Love of either sense, Made deaf as well as blind? |
46856 | Or can your sight be deaf to such a quick And well- tuned face, such moving rhetoric? |
46856 | Or canst thou think The queen of beauty dwells in such a chink? |
46856 | Or did the water your wise noddles scald, Which your devotions and hot zeal did heat? |
46856 | Or did thy fierce ambition long to make Some lover turn a martyr for thy sake? |
46856 | Or do the_ Iuncto_ leap at truss a fayle? |
46856 | Or freezing in thy breast, What Martyrs, in wish''d flames that die, Are half so pleas''d or blest? |
46856 | Or from what vow did thy assurance grow? |
46856 | Or how can the griev''d patient look for ease, When the physician suffers the disease? |
46856 | Or is''t a dream which wakeneth into tears? |
46856 | Or misprint for''bea_u_-manors''? |
46856 | Or waddling ducks o''ertop the tow''ring crane? |
46856 | Or was''t ambition that this damned fact Should tell the world you know the sins you act? |
46856 | Or was''t because my love to thee was such, I could not choose but blab it? |
46856 | Or when the kiss thou gav''st me last My soul stole in its breath, 10 What life would sooner be embrac''d Than so desir''d a death? |
46856 | Or where a poor man''s cause no right obtains? |
46856 | Or why should You( of all) attempt the cure, Whose facts nor Gospel''s test nor Law''s endure? |
46856 | Or, if she needs must love, why did she scowl Upon state- satins, and embrace a cowl? |
46856 | Pray tell us( those that can), What fruits have grown From all Your seeds in blood and treasure sown? |
46856 | Pray, Gaffer Cowlists, why are ye so bald To cool your_ pia maters_ in a sweat? |
46856 | Pray, what was Merlin''s father? |
46856 | Presumption too? |
46856 | Query, a favourite word of Chadderton? |
46856 | Quoth she, with blushes carpeting her cheek,''And is that question, prithee, yet to ask? |
46856 | Rainolds._ Stay, lovely boy, why fly''st thou me That languish in these flames for thee? |
46856 | Rivers than crystal clearer, when to ice Congeal''d, why do weak judgements so despise? |
46856 | Ronan''s Well_? |
46856 | Sack stately towns, silk banners spread, Gallop their coursers o''er the dead? |
46856 | Say I should turn my Chloe off, And take poor Lydia home again? |
46856 | Say, Og, is''t meet Penance bear date after the winding sheet? |
46856 | Say, my young sophister, what think''st of this? |
46856 | Say, what could urge this Fate? |
46856 | Says Jupiter,''See ye not other trades, Learnings, and sciences, have constant springs, Summers and autumns without winterings? |
46856 | Seest thou the wingèd Trumpeters withal, That kick the World''s blue tottering Ball? |
46856 | Shall I embrace A crocodile, or place My choice affections on the fatal dart, That stabs me to the heart? |
46856 | Shall I presume, Without perfume, My Christ to meet That is all sweet? |
46856 | Shall curls adorn my head, an helmet thine? |
46856 | Shall just revenge in my soft bosom die? |
46856 | She rules by omnipresence, and shall we Deny a prince the same ubiquity? |
46856 | Since''tis my doom, Love''s undershrieve, Why this reprieve? |
46856 | So many cards i''th''stock, and yet be bilked? |
46856 | So, stepping forward, cries,''Injurious slave, Unto what baseness does thy folly tempt her?'' |
46856 | Syriac? |
46856 | Tell me, dear son, why didst thou die And leave''s to write an elegy? |
46856 | Tethys? |
46856 | That Isaac might stroke his beard and sit Judge of[ Greek: eis Haidou] and_ elegerit_? |
46856 | That famous lie, you a Remonstrance name; Were not reproaches your malicious aim? |
46856 | That stomach healthi''st is, that ne''er was cloy''d, Why not that Love the best then, ne''er enjoy''d? |
46856 | That, after all this time, thou shouldst repent Thy fairest blessing to the continent? |
46856 | The Bays, the Palms, the Fighting men, And written Scroll?--Come tell me then, 10 Did thy o''er- curious eye e''er see An apter scheme of Misery? |
46856 | The Wheel and Balance, which are tied To th''Gold, black Clouds on either side? |
46856 | The antipodes wear their shoes on their heads, And why may not we in their imitation? |
46856 | The flying Globe, the Glass thereon, Those fragments of a Skeleton? |
46856 | The questions were proposed--"Who? |
46856 | The testy father, with a furrowed brow, Comes to Bellama with demanding why? |
46856 | The wind that still in Aulis holds my dear, Why was it not so cross to keep him here? |
46856 | The_ D.N.B._ allows( with a?) |
46856 | Then love he does: but must this action, woo, Be tied by patent only unto men? |
46856 | Then my complaint how canst thou hear, Or I this passion fly, Since thou imprison''d hast thine ear, And not confin''d thine eye? |
46856 | Then say, fair lady, truth I do not jeer, Will you be wedded to a scarleteer?'' |
46856 | Then says Apollo( meaning to make sport)''What occupation use you, art, or trade? |
46856 | Then what''s the proudest Monarch''s glittering robe, Or what''s he, more than I, that rul''d the globe? |
46856 | Then, starting up her substance fair to catch, 1760 He lost the shadow, and did rave again:''Can grovelling brambles lofty cedars scratch? |
46856 | Then[ I] pray you( in truth it is no gull) 4210 Will you be married to a tinker''s trull?'' |
46856 | They are the Gospel''s life- guard; but for them, The garrison of New Jerusalem, What would the brethren do? |
46856 | Think you I have some plot upon my peace, I would this bondage change for a release? |
46856 | Think''st thou stern Fate will suffer such a wrong? |
46856 | This I would do: but what will our desire avail When active heat and vigour fail? |
46856 | This was their guest- bed, and there was no other, 3790 Think you Bellama then lodged with her brother? |
46856 | Thou Love( what should I call thee?) |
46856 | Thou art fondly vain, My wavering thoughts thus to molest, Why should my pleasure be the only pain, That must torment my easy breast? |
46856 | Thou art the curléd lock of Antichrist; Rubbish of Babel; for who will not say Tongues were confounded in& c.? |
46856 | Thou who alone Canst, yet wilt grant no ease, Why slight''st thou one To feed a new disease? |
46856 | Though tempests rise, and earthquakes make The giddy World''s foundation shake? |
46856 | Three tenents clap while five hang on the tayle? |
46856 | Thy power on him why hop''st thou more Than his on me should be? |
46856 | Thyself with vain applause why shouldst thou please, Or dote on Fame, which fools may take from thee? |
46856 | To be grand factor in the frozen borders For them whose decks do make old ocean froth? |
46856 | To force you from your firmest bases reel, What from the strokes of Chance shall you secure, When rocks of Innocence are so unsure? |
46856 | To sell thyself dost thou intend 10 By candle end, And hold the contract thus in doubt, Life''s taper out? |
46856 | To thy full learning how can all allow Just praise, unless that all were learn''d as thou? |
46856 | To what serve Laws, where only Money reigns? |
46856 | V. When will the frowning Heav''n begin to smile? |
46856 | V. Would I descry Those radiant mansions''bove the sky, Invisible by mortal eye? |
46856 | Verse chemically weeps; that pious rain Distilled with art is but the sweat o''th''brain Whoever sobbed in numbers? |
46856 | Was I not bosomed more than parents, fair? |
46856 | Was Whiting reminiscent of_ The Nun''s Priest''s Tale_ here?] |
46856 | Was ever stomach that lack''d meat Nourish''d by what another eat? |
46856 | Was it for this you left your leaner soil, Thus to lard Israel with Egypt''s spoil? |
46856 | Was there no way to punish me for sin But by a maid? |
46856 | Wast thou so poor in Nymphs, that thy moist love Must be maintain''d with pensions from above? |
46856 | Weep, Oriana, weep, for who does know Whether we e''er shall meet again below? |
46856 | Were not thy virtue nor thy valour charms To guard thy body from those outward harms Which could not reach thy soul? |
46856 | Wert thou e''er young? |
46856 | Wert thou served up two in one dish, the rather To split thy sire into a double father? |
46856 | What actions gainful birth unto thy hope? |
46856 | What better warrant than desired to do''t? |
46856 | What can be free from Love''s imperious laws When painted shadows real flames can cause? |
46856 | What can we now expect? |
46856 | What castle was besieg''d, what Port, what Town, You were not sure to carry ere sat down? |
46856 | What charm, what magic vapour can it be That checks his rays to this apostasy? |
46856 | What door to thy presumption did I ope? |
46856 | What fellow- feeling can there be In such a strange disparity? |
46856 | What fiend''( says he)''in you thus rails on greatness? |
46856 | What firmer seal than language, lip, and hand? |
46856 | What flame, since my love''s thine, can call my own? |
46856 | What forfeit have I made of word or vow, That I am rack''d on thy displeasure now? |
46856 | What mean those Blades( whom we adore) To stain the Earth with purple gore? |
46856 | What meant the man? |
46856 | What medicine or what cordial can be got For thee, who poison''st thy best antidote? |
46856 | What must I pay? |
46856 | What part can I have in thy luminous cone? |
46856 | What reason canst thou have to prize The dearest object of thine eyes? |
46856 | What reverence, what devotion can we pay, When these, our earthly Gods, are snatch''d away? |
46856 | What steams of envy choke bright Venus''lamp? |
46856 | What strange dilemmas doth Rebellion make? |
46856 | What strength can fate''s decree revoke? |
46856 | What then? |
46856 | What think ye of the gods, to whose huge name The pagans bow''d their humble knees? |
46856 | What though Albino''s dead? |
46856 | What though hereafter it may prove their lot To be compared with Iscariot? |
46856 | What though my leprous soul no Jordan can Recure, nor floods of the lav''d Ocean Make clean? |
46856 | What though our fields present a naked sight? |
46856 | What though the sky be clouded o''er, And Heav''us influence smile no more? |
46856 | What though thy mistress far from marble be? |
46856 | What timorous man would n''t be pleas''d to die, To make so noble a discovery? |
46856 | What tyrannic mistress dare To one beauty love confine, Who, unbounded as the air, All may court but none decline? |
46856 | What wailings do I hear, what paleness see? |
46856 | What would you mend? |
46856 | What wouldst thou have me say? |
46856 | What''s Judgement then, but public merchandise? |
46856 | What''s all that Gold and sparkling Stones To that bald Skull, to those Cross Bones? |
46856 | What? |
46856 | What? |
46856 | What? |
46856 | What? |
46856 | When any man insults o''er me, shall I Put finger in mine eye and cry? |
46856 | When o''er the Germans first his Eagle towr''d, What saw the legions which on them he pour''d? |
46856 | When shall I clasp thee in these arms of mine, These longing arms, and lie dissolv''d in thine? |
46856 | When shall I have thee by thyself alone, To learn the wondrous actions thou hast done? |
46856 | When th''prison''s full, what next can be But the Grand Gaol- Delivery? |
46856 | When thy soft accents through mine ear Into my soul do fly, What Angel would not quit his sphere, To hear such harmony? |
46856 | Whence came Their immortalities but from a shade, But from those portraitures the painter made? |
46856 | Where are th''Elysian shades, thou tott''red thief? |
46856 | Where didst encage thine eyes? |
46856 | Where ever durst you strike, if you met foes Whose valour did your odds in men oppose? |
46856 | Where he espied Bellama rove about Crying,''Albino, dost thou fly from me?'' |
46856 | Where''s my wife? |
46856 | Wherefore created were those glorious lights, Which in the azure firmament appear? |
46856 | Which is the better, Cupid, or thy book? |
46856 | Which of you all did more majestic show, Or wore the garland on a sweeter brow? |
46856 | Who asked the banns''twixt these discoloured mates? |
46856 | Who bribed your full face- gazings? |
46856 | Who feeted that enigma, whose kind air Spake me the only high in thy esteem? |
46856 | Who hath a pencil to express the Saint But he hath eyes too, washing off the paint? |
46856 | Who in pleuretic passions does deny 1960 To open veins, to shut death out o''th''doors? |
46856 | Who readeth Ovid''s Metamorphosin, And thinks not Moses''soul was sheathèd in 310 His body by a transmigration? |
46856 | Who said,''Conrade, why was your stay so long? |
46856 | Who says the soul gives out her gests, or goes A flitting progress''twixt the head and toes? |
46856 | Who will not in sharp fevers Galen try, To weaken humours, and unstop the pores? |
46856 | Who would in wisdom choose the Torrid Zone Therein to settle a plantation? |
46856 | Who would not die upon the spot? |
46856 | Who would not thy soft yoke sustain, And bow beneath thy easy chain, That with a bondage bless''d might be, Which far transcends all liberty? |
46856 | Who would not twice ten minutes in a brook Chin- high and thirsty stand, to be a duke?'' |
46856 | Who''d dote on gold? |
46856 | Who, when Sir Cupid enters at the eye, With pride and coy disdain shuts comfort forth? |
46856 | Why are you guilty of th''adoring sin? |
46856 | Why burns my heart her scorned sacrifice, Whose breast is hard as crystal, cold as ice? |
46856 | Why did I ever see those glorious eyes My famish''d soul to tantalize? |
46856 | Why does my falt''ring tongue disguise my voice With rude and inarticulate noise? |
46856 | Why doth himself thus linger on the way? |
46856 | Why doth my she- advowson fly Incumbency? |
46856 | Why has Dame Nature so much brightness lent To diamonds, topazes, and other gems? |
46856 | Why is his work retarded by delay? |
46856 | Why not''the other minute'', and so''the other now''?] |
46856 | Why should men call that state of life forlorn, Which God approves of, and which kings have borne? |
46856 | Why should thy tents so terrible appear Where monarchs reformadoes were? |
46856 | Why slack I then to contribute a vote, Large as the kingdom''s joy, free as my thought? |
46856 | Why so serious, why so grave? |
46856 | Why then should I in vain presume, In vain, fond man, to live My disappointments poorly to survive? |
46856 | Why then, my soul, who fain wouldst be at ease, Should the World''s glory dazzle thy bright eye? |
46856 | Why this fair volume should be bound so fast In wooden covers, clasp''d- up in such haste? |
46856 | Why was day''s charioteer with lustre dight? |
46856 | Will he contend with such a worthless thing, Or dust and ashes into Judgement bring? |
46856 | Will you give 3390 Your lovely self in marriage unto him, If I shall say Albino yours does live, And in your view his comely portrait limn? |
46856 | Will you make ulcers, and apply no plasters? |
46856 | Wilt thou just vengeance force to dig thy grave? |
46856 | With his conception, his first leaf, begin; What is he there but complicated sin? |
46856 | Wouldst thou to Heav''n, and be a star? |
46856 | Ye generous Trojans, turn your swords away From his dear breast, find out a nobler prey; Why should you harmless Laodamia slay? |
46856 | Yet stay: but by the sour we know not sweet, 1790 White''s silver hue adjoined to black shines best, How should we know our hands but by our feet? |
46856 | Yet why do I my constitution blame, Since all my heart is out of frame? |
46856 | Yet why may not a spotless virgin''s prayers, Wing''d with desire, unclasp high heaven''s door? |
46856 | Yet why should I suggest what your own heart, Were it not vain, might, better far, impart? |
46856 | Yet why should Strephon murmur, why complain, Or envy Phyllis her delight, Why should her pleasures be to him a pain, Easier perhaps out of his sight? |
46856 | Yet why should hallowed Vesta''s glowing shrine Deserve more honour than a flaming mine? |
46856 | Yet why shouldst thou, ambitious Muse, believe Thy gloomy verse can any splendours give, Or make him one small moment longer live? |
46856 | Yet, seeing home- spun russet, stopped his pace; Saying,''By this what honour shall I gain?'' |
46856 | Yet, what''s the Sun? |
46856 | You pretty lambs may leap and play To welcome the new- kindled day, Your shepherd harmless, as are you, Why is he not as frolic too? |
46856 | [ 2] And how many of their slight productions may be gigged[3] out of one of his pregnant words? |
46856 | [ Line: 1086''Chester'']=''he who chests''--and why not?] |
46856 | [ Line: 11 Does''engoddessed''occur elsewhere? |
46856 | [ Line: 1112 The metaphors as well as the bloods are something mixed: but again, why not?] |
46856 | [ Line: 120 Erasmus] Regarded as neither Papist nor Protestant?] |
46856 | [ Line: 1211 satonisco]? |
46856 | [ Line: 126_ Ven_-Bacchus] Venus- Bacchus?] |
46856 | [ Line: 1306 Does''wretch_ing_''occur elsewhere? |
46856 | [ Line: 1461_ Carduus benedictus_][ Line: 1519 Why''Irish''who can say? |
46856 | [ Line: 149 bean- manors]= Manors held at a bean instead of a peppercorn? |
46856 | [ Line: 1559 For novel]=''as a novelty''?] |
46856 | [ Line: 167 the accumulative king] Pym? |
46856 | [ Line: 17''acquite''may be for rhyme only; but if''requite'', why not?] |
46856 | [ Line: 1984 Once more, if''jen-_net_''is superfluous and you can not think of any rhyme but''Bennet''why not overrun?] |
46856 | [ Line: 1995 b_l_anched?] |
46856 | [ Line: 2150 worlds] Play on''globes''?] |
46856 | [ Line: 22 by the text]=''formally''? |
46856 | [ Line: 25''Agathite'']''Agath''is a form of''agate'': is''agathite''a coinage suggested by the blending of colours in the agate?] |
46856 | [ Line: 2527 Quiris?] |
46856 | [ Line: 2861 copèd]? |
46856 | [ Line: 2924 salve] Where did she get it?] |
46856 | [ Line: 295 trencher- cloaks] cut short? |
46856 | [ Line: 2970 Folco]? |
46856 | [ Line: 2971 Sardonic, an adjective formed from''sardonyx''?] |
46856 | [ Line: 30 This] Our_ 1660_,_ MS._][ Line: 31 light? |
46856 | [ Line: 3152 Is this found elsewhere?] |
46856 | [ Line: 3179 Malèd] Is this for''mailed''? |
46856 | [ Line: 3182_ Donnes_]_ Donne_? |
46856 | [ Line: 32 The North usually salting and boiling its beef?] |
46856 | [ Line: 3228 Was a''helm''part of the dress which a monk suddenly flying from his cloister would have''at_ temp._ of tale''?] |
46856 | [ Line: 3264 airs]=''breaths''=''words''?] |
46856 | [ Line: 34 Did a far greater Cambridge poet think of this in writing''When the locks are crisp and curl''d?'' |
46856 | [ Line: 3606 Who was or were Holgoy?] |
46856 | [ Line: 363 Polyander]?] |
46856 | [ Line: 37 Galupin?] |
46856 | [ Line: 5 what all] what riddles? |
46856 | [ Line: 64 third- air]=''third_ hand_'', or what?] |
46856 | [ Line: 677 Serrat] Our Lady of Montserrat? |
46856 | [ Line: 80 Mosel[e]y, Milton''s printer; and Sancta Clara, the Jesuit?] |
46856 | [ Line: 81''But why should we be made your frantic choice?'' |
46856 | [ Line: 844''boat- boy''? |
46856 | [ Line: 93 Posidippus? |
46856 | [ Lines: 2188- 93 Is this one of the''misplaced staves''so very coolly left to the reader''s discovery in the Errata- note? |
46856 | [ When I commanded am by thee, Or by thine eye or hand, What monarch would not prouder be To serve than to command?] |
46856 | _ An Elegy upon S. W. R._[ Sir W. Raleigh? |
46856 | _ An Explanation of an Emblem Engraven by V. H._ Seest thou those Rays, the Light''bove them? |
46856 | _ Boy._ Why should my black thy love impair? |
46856 | _ But can not then They that o''er Lethe go, return again? |
46856 | _ C._ Why dost thou all address deny? |
46856 | _ Chariessa._ What if Night Should betray us, and reveal To the light All the pleasures that we steal? |
46856 | _ Epigrams._ I. Quid faciant leges, ubi sola pecunia regnat? |
46856 | _ Excuse for wishing her less Fair._ Why thy passion should it move That I wish''d thy beauty less? |
46856 | _ Hor._ But Chloe now has vanquish''d me, That lute and voice who could deny? |
46856 | _ Hor._ But say I Lydia lov''d again, And would new- braze Love''s broken chain? |
46856 | _ How slipt? |
46856 | _ Love''s Bravo.__ SONG._ Why should we murmur, why repine, Phyllis, at thy fate, or mine? |
46856 | _ Love''s Harvest._ Fond Lunatic forbear, why dost thou sue For thy affection''s pay ere it is due? |
46856 | _ Nymph._ Choose one whose love may be allur''d By thine: who ever knew Inveterate diseases cur''d But by receiving new? |
46856 | _ Nymph._ How can diseaséd minds infect? |
46856 | _ Nymph._ Stand off, and let me take the air; Why should the smoke pursue the fair? |
46856 | _ Opinion._ Whence took the diamond worth? |
46856 | _ Paradox.__ That it is best for a Young Maid to marry an Old Man._ Fair one, why can not you an old man love? |
46856 | _ Philocharis._ Fairest, we Safely may this fear despise; How can She See our actions who wants eyes? |
46856 | _ Quid autem_,(_ Illustris Anima_)_ quid dicemus?_ 130_ Quale Tributum Piae tuae Memoriae solvemus?__ Mors tua obtundit et mutum reddit Dolorem_. |
46856 | _ Quid autem_,(_ Illustris Anima_)_ quid dicemus?_ 130_ Quale Tributum Piae tuae Memoriae solvemus?__ Mors tua obtundit et mutum reddit Dolorem_. |
46856 | _ Quæ mea culpa tamen, nisi si lusisse vocari Culpa potest: nisi culpa potest& amasse, vocari?_ Tout vient a poinct qui peut attendre. |
46856 | _ Quæ mea culpa tamen, nisi si lusisse vocari Culpa potest: nisi culpa potest& amasse, vocari?_[ Illustration] Printed in the Year, 1651. |
46856 | _ Song._ Celinda, by what potent art Or unresisted charm, Dost thou thine ear and frozen heart Against my passion arm? |
46856 | _ Song._ Fool, take up thy shaft again; If thy store Thou profusely spend in vain, Who can furnish thee with more? |
46856 | _ Sonnet._ Tell me, you stars that our affections move, Why made ye me that cruel one to love? |
46856 | _ The Defence.__ Piensan los Enamorados__ Que tienen los otros los ojos quebrantados._ Why slightest thou what I approve? |
46856 | _ The Indifferent.__ SONG._ Prithee confess for my sake and your own, Am I the man or no? |
46856 | _ Thoughts!_ What are they? |
46856 | _ To his unconstant Friend._ But say, thou very woman, why to me This fit of weakness and inconstancy? |
46856 | _ What satisfaction would the Vision bring?__ If sweet the stream_,_ much sweeter is the spring_. |
46856 | _ Whence, pray, Sir, learnt you those ingenuous arts_,_ From one at home, or hir''d from foreign parts_? |
46856 | _ Whence_,_ Brother Case_,_ and whither bound so fast?_ CA. |
46856 | _----O Famâ ingens, ingentior armis, Rex Gustave, quibus Coelo te laudibus aequem?_ Virgil. |
46856 | and When? |
46856 | and could so soon that tie Relent in slack apostacy? |
46856 | and what she Judged none praise, lip, deserving of but me? |
46856 | and which did the author mean? |
46856 | and yet a Scottish crew? |
46856 | before Troy''s walls my dear does lie, 40 What pleasure can I take in Tyrian dye? |
46856 | canst Thou these profanations like? |
46856 | clear your throat, May a man have a penyworth? |
46856 | dear Albino, must you now be told 3500 Who your Bellama is? |
46856 | did not Bellama''s''no''Give thee a warning- piece presaging danger, But thou must headlong rush upon thy woe? |
46856 | didst hear the heavens scold, And chide in wind and thunder threat''ning wars? |
46856 | disturb thy sleep? |
46856 | does he deserve that brand, Who dallies with consent, invited to''t? |
46856 | durst thou behold( Acting this crime) the castle of the stars? |
46856 | four a groat? |
46856 | has Fate my dear Albino ta''en? |
46856 | hast thou a mind to know To what unblest beginnings thou dost owe Thy wretched self? |
46856 | hast thou been six years dead? |
46856 | is Thetis dead, Or Amphitrite from thy wet arms fled? |
46856 | is this true? |
46856 | is''t not said Spirits have power a damsel to unmaid?'' |
46856 | mad Avaro cried, 2350''Why do you think she could o''ercome your frock? |
46856 | make an earldom die? |
46856 | may there not be The selfsame spot of him, and you, and me?'' |
46856 | must mine hostess wait upon th''entreat 3950 Of tailors, cobblers, carpenters, and tanners? |
46856 | must my expectation know no end? |
46856 | ne''er a cavern, ne''er a grot, To cover from the common lot? |
46856 | of a tinker''s brass?'' |
46856 | on Your triumphant Day, What can Your poor unlettred Beadsman say? |
46856 | or Arabic? |
46856 | or Welsh? |
46856 | or can they stir And not digress? |
46856 | or dare I tie'', 1900 Quoth fair Bellama''unto this belief? |
46856 | or let me die, or live, If I must die, why this reprieve? |
46856 | or prevail To fright that coward Death, who oft grew pale To look thee and thy battles in the face? |
46856 | or shall I make A bawdy song t''advance thy trade, Or court thee with a serenade? |
46856 | or why was ever young? |
46856 | quoth Albino,''can my dullness think That homely russets my Bellama veil? |
46856 | quoth Albino,''dare I trust mine ears With this blest air? |
46856 | quoth Don Fuco, with a far- fetched sigh, Which all that time was drenched o''er- head in grief, 470''Am I to black Cocytus yet drawn nigh? |
46856 | quoth mine host, and rubbed his gummy eyes,''What says my son? |
46856 | quoth she,''dost think that I Into a sea of grief will wade with thee? |
46856 | quoth the matron,''could thy falsehood serve Thus to dishonour me, and all my train? |
46856 | shall every fashion fashion me, As in religion by the church''s eye, So by the world''s must I in loving see? |
46856 | shall our nation be in bondage thus Unto a land that truckles under us? |
46856 | shall the cheeks of Fame, Stretched with the breath of learned Loudoun''s name, Be flagged again? |
46856 | shall turn away, Answering only with a lift- up hand, Who can his fate withstand? |
46856 | shall we conclude, All women will deny you their assent? |
46856 | since it must be, so let it be, For what do resolutions signify, When we are urg''d to write by destiny? |
46856 | that bitter word,_ No more!_ and how many have put it more simply and passionately? |
46856 | the borrow''d rays That crystal wears, whence had they first their praise? |
46856 | the heart is thine; Ah, why then should the pain be mine? |
46856 | thou dost rave, Why dwells such language on thy wretching tongue? |
46856 | thousand more, and nearer 3570 Seals of thy love, must slights unseal your lips? |
46856 | ti d''erexa? |
46856 | ti moi deon ouk etelesthê?] |
46856 | timely cease to strive, 50 With how much blood wilt thou thy loss retrieve? |
46856 | was thy favour only writ In that loose element where thou dost sit? |
46856 | what cure shall I for thee devise, Whose leprous state corrupts all remedies? |
46856 | what deeds, what duty left undone? |
46856 | what hopes? |
46856 | what is Man, Whose life at best is but a span? |
46856 | what is there here For man to set his heart upon, Since what we dote on most is soonest gone? |
46856 | what more? |
46856 | what needs a chain to tie One by your merit bound a votary? |
46856 | what pretence Had guilt to stain thy spotless innocence? |
46856 | what shall I say? |
46856 | what shall we say? |
46856 | what skill''t? |
46856 | when Your projected State Doth from the best in form degenerate? |
46856 | when? |
46856 | whence so chang''d of late, As to become in love a reprobate? |
46856 | where? |
46856 | whither didst thou send thy troth? |
46856 | who would not his soul and substance tenter, To be circumference to such a centre? |
46856 | who would not wish to be( To gain such dainty lodging) such, or thee? |
46856 | why dost thou bark at me? |
46856 | why dost thou dispense Unequally thy sacred influence? |
46856 | why in this loathéd chain Me from my Fair dost thou detain? |
46856 | why shouldst thou be At once unequal to thyself and me? |
46856 | why shouldst thou take such care To lengthen out thy life''s short kalendar? |
46856 | why will they use me so, A virgin that no evil do? |
46856 | why with rude force Dost thou my Fair from me divorce? |
46856 | why wouldst thou know What, known, must needs create thee woe? |
46856 | why? |
46856 | would he have store Of both? |
46856 | you whom tyrant drink Drags thrice about the town, what do you think? |
9413 | ''And live there men, who slight immortal Fame? |
9413 | ''But has he spoken?'' |
9413 | ''But why all this of avarice? |
9413 | ''D''ye think me, noble general, such a sot? |
9413 | ''I found him close with Swift-- Indeed? |
9413 | ''It must be so-- why else have I the sense Of more than monkey charms and excellence? |
9413 | ''No-- shall the good want health, the good want power?'' |
9413 | ''Quid vetat et nosmet Lucilî scripta legentes Quaerere, num illius, num rerum dura negârit Versiculos natura magis factos, et euntes Mollius?'' |
9413 | ''Tis she!--but why that bleeding bosom gored, Why dimly gleams the visionary sword? |
9413 | ''What differ more''( you cry)''than crown and cowl?'' |
9413 | ''Where, but among the heroes and the wise?'' |
9413 | ''Who''s chariot''s that we left behind?'' |
9413 | ''You, Mr Dean, frequent the great; Inform us, will the Emperor treat? |
9413 | ''[ 10] The hills and rocks attend my doleful lay; Why art thou prouder and more hard than they? |
9413 | ( so many virtues shown) Ah think, what poet best may make them known? |
9413 | ( which did not you prolong, The world had wanted many an idle song) What drop or nostrum can this plague remove? |
9413 | ***** ELEGY TO THE MEMORY OF AN UNFORTUNATE LADY[58] What beckoning ghost, along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade? |
9413 | --What are you thinking? |
9413 | --Why then Man? |
9413 | --With that which follow''d Julius to the skies Angels that watch''d the Royal Oak so well, How chanced ye nod, when luckless Sorel fell? |
9413 | 10 Admire we then what earth''s low entrails hold, Arabian shores, or Indian seas infold; All the mad trade of fools and slaves for gold? |
9413 | 10 Here shall I try the sweet Alexis''strain, That call''d the listening Dryads to the plain? |
9413 | 10 In tasks so bold, can little men engage, And in soft bosoms dwells such mighty rage? |
9413 | 10 Twined with the wreaths Parnassian laurels yield, Or reap''d in iron harvests of the field? |
9413 | 10 Why deck''d with all that land and sea afford? |
9413 | 100 For this with fillets strain''d your tender head, And bravely bore the double loads of lead? |
9413 | 100 Prescient, the tides or tempests to withstand, Build on the wave, or arch beneath the sand? |
9413 | 100 Where, where was Eloise? |
9413 | 100 Who counsels best? |
9413 | 100 Yet some I know with envy swell, Because they see me used so well:''How think you of our friend the dean? |
9413 | 110 Could pension''d Boileau lash, in honest strain, Flatterers and bigots even in Louis''reign? |
9413 | 110 How shall I, then, your helpless fame defend? |
9413 | 110 What makes all physical or moral ill? |
9413 | 120 Is it for Bond, or Peter,( paltry things) To pay their debts, or keep their faith, like kings? |
9413 | 130 V. Ask for what end the heavenly bodies shine, Earth for whose use? |
9413 | 140 This is my plea, on this I rest my cause-- What saith my counsel, learnèd in the laws? |
9413 | 142, in some editions-- Give each a system, all must be at strife; What different systems for a man and wife? |
9413 | 150 But why should I on others''prayers depend? |
9413 | 150 From pride, from pride, our very reasoning springs; Account for moral, as for natural things: Why charge we Heaven in those, in these acquit? |
9413 | 150 What good, or better, we may call, And what, the very best of all? |
9413 | 160 Nay, why external for internal given? |
9413 | 190 How shall I lose the sin, yet keep the sense, And love the offender, yet detest the offence? |
9413 | 20 If, after this, you took the graceless lad, Could you complain, my friend, he proved so bad? |
9413 | 20 Of carps and mullets why prefer the great,( Though cut in pieces ere my lord can eat) Yet for small turbots such esteem profess? |
9413 | 20 in the MS.-- Is there a bard in durance? |
9413 | 220 But where th''extreme of vice, was ne''er agreed: Ask where''s the north? |
9413 | 227 in the MS.-- Where''s now the star that lighted Charles to rise? |
9413 | 230 The powers of all subdued by thee alone, Is not thy reason all these powers in one? |
9413 | 270 Why am I ask''d what next shall see the light? |
9413 | 29 in the first edition-- Dear Doctor, tell me, is not this a curse? |
9413 | 300 What greater bliss attends their close of life? |
9413 | 35, first edition-- Could He, who taught each planet where to roll, Describe or fix one movement of the soul? |
9413 | 40 Or ask of yonder argent fields above, Why Jove''s satellites are less than Jove? |
9413 | 405 in the MS.-- And of myself, too, something must I say? |
9413 | 50 Shall we, or shall we not, account him so, Who died, perhaps, an hundred years ago? |
9413 | 50 What could be free, when lawless beasts obey''d, And even the elements a tyrant sway''d? |
9413 | 500''''Tis true,''said I,''not void of hopes I came, For who so fond as youthful bards of fame? |
9413 | 60 What, though no sacred earth allow thee room, Nor hallow''d dirge be mutter''d o''er thy tomb? |
9413 | 620 Name a new play, and he''s the poet''s friend, Nay, show''d his faults-- but when would poets mend? |
9413 | 68 the following lines in first edit.-- If to be perfect in a certain sphere, What matters, soon or late, or here or there? |
9413 | 80 Pan came, and ask''d, what magic caused my smart, Or what ill eyes malignant glances dart? |
9413 | 80 The lamb thy riot dooms to bleed to- day, Had he thy reason, would he skip and play? |
9413 | 80 When out of twenty I can please not two; When this heroics only deigns to praise, Sharp satire that, and that Pindaric lays? |
9413 | 90 Or gravely try to read the lines Writ underneath the country signs; Or,''Have you nothing new to- day From Pope, from Parnell, or from Gay?'' |
9413 | A better shall we have? |
9413 | A dean, sir? |
9413 | A favourite''s porter with his master vie, Be bribed as often, and as often lie? |
9413 | Add health, and power, and every earthly thing,''Why bounded power? |
9413 | Admires the jay the insect''s gilded wings? |
9413 | Admit, your law to spare the knight requires, 30 As beasts of nature may we hunt the''squires? |
9413 | Again? |
9413 | Against your worship when had Selkirk writ? |
9413 | All this dread order break-- for whom? |
9413 | And I not strip the gilding off a knave, Unplaced, unpension''d, no man''s heir, or slave? |
9413 | And each blasphemer quite escape the rod, Because the insult''s not on man, but God? |
9413 | And has not Colly still his lord, and whore? |
9413 | And here, while town, and court, and city roars, With mobs, and duns, and soldiers, at their doors: Shall I, in London, act this idle part? |
9413 | And how did, pray, the florid youth offend, Whose speech you took, and gave it to a friend? |
9413 | And is not mine, my friend, a sorer case, When every coxcomb perks them in my face? |
9413 | And is there magic but what dwells in love? |
9413 | And peers give way, exalted as they are, Even to their own s- r- v-- nce in a car? |
9413 | And say, to which shall our applause belong, This new court- jargon, or the good old song? |
9413 | And shall we deem him ancient, right and sound, Or damn to all eternity at once, At ninety- nine, a modern and a dunce? |
9413 | And who stands safest? |
9413 | And why not players strut in courtiers''clothes? |
9413 | And why this ardent longing for a maid?'' |
9413 | Are these revived? |
9413 | Are they not rich? |
9413 | Art thou, fond youth, a candidate for praise?'' |
9413 | Ask of the learn''d the way? |
9413 | Ask of thy mother earth, why oaks are made Taller or stronger than the weeds they shade? |
9413 | Ask you what provocation I have had? |
9413 | At amorous Flavio is the stocking thrown? |
9413 | Authors are partial to their wit,''tis true, But are not critics to their judgment too? |
9413 | B---- for his prince, or---- for his whore? |
9413 | Barnard[133] in spirit, sense, and truth abounds;''Pray then, what wants he?'' |
9413 | But Fortune''s gifts if each alike possess''d, And each were equal, must not all contest? |
9413 | But does the court a worthy man remove? |
9413 | But grant I may relapse, for want of grace, Again to rhyme; can London be the place? |
9413 | But grant him riches, your demand is o''er? |
9413 | But of this frame the bearings, and the ties, The strong connexions, nice dependencies, 30 Gradations just, has thy pervading soul Look''d through? |
9413 | But pray, when others praise him, do I blame? |
9413 | But where''s the man, who counsel can bestow, Still pleased to teach, and yet not proud to know? |
9413 | But wherefore all this labour, all this strife? |
9413 | But why insult the poor, affront the great? |
9413 | But why then publish? |
9413 | But why? |
9413 | But, after all, what would you have me do? |
9413 | But, faith, your very friends will soon be sore; Patriots there are, who wish you''d jest no more-- And where''s the glory? |
9413 | But, sir, of writers? |
9413 | By what criterion do ye eat, d''ye think, If this is prized for sweetness, that for stink? |
9413 | Call Verres, Wolsey, any odious name? |
9413 | Can I retrench? |
9413 | Canst thou endure a foe, forgive a friend? |
9413 | Canst thou forget that sad, that solemn day, When victims at yon altar''s foot we lay? |
9413 | Canst thou forget what tears that moment fell, When, warm in youth, I bade the world farewell? |
9413 | Come, Delia, come; ah, why this long delay? |
9413 | Composing songs,[161] for fools to get by heart? |
9413 | Could Laureate Dryden pimp and friar engage, Yet neither Charles nor James be in a rage? |
9413 | Could he, whose rules the rapid comet bind, Describe or fix one movement of his mind? |
9413 | D''ye think me good for nothing but to rhyme? |
9413 | Dare they to hope a poet for their friend? |
9413 | Dare you refuse him? |
9413 | Did ever Proteus, Merlin, any witch, Transform themselves so strangely as the rich? |
9413 | Did here the trees with ruddier burdens bend, And there the streams in purer rills descend? |
9413 | Do lovers dream, or is my Delia kind? |
9413 | Do n''t you remember what reply he gave? |
9413 | Does neither rage inflame, nor fear appal? |
9413 | Dryden alone( what wonder?) |
9413 | Each beast, each insect, happy in its own: Is Heaven unkind to Man, and Man alone? |
9413 | End all dispute; and fix the year precise When British bards begin t''immortalise? |
9413 | Fair opening to some court''s propitious shine, Or deep with diamonds in the flaming mine? |
9413 | First, if thou canst, the harder reason guess, Why form''d no weaker, blinder, and no less? |
9413 | Fly then, on all the wings of wild desire, Admire whate''er the maddest can admire: Is wealth thy passion? |
9413 | For fame, for riches, for a noble wife? |
9413 | For right or wrong have mortals suffer''d more? |
9413 | For this your locks in paper durance bound, For this with torturing irons wreath''d around? |
9413 | For what? |
9413 | For, what one likes, if others like as well, What serves one will, when many wills rebel? |
9413 | Fortune not much of humbling me can boast; Though double tax''d, how little have I lost? |
9413 | From lips like those, what precept fail''d to move? |
9413 | Full ten years slander''d, did he once reply? |
9413 | Had ancient times conspired to disallow What then was new, what had been ancient now? |
9413 | Has age but melted the rough parts away, As winter- fruits grow mild ere they decay? |
9413 | Has life no joys for me? |
9413 | Has life no sourness, drawn so near its end? |
9413 | Have you not seen, at Guildhall''s narrow pass, Two aldermen dispute it with an ass? |
9413 | He asks,''What news?'' |
9413 | His butchers, Henley,[97] his freemasons, Moore? |
9413 | His, who would save a sixpence, or his soul? |
9413 | How match the bards whom none e''er match''d before? |
9413 | How shall he keep what, sleeping or awake, A weaker may surprise, a stronger take? |
9413 | How shall we fill a library with wit, When Merlin''s cave is half unfurnish''d yet? |
9413 | How the dear object from the crime remove, Or how distinguish penitence from love? |
9413 | How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move? |
9413 | I fain would please you, if I knew with what; Tell me, which knave is lawful game, which not? |
9413 | I wish you joy, sir, of a tyrant gone; But does no other lord it at this hour, As wild and mad-- the avarice of power? |
9413 | If any ask you,''Who''s the man, so near His prince, that writes in verse, and has his ear?'' |
9413 | If every wheel of that unwearied mill That turn''d ten thousand verses, now stands still? |
9413 | If plagues or earthquakes break not Heaven''s design, Why then a Borgia, or a Catiline? |
9413 | If the great end be human happiness, Then Nature deviates; and can Man do less? |
9413 | If time improve our wit as well as wine, Say at what age a poet grows divine? |
9413 | If to be perfect in a certain sphere, What matter, soon or late, or here or there? |
9413 | If white and black blend, soften, and unite A thousand ways, is there no black or white? |
9413 | In parts superior what advantage lies? |
9413 | In those fair fields where sacred Isis glides, Or else where Cam his winding vales divides? |
9413 | In town, what objects could I meet? |
9413 | In vain Thalestris with reproach assails, For who can move when fair Belinda fails? |
9413 | Indeed? |
9413 | Is it for thee the linnet pours his throat? |
9413 | Is that too little? |
9413 | Is the great chain, that draws all to agree, And drawn, supports, upheld by God, or thee? |
9413 | Is the reward of virtue bread? |
9413 | Is there no bright reversion in the sky, For those who greatly think, or bravely die? |
9413 | Is there on earth one care, one wish beside? |
9413 | Is there, who, lock''d from ink and paper, scrawls With desperate charcoal round his darken''d walls? |
9413 | Is thine alone the seed that strews the plain? |
9413 | Is this my guide, philosopher, and friend? |
9413 | Is this too little for the boundless heart? |
9413 | It was in the first editions:-- And dwells such rage in softest bosoms then, And lodge such daring souls in little men? |
9413 | Look next on greatness; say where greatness lies? |
9413 | Made for his use all creatures if he call, Say, what their use, had he the powers of all? |
9413 | Man? |
9413 | Mine, d''ye mean? |
9413 | Must great offenders, once escaped the crown, Like royal harts, be never more run down? |
9413 | My lands are sold, my father''s house is gone; I''ll hire another''s; is not that my own, And yours, my friends? |
9413 | Nay, tell me first, in what more happy fields The thistle[7] springs, to which the lily[8] yields? |
9413 | No zealous pastor blame a failing spouse, Without a staring reason on his brows? |
9413 | Nor foes nor fortune take this power away; And is my Abelard less kind than they? |
9413 | Not the black fear of death, that saddens all? |
9413 | Not write? |
9413 | Nothing? |
9413 | Observe how seldom even the best succeed: Tell me if Congreve''s fools are fools indeed? |
9413 | Of Man, what see we but his station here, From which to reason, or to which refer? |
9413 | Of vice or virtue, whether bless''d or cursed, Which meets contempt, or which compassion first? |
9413 | Oh, say what stranger cause, yet unexplored, Could make a gentle belle reject a lord? |
9413 | On Avon''s bank, where flowers eternal blow, If I but ask, if any weed can grow? |
9413 | Or Japhet pocket, like his Grace, a will? |
9413 | Or Page pour''d forth the torrent of his wit? |
9413 | Or do the prints and papers lie?'' |
9413 | Or he, who bids thee face with steady view Proud fortune, and look shallow greatness through: And, while he bids thee, sets th''example too? |
9413 | Or hears the hawk when Philomela sings? |
9413 | Or popularity? |
9413 | Or smoking forth, a hundred hawkers''load, On wings of winds came flying all abroad? |
9413 | Or some old temple, nodding to its fall, For Chartres''[92] head reserve the hanging wall? |
9413 | Or touch, if tremblingly alive all o''er, To smart and agonise at every pore? |
9413 | Or what remain''d so worthy to be read By learned critics of the mighty dead? |
9413 | Or which must end me, a fool''s wrath or love? |
9413 | Or who shall wander where the Muses sing? |
9413 | Or why so long( in life if long can be) Lent Heaven a parent to the poor and me? |
9413 | Or will you think, my friend, your business done, 320 When, of a hundred thorns, you pull out one? |
9413 | Or, nobly wild, with Budgell''s fire and force, Paint angels trembling round his falling horse? |
9413 | Or, quick effluvia darting through the brain, Die of a rose in aromatic pain? |
9413 | Pleased to look forward, pleased to look behind, And count each birthday with a grateful mind? |
9413 | Rack''d with sciatics, martyr''d with the stone, Will any mortal let himself alone? |
9413 | Say first, of God above, or Man below, What can we reason, but from what we know? |
9413 | Say with what eyes we ought at courts to gaze, And pay the great our homage of amaze? |
9413 | Say, Daphnis, say, in what glad soil appears, A wondrous tree[6] that sacred monarchs bears? |
9413 | Say, does thy blood rebel, thy bosom move With wretched avarice, or as wretched love? |
9413 | Say, in pursuit of profit or delight, Who risk the most, that take wrong means, or right? |
9413 | Say, is their anger or their friendship worse? |
9413 | Say, what the use, were finer optics given, T''inspect a mite, not comprehend the heaven? |
9413 | Say, where full instinct is th''unerring guide, What pope or council can they need beside? |
9413 | Say, will the falcon, stooping from above, Smit with her varying plumage, spare the dove? |
9413 | Say, will ye bless the bleak Atlantic shore, Or bid the furious Gaul be rude no more? |
9413 | See Sir Robert!--hum-- And never laugh-- for all my life to come? |
9413 | Shall Ward draw contracts with a statesman''s skill? |
9413 | Shall burning Ætna, if a sage requires, Forget to thunder, and recall her fires? |
9413 | Shall half the new- built churches round thee fall? |
9413 | Shall he alone, whom rational we call, Be pleased with nothing, if not bless''d with all? |
9413 | Soft were my numbers; who could take offence While pure description held the place of sense? |
9413 | Some secret truths, from learned pride conceal''d, To maids alone and children are reveal''d: What though no credit doubting wits may give? |
9413 | Sprung it from piety, or from despair? |
9413 | Steals down my cheek th''involuntary tear? |
9413 | Steals my senses, shuts my sight, Drowns my spirits, draws my breath? |
9413 | Suppose I censure-- you know what I mean-- To save a bishop, may I name a dean? |
9413 | Suppose he wants a year, will you compound? |
9413 | Survey both worlds, intrepid and entire, In spite of witches, devils, dreams, and fire? |
9413 | Take him with all his virtues, on my word; His whole ambition was to serve a lord; But, sir, to you, with what would I not part? |
9413 | Tell me, if virtue made the son expire, Why, full of days and honour, lives the sire? |
9413 | Tell me, my soul, can this be Death? |
9413 | Tell( for you can) what is it to be wise? |
9413 | The boy and man an individual makes, Yet sigh''st thou now for apples and for cakes? |
9413 | The good must merit God''s peculiar care; But who but God can tell us who they are? |
9413 | The lands are bought; but where are to be found Those ancient woods, that shaded all the ground? |
9413 | The matter''s weighty, pray consider twice; Have you less pity for the needy cheat, The poor and friendless villain, than the great? |
9413 | The mob''s applauses, or the gifts of kings? |
9413 | The modern language of corrupted peers, Or what was spoke at Cressy and Poictiers? |
9413 | The priest whose flattery bedropp''d the crown, How hurt he you? |
9413 | Then why so few commended? |
9413 | Then wisely plead, to me they meant no hurt, But''twas my guest at whom they threw the dirt? |
9413 | There oft are heard the notes of infant woe, The short thick sob, loud scream, and shriller squall: How can ye, mothers, vex your children so? |
9413 | They too may be corrupted, you''ll allow? |
9413 | Thine the full harvest of the golden year? |
9413 | Think we, like some weak prince, th''Eternal Cause, Prone for his favourites to reverse his laws? |
9413 | This light and darkness in our chaos join''d What shall divide? |
9413 | This, he who loves me, and who ought to mend? |
9413 | Thy fate unpitied, and thy rites unpaid? |
9413 | Tis now no secret''--I protest''Tis one to me--''Then tell us, pray, When are the troops to have their pay?'' |
9413 | To bear too tender, or too firm a heart, To act a lover''s or a Roman''s part? |
9413 | To sigh for ribands if thou art so silly, Mark how they grace Lord Umbra, or Sir Billy: Is yellow dirt the passion of thy life? |
9413 | To stop thy foolish views, thy long desires, And ease thy heart of all that it admires? |
9413 | To what new clime, what distant sky, Forsaken, friendless, shall ye fly? |
9413 | To whom can riches give repute, or trust, Content, or pleasure, but the good and just? |
9413 | Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land? |
9413 | Virtue, I grant you, is an empty boast; But shall the dignity of vice be lost? |
9413 | Was ever such a happy swain? |
9413 | Was this their virtue, or contempt of life? |
9413 | Web for his health, a Chartreux for his sin, Contend they not which soonest shall grow thin? |
9413 | Well, if the use be mine, can it concern one, Whether the name belong to Pope or Vernon? |
9413 | What Muse for Granville can refuse to sing? |
9413 | What better teach a foreigner the tongue? |
9413 | What boy but hears the sayings of old Ben? |
9413 | What can ennoble sots, or slaves, or cowards? |
9413 | What eyes but hers, alas, have power to move? |
9413 | What have I said? |
9413 | What heavenly particle inspires the clay? |
9413 | What if I sing Augustus, great and good? |
9413 | What is loose love? |
9413 | What is this absorbs me quite? |
9413 | What is this wit, which must our cares employ? |
9413 | What life in all that ample body, say? |
9413 | What moved my mind with youthful lords to roam? |
9413 | What nothing earthly gives, or can destroy, The soul''s calm sunshine, and the heartfelt joy, Is virtue''s prize: a better would you fix? |
9413 | What scenes appear where''er I turn my view? |
9413 | What shook the stage, and made the people stare? |
9413 | What should ail them? |
9413 | What sin of mine could merit such a rod? |
9413 | What speech esteem you most? |
9413 | What tender maid but must a victim fall To one man''s treat, but for another''s ball? |
9413 | What then? |
9413 | What though my name stood rubric on the walls, Or plaster''d posts, with claps, in capitals? |
9413 | What walls can guard me, or what shades can hide? |
9413 | What will a child learn sooner than a song? |
9413 | What woful stuff this madrigal would be, In some starved hackney sonnetteer, or me? |
9413 | What wonder, then, a beast or subject slain Were equal crimes in a despotic reign? |
9413 | What would this Man? |
9413 | What''s fame? |
9413 | What''s long or short, each accent where to place, And speak in public with some sort of grace? |
9413 | What''s property, dear Swift? |
9413 | What, though no weeping loves thy ashes grace, Nor polish''d marble emulate thy face? |
9413 | What? |
9413 | What? |
9413 | Whatever is, is right.--This world,''tis true, Was made for Caesar-- but for Titus too: And which more bless''d? |
9413 | When Florio speaks, what virgin could withstand, If gentle Damon did not squeeze her hand? |
9413 | When I confess, there is who feels for fame, And melts to goodness,[206] need I Scarb''rough[207] name? |
9413 | When the loose mountain trembles from on high, Shall gravitation cease, if you go by? |
9413 | Where are those troops of poor, that throng''d of yore The good old landlord''s hospitable door? |
9413 | Where grows?--where grows it not? |
9413 | Where stray ye, Muses, in what lawn or grove, While your Alexis pines in hopeless love? |
9413 | Whether my vessel be first- rate or not? |
9413 | Whether we ought to choose our friends, For their own worth, or our own ends? |
9413 | While Cato gives his little senate laws, What bosom beats not in his country''s cause? |
9413 | While thus I stood, intent to see and hear, One came, methought, and whisper''d in my ear:''What could thus high thy rash ambition raise? |
9413 | Who bid the stork, Columbus- like, explore Heavens not his own, and worlds unknown before? |
9413 | Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? |
9413 | Who builds a bridge that never drove a pile? |
9413 | Who calls the council, states the certain day, Who forms the phalanx, and who points the way? |
9413 | Who can not flatter, and detest who can, Tremble before a noble serving- man? |
9413 | Who climb their mountain, or who taste their spring? |
9413 | Who finds not Providence all good and wise, Alike in what it gives, and what denies? |
9413 | Who for thy table feeds the wanton fawn, For him as kindly spread the flowery lawn: 30 Is it for thee the lark ascends and sings? |
9413 | Who hears him groan, and does not wish to bleed? |
9413 | Who is ready to say,"May my last end be like his"? |
9413 | Who made the spider parallels design, Sure as De Moivre, without rule or line? |
9413 | Who mark''d their points to rise or to descend, Explain his own beginning or his end? |
9413 | Who now in anagrams their patron praise, Or sing their mistress in acrostic lays? |
9413 | Who now reads Cowley? |
9413 | Who saw its fires here rise, and there descend, Explain his own beginning, or his end? |
9413 | Who sees him act, but envies every deed? |
9413 | Who shames a scribbler? |
9413 | Who taught the nations of the field and wood To shun their poison, and to choose their food? |
9413 | Who then with incense shall adore our name? |
9413 | Who there his Muse, or self, or soul attends, 90 In crowds, and courts, law, business, feasts, and friends? |
9413 | Who thus define it, say they more or less Than this, that happiness is happiness? |
9413 | Who would not weep, if Atticus were he? |
9413 | Whom have I hurt? |
9413 | Whose self- denials nature most control? |
9413 | Why angels call''d, and angel- like adored? |
9413 | Why bows the side- box from its inmost rows? |
9413 | Why did I write? |
9413 | Why drew Marseilles''good bishop[90] purer breath, When Nature sicken''d, and each gale was death? |
9413 | Why else to walk on two so oft essay''d? |
9413 | Why feels my heart its long- forgotten heat? |
9413 | Why had not I in those good times my birth, Ere coxcomb- pies or coxcombs were on earth? |
9413 | Why has not Man a microscopic eye? |
9413 | Why is not man a god, and earth a heaven? |
9413 | Why round our coaches crowd the white- gloved beaux? |
9413 | Why rove my thoughts beyond this last retreat? |
9413 | Why sit we mute when early linnets sing, When warbling Philomel salutes the spring? |
9413 | Why sit we sad, when Phosphor[5] shines so clear, And lavish Nature paints the purple year? |
9413 | Why so? |
9413 | Why will you break the Sabbath of my days? |
9413 | Why words so flowing, thoughts so free, Stop, or turn nonsense, at one glance of thee? |
9413 | Why write at all? |
9413 | Why, Virtue, dost thou blame desire, Which Nature has impress''d Why, Nature, dost thou soonest fire The mild and generous breast? |
9413 | Wilt thou do nothing for a nobler end, Nothing, to make philosophy thy friend? |
9413 | With earnest eyes, and round, unthinking face, He first the snuff- box open''d, then the case, And thus broke out--''My Lord, why, what the devil? |
9413 | With terrors round, can reason hold her throne, 310 Despise the known, nor tremble at the unknown? |
9413 | Without this just gradation, could they be Subjected, these to those, or all to thee? |
9413 | Would he oblige me? |
9413 | Would ye be blest? |
9413 | Yet time ennobles, or degrades each line; It brighten''d Craggs''s,[137] and may darken thine: And what is fame? |
9413 | You did so lately, was it understood? |
9413 | You humour me when I am sick, Why not when I am splenetic? |
9413 | You think this cruel? |
9413 | [ 145] Though justly Greece her eldest sons admires, Why should not we be wiser than our sires? |
9413 | [ 160] How shall I rhyme in this eternal roar? |
9413 | [ 18] If Faith itself has different dresses worn, What wonder modes in wit should take their turn? |
9413 | [ 197] But shall a printer,[198] weary of his life, Learn from their books to hang himself and wife? |
9413 | [ 91] to relieve thy breast? |
9413 | [ 98] Does not one table Bavius still admit? |
9413 | _ P._ Do I wrong the man? |
9413 | _ P._ Must Satire, then, nor rise nor fall? |
9413 | and can I choose but smile, When every coxcomb knows me by my style? |
9413 | and for ever? |
9413 | and is there no relief for love? |
9413 | and,''How''s the wind?'' |
9413 | attempt ye still to rise, By mountains piled on mountains, to the skies? |
9413 | be fair, Say, can you find out one such lodger there? |
9413 | beheld an emptier sort, Than such as swell this bladder of a court? |
9413 | but whence arose that prayer? |
9413 | can Sporus feel? |
9413 | could compel A well- bred lord t''assault a gentle belle? |
9413 | deck thy shrine? |
9413 | for God''s- sake where''a the affront to you? |
9413 | for courts you sure were made: Why then for ever buried in the shade? |
9413 | for thee? |
9413 | for what hast thou to dread? |
9413 | has poet yet, or peer, Lost the arch''d eyebrow, or Parnassian sneer? |
9413 | hast thou possess''d The prudent, learn''d, and virtuous breast? |
9413 | he has been fairly in? |
9413 | her soul aspire Above the vulgar flight of low desire? |
9413 | if dropp''d below, Say, in what mortal soil thou deign''st to grow? |
9413 | if she lend not arms, as well as rules, What can she more than tell us we are fools? |
9413 | if they bite and kick? |
9413 | keep her course in sight, Confine her fury, and assist her flight? |
9413 | leave the combat out?'' |
9413 | let the secret pass, That secret to each fool, that he''s an ass: 80 The truth once told( and wherefore should we lie?) |
9413 | let your names be read; 250 Are none, none living? |
9413 | name them, who? |
9413 | new tumults in my breast? |
9413 | not damn the sharper, but the dice? |
9413 | or can a part contain the whole? |
9413 | or is it Granville sings? |
9413 | or stars and strings? |
9413 | or( to be grave) Have I no friend to serve, no soul to save? |
9413 | quoth the daughter,''Be thilke same thing maids longen a''ter? |
9413 | replied)''Was it for this you took such constant care The bodkin, comb, and essence to prepare? |
9413 | rob your boys? |
9413 | shall Cibber''s son,[195] without rebuke, Swear like a lord, or Rich[195] out- whore a duke? |
9413 | shall I quit thee 200 For huffing, braggart, puff''d nobility? |
9413 | shall all things yield returns but love? |
9413 | shall the ravisher display your hair, While the fops envy, and the ladies stare? |
9413 | sunk thee to the grave? |
9413 | tell, Is it, in heaven, a crime to love too well? |
9413 | that thing of silk, Sporus, that mere white curd of ass''s milk? |
9413 | the reason wouldst thou find, Why form''d so weak, so little, and so blind? |
9413 | thy hairs should feel, The conquering force of unresisted steel? |
9413 | was I born for nothing but to write? |
9413 | we all must feel-- Why now, this moment, do n''t I see you steal? |
9413 | what are you to Love? |
9413 | what is man?" |
9413 | what justice rules the ball? |
9413 | what more can they pretend? |
9413 | what sin to me unknown Dipp''d me in ink, my parents'', or my own? |
9413 | what wouldst thou have? |
9413 | where how useless lies The compass, if no powerful gusts arise? |
9413 | where is thy sting? |
9413 | where is thy victory? |
9413 | who chain''d his country, say, Or he whose virtue sigh''d to lose a day? |
9413 | who starts not at the name, In all the Inns of Court or Drury Lane? |
9413 | why no king?'' |
9413 | why private? |
9413 | why the man was hanged ten years ago: Who now that obsolete example fears? |
9413 | will Heaven reward us there With the same trash mad mortals wish for here? |
9413 | with Heaven who can contest? |
9413 | with all thy store, How dar''st thou let one worthy man be poor? |
9413 | work''d solely for thy good, Thy joy, thy pastime, thy attire, thy food? |
41817 | ''Smooth Ally,''was it? |
41817 | ''The Angel--''? 41817 A hundred dollars?" |
41817 | A turkey? 41817 A what?" |
41817 | About me? |
41817 | Afraid? 41817 Am I very expensive?" |
41817 | Among other things, to work? |
41817 | An adventure? 41817 And he assents to your proposition?" |
41817 | And he was a shentlemans like me, and you nodings but a common trummer, hey? 41817 And incidentally to fight him?" |
41817 | And it was written by a Jew? 41817 And pray, what was the offence that called forth such wrath, and who was the wretch who committed the crime?" |
41817 | And pray, why not? |
41817 | And that other one-- how is he? |
41817 | And they have not had any breakfast? |
41817 | And to employ me to represent him? |
41817 | And to give up my clients as McSheen did? |
41817 | And what is the alternative, pray? |
41817 | Any relation to my old friend, Henry Glave? |
41817 | Anybody failed''t we expected to get through? |
41817 | Are all Jews rich? |
41817 | Are they not my brethren? |
41817 | Are you alluding to me, sir? |
41817 | Are you an employee of this Company? |
41817 | Are you crazy? |
41817 | Are you fond of Wordsworth? |
41817 | Are you going away? |
41817 | Are you going to keep on touching your hat to him? |
41817 | Are you going to keep that up? 41817 Are you hurt?" |
41817 | Are you not rich enough now? |
41817 | Are you one of the employees of this road? |
41817 | Are you the brakeman? |
41817 | Are you the proprietor here? |
41817 | Are you through? |
41817 | As-- for example? |
41817 | Bassett Tipps? 41817 Buried?" |
41817 | But I thought Music was not a trade, but a profession, an art? |
41817 | But I want to know why? 41817 But I?" |
41817 | But how did you manage to get here? |
41817 | But of course, if you are going away I could not do it, could I? |
41817 | But perhaps I can serve you? |
41817 | But she does not know that? |
41817 | But what have I done? |
41817 | But what made you do it? |
41817 | But why? |
41817 | But you are sure that this woman is Elsa? |
41817 | But you do n''t go into such places by yourself? |
41817 | But, would they work-- this great class? |
41817 | By whom? |
41817 | Ca n''t you move these people on? |
41817 | Can I take you down- town anywhere? |
41817 | Can you tell me? 41817 Cap''n-- yes, suh-- I''m gwine to clean''t up-- but, Cap''n----""Well?" |
41817 | Cap''n----"Well, what is it? 41817 Chaperon? |
41817 | Coll McSheen? |
41817 | Collis McSheen I know, for I have had some experience of him; and Gillis, the agent, was a cool proposition; but the Argand Estate? 41817 Dad, what is it?" |
41817 | Dad-- it could n''t be-- it was not Aunt Sophia? 41817 Did I know?" |
41817 | Did Jesus utter his divine philosophy only for you who were then savages in Northern Europe or half- civilized people in Greece, Italy, and Spain? 41817 Did Mr. McSheen send for me to come on here? |
41817 | Did he? |
41817 | Did not you find it terrible? |
41817 | Did that foreigner go down there while you were there? |
41817 | Did they tell you that? |
41817 | Did you ever know--? |
41817 | Did you have five children; and did your wife bring them on here some months ago-- when the train was late, one day? |
41817 | Did you? 41817 Do I?" |
41817 | Do n''t you think so? |
41817 | Do n''t you? 41817 Do you imagine I would live among the rich?" |
41817 | Do you know Miss Leigh? 41817 Do you know him well?" |
41817 | Do you know that my husband is her-- agent? |
41817 | Do you mean my aunt''s husband? |
41817 | Do you mean that you think we should not write or talk of anything-- forbidden? |
41817 | Do you mean to say that great novelists never discuss such questions? |
41817 | Do you mind telling me who your counsel is that you consulted in these matters? 41817 Do you see that big house?" |
41817 | Do you think I have a bank in my office, or am a faro dealer, that I can put up a pile like that at midnight? 41817 Do you think I was very-- bold to come?" |
41817 | Do you think that I could not make money if I wished to do so? |
41817 | Do you think that proves it? |
41817 | Do you think--? 41817 Do you want money?" |
41817 | Doc, did you ever hear what the parrot said to herself after she had sicked the dog on, and the dog not seeing anything but her, jumped on her? |
41817 | Does any one know him well? |
41817 | Does he dance so badly as that? 41817 Does he play faro?" |
41817 | Does my daughter know of this extraor-- of this? |
41817 | Does my daughter reciprocate this-- ah-- attachment? 41817 Does n''t he attend teas?" |
41817 | Does she know, or has she forgiven you? |
41817 | Does she? 41817 Does you think I''d fight dthat dog after what you tol''me?" |
41817 | Dr. Samuel Johnson? |
41817 | Every man has a right to labor at whatever work and for whatever prices he pleases,I said;"that you will admit is fundamental?" |
41817 | Everything? |
41817 | Examine me? 41817 Father, how many men have you in the mills and on the railway?" |
41817 | Father,she began,"did you see that dreadful article in the_ Trumpet_ this morning?" |
41817 | Fhat haf you done vit my daughter? |
41817 | For example? |
41817 | For how long? |
41817 | From the Argand Estate? |
41817 | Gimme a ride? |
41817 | Glad to see you? |
41817 | Got a pretty daughter? |
41817 | Guilty of what, my dear? |
41817 | Has he improved? |
41817 | Has he specifically given you this advice? |
41817 | Have His teachings had no part in deciding you as to your work? |
41817 | Have n''t they? 41817 Have we been in that room?" |
41817 | Have you any money? |
41817 | Have you seen Mr. McSheen since your arrival? |
41817 | Have you seen him? |
41817 | He did, did n''t he? |
41817 | He has an office in this building? |
41817 | He is n''t? 41817 Her?--which her?" |
41817 | His teachings? 41817 His women?" |
41817 | How are you? 41817 How are you?" |
41817 | How did you ever happen to be your Aunt Sophy''s niece? |
41817 | How did you get here? |
41817 | How did you know it? 41817 How did you know it?" |
41817 | How do you know she would have me? |
41817 | How do you know? |
41817 | How do you mean? |
41817 | How do? 41817 How is he getting on?" |
41817 | How is the strike coming on? |
41817 | How much can you do? |
41817 | How much is it? |
41817 | How much will you give me for this? |
41817 | How much? |
41817 | How on earth do you manage to live on it? |
41817 | How would that suit us? |
41817 | How''ll you prove it? |
41817 | How''s our friend, the Marvel, coming on? |
41817 | How? |
41817 | How? |
41817 | How? |
41817 | I did n''t tell you, did I? 41817 I guess we all know him, do n''t we, Doc?" |
41817 | I have come to ask if there is not a young woman here--? |
41817 | I have no doubt you were what they say, but what I mean is, where is Dix and how did you get hold of him? |
41817 | I saw that they had some cause; what was it? |
41817 | I suppose you have consulted counsel as to this? |
41817 | I suppose you would have poisoned your slaves, like the old Roman Empress-- What was her name? |
41817 | I thought Mr. McSheen was general counsel? 41817 I toll you dthat?" |
41817 | I wish,he said,"to ask you where you dined last Friday night; with whom?" |
41817 | I wonder how he is coming on? |
41817 | I''ll whip you as sure as you live----"Jes''ef he should? |
41817 | I''m a wise one, though-- what was it our teacher used to tell us about the geese giving the alarm somewhere? 41817 I''m glad they hammered him-- you''re sure it''s Dix?" |
41817 | I? 41817 If I put up enough?" |
41817 | In a chapel? |
41817 | In name, at least, you claim that there has been a new dispensation? |
41817 | Insolence? 41817 Insolence?" |
41817 | Is Mr. Marvel a Jew? |
41817 | Is any one dead? |
41817 | Is he? 41817 Is he? |
41817 | Is it not true that you allowed a Jew to speak in your church, in my chapel? |
41817 | Is she in love? |
41817 | Is she? 41817 Is she?" |
41817 | Is that accepted? |
41817 | Is there any other but the Jew? 41817 Is this number----?" |
41817 | It? 41817 Jeams,"I said, when I had cut short his grandiloquence,"what will Eliza say to you when she finds you this way again?" |
41817 | John Marvel? 41817 Kind o''makin''a set for him, they say?" |
41817 | Knew me-- a negro? 41817 Let that carriage come up here, will you?" |
41817 | Like her? |
41817 | McNeil-- McNeil? |
41817 | More intellect-- yes-- much more.--More sense? 41817 Mr. Canter, for example?" |
41817 | Mr. Glave, you have been in the East, have you? |
41817 | Mr. Hen, ain''you gwine let me have dem ten dollars, sho''''nough? 41817 Mr. James Canter has called for you; must you go?" |
41817 | Mrs. Williams, your little girl is all right again? 41817 No doubt, but here in this city----?" |
41817 | No, I do n''t think she would be here, but have you not a sort of a hotel attached to your place? |
41817 | No, I haven''t-- a dog that belongs to your daughter? |
41817 | No, I mean really----"What? |
41817 | No-- what? |
41817 | Not I-- you see that door? 41817 Not Woodson?" |
41817 | Not know it? 41817 Not the public-- if they are injured by it?" |
41817 | Not true? |
41817 | Of a man I know? 41817 Of course, you know that she is going to marry Mr. Canter? |
41817 | Of simply using your own property in a way satisfactory to you? |
41817 | Of the police? |
41817 | Of whom? |
41817 | Oh!--What? |
41817 | Oh, could you? 41817 Oh, did n''t I? |
41817 | Oh, do you think so? 41817 Oh, would n''t you have liked to see it?" |
41817 | Oh-- I suppose you have to put in night work, too, then? |
41817 | Only two? 41817 Or, as that is not very amusing, suppose we cap verses? |
41817 | Papa,she said one day, when she had asked him to take her somewhere, and he had pleaded,"business,""why do you go to the office so much?" |
41817 | Perhaps, we look at the matter from different standpoints? |
41817 | Perhaps, you happen also to know McNeil''s counsel-- perhaps, you are the man yourself? |
41817 | Power and money go togither? |
41817 | She does? 41817 Sister, do n''t you remember the Giant- of- Battles we used to have in our garden at Rosebank? |
41817 | So the count thought a team had run over him, did he? |
41817 | So? 41817 Tell me, what did he say? |
41817 | Than under the ire--what the dickens will rhyme with"wilt less"? |
41817 | That I did what? |
41817 | That our car was hitched on to the train----"And why should n''t it be, my dear young lady? 41817 That the reason you take no more jobs?" |
41817 | That you invited and permitted a man named Wolffert, a socialistic Jew, to address a congregation in my chapel? |
41817 | The Argands''car, you say? |
41817 | The Count? |
41817 | The big house in the middle of the block is Mrs. Argand''s-- the great Philanthropist, you know? 41817 The what?" |
41817 | The''Big Chief''? |
41817 | The''Transcontinental Something and Something Else?'' 41817 Then what made you do it?" |
41817 | Then why did you not marry him? |
41817 | Then why is it not now? |
41817 | Then, in Heaven''s name, what are they entitled to? |
41817 | They did n''t pay the rent, I suppose? |
41817 | Tipps-- Tipps? |
41817 | To me? 41817 To ply your old trade?" |
41817 | To upset the reorganization of that road which took place ten-- twenty-- How many years ago was it? 41817 To what?" |
41817 | To whose? |
41817 | Told him? 41817 Took you so?" |
41817 | Try-- again?--who? |
41817 | Understand? 41817 Uttering the most dangerous and inflammatory doctrines-- doctrines alike opposed to the teaching of the church and to the command of the law?" |
41817 | Was any one squeezed out? |
41817 | Was it anybody-- I know? |
41817 | Was it reorganized? |
41817 | Well, I promised to pay you, didn''I? 41817 Well, Jacob,"said Wolffert when he had greeted me,"have you got to the top yet?" |
41817 | Well, Mrs. McNeil( to a rusty, thinly clad woman who sat with her back to me),"so your husband won his case, after all? |
41817 | Well, did you see our story? |
41817 | Well, how can I go about it? |
41817 | Well, may I not see you home? |
41817 | Well, of course, you''ll come? |
41817 | Well, sister, we got nothing-- we lost everything, did n''t we? |
41817 | Well, the court upheld it? |
41817 | Well, the road belongs to them, do n''t it? |
41817 | Well, what can I do for you? |
41817 | Well, what is it? |
41817 | Well, where is he now? |
41817 | Well, which would you say? |
41817 | Well, wo n''t you have something? |
41817 | Well? |
41817 | Well? |
41817 | Were we indebted to you for that attention? |
41817 | What Miss Leigh? |
41817 | What are you doing with my dog? |
41817 | What are you going to do with such a man? |
41817 | What are you lying to me for? 41817 What are you talking about?" |
41817 | What are you talking about? |
41817 | What article? |
41817 | What became of Wolffert? |
41817 | What business is it of yours whether I do or not? |
41817 | What business is that of yours? |
41817 | What did he find out? |
41817 | What do I think of him? 41817 What do you mean? |
41817 | What do you say, Wringman? |
41817 | What do you think of him? |
41817 | What do you want? |
41817 | What facts, sir? |
41817 | What for instance? 41817 What is Socialism?" |
41817 | What is it then?--Loafer? |
41817 | What is it, then? 41817 What is it? |
41817 | What is it? |
41817 | What is it? |
41817 | What is the matter, little girl? |
41817 | What is the matter? |
41817 | What is the matter? |
41817 | What is the name of your little protégée''s father-- the criminal? |
41817 | What is your price, anyhow? |
41817 | What is your remedy? 41817 What is your remedy? |
41817 | What lady? |
41817 | What law? 41817 What makes you think that?" |
41817 | What makes you think that? |
41817 | What new worlds have you discovered? |
41817 | What railway did you say it was? |
41817 | What sort of a preacher is he? |
41817 | What sort of era? 41817 What sort of interests are they?" |
41817 | What the---- is it to you? 41817 What then? |
41817 | What turned you to philanthropy? |
41817 | What was it? |
41817 | What was it? |
41817 | What was it? |
41817 | What was that? |
41817 | What was your book? |
41817 | What were you doing in there? |
41817 | What were you fellows talking about? 41817 What would you substitute for it?" |
41817 | What you want to go''way for, Cap''n? 41817 What''s he after? |
41817 | What''s his name? |
41817 | What''s that? |
41817 | What''s the matter with him? 41817 What''s your labor- friend, Wringman, doing now? |
41817 | What? 41817 What? |
41817 | What? |
41817 | What? |
41817 | What? |
41817 | When are you coming back? |
41817 | When you comin''back? |
41817 | When? |
41817 | Where are the men? |
41817 | Where did I hear your name? 41817 Where did you two know each other?" |
41817 | Where do they live? |
41817 | Where do you go to church? |
41817 | Where has she gone? |
41817 | Where have I seen you before? |
41817 | Where is Dix? |
41817 | Where you goin''? |
41817 | Which of''em? |
41817 | Which one? |
41817 | Which one? |
41817 | Which way you goin''? |
41817 | Who are''we''? |
41817 | Who called her so? |
41817 | Who called her the''Angel of the Lost Children''? |
41817 | Who do you know here? |
41817 | Who do you mean? 41817 Who does?" |
41817 | Who has most pull down there? |
41817 | Who is Eleanor Leigh in love with? |
41817 | Who is Langton when he is at home? |
41817 | Who is it? |
41817 | Who is she? 41817 Who is she?" |
41817 | Who is that young man? |
41817 | Who lives in that house? |
41817 | Who made those laws? |
41817 | Who make the laws? 41817 Who says--? |
41817 | Who was it? |
41817 | Who was on that car that you were following? |
41817 | Who''s your friend? |
41817 | Who''s your new owner? |
41817 | Who, for instance? |
41817 | Who? 41817 Who? |
41817 | Whom do you mean? 41817 Whose life did he save?" |
41817 | Whose women? |
41817 | Why did n''t you say you were a friend of his? |
41817 | Why did not you work more? |
41817 | Why did they go out? |
41817 | Why did you suspect her? |
41817 | Why do n''t you let her see the girl? |
41817 | Why do n''t you, then? |
41817 | Why do you not go to the police? |
41817 | Why do you wish to know? |
41817 | Why not come and help me in my work-- who need you so much? |
41817 | Why not? 41817 Why not?" |
41817 | Why should I not participate in the benefit of the wisdom of a Jewish rabbi? |
41817 | Why should n''t I talk of any subject I please? |
41817 | Why so sad to- night? |
41817 | Why, Eleanor, what is this? 41817 Why, do you not remember Henry Glave? |
41817 | Why, do you suppose the Coll McSheens and Gillises and their kind could subsist unless the Argands and Capons of the Time supported them? 41817 Why, how do you do?" |
41817 | Why, how do you do? |
41817 | Why, my mail----"Why do n''t you do as I do? |
41817 | Why, that is Socialism, is n''t it? |
41817 | Why, what made you run off so? |
41817 | Why? 41817 Why?" |
41817 | Why?--what is the matter with this? |
41817 | Will I? 41817 Will nothing less satisfy you?" |
41817 | Will you lend me a hundred? |
41817 | Will you let me say something to you? |
41817 | Will you say that His teachings have had no part in forming your character and life? |
41817 | Wo n''t you have it? |
41817 | Wo n''t you have something, too? 41817 Wo n''t you let me help you?" |
41817 | Wo n''t you step inside? |
41817 | Wolffert, I suppose? |
41817 | Workingmen, why am I here? 41817 Would Mr. Marvel have called it so?" |
41817 | Yes, he does-- if any man ever does-- he lives for others-- and what does he get? 41817 Yes, sir, I did-- something like that, though not quite that-- but----""How then do you reconcile the two?" |
41817 | Yes; but all these people-- who pay-- and who had no breakfast? |
41817 | Yet, ze Count--? |
41817 | You are a lawyer also? |
41817 | You did? 41817 You did?" |
41817 | You differentiate the literature and the novels? |
41817 | You do n''t want a pair of shoes? 41817 You do n''t? |
41817 | You do not call it rude not to answer a letter when a gentleman writes to explain an unfortunate mistake, and then cut him publicly? |
41817 | You do? |
41817 | You have never seen her before? |
41817 | You have no poor, then? |
41817 | You know Miss Leigh, too? |
41817 | You know a man''t calls himself Count Pushkin? |
41817 | You know it? |
41817 | You know we have bought a house very near you? |
41817 | You mean gentlemen? |
41817 | You mean he''s dull? |
41817 | You mean the one who wrote the Dictionary? |
41817 | You mean the preacher? 41817 You mean with the chain?" |
41817 | You mean----? |
41817 | You observe that our friend is laconic? |
41817 | You remember how he tried to make us kill each other? |
41817 | You say he is not? |
41817 | You swear it? |
41817 | You teach Sunday- school, do n''t you? |
41817 | You think not? 41817 You think this is the girl the lady was looking for?" |
41817 | You want some money, I suppose? |
41817 | You were-- what? |
41817 | You will not what? |
41817 | You wrote to him? |
41817 | You''d sell him, I guess? |
41817 | You''ll do what? |
41817 | You''ll keep the police off? |
41817 | You''re a stockholder? |
41817 | You''re runnin''a Sunday- school, ai n''t you? |
41817 | You, of course, declined the proposal they made? |
41817 | ''One would hardly suppose That your eye was as steady as ever, Yet you balanced an eel on the end of your nose-- What made you so awfully clever?''" |
41817 | --Not in-- I''ll swear on a stack of Bibles as-- as high as Gen''l Washin''s monument-- you bring it heah-- is you got a Bible? |
41817 | Ai n''t that like Pa?" |
41817 | All she said was,"Why did not you win the honors?" |
41817 | An''ai n''t dthat de same thin''?" |
41817 | An''ef he should----?" |
41817 | And Mr. Marvel is coming on well?" |
41817 | And as this comes, think you that man will not rise higher? |
41817 | And with the thought came another: Did it mean that she was going to marry that young Canter? |
41817 | And you wo n''t make me-- will you? |
41817 | Are you in loaf mit her, too, like poor Kalender, who spent all hees moneys on her, and what she laugh at to make me amused? |
41817 | Are you the father of my little girl?" |
41817 | As I was standing near her, I turned and asked her in an undertone:"Can you tell me whose funeral this is?" |
41817 | As she turned to me with flashing eyes, I felt a great desire to tell her but how could I do so? |
41817 | As soon as the Count began to come around our house-- a good deal-- I mean, really, quite a good deal-- you understand?" |
41817 | As to what, pray?" |
41817 | At that moment the hostess leant forward and said:"What are you two so interested in discussing there? |
41817 | But I believe you were in-- you liked him very much?" |
41817 | But I was pining to say to him,"Peck, why do n''t you come out with it and ask me plainly what I know of your conference the other night?" |
41817 | But did they play for a living? |
41817 | But do you suppose that Moses would make no modification now?" |
41817 | But how should he use his knowledge? |
41817 | But may I ask you what you want with her?" |
41817 | But why are you so interested in Mr. Leigh? |
41817 | But why the deuce do n''t you drop that business? |
41817 | Ca n''t you git me out o''dis right away?" |
41817 | Come on now----""Which way are you going? |
41817 | Could I have been mistaken in thinking he and McSheen had been talking of Mr. Leigh in their conference? |
41817 | Could I write her of this poor creature? |
41817 | Could Mr. Leigh have lost his fortune? |
41817 | Could he do anything for me? |
41817 | Could it be a delusion? |
41817 | Could it be that McSheen was endeavoring to secure possession of the West Line? |
41817 | Could this, I reflected sombrely, be the element we are importing? |
41817 | Did I not hold the future in fee? |
41817 | Did I suppose that the Master would have commanded,"Love your enemies,"and,"Turn the other cheek,"if He had not meant it? |
41817 | Did he really court you? |
41817 | Did he work to accumulate gold? |
41817 | Did n''t you hear how last spring he stopped a runaway and was knocked down and dragged ever so far? |
41817 | Did she say I had-- ah-- addressed her?" |
41817 | Did they have the right to stop the train and hold it back? |
41817 | Did you ever meet Pansy Tipps? |
41817 | Did you ever see him dance? |
41817 | Did you read that article?" |
41817 | Did you think I insulted you as a Jew this afternoon?" |
41817 | Do n''t you agree with me?" |
41817 | Do n''t you remember?" |
41817 | Do n''t you think he''s lovely?" |
41817 | Do n''t you think so? |
41817 | Do you get any more money for doing it?" |
41817 | Do you imagine I mean--? |
41817 | Do you know anybody who might invite him to lunch and ask us to meet him? |
41817 | Do you know him?" |
41817 | Do you know him?" |
41817 | Do you know them?" |
41817 | Do you know what will become of them if they are turned out? |
41817 | Do you mean-- You do n''t mean Coll McSheen?" |
41817 | Do you see?" |
41817 | Do you suppose I would make a bet about a girl I did not know?" |
41817 | Do you think that you could recover anything for us? |
41817 | Do you understand?" |
41817 | Does he drink? |
41817 | Does n''t the road belong to your father; at least, to your family-- and those whom they represent?" |
41817 | Dutch?" |
41817 | Elsa?--Vere iss Elsa?" |
41817 | For I am your all- daughter-- You wo n''t, will you?" |
41817 | For a moment she said nothing, then she asked quietly,"How does the rest of it go?" |
41817 | For damages, I suppose?" |
41817 | Glave?" |
41817 | Glave?" |
41817 | Glave?" |
41817 | Ha, ah?" |
41817 | Has it not broken up the institution of slavery-- highway robbery, organized murder-- except by itself and its members? |
41817 | Has she accepted you?" |
41817 | He is an expert machinist-- has worked for years in boiler shops-- has driven----""Why is he out of a job if he is such a universal paragon? |
41817 | He was so smug that I could not help saying,"You were always economical?" |
41817 | He''s counsel for the Argands, but-- you do n''t know Coll McSheen?" |
41817 | His,"Well, what is it?" |
41817 | How can you shift the responsibility? |
41817 | How could I be otherwise? |
41817 | How could I reach her? |
41817 | How did he come to tell you?" |
41817 | How did he know that I knew her? |
41817 | How did it come? |
41817 | How did it happen?" |
41817 | How did it happen?" |
41817 | How did they get it?" |
41817 | How did you like him? |
41817 | How did you manage that?" |
41817 | How do they own it? |
41817 | How do you do, Count Pushkin?" |
41817 | How do you do? |
41817 | How do you do?" |
41817 | How do you reconcile it with your patriotism to introduce into the body politic such an element of ignorance, superstition, and unrest?" |
41817 | How is it new?" |
41817 | How old do you think I should have been?" |
41817 | How should he use his information? |
41817 | How?" |
41817 | I asked myself, can this be John Marvel, this master of this great audience? |
41817 | I did n''t want him, of course-- men are so in the way in the morning, do n''t you think so? |
41817 | I do not quite understand whom you wish to be the equal of-- of men? |
41817 | I had to see him, of course, because he is, as I told you, the general counsel----""In a way?" |
41817 | I mean, for what?" |
41817 | I put it in this hat, see, ai n''t it a wonder?" |
41817 | I shall haf all de moneys I want-- my pockets full, and den I vill pay you one-- two-- t''ree times for all you haf lend me, hein? |
41817 | I should like to meet him, should n''t you? |
41817 | I should think you are rather small to be so high?" |
41817 | I should think you would feel rather lonely up here-- and would miss all your old friends?" |
41817 | I tell you what you do,"he added, modestly,"you write it up-- you say you have written for the press?" |
41817 | I vill nod? |
41817 | I wanted to say,"Why, then, do n''t you marry him?" |
41817 | I was fond of driving and dancing, but I did not want to talk about it all the time, and then as I got older----""How old?" |
41817 | I was recalled from a slight straying of my mind from some story she was telling, by her saying:"You''re a lawyer, are n''t you?" |
41817 | I wished also to say,"Why do n''t you marry me?" |
41817 | I wonder if they were connected with Bassett Tipps?" |
41817 | In love with--?" |
41817 | Is he your father?" |
41817 | Is it our own property?" |
41817 | Is n''t she trying to sell her niece to an adventurer for a title, or a reprobate for his money?" |
41817 | Is n''t that sufficient?" |
41817 | Is not that the way to Dr. Davis''s house?" |
41817 | Is not the fundamental law, not to do evil to others?" |
41817 | Is that quite right?" |
41817 | Is this not Miss Belle Henderson?" |
41817 | Is this one poorer than those others you have saddled on me?" |
41817 | It happened that I knew my Alice much better than my Dante, so when she said,"You can talk, ca n''t you?" |
41817 | It was fine, was n''t it? |
41817 | Leigh?" |
41817 | Leigh?" |
41817 | Let me see; McSheen had the claim, and he gave it up-- that was when? |
41817 | Marvel?" |
41817 | May I have the pleasure of driving up with you? |
41817 | Maybe, I can help you?" |
41817 | McNeil?" |
41817 | McSheen?" |
41817 | McSheen?" |
41817 | McSheen?" |
41817 | Miss Eleanor Leigh?" |
41817 | My aside to our hostess drew the attention of the others to me, and Mrs. Arrow suddenly said,"Mr. Glave, which would you say? |
41817 | My sister-- Won''t you take a chair? |
41817 | Nettled, I asked arrogantly,"Do n''t you think I have more sense-- more intellect than Peck?" |
41817 | No wonder you get ill. Why do n''t you get a room in a more decent part of the town-- near where John Marvel lives, for instance?" |
41817 | Of what?" |
41817 | Or have the pickets been after him?" |
41817 | Peck, how did you get in?" |
41817 | Pecksniff? |
41817 | Perhaps, you sent him to me?" |
41817 | See? |
41817 | See?" |
41817 | She stopped long enough to raise her jewelled lorgnette, and take a shot at me through it:"Are you the brakeman?" |
41817 | Shot? |
41817 | Should I go to Eleanor Leigh and make a clean breast of it, or should I leave it to occasion to determine the matter? |
41817 | Should the pack ever find a leader bold enough to spring, what will be the end? |
41817 | Sister, what in the world are you doing? |
41817 | Socialism?" |
41817 | THE CURTAIN 563 ILLUSTRATIONS_"To ply your old trade?" |
41817 | Tell me----?" |
41817 | The Count bet me I''d forget it and I bet him a gold cigar- holder I wouldn''t-- what_ is_ his name? |
41817 | The poor had so much done for them, why should not he look after the rich? |
41817 | The whole family were to be christened next Sunday, and what do you suppose they did? |
41817 | The young lady turned to me:"Do you mean that our car has caused all this trouble?" |
41817 | Then another question:"Could I tell why all the men appeared to find Miss Leigh so very attractive?" |
41817 | Then quite as quietly I asked:"Did Mr. McSheen send for you to come on here?" |
41817 | These people? |
41817 | This will help us out? |
41817 | To give them all they demand, and have them come back with a fresh and more insolent demand to- morrow?" |
41817 | Understand?" |
41817 | Walk in, wo n''t you?" |
41817 | Was it due to the views which she had been expressing of late touching the suppression of the laboring class? |
41817 | Was it, indeed? |
41817 | Was she a beggar or only an unhappy outcast, waiting in the darkness for the sad reward which evil chance might fling to her wretchedness? |
41817 | Was there something fundamentally wrong with society? |
41817 | Was this the reason she taught school? |
41817 | We had fallen to talking of his work when I said,"Wolffert, why do you live in this horrible quarter? |
41817 | Well, I ca n''t teach them, but I might try some other poor class?" |
41817 | Well, what do you know about him?" |
41817 | Well?" |
41817 | What Miss Leigh are you speaking of?" |
41817 | What are you so serious about? |
41817 | What became of her?" |
41817 | What can I do for yer?" |
41817 | What can I do for you?" |
41817 | What can this one do? |
41817 | What did he come back here for?" |
41817 | What did he have to do with it?" |
41817 | What did he say his name was?" |
41817 | What did you mean by trying to murder me?" |
41817 | What did you say to him?" |
41817 | What did you tell him?" |
41817 | What do I know of the-- the fraud-- the arrangements, if there ever were any such arrangements as those you speak of?" |
41817 | What do you know about it?" |
41817 | What do you know of us? |
41817 | What do you mean?" |
41817 | What do you mean?" |
41817 | What do you mean?" |
41817 | What do you want now?" |
41817 | What do you want?" |
41817 | What does a young man need with an overcoat?" |
41817 | What does she say to you?" |
41817 | What does the worker now know of ideals? |
41817 | What had I done?" |
41817 | What had I ever done except for myself? |
41817 | What had I ever done to you that you should be after me?" |
41817 | What have you done that you should give us advice? |
41817 | What help? |
41817 | What ideals have we? |
41817 | What in the world is he writing to you about?" |
41817 | What is she?" |
41817 | What is the secret of his power? |
41817 | What is their name?" |
41817 | What is their volition? |
41817 | What is your oldest boasted scripture?" |
41817 | What may they be, please?" |
41817 | What put that idea into your little head? |
41817 | What should I do under the circumstances? |
41817 | What was Peck doing with the Leighs? |
41817 | What was he doing talking with her at that hour? |
41817 | What was it that withheld me? |
41817 | What was it they did, sister?" |
41817 | What was it?" |
41817 | What was the truth? |
41817 | What was the use of fooling about a few score dollars a point when I could easily make it a thousand? |
41817 | What were you doing?" |
41817 | What were you saying?" |
41817 | What would be the result if she should pass by and see me cleaning bricks-- me a laborer, and Pushkin-- the thoughts came together-- should see me? |
41817 | What would she think if she should know I had had a hand in that paper? |
41817 | What would you think if I were to say I would marry you right away?" |
41817 | What you doin''?" |
41817 | What you doin''?" |
41817 | What you doin''?" |
41817 | What!--''Where is she?'' |
41817 | What''s McSheen to him?" |
41817 | What''s his name and why was he after me? |
41817 | What''s his name?" |
41817 | What''s old Bart after?" |
41817 | What''s that running down your sleeve? |
41817 | What''s the matter with him?" |
41817 | What''ve you been up to?" |
41817 | What? |
41817 | When I told her I was going away, she said,"Where?" |
41817 | When and where?" |
41817 | When did it happen?" |
41817 | When did you change your coat?" |
41817 | When have you ever done anything but fawn on Herod and flatter Pontius? |
41817 | When have you ever hearkened to the cry of the destitute? |
41817 | When have you ever visited the fatherless and the widows in affliction, unless they were rich? |
41817 | When he was here the other day, he brought us a treat; a whole half- dozen oranges; wo n''t you let me prepare you one? |
41817 | When?" |
41817 | When?" |
41817 | Where did it come from?" |
41817 | Where did you get such an idea?" |
41817 | Where has he moved to?" |
41817 | Where is he?" |
41817 | Where is he?" |
41817 | Where is he?" |
41817 | Who are these?" |
41817 | Who are you?" |
41817 | Who brought them there-- the man who deceived and betrayed them? |
41817 | Who can gife ze divine strain ven ze heart is set on monee always?" |
41817 | Who is he? |
41817 | Who is he?" |
41817 | Who knows? |
41817 | Who stands head?" |
41817 | Who was it? |
41817 | Who was it?" |
41817 | Who was this man? |
41817 | Who were the wretches who robbed them? |
41817 | Who will take care of them when they are turned out on the street? |
41817 | Who''s he working for?" |
41817 | Who, indeed? |
41817 | Who?" |
41817 | Whom are you here to help and set free to- day? |
41817 | Why are you so interested in it?" |
41817 | Why ca n''t you keep your mouth for your own business instead of interfering with other folks? |
41817 | Why did you insult me out of a clear sky? |
41817 | Why do n''t you go to hear John Marvel? |
41817 | Why do n''t you stop your---- nonsense and settle down and marry that girl? |
41817 | Why do n''t you try Aunt Sophia again?" |
41817 | Why does n''t she know it? |
41817 | Why have you come here?" |
41817 | Why have you denied yourself to your friends? |
41817 | Why have you never--?" |
41817 | Why is it indecent?" |
41817 | Why is it not your business, too? |
41817 | Why law more than these others? |
41817 | Why might not I win her? |
41817 | Why not gamble? |
41817 | Why not let me ask my father about your matter? |
41817 | Why not tell?" |
41817 | Why should he be able to make easily a demonstration at the blackboard that the cleverest of us only bungled through? |
41817 | Why should he be held a little apart from them? |
41817 | Why should he follow me? |
41817 | Why should n''t they? |
41817 | Why should not I enter the brotherhood? |
41817 | Why should one fear them? |
41817 | Why should we not act on it? |
41817 | Why should we not act on it?" |
41817 | Why should you go and cast it down, fling it away, and come down in the mire and dust and dirt?" |
41817 | Why will you do this? |
41817 | Why, I thought you thought so too?" |
41817 | Why, do you imagine any judge in this city would even consider a bill charging fraud against such persons as those I have mentioned? |
41817 | Why, our fathers are directors, are n''t they-- at least, my father is-- and own a block of the stock that controls----?" |
41817 | Why, where do we get the money from to run our place with?" |
41817 | Why, your aunt, Mrs. Argand, owns thousands of shares, does n''t she, and your father?" |
41817 | Why--? |
41817 | Why?" |
41817 | Why?" |
41817 | Whyn''t you stay where you is? |
41817 | Will you give me Dix?" |
41817 | Will you ring that bell?" |
41817 | Wo n''t you take a seat?" |
41817 | Wo n''t you walk into our sitting- room? |
41817 | Wolffert?" |
41817 | Wolffert?" |
41817 | Women?" |
41817 | Would I take a seat for a moment? |
41817 | Would I take a seat? |
41817 | Would Peck tell Miss Leigh any lies about me? |
41817 | Yes, but why should a Jew be held apart? |
41817 | Yes, you could go that way, but why not come here and let me assign you a class?" |
41817 | You appeal to me?" |
41817 | You claim to be a Christian?" |
41817 | You do n''t know who I am either?" |
41817 | You do not forbid it?" |
41817 | You get much work?" |
41817 | You have his address?" |
41817 | You have it now, then?" |
41817 | You have quite gotten over your accident of the spring? |
41817 | You know he''s a real count? |
41817 | You know her, I believe?" |
41817 | You know them both, do n''t you?" |
41817 | You know they''re striking on our lines-- some of them? |
41817 | You mean to hear the orchestra?" |
41817 | You remember my telling you of the poor family that was on the train last year when I came back in Aunt Sophia''s car and we delayed the train?" |
41817 | You say he''s in jail? |
41817 | You say you used the back stairway at times, opening on the alley near Mick Raffity''s?" |
41817 | You say your dog''s a good fighter?" |
41817 | You think Queen Isabella pawned her jewels to send Christobal Colon to discover America-- don''t you?" |
41817 | You think that they hold you in some distrust and dislike, possibly?" |
41817 | You vill gif me one little lesson? |
41817 | You will accept his offer, of course?" |
41817 | You would n''t dare to tease your rector in town-- the great Dr.--What is his name?" |
41817 | You''d know she''d want that now, would n''t you? |
41817 | Your boy got his place, did n''t he? |
41817 | [ Illustration:"Perhaps you are the man yourself?" |
41817 | and what effect would the strange confluence have on the current of our life in the future? |
41817 | come in, wo n''t you?" |
41817 | did you? |
41817 | do they?" |
41817 | do you think so?" |
41817 | exclaimed the other girl in astonishment,"what right? |
41817 | he is, is he?" |
41817 | he laughed,"what do you think of your friends?" |
41817 | he stammered_ 60_"But you must not come in"_ 140_"Perhaps, you are the man yourself?" |
41817 | inquired Miss Leigh coldly,"and how did he do it?" |
41817 | must you be going?" |
41817 | said her father, laughing,"so that is the way you buy things, is it? |
41817 | she would n''t marry a Jew?" |
41817 | who is talking about money now?" |
41817 | why did you say that?" |
41817 | why did you? |
41817 | would n''t I? |
41817 | you have the books?" |
41817 | you have, and who may be your informant?" |
38162 | Am I a new creature? 38162 Good- bye"treads on the heels of"How do you do?" |
38162 | He that formed the eye, shall He not see? |
38162 | How do we do? |
38162 | Is any afflicted among you? 38162 Know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? |
38162 | Sir,she said, in a loud voice,"Are you happy?" |
38162 | To whom do you live? 38162 What is that to thee? |
38162 | What is_ zeal_ in religion? |
38162 | Where is charity? |
38162 | Wherefore standest thou without? |
38162 | Who art thou that judgest another? |
38162 | Why do you say that? |
38162 | ''Are you afraid to die?'' |
38162 | ( 1) And now, in concluding this paper,_ let me ask every one who reads it Whose child are you_? |
38162 | ( 1) First of all, how are you_ using your time_? |
38162 | ( 1) In the first place, Is your religion a matter of form and not of heart? |
38162 | ( 1) In the first place,_ let me entreat every reader of this paper to apply to his own heart the solemn inquiry, Are you happy_? |
38162 | ( 1) Let me ask, in the first place,_ Do we ever think about our souls at all_? |
38162 | ( 10) Let me ask, in the tenth and last place,_ whether we know anything of being ready for Christ''s second coming_? |
38162 | ( 2) Do you feel any desire to be free? |
38162 | ( 2) Let me ask, in the second place,_ whether we ever do anything about our souls?_? |
38162 | ( 2) Let me ask, in the second place,_ whether we ever do anything about our souls?_? |
38162 | ( 2) Secondly, where_ shall you be in eternity_? |
38162 | ( 2)_ If you are not a son and heir of God, let me entreat you to become one without delay._ Would you be rich? |
38162 | ( 3) Are you spiritually free? |
38162 | ( 3) Let me ask, in the third place,_ whether we are trying to satisfy our consciences with a mere formal religion_? |
38162 | ( 3) Thirdly, would you be_ safe for time and eternity_? |
38162 | ( 4) Lastly,_ would you be happy_? |
38162 | ( 4) Let me ask, in the fourth place,_ whether we have received the forgiveness of our sins_? |
38162 | ( 6) Let me ask, in the sixth place,_ whether we know anything of practical Christian holiness_? |
38162 | ( 7) Let me ask, in the seventh place,_ whether we know anything of enjoying the means of grace_? |
38162 | ( 8) Let me ask, in the eighth place,_ whether we ever try to do any good in the world_? |
38162 | ( 9) Let me ask, in the ninth place,_ whether we know anything of living the life of habitual communion with Christ_? |
38162 | (_ a_) Do you believe the Bible? |
38162 | (_ a_) Is any reader of this paper_ asleep and utterly thoughtless about religion_? |
38162 | (_ a_) Is_ knowledge_ pleasant to us now? |
38162 | (_ b_) Do you believe the Bible? |
38162 | (_ b_) Is any reader of this paper_ feeling self- condemned, and afraid that there is no hope for his soul_? |
38162 | (_ b_) Is_ holiness_ pleasant to us now? |
38162 | (_ c_) Do you believe the Bible? |
38162 | (_ c_) Is any reader of this paper a professing believer in Christ, but a_ believer without much joy and peace and comfort_? |
38162 | (_ c_) Is_ rest_ pleasant to us now? |
38162 | (_ d_) Do you believe the Bible? |
38162 | (_ d_) Is any reader of this paper_ a believer oppressed with doubts and fears_, on account of his feebleness, infirmity, and sense of sin? |
38162 | (_ d_) Is_ service_ pleasant to us now? |
38162 | (_ e_) Do you believe the Bible? |
38162 | (_ e_) Is_ satisfaction_ pleasant to us now? |
38162 | (_ f_) Is_ communion with the saints_ pleasant to us now? |
38162 | (_ g_) Is_ communion with Christ_ pleasant to us now? |
38162 | )[ 18]--Who does not remember the Apostle Paul''s words about charity? |
38162 | --"What is our life? |
38162 | --Do they interfere with his private religion? |
38162 | --How is it with us? |
38162 | --Once more I ask,"What shall we say to these things?" |
38162 | --Who does not know the spirit of love which runs through all St. John''s Gospel and Epistles? |
38162 | --_Thomas Watson._ 1660 Who is there among the readers of this paper that knows his heart is not right in the sight of God? |
38162 | 5, 1658._) What would this good man have said if he had lived in our times? |
38162 | A passage of Scripture like this parable ought surely to raise in many an one great searchings of heart.--"What am I? |
38162 | A wicked woman was overheard in the streets of London saying to a bad companion,"Come along: who is afraid? |
38162 | Am I a holy man?" |
38162 | Am I prepared to leave the world? |
38162 | Am I really one with Christ, and a pardoned soul?" |
38162 | Am I treated as I deserve?" |
38162 | Among the lost or among the saved? |
38162 | And Nathaniel said unto him, Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? |
38162 | And after all,"Who gave thee any faith at all?" |
38162 | And after all,"Who told thee thou hadst any sins?" |
38162 | And by what means was all this miserable darkness cleared away? |
38162 | And can you suppose the Lord Jesus Christ is less merciful and less compassionate? |
38162 | And does not this stand in perfect harmony with all the language of Scripture on the same subject? |
38162 | And how can we know God without prayer? |
38162 | And how did He arm them for this battle? |
38162 | And how did these men of one book prosper? |
38162 | And is Christianity like this real? |
38162 | And is such Christianity as this real? |
38162 | And is such Christianity as this real? |
38162 | And is the Christianity of these people real? |
38162 | And is the religion of these people real Christianity? |
38162 | And is there not a striking and painful difference between this language and the habits and feeling of society about money? |
38162 | And now, after 4,800 years, what more can be said of the greatest among ourselves? |
38162 | And then ask this man who denies the being of a God, and a great First Cause, if all this wonderful mechanism is the result of chance? |
38162 | And they ask us, when this is the case, what becomes of the Bible''s boasted power? |
38162 | And what are the secrets of their victory? |
38162 | And what are the_ cheap things_ now? |
38162 | And what are_ man''s principal wants_? |
38162 | And what do men give us in its place? |
38162 | And what is that"_ something_"? |
38162 | And what is that_ something_? |
38162 | And what is the best receipt for cheerfulness in such a world as this? |
38162 | And what shall be said of the man who neglects his soul, and makes no effort to enter the strait gate? |
38162 | And what was one secret of their power? |
38162 | And what was the cause? |
38162 | And what was the reason? |
38162 | And what was the reason? |
38162 | And why should not others do the same? |
38162 | And why was this? |
38162 | And why? |
38162 | And why? |
38162 | And why? |
38162 | And you, what are you doing for your immortal soul? |
38162 | And_ is this"striving"_ to enter in? |
38162 | And_ is this"striving"_? |
38162 | And_ is this"striving"_? |
38162 | Are all these people wrong? |
38162 | Are not these things so? |
38162 | Are not these things true? |
38162 | Are there no sick, no poor, no needy, whose sorrows we might lessen, and whose comforts we might increase? |
38162 | Are there not many of them yet outside the gate, unforgiven, unsanctified, and unfit to die? |
38162 | Are these your feelings about sin? |
38162 | Are they things to which you give a cold assent, and tolerate them as proper and correct? |
38162 | Are we free? |
38162 | Are we living like disciples of Him who always"went about doing good,"and commanded His disciples to take Him for their"example"? |
38162 | Are we never so much at home as in their company? |
38162 | Are we not no better than mere cumberers of the ground?" |
38162 | Are we really going to put a mere vague thing called"earnestness,"in the place of Christ, and to maintain that no"earnest"man can be wrong? |
38162 | Are we to be judges of what ought to be in the Word? |
38162 | Are we to come out from the world, or are we not? |
38162 | Are you a Christian in business, and on week- days, and by your own fireside? |
38162 | Are you a new creature? |
38162 | Are you a young person? |
38162 | Are you among the wheat, or among the chaff? |
38162 | Are you at peace with the worm and the fire? |
38162 | Are you forsaken by friends? |
38162 | Are you free? |
38162 | Are you free? |
38162 | Are you free? |
38162 | Are you happy? |
38162 | Are you looking simply to Christ for pardon and life eternal? |
38162 | Are you misrepresented and calumniated? |
38162 | Are you one of them? |
38162 | Are you one of these? |
38162 | Are you or are you not one of Christ''s friends? |
38162 | Are you overcoming the world, or are you overcome by it? |
38162 | Are you persecuted? |
38162 | Are you poor? |
38162 | Are you prepared? |
38162 | Are you preparing to meet God? |
38162 | Are you prosperous in the world? |
38162 | Are you ready for it? |
38162 | Are you sure that, with all their appearance of religion, they are born again and converted to God? |
38162 | Are you tempted to fancy that if you had the rich man''s place you would be quite happy? |
38162 | Are you tempted to make the Lord''s Supper override and overshadow everything in Christianity, and place it above prayer and preaching? |
38162 | Are you that man? |
38162 | Are you that man? |
38162 | Are you that man? |
38162 | Are you the child of nature or the child of grace? |
38162 | Are you the child of the devil or the child of God? |
38162 | Are you vile in your own eyes, and willing to take the lowest place? |
38162 | Are you wasting time, or turning it to good account? |
38162 | Are you wearied in body and grieved in spirit? |
38162 | Are you willing to put your soul into Christ''s hand?" |
38162 | Are you young? |
38162 | Art thou really sensible of thy guilt and vileness? |
38162 | Ask him if he so thinks about the watch he looks at, the bread he eats, or the coat he wears? |
38162 | Ask him if he will give up the little bit of religious hope which he has attained? |
38162 | Ask him if he would be content to turn round and throw down the things he has got hold of, and go back to the world? |
38162 | Ask him if it came together at first by luck and accident? |
38162 | Ask yourself what kind of gatherings you like best here upon earth? |
38162 | Ask yourself whether you really love the assembling together of God''s people? |
38162 | At what period shall the gate of salvation be shut for ever? |
38162 | Bought with such a price as that bread and wine call to his recollection, ought he not to glorify Christ in body and spirit, which are His? |
38162 | But HOW can sinful men like ourselves become sons of God? |
38162 | But I ask any real Christian, Is it not true? |
38162 | But I ask that man who has given up reading the Bible because it contains hard things, whether he did not find many things in it easy and plain? |
38162 | But all the time they never ask themselves,"What is all this to me?" |
38162 | But are they not true? |
38162 | But are we any better for it? |
38162 | But are we ourselves free? |
38162 | But are you sure that these people you speak of are true believers in Christ? |
38162 | But did you ever ask any of these people whether they would give up the position in religion they have reached, and go back to the world? |
38162 | But do you not see that the reality of death is continually forbidding us to use other language? |
38162 | But does sickness confer the benefits of which I have been speaking on only a few? |
38162 | But is not an acknowledgment of our own ignorance the very corner- stone and foundation of all knowledge? |
38162 | But is not this exactly in keeping with the history of the judgment, in the twenty- fifth of St. Matthew? |
38162 | But is there meanwhile no home for our souls? |
38162 | But is there no better"gathering"yet to come? |
38162 | But is this true? |
38162 | But still this is not a straightforward answer to my question.--Are you wheat or are you chaff? |
38162 | But what do their faces tell us as they hasten to their posts? |
38162 | But what is it to you and me what man thinks in religion? |
38162 | But what saith the Scripture? |
38162 | But what shall we say of the man who is ashamed of Him who died for him on the cross? |
38162 | But where is it said that none shall be saved except their faith be great? |
38162 | But where is the sin, or the heap of sins, that the blood of Jesus can not wash away? |
38162 | But where will the man hide his head at last who neglects such glorious encouragements? |
38162 | But where will you be? |
38162 | But who can find a man who would lay down his life for those that hate him? |
38162 | But who can wonder? |
38162 | But who can wonder? |
38162 | But who can wonder? |
38162 | But who that reads the parable to the end can fail to see that in the highest sense Lazarus was not poor, but_ rich_? |
38162 | But who that reads the story through can fail to see that in the highest and best sense the rich man was pitiably_ poor_? |
38162 | But why need I stop short in Bible examples? |
38162 | But why should I dwell on these things? |
38162 | But why should all this surprise us? |
38162 | But why should we look at facts in history? |
38162 | By what right do you talk in this way? |
38162 | Can God be a God of mercy, when He permits disease? |
38162 | Can a formal Christian really suppose that the mere outward Christianity he professes will comfort him in the day of sickness and the hour of death? |
38162 | Can any one deny that a mere outward religion, a religion of downright formality, is the religion which is popular in England at the present day? |
38162 | Can he do nothing but hear, and see, and smell, and taste, and feel? |
38162 | Can it be reconciled with the religion of Him who spoke the parable of the good Samaritan, and bade us"go and do likewise"? |
38162 | Can it be said indeed that reality is rightly esteemed among Christians? |
38162 | Can there really be such mighty harm in these things? |
38162 | Can this be right? |
38162 | Can we imagine that He who formed our world in such perfect order was the Former of needless suffering and pain? |
38162 | Can we really suppose that people are praying against sin night and day, when we see them plunging right into it? |
38162 | Can we suppose for a moment that God created sickness and disease at the beginning? |
38162 | Can we suppose they pray against the world, when they are entirely absorbed and taken up with its pursuits? |
38162 | Can we think that He who made all things"very good,"made Adam''s race to sicken and to die? |
38162 | Can we think they really ask God for grace to serve Him, when they do not show the slightest desire to serve Him at all? |
38162 | Can you doubt for a moment that He abhors everything that is not genuine and true? |
38162 | Can you reflect calmly on all the omissions and commissions of by- gone years? |
38162 | Can you think He would suffer on the cross and die, and yet leave it uncertain whether believers in Him would be saved? |
38162 | Consider, as you travel through every chapter,"How does this affect_ my_ position and course of conduct? |
38162 | Could we have been saved without the Lord Jesus Christ coming down from heaven? |
38162 | Did He leave it to our discretion whether we would attend to His injunction or not? |
38162 | Did He mean that it did not signify whether His disciples did or did not keep up the ordinance He had just established? |
38162 | Did the Apostle only mean in these texts, that circumcision was no longer needed under the Gospel? |
38162 | Did they come from nature? |
38162 | Do I believe?" |
38162 | Do I cast myself on Him? |
38162 | Do I mean everybody who goes to church or chapel? |
38162 | Do I mean everybody who professes an orthodox creed, and bows his head at the belief? |
38162 | Do I mean everybody who professes to love the Gospel? |
38162 | Do I not speak to your heart? |
38162 | Do I really believe on Christ? |
38162 | Do I say that all true Christians are equally happy? |
38162 | Do I say that real true Christians are equally happy at all times? |
38162 | Do I want them to come to the Lord''s Supper as they are? |
38162 | Do I wish them to come to the Lord''s Supper? |
38162 | Do tears rise unbidden in your eyes when you mark the empty places round the fireside? |
38162 | Do they hate the sins which Jesus died to put away? |
38162 | Do they take up too much of his thoughts and attention? |
38162 | Do we ever try to do any good to any one beside our own friends and relatives, and our own party or cause? |
38162 | Do we feel our hearts burn within us at the thought of His dying love? |
38162 | Do we feel that we are never so happy as when we are with the"excellent of the earth?" |
38162 | Do we find His name precious to us? |
38162 | Do we find it sweet to work for Christ, and yet groan being burdened by a feeble body? |
38162 | Do we find the world empty? |
38162 | Do we know anything of genuine Samaritan love to others? |
38162 | Do we know anything of it? |
38162 | Do we know better than God? |
38162 | Do we long for a world in which we need not to be always watching and warring? |
38162 | Do we long for entire conformity to the image of God? |
38162 | Do we long for the filling up of every void place and gap in our hearts? |
38162 | Do we not require our children to learn many things of which they can not see the meaning at first? |
38162 | Do we often feel"faint though pursuing?" |
38162 | Do we want_ a friend in need_? |
38162 | Do we want_ a loving and affectionate friend_? |
38162 | Do we want_ a mighty and powerful friend_? |
38162 | Do we want_ a tried and proved friend_? |
38162 | Do we wish to grow in grace and be very holy Christians? |
38162 | Do you ask the reason, of this name which the Bible gives to the company of all true Christians? |
38162 | Do you delight in the Bible? |
38162 | Do you doubt the truth of all I am saying? |
38162 | Do you feel labouring and heavy- laden? |
38162 | Do you feel lonely and desolate as every December comes round? |
38162 | Do you find few to pray with, few to praise with, few to open your heart to, few to exchange experience with? |
38162 | Do you find it essential to your comfort to read the Bible regularly in private, and to speak to God in prayer? |
38162 | Do you find nothing there to make you zealous,--to make you earnest about your soul? |
38162 | Do you know anything of feelings like these toward Jesus Christ? |
38162 | Do you know anything of the grace of which I have been speaking? |
38162 | Do you know what it is to come out from the world and be separate, or are you yet entangled by it, and conformed to it? |
38162 | Do you learn increasingly, that heaven is becoming every year more full and earth more empty? |
38162 | Do you loathe heart- sins, and fight against them? |
38162 | Do you long for perfect holiness, and follow hard after it? |
38162 | Do you love Christ''s people? |
38162 | Do you love Christ? |
38162 | Do you read it? |
38162 | Do you secretly think in your own mind that I take too gloomy a view of the world? |
38162 | Do you serve Christ? |
38162 | Do you think He does not desire to bring many sons to glory? |
38162 | Do you think that my assertions are extravagant and unwarrantable? |
38162 | Do you try to do good to the world? |
38162 | Do you want_ a friend in deed_? |
38162 | Do you wish to have a religion which will comfort you in life, give you good hope in death, and abide the judgment of God at the last day? |
38162 | Do you wrestle in prayer? |
38162 | Do you yourself really feel happy?" |
38162 | Do your fine new notions give you much comfort? |
38162 | Does Christmas, for instance, bring with it sorrowful feelings and painful associations? |
38162 | Does a man live in charity towards others? |
38162 | Does a man put his trust in Jesus Christ as his only hope of salvation? |
38162 | Does a man read or travel much? |
38162 | Does a man truly repent of sin and hate it? |
38162 | Does all around and before you seem bright, and cheerful, and happy? |
38162 | Does any man suppose that Jesus is not willing to see His garner filled? |
38162 | Does any reader desire to know the remedy against that love of self which ruined the rich man''s soul, and cleaves to us all by nature, like our skin? |
38162 | Does any reader of this paper desire a perfect Church? |
38162 | Does any reader of this paper want a real friend? |
38162 | Does anyone ask how and in what way Christ has obtained these mighty privileges for His people? |
38162 | Does he apply to ministers for a solution? |
38162 | Does he never feel pain, and shed no tears? |
38162 | Does he settle down quietly in some English or Scotch parish? |
38162 | Does this come home to you? |
38162 | Does this come home to you? |
38162 | Does this come home to you? |
38162 | Does this come home to you? |
38162 | Does this surprise any reader? |
38162 | Does your conscience tell you that you are one of the persons I speak of? |
38162 | Dost thou read it? |
38162 | First of all,_ what is this family_? |
38162 | For what do we declare at the Lord''s Supper? |
38162 | From whence will you fetch your consolations? |
38162 | HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | Has any one little or no money who reads these pages? |
38162 | Has any one money who reads these pages? |
38162 | Has he a body only? |
38162 | Has he no anxieties and no troubles? |
38162 | Has he no doubts and no fears? |
38162 | Has he no sorrows and no cares? |
38162 | Has heart- religion even been popular in the professing Church of Christ during the last eighteen centuries? |
38162 | Has heart- religion ever been popular in our own land in days gone by? |
38162 | Hast thou a truly broken and contrite heart? |
38162 | Have I any home to look forward to in the world to come? |
38162 | Have I charity?" |
38162 | Have I put off the old man and put on the new? |
38162 | Have death, and sickness, and disappointment, and poverty, and family troubles, passed over your door up to this time, and not come in? |
38162 | Have they a secularizing effect on his soul? |
38162 | Have they a tendency to pull him down to earth? |
38162 | Have you a happy home? |
38162 | Have you any desire to prove the reality of your charity,--that blessed grace which so many talk of, and so few practise? |
38162 | Have you been born again? |
38162 | Have you come out from the world? |
38162 | Have you ever felt your sins, and repented of them? |
38162 | Have you forgotten that it is_ not fashionable_ to pray? |
38162 | Have you forgotten that it is_ not natural_ to any one to pray? |
38162 | Have you forgotten_ the deaths that many die_? |
38162 | Have you forgotten_ the lives that many live_? |
38162 | Have you made a covenant with death and hell? |
38162 | Have you no desire after heaven? |
38162 | Have you no fear of eternal torment? |
38162 | Have you no sins to be pardoned? |
38162 | Have you put off the old man, and put on the new? |
38162 | He can be touched with the feeling of your infirmities, for He suffered Himself being tempted.--Are you alone? |
38162 | He can look down even into the grave, as the wisest Greeks and Romans could never do, and say,"Oh, death, where is thy sting? |
38162 | He compels them to think, whether they like it or not--"What are we doing? |
38162 | He has a soul.--Has he sensual faculties only? |
38162 | He has the well of truth open before him, and what can he want more? |
38162 | He must try all religious teaching by one simple test,--Does it square with the Bible? |
38162 | He replied,--"If he sees us there, I am sure he will say, as he does now,--''What are these boys doing here? |
38162 | He said to Him,"Lord, are there few that be saved?" |
38162 | He who said to the man without the wedding garment,"Friend, how camest thou in hither?" |
38162 | He will be often asking himself, What must I believe? |
38162 | He will discover that different persons give the most different answers to the important question, What shall I do to be saved? |
38162 | He will simply ask, What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | Hear how He converses, as He dines on the shore of the sea of Galilee:"Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me?" |
38162 | Hear what the prophet Isaiah says:"To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto Me? |
38162 | High or low, rich or poor, master or servant, farmer or labourer, young or old, here is a question that deserves an answer,--_Are you really happy_? |
38162 | How can I do that which is most edifying to others?" |
38162 | How can I help to set them free?" |
38162 | How can it be explained? |
38162 | How can it be explained? |
38162 | How can it be, if He is to find wheat and chaff side by side in the day of His second coming? |
38162 | How can it show forth its gratitude? |
38162 | How can these things be?" |
38162 | How can we account for it? |
38162 | How can we do most good with our money while we are here? |
38162 | How can we expect to be saved by an"unknown"God? |
38162 | How can we so spend it as to leave the world somewhat happier and somewhat holier when we are removed? |
38162 | How can you possibly be happy in an eternal heaven, where holiness is all in all, and worldliness has no place? |
38162 | How could it do more? |
38162 | How could that man enjoy the meeting of true Christians in heaven who takes no pleasure in meeting true Christians on earth? |
38162 | How indeed will you escape if you neglect so great salvation? |
38162 | How is it with ourselves? |
38162 | How is it with you? |
38162 | How is it? |
38162 | How is this? |
38162 | How much Evangelical religion is completely unreal? |
38162 | How readest thou?" |
38162 | How shall a man make sure work of his own sonship? |
38162 | How shall he find out whether he is one that has come to Christ by faith and been born again? |
38162 | How shall man and God be brought together? |
38162 | How shall man ever draw near to his Maker without fear and shame? |
38162 | How shall we account for it? |
38162 | How shall we get through this valley of tears with least pain? |
38162 | How shall we learn to bear sickness patiently, when sickness comes to our turn? |
38162 | How then and when does this mighty change and translation come upon men? |
38162 | How then can we account for the strong language used in Scripture about it? |
38162 | How will they bear God''s inspection? |
38162 | I am sure it deserves an answer,"What will you do when you are ill?" |
38162 | I ask again, Where is your zeal for the glory of God? |
38162 | I ask him whether it be not true that nothing damages the cause of religion so much as"the world"? |
38162 | I ask whether you have gone up to it, knocked at it, been admitted, and_ are now inside_? |
38162 | I ask you, What will you do when you are ill? |
38162 | I ask you, then, in all affection, Where is your zeal in religion? |
38162 | I ask,_ Is this zeal?_ Would the apostles have been satisfied with such a state of things? |
38162 | I ask,_ Is this zeal?_ Would the apostles have been satisfied with such a state of things? |
38162 | I charge you, I summon you to give an honest answer to my question,--What art thou doing with the Bible?--Dost thou read it?--HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | I charge you, I summon you to give me an honest answer this day,--What art thou doing with the Bible? |
38162 | I fear that heaven would be no place for an uncharitable and ill- tempered man!--What said a little boy one day? |
38162 | I mean such boldness as that of Joshua, when the children of Israel were defeated before Ai:"What,"says he,"wilt Thou do unto Thy great name?" |
38162 | I only ask, Is it not so? |
38162 | I put it to his conscience whether he did not see great landmarks and principles in it all the way through? |
38162 | I there find the inquiry made,"What is required of them who come to the Lord''s Supper?" |
38162 | I will now pass on to the last thing which I promised to consider.--_What are the future prospects_ of the whole family in heaven and earth? |
38162 | I will rather ask you whether you yourself may not be the cause why believers look grave and serious when you meet them? |
38162 | I would fain have no one lay down this paper unable to answer the questions,--"What practical lesson have I learned? |
38162 | If not, with what face shall we meet Him in the judgment day? |
38162 | If sickness can do the things of which I have been speaking( and who will gainsay it? |
38162 | If we carry our Master with us wherever we go, who can tell but we may"save some,"and get no harm? |
38162 | If you are not inside, what good have you got from your religion? |
38162 | If you have( and who will dare to deny it? |
38162 | In an age like this it is well to ask,"How do we do about our souls?" |
38162 | In such a matter the only point is, What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | In the face of truth like this no reader can feel surprised if I ask, How is it with our souls in the matter of Christ''s second coming? |
38162 | In the first place,_ why was the Lord''s Supper ordained_? |
38162 | In the second place, let me try to show_ who ought to be communicants_? |
38162 | In this matter also, how is it with our souls? |
38162 | Is Christ becoming every year more precious? |
38162 | Is communion with Christ like this a common thing? |
38162 | Is he alone in his position? |
38162 | Is he drowsy in soul? |
38162 | Is he ignorant? |
38162 | Is he in circumstances of special trial? |
38162 | Is he laden with many sins? |
38162 | Is he weak and cowardly? |
38162 | Is heart- religion popular in England at this very day? |
38162 | Is his heart hard and prone to evil? |
38162 | Is holiness becoming every year more lovely and desirable in your eyes? |
38162 | Is it condemned or approved by the Bible? |
38162 | Is it for nothing that He praises the good Samaritan, who denied himself to show kindness to a stranger? |
38162 | Is it for nothing that He says,"It is more blessed to give than to receive"? |
38162 | Is it for nothing that He says,"Make to yourselves friends of the mammon of unrighteousness"? |
38162 | Is it for nothing that He warns us against the example of the priest and Levite, who saw the wounded traveller, but passed by on the other side? |
38162 | Is it for nothing that St. Paul classes covetousness with sins of the grossest description, and denounces it as idolatry? |
38162 | Is it for nothing that in the parable of the sower He mentions the"deceitfulness of riches"as one reason why the seed of the Word bears no fruit? |
38162 | Is it for nothing that the Lord Jesus spoke the parable of the rich fool, and blamed him because he was not"rich towards God"? |
38162 | Is it genuine? |
38162 | Is it justified? |
38162 | Is it not for Thine honour that thy Gospel should increase?" |
38162 | Is it not for Thy glory that we should be sanctified? |
38162 | Is it not rather to be suspected that many have quite as much grace as they ask for? |
38162 | Is it not the true account of many, that they have little, because they ask little? |
38162 | Is it not very likely that they have nothing but the name of Christianity, without the reality; and a form of godliness, without the power? |
38162 | Is it pardoned? |
38162 | Is it prepared to meet God? |
38162 | Is it real? |
38162 | Is it real? |
38162 | Is it real? |
38162 | Is it true? |
38162 | Is not the actual amount of time that many Christians give to prayer in the aggregate very small? |
38162 | Is not this encouragement? |
38162 | Is not this encouragement? |
38162 | Is not this encouragement? |
38162 | Is not this encouragement? |
38162 | Is not this just what you see in the Apostle Paul? |
38162 | Is not this what you see in Paul at Antioch, when he withstood Peter to the face, and said he was to be blamed? |
38162 | Is not this what you see in Phinehas, the son of Eleazar?--or in Hezekiah and Josiah, when they put down idolatry? |
38162 | Is not this what you see in the Apostle Paul? |
38162 | Is not this what you see in the Lord Jesus? |
38162 | Is our religion real? |
38162 | Is our spirit often willing, but hampered and clogged by the poor weak flesh? |
38162 | Is sin becoming every year more hateful to you? |
38162 | Is sin the burden and bitterness of our lives? |
38162 | Is the little that we know of God and Christ, and the Bible precious to our souls, and do we long for more? |
38162 | Is the man an earnest man? |
38162 | Is the world a danger to the soul, or is it not? |
38162 | Is there literally nothing that you can do for the glory of God, and the benefit of your fellow- men? |
38162 | Is there no one in all the world that you can read to? |
38162 | Is there no one that you can speak to? |
38162 | Is there no one that you can write to? |
38162 | Is there no spiritual dwelling- place to which we may continually repair in this desolate world, and, repairing to it, find rest and peace? |
38162 | Is there none we can do good to? |
38162 | Is there not an unreal_ faith_? |
38162 | Is there not an unreal_ holiness_? |
38162 | Is there not an unreal_ humility_? |
38162 | Is there not an unreal_ love and charity_? |
38162 | Is there not an unreal_ repentance_? |
38162 | Is there not unreal_ praying_? |
38162 | Is there not unreal_ talking_ about religion? |
38162 | Is there not unreal_ worship_? |
38162 | Is this your religion? |
38162 | Is this your religion? |
38162 | Is this your religion? |
38162 | Is this your religion? |
38162 | Is your own Christianity real and true? |
38162 | Is your own religion real or unreal? |
38162 | It can awaken him.--Is he mourning? |
38162 | It can comfort him.--Is he erring? |
38162 | It can keep him from evil.--Is he alone? |
38162 | It can make him strong.--Is he in company? |
38162 | It can restore him.--Is he weak? |
38162 | It is a simple question, but a solemn one,--_Do you yet belong to the family of God_? |
38162 | It should set him thinking,--"How does this affect me? |
38162 | Last, but not least, do we want_ an unfailing friend_? |
38162 | Lay to heart the words of that noble- minded Jansenist, who said, when told that he ought to rest a little,"What should we rest for? |
38162 | Let me ask every one a plain question:"Are you free?" |
38162 | Let me show, in the second place,_ when a man can be called rightly zealous in religion_? |
38162 | Let me show, in the third place,_ why it is a good thing for a man to be zealous in religion_? |
38162 | Might it not rather be feared that many believers in this generation pray_ too little_? |
38162 | Might we not abridge some of our luxuries? |
38162 | Might we not lay out less upon ourselves, and give more to Christ''s cause and Christ''s poor? |
38162 | Must not many things be taken for granted in the beginning of every science, before we can proceed one step towards acquaintance with it? |
38162 | Nay, but, O man,"who art thou that repliest against God?" |
38162 | No wonder that holy Baxter sings,--"What if in prison I must dwell, May I not then converse with Thee? |
38162 | No.--Do they care for the souls which were so precious in His sight? |
38162 | No.--Do they delight in the word of reconciliation? |
38162 | No.--Do they love the Saviour who came into the world to save them? |
38162 | No.--Do they seek close fellowship with Him? |
38162 | No.--Do they try to speak with the Friend of sinners in prayer? |
38162 | No.--Oh, reader, is this your case? |
38162 | No: he has a thinking mind and a conscience!--Has he no consciousness of any world but that in which he lives and moves? |
38162 | Now how is this? |
38162 | Now is it reasonable to suppose that our Lord would appoint an ordinance for so simple a purpose as the"_ keeping His death in remembrance_"? |
38162 | Now is the view here stated the doctrine of the New Testament? |
38162 | Now what can we make of this great fact,--the universal prevalence of sickness? |
38162 | Now what has a self- righteous man to do with an ordinance like this? |
38162 | Now, how can we account for the difference which I have just described? |
38162 | Now, is it possible that such a daily sight should not give them grief? |
38162 | Now, what is the cause of most backsliding? |
38162 | Now, what is this glorious freedom? |
38162 | Now, what will your portion be? |
38162 | Now, where is the peculiar blessedness of this gathering? |
38162 | O grave, where is thy victory?" |
38162 | Of whom does it consist? |
38162 | Often, far too often, the only question asked about a man is,"How much is he worth?" |
38162 | Oh, prayerless man, who and what are you that you will not ask anything of God? |
38162 | Oh, when are you going to begin? |
38162 | On the right hand or on the left, in the day of judgment? |
38162 | On what do you mean to build your hope? |
38162 | On what do you mean to rest your soul? |
38162 | Once more I ask,"How do we do about our souls?" |
38162 | Once more I ask,"How do we do?" |
38162 | Once more I ask,--In the matter of communion with Christ,"How do we do?" |
38162 | Once more I ask,--In the matter of readiness for Christ''s second coming,"How do we do?" |
38162 | Once more I press my question on your conscience:"What will you do when you are ill?" |
38162 | Once more let us ask, in the matter of conversion,"How do we do?" |
38162 | Once more let us ask,--In the matter of forgiveness of sins,"How do we do?" |
38162 | Once more let us ask,--In the matter of holiness, how is it with our souls? |
38162 | Once more let us ask,--In the matter of means of grace,"How do we do?" |
38162 | Once more, then, I ask my readers to consider the question of my text,--"How do we do about our souls?" |
38162 | Or, do you find these practices irksome, and either slur them over, or neglect them altogether? |
38162 | Say to your soul, whenever you are tempted to that which is wrong,"Soul, soul, is this thy kindness to thy Friend?" |
38162 | Say to yourself often as you read,"What is all this about?" |
38162 | Secondly,_ what is its present position_? |
38162 | Settle it, for death is nigh, the Lord is at hand, and who can tell what a day might bring forth? |
38162 | Settle your thoughts on this one simple inquiry,--"Do I really trust in Christ, as a humble sinner? |
38162 | Shall our congregations be taught that even when people live and die in sin we may hope for their happiness in a remote future? |
38162 | Shall we admit the dangerous principle that words in Scripture do not mean what they appear to mean? |
38162 | Shall we be wise above that which is written? |
38162 | Shall you be gathered by the angels into God''s home when the Lord returns, or shall you be left behind? |
38162 | Should we not say, Why did you not steer by the great leading lights? |
38162 | Surely, we may well say,--"When the Son of man cometh, shall He find charity upon earth?" |
38162 | Texts are the guides we must never be ashamed to refer to in the present day.--"What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | The grand question is, Will you take it? |
38162 | The grand test of a man''s faith and religion is,"Does it make him happy?" |
38162 | The only question is,--Is the thing said Scriptural? |
38162 | The question is simply this,"Do you feel your sins? |
38162 | Their heart never turns to God with the solemn inquiry,--"Lord, is this my picture?--Lord, is it I?" |
38162 | Then, where is your grace? |
38162 | There are no such products in a natural man''s heart.--Did they come from the devil? |
38162 | There is but one point to be settled:"What says the Word of God?" |
38162 | There is but one question worth asking about our actions:"How will they look in the day of judgment?" |
38162 | They can look back on long years of carelessness and worldliness and say,--"Who shall lay anything to my charge?" |
38162 | They can not answer the question,"Who are those whom Christ effectually makes free?" |
38162 | They can stand by the side of an open grave, and say,"O death, where is thy sting? |
38162 | They feel as if He had said to each one of them,"Wilt thou be my son?" |
38162 | They will have to die and appear before the bar of God, and be judged; and then what will the end be? |
38162 | Think of them all, and often say to yourself,--"What can I do for them? |
38162 | Thirdly,_ what are its future prospects_? |
38162 | This is the Deist''s creed.--Now, shall we listen to this doctrine? |
38162 | Though he may deceive neighbours, acquaintances, fellow- worshippers, and ministers with a form of godliness, does he think that he can deceive God? |
38162 | True charity is not always asking,--"What are my rights? |
38162 | Turn ye, turn ye: why will ye die?" |
38162 | V. Do we want_ a wise and prudent friend_? |
38162 | Was He obliged to do this? |
38162 | Was heart- religion popular in New Testament times? |
38162 | Was heart- religion popular in Old Testament times? |
38162 | Was that all? |
38162 | Was the Lord Jesus Christ obliged to come down to save us? |
38162 | We do not plead as often as we might,"Lord, are we not Thine own people? |
38162 | Were their members continuing steadfast in the faith? |
38162 | Were they going forward, or standing still? |
38162 | Were they growing in grace? |
38162 | Were they not in earnest? |
38162 | What account can we give of it? |
38162 | What am I doing? |
38162 | What answer shall we give to our inquiring children when they ask us,"Father, why do people get ill and die?" |
38162 | What are all the revolutions recorded by Vertot,--what are all the revolutions which France and England have gone through, compared to these? |
38162 | What are the Romish miracles which weak men believe, compared to all this, even if they were true? |
38162 | What are the annals of history but a long record of conflicts between the friends and foes of liberty? |
38162 | What are the marks and signs, and tokens, by which the"sons of God"may be known? |
38162 | What are the victories of Alexander, and CÃ ¦ sar, and Marlborough, and Napoleon, and Wellington, compared with those I have just mentioned? |
38162 | What are the_ dear things_ now? |
38162 | What are we to understand when we hear of charity being greater than faith and hope? |
38162 | What are you doing for Him? |
38162 | What are you doing with the Bible? |
38162 | What are you going to do? |
38162 | What are your feelings about public prayer and public praise, about the public preaching of God''s Word, and the administration of the Lord''s Supper? |
38162 | What are your ways of behaving toward all around you in your own family? |
38162 | What art thou doing with the Bible?--Dost thou read it at all?--HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | What art thou doing with the Bible?--Dost thou read it? |
38162 | What art thou doing with the Bible?--Dost thou read it?--HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | What art thou doing with the Bible?--Dost thou read it?--HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | What can be more proud? |
38162 | What can be more striking than the fact that the Bible has frequently spoken of money as a most fruitful cause of sin and evil? |
38162 | What can be more unholy than such a doctrine as this? |
38162 | What can be more unreasonable? |
38162 | What can be more worthy of zeal than eternal things, than the glory of God, than the salvation of souls? |
38162 | What can be possibly said for the man who after all dies without prayer? |
38162 | What can be said about these people? |
38162 | What can be worse than the accounts we have of its ignorance and superstition? |
38162 | What can it render to its Redeemer? |
38162 | What comfort could you have in an abode where love was the law, and selfishness and ill- nature completely shut out? |
38162 | What common bond of harmony and brotherhood? |
38162 | What common delight in a common service? |
38162 | What concord, what harmony, what peace, what oneness of spirit could exist? |
38162 | What did the Lord mean when He spoke the parables of the friend at midnight and the importunate widow? |
38162 | What do I mean when I say the true Christian is happy? |
38162 | What do I mean when I speak of a true Christian? |
38162 | What do I mean when I speak of formal religion? |
38162 | What does it all mean? |
38162 | What does it matter how men conduct themselves, if all go to heaven, and nobody goes to hell? |
38162 | What does this teach_ me_?" |
38162 | What dost thou do with the Bible?--Dost thou read it?--HOW READEST THOU? |
38162 | What explanation can we give of it? |
38162 | What great and good thing was ever done without trouble? |
38162 | What have we really got from Christ? |
38162 | What is a man to do? |
38162 | What is a man to do? |
38162 | What is all this but taking Jehoiakim''s penknife? |
38162 | What is he to do? |
38162 | What is it like? |
38162 | What is likely to be my condition after death? |
38162 | What is that one thing? |
38162 | What is the character of our religion? |
38162 | What is the great end, aim, object, and ruling motive in your life?" |
38162 | What is the reason that some believers are so much brighter and holier than others? |
38162 | What is written in the Word of God? |
38162 | What is written? |
38162 | What is your manner of speaking, especially in seasons of vexation and provocation? |
38162 | What is your temper? |
38162 | What kind of love is that of the Lord Jesus toward man? |
38162 | What matter? |
38162 | What may be learned from their care- worn countenances? |
38162 | What may be read in many of their wrinkled foreheads,--so absent- looking and sunk in thought? |
38162 | What may communicants expect from the Lord''s Supper? |
38162 | What may we learn from these tremendously strong expressions? |
38162 | What mean those deep lines which furrow so many a cheek and so many a brow? |
38162 | What means that air of anxious thoughtfulness which is worn by five out of every six we meet? |
38162 | What more can a man want to lead him to take any step in religion than the things I have just told him about prayer? |
38162 | What more could be done to make the path to the mercy- seat easy, and to remove all occasions of stumbling from the sinner''s way? |
38162 | What motive remains for living soberly, righteously, and godly? |
38162 | What must be thought of you if you despise the only sure receipt for the everlasting health of your soul? |
38162 | What point of union would there be in such a company? |
38162 | What saith the Lord? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture? |
38162 | What saith the Scripture?_"He ought to care nothing for what other people may think right. |
38162 | What says Solomon? |
38162 | What says St. Paul? |
38162 | What says St. Paul? |
38162 | What says St. Paul? |
38162 | What says our Lord? |
38162 | What says the Apostle James? |
38162 | What says the Apostle Paul to Titus? |
38162 | What says the Apostle Paul? |
38162 | What says the Gospel of John? |
38162 | What says the Lord Jesus to the Laodicean Church? |
38162 | What says the Psalmist? |
38162 | What says the Scripture which heads this paper? |
38162 | What says the Scripture which heads this paper? |
38162 | What says the Scripture which heads this paper? |
38162 | What says the Scripture which heads this paper? |
38162 | What says the Scripture? |
38162 | What says the Scripture? |
38162 | What says the Scripture? |
38162 | What says the book of Job? |
38162 | What says the first Epistle to the Corinthians? |
38162 | What shall I say of those who are irregular about public worship on Sundays? |
38162 | What shall I say of those who come regularly to a place of worship, but come entirely as a matter of form? |
38162 | What shall I say of those who never pray? |
38162 | What shall I say of those who seldom or never read the Bible? |
38162 | What shall a man do? |
38162 | What shall a man do? |
38162 | What shall be said of the man who transgresses God''s law, and does something which God says, Thou shalt not do? |
38162 | What shall enable us to feel,"I fear no evil"? |
38162 | What shall it profit you to be a citizen of a free country, so long as your soul is not free? |
38162 | What shall support us in that trying hour? |
38162 | What shall we say of the man who is ashamed of his religion, ashamed of his Master, ashamed of his home? |
38162 | What shall we say of these people? |
38162 | What shall we say to these testimonies of Scripture? |
38162 | What shall we say to these things? |
38162 | What shall we say to these things? |
38162 | What should we think of the child who told his father he was in trouble, but nothing more? |
38162 | What should we think of the patient who told his doctor he was ill, but never went into particulars? |
38162 | What should we think of the wife who told her husband she was unhappy, but did not specify the cause? |
38162 | What should you think of the man who in time of cholera despised a sure receipt for preserving the health of his body? |
38162 | What though thine earthly friends forsake thee, and thou art alone in the world? |
38162 | What though thy body be bowed down with disease? |
38162 | What though thy poverty and trials be very great? |
38162 | What though your faith be feeble? |
38162 | What were he and his companions but men"mighty in the Scriptures?" |
38162 | What were his sermons but expositions and applications of the Word? |
38162 | What will you do when all these things have passed away for ever? |
38162 | What would become of the ignorant masses who crowd the lanes and alleys of our overgrown cities, if it were not for Christian zeal? |
38162 | What would you do in heaven, I wonder, if you got there without charity? |
38162 | What would you say of the man who saw his neighbour''s house in danger of being burned down, and never raised the cry of"Fire"? |
38162 | What, in a world of disease and death, what ought I to do?" |
38162 | When God has spoken of it so plainly, who can safely hold his peace? |
38162 | When Scripture speaks so plainly, why can not men be content with it? |
38162 | When and in what manner do sinners become the"sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty?" |
38162 | When are you prepared to meet God? |
38162 | When do we enter into this glorious relationship? |
38162 | When does a man really take his first step in coming out from sin and the world? |
38162 | When does the building of the Spirit really begin to appear in a man''s heart? |
38162 | When shall this be? |
38162 | When shall"striving"to enter be of no use? |
38162 | When sinners entice you, and say,"It is only a little one,"--when Satan whispers in your heart,"Never mind: where is the mighty harm? |
38162 | When we look around us, we may well ask,"How do we do about our souls?" |
38162 | When ye come to appear before Me, who hath required this at your hand, to tread my courts? |
38162 | Whence did these feelings come? |
38162 | Where am I going? |
38162 | Where are our brothers and sisters? |
38162 | Where are our fathers and mothers? |
38162 | Where are our husbands and wives? |
38162 | Where are our ministers and teachers? |
38162 | Where are our neighbours and friends? |
38162 | Where are the boys and girls we played with when we went to school? |
38162 | Where are the evidences of your conversion and sanctification? |
38162 | Where are the old grey- headed worshippers, whose reverent faces we remember so well, when we first went to God''s house? |
38162 | Where are your practical actions of love in your dealing with others? |
38162 | Where can we find the smallest evidence that any one can be born again, and have a new heart, if he dies in an unregenerate state? |
38162 | Where do you mean to turn for comfort? |
38162 | Where is it to be found? |
38162 | Where is the freeman of Christ on earth who is not often painfully reminded that we are not yet in heaven? |
38162 | Where is the nation upon earth that has ever attained greatness, and left its mark on the world, without freedom? |
38162 | Where is the need of the Holy Ghost, if sinners are at last to enter heaven without conversion and renewal of heart? |
38162 | Where is the slightest proof that saving faith in Christ''s blood can ever begin after death? |
38162 | Where is this path? |
38162 | Where is this road? |
38162 | Where is your good- nature, your courtesy, your patience, your meekness, your gentleness, your forbearance? |
38162 | Where is your zeal for extending Christ''s Gospel through an evil world? |
38162 | Where shall we begin, if we try to give examples of His zeal? |
38162 | Where should we end, if we once began? |
38162 | Where would be all these glorious instruments for good if it were not for Christian zeal? |
38162 | Where would be our Societies for rooting out sin and ignorance, for finding out the dark places of the earth, and recovering poor lost souls? |
38162 | Where would our City Missions and Ragged Schools be if it were not for zeal? |
38162 | Where would our District- Visiting and Pastoral Aid Societies be if it were not for zeal? |
38162 | Where would the Missionary work be if it were not for zeal? |
38162 | Which are you? |
38162 | Which is it of the two? |
38162 | Who are the men that God has generally honoured to build up the walls of His Zion, and turn the battle from the gate? |
38162 | Who are the men that have left the deepest and most indelible marks on the Church of their day? |
38162 | Who can account for this? |
38162 | Who can count up the ailments by which our bodily frame may be assailed? |
38162 | Who can describe the glory which is yet to be revealed and given to the children of God? |
38162 | Who can doubt that this mighty sentence was written for Christians as well as for Jews? |
38162 | Who can doubt what the answer would be I? |
38162 | Who can tell but that he may be called this very year to meet his God? |
38162 | Who can tell the full nature of the inheritance of the saints in light? |
38162 | Who can tell what it may do when spoken in faith and prayer? |
38162 | Who can tell what"a word spoken in due season"may do? |
38162 | Who does not know that the heroes and heroines of these works are constantly described as patterns of perfection? |
38162 | Who does not know the misery of disorder? |
38162 | Who does not mourn over the folly of the drunkard, the opium eater, and the suicide? |
38162 | Who ever lives to be fifty years old and does not find to his cost that it is so? |
38162 | Who ever spoke such loving and merciful words as our Lord Jesus Christ? |
38162 | Who ever visited a museum of morbid anatomy without a shudder? |
38162 | Who gave you the feelings you possess? |
38162 | Who has got it at this moment to bestow? |
38162 | Who has obtained it for man? |
38162 | Who is there among the readers of this paper that_ is a son of God indeed_? |
38162 | Who is there among the readers of this paper who_ desires to become a son of God_? |
38162 | Who is there now among the readers of this paper that loves the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity? |
38162 | Who knows but this text may help to make this day the happiest day in your life? |
38162 | Who knows but this text may prove a word in season to your soul? |
38162 | Who knows but this year may be the last in his life? |
38162 | Who knows but we may have a very stormy passage? |
38162 | Who made you hate sin? |
38162 | Who made you long and labour to be holy? |
38162 | Who made you love Christ? |
38162 | Who now among the readers of this paper_ desires to know whether he is a son of God_? |
38162 | Who ought to go to the Table and be communicants? |
38162 | Who shall dwell with devouring fire? |
38162 | Who shall dwell with everlasting burnings? |
38162 | Who would desire to speak of hell- fire if God had not spoken of it? |
38162 | Who would like to be found in a modern ball- room when the Lord Jesus Christ comes the second time? |
38162 | Who, even in our own time, has not heard of that enormous fountain of wretchedness, the slavery of the Negro race? |
38162 | Why are you cast down? |
38162 | Why do many so- called Christians never go to the Lord''s Table? |
38162 | Why indeed art thou ever sad if thou art the King''s son? |
38162 | Why is it a thing that we ought to look forward to with joy, and expect with pleasure? |
38162 | Why is it? |
38162 | Why should I not say that multitudes have gone to"the strait gate"since the days of the Apostles, and have entered in by it and been saved? |
38162 | Why should fig trees which bear no fruit be spared in the present day, when in our Lord''s time they were to be cut down as"cumberers of the ground"? |
38162 | Why should he repent and take up the cross, if he can get to heaven at last without trouble? |
38162 | Why should men ever doubt, when they look at you, whether it is a pleasant thing to be one of God''s children? |
38162 | Why should not you also seek Christ? |
38162 | Why should not you give up your sins, and lay hold on Christ this very day? |
38162 | Why should we mystify and confuse a subject which in the New Testament is so simple? |
38162 | Why should we not look at facts under our own eyes, and by our own doors? |
38162 | Why should we suppose for a moment that a lower standard will suffice in the present day? |
38162 | Why was the Lord''s supper ordained? |
38162 | Will you not repent? |
38162 | Would we like to know where the true Pattern of charity like this can be found? |
38162 | Would you adorn the doctrine you profess? |
38162 | Would you be happy? |
38162 | Would you be noble? |
38162 | Would you know whether you are prepared to meet God? |
38162 | Would you know whether you are prepared to meet God? |
38162 | Would you like to know why they are called"a family"? |
38162 | Would you make your Christianity beautiful in the eyes of others? |
38162 | Yet what does she say herself? |
38162 | Yet what is Solomon''s testimony? |
38162 | Yet what was the true record of Davy''s feelings? |
38162 | Yet who can doubt which of the two parties was on the Lord''s side? |
38162 | Yet who can doubt which was most precious in God''s sight, the servant or the king? |
38162 | Yet who can doubt which was the good man of the two, the Lord Chief Justice or the author of the"Saint''s Rest"? |
38162 | You will hear that awful word,"Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?" |
38162 | Your heart will sometimes say,"We have had family prayers; what mighty harm if we leave private prayer undone?" |
38162 | [ 13] What says the Epistle to the Galatians? |
38162 | _ Did you ever ask those questions?_ I am certain if you did, that the weakest and lowest believers would all give you one answer. |
38162 | _ Have you got a home for your soul?_ Is it safe? |
38162 | _ Have you got a home for your soul?_ Is it safe? |
38162 | _ Is this"striving"_? |
38162 | _ What is that family_ which the Bible calls"the whole family in heaven and earth"? |
38162 | _ What is the present position_ of the whole family in heaven and earth? |
38162 | _ When is a man truly zealous in religion?_ There never was a grace of which Satan has not made a counterfeit. |
38162 | _ Who are the chaff in the world?_ This again is a point which demands special attention. |
38162 | _ Who are the wheat in the world?_ This is a point which demands special consideration. |
38162 | _ Why is this"gathering together"of true Christians a thing to be desired?_ Let us try to get an answer to that question. |
38162 | and what do we know of Him? |
38162 | and what do we think of Him? |
38162 | and what must I do? |
38162 | but,"How can I best promote peace? |
38162 | genuine or base? |
38162 | have we not all eternity to rest in?" |
38162 | oh, eternity, where are thy terrors?" |
38162 | oh, grave, where is thy victory? |
38162 | or nominal and base? |
38162 | she replied.--''But why does the uncertainty of another state give you no concern?'' |
38162 | they say:"If this is not Christianity, what is?" |
38162 | to yourself or to Christ? |
38162 | we may well ask,--"Where is love? |
38162 | where is the mind of Christ?" |
6661 | ''See ye that?'' 6661 ''Where is Jezdegerd?'' |
6661 | ''You say well, daughter,''said the sage,''good- night-- but who, of the numbers who hear me, shall say good- morning?'' 6661 All this,"said the Emperor,"we knew before;--but what new evil now threatens, since we have already escaped so important a one?" |
6661 | And Sir Philip Forester,said I,"did he too vanish for ever from the public scene?" |
6661 | And after all,she proceeded,"you, Lady Augusta de Berkely, what do you venture, if you run the risk of falling into the hands of your lover? |
6661 | And are the conditions,said the Caesar,"the same as if Count Robert himself held the lists? |
6661 | And as I understand,said Agelastes,"your lady shares with your honourable self in these valorous resolutions?--Can this be?" |
6661 | And can thy fertile brain,said the centurion,"spin nothing out of his present situation, tending towards our advantage?" |
6661 | And can your imperial Highness,said Douban,"hope that you have acquired this man''s duty and affection by the conduct you have observed to him?" |
6661 | And did this move the gallant? |
6661 | And do you know all this,said Count Robert,"and permit this man to go unimpeached?" |
6661 | And for what,said the Varangian,"have you so employed him? |
6661 | And have they done so? |
6661 | And have you thought what must be the necessary inference? |
6661 | And is it but now you know me, Bertha? |
6661 | And is it not,said the Varangian,"your Valour''s duty to probe this want of discipline to the bottom?" |
6661 | And is that all that you would make of such an opportunity? |
6661 | And my memory in history,said Alexius,"in what manner is that to be preserved?" |
6661 | And suppose for once,said the Princess Anna Comnena,"that I possessed such titles to your confidence, what would your answer be to me?" |
6661 | And that,said the Count,"has reference to Bertha, the faithful attendant of my wife?" |
6661 | And the combat, my lord? |
6661 | And then? |
6661 | And this Duke Robert, who is he? |
6661 | And this, then, was thy handiwork? |
6661 | And this,said the Emperor, fixing his eye upon his confessor,"your reverence esteems actually the most dangerous point of the popular tumult?" |
6661 | And thou dost not blush to own it? |
6661 | And thou hast slain my comrade of this strange watch? |
6661 | And to which of their foibles wilt thou address it? |
6661 | And what did he learn there? |
6661 | And what is all this to me? |
6661 | And what is her danger,said Hereward;"what is it she wants, this accomplished lady whom thou callest mistress?" |
6661 | And what is that purpose? 6661 And what may that be?" |
6661 | And what mean you,said the Emperor,"that I am to do, while my Anglo- Saxons fight for my sake?" |
6661 | And what of the gallant who assisted at our prelections? |
6661 | And what said Bohemond? |
6661 | And what we have seen is even now acting? |
6661 | And where is the animal who was opposed to thee? |
6661 | And wherefore didst thou not instantly call treason, and raise the hue and cry? |
6661 | And wherefore, and how long,said Count Robert,"dost thou conclude that my Countess is detained in these gardens?" |
6661 | And who is that, good woman? |
6661 | And would you have me, then,said Count Robert,"move the crusaders to break a fairly appointed field of battle? |
6661 | And you will return, mistress,said her mother,"from so foolish an expedition, before the sun sets?" |
6661 | And, being on these terms, you are going to join the very army in which my brother Falconer is now serving? |
6661 | Are there many of a race,said the Countess,"so singularly unhappy in their destination? |
6661 | Are you sure, good woman,replied the knight,"that there is any inhabitant in these ruins? |
6661 | Art thou a man,said Count Robert to his companion;"and canst thou advise me to remain still and hear this?" |
6661 | Ay, I understand,said Dickson,"your son hath had a touch of that illness which terminates so frequently in the black death you English folk die of? |
6661 | Ay-- what else? |
6661 | Ay? |
6661 | Bertram, my friend,said the younger of the two,"how far are we still from Douglas Castle? |
6661 | But art not thou also bound to a nearer dependence upon''the great Acolyte, Achilles Tatius? |
6661 | But what are they, these strangers? |
6661 | But what have I to do,said the Count,"with this man, or with his plots?" |
6661 | But wherefore, may I ask,said Bertram,"so much displeased but now at my young friend Charles?" |
6661 | But wherefore, then, leave me, Hereward? |
6661 | But, my dear aunt,said I,"what became of the man of skill?" |
6661 | But,he added,"if these necromantic vassals of hell shall raise the devil upon, me, what shall I do then? |
6661 | Can you administer the torture to the soul? |
6661 | Could Nicephorus do this? |
6661 | Could you wish,said he to Greenleaf,"a more exact description of the miseries which have passed over Scotland in these latter days? |
6661 | Did I not say so? |
6661 | Do I not know it? |
6661 | Do I not know you now? |
6661 | Do you consider that it is made in my presence? |
6661 | Do you mean, then,said the Varangian,"to suffer your wife''s honour to remain pledged as it at present is, on the event of an unequal combat?" |
6661 | Do you not go with me? |
6661 | Do you not know that is the instrument of their barbarous office? 6661 Do you not remember me, old friend?" |
6661 | Do you suffer your youthful pupils to be indeed so slovenly and so saucy, Bertram? |
6661 | Do you talk then of conspiracies in this part of the country, Greenleaf? |
6661 | Do you tell me so, Sir Minstrel,said De Valence in a threatening tone,"knowing me and my office?" |
6661 | Do you then hold, reverend father,said Sir Aymer,"that there is real danger in carrying this youth to the castle to- night, as I proposed?" |
6661 | Does anybody,said the knight,"know whom it is that this old woman means?" |
6661 | Dost thou connive with the wolves in robbing thine own fold? |
6661 | Douban,said Alexius,"how fares it with thy patient, whose safety is this day of such consequence to the Grecian state?" |
6661 | Fair Countess,he said,"what occasion is there for your wearing this veil of sadness over a countenance so lovely?" |
6661 | For whose ear? |
6661 | Hah!--say''st thou? |
6661 | Harm? |
6661 | Hath he persuaded thee of this, Douban? |
6661 | Have thine enquiries, my gallant friend, learned more concerning my unfortunate wife, my faithful Brenhilda? |
6661 | He is then a soldier? |
6661 | Hear you that? |
6661 | How am I to know you,replied the ghastly cavalier,"or your circumstances? |
6661 | How did she bear her removal? |
6661 | How do you say? |
6661 | How is it,said Bohemond,"noble Count of Paris? |
6661 | How say you, my noble wife? |
6661 | How shall we deal with him? |
6661 | How speak you that? |
6661 | How, madam? |
6661 | I am Lady Bothwell; allow me to say, that this is no time or place for long explanations.--What are your commands with me? |
6661 | I am not, then,said Turnbull,"received as a friendly messenger? |
6661 | I have found the passage,--he called out;"and its direction is the same in which thy voice is heard-- But how shall I undo the door?" |
6661 | I have the honour to speak with the Lady Bothwell? |
6661 | I hope,said the abbot, looking strangely confused,"I shall be first heard in behalf of the Church concerning this affair of an abducted nun? |
6661 | I must then prepare to attend you instantly to the Castle of Douglas and the presence of Sir John de Walton? |
6661 | I see,he said,"you are resolved, and I know that your resolution can in justice be called by no other name than an act of heroic folly:--What then? |
6661 | I see,said she,"that the peril of this part of the adventure must rest with me; and wherefore should it not? |
6661 | I? |
6661 | In private? 6661 In what respect?" |
6661 | In what sense,said the Lady Augusta,"do you use these words?" |
6661 | In which case,said Sir Aymer,"you would have had the discomfort of returning some part of the money you have received?" |
6661 | Indeed? |
6661 | Is Pembroke near? |
6661 | Is it a club? |
6661 | Is it to these gentlemen that your censure applies? |
6661 | Is the chase ended, then? |
6661 | Is there danger near, and do you distrust our protection? |
6661 | Is there then,said Count Robert,"any absolute necessity that thou and I perform this dance at all?" |
6661 | Knew before? |
6661 | May I speak,he said,"and live? |
6661 | Meantime,said the Follower,"thou obtainest, I conclude, such orders and warrants as the Caesar can give for the furtherance of our plot?" |
6661 | Must I then betray secrets which my father has intrusted to me? |
6661 | Must you do this? |
6661 | My Robert, we will go-- will we not, where such objects are to be seen? |
6661 | My assistance,said the old archer,"shall be at hand when you call, but"--"But what?" |
6661 | Orders from whom? |
6661 | Perhaps my attachment, were its source of consequence, might be foumd warmer for the union of the rights you mention,said Aunt Margaret? |
6661 | Pray, Sir Philip, what route do you take when you reach the Continent? |
6661 | Pshawanswered De Walton,"is Aymer de Valence governor of this castle, or am I? |
6661 | Sage Douban,he said,"has our esteemed prisoner, Ursel, made his choice between our peace and enmity?" |
6661 | Scoundrel heathen,said the Christian Knight,"dost thou hold that language to a Peer of France?" |
6661 | See there,said the Caesar,"is not that, most serene Empress, the very point of despair? |
6661 | Speak out, sir; what is your meaning? |
6661 | Stop, sir, I command you,said Lady Bothwell.--"Who are you, that, at such a place and time, come to recall these horrible recollections? |
6661 | Stranger,he said,"what noise is that I hear?" |
6661 | Such being the case,answered De Valence,"let me know plainly on what matter it is that you require my opinion? |
6661 | Such, doubtless, were your thoughts when you left the land of the west,said Agelastes;"but, fair Countess, have they experienced no change? |
6661 | Tell me, my most simple friend, art thou afraid it has been transported hither in one night, as the Latins believe of Our Lady''s house of Loretto? |
6661 | Tell me,said Bend- the- Bow,"this same Bertram,--was he not about a year since in the service of some noble lady in our own country?" |
6661 | Tell me,said De Walton,"thou traitor, for what waitest thou here?" |
6661 | That he may return with his crusading madmen,said the Emperor,"and sack Constantinople, under pretence of doing justice to his Confederates? |
6661 | That is to say, you besotted villains,answered the young knight,"you have been drinking, and have slept?" |
6661 | The strict rule of chivalry indeed bears what I tell thee, but when the question is, Fight or not? 6661 There knocks,"said he,"one of our allies; who can it be that comes so late?" |
6661 | These Normanssaid the Emperor,"are then the people by whom the celebrated island of Britain is now conquered and governed?" |
6661 | They are, then, a brave and warlike people? |
6661 | Thinkest thou not,said Achilles,"that he may have crossed the Hellespont, in order to rejoin his own countrymen and adherents?" |
6661 | To take up their master on their shoulders? 6661 Was it then so impious?" |
6661 | We meet not then to- night? |
6661 | We will go, Robert-- will we not? |
6661 | Well, your plan, sir? |
6661 | Well,said Achilles,"and should not the consciousness of the possibility of this fate render us cautious?" |
6661 | Were you impatient for my return, fair lady? 6661 What became of the adept?" |
6661 | What can such words preface? |
6661 | What can you require of me, father? |
6661 | What disconsolate wretch art thou, who expectest that the living can answer thee from the habitations of the dead? |
6661 | What do they whisper, thou sworn sister of the Eumenides? |
6661 | What dost thou think,said the Countess,"of so suspicious a friend as Agelastes? |
6661 | What else didst thou note about this person? |
6661 | What hast thou to ask from me? |
6661 | What hast thou to say, sir? |
6661 | What is he? |
6661 | What is it? |
6661 | What is the meaning of this, Engelbrecht? |
6661 | What is the name,said the Emperor,"of that singular and assuming man?" |
6661 | What means this? |
6661 | What means your reverence? |
6661 | What now,he said,"our trusty sentinel? |
6661 | What thinkest thou, my young friend,said De Walton,"if we try some of the woodland sports proper, they say, to this country? |
6661 | What was this Ursel,said Hereward,"of whom I hear men talk so variously?" |
6661 | What will be the consequence to my father? |
6661 | What will be tried, mother? |
6661 | What would you have me do? |
6661 | What would you with me, young man? |
6661 | What, has our fair opponent withdrawn her forces? 6661 What, in one word, is thy demand?" |
6661 | What, sir,said his companion,"you must contest the point, must you? |
6661 | What, then, are thy thoughts of the Emperor by whose command thou sufferest so severe a restraint? |
6661 | What? |
6661 | When and where? |
6661 | Where and how? |
6661 | Where, then, lady, would you now go,said sister Ursula,"were the choice in your power?" |
6661 | Which of our leaders do you come hither to see? |
6661 | Whisper? |
6661 | Whither are we going, my father? |
6661 | Who are yon two persons? |
6661 | Why distress me thus, mother? |
6661 | Why dost thou think so? |
6661 | Why here,he said,"trusty Follower? |
6661 | Why, then,said Count Robert, blushing deeply at the same time,"did they exhibit its fantastic terrors to me? |
6661 | Why, thou foolish and hot- brained churl,replied the Count,"what right hast thou to the honour of dying by my blade? |
6661 | Will you give me no odds to stab a stupefied or drunken man, most noble centurion? |
6661 | Will you then, Prince Bohemond, not be ruled by the conduct of your friend? |
6661 | Will your Imperial Majesty transfer to me the direction of your menagerie, or collection of extraordinary creatures? |
6661 | Wilt thou? 6661 Without doubt you must also have heard, noble sir,"replied the minstrel,"many things of James, the present heir of the house of Douglas?" |
6661 | Yes,replied Sir John de Walton,"but see you not that her offending lover is expressly excluded from the amnesty granted to the lesser offender? |
6661 | You are no soft Eastern, fair maid, and I presume you will find yourself under no difficulty in managing a quiet horse? |
6661 | You at least,said the Emperor,"my gentle Count Robert, you and your lovely lady, will not have any scruple to pledge your Imperial host?" |
6661 | You have my secret, then,said he,"and you know who it is that passes under the name of Augustine?" |
6661 | You have seen him, then, this evening? |
6661 | You hear him, daughter? |
6661 | You know,said the supposed Augustine,"the principal part of my story; can you, or will you, lend me your assistance? |
6661 | You mean Major Falconer, your brother by the mother''s side:--What can he possibly have to do with our present agreeable conversation? |
6661 | You seek, then, to barter safety for fame,said Agelastes,"though you may, perchance, throw death into the scale by which you hope to gain it?" |
6661 | You would perhaps love the commission yourself? |
6661 | *****"And did this tragedy,"said I,"take place exactly at the time when the scene in the mirror was exhibited?" |
6661 | --"Sure,"says Don Quixote,"that which treats of me can have pleased but few?" |
6661 | A list, I suppose, of the followers of this great count?" |
6661 | All this being prepared beforehand, how and when shall we deal with the Emperor?" |
6661 | And against what were they waged? |
6661 | And am I not here, Bertha? |
6661 | And now, be candid for once with thy master-- for deception is thy nature even with me-- By what charm wilt thou subdue these untamed savages?" |
6661 | And now, grave sir, permit me to ask, whether this meeting is by your desire, and for what is its purpose? |
6661 | And speak now in true faith, hast not thou been rewarded?" |
6661 | Are we such bad horsemen, or are our steeds so awkward, that we can not rein them back from this to the landing- place at Scutari? |
6661 | Are we then to judge you a follower of the Muses, in whose service, as well as in that of Phoebus, we ourselves pretend to be enlisted?" |
6661 | As Hereward passed, he put the same question as he did to the former citizen,--"Know you the meaning of these trumpets sounding so late?" |
6661 | At length a female voice spoke above the Babel of confused sounds, saying,"Where is the Southern Knight? |
6661 | But here comes the muscadel and the breakfast; wilt thou take some refreshment;--or shall we go on without the spirit of muscadel?" |
6661 | But thou hast not yet told me, friend minstrel, what are the motives, in particular which have attracted thy wandering steps to this wild country?" |
6661 | But what is it the Imperial Admiral is about to do?" |
6661 | But when is it that these Franks draw back on account of danger? |
6661 | But where is this man? |
6661 | But who, or what, shall now warrant to me the veracity of either?" |
6661 | But you would hardly, I suppose, be pleased to adopt the wisest alternative?" |
6661 | But, indeed, to what purpose should the ancient Douglasses have employed his principles, even if they had known them in ever so much perfection? |
6661 | Can you not believe this terrace a safe station while you have my support and that of this faithful slave?" |
6661 | Can your wisdom possibly entertain a wish to converse with me?" |
6661 | Come hither-- look through the wicket to the stone bench, on the shady side of the grand porch-- tell me, old lad, what dost thou see there?" |
6661 | Comes it hitherward?" |
6661 | Could it be possible? |
6661 | De Walton, what have you done? |
6661 | Did she sleep or wake, or could she sleep within the close hearing of that horrible cry, which shook all around? |
6661 | Diogenes here entered--"Has the Frank lady been removed?" |
6661 | Do thy gifts, accomplishments, and talents, spread hardness as well as polish over thy heart? |
6661 | Do you envy that nobleman, whom, if death were in the sound, I would not hesitate to term my honourable patron? |
6661 | Do you live, or have you been murdered? |
6661 | Does this tide of Xiatin warriors, so strangely set aflowing, still rush on to the banks of the Bosphorus? |
6661 | Had she changed her purpose on account of the hard words which he had used towards her? |
6661 | Had she resolved to leave her father to his fate in his hour of utmost need? |
6661 | Has the deep earth swallow''d him? |
6661 | Have you anything to take with you?" |
6661 | Have you the courage to behold with your own eyes what the Cavaliero Philippo Forester is now doing? |
6661 | He then said,"Thou remainest, sage Agelastes, confident in the purpose of which we have lately spoke together?" |
6661 | He therefore began thus:--"''Outpost at Hazelside, the steading of Goodman Thomas Dickson''--Ay, Thomas, and is thy house so called?" |
6661 | Here have I sacrificed my just revenge over my rival Ursel, and what good do I obtain by it? |
6661 | Ho?" |
6661 | How art thou supplied with food in this dungeon of thine?" |
6661 | How did you in reality rest during last night?" |
6661 | How did you rest last night?" |
6661 | How say''st thou?" |
6661 | I ask you, will you answer the enquiries which it is my duty to make, or am I to enforce obedience by putting you under the penalties of the question? |
6661 | I have told a greater lie-- at least I have suppressed more truth-- than on any occasion before in my whole life-- and what is the consequence? |
6661 | In the meanwhile, the dialogue between the Emperor and his soldier continued:--"How,"said Alexius,"did this draught relish compared with the former?" |
6661 | In what manner, it is more necessary to ask, was it received by this boy?" |
6661 | Is he now in the apartment called the Baron''s study?" |
6661 | Is it not possible that one can have at the same time an affection for the memory of a father and for truth? |
6661 | Is this a recollection which can inspire a Scottish knight with compassion towards an English lady? |
6661 | Mark you not the concluding paragraph?" |
6661 | May I be informed of the cause, after the arrangement so recently gone into with the governor?" |
6661 | O, then, by day, Where wilt thou find a cavern dark enough To mask thy monstrous visage? |
6661 | Once more, what dost thou want with me? |
6661 | One word permit me to ask-- in what manner is the wife of the Caesar to be disposed of?" |
6661 | Or hath he melted like some airy phantom That shuns the approach of morn and the young sun? |
6661 | Or hath he wrapt him in Cimmerian darkness, And pass''d beyond the circuit of the sight With things of the night''s shadows? |
6661 | See you not the gleams from his headpiece and his cuirass? |
6661 | Shall he, so unutterably miserable, not profit by perhaps the only opportunity of freedom that may ever occur to him?" |
6661 | Sham''st thou to show thy dangerous brow by night, When evils are most free? |
6661 | So saying, he pulled a scroll from his leathern pouch, and said,"Minstrel, canst thou read?" |
6661 | Tell me then, how go on the affairs of the empire? |
6661 | The Prophet Baalam was not more surprised when his ass turned round her head and spoke to him!--And what else didst thou note concerning this man? |
6661 | The lady, on that direful morning when she retired from the church of Douglas, had not resolved( indeed what lady ever did?) |
6661 | The question is now, How we shall rejoin each other when we separate? |
6661 | The question is, Can you forgive what has taken place?" |
6661 | The question was, what that cause could be? |
6661 | Their general demand was,"What was her business in their camp?" |
6661 | Then I presume to say in your ear"----"What do you imagine is his object?" |
6661 | There is a maxim for thee, Gilbert!--Heardest thou ever better? |
6661 | Think you he will have the madness to brand us with such open neglect, my father? |
6661 | Thinkest thou he is awake?" |
6661 | Thou art, if I mistake not, the bold Frank, who was yesternight imprisoned in this place with, a tiger, chained within no distant spring of his bed?" |
6661 | Thou knowest, methinks, that in trusting me thou wilt come to no harm?" |
6661 | To whose fault are we to ascribe the source of all these errors? |
6661 | Tom Dickson, call you him?" |
6661 | Upon your knighthood and your honour, will you promise to me so much?" |
6661 | Varangian he shall be of Varangians; Acolyte he shall be named, in place of the present traitor; and who knows what may come thereafter?" |
6661 | Was she still within a few yards of him, as when he lay down the last night? |
6661 | Was there ever received into a human creed, a being so mean-- almost so ridiculous-- as the Christian Satan? |
6661 | Well, we will owe him a return, Sir Philip-- shall we not? |
6661 | What conduct, then, is a poor man like me to hold? |
6661 | What could my forgiveness avail him?" |
6661 | What do you think of all this?" |
6661 | What does this cartel exact, save what your duty as a knight implicitly obliges you to? |
6661 | What dreadful risk do you incur? |
6661 | What is there in this metropolis that they have to oppose them?" |
6661 | What is this person''s character?" |
6661 | What mean these drops of blood?" |
6661 | What means this stifling smell of smoke? |
6661 | What prospect is there that I shall have strength of mind sufficient to continue the task? |
6661 | What sayst thou? |
6661 | What think''st thou, good savage?" |
6661 | What were my eyes made of when they permitted thee to be the first discoverer of these signs of conflict? |
6661 | What, then, a lance, in other words, a belted knight, commands this party?" |
6661 | Where are the noble ladies, whose smiles used to give countenance to the Knights of Saint George''s Cross? |
6661 | Where is he? |
6661 | Where thinkest thou this unhappy fugitive can have taken refuge?" |
6661 | Who are yon with whom he has now met, and who are apparently walking, or rather strolling in the same way with him, back to Constantinople?" |
6661 | Who else could have an interest in banishing or putting to death the husband, but he that affects to admire the wife?" |
6661 | Who was it passed through your post even now, with the traitorous cry of Douglas?" |
6661 | Why should we adjourn till to- morrow that which can be as well finished today? |
6661 | Will our swords be sharper, or our arms stronger to wield them, than they are at this moment? |
6661 | Will you hear of a Spanish lady, How she wooed an Englishman? |
6661 | Wouldst thou wish another safeguard?" |
6661 | You know what was done that day-- how you quenched your thirst, I mean?" |
6661 | You talk of want of proof? |
6661 | You wish, I doubt not, to know who I am? |
6661 | a sexton is he? |
6661 | and does Alexius still entertain hopes to diminish and divide the strength of numbers, which he could in vain hope to defy?" |
6661 | and have I not in vain offered my life- blood to wipe out the stain of parricide and ingratitude? |
6661 | and have you any design of dishonouring his remains? |
6661 | and was he to rely no longer upon the assistance which he had implored her to send? |
6661 | and what are we now, in this foreign land?" |
6661 | and why are these superb congers unprovided with a requisite quantity of fennel? |
6661 | and why hast thou the boldness to watch me?" |
6661 | and will you not invent some mode of ensuring our revenge?" |
6661 | and, while he was subjected to a trial so extraordinary, for what were her weaker frame and female courage reserved? |
6661 | answered the Varangian, somewhat startled.--"Do you know my father''s name?" |
6661 | but that the Count of Paris may have a bride worthy of him.--Dost thou think that this affection is thrown away? |
6661 | cried the Emperor, with emphasis;"where shall I get a soldier-- a champion-- a friend-- so faithful?" |
6661 | cried the old man, holding up his hands,"is it thus the worms which thou hast called out of dust obey the commands of their Maker? |
6661 | darest thou to speak so audacious an opinion?" |
6661 | do you think I can tell you? |
6661 | exclaimed the angry soldier,"when was it that we became fellow- servants, and who is it that thou darest to call my master?" |
6661 | exclaimed the governor, who now only began to comprehend the extent of his misfortune;"whither hath she fled? |
6661 | exclaimed the governor,"under pretence?--is he not then really indisposed?" |
6661 | he added, turning to Dickson--"How say ye, quartermaster? |
6661 | if words can pay debt, there is no fear of our exchequer becoming insolvent.--What follows here, Nicephorus? |
6661 | indeed?" |
6661 | is this the promise you made me to save the life of the unfortunate Nicephorus?" |
6661 | most holy patriarch, would not such a prospect shake the most devout Crusader''s attachment to the burning sands of Palestine?" |
6661 | of Berkley did not relieve my wants?" |
6661 | of what can men''s hearts be made, who can thus dally with the agony of others?" |
6661 | or to whom do you imagine you are responsible for answering such questions as I may put to you?" |
6661 | or will you take it on my report?" |
6661 | or with whom?" |
6661 | replied the old woman,--"is time an object with your honour? |
6661 | said Agelastes;"is there nothing than can move thee but things that are foreign to thyself? |
6661 | said Agelastes;"your Edward, as Alexius termed him?" |
6661 | said De Walton,"my lieutenant and friend, Aymer de Valence, at whom your suspicions point?" |
6661 | said Sir Aymer,"do you mean to found on that circumstance any charge against my loyalty? |
6661 | said Ursel,"what could a blind man do? |
6661 | said he,"our worthy Anglo- Dane, how fares he?" |
6661 | said the Caesar, astonished;"do you propose yourself to hold the lists against me?" |
6661 | said the Countess,"what can these unhappy Africans have done, to have deserved a condemnation which involves so cruel a fate?" |
6661 | said the Emperor;"canst thou not conceive that what has never been taken away is restored with little difficulty? |
6661 | said the Frank, with a brow somewhat over- clouded;"do you feel that I have not left you unjostled by my advance to these squadrons of yours?" |
6661 | said the Frank,"doth paltry intrigues and quarrels of slaves involve a single thought of suspicion of the noble Countess of Paris? |
6661 | said the Princess;"and to one who has so lately held the character of his avowed enemy?" |
6661 | said the Princess;"or what have I to do to pronounce the doom of the Caesar, who is not subject to my power?" |
6661 | said the astonished and forlorn Princess;"Nicephorus, who has so often called my eyes the lights by which he steered his path? |
6661 | said the knight--"and what is the result of your observation?" |
6661 | said the knight;"I hope I am not to find doubts and disobedience on all hands?" |
6661 | said the lady, with some surprise;"and how is your wisdom aware of that?" |
6661 | said the page who had spoken first;"can nothing of less consequence serve thy turn? |
6661 | said the voice again;"whom hast thou got for a companion?--some of the fiends, or ghosts of murdered men, who they say are frequent in these dungeons? |
6661 | she said, suddenly pausing,"do you hear that?" |
6661 | she said,"what have we been to each other since that period? |
6661 | shouted De Valence,"why were you not upon your duty? |
6661 | sighed the disguised pilgrim,"but, on the other hand, how much time must pass by in the siege, by defeating which that suit must needs be advanced? |
6661 | so gallant an enemy as the Caesar, as he is called?" |
6661 | that we Varangians were plunderers, drunkards, and the like?" |
6661 | what can you possibly want with them, when you promised to stay with me quietly for at least a week?" |
6661 | what hast thou, at this time of day, come to report to us? |
6661 | what is the meaning of that red flag which the Greek Admiral has this instant hoisted?" |
6661 | what sleeps he with, wrapt so close in his bear- skin?" |
6661 | what wouldst thou have? |
6661 | where loiterest thou? |
6661 | wherefore not assist me in the release of my mistress?" |
6661 | who waits there?" |
6661 | why didst thou not apprize me of this yesterday?" |
6661 | why this soldier here at this time of night?" |
6661 | wilt thou indeed?" |
6661 | with that learned old man?" |
6661 | would rather form a gay subject for the minstrelsy of this excellent bard, than the theme of a tragic lay? |
49372 | A kind of rep."Striped? |
49372 | A nobleman? 49372 Across the fields? |
49372 | After the victory of Landéan, why did you not shoot the three hundred peasant prisoners? |
49372 | Against whom? |
49372 | Ah, is that you, master? |
49372 | Am I not a Breton peasant? 49372 Am I not speaking to you?" |
49372 | And Lantenac? |
49372 | And after that? |
49372 | And am I still to command the twelve? |
49372 | And how about the escort? |
49372 | And how many prisoners? |
49372 | And if I am asked monseigneur''s name? |
49372 | And in fifteen? |
49372 | And in the mean time what would you have? |
49372 | And in your left hand? |
49372 | And shall I find my children there? |
49372 | And since your husband died, what have you been doing? |
49372 | And so, madam, you are running away? |
49372 | And that the man who arrests me will make his fortune? |
49372 | And the Garde- meuble? 49372 And the Opera House built with the money that you furnished?" |
49372 | And the child? 49372 And the hundred thousand livres in secret funds of the Ministère de la Justice?" |
49372 | And the ladies,--where are they? |
49372 | And the loans to Montansier? |
49372 | And the oldest one? 49372 And the other woman,--is she living too?" |
49372 | And the rendez- vous is still to be the same,--at the Pierre- Gauvaine? |
49372 | And the thefts of your_ alter ego_, Lacroix, in Belgium? |
49372 | And the two millions secret expenses of the Assembly, a quarter of which fell to your share? |
49372 | And the younger one? 49372 And then?" |
49372 | And then? |
49372 | And then? |
49372 | And then? |
49372 | And what are the lions? |
49372 | And what are they doing there? |
49372 | And what did your husband do? |
49372 | And what is that? |
49372 | And what sort of a figure did they cut on the scaffold? |
49372 | And what then would you do with a Republican chief who would set a Royalist leader at liberty? |
49372 | And why should n''t she? |
49372 | And yesterday? |
49372 | And you are looking for them? |
49372 | And you attacked the Blues at the farm Herbe- en- Pail? |
49372 | And you have been travelling all day? |
49372 | And you number seven thousand? |
49372 | And you propose to save me? |
49372 | And you said to Buzot, Robespierre,''What does the Republic signify?'' |
49372 | Are all the cruisers there? |
49372 | Are any of the men seriously wounded? |
49372 | Are there but twelve? |
49372 | Are we still far from it? |
49372 | Are we, then, to separate, Monsieur le Marquis? |
49372 | Are you a kinsman or connection of the man who has escaped? |
49372 | Are you a royalist, or a republican? |
49372 | Are you acquainted with the decree of the Convention? |
49372 | Are you for or against the king? |
49372 | Are you sneering, Marat? |
49372 | Before Condé? |
49372 | Besieged,he cried,"why continue this bloodshed? |
49372 | Both of them? |
49372 | But do you know there is a price set on my head? |
49372 | But one can not hear it? |
49372 | But the children? |
49372 | But what about your parents? 49372 But will she come by this road?" |
49372 | By me? |
49372 | By the way, Guéchamp, how was it about the ladder? |
49372 | By the way, are you hungry? |
49372 | By whom? |
49372 | By whom? |
49372 | Can we turn broadside on? |
49372 | Can you read? |
49372 | Citizen Cimourdain, where do you live? |
49372 | Commander,he said,"are we to land the marines?" |
49372 | Comrade,he said,"how long will it take to go through this passage and reach the woods in safety?" |
49372 | Death? |
49372 | Did n''t you hear me telling you that my children were stolen from me, one little girl and two little boys? 49372 Did the inhabitants of the farm and village resist?" |
49372 | Did you burn the hamlet? |
49372 | Did you not say that the people of Herbe- en- Pail were friendly to the Blues? |
49372 | Do n''t know who you are? |
49372 | Do you believe in God? |
49372 | Do you belong to the neighborhood? |
49372 | Do you know how to use it? |
49372 | Do you know me? |
49372 | Do you know me? |
49372 | Do you know their names too? |
49372 | Do you know those ships? |
49372 | Do you mean the children? |
49372 | Do you mean the younger? |
49372 | Do you mean to stop here, citizen? |
49372 | Do you see that roof, Marquis? |
49372 | Do you see what there is above it? |
49372 | Do you think he will do? |
49372 | Do you understand my question? |
49372 | Does Monseigneur know the neighborhood? |
49372 | Does Monseigneur wish me to leave him? |
49372 | Does any one here know him? |
49372 | Does it belong to you? |
49372 | Escaped? |
49372 | For a commander? |
49372 | For scaling? |
49372 | For what? |
49372 | For whom do you take me? |
49372 | For whom? |
49372 | For whom? |
49372 | Free? |
49372 | From the top of the grand staircase? |
49372 | General,resumed Count Boisberthelot,"considering what this man has done, do you not think that his superiors have a duty to perform?" |
49372 | Go away? |
49372 | God? 49372 Has he any papers about him?" |
49372 | Have I earned a small reward? |
49372 | Have I ever met you before? |
49372 | Have you a lord yourself? |
49372 | Have you a mother? |
49372 | Have you heard, Dussaulx? |
49372 | Have you seen three little children anywhere? |
49372 | Have you the''Moniteur''in your state- room, commander? |
49372 | He is not ill, then? |
49372 | He who ordered the drums to beat while they were beheading the king? 49372 Hey I who are you, lying on the ground there?" |
49372 | How can that be? 49372 How can you tell? |
49372 | How did you know it? |
49372 | How is it that you have no ladder? |
49372 | How is that? 49372 How is that? |
49372 | How is that? 49372 How is that?" |
49372 | How is that? |
49372 | How is that? |
49372 | How long does it take to reach Dol? |
49372 | How long have they been there? |
49372 | How long have you been dying of hunger? |
49372 | How long since? |
49372 | How many are there? |
49372 | How many are you? |
49372 | How much do I owe you? |
49372 | How old is this midget? |
49372 | How shall I know where that is? |
49372 | I ask you what are your political opinions? |
49372 | I asked you where you were going? 49372 I?" |
49372 | I? |
49372 | If you were to see him, would you obey him? |
49372 | In a dressing- gown? |
49372 | In a tempest? |
49372 | In what direction? |
49372 | In what direction? |
49372 | Is he a marquis? |
49372 | Is it a village, a castle, or a farm? |
49372 | Is it far? |
49372 | Is it possible that it has not arrived till now? |
49372 | Is it possible? 49372 Is n''t the tocsin ringing?" |
49372 | Is she still alive? |
49372 | Is that some of the old cut- throat? |
49372 | Is that you, Caimand? |
49372 | Is that you, Halmalo? |
49372 | Is that you, citizen Cimourdain? |
49372 | Is that your opinion? |
49372 | Is the road to Dinan open? |
49372 | Is there a man among you who will volunteer to scale it? |
49372 | Is there a man among you willing to undertake the business? |
49372 | Is there no brook in this cursed wood? |
49372 | Is this all you have to say in your defence? |
49372 | Is this one of the requisition horses, citizen? |
49372 | It is a goal; otherwise, of what use is society? 49372 Man a servant? |
49372 | May I? |
49372 | Near Lamballe? |
49372 | Neither royalist nor republican? |
49372 | Next? |
49372 | Not directly? |
49372 | Nothing? |
49372 | Of republicans? |
49372 | Of the French? |
49372 | Of what are you thinking? |
49372 | On the''Saint Esprit''? |
49372 | On what account? |
49372 | On which side are you, then? |
49372 | On which side? |
49372 | Pilot, can you make out distinctly the largest ship? |
49372 | Pilot, what is the first ship on the port? |
49372 | Pilot, where are we? |
49372 | Robespierre, did not Verdun open the way to Paris for the Prussians? |
49372 | Sergeant Radoub, do you, or do you not, vote for Captain Gauvain''s acquittal? 49372 She is about to go by?" |
49372 | So it is all one to you, whatever happens? |
49372 | So, citizen Cimourdain, if you caught a Republican chief stumbling, you would have him beheaded? |
49372 | Something waving? |
49372 | Still there? |
49372 | Tell us, René- Jean, why did you speak to that little girl in the village? |
49372 | The escape- ladder? |
49372 | The one who was at La Force with the ci- devant Duke de Villeroy? |
49372 | The priest? |
49372 | Then I suppose you will pardon Lantenac if you take him? |
49372 | Then she is going to Parigné? |
49372 | Then you can read? |
49372 | Then, commander, I take it affairs are not going so very badly? |
49372 | Thou hast not done this? |
49372 | Thou? |
49372 | Thou? |
49372 | Throughout this entire neighborhood? |
49372 | Tiger- skin? |
49372 | To escape? |
49372 | To the Blues, or the Whites? 49372 To what party do you belong?" |
49372 | Two boys? |
49372 | Two? |
49372 | Under the king? |
49372 | Was he really hidden in the bottom of the hold? |
49372 | Was it a Blue, or a White? |
49372 | Was that three days ago? |
49372 | Was the farm burned? |
49372 | Well, how did they behave in prison? |
49372 | Well, what is it? |
49372 | Well, what is it? |
49372 | Well, what is your country? |
49372 | Well? |
49372 | Well? |
49372 | Well? |
49372 | Well? |
49372 | Went to bed? |
49372 | Were do you come from? |
49372 | What Blues are they? |
49372 | What affair is this of Danton? |
49372 | What affair of mine? 49372 What am I to do? |
49372 | What are they giving now in Paris? |
49372 | What are they? |
49372 | What are we to do with the prisoners? |
49372 | What are you doing here? |
49372 | What are you thinking of? |
49372 | What decree would you like the Assembly to pass, Marat? |
49372 | What did you say the name was? |
49372 | What do you call being good? |
49372 | What do you eat? |
49372 | What do you know about it? 49372 What do you mean by that?" |
49372 | What do you mean by that? |
49372 | What do you think of what is transpiring? |
49372 | What do you wish? |
49372 | What does Cimourdain want? |
49372 | What does that matter? |
49372 | What does that mean? |
49372 | What example do you require of us? |
49372 | What folly is this, Montaut? |
49372 | What have we here,--the woman who was shot come to life again? |
49372 | What have you to say in regard to this decree? |
49372 | What is his name? |
49372 | What is it made of? |
49372 | What is it, Guéchamp? |
49372 | What is it, Radoub? |
49372 | What is it, Sergeant Radoub? |
49372 | What is it, then? |
49372 | What is it? |
49372 | What is that in your right hand? |
49372 | What is that? |
49372 | What is that? |
49372 | What is that? |
49372 | What is that? |
49372 | What is the Tourgue? |
49372 | What is the baby''s name? 49372 What is the name of this farm where we are living now?" |
49372 | What is the second ship to port, pilot? |
49372 | What is the subject under consideration? |
49372 | What is their business? |
49372 | What is this that you are doing? |
49372 | What is to be done with the wounded? |
49372 | What is your name? |
49372 | What is your name? |
49372 | What is your name? |
49372 | What is your name? |
49372 | What is your name? |
49372 | What kind of bottom? |
49372 | What of that? 49372 What stands higher than justice?" |
49372 | What then? |
49372 | What underground passage? 49372 What was it called?" |
49372 | What''s that? 49372 What''s that?" |
49372 | What, then, is to be done? |
49372 | What, then, was it bringing? |
49372 | What? |
49372 | When do you want the ladder? |
49372 | When was that? |
49372 | When? |
49372 | Where are we, pilot? |
49372 | Where are you going, then? |
49372 | Where are you going? |
49372 | Where are you going? |
49372 | Where are you taking them? |
49372 | Where do you come from? |
49372 | Where do you sleep? |
49372 | Where does it come from? |
49372 | Where is he? |
49372 | Where is it going? |
49372 | Where is it? |
49372 | Where is that man? 49372 Where shall I see monseigneur again?" |
49372 | Where was it? |
49372 | Where was that? |
49372 | Where would you have me go? |
49372 | Which is the first one from the ship? |
49372 | Which of the two is likely to gain the day? |
49372 | Which way shall I go? |
49372 | Who are they? |
49372 | Who are you? |
49372 | Who burned it? |
49372 | Who helped him? |
49372 | Who is fighting? |
49372 | Who is it that causes anarchy if not yourself? |
49372 | Who is it? |
49372 | Who is that? |
49372 | Who is that? |
49372 | Who is this Lantenac? |
49372 | Who is this leader, citizen Robespierre? |
49372 | Who killed him? |
49372 | Who wants to fight me? 49372 Who was it, then?" |
49372 | Whom do you mean? |
49372 | Why are you not at home? |
49372 | Why do n''t you come, mamma? |
49372 | Why do you call me ci- devant? |
49372 | Why do you call me''My lord''? |
49372 | Why not,--since you pardoned three hundred peasants? |
49372 | Why not? |
49372 | Why so? |
49372 | Why? |
49372 | Why? |
49372 | Why? |
49372 | Will Monseigneur appoint some place of rendez- vous? |
49372 | Will a prince speak to me? |
49372 | Will you grant us this favor? |
49372 | Women? |
49372 | Would you like to have me in your power? |
49372 | Yes; and what then? |
49372 | Yes; and what then? |
49372 | You are sure you recognize them, pilot? |
49372 | You hate me? |
49372 | You have just been making an inspection, La Vieuville: how many guns have we fit for service? |
49372 | You have seen my notice? |
49372 | You mean relentless? |
49372 | You mean the tariff of the 1st of May? 49372 You realize that sixty thousand francs is a fortune?" |
49372 | You think it just? |
49372 | You vote that the accused be acquitted? |
49372 | You will forget nothing? |
49372 | You, Gouge- le- Bruant? |
49372 | Your family belong there, I suppose? |
49372 | ; to whom then shall we appeal for judgment? |
49372 | A peasant started up, crying,"Who goes there?" |
49372 | After a day''s ride the following dialogue might be heard:"How much do I owe you, coachman?" |
49372 | After she had eaten, Michelle Fléchard said to the peasant woman,--"Well, I have finished my cake; now, where is the Tourgue?" |
49372 | Against whom was the tocsin ringing? |
49372 | Against whom was this fury directed? |
49372 | Against whom? |
49372 | Ah I you pretend to judge God''s ways? |
49372 | All these frantic bells ringing on every side, and at the same time this silence; what could be more appalling? |
49372 | Am I inside the law, or outside of it? |
49372 | Amid this twilight low voices were carrying on a dialogue:--"Are you sure of this?" |
49372 | And Boisberthelot added thoughtfully,--"What do you think of the Chevalier de Dieuzie, La Vieuville?" |
49372 | And as to your sophistries concerning the historical right of royal races, what care we for that matter? |
49372 | And by what means? |
49372 | And could he not see that in a deed so outrageous, the coward who allows the act is worse than the man who commits it? |
49372 | And had not this transfigured Lantenac in his turn the power to transfigure Gauvain? |
49372 | And he added composedly,--"Where is the priest?" |
49372 | And he asked himself,"Why, then, did I save him?" |
49372 | And he continued,--"How do you expect to find a priest here on the open sea?" |
49372 | And he, possessing the power to prevent this,--was he to hold his peace? |
49372 | And if I fail, you will have me shot?" |
49372 | And if so, by whom? |
49372 | And presently she added,--"Then you do n''t know where they are?" |
49372 | And so you mean to save me?" |
49372 | And so, this man, for the sake of three children,--his own? |
49372 | And the crown diamonds?" |
49372 | And turning to the woman,"And your husband, madam? |
49372 | And was there a man who could wish to save him? |
49372 | And what did he think of it? |
49372 | And what do we require? |
49372 | And what help is there? |
49372 | And what is the meaning of all this? |
49372 | And what were they about to do with it? |
49372 | And what were they now about to do with this man? |
49372 | And where will you sleep?" |
49372 | And who is to blame for it? |
49372 | And who will have caused all this? |
49372 | And why had he done this? |
49372 | And why is this? |
49372 | And why was this? |
49372 | And you, Robespierre? |
49372 | And, after all, was it not possible that Gauvain exaggerated the deed that so fascinated his imagination? |
49372 | Are there then no statesmen here? |
49372 | Are they all deaf, that no one comes? |
49372 | Are we going to make idiots of ourselves, for pity''s sake? |
49372 | Are you not in the same danger?" |
49372 | Are you not tired? |
49372 | Are you willing? |
49372 | Besides, what purpose would it have served? |
49372 | Boisberthelot said to Vieuville:--"Do you believe in God, chevalier?" |
49372 | But had he not promised that this death should take place? |
49372 | But how long could this last? |
49372 | But how were they to defend themselves? |
49372 | But if you are to add nothing to Nature, why leave her? |
49372 | But of what republic? |
49372 | But she is not dead, is she? |
49372 | But the knaves, the rascals, the scoundrels of your party, what rights do they claim? |
49372 | But to what purpose? |
49372 | But was it possible for him to have made such a forced march? |
49372 | But was this indeed the same head? |
49372 | But what availed these rags? |
49372 | But what heroism can be expected from a poor peasant woman? |
49372 | But what was to become of the corvette? |
49372 | But what? |
49372 | But where could regular troops be found? |
49372 | But who had imperilled their lives? |
49372 | By the way, when will he be king?" |
49372 | By way of the library? |
49372 | Can I live without my children? |
49372 | Can a conflagration be extinguished without violent efforts? |
49372 | Can you conceive of any one so stupid as that?" |
49372 | Can you dream of such a thing? |
49372 | Cannon is of no avail, for of what use would it be to cannonade walls fifteen feet thick? |
49372 | Champcenetz was arrested for exclaiming at the Palais Royal:"When are we to have a Turkish revolution? |
49372 | Cimourdain continued:--"What have you to say in your defence?" |
49372 | Cimourdain said to Gauvain,--"What have we accomplished?" |
49372 | Cimourdain went on with the interrogatory:--"Who are you?" |
49372 | Cimourdain, with a white handkerchief in his hand, approached the tower; and as he drew near, he cried aloud,--"You men in the tower, do you know me?" |
49372 | Citizen Danton, why did you ask me to come to your Conventicle if you did not wish for my advice? |
49372 | Could Cimourdain love? |
49372 | Could it be Léchelle? |
49372 | Could it be a battle? |
49372 | Could it be possible that all this was to count for nothing? |
49372 | Could it be possible that his dream had come to pass? |
49372 | Could one, after mature consideration, really deny the devotion of Lantenac, his stoical self- abnegation, his sublime disinterestedness? |
49372 | Could she do it? |
49372 | Could the servant of all men feel a personal affection? |
49372 | DOES HE ESCAPE? |
49372 | DOES HE ESCAPE? |
49372 | Did I ask permission to belong to it? |
49372 | Did he say La Tourgue?" |
49372 | Did he use his reason? |
49372 | Did not this advanced guard form a part of one of those exploring columns called_ colonnes infernales_? |
49372 | Did you ever have any children?" |
49372 | Did you not buy this horse at Alençon?" |
49372 | Did you say three children?" |
49372 | Did you think I was like the beasts of the field?" |
49372 | Do n''t you hear me? |
49372 | Do n''t you want us to help you carry her to your_ carnichot?_"[ Illustration 034] Tellmarch nodded. |
49372 | Do you even know whether I am in a state of grace? |
49372 | Do you hear the cannon- shots? |
49372 | Do you know it?" |
49372 | Do you know the Tourgue?" |
49372 | Do you know the spot?" |
49372 | Do you know where it is?" |
49372 | Do you mean my country? |
49372 | Do you realize whom you are destroying here? |
49372 | Do you suppose it possible to remove a tumor without loss of blood? |
49372 | Do you understand me?" |
49372 | Do you understand that, commander? |
49372 | Does Hot the right of self- forgiveness exist? |
49372 | Does dying of hunger mean being inside the law?" |
49372 | Does it become a priest to put a soldier to death?" |
49372 | Does the elephant stop to see where he puts his foot? |
49372 | For some moments he dwelt upon this thought; then he resumed the thread of his meditations,--"Am I sure of this?" |
49372 | For what crime did you reproach the Monarchy? |
49372 | Gauvain continued,--"And woman,--how do you dispose of her?" |
49372 | Gauvain continued,--"Are all our drummers ready?" |
49372 | Gauvain went on:--"But what matters the storm to me, if I have a compass; and what power can events gain over me, if I have my conscience?" |
49372 | Gavard made the military salute, asking, as he did so,"Where will you establish your headquarters, my lord?" |
49372 | Had all the inhabitants fled? |
49372 | Had an order been received by the advanced guard occupying the farm? |
49372 | Had he succeeded in making his way; or had another fiery chasm opened under his feet; or had he but ended his own life? |
49372 | Had not he, Gauvain the merciful, declared that Lantenac was to be excluded from mercy, and that he would deliver him to Cimourdain? |
49372 | Had she no right to ask for information? |
49372 | Has it any sense whatever? |
49372 | Have you a good memory?" |
49372 | Have you a house?" |
49372 | Have you been promoted? |
49372 | Have you been travelling according to the new tariff, citizen?" |
49372 | Have you not seen them?" |
49372 | Having done this, he said,--"My lord, am I to lead the way, or to follow you?" |
49372 | He had made a man of this little lord,--possibly a great man, who knows? |
49372 | He paused for a moment, lost in thought; then he went on,--"What was it you said?" |
49372 | How are ideas formed and scattered in those little minds? |
49372 | How are we ever to get the better of Pitt and Coburg, when men play tricks like these? |
49372 | How can it be overcome? |
49372 | How can it be subdued? |
49372 | How can one arrest an object in its course, whose onslaught must be avoided? |
49372 | How can one guard against these terrible gyrations? |
49372 | How did you find out what I said to Saint- Just yesterday?" |
49372 | How fetter this monstrous mechanism of shipwreck? |
49372 | How foresee its comings and goings, its recoils, its halts, its shocks? |
49372 | How had it overthrown a colossus of anger and hatred? |
49372 | How is one to cope with the caprices of an inclined plane? |
49372 | How long since we have blamed the doctor for his patient''s illness? |
49372 | How many are you?" |
49372 | How many are you?" |
49372 | How many leagues can you walk in a day?" |
49372 | How many loaded pistols are there?" |
49372 | How old are you, Danton? |
49372 | How was a man to choose? |
49372 | How was it achieved? |
49372 | How will you manage that?" |
49372 | I have a horse here; will you deign to accept it, general?" |
49372 | I say, Caimand, do you think you could save her? |
49372 | If Providence had not placed you by my cradle, where should I be to- day? |
49372 | Is it agreed?" |
49372 | Is it decided?" |
49372 | Is it not frightful? |
49372 | Is it then strange that this blind man failed to appreciate the light? |
49372 | Is not Saint- Just a nobleman, Robespierre? |
49372 | Is one likely to be without a lord?" |
49372 | Is such a man vulnerable to the influence of any affection whatsoever? |
49372 | Is that perchance the object of your visit? |
49372 | Is that the way they are going to do now?" |
49372 | Is that what they wanted? |
49372 | Is the tax on salt the same thing as the king?" |
49372 | Is there no one here? |
49372 | Is this the way?" |
49372 | It is not easy to speak to a mother of her lost children; and besides, what did he know? |
49372 | It is original, is it not? |
49372 | It may not choose its methods wisely, perhaps, but can it do otherwise? |
49372 | It was as if questioning itself,--"What can this object be?" |
49372 | It''s a little girl, is n''t it?" |
49372 | Looking Gauvain full in the face, Cimourdain said,--"Why did you order those nuns of the convent of Saint- Marc- le- Blanc to be set at liberty?" |
49372 | Moreover, have we not all one common mother,--our native land? |
49372 | Must he obey this voice? |
49372 | Next?" |
49372 | Next?" |
49372 | No; of his kin perhaps? |
49372 | Not at all; belonging to his own rank in life? |
49372 | Of what use are your police, Robespierre? |
49372 | Of what use is intimidation? |
49372 | Once he may have been; but was he a tiger still? |
49372 | One grenadier, pointing to the guillotine, cried,"Here I am; will you not take me as a substitute?" |
49372 | Only it seems to me larger than you said, Guéchamp?" |
49372 | Presently she would add,--"Do you know where they are? |
49372 | Robespierre gloomily nodded his approval, and Cimourdain continued,--"To whom shall I be delegated?" |
49372 | Robespierre, however, always ceremonious, inquired,--"How did you get in, citizen?" |
49372 | Shall you officiate as headsman? |
49372 | She asked him almost harshly,--"When can I go away?" |
49372 | Should she stay, or try to make her escape? |
49372 | Sneering, did you say? |
49372 | So the old man ought to have let the midgets burn alive, and my commander did wrong to save the old man''s head? |
49372 | So why not Gauvain? |
49372 | So you wish to have no more nobles? |
49372 | Super- natural? |
49372 | Suppose that Frankfort is able to pay a war indemnity of four millions,--what is that in comparison with crushing a nest of Émigrés? |
49372 | Tellmarch raised himself, and cried out in a terrible voice,--"Is there no one here?" |
49372 | That the Republic was in the ascendant throughout this region of the Vendée was beyond a doubt; but which Republic? |
49372 | That vast embrace, enfolding everything and everybody, could it be limited to one? |
49372 | The first call simply broached the subject; the second asked the question,"Will you listen?" |
49372 | The horn was the voice of the tower asking the camp,"May we speak with you?" |
49372 | The man continued,--"Did you see that notice about yourself?" |
49372 | The man went on,--"You were going to the farm Herbe- en- Pail, were you not?" |
49372 | The peasant who had been the first to show himself continued:--"All the others are dead, are they not? |
49372 | The rider continued,--"You say there is fighting at Dol?" |
49372 | The second?" |
49372 | The sergeant continued,--"Who are you, madam?" |
49372 | The sergeant repeated,--"What is your native land?" |
49372 | The vivandière continued in her martial yet womanly voice,--a gentle voice withal,--"What is your name?" |
49372 | The vivandière repeated,--"I ask you how old it is?" |
49372 | The woman continued,---"Last night we went to bed in an_ émousse._""All four of you?" |
49372 | Then Cimourdain heard the following conversation between Gauvain and the man:--"Are you wounded?" |
49372 | Then Radoub shook his fist towards Heaven as though he beheld some one, and exclaimed,--"Has Almighty God no mercy?" |
49372 | Then came the question, could it be used; and for what purpose? |
49372 | Then he continued,--"How do you like this water, my lord?" |
49372 | Then it is a Parisian battalion?" |
49372 | Then the conversation was resumed:--"By the way, has the report of Dampierre''s death been confirmed?" |
49372 | Then, raising his head, he said,--"Now, on the starboard?" |
49372 | There is something really terrible in the silence of an unchanging thought, and how can one expect that a mother will listen to reason? |
49372 | These words won Robespierre to his side; but still the latter put the question,--"Were you not formerly a priest?" |
49372 | This blood that he was about to shed,--for to allow its shedding amounted to the same as shedding it himself,--was not this his own blood? |
49372 | This must be a sort of dream, is n''t it? |
49372 | Through the rooms overhead? |
49372 | To kill him? |
49372 | To set him free? |
49372 | To what avail? |
49372 | To what? |
49372 | To whom do I owe this delicate attention?" |
49372 | To whose care would you intrust that?" |
49372 | Towards which of these two did duty call him? |
49372 | Two abysses opened before Gauvain,--to destroy the Marquis, or to save him? |
49372 | Was Herbe- en- Pail a case in point? |
49372 | Was I wrong? |
49372 | Was Lantenac then a tiger? |
49372 | Was he about to burn and destroy this library, this castle, these walls, wherein he had so often blessed the child? |
49372 | Was he not too much of a soul to possess a heart? |
49372 | Was he still doubtful whether to vote for death or for life? |
49372 | Was he there?" |
49372 | Was he to betray God''s trust? |
49372 | Was he who had done this to remain a tiger and be treated like a wild beast? |
49372 | Was it attacked? |
49372 | Was it not Lantenac? |
49372 | Was it not more likely to be a military execution? |
49372 | Was it not the Imânus? |
49372 | Was it possible for such a man to flee? |
49372 | Was it then the object of Revolution to destroy the natural affections, to sever all family ties, and to stifle every sense of humanity? |
49372 | Was she doomed to fall dead on the road? |
49372 | Was she drawing near her goal? |
49372 | Was such a man in very deed a man? |
49372 | Was the man of the past to lead the van of progress, and the man of the future to fall back to the rear? |
49372 | Was there not an understanding for the 31st of May? |
49372 | Was there to be no rivalry in magnanimity? |
49372 | Was this flight? |
49372 | Was this flood of light to meet with no responsive flash? |
49372 | Was this the Tourgue? |
49372 | Was this the punishment thereof? |
49372 | Well, what do you think of the present state of affairs? |
49372 | Well, what of that? |
49372 | Were her sufferings almost over? |
49372 | Were they dealing with reality? |
49372 | Were they still living? |
49372 | What about them?" |
49372 | What am I to do here? |
49372 | What are we striving to accomplish? |
49372 | What are your political opinions?" |
49372 | What can this mean? |
49372 | What could be done? |
49372 | What could it be? |
49372 | What could it mean? |
49372 | What could it mean? |
49372 | What could it mean? |
49372 | What could they do? |
49372 | What could this little group of shadows be? |
49372 | What did they do, these Fléchards of yours? |
49372 | What difference can it make to me? |
49372 | What do you want of us?" |
49372 | What do you want to do with him?" |
49372 | What does he do? |
49372 | What does that prove? |
49372 | What else?" |
49372 | What had become of the children? |
49372 | What had become of this little family? |
49372 | What has He done with my children?" |
49372 | What has become of him?" |
49372 | What has he to lose? |
49372 | What have I done up to the present moment? |
49372 | What have those innocents done? |
49372 | What is an ear more or less? |
49372 | What is going on here, I should like to know?" |
49372 | What is that dreadful house? |
49372 | What is the mysterious action of those memories, so faint and evanescent? |
49372 | What is the ocean? |
49372 | What is there that one can not forgive a child? |
49372 | What is this commander''s name, by the way?" |
49372 | What is this law, then, that one can be outside of it? |
49372 | What is to be done with this complication? |
49372 | What is your native land?" |
49372 | What kind of a man do you think I am? |
49372 | What machinery of warfare? |
49372 | What made the people look at her so strangely? |
49372 | What o''clock could it be? |
49372 | What then is Revolution? |
49372 | What time of the day was it? |
49372 | What was going on? |
49372 | What was he about to do? |
49372 | What was he doing, what could he be thinking about, when he stood motionless for hours at a time? |
49372 | What was he to do? |
49372 | What was it, then? |
49372 | What was passing in her soul? |
49372 | What was to be done? |
49372 | What was to be done? |
49372 | What was your parents''trade? |
49372 | What weapons had it used? |
49372 | What were we about to do with that ship which is perishing at this moment? |
49372 | What will be the result? |
49372 | What would happen to the Republicans if the enemy should become aware of their limited number? |
49372 | When shall I be fit for tramping?" |
49372 | When will you start?" |
49372 | Where are they?" |
49372 | Where look for soldiers? |
49372 | Where seek for regiments, and find a ready- made army? |
49372 | Where was the community that lived and labored at Herbe- en- Pail? |
49372 | Where were they? |
49372 | Where will my lord sleep?" |
49372 | Wherefore? |
49372 | Which of the two would win the day? |
49372 | Which side are you on?" |
49372 | Which was to prevail? |
49372 | Who are you? |
49372 | Who are you?" |
49372 | Who could hold them at bay for a quarter of an hour?" |
49372 | Who could it be? |
49372 | Who could tell how soon it might pass from the defensive to the offensive? |
49372 | Who does such things as these? |
49372 | Who ever saw the like? |
49372 | Who had asked this question? |
49372 | Who had put their cradles in the fire? |
49372 | Who had taken care of these little ones? |
49372 | Who invited you to come here with your speeches? |
49372 | Who put my children there? |
49372 | Who was the Imânus? |
49372 | Why did you not use the artillery?" |
49372 | Why did you refuse to send that band of fanatical old priests, whom you took at Louvigné, before the revolutionary tribunal?" |
49372 | Why do you interfere with us? |
49372 | Why do you threaten them? |
49372 | Why give them so terrible an aspect? |
49372 | Why kill so many men when two would suffice?" |
49372 | Why shed all this blood to no avail? |
49372 | Why the devil do we risk our lives? |
49372 | Why then was his deed so admirable? |
49372 | Why was he always looking up at the sky? |
49372 | Will you accept?" |
49372 | Will you ascend to my abode?" |
49372 | Will you do me the favor to take a seat? |
49372 | Will you please to keep still, citizen without knowing it? |
49372 | Will you remember all this?" |
49372 | Will you take nothing, citizen?" |
49372 | With no particular object?" |
49372 | Would he not lay his command upon his grandson henceforth to pay the same veneration to that crown of white hair as to his own halo? |
49372 | Would not he, who already rested in the grave, rise to bar the entrance against his brother? |
49372 | Would not the indignant glance of a departed spirit rise between Gauvain and Lantenac? |
49372 | Would you have it merciful to poison? |
49372 | Yes, or no?" |
49372 | Yes-- but France? |
49372 | Yet if we are to lose the privilege of pardoning, of what use is it to conquer? |
49372 | You are familiar with the woods?" |
49372 | You are not a gypsy, are you? |
49372 | You believe in God, do you not? |
49372 | You do n''t know who killed your husband?" |
49372 | You do not know your country?" |
49372 | You expect us to deliver up Monseigneur, do you? |
49372 | You know her?" |
49372 | You look tired; will you come to my house and rest?" |
49372 | You may perhaps have forgotten, Viscount, what a nobleman is? |
49372 | You understand?" |
49372 | You will not, of course, require me to shout for Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity? |
49372 | [ Illustration 029]"Where are you going?" |
49372 | [ Illustration 056]"Where do you live?" |
49372 | [ Illustration 093] Was it an impious act to lay this dwelling in ashes? |
49372 | after he had shown his humanity in the very jaws of civil war? |
49372 | and directly afterwards fire your pistol in the air?" |
49372 | asked Cimourdain;"what is the Vendée doing now?" |
49372 | can you expect it to take pity on the virus? |
49372 | general as he was, to have renounced strategy, battle, and revenge? |
49372 | he cried,"do you think you can frighten me with your jaw like beef_ à la mode?_ Sapristi! |
49372 | he- cried,"why are you here?" |
49372 | when in the conflict between inferior truths he had shown forth the truth that stands above all others? |
8207 | ''''T is Caesar_ that you mean_: Is it_ not_, Cassius?'' |
8207 | ''--because they are not read and_ revolved_ by men, in their mature and settled years, but confined almost_ to boys and beginners_? |
8207 | ''And besides, though I had a_ particular_ distinction_ by myself_, what can it distinguish when I am no more? |
8207 | ''And so can I, and so can any man;''Says the new philosopher--''But will they_ come?__ Will they come_--when you do call for them?'' |
8207 | ''And so can I, and so can any man;''Says the new philosopher--''But will they_ come?__ Will they come_--when you do call for them?'' |
8207 | ''And this Pierre, or William, what is it but a sound when all is done? |
8207 | ''And what did you enact?'' |
8207 | ''And what have_ kings_ that"_ privates_"have not, too, save ceremony,--save general ceremony? |
8207 | ''Are you_ our_ daughter? |
8207 | ''Art cold? |
8207 | ''Art cold[ to the Fool]? |
8207 | ''Art thou not ashamed,''he said to him,''to_ sing so well_?'' |
8207 | ''But what if it be an harangue whereon his life depends?'' |
8207 | ''Canst thou not minister to a_ mind_ diseased?'' |
8207 | ''Canst thou tell why one''s nose stands in the middle of his face?'' |
8207 | ''Canst thou tell why one''s nose stands in the middle of his face?'' |
8207 | ''Come,_ try upon yourselves_ what you have_ seen me_?'' |
8207 | ''Couldst thou save nothing?'' |
8207 | ''Do you mark that, my lord?'' |
8207 | ''Do you mix, me up with these spiders?'' |
8207 | ''Do you think I am a Jack Cade or a Robin Hood?'' |
8207 | ''FIRST, therefore, in this,_ as in all things which are practical_, we ought to cast up our account, WHAT is IN OUR POWER, AND WHAT NOT? |
8207 | ''For myself?'' |
8207 | ''Have you heard the argument?'' |
8207 | ''Have you heard the argument?'' |
8207 | ''Have you heard the argument?'' |
8207 | ''Having thus far proceeded... Is it not meet That I did amplify my judgment in Other conclusions?'' |
8207 | ''How shall your_ houseless heads_ and_ unfed sides_, Your_ looped_ and_ windowed raggedness_ defend you From_ seasons such as these_? |
8207 | ''I never gave you kingdoms, called you_ children_; You_ owe_ me no subscription; why,_ then_, let fall Your horrible pleasure? |
8207 | ''Is it possible that so short a time can alter the conditions of a_ man_?'' |
8207 | ''Is there any_ cause_--is there any cause_ in nature_ that makes these hard hearts?'' |
8207 | ''Is there no offence in it?'' |
8207 | ''Is there no offence in it?'' |
8207 | ''Is''t not the king?'' |
8207 | ''It was a_ brute_ part of him[ collateral sounds-- Elizabethan phonography] to kill so_ capitol a calf_ there.--Be the players ready?''(?). |
8207 | ''It was a_ brute_ part of him[ collateral sounds-- Elizabethan phonography] to kill so_ capitol a calf_ there.--Be the players ready?''(?). |
8207 | ''Now, Sir, what are you?'' |
8207 | ''Rack his style, Madam,_ rack his style_?'' |
8207 | ''Then let them anatomise Regan; see what breeds about her heart: Is there any CAUSE IN NATURE that makes_ these hard hearts_?'' |
8207 | ''This a consul? |
8207 | ''Tis Caesar that you mean: Is it_ not_, Cassius? |
8207 | ''Tis_ Caesar_ that you mean: Is it not, Cassius? |
8207 | ''What do you read, my lord?'' |
8207 | ''What is a man profited if he should gain the whole world and lose his own soul; or what can a man give in exchange for his soul?'' |
8207 | ''What is granted them?'' |
8207 | ''What is the end of study?'' |
8207 | ''What is the end of study?'' |
8207 | ''What is the end of study?'' |
8207 | ''What is the_ end_ of study? |
8207 | ''What is the_ end_ of_ study_? |
8207 | ''What is your study?'' |
8207 | ''What mean''st by this?'' |
8207 | ''What rhubarb, senna, or what purgative drug, Would scour_ these English_ hence? |
8207 | ''What would you undertake to do?'' |
8207 | ''What''s_ Hecuba_ to him or he to_ Hecuba_, that he should weep for her? |
8207 | ''What, art mad? |
8207 | ''When will you cease to be a beggar, Raleigh?'' |
8207 | ''Where is this straw, my fellow? |
8207 | ''Why dost not speak? |
8207 | ''Why should I war without the walls of Troy, That find such cruel battle here within? |
8207 | ''Would you proceed especially against Caius Marcius? |
8207 | ''Would you proceed especially against_ Caius Marcius?_ Against him FIRST.'' |
8207 | ''Would you proceed_ especially_ against_ Caius_ MARCIUS?'' |
8207 | ''_ Boy? |
8207 | ''_ But_ will thy manes such a gift bestow_ As to make violets from thy ashes grow_?'' |
8207 | ''_ Can it be_ that men are afraid to lose themselves by the way, that they reserve themselves to the end of the game?'' |
8207 | ''_ Whither_ dost thou wandering go?'' |
8207 | ( A_ preferment_?) |
8207 | (?) |
8207 | (_ Enfranchisement_?) |
8207 | ***** Now in the names of all the gods at once,_ Upon what meat doth this our Caesar feed That he is grown so great_? |
8207 | ***** What need you five- and- twenty, ten, or five, To_ follow_ in a_ house_, where twice so many_ Have a command to tend you_? |
8207 | --''_How''s_ that?'' |
8207 | --''why does he so''? |
8207 | --_ No_? |
8207 | --_ The King to Tom o''Bedlam._''Would you proceed especially against_ Caius Marcius_? |
8207 | --all this makes but a part of the exhibition, which the lamentations of Mark Antony complete:--''O mighty Caesar, dost thou lie so low? |
8207 | ... Be my horses ready? |
8207 | ... Traitor!--how now?.... |
8207 | A PEASANT_ stand up thus_? |
8207 | A good old commander, and a most kind gentleman: I pray you, what thinks he of our estate? |
8207 | AY,_ Marcius, Caius_ Marcius; Dost thou think I''ll grace thee with THAT ROBBERY,_ thy_ STOLEN NAME CORIOLANUS in CORIOLI?'' |
8207 | All myself? |
8207 | All this? |
8207 | And after that, he came thus sad away? |
8207 | And has any one ever read the plan of this man''s works? |
8207 | And is that, after all,--is that the trouble still? |
8207 | And the_ creature_ run from the_ cur? |
8207 | And this Pierre or William, what is it but a sound, when all is done,("What''s in a name?") |
8207 | And what art thou, thou_ idol ceremony?_--_What is_ thy_ soul_ of_ adoration_?'' |
8207 | And what but the most boundless freedoms and audacities, on this very question, could one look for here? |
8207 | And what did you enact? |
8207 | And what does he mean, when he tells us in this connection that he is not a vain promiser? |
8207 | And what if it be? |
8207 | And what is this itself but a universal map, this map of the advancement of learning? |
8207 | And what should the single private man, the man of exclusive affections and changeful humours, do with the weal of the whole? |
8207 | And when shall the friendship of such''a twain''gladden our earth again, and build its''eternal summer''in our common things? |
8207 | And why should Caesar be a tyrant then? |
8207 | Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils, Shrunk to_ this little measure_?'' |
8207 | Are these_ your herd_? |
8207 | Are you_ all_ resolved to give your voices? |
8207 | Are_ you_ not moved,_ when all the sway of earth Shakes like a thing unfirm_? |
8207 | Art_ cold_? |
8207 | As a method of_ philosophical inquiry_, merely, what earthly harm could it do? |
8207 | At the senate- house? |
8207 | BOY? |
8207 | Because they are not eight? |
8207 | Boy? |
8207 | Boy? |
8207 | Brother John Bates, is not that the morning which breaks yonder? |
8207 | But I beseech you, What says the other troop? |
8207 | But are there any such books as these? |
8207 | But does any one say--''To what purpose,''if the end were concealed so effectually? |
8207 | But how? |
8207 | But if this design be buried so deeply, is it not_ lost_ then? |
8207 | But soft, I pray you: WHAT? |
8207 | But what are_ these_?--these new orders,--these new species of nature, defying nature, that we are generating with our arts here now? |
8207 | But where is the FOURTH part of the Great Instauration? |
8207 | But will thy manes such a gift bestow As to make violets from thy ashes grow? |
8207 | But, Damosella, was this directed to you? |
8207 | But, alas, HOW? |
8207 | Can it point out and favor_ inanity_?'' |
8207 | Can it point out and favour inanity? |
8207 | Can you not_ see_ with that? |
8207 | Canst tell how_ an oyster_ makes_ his_ shell?'' |
8207 | Canst thou tell why a man''s nose stands in the middle of his face? |
8207 | Cicero concedes that''it is indeed a strange disposed time?'' |
8207 | Come, come;_ I am a king, My masters_; know you_ that_? |
8207 | Consider you what_ services_ he has done for_ his country_? |
8207 | Crown him? |
8207 | DID CAESAR SWOON? |
8207 | Did he make so deep a summer in his verse, that the track of the precept was lost in it? |
8207 | Did they please you, Sir Nathaniel? |
8207 | Did_ Cicero say anything_? |
8207 | Do the boys carry it away? |
8207 | Do_ princes_ satisfy_ themselves_ with so little? |
8207 | Does any one here know me? |
8207 | Does anyone here know me?'' |
8207 | Does he give us any hint as to where we are to look for it? |
8207 | Dost thou understand me? |
8207 | For them? |
8207 | For who knows but it may be? |
8207 | Good- even, Casca; brought you Caesar home? |
8207 | Had he died in the business, madam, what then? |
8207 | Hark, in thine ear: Change_ places_, and, handy- dandy,_ which is the justice, and which is_ THE THIEF?'' |
8207 | Has anybody seen the FOURTH part? |
8207 | Hast thou not learn''d me how To make perfumes? |
8207 | Hath he not passed the NOBLES and the COMMONS? |
8207 | Have I had_ children''s voices_? |
8207 | Have we not had a taste of his obedience? |
8207 | Have you Ere now,_ deny''d the asker_, and now again, On him that_ did not ask, but mock_,[ with a pretence of asking,] bestow Your sued for tongues? |
8207 | Have you a_ catalogue_ Of all the voices that we have procured,_ Set down by_ THE POLL? |
8207 | Have you collected them BY TRIBES? |
8207 | Have you heard the argument? |
8207 | Have_ we_ any general wise man, or ghost of one, who walks up and down at certain hours and gives advice on such topics? |
8207 | Having thus far proceeded,( Unless thou think''st me devilish,) is''t not meet That I did amplify my judgment in Other conclusions? |
8207 | He has asked already,''What is the cause of thunder?'' |
8207 | Hear''st thou of_ them_?'' |
8207 | Hear''st thou,_ Mars_? |
8207 | Here; What''s the matter? |
8207 | Honest, my lord? |
8207 | How accompanied? |
8207 | How chances that the_ king comes with so small a train_? |
8207 | How could men suspect, as yet, that this was the new scholasticism, the New Philosophy? |
8207 | How happens it? |
8207 | How now, you_ dog_? |
8207 | How now,_ my masters?_ HAVE YOU CHOSE THIS MAN? |
8207 | How now,_ my masters?_ HAVE YOU CHOSE THIS MAN? |
8207 | How shall_ this bosom multiplied_, digest; The senate''s courtesy? |
8207 | How should they be? |
8207 | How to_ prevent_ the fiend? |
8207 | I am afeared that few die well, that die in battle; for how can they_ charitably_ dispose of anything_ when blood is their argument_? |
8207 | I will die bravely, like a bridegroom: What? |
8207 | I will make my very house reel to night:--A letter for me? |
8207 | I would they were in Tyber!--_What, the vengeance, Could he_ not_ speak them fair_? |
8207 | I_ can not do it to the gods_: Must I then do''t to_ them_? |
8207 | If you are a coward, and men commend you for your valour, is it of you that they speak? |
8207 | If you are not, what business have you in these chairs of state? |
8207 | If you did wear a beard upon your chin, I''d shake it on this quarrel:_ What do you mean_? |
8207 | If you have mistaken one of the Scipios for another, what is all the rest you have to say worth? |
8207 | If_ you are_ learned_, Be not as_ common fools_; if you are_ not_-- What do you draw this foolish line for, that separates you from the commons? |
8207 | In his noblest conditions, what business has he in the state? |
8207 | In peace, what_ each_ of them by the other loses That they combine not there? |
8207 | In that will give good words to_ thee_, will flatter Beneath abhorring.--What would you have, you_ curs_, That like nor peace, nor war? |
8207 | Informed them? |
8207 | Is it a manuscript? |
8207 | Is it the beast, or is it''the fiend?'' |
8207 | Is it the recent invention of goose- quills which he is celebrating here with so much lyrical pomp, in so many, many lyrics? |
8207 | Is it, that that characteristic of Elizabeth''s time-- that same thing which Seneca complained of in Nero''s,--is it that_ that_ is not yet obsolete? |
8207 | Is not this a man for particulars, then? |
8207 | Is that the reason, this so magnificent part, this radical part of the new discovery of the Modern Ages, is still held''superfluous?'' |
8207 | Is the Poet so too? |
8207 | Is there any cause in NATURE that makes these hard hearts?'' |
8207 | Is there any intimation as to the particular form of writing in which we are to find it? |
8207 | Is there no offence in it? |
8207 | Is there not a ballad, boy, of the King and the Beggar? |
8207 | Is this done? |
8207 | Is this so? |
8207 | Is''t a verdict? |
8207 | Is_ it not as this mouth should tear this hand For lifting food to it_?'' |
8207 | Is_ man_ no more than this? |
8207 | It gives me an estate of seven years''health; in which time I will make a lip at the physician... Is he not wounded? |
8207 | It is the Poet, who says elsewhere,''Can''st thou not minister to a_ mind_ diseased? |
8207 | It was a brute part of him to kill so capital a calf there.--Be the players ready? |
8207 | Kindly_? |
8207 | Marcius coming home? |
8207 | Marcius is coming home: he has--_more cause to be_--PROUD.--Where is he wounded? |
8207 | May I change these garments_? |
8207 | Must I give way and room to your rash choler? |
8207 | Must I go show them my unbarbed sconce? |
8207 | Must all determine here? |
8207 | Must_ I stand_ and_ crouch Under your testy humour_? |
8207 | Must_ I_ budge? |
8207 | Must_ I_ observe_ you_? |
8207 | Must_ these_ have voices that can yield them now, And straight disclaim their tongues? |
8207 | My lord,--you played once in the university, you say? |
8207 | No rescue? |
8207 | No seconds? |
8207 | No? |
8207 | No? |
8207 | Now, what is it that we have to find? |
8207 | O Sir, you are not right: have you not known The worthiest men have done it? |
8207 | O none, unless_ this_ miracle[ this_ miracle_] have might, that in_ black ink_--''Is this printer''s ink? |
8207 | On whose side? |
8207 | Or is it the ink of the prompter''s book? |
8207 | Or what_ strong hand_ can hold his swift foot back? |
8207 | Or, seeing it, of such_ childish friendliness To yield your voices?__ Bru_. |
8207 | Or_ who_ his spoil of beauty can forbid? |
8207 | Shall I be charged no further than this present? |
8207 | Shall I be frighted_ when a madman stares_?'' |
8207 | Shall it be put to_ that_? |
8207 | Shall the blessed''Son of England''prove a thief, and take purses? |
8207 | Shall''s have a Play of_ this_? |
8207 | Shall_ Rome_ stand under_ one man''s awe_? |
8207 | Shall_ time''s best jewel_ from_ time''s chest_ lie hid? |
8207 | Sir, I pray let me ha''t: I have wounds to show you, Which shall be yours in private.--Your good voice, Sir; What say you? |
8207 | So that it be known in its real comprehension, in its true relations to the weal of the world, what matters it? |
8207 | So young, and so untender? |
8207 | Soft; who comes here? |
8207 | Softly, in thine ear,--_ which is the_ JUSTICE, and which is THE THIEF?'' |
8207 | THEY SAY? |
8207 | The matter? |
8207 | The queen apprehending it gladly, asked,''How?'' |
8207 | The time when? |
8207 | The trick of that voice I do well remember: Is''t not THE KING? |
8207 | The_ service_ of the_ foot_, Being once_ gangren''d_, is not then respected_ For what before it was_? |
8207 | These are murderers,--count them-- they are all murderers, wholesale murderers, perhaps,--but of what? |
8207 | These new Georgics of the mind whose_ argument is here_,--where are they? |
8207 | They know the corn Was not our RECOMPENSE; resting well assured_ They ne''er did service for it_? |
8207 | Think upon_ me? |
8207 | Think you so? |
8207 | Think''st thou it honourable for a NOBLE MAN Still to remember wrongs? |
8207 | Think''st thou it honourable for a noble man_ Still_ to remember wrongs?'' |
8207 | Thinkest thou the_ fiery fever will go out_ With_ titles blown from adulation_? |
8207 | This is abhominable which he would call abominable; it insinuateth me of insanie;_ Ne intelligis, domine_? |
8207 | This is the play in which one asks''Which is the princess?'' |
8207 | This new Virgil who might promise himself such glory,--such new glory in the singing of them,--where is he? |
8207 | Thou hast seen a farmer''s_ dog_ bark at a_ beggar_? |
8207 | Thou seest how this world goes? |
8207 | Tis_ Caesar_ that you mean: Is it not, Cassius? |
8207 | To what effect? |
8207 | To whom came he? |
8207 | Traitor!--How now? |
8207 | True? |
8207 | True? |
8207 | Trust ye? |
8207 | Under what captain serve you? |
8207 | Videsne quis venit?__ Ho. |
8207 | WHERE IS THIS VIPER, That would_ depopulate_ the city, and BE EVERY MAN HIMSELF? |
8207 | Was the crown offered him thrice? |
8207 | Was there any cause in nature for it? |
8207 | We have yet many among us can gripe as hard as Cassibelan_: I do not say, I am one; but I have a hand.--Why tribute? |
8207 | Well then_, I pray, YOUR PRICE O''THE CONSULSHIP? |
8207 | Well, What then? |
8207 | Well, what then? |
8207 | Were you not? |
8207 | What are these new varieties to which our kind is tending now? |
8207 | What are these? |
8207 | What are these? |
8207 | What could a pitiful schoolmaster have done worse, who got his living by it? |
8207 | What do you read, my lord? |
8207 | What drink''st thou oft_ instead of homage sweet_ But_ poison''d flattery_? |
8207 | What has he done to Rome, that''s worthy death? |
8207 | What hast thou done?.... |
8207 | What is it that is missing out of this philosophy? |
8207 | What is it that is wanting then? |
8207 | What is it that we have to look for? |
8207 | What is that we want to find? |
8207 | What is the difficulty with this platform and exemplar of good as he finds it, notwithstanding the praise he has bestowed on it? |
8207 | What is the matter, That being pass''d for consul, with full voice, I am so dishonour''d, that the very hour You take it off again? |
8207 | What is the reason that our critics do not include them in their criticism? |
8207 | What is the reason that our editors do not produce these so important works in their editions? |
8207 | What is the reason that our scholars do not quote them? |
8207 | What is the_ end_ of it?'' |
8207 | What is this? |
8207 | What is this_ same?__ Trin_. |
8207 | What makes this CHANGE? |
8207 | What malice could a philosophic poet bear him? |
8207 | What more do we want? |
8207 | What must I do? |
8207 | What need one? |
8207 | What radical, fatal defect is it that he finds even in the doctrine of the NATURE OF GOOD? |
8207 | What saw he? |
8207 | What should be in_ that Caesar_? |
8207 | What should the_ people do_ with these bald tribunes? |
8207 | What shouts are these? |
8207 | What was the last cry for? |
8207 | What was the second noise for? |
8207 | What work''s, my countrymen, in hand? |
8207 | What''s the matter? |
8207 | What, a_ prisoner_? |
8207 | What, art mad?--[ have you not the use of your reason, then? |
8207 | What, by the supposition, could it be but one mine of poetic treason? |
8207 | What, what? |
8207 | What, will he come? |
8207 | What_ do ye talk? |
8207 | What_ thing_ was that Which parted from you?'' |
8207 | When could they say, till now, that talked of Rome, That her wide walls encompass''d but_ One man_? |
8207 | When could they say, till now, that talked of_ Rome_, That_ her wide walls_ encompassed_ but One Man_? |
8207 | When shall a''marriage of true minds''so even be celebrated on the lips and in the lives of men again? |
8207 | When went there by an AGE, since the great flood, But it was famed with more than with ONE MAN? |
8207 | When went there by an age, since the great flood, But it was famed with more than with_ One man_? |
8207 | Where are they then? |
8207 | Where are they?--The lost Fables of the New Philosophy? |
8207 | Where are those diagrams? |
8207 | Where are those particular cases, in which this method of investigation is applied to the noblest subjects? |
8207 | Where go you, With bats and clubs? |
8207 | Where hast thou sent the king? |
8207 | Where is that so important part for which all that precedes it is a preparation, or to which it is subsidiary? |
8207 | Where learned''st thou_ that_, fool? |
8207 | Where will the old Duke live? |
8207 | Where''s Caius Marcius? |
8207 | Where''s he wounded? |
8207 | Where''s thy_ drum_? |
8207 | Where? |
8207 | Wherefore to Dover?_ Let him first answer that. |
8207 | Wherefore_ to Dover?__ Gloster_. |
8207 | Which way, do you judge, my wit would fly? |
8207 | Who cared what methods the philosophers were taking, or whether this was a new one or an old one, so that the men of letters could understand it? |
8207 | Who did that very thing? |
8207 | Who goes there? |
8207 | Who hinders my groom from calling himself Pompey the Great? |
8207 | Who is he that had not rather not be read at all, than after a drowsy or_ cursory_ manner? |
8207 | Who is it that can tell me_ who I am_?'' |
8207 | Who knows but the Naturalist in this field was then already on the ground, making his collections? |
8207 | Who overcame he? |
8207 | Who shall claim that this department is the only one, which that gift, that is the last gift of Creation and Providence to man is forbidden to enter? |
8207 | Who shall say that it is yet time to strip him of the disguise which he wears so effectively? |
8207 | Who shall think himself competent to oppose this benefaction? |
8207 | Who understandeth thee not,_ loves thee not.--Ut re sol la mi fa.--Under pardon_, Sir, what are THE CONTENTS? |
8207 | Who was it that stood on the spot and put that design into execution? |
8207 | Who, that is himself at all above the condition of an oyster, will undertake to say, deliberately and upon reflection, that it is not? |
8207 | Why are you breathless? |
8207 | Why did he come? |
8207 | Why did he see? |
8207 | Why did you laugh when I said,_ Man_ delights not me? |
8207 | Why did you wish me milder? |
8207 | Why did you wish me milder? |
8207 | Why do you go about to recover the wind of me, as if you would drive me into a toil? |
8207 | Why dost not speak? |
8207 | Why had your bodies_ No heart among you_, or had you tongues To cry against THE RECTORSHIP of--_judgment_? |
8207 | Why might not you, my lord, receive attendance From those that she calls servants, or from mine? |
8207 | Why shall the people_ give_ One that speaks thus their voice? |
8207 | Why should that name be sounded more than yours? |
8207 | Why should we pay tribute? |
8207 | Why stay we prating here? |
8207 | Why, either, were you ignorant to see''t? |
8207 | Why, fool? |
8207 | Why, look you now_, how_ unworthy a thing_ you make of ME? |
8207 | Why,_ masters_, my good friends, mine honest neighbours, Will you undo yourselves_? |
8207 | Why? |
8207 | Why? |
8207 | Why? |
8207 | Why? |
8207 | Why? |
8207 | Why_ force you this_? |
8207 | Why_ then_ should_ I_ be consul? |
8207 | Will it give place to flexure and low bending? |
8207 | Will you play upon this pipe? |
8207 | With a proud heart he wore His humble weeds_: Will you dismiss the people? |
8207 | With all his faults, and all his egotisms, who would not be sorry to see him taken to pieces, after all? |
8207 | Would you have me_ False to my nature_? |
8207 | Would you have me_ False to my nature_? |
8207 | Would you proceed_ especially_ against Caius Marcius? |
8207 | You pulled me by the_ cloak_: would you speak with me? |
8207 | Your enigma_? |
8207 | Your knees to me? |
8207 | Your own desert? |
8207 | Your_ names_?'' |
8207 | [ If it be? |
8207 | [ What is it, then, that this prophet is relying on? |
8207 | [''Shall the blessed_ Sun_ of_ Heaven_ prove a micher, and_ eat blackberries_''? |
8207 | [''When could they say till now that talked of Rome that_ her_ wide walls encompassed but_ one man_?'' |
8207 | _ And even to this day_, if any man would let NEW LIGHT IN upon the human understanding,[ who was it that proposed to do that?] |
8207 | _ And, besides, for whom do you write_?'' |
8207 | _ And_ why_ should Caesar be a tyrant_ then? |
8207 | _ Boy? |
8207 | _ Brutus_ and_ Caesar_: What should be in that_ Caesar_? |
8207 | _ Dost thou think_ I''ll grace thee with that ROBBERY-- thy STOLEN NAME,_ Coriolanus_, in CORIOLI?.... |
8207 | _ False justicer, why hast thou let her scape_? |
8207 | _ Fiery_?--what_ quality_? |
8207 | _ Have you informed them since?__ Bru_. |
8207 | _ Have you not set them on?__ Men_. |
8207 | _ He hath not told his thought to the king_? |
8207 | _ I_ inform them? |
8207 | _ Is it he_? |
8207 | _ Is the storm overblown? |
8207 | _ Killing our enemies?_ The blood he hath_ lost_,( Which, I dare vouch, is more than that he hath,_ By many an ounce_), he dropped it for his country. |
8207 | _ Let it be virtuous to be obstinate_.-- What is that curtsey worth? |
8207 | _ Marcius_? |
8207 | _ Men_.... Is the senate possessed of this? |
8207 | _ Must I_ With_ my base tongue, give to my noble heart A lie that it must bear? |
8207 | _ Now in the name_ of_ all the gods at once_,_ Upon what meat doth this our_ CAESAR_ feed, That he is grown so great_? |
8207 | _ On whom depending, their obedience fails To the greater bench_? |
8207 | _ Our à � diles smote? |
8207 | _ Shall remain!_ Hear you this Triton of the minnows? |
8207 | _ The matter_? |
8207 | _ They say, there''s grain enough_? |
8207 | _ They_[ Volsces?] |
8207 | _ This a Consul_? |
8207 | _ This_? |
8207 | _ Traitor_? |
8207 | _ Videlicet_, he came, saw, and overcame... Who came? |
8207 | _ What is about to be? |
8207 | _ What_ Rome? |
8207 | _ Where is this_ STRAW,_ my fellow_? |
8207 | _ Where_ hast thou led me? |
8207 | _ Who offered him the crown_? |
8207 | _ Why dost not speak_?'' |
8207 | _ You, being their mouths_, why rule you not their teeth? |
8207 | _ mark you__ His absolute_ SHALL? |
8207 | and why stare you so? |
8207 | and''wherein?'' |
8207 | art_ mad_? |
8207 | did_ CAESAR SWOON?'' |
8207 | distil? |
8207 | do you think I AM EASIER TO BE PLAYED ON THAN A PIPE? |
8207 | or those doves''eyes, Which can_ make gods forsworn_? |
8207 | or three or four dashes with a pen?'' |
8207 | or, rather, as Horace says in his-- What, my soul,_ verses_? |
8207 | preserve? |
8207 | say they: did he know no more than this_ when he was in_ PLACE?'' |
8207 | to_ your corrected son_? |
8207 | what is that? |
8207 | what mockery of power is it then? |
8207 | what then? |
8207 | why does he so?'' |
8207 | why does it so?'' |
8207 | without inquiring what it is that makes that_ lack_; without ever putting the question in earnest,''_ Why does he so_?'' |
8207 | yea, so, That our great king himself doth woo me oft For my confections? |
13728 | ''Ow d''yer s''pose my ma''s goin''to git along without me to do for''er and the babby? |
13728 | ''Ow does any one know ee wor there at all? 13728 ''Will you walk into my parlour?''" |
13728 | A fine performance, eh? 13728 Ah?" |
13728 | Aldous tells me you take a great interest in the people? |
13728 | All well? |
13728 | Alresford--_Alresford_? 13728 An''''ow about that straw- plaitin'', miss?" |
13728 | An''it be true as_ she_ be goin''to marry Muster Raeburn? |
13728 | An''them town chaps got off, eh? |
13728 | And I did n''t say''money''or''comfort,''did I? 13728 And I think,"he said,"you gave me Mr. Thorpe''s address?" |
13728 | And I understand from you,he said,"that the paper_ goes in_ for the strike, that you will fight it through?" |
13728 | And Mr. Raeburn liked it? |
13728 | And afterwards-- what is to become of your product? |
13728 | And do n''t you think, Mr. Raeburn, that you might open that gate? 13728 And he is ready to take your view of it?" |
13728 | And he told no one else?--he never complained? |
13728 | And it was the monotony you liked? |
13728 | And now what has happened? |
13728 | And now, you wo n''t despair, will you? 13728 And now,"she said, in half- coherent despair,"do you know what you are doing? |
13728 | And she gave you no message for me? |
13728 | And shoot big game, I suppose-- amuse yourself somehow? |
13728 | And the people? |
13728 | And the wife and child? |
13728 | And then you tormented him? |
13728 | And this? |
13728 | And what did you teach them? |
13728 | And what right have you to do it? 13728 And when did this happen?" |
13728 | And who did it? |
13728 | And you and Anna will walk to the Registry Office next week? |
13728 | And you are as much in love with the poor as ever? |
13728 | And you are quite sure that Busbridge Towers has nothing to do with it? |
13728 | And you are unhappy about it? 13728 And you gave up that intention?" |
13728 | And you mean besides,said his grandfather, interrupting him,"that I must send your aunt to call?" |
13728 | And you really think him a trifle better? |
13728 | And you really think that the world ought to be''hatched over again and hatched different''? 13728 And you reckon that I am not likely to go to Mellor, even to see her? |
13728 | And you refused him? |
13728 | And you say the same? |
13728 | And you think the principle matters twopence without the details? 13728 And you will never go out with me, mamma?" |
13728 | And you will try and make him alter his mind? |
13728 | And your election? |
13728 | Any clue? 13728 Any letters?" |
13728 | Anything more? 13728 Are n''t you ashamed of them?" |
13728 | Are the Raeburns as strong as they were? |
13728 | Are the frocks so adorable? |
13728 | Are there any other rooms than this? |
13728 | Are there many of these Labour members like_ that_? |
13728 | Are yer at home, miss? |
13728 | Are you a little easier, papa? |
13728 | Are you always going to quarrel with me like this? 13728 Are you and he like all the rest,"cried Marcella, her passion breaking out again,"only eager to have blood for blood?" |
13728 | Are you comin'', mother? |
13728 | Are you coming, Frank? |
13728 | Are you going in here? |
13728 | Are you going to be asleep a long time? |
13728 | Are you rested-- were they good to you? 13728 Are you so aggressive? |
13728 | Are you very bad, little man? |
13728 | Because a man is harsh and masterful, and uses stinging language, is he to be shot down like a dog? |
13728 | Business? |
13728 | But do n''t you_ hate_ the people that have them? |
13728 | But he was civil to you, you say? |
13728 | But how can one help being ashamed? |
13728 | But how in the world did you do''t, miss? 13728 But if one ca n''t have both feathers and boots?" |
13728 | But if she feels it-- as you or I might feel such a thing about some one we knew or cared for, Agneta? |
13728 | But not in your judgment? |
13728 | But tell me--he went on--"who has been tampering with you? |
13728 | But why? |
13728 | But why_ ca n''t_ they have feathers and boots? 13728 But you did n''t?" |
13728 | But you will let me take you home? |
13728 | But, after all, how can one feel for the oppressor, or those connected with him, as one does for the victim? |
13728 | But, after all, why should they care for all this? 13728 But-- may I explain myself, Miss Boyce, in a room with a fire? |
13728 | But_ does_ it do any good? |
13728 | By the way,said the mother, suddenly,"I suppose you will be going over to help him in his canvassing this next few weeks? |
13728 | By yourself, Marcella? 13728 Ca n''t people agree to differ, you sentimentalist? |
13728 | Ca n''t we go out? 13728 Can I-- like Parnell-- make a party and keep it together? |
13728 | Can you bear it? |
13728 | Can you do nothing? |
13728 | Can you tell me what the case was? |
13728 | Can you walk? |
13728 | Casey, some whisky? 13728 Clever Benny,"she said, patting his head;"but why are n''t you at school, sir?" |
13728 | Confess you took me for the ghost? |
13728 | Could it have greeted me more kindly,he said, in his whispering voice,"for the end?" |
13728 | Could n''t you stay like that? 13728 Could you-- come to- morrow afternoon? |
13728 | D''ye know, miss,said Mrs. Jellison, pointing to Mrs. Patton,"as she kep''school when she was young?" |
13728 | Deacon, are the letters come? |
13728 | Dear Mrs. Hurd,said Marcella, kneeling down beside her,"wo n''t you let Ann go? |
13728 | Did I tell you my news of Minta Hurd? |
13728 | Did Miss Betty amuse you? |
13728 | Did he defend himself? |
13728 | Did he give you no warning in that talk you had with him at Mellor? |
13728 | Did n''t he just? 13728 Did n''t you hear? |
13728 | Did n''t you like that last speech? |
13728 | Did n''t you meet him at my rooms? |
13728 | Did you escape in here out of the heat? |
13728 | Did you ever love any one like that, Mary? |
13728 | Did you hear anything of his state of mind? |
13728 | Did you hear of anythink? |
13728 | Did you know anything of this? |
13728 | Did you notice that piece of news I sent you, in my last letter to Geneva? 13728 Did you see Hurd?" |
13728 | Did you see anything to make you suppose,he asked quietly, after a pause,"that she is going to marry him?" |
13728 | Did you see it, miss? |
13728 | Did you see that man? |
13728 | Did_ you_? |
13728 | Do all your principles break down like this? 13728 Do you feel worse again? |
13728 | Do you guess at all why it hurts me to jar with you? |
13728 | Do you imagine that that seems anything but natural to me? 13728 Do you know Lady Selina Farrell?" |
13728 | Do you know any Hurds? 13728 Do you know most of the people dining?" |
13728 | Do you know so many busy people? |
13728 | Do you know that man Wharton is getting an extraordinary hold upon the London working men? |
13728 | Do you know these three pamphlets? 13728 Do you know where I was before I went into the inquest?" |
13728 | Do you know,he exclaimed, turning upon her,"that she may never recover this? |
13728 | Do you know,he said presently,"I did not tell you before, but I am certain that Hurd''s wife is afraid of you, that she has a secret from you?" |
13728 | Do you like being alone? |
13728 | Do you mean to say that she is at home and that she will not see me? |
13728 | Do you mean to say,she asked him abruptly,"that you have given up the luxuries and opportunities of your class?" |
13728 | Do you mind letting me shake hands with you? |
13728 | Do you remember,he said, approaching her again,"that you have given me cause to hope? |
13728 | Do you remember,she said, in a low, energetic voice,"that I told you I could never be ungrateful, never forget what he had done?" |
13728 | Do you see--she said at last, with a change of tone,"do you see that we have got our invitation?" |
13728 | Do you suppose I can go on all my life without hearing Mr. Raeburn''s name mentioned? 13728 Do you suppose I nurse none but well- paid artisans?" |
13728 | Do you suppose anybody who could look beyond the moment would dream of calling it failure? |
13728 | Do you suppose to- night will be the height of happiness? |
13728 | Do you suppose you know so much about women? |
13728 | Do you suppose,he exclaimed,"that I yet understand in the least how it is that I am here, in this chair, with you beside me? |
13728 | Do you think I can have all the work of the house put out because some one is ill? 13728 Do you think I should let myself starve with my work to do?" |
13728 | Do you think I was rude to your grandfather? |
13728 | Do you think it was all a mistake, mamma, my going away eighteen months ago-- a wrong act? |
13728 | Do you think she is any the more likely to have you,said Marcella, unrelenting,"if you behave as a loafer and a runaway? |
13728 | Do you think that because I delight in-- in pretty things and old associations, I must give up all my convictions? 13728 Do you want to forbid me to go?" |
13728 | Do you? |
13728 | Does Aldous understand what you are letting him in for? |
13728 | Does a man_ forgive_ the hand that sets him free, the voice that recreates him? 13728 Does she know about that settlement?" |
13728 | Does she love him at all? |
13728 | Does she show you his letters? |
13728 | Does your arm hurt you much? |
13728 | Forgive? |
13728 | Frank!--is that you? 13728 George Denny? |
13728 | Great political changes you mean? |
13728 | Harry Wharton? |
13728 | Has papa been able to do anything for the cottages yet? |
13728 | Has there been nothing else than that in it? |
13728 | Have you any idea what sort of a wind you keep up here on these hills on a night like this? 13728 Have you been dancing, Mary?" |
13728 | Have you been out of town all these Sundays? |
13728 | Have you been talking Socialism to her? |
13728 | Have you left the Venturists? |
13728 | Have you read the rest of the will? |
13728 | Have you seen Mrs. Hurd this morning? |
13728 | Have you seen the afternoon papers? |
13728 | He died? |
13728 | He is waiting for you-- will you come at once? |
13728 | He makes everybody discontented; sets everybody by the ears; and, after all, what can he do for anybody? |
13728 | He was able to bear the journey? 13728 How am I to know? |
13728 | How are you getting on? |
13728 | How can I bear to be thinking of these things? |
13728 | How can I help it? |
13728 | How can I? |
13728 | How can a man who has reached the position he has in so short a time-- in so many different worlds-- be disposed of by calling him an ugly name? 13728 How can he know? |
13728 | How can he? |
13728 | How can she feel it like that? |
13728 | How can she know any one of-- of that class well enough? 13728 How could I think of my own affairs?" |
13728 | How could I? 13728 How do yer know ee seed''i m?" |
13728 | How has she taken-- the verdict? |
13728 | How is Lord Maxwell? |
13728 | How is he, Mr. Wharton? 13728 How is she?" |
13728 | How long has she been like this? |
13728 | How long have you been at work to- day? |
13728 | How many times did Roberts manage to be- lord me in a minute? |
13728 | How much gratitude do you think I owe him? |
13728 | How regret it, papa? |
13728 | How shall I instruct a Speaker''s great- niece? |
13728 | How shall we ever escape from the_ curse_ of this game system? |
13728 | How will mamma take it? |
13728 | How worn- out you look!--Yes, certainly-- Agneta, take her up and let her rest-- And you wish to speak to me afterwards? 13728 How? |
13728 | How_ could_ she see him? |
13728 | I ai nt a goin''ter,said the boy, shortly, beginning to sweep again with energy,"an''if this''ere baby cries, give it the bottle, I s''pose?" |
13728 | I believe you have not been at Mellor long? |
13728 | I do n''t remember-- ought I? |
13728 | I mean,said Lady Selina,"was she in love with anybody else, and was the poacher an excuse?" |
13728 | I say, Hallin-- is this all right? |
13728 | I say, Wharton, come and dine, will you, Thursday, at the House-- small party-- meet in my room? |
13728 | I suppose Mr. Harden and his sister remind you of your London Socialist friends, Marcella? |
13728 | I suppose brain- power and education count for something still? |
13728 | I suppose you had never obeyed any one in your life before? |
13728 | I suppose you mean Lord Maxwell? |
13728 | I think,said Marcella, quietly,"you mean the cause of the rich, do n''t you?" |
13728 | I was going to ask you to- day, if you could help them? |
13728 | I will go and get something-- what would you like? |
13728 | I will take you back to the Lanes, anyway,said Lady Winterbourne;"or shall we look after you?" |
13728 | I wonder what you suppose it teaches? |
13728 | If it''s to be the People''s party, why, in the name o''God, must yo put a yoong ripstitch like yon at the head of it? 13728 If nature put not forth her power About the opening of the flower, Who is it that could live an hour?" |
13728 | In the first place,he said, laughing,"as to my speech, do you suppose that I believe in that Bill which I described just now?" |
13728 | Is Sir Frank anywhere about? |
13728 | Is he gone? 13728 Is he penitent?" |
13728 | Is he still out of work? |
13728 | Is his lordship in? |
13728 | Is it that tiresome arm still? 13728 Is it the_ Labour Clarion_? |
13728 | Is n''t it sad,said his old friend, unable to help herself,"to see her battling like this with life-- with thought-- all alone? |
13728 | Is n''t it the very poetry of night and solitude? |
13728 | Is n''t it too soon? |
13728 | Is n''t that the condition of most of us? |
13728 | Is n''t there a superstition against doing that-- before you''re married? |
13728 | Is n''t your arm hurt? |
13728 | Is she fat-- and forty? |
13728 | Is that all you have noticed? 13728 Is that so rare?" |
13728 | Is that tea? |
13728 | Is the creature all tricks? |
13728 | Is the hair really-- as grey as that? |
13728 | Is there anything more you wish to say to me? |
13728 | Is there anything to say against it? 13728 Is there anything-- anything wrong?" |
13728 | Is there much poaching in this village now, do you think? |
13728 | Is this miscellaneous work a relief to you after hospital? |
13728 | It is all a horrible tangle,she said,"and what the next twenty years will bring forth who can tell? |
13728 | It is just the feather''s weight of change that makes the difference, is n''t it? |
13728 | It was all a mistake-- wasn''t it? 13728 It would be strange, would n''t it, if I took it quite for granted-- all in the day''s work?" |
13728 | It''s the best speech you''ve ever made-- the best president''s speech we''ve had yet, I say,--don''t you think so? |
13728 | Lane, will you take charge? 13728 Look here-- do come to the point-- have you proposed to her?" |
13728 | Mamma, are you coming? |
13728 | Mamma, ca n''t I do those letters for you? 13728 Mamma, how_ could_ he?" |
13728 | Mamma, is this Miss Boyce--_your_ Miss Boyce? |
13728 | Mamma, will you please not tell papa that-- that Lord Maxwell came here this afternoon? 13728 Mamma,"exclaimed the girl, in her deep voice,"you would not wish to stop me?" |
13728 | Marcella, is that you? |
13728 | Marcella,he said, sitting down beside her,"did you read my letter that I wrote you the day before--?" |
13728 | May I ask you to read the petition carefully, before you attempt to do anything with it? 13728 May I exact a reward?" |
13728 | May I have a word with you presently? |
13728 | May I introduce you? |
13728 | May I kiss you? |
13728 | May I let him in? |
13728 | May I speak to you, miss? |
13728 | May I, then, venture to intrude upon you with these few words? 13728 May n''t I go where I belong?" |
13728 | May n''t I go, Deacon? 13728 May n''t I-- for the present-- do what I will with mine own? |
13728 | May n''t one even feed a Radical? |
13728 | May we come in? |
13728 | Miss Boyce, may we see the house? 13728 Miss how-- much?" |
13728 | Mr. Wharton, do you ever do such a frivolous thing as go to the theatre? |
13728 | Mrs. Boyce will not make Mellor her home? |
13728 | My answer? |
13728 | My dear Miss Betty, have n''t you found out by now that I am a good listener and a bad talker? 13728 My dear sir, are such things generally made public property? |
13728 | My dear young lady,he said, much amused,"are you even in the frame of mind to make a hero of a poacher? |
13728 | My proof of friendship? 13728 Need one measure everything by politics?" |
13728 | Nervous, eh? |
13728 | No return? 13728 No-- really?--shall I?" |
13728 | No; who is she? |
13728 | Not a Conservative? |
13728 | Not good- bye? 13728 Now are you ready?" |
13728 | Now look here, Miss Boyce,--what do you think Mr. Hallin wants? 13728 Now, look here Miss Boyce, will you come for a walk with me? |
13728 | Now, will you come up in half an hour? 13728 Now,"he added, as his lameness forced him to sit down,"will you kindly allow me some conversation with you? |
13728 | Now,_ can_ I wait for my tea till I have washed and dressed? |
13728 | O Neigung, sage, wie hast du so tief I m Herzen dich verstecket? 13728 Of course you know what everybody said?" |
13728 | Oh!--must you? |
13728 | Oh, that''s the Irish Secretary answering now, is it? |
13728 | Oh, they are, are they? |
13728 | On the broad seas of life enisled--separate, estranged, for ever? |
13728 | Only half the income? |
13728 | Or of mine? |
13728 | Our cause? |
13728 | Papa is more at ease in those ways? |
13728 | Papa, is Lord Maxwell''s note an uncivil one? |
13728 | Papa--_was_ that a note from Lord Maxwell? |
13728 | Part of the year? |
13728 | Perhaps you do n''t know that I was a member of the Venturist Society in London? 13728 Perhaps you''ll be pleased to hear that I_ am_ going to a meeting of Mr. Raeburn''s next week?" |
13728 | Perhaps you''ll tell me where you are,he said,"that I may know how to talk? |
13728 | Please tell me,she said suddenly,"why do you attack my straw- plaiting? |
13728 | Poor old Patton, he do get slow on his legs, do n''t you, Patton? 13728 Richard Boyce? |
13728 | Roberts, has Miss Raeburn gone out? |
13728 | Shall Daisy run out with that telegram? |
13728 | Shall I produce his letter to me? |
13728 | Shall I send the children upstairs? |
13728 | Shall I tell you,he asked, in a lower voice--"shall I show you something-- something that I had on my heart as I was walking here?" |
13728 | Shall we get out of this very uncomfortable corner? |
13728 | Shall we go into the Stone Parlour? 13728 Shall you be at work to- morrow, Raeburn?" |
13728 | Shall you miss a sitting of the commission? |
13728 | She holds my friend''s life in her hands-- is she worthy of it? |
13728 | She''ll manage him, do n''t you think? 13728 Since when has she become a person likely to be''satisfied''with anything? |
13728 | So I shall be expected to take quite a different view of him henceforward? |
13728 | So I understand you wish me to go down at once? |
13728 | So it was from the dear mamma that the young man got his opinions? |
13728 | So that was his doing? |
13728 | So the Socialists are the only people who think? |
13728 | So you call yourself a Socialist? 13728 So you mean to go about much? |
13728 | So you pity yourself? |
13728 | So you suppose that Aldous had his wits about him on that great occasion as much as you had? |
13728 | So you think Miss Raeburn has views? |
13728 | So you were carried away? |
13728 | Suppose we leave Mr. Wharton alone? |
13728 | Suppose we talk about her? |
13728 | Supposing you live long enough to see the State take it, shall you be able to reconcile yourself to it? 13728 Tell me,"she said, bending over the arm of her chair and speaking in a low, eager voice,"he is beginning to forget it?" |
13728 | That you like it? |
13728 | The Bar? |
13728 | The man says, please sir, is there any answer, sir? |
13728 | The school was n''t very big then, I suppose? |
13728 | The small young fellow with the curly hair? |
13728 | The whole point lies in this,she said, looking up:"_ Can_ we believe Hurd''s own story? |
13728 | Then shall I tell you? 13728 Then the paper will not back arbitration?" |
13728 | Then why did you accept him? |
13728 | Then why do you let Marcella go? 13728 Then why do you make farcical speeches, bamboozling your friends and misleading the House of Commons?" |
13728 | Then will you dine with us? |
13728 | They have told you everything? 13728 They took him back to prison?" |
13728 | They''ll let me come and see you, Jim? |
13728 | They''re a- goin''to try''i m Thursday? |
13728 | They''re not taking him away? |
13728 | This being so,he resumed,"the question is, what can be done? |
13728 | This is Friday-- say Monday? |
13728 | This_ can not_ mean--he said, when they had exchanged a brief salutation--"that the paper is backing out?" |
13728 | Time enough to throw it all up in, you think? |
13728 | To learn nursing? 13728 To- morrow?" |
13728 | Too austere, I suppose? |
13728 | Two hundred a year? |
13728 | Two years, was n''t it, to- day? 13728 Unnecessary, do n''t you think?" |
13728 | Was Hurd himself examined? |
13728 | Was n''t it? |
13728 | Was there anything else you did n''t help in? 13728 We are all going together to the Gairsley meeting next week, are n''t we? |
13728 | We grope in a dark world-- you see some points of light in it, I see others-- won''t you give me credit for doing what I can-- seeing what I can? 13728 We may meet often-- mayn''t we?--at Lady Winterbourne''s-- or in the country? |
13728 | We shall meet next week, I suppose, in the House? |
13728 | Well, Marcella, have you and Lady Winterbourne arranged your classes? |
13728 | Well, are you going to do it? |
13728 | Well, did you disapprove? |
13728 | Well, how did you like the speech to- night--_the_ speech? |
13728 | Well, in the first place,said Wharton, slowly,"she is beautiful-- you knew that?" |
13728 | Well, is n''t it simple? |
13728 | Well, it''s you that''s the young''un, ai n''t it, miss? |
13728 | Well, let me find out, wo n''t you? 13728 Well, papa, but what does he say?" |
13728 | Well, there is always that to think of, is n''t there? 13728 Well, what are you going to do about those cards?" |
13728 | Well, what have you to say to me? |
13728 | Well, you might, might n''t you? |
13728 | Well,he said at last, stooping to his neighbour,"what are you thinking of?" |
13728 | Well-- I-- I believe-- you have some land? |
13728 | Well-- any news? |
13728 | Were you? |
13728 | Wharton? 13728 Wharton?" |
13728 | What am I to do, Jim, an''them chillen-- when you''re took to prison? |
13728 | What can you find to write about? |
13728 | What did I do it for? |
13728 | What did Mercy Moss do? |
13728 | What did he do it for? |
13728 | What did you tell''er? |
13728 | What did_ you_ think of Mr. Wharton''s speech the other night? |
13728 | What do they say in the village? |
13728 | What do you mean? |
13728 | What do you mean? |
13728 | What do you mean? |
13728 | What do you say? |
13728 | What do you spose I''d tell her? 13728 What do you suppose he is after?" |
13728 | What do you want me to say? |
13728 | What does it matter what I was last year? |
13728 | What does it mean? |
13728 | What for? |
13728 | What has happened, Louis? 13728 What have I done?" |
13728 | What have I ever done but claim from you that freedom you desire so passionately for others-- freedom of conscience-- freedom of judgment? 13728 What have you seen of Aldous Raeburn?" |
13728 | What help will you ask of me that I can not give? 13728 What is it you want, Nuss? |
13728 | What is it, Darwin? 13728 What is it, dear Ned?" |
13728 | What is it, dear? 13728 What is it? |
13728 | What is it? 13728 What is justice?" |
13728 | What is she going to do when she has done her training? |
13728 | What is she like? |
13728 | What is the good of playing Lady Bountiful to a decayed industry? 13728 What is the matter, Deacon?" |
13728 | What landlord is? 13728 What possible right have you to that remark?" |
13728 | What post? |
13728 | What right? |
13728 | What tales have you heard? |
13728 | What the deuce does it matter? 13728 What ud ha been the good o''that, miss?" |
13728 | What use is there, papa, in going back to these things? |
13728 | What was it Worth said to me the other day?--Ce qu''on porte, Mademoiselle? 13728 What was it you wanted about those coverts, papa?" |
13728 | What works? |
13728 | What!--among the smart people? |
13728 | What''s kept you so late? |
13728 | What''s the name? |
13728 | What, never? |
13728 | What, no carriage? |
13728 | What, the Flag-- and the Throne-- that kind of thing? |
13728 | What, the burns? 13728 What, you have been getting into scrapes again?" |
13728 | What? 13728 What?" |
13728 | What_ do_ you mean, Agneta? |
13728 | What_ does_ he want with us and our affairs? |
13728 | What_ is_ the matter with you, my dear? |
13728 | Whatever are you so late for? |
13728 | Whatever have you been doing to your cheek? |
13728 | When are you speaking next? |
13728 | Where are my things? |
13728 | Where are you going? |
13728 | Where have you been meeting her-- this young lady? |
13728 | Where have you been? |
13728 | Where have you got the money? |
13728 | Where in the world did she get it all from, and is she standing on her head or am I? |
13728 | Where is Daisy? |
13728 | Where is Miss Harden? |
13728 | Where is Mrs. Boyce, William? |
13728 | Where was the tyranny in this case? |
13728 | Where you bin, Will? 13728 Where''s Marcella?" |
13728 | Where? |
13728 | Which he will never get over? |
13728 | Which means,she said,"that you ca n''t get your way in the House?" |
13728 | Which room? |
13728 | Who ever thought otherwise of a clever opponent? |
13728 | Who is found? |
13728 | Who is that talking to Miss Boyce? |
13728 | Who is that tall man just gone up to speak to him? |
13728 | Who pays the keepers? |
13728 | Who? 13728 Whom did you walk with yesterday afternoon?" |
13728 | Whose fault was it,he interrupted,"that I was not with you? |
13728 | Whose wife worships you?--whose good angel you have been? 13728 Why are you still a Venturist?" |
13728 | Why ca n''t she smile and chatter like other girls? |
13728 | Why did I do it? |
13728 | Why did n''t he let Hurd alone,said Marcella, sadly,"and prosecute him next day? |
13728 | Why did you ask me? 13728 Why did you write, or allow that article on the West Brookshire landlords two days ago?" |
13728 | Why do n''t you go? |
13728 | Why do you bury yourself in that nursing life? |
13728 | Why do you expect an English crowd to do anything beautiful? 13728 Why do you harp on that?" |
13728 | Why do you say that, I wonder? |
13728 | Why do you take up her time so, with all these things? |
13728 | Why should it be-- always? 13728 Why should n''t they wear feathers in their hats? |
13728 | Why, who is coming? |
13728 | Why-- why, what is the matter with you, Aldous? 13728 Why?" |
13728 | Will Lord Maxwell continue the pension? |
13728 | Will Miss Raeburn take me? |
13728 | Will it mend your daughter''s grief to see another woman''s heart broken? 13728 Will they let me in?" |
13728 | Will you acknowledge that I played my part well? 13728 Will you come and look at our tapestry?" |
13728 | Will you come and see this room here? |
13728 | Will you come in? 13728 Will you come in?" |
13728 | Will you come next Tuesday? |
13728 | Will you come to tea with me next week?--Oh, I will write.--And we must go too-- where_ can_ my friend be? |
13728 | Will you come? |
13728 | Will you criticise?--tell me where you thought I was a fool to- night, or a hypocrite? 13728 Will you excuse me,"he said,"for coming at this hour? |
13728 | Will you give it me? |
13728 | Will you give me some lunch, Miss Boyce, in return for a message? 13728 Will you give me some?" |
13728 | Will you go to the Court, mamma? |
13728 | Will you go? |
13728 | Will you mind if I do n''t talk? |
13728 | Will you not let Marcella take you to rest? |
13728 | Will you order the carriage? |
13728 | Will you please get this taken to Mr. Raeburn? 13728 Will you please try and find him?" |
13728 | Will you sit and rest a little before you go upstairs? |
13728 | Will you take her upstairs to your sitting- room, and let her have some food and rest? 13728 Will you take me away?" |
13728 | Will you take me down with you to your village? 13728 Will you tell me about Lord Maxwell?" |
13728 | Will you tell me what made you do this? |
13728 | Will you tell me,he said steadily--"I think you will admit I have a right to know-- is Marcella in constant correspondence now with Henry Wharton?" |
13728 | Will you think me a very extraordinary person if I ask you a question? 13728 Will you? |
13728 | Will you? |
13728 | Willie, what is it ails you, dear? 13728 Willie,"she said, running to him,"how are you, dear? |
13728 | Windmill Hill? 13728 Wo n''t you go and have some dinner?" |
13728 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
13728 | Wo n''t you sit nearer to the window? 13728 Wo n''t you try and believe what it costs me to refuse?" |
13728 | Wo n''t_ anybody_ find him? 13728 Would n''t he?" |
13728 | Would you call her beautiful? 13728 You a Venturist? |
13728 | You admit the strength of the temptation? 13728 You and I-- Why care by what meanders we are here I''the centre of the labyrinth? |
13728 | You are Miss Boyce? 13728 You are sorry he is a Tory, is that it?" |
13728 | You are staying the night with her? |
13728 | You are very wet, papa,she said to him as she took his cup;"do n''t you think you had better go at once and change?" |
13728 | You bin out workin''a day''s work already, han''t yer? |
13728 | You ca n''t want him to get in, though? |
13728 | You challenge me? 13728 You come from the St. Martin''s Association?" |
13728 | You did not know? |
13728 | You did tell me, Aldous, did n''t you,said Lady Winterbourne,"that Miss Boyce was a great reader?" |
13728 | You do n''t expect to pay your way? |
13728 | You do n''t mind my calling him by his Christian name sometimes? 13728 You do n''t, do you, Aldous? |
13728 | You have come from London to- day? |
13728 | You have just come from the village, I think? |
13728 | You have not proposed to her? |
13728 | You knew Uncle Robert-- Lord Maxwell did? |
13728 | You know some on''em, miss, do n''t yer? |
13728 | You know that fellow''s history, Aldous? |
13728 | You like the country? |
13728 | You love the place; but did you ever see it so lovable? 13728 You mean Miss Boyce?" |
13728 | You mean Mr. Wharton by the other man? |
13728 | You mean,he said in an altered voice, after a pause of silence,"that another influence-- another man-- has come between us?" |
13728 | You mock me? |
13728 | You must of course think it a very interesting old place? |
13728 | You read it? |
13728 | You see Jim, miss, how he''s made? 13728 You spoke of giving him help if he ever asked it of you-- has he asked it?" |
13728 | You think any other sort of paper is any better? |
13728 | You think that suffering belongs to one class? 13728 You think you will get it some day?" |
13728 | You told him that? |
13728 | You understand, Aldous, that for twenty years-- it is twenty years last month since your father died-- you have been the blessing of my life? 13728 You want to get at everything so quickly?" |
13728 | You went with her to the prison to- day, I believe? |
13728 | You will do what you can in the only quarter--he spoke slowly--"that can really aid, and you will communicate with me at the House of Commons? |
13728 | You will keep this sitting- room, Aldous? |
13728 | You will not go away, mees,he implored,"you will not leaf me alone?" |
13728 | You will set up another keeper, and you wo n''t do anything for the village? |
13728 | You wo n''t scold me? |
13728 | You''ll be quiet, Will, and go sleep, wo n''t yer, if daddy takes keer on you? |
13728 | You''re goin''to put that bit of hare on? 13728 You''ve never been and got in Westall''s way again?" |
13728 | You_ are_ better, papa? |
13728 | _ Did_ I blow you out of window? |
13728 | _ Do_ you want it? |
13728 | _ E tristo impara?_repeated Marcella, her voice wavering. |
13728 | _ Spies,_ yo call us? |
13728 | _ Sympathy!_ who was ever yet fed, warmed, comforted by_ sympathy_? 13728 _ Yours?_"she said mechanically. |
13728 | ''''Aven''t yer brought me no sweeties, Gran''ma?'' |
13728 | ''Adn''t we got rid of every stick o''stuff we iver''ad? |
13728 | ''But if you was to_ look_, Gran''ma-- in both your pockets, Gran''ma-- iv you was to let_ me_ look?'' |
13728 | ''Ca n''t you let me alone?'' |
13728 | ''Ffolliot,''he said,''can you come with me to Siam next week?'' |
13728 | ''How much?'' |
13728 | ''Johnnie,''says she,''whatever made''em do sich a wicked thing?'' |
13728 | ''Oh, Jim,''says I,''wherever have you been? |
13728 | ''Ow''s she?" |
13728 | ''We''ll go and explore those temples in Siam,''he said, and then he muttered something about''Why should I ever come back?'' |
13728 | ''What did tha think, Willum?'' |
13728 | ''What did_ tha_ think, George?'' |
13728 | ''What right have you or any one else,''he said, very short,''to ask me such a question?'' |
13728 | ''Why do n''t you complain to the agent?'' |
13728 | ***** But these two years since she had said good- bye to Solesby and her school days? |
13728 | *****"Now, will you please explain to me why you look like that, and talk like that?" |
13728 | *****"Will you take me to the Court?" |
13728 | --and to be ashamed you ever knew us?" |
13728 | --he said, still holding her, and roused to a white heat of emotion--"_why_ is it impossible? |
13728 | --he smiled kindly--"is that an arrangement between you and your mother?" |
13728 | --he strained his eyes in vain--"Collision perhaps-- and mischief? |
13728 | --her state of mind and mine? |
13728 | --she pointed a shaking finger at the dress patterns lying scattered on the table--"with this agony, this death, under my eyes?" |
13728 | --with an angry look at her--"I suppose you thought I should want to sponge upon her? |
13728 | A contradiction, or a commonplace, you say? |
13728 | A foolish girl had repented her of her folly-- was anxious to make those concerned understand-- what more simple? |
13728 | A little later Aldous was startled to hear him say, very clearly and quickly:"Do you remember that this is the fifth of October?" |
13728 | A real full- blown one?" |
13728 | After watching his three companions for a while, he broke in upon their chat with an abrupt--"What_ is_ this job, Louis?" |
13728 | Agneta, shall we adjourn?" |
13728 | Ah!--what was that?" |
13728 | Aldous hesitated; then he said--"Do you gather that her nursing life satisfies her?" |
13728 | Aldous?" |
13728 | Aldous?" |
13728 | Am I asked to take him to my bosom? |
13728 | Am I real? |
13728 | An''what do yer think he foun''?" |
13728 | And I feel--""Doubts?" |
13728 | And I says to him,''Jim, if you wo n''t go for my sake, will you go for the boy''s?'' |
13728 | And by the way, Lady Selina, are_ you_ always so cool? |
13728 | And her politics?" |
13728 | And if it was no good my coming, why, we need n''t say anything about it ever, need we? |
13728 | And if so, how were that girl and his sister to get on? |
13728 | And mebbe he''s eleven shillin''a week-- an''two- threy little chillen-- you understan'', miss?" |
13728 | And now-- never so much as an ordinary word of friendship between them again? |
13728 | And were those languid, indistinguishable murmurs what the newspapers call"_ cheers_"? |
13728 | And what harm? |
13728 | And what matter? |
13728 | And who is agoin''to pay me, miss, if you''ll excuse me asking?" |
13728 | And who is fit to be master? |
13728 | And who may he be, miss? |
13728 | And who''s this speaking now?" |
13728 | And why should one be envious of_ them_ personally? |
13728 | And will you explain to him why I am going there to- morrow?" |
13728 | And you really think anything is going to come out of finicking little schemes of that sort?" |
13728 | And you want me to say a word to other people-- to the Winterbournes and the Levens, for instance?" |
13728 | And, in return for your misty millennium two years hence, the men are to join at once in putting the employers in a stronger position than ever? |
13728 | Ann, can you lift her?" |
13728 | Anthony has told you how it came out?" |
13728 | Any arrests?" |
13728 | Arbitration? |
13728 | Are any of your fellows here to- night?" |
13728 | Are his ways mine? |
13728 | Are the-- police there-- and a stretcher?" |
13728 | Are you a youth, or am I a three- tailed bashaw? |
13728 | Are you engaged for Saturday week?" |
13728 | Are you going to make no return for your income, and your house, and your leisure?" |
13728 | Are you in town or to be found? |
13728 | Are you not vowed to great destinies? |
13728 | Are you sure even that she wants to have you?" |
13728 | As for my giving, what relation has it to anything real or lasting?" |
13728 | As if there could be anything humiliating in confessing such a mistake as that; besides, what is there to be ashamed of? |
13728 | As it was, why did n''t she find some needy boy to take pity on her? |
13728 | At any rate shall we see what light a cup of coffee throws upon it? |
13728 | At last she said abruptly-- her head still turned to the woods on her left--"Are you sure he is going to be happy?" |
13728 | At the last, just as he was going, he said:"Have you seen Mr. Wharton at all since this happened?" |
13728 | Beauty, success, happiness, for instance?" |
13728 | Because I treated Mr. Raeburn unjustly last year, are we now to harass and persecute him? |
13728 | Bennett?" |
13728 | Besides, what can you know of him?" |
13728 | Besides, what did she mean by asking questions about the poaching? |
13728 | Besides, what particular harm had been done, what particular harm_ could_ have been done with such a Cerberus of a husband? |
13728 | Besides, who wished to make a hero of him? |
13728 | Besides-- the ethical balance itself-- does it not alter according to the hands that hold it-- poacher or landlord, rich or poor? |
13728 | But Betty? |
13728 | But I want to ask a question-- what arrangements have you made for the reporting of your speech?" |
13728 | But I wonder why they come, and why he thinks himself so ill-- do you know?" |
13728 | But are you so sure, Miss Boyce, you believe in your own creed? |
13728 | But ask yourself-- has not destiny brought us together? |
13728 | But did anybody suppose that_ enough_ had been done? |
13728 | But do you imagine I want you or any one else to tell me that we sha n''t get such a Bill for generations? |
13728 | But first-- I have been boasting of knowing something about you-- but I should like to ask-- do you know anything about me?" |
13728 | But how can any one_ rejoice_ in it? |
13728 | But how would_ she_ respond? |
13728 | But how, or why? |
13728 | But if not, how can I bear to live what is to be so large a part of my life out of your ken and sight? |
13728 | But if the tool breaks and blunts, how can the task be done? |
13728 | But is it not possible and conceivable all the same? |
13728 | But it certainly was no wonder that Aldous should find those eyes of hers superb? |
13728 | But it is all done with-- couldn''t we just be good friends-- understand each other, perhaps, better than we ever did?" |
13728 | But one must enjoy oneself you know; what else can one do? |
13728 | But perhaps you will introduce me to one or two of your poor people first?" |
13728 | But since he got work at the Court in November-- is it likely? |
13728 | But the Court--""Did not believe it?" |
13728 | But the question is, what are we to work towards? |
13728 | But the question with me has always been, Shall I accept pity? |
13728 | But the wife? |
13728 | But there''s a good deal of game given away in these parts, is n''t there? |
13728 | But we ca n''t undo''67--can we? |
13728 | But what about the unskilled-- the people here for instance-- the villagers? |
13728 | But what am_ I_ about? |
13728 | But what can men in your position know about it, or care about it? |
13728 | But what right had Wharton to be thinking of such irrelevant matters as women and love- making at all? |
13728 | But what was there_ certain_ or_ inevitable_ about his future after all? |
13728 | But where did you get it all from, Miss Boyce? |
13728 | But where is the party? |
13728 | But which of us_ really_ believes that they are fit for it, or that they are ever going to get along without_ our_ brain- power?" |
13728 | But who could answer for it-- or for him? |
13728 | But who''s that?" |
13728 | But why does nature so often leave it out in these splendid creatures?" |
13728 | But why in this neighbourhood at all?--why not rather on the other side of the county? |
13728 | But why should_ you_ be allowed to show your feelings, when other people do n''t?" |
13728 | But yes, I do remember; there was something-- something disagreeable?" |
13728 | But you can see she''s advanced-- peculiar-- or what d''ye call it?--woman''s rights, I suppose, and all that kind of thing? |
13728 | But you should show every sympathy to the clever enthusiastic young men-- the men like that-- shouldn''t you? |
13728 | But you? |
13728 | But, after all, what woman could say less? |
13728 | But-- first-- come and see me whenever you like--3 to 4.30, Brown''s Buildings, Maine Street-- and tell me how this goes on?" |
13728 | But_ now_,"she turned to him slowly,"ca n''t you see it for yourself? |
13728 | By the way, did you ever see that girl?" |
13728 | By the way--"he stopped short--"do you see that that fellow''s come back?" |
13728 | Ca n''t they respect each other, without echoing each other on every subject?" |
13728 | Ca n''t we write at once?" |
13728 | Ca n''t you see? |
13728 | Can I give you anything?" |
13728 | Can I help you?" |
13728 | Can I through the_ Clarion_--and through influence_ outside_ the House-- coerce the men_ in_ the House? |
13728 | Can we do anything? |
13728 | Can we do anything?" |
13728 | Can you advise me about selling some of those railway shares?" |
13728 | Can you suggest to me means of improving it? |
13728 | Can you tell me-- will you?--or is it unfair?" |
13728 | Can you trust me to behave?" |
13728 | Childishly, angrily--_she wanted him to be friends!_ Why should n''t he? |
13728 | Could I be expected to stand that?" |
13728 | Could capital be got? |
13728 | Could he, with his loving instinct, have failed to give his friend some sign? |
13728 | Could n''t we be friends? |
13728 | Could n''t you mark all your friendships by little white stones? |
13728 | Could one die and still believe it? |
13728 | Could she keep her own counsel or would they find themselves in the witness box? |
13728 | Could they count on the support of the_ Clarion_? |
13728 | Could you sit my horse if I led him?" |
13728 | Could you-- could you give me the name of some one in the City you trust?" |
13728 | Craven? |
13728 | Craven?" |
13728 | D''yer see as she''s leff off her ring?" |
13728 | Daisy, where''s the cradle? |
13728 | Dear-- What do you mean?" |
13728 | Did Heaven give you that sun- burn only that you might come home from Italy and twit us weaklings? |
13728 | Did I not offer-- entreat? |
13728 | Did any of them ever taste a more poignant moment than I-- when she-- lay upon my breast? |
13728 | Did it please you?" |
13728 | Did n''t she know it? |
13728 | Did n''t we, Betsy?--didn''t we, Doll?" |
13728 | Did you ever hear of my mother?" |
13728 | Did you ever know any doll that was n''t?" |
13728 | Did you ever see such a countenance? |
13728 | Did you ever see such a stolid set?" |
13728 | Difficult? |
13728 | Do I know something about you, or do I not? |
13728 | Do n''t you know that there is no one in the world I would sooner please if I could?" |
13728 | Do n''t you remember she told us about them that day she first came back to lunch?" |
13728 | Do n''t you suppose it might bring her some comfort, Mrs. Jellison, if she were to try and forgive that poor wretch? |
13728 | Do n''t you suppose that Betty has good reasons for hesitating when she sees the difference between you-- and-- and other people?" |
13728 | Do n''t you think it a melancholy fate to be always admiring the people who detest you?" |
13728 | Do n''t you think there will be a special little corner of purgatory for London butlers? |
13728 | Do n''t you think-- we might settle our business?" |
13728 | Do n''t you-- you dear old goose?" |
13728 | Do you imagine I should dare to say the things I have said except to one of the_ Ã © lite_? |
13728 | Do you know her, miss?" |
13728 | Do you know, I hear them coming back?" |
13728 | Do you remember that night I kept you up till it was too late to go to bed, talking over my Church plans? |
13728 | Do you remember the Ghirlandajo frescoes in Santa Maria Novella, or the side groups in Andrea''s frescoes at the Annunziata? |
13728 | Do you remember your Carlyle?" |
13728 | Do you remember?" |
13728 | Do you see Mr. Lane calling us?" |
13728 | Do you see that old fellow in the white beard under the gallery? |
13728 | Do you suppose it is such a very hard life?" |
13728 | Do you suppose our host succeeds? |
13728 | Do you suppose we are made of such brittle stuff, we poor landowners, that we ca n''t stand an argument now and then?" |
13728 | Do you think I triumph, that I boast? |
13728 | Do you think I_ want_ to look as rombustious as you? |
13728 | Do you think Titian''sweated''his drapery men-- paid them starvation rates, and grew rich on their labour? |
13728 | Do you think it is all a convention-- that my feeling, my conscience, remain outside? |
13728 | Do you think you can be kind to her? |
13728 | Does Mr. Raeburn make you think very bad things of me, Miss Boyce?" |
13728 | Does n''t it make you laugh to see Lady Winterbourne doing her duties? |
13728 | Does that mean that you ever read my poor little speeches?" |
13728 | Does this_ milieu_ into which you are passing always satisfy you? |
13728 | Doth man live by bread alone? |
13728 | Eight months had she been at Mellor? |
13728 | Either she took too little notice of us before, or she takes too much now-- don''t you think so?" |
13728 | Excuse for what? |
13728 | For a minute, nothing-- then a few vague sounds as of something living and moving down below-- surely in the library? |
13728 | For the lack of delicacy and loyalty, of the best sort of breeding, which had marked the days of her engagement? |
13728 | Had he escaped? |
13728 | Had he indeed stabbed the hand that had tried to help him? |
13728 | Had he not ineffectually tried to delay execution the night before, thereby puzzling and half- offending his grandfather? |
13728 | Had it indeed been done already? |
13728 | Had not the hard devotion of twenty years made him at least her own? |
13728 | Had she ever seen a labourer''s wife scrubbing her cottage floor without envy, without moral thirst? |
13728 | Had they ever really formed a part of historical time, those eight months of their engagement? |
13728 | Had they not already cost him love? |
13728 | Hallin exclaimed,"You had food?" |
13728 | Hallin was dead-- who else was there that cared for her or thought of her? |
13728 | Hallin?" |
13728 | Hallin?" |
13728 | Hallin?--and how good he has been to me?" |
13728 | Has he been making love to you?" |
13728 | Have n''t you been dancing?" |
13728 | Have n''t you understood at all? |
13728 | Have they not been the blight and the curse of the country for hun''erds of years? |
13728 | Have you any more right than a public official would have to spend public money in neglecting his duties?" |
13728 | Have you been following the strike''leaders''in the_ Clarion?_""No!" |
13728 | Have you had your tea?" |
13728 | Have you heard finally how much the settlement is to be?" |
13728 | Have you left margin enough?" |
13728 | Have you really no conception of what you will be dealing to me if you tear yourself away from me?" |
13728 | Have you seen her?" |
13728 | Have you thought that I may often think it right to do things you disagree with, that may scandalise your relations?" |
13728 | Have_ you_ no pity for Mrs. Westall or her child?" |
13728 | He assumed, she supposed, that such a thing could happen, and nothing more be said about it? |
13728 | He had done this doubtful thing-- but why should it ever be necessary for him to do another? |
13728 | He was with you, was n''t he?" |
13728 | How am I to lift you out of this squaw theory of matrimony? |
13728 | How can I spend my time on clothing and dressmakers? |
13728 | How can any one_ wish_ that the present state of things should go on? |
13728 | How can it be? |
13728 | How could he get her to himself again? |
13728 | How could he get her to himself somehow for a moment-- and dispose of that Craven girl? |
13728 | How had the frail prophet sped? |
13728 | How is it to be done? |
13728 | How is the wife?" |
13728 | How little sleep can I do with in the next fortnight?" |
13728 | How long do you suppose that business will remain''off''? |
13728 | How long is it, Miss Boyce, since you settled at Mellor?" |
13728 | How long would it be before they were dipping in Marcella''s purse? |
13728 | How many meetings did he find that he must hold in the month? |
13728 | How many workers do you expect to get together?" |
13728 | How much did she know of Aldous, of her life that was to be-- above all, how much of herself? |
13728 | How much harm do you think I shall have done here by the time I am sixty- four?" |
13728 | How much have you seen of her?--how deep has it gone? |
13728 | How was it possible to defend the bribery, buns, and beer by which it won its corrupting way? |
13728 | How was it that it hurt her now so much to have lost love, and power, and consideration? |
13728 | How was it that, with all his efforts, the_ Clarion_ was not making, but losing money? |
13728 | How was it to be avoided? |
13728 | How would Raeburn take it? |
13728 | How would she like it-- this parade that was to be made of her-- these people that must be introduced to her? |
13728 | How, indeed, could you know the women without knowing Richard Boyce? |
13728 | However, were you there when it was broken off?" |
13728 | I began as an actor, did I finish as a man?" |
13728 | I do n''t believe Betty_ would_; he''s too old for her, is n''t he? |
13728 | I felt myself a brute all round; for what right had I to come and tell you what he told me? |
13728 | I got no help from my party-- where was it to come from? |
13728 | I must rouse them-- that was what you came to see? |
13728 | I never kept Miss Raeburn waiting for lunch yet, did I, Mr. Aldous? |
13728 | I say, is n''t she_ ripping_ to- night-- Betty?" |
13728 | I thought I had observed-- pardon me for saying it-- on the two or three occasions we have met, some degenerate signs of individualism? |
13728 | I told you about them, did n''t I?" |
13728 | I trust he is better?" |
13728 | I was going to suggest that you might like some of that fire taken away?" |
13728 | I wonder how many he tells in the day? |
13728 | I wonder whether you have any idea what you make me feel? |
13728 | I''m sure you''ve been contradicting all the way upstairs-- and why do n''t you say''How do you do?'' |
13728 | If it were not for money--_hateful_ money!--what more brilliant wife could be desired for any rising man? |
13728 | If you are a leader of the people, why do n''t you educate them? |
13728 | If you saw the Revolution coming to- morrow into the garden of Alresford House, would you go to the balcony and argue?" |
13728 | In all labour, it is the modern question, is n''t it?--_how much_ of the product of labour the workman can extract from the employer? |
13728 | In one word-- do you imagine that you can induce Mr. Raeburn and Lord Maxwell to sign?" |
13728 | Is a co- operative farm any less of a stopgap?" |
13728 | Is everybody going to cut us because of that?" |
13728 | Is he a man of_ us_--bone of our bone? |
13728 | Is it Hallin? |
13728 | Is it books, or people?" |
13728 | Is it right to make no more effort?" |
13728 | Is it these things that kill, or any of the great simple griefs and burdens? |
13728 | Is it your feet are so cold? |
13728 | Is n''t it incredible?" |
13728 | Is n''t it like all the topsy- turvy things nowadays? |
13728 | Is n''t it sad, Aldous?" |
13728 | Is n''t it sad?" |
13728 | Is n''t it, on the whole, probable that he knows more about the country than you do, Marcella?" |
13728 | Is n''t that enough of itself to make a party discontented? |
13728 | Is not life enriched thereby beyond robbery? |
13728 | Is she about twenty?" |
13728 | Is that it?" |
13728 | Is that_ all_ that stands between you now-- the whole? |
13728 | Is the good old_ ars amandi_ perishing out of the world? |
13728 | Is there anything changed in your mind?" |
13728 | Is there anything left alive? |
13728 | Is this face-- these lips real?" |
13728 | Is your carriage there, sir?" |
13728 | It is the other way, I think, Agneta-- don''t you?" |
13728 | It makes it more interesting, does n''t it? |
13728 | It wants some fresh blood, I think-- I must find it? |
13728 | It was a most painful, distressing scene, and he-- is very ill.""But you have brought him to the Court?" |
13728 | It was bad enough in the old lodging- house days; but here-- why_ should_ we?" |
13728 | It was called"A Pennorth of Grace, or a Pound of Works?" |
13728 | It was mean and miserable, was n''t it, not to be able to appreciate the gift, only to feel when it was taken away? |
13728 | It was n''t beautiful-- was it?" |
13728 | Jellison?" |
13728 | Jellison?" |
13728 | Jellison?" |
13728 | Jervis?" |
13728 | Just tell me-- in one word-- how the ball went?" |
13728 | Look at the moon!--and the tide"--they had come to the wide door opening on the terrace--"aren''t they doing their very best for you?" |
13728 | May I bring Lord Wandle and introduce him to you? |
13728 | May I engage you-- ten o''clock?" |
13728 | May I give you some tea?" |
13728 | May I say to you all that is in my mind-- or-- or-- am I presuming?" |
13728 | Meanwhile, however things go, could you be large- minded enough to count one person here your friend?" |
13728 | Men are a medley, do n''t you think?--So you liked his speech?" |
13728 | Miss Boyce of Mellor?" |
13728 | Miss Boyce, may I come in?" |
13728 | Miss Craven comes too? |
13728 | Morally?" |
13728 | Most consoling, was n''t it-- on the whole-- to us West End people?" |
13728 | Mr. George Denny, the member for Westropp? |
13728 | Mr. Pearson? |
13728 | Mrs. Hurd-- you know who I mean?" |
13728 | Mrs. Vincent turned quickly round as Marcella came back again, and spoke for the first time:"That was my mother you were talkin''to?" |
13728 | Must we stay very long?" |
13728 | Need one think so much about it? |
13728 | Next Saturday, is n''t it?" |
13728 | No? |
13728 | Nor you, Wilkins? |
13728 | Not your fault? |
13728 | Nothing else? |
13728 | Now then-- who to send? |
13728 | Now, Jim, what''s wrong with you-- why should n''t I tell?" |
13728 | Now, Mr. Wharton, where are the Irishmen? |
13728 | Now, are you going to Betty?" |
13728 | Now, who''s this? |
13728 | Now, you will_ try_ to think of something else? |
13728 | Offended? |
13728 | Oh, Jim-- where ha''you bin?" |
13728 | Oh, what shall I do? |
13728 | Oh, you_ are_ well off!--aren''t you?" |
13728 | On Lord Maxwell''s property-- you know them?" |
13728 | Or did it betray, perhaps, a woman''s secret consciousness of some presence beside her, more troubling and magnetic to her than others? |
13728 | Or shall you feel it a wrong, and go out a rebel?" |
13728 | Or was it that she was really barren and poor in soul, and had never realised it before? |
13728 | Patton?" |
13728 | Patton?" |
13728 | Pearson?" |
13728 | Raeburn?" |
13728 | Raeburn?" |
13728 | Raeburn?" |
13728 | Richard,"--she got up and went to him,--"don''t excite yourself about it; shall I read to you, or play a game with you?" |
13728 | Shall I find no poor at Mellor-- no work to do? |
13728 | Shall I lift your head a little?" |
13728 | Shall I send Hallin and young Leven away? |
13728 | Shall Jenkins go and fetch somebody to look after that poor thing? |
13728 | Shall we move? |
13728 | Shall we take this short way?" |
13728 | Shall you persuade her to come out of that, do you think, Aldous?" |
13728 | She is consumptive, of course-- what else could you expect with that cottage and that food? |
13728 | She took a piece of paper from Miss Raeburn''s desk, and wrote on it:"Will you read this-- and Lord Maxwell-- before I come down? |
13728 | Should she confess? |
13728 | Six weeks was it since he had first seen her-- this tall, straight, Marcella Boyce? |
13728 | So now you think the poor are as well off as possible, in the best of all possible worlds-- is that the result of your nursing? |
13728 | So she has gone into complete seclusion from all her friends?" |
13728 | So you can understan'', miss, ca n''t you, as Jim do n''t want to have nothing to do with Westall? |
13728 | So, she is beautiful and she is clever-- and_ good_, my boy? |
13728 | So, when a Czar of Russia is blown up, do you expect one to think only of his wife and children? |
13728 | Suppose I use it for things you do n''t like?" |
13728 | Surely her year of hospital training must be up by now? |
13728 | Surely,_ surely_ that is conceivable? |
13728 | Tell me, she has_ actually_ brought herself to regard this man''s death as in some sort my doing-- as something which ought to separate us?" |
13728 | That it ought to be, if it could be?" |
13728 | That lady took up her knitting, laid it down again, resumed it, then broke out--"How did it come about? |
13728 | That sort''s allus gaddin''about? |
13728 | That young lady there, what do she matter? |
13728 | The local man is the catspaw.--So you are sorry for him-- this man?" |
13728 | The next-- her mind threw itself with fresh vehemence upon the question,"Can I, by any means, get my way with Aldous?" |
13728 | The past was so much past; who now was more respectable or more well intentioned than he? |
13728 | The shot that he, Wharton, had heard had been the shot which slew Westall? |
13728 | Then I may write you a note? |
13728 | Then I suppose Mr. Wharton is an old friend?" |
13728 | Then it comes to this-- was the act murder? |
13728 | Then she began to knit fast and furiously, and presently said in great agitation,--"What can he be thinking of? |
13728 | Then the others-- you know them? |
13728 | Then why not put his pride away and be generous? |
13728 | Then, after a pause,"Why_ does n''t_ she go home? |
13728 | Then, after a pause,"You do not imagine there is any chance of success for her?" |
13728 | Then, after a pause:"How long is he staying at Mellor?" |
13728 | Then, as Frank was taking his leave, Marcella said:"Wo n''t you wait for-- for Lord Maxwell, in the old library? |
13728 | Then, at nine o''clock or so, may I come down and see Lord Maxwell and you-- together?" |
13728 | There she is-- you will let me introduce you? |
13728 | There, now, tell me what you are going to wear?" |
13728 | There; are n''t the pillows easier so? |
13728 | They go with pretty gowns, do n''t they, and other people like to see them?" |
13728 | They''ll try and get him off, miss? |
13728 | To- night, did your royalty please you? |
13728 | Towards the end Wharton turned upon his companion sharply, and asked:"How did you discover that I wanted money?" |
13728 | Was I Alfred de Musset?--and she George Sand? |
13728 | Was Marcella happy, was she proud of him, as she ought to be? |
13728 | Was Raeburn still there-- in that next room? |
13728 | Was anything wrong?" |
13728 | Was he not perfectly well aware of the curt note which his grandfather had that morning despatched to the new owner of Mellor? |
13728 | Was he the first man in the world who had been thrown over by a girl because he had been discovered to be a tiresome pedant? |
13728 | Was it all her own fault that in her brief engagement she had realised him so little? |
13728 | Was it not her natural, inevitable portion? |
13728 | Was it the monotony of the life? |
13728 | Was it_ possible_ that the boy was in love, and with Betty? |
13728 | Was she never to be simple, to see her way clearly again? |
13728 | Was she not rather, so to speak, just embarked upon their sequel, or second volume? |
13728 | Was she pelting him in this way that she might so get rid of some of her own inner smart and restlessness? |
13728 | Was she there to preach to them? |
13728 | Was she, after all, too young for the work, or was there some fret of the soul reducing her natural force? |
13728 | Was that why Betty was leading him such a life? |
13728 | Was that_ his_ voice answering? |
13728 | Was the preserving very strict about here? |
13728 | Was there a murmured word from him? |
13728 | Was this, indeed, the second volume beginning-- the natural sequel to those old mysterious histories of shrinking, disillusion, and repulse? |
13728 | Was_ true_ love now to deliver her from that sympathy, to deaden in her that hatred? |
13728 | We get all sorts-- Socialists, Conservatives, Radicals--""--And you do n''t think much of the Socialists?" |
13728 | We must get round it somehow-- mustn''t we? |
13728 | Well, Miss Craven, were you interested?" |
13728 | Well, and about their cottages? |
13728 | Well, and what of it? |
13728 | Well, and why not? |
13728 | Well, can there be a greater? |
13728 | Well, now, are you satisfied with that paper? |
13728 | Well, what matter? |
13728 | Well, what was the bearing of it? |
13728 | Well-- that surly keeper, and his pretty wife who had been Miss Raeburn''s maid-- could anything be more inevitable? |
13728 | Well-- what blame? |
13728 | Wer hat dich, die verborgen schlief, Gewecket?" |
13728 | Were they also, in another fashion, to cost him his friend? |
13728 | Wharton?" |
13728 | Wharton?" |
13728 | Wharton?" |
13728 | Wharton?" |
13728 | Wharton?" |
13728 | Wharton?" |
13728 | Wharton?--other than politics, I mean?" |
13728 | What I desire to know, categorically, is, what made you write that letter to me last night, after-- after the day before?" |
13728 | What are you lookin''at me for, Betsy Brunt?" |
13728 | What can papa have said in that letter to him? |
13728 | What chance would he or any one else have had with Marcella Boyce, if she had happened to be in love with the man she had promised to marry? |
13728 | What could love have asked better than such a moment? |
13728 | What did I say?--how much did I mean? |
13728 | What did she want to stay all that time for? |
13728 | What do you mean, mamma?" |
13728 | What does such a being want with the drudgery of learning? |
13728 | What does-- what does Mr. Raeburn say to it?" |
13728 | What for? |
13728 | What good will it do her to go about without her parents? |
13728 | What had come to her? |
13728 | What had he been about all this time? |
13728 | What had he said to Lord Maxwell?--and to the Winterbournes? |
13728 | What had worked in her? |
13728 | What hardship is there in starving and scrubbing and toiling? |
13728 | What harm-- to her or to Raeburn? |
13728 | What have I got to do with a water- supply for the village? |
13728 | What have the likes of him ever been but thorns in our side? |
13728 | What if I came here the slave of impersonal causes, of ends not my own? |
13728 | What if I leave-- maimed-- in face of the battle? |
13728 | What in the true reasonableness of things was to prevent human beings from conversing by night as well as by day? |
13728 | What is he? |
13728 | What is it?" |
13728 | What is the difference?" |
13728 | What is the matter?" |
13728 | What is wrong?" |
13728 | What lay between them, and the worst impulses that poison the lives of women, but differences of degree, of expression? |
13728 | What likelihood was there that her life and his would ever touch again? |
13728 | What of that? |
13728 | What ought to prevent my free will anticipating a moment-- since I_ can_ do it-- that we all want to see?" |
13728 | What passion ever yet but had its subterfuges? |
13728 | What places did he regard as his principal strongholds? |
13728 | What right have you to go to California?" |
13728 | What shall I do? |
13728 | What the deuce does it mean? |
13728 | What then? |
13728 | What time? |
13728 | What time? |
13728 | What tremors of fear and joy could she not remember in connection with it? |
13728 | What was this intolerable sense of loss and folly, this smarting emptiness, this rage with herself and her life? |
13728 | What was this life she had dared to trifle with-- this man she had dared to treat as a mere pawn in her own game? |
13728 | What was this room, this weird light, these unfamiliar forms of things, this warm support against which her cheek lay? |
13728 | What was to prevent her from doing the same thing again to- morrow? |
13728 | What was wrong with her? |
13728 | What were their wages?--eleven shillings a week? |
13728 | What were yo out for in this nasty damp? |
13728 | What''ll she keer about us when she''s got''er fine husband? |
13728 | What''s the good of your grumbling? |
13728 | What''s the inducement-- eh, you fellows?" |
13728 | What, after all, did she know of this strange individuality from which her own being had taken its rise? |
13728 | What,_ their_ friend and champion, and ultimately their redeemer too? |
13728 | What_ can_ he have said? |
13728 | What_ was_ this past which in these new surroundings was like some vainly fled tyrant clutching at them again? |
13728 | When Lord Maxwell ceased, she said quickly, and as he thought unreasonably--"So you will not sign?" |
13728 | When have the landlords ever gone with the people? |
13728 | When is it to be?" |
13728 | When is the great event to be?" |
13728 | When one comes across one of the tools of the future, must one not try to sharpen it, out of one''s poor resources, in spite of manners?" |
13728 | When shall I come?" |
13728 | When they got home, Mrs. Boyce turned to her daughter at the head of the stairs,"Shall I unlace your dress, Marcella?" |
13728 | When we get to the Court, will you ask Miss Raeburn to let me have some food in her sitting- room? |
13728 | When we last discussed these things at Mellor, I_ think_--you were a Socialist?" |
13728 | When will Mr. Wharton be here?" |
13728 | When will you come and see me-- or shall I come to you? |
13728 | Where does she get it from? |
13728 | Where even was the speaker of an hour ago? |
13728 | Where have they been meeting?" |
13728 | Where is Mr. Hallin? |
13728 | Where is she?" |
13728 | Where was Frank? |
13728 | Where was Miss Boyce? |
13728 | Where was all that girlish abandonment gone which she had shown him on that walk, beside the gate? |
13728 | Where was he? |
13728 | Where was the prophetess? |
13728 | Where were the gentlemen? |
13728 | Where''s Mr. Gladstone? |
13728 | Where''s them chillen? |
13728 | Which of us? |
13728 | While, as for Hallin''s distrust, and Anthony Craven''s jealous hostility, why should a third person be bound by either of them? |
13728 | Who are you that you should have all the cake of the world, and other people the crusts?" |
13728 | Who can say? |
13728 | Who can that be passing the avenue?" |
13728 | Who is to guarantee them even the carrying through, much less the success, of your precious syndicate? |
13728 | Who knows? |
13728 | Who was to look after her various village schemes while she and Lady Winterbourne were away in London? |
13728 | Who''s to say as Jim was with''em at all last night? |
13728 | Why admit his monopoly before the time? |
13728 | Why are we to go lickspittlin''to any man of his sort to do our work for us? |
13728 | Why did he choose the_ staircase_?" |
13728 | Why did he let such talk go on? |
13728 | Why did he talk in this way, with these epithets, this venom? |
13728 | Why did n''t you let us alone, instead of bringing us out in the cold?'' |
13728 | Why did you have them? |
13728 | Why did you let her go about in London with those people? |
13728 | Why do yer let that boy out so late?" |
13728 | Why do you talk of the poor, of labour, of self- denial, and live whenever you can with the idle rich people, who hate all three in their hearts? |
13728 | Why does he behave as though he had the world on his shoulders? |
13728 | Why embitter such a situation?--make it more difficult for everybody concerned? |
13728 | Why had his grandfather been so officious in this matter of the flowers? |
13728 | Why had she meddled? |
13728 | Why is it"--she broke out with vehemence--"that not a single Labour paper is ever capable of the simplest justice to an opponent?" |
13728 | Why not a scuffle?--a general scrimmage?--in which it was matter of accident who fell? |
13728 | Why not give it up now, rest, and begin again in the winter?" |
13728 | Why not simply bury the past and begin again? |
13728 | Why not take courage again-- join in-- talk-- show sympathy? |
13728 | Why not? |
13728 | Why should Miss Boyce do such"funny things"--why should she live as she did, at all? |
13728 | Why should n''t he? |
13728 | Why should n''t_ ee_ be happy, same as her? |
13728 | Why should we change our ways? |
13728 | Why should we force on the poor what to us would be an outrage?" |
13728 | Why should_ these_ people have all the gay clothes, the flowers, the jewels, the delicate food-- all the delight and all the leisure? |
13728 | Why such soreness of spirit? |
13728 | Why will you not change your things directly you come in? |
13728 | Why would n''t he have done just as well? |
13728 | Why would n''t she have taken up with him? |
13728 | Why would you walk?" |
13728 | Why, what had Aldous been about? |
13728 | Why? |
13728 | Why? |
13728 | Why? |
13728 | Why? |
13728 | Why? |
13728 | Why?--_why_? |
13728 | Wilkins? |
13728 | Will you allow me a philosopher''s remark?" |
13728 | Will you come and see my-- grandfather now? |
13728 | Will you come?" |
13728 | Will you do it-- will you promise me now-- for my sake?" |
13728 | Will you explain to Miss Raeburn?" |
13728 | Will you forgive me if I speak of her?" |
13728 | Will you have a maid to go with you?" |
13728 | Will you let me go, young man? |
13728 | Will you look at the list?" |
13728 | Will you promise not to be angry with me-- to believe that I''ve thought about it-- that I''m doing it for the best?" |
13728 | Will you show me some to- morrow?" |
13728 | Will you tell me?--will you sit down?" |
13728 | Will you want me to wear them so often?" |
13728 | Will you, if I make it?" |
13728 | Wo n''t you believe I may have learnt a little?" |
13728 | Wo n''t you shake hands with me, as comrades should? |
13728 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
13728 | Wo n''t you try it?" |
13728 | Would Aldous insist on carrying his wife off to the dower house on the other side of the estate? |
13728 | Would Mr. Wharton personally support them, in or out of Parliament, and get his friends to do the same? |
13728 | Would it be worth my while, as a social reformer? |
13728 | Would marriage fetter her? |
13728 | Would not most men have gone to the bad altogether, after such a lapse? |
13728 | Would she please understand that it was an accident? |
13728 | Would the_ Clarion_ now"go in"for them? |
13728 | Would you like Dr. Clarke sent for?" |
13728 | Would you mind writing the address for me, and will you read what I have written there?" |
13728 | Would you rather not see strangers? |
13728 | Yet how question him? |
13728 | Yet that passionate sympathy with the poor-- that hatred of oppression? |
13728 | Yet what else was the task of faith? |
13728 | Yet, of whom? |
13728 | You agree with Denny, in fact? |
13728 | You are a great friend of Mr. Wharton''s, I think?" |
13728 | You are coming back after the meeting?" |
13728 | You could still think it, and feel it?" |
13728 | You do n''t have your horrid Parliament that night, do you?" |
13728 | You do n''t think the country would be the better, if we could do away with game to- morrow?" |
13728 | You do n''t understand Greek, do you, Miss Boyce? |
13728 | You don''t-- you don''t-- really think badly of her?" |
13728 | You give me leave?" |
13728 | You had about a quarter of an hour''s talk with my aunt, did you not?" |
13728 | You have n''t then seen any account of the lecture in the papers?" |
13728 | You have quite decided?" |
13728 | You know I have a labour newspaper?" |
13728 | You know Willie Ffolliot-- that queer dark fellow-- that used to be in the 10th Hussars-- did all those wild things in the Soudan?" |
13728 | You lent it to a man called Hurd?" |
13728 | You must let me tell you sometime what he did for me-- what he was to me-- at Cambridge? |
13728 | You perceive?--this is a Radical house-- and a Radical banquet?" |
13728 | You quote that fellow to_ me?_""Why should n''t I?" |
13728 | You quote that fellow to_ me?_""Why should n''t I?" |
13728 | You remember I told you how we worked at the South Kensington classes together, and how they made me a Venturist? |
13728 | You remember her, Betsy Brunt?" |
13728 | You remember speaking to me of your friends the Cravens? |
13728 | You said eleven?" |
13728 | You think that I have been to blame? |
13728 | You told papa-- didn''t you?--and Mr. Raeburn says that you are a Socialist-- not half- and- half, as all the world is, but the real thing? |
13728 | You understand that the case comes on at the assizes next Thursday?" |
13728 | You understand? |
13728 | You understand?" |
13728 | You were n''t in court to- day, were you, at all?" |
13728 | You were n''t there, Marcella?" |
13728 | You will be kind to her?" |
13728 | You will not surely_ wish_ even, that we should be governed in our relations to it by any private feeling or motive?" |
13728 | You wo n''t give me many jewels, will you?" |
13728 | You would n''t wish Hurd not to be defended, I suppose?" |
13728 | You''ll get Mr. Raeburn to speak-- won''t you, miss?--and Lord Maxwell? |
13728 | You''ll trust me? |
13728 | You_ actually_ mean that; how do you propose to punish us?" |
13728 | Your father and mine were great friends, were n''t they, as boys?--your family and mine were friends, altogether?" |
13728 | Your father, I think, is Conservative?" |
13728 | _ Could_ she ever turn her back upon those holidays? |
13728 | _ Did n''t_ we sit here an''starve, till the bones was comin''through the chillen''s skin?--didn''t we?" |
13728 | _ Forget_?--such a creature? |
13728 | _ Now_, then, what do you say to a doggie,--two doggies?" |
13728 | _ She_--marry Aldous Raeburn in a month? |
13728 | _ Wharton_? |
13728 | _ Where_ was Edith? |
13728 | _ Why_ do you do so many contradictory things? |
13728 | _ You_ think she was sincere?" |
13728 | _ the_ Mr. Hallin--_that_ was Edward Hallin-- who settled the Nottingham strike last month-- who lectures so much in the East End, and in the north?" |
13728 | _ where_ did you get that bonnet? |
13728 | are you always content? |
13728 | as bad as that?" |
13728 | as to the Raeburns? |
13728 | but how much did the man who wrote that know about Cathay?" |
13728 | cried Aldous;"can you not be just to me, if it is impossible for you to be generous?" |
13728 | cried Betty, with a sparkle in her charming eyes;"what_ is_ it in her face? |
13728 | cried Edith Craven, catching hold of her friend;"you lost me? |
13728 | cried Marcella--"What is it?" |
13728 | cried that lady in answer to her friend''s demurrer;"is all the world afraid of her?" |
13728 | cried the lad, choking with arguments and exasperation;"and why should he steal my pheasants? |
13728 | did you like it, grasshopper?" |
13728 | did you read the evidence in that Bluebook last year? |
13728 | exclaimed Marcella, nodding to him--"you could not be a Venturist and keep up game- preserving?" |
13728 | for what? |
13728 | he added, as he bent over the table to look for a pen;"why did n''t that idiot give me these?" |
13728 | he asked himself;"what am I going to do it for again to- morrow?" |
13728 | he broke out suddenly--"that labourer''s speech? |
13728 | he cried;"you''re not angry with me?" |
13728 | he drew in his breath--"What if in helping you, and teaching you-- for I have helped and taught you!--I have undone myself? |
13728 | he said, bantering--"or letters? |
13728 | he said, while his face lit up,"will you bring her here?" |
13728 | he said,"do n''t you know your place?" |
13728 | he said-- finding his words in a rush, he did not know how--"Why every syllable of yours matters to me? |
13728 | he said--''Miss Boyce thinks I want to marry Betty Macdonald?'' |
13728 | how can I tell? |
13728 | how could she? |
13728 | how?--what would it really_ mean_ for him and for her? |
13728 | how_ could_ papa?" |
13728 | neither you nor I can help it, can we?" |
13728 | nor Molloy? |
13728 | or No!--wull yo?--or_ woan''t yo_?" |
13728 | or had both of them been overworking and underfeeding as usual? |
13728 | or would Aldous settle it on this walk? |
13728 | or would they be content to stay in the old place with the old people? |
13728 | said Aldous, drawing a long, stern breath;"he did n''t try to get off then? |
13728 | said Hallin, fervently-- she beat him?" |
13728 | said Hallin, laughing;"did you comfort yourself by reflecting that it was everybody''s fate?" |
13728 | said Hallin,"who could ever have foreseen it?" |
13728 | said Lady Selina, eagerly,"and what did you think of her?" |
13728 | said Lady Winterbourne in her amazement;"and what is the matter with Lord Wandle?" |
13728 | said Leven, stopping short behind Aldous, who was alone conscious of the lad''s indignant astonishment;"what the deuce is_ he_ doing here?" |
13728 | said Wilkins, as Wharton handed him a cup of coffee;"but of coorse you are-- part of yower duties, I suppose?" |
13728 | said Wilkins, doggedly, the red spot deepening on his swarthy cheek--"he''s runnin''that paper for his own hand-- Haven''t I had experience of him? |
13728 | said he to her,"where ud you an''the chillen be this night if I''adn''t done it? |
13728 | said that lady with careful politeness,"or shall I send word at once? |
13728 | said the other, pondering;"he is the Levens''cousin, is n''t he? |
13728 | says I to him--''why do n''t yer get that boy there to teach yer your business?'' |
13728 | she broke out again in a low wail,"how could he?" |
13728 | she cried, leaning forward to him,"wo n''t it comfort you a bit, even if you ca n''t live to see it, to think there''s a better time coming? |
13728 | she cried, turning upon him, and catching at a word;"what burden have you ever borne? |
13728 | she cried;"that I am not behaving like a lady-- as one of your relations would? |
13728 | she cried;"the system that wastes human lives in protecting your tame pheasants?" |
13728 | she do speak up, do n''t she?" |
13728 | she repeated, while the dark eye dilated--"I wonder what you mean?" |
13728 | she said as she entered,"how have you got on?" |
13728 | she said, turning suddenly to Miss Raeburn,"have you heard what a monstrosity Alice has produced this last time in the way of a baby? |
13728 | she said, with a little shrug;"what do you know about it? |
13728 | she said--"how many since we met last?" |
13728 | she said--"where my convictions lead me?" |
13728 | so you think him altogether a windbag?" |
13728 | that''s about it for wages, is n''t it? |
13728 | the man who got up after me?" |
13728 | there were a young person before you--"or"has n''t she got nice hands, Mrs. Burton? |
13728 | this was a forcible young woman: was Aldous the kind of man to be able to deal conveniently with such eyes, such emotions, such a personality? |
13728 | to Miss Boyce?" |
13728 | was n''t it true?" |
13728 | was n''t it? |
13728 | what about Miss Boyce''s friend?" |
13728 | what are you here for? |
13728 | what was the secret of her kittenish, teasing ways-- or was there any secret? |
13728 | what were the chances of secrecy? |
13728 | what, indeed, are wealth and poverty?" |
13728 | when it ought to be urging war?" |
13728 | where have you been hiding yourself during this great discussion? |
13728 | who seed him?" |
13728 | who''s this?" |
13728 | why do you permit it?" |
13728 | why should he not take these men''s offer? |
13728 | why was n''t that fellow up to time? |
13728 | will it soon be enough for you?" |
13728 | will_ you_ tell me who people are? |
13728 | wo n''t_ anybody_ help me?" |
13728 | ye favouring gods, might he reveal to her the part she herself played in those closely covered sheets? |
13728 | you have n''t been night- nursing?" |
13728 | you mean to say,"he asked her angrily, raising his voice,"that you have never_ meant_ to do your duties here-- the duties of your position?" |
13728 | you must be at a distance from us to do us justice?" |
13728 | you really mean it?" |
12680 | ''Ow would you like to pay for Pesach''s new coat? 12680 A little rum?" |
12680 | A new Jewish paper? |
12680 | A preacher speaks with authority, but this penny- a- liner--"With truth? |
12680 | About me? |
12680 | About that? |
12680 | Addie,he said,"is n''t it funny I should be marrying a Jewish girl, after all?" |
12680 | Addle? |
12680 | After all these years? |
12680 | Ah, did they twitter? |
12680 | Ah, then I presume you came in for some of the two thousand, despite your non- connection with Torah? |
12680 | Ah, then you do know something about Miss Ansell? |
12680 | Ah, what is that? 12680 Ah, what is that?" |
12680 | Ai n''t I bigger? |
12680 | Ai n''t I? |
12680 | Ai n''t you forgetting about election expenses, Pinchas? |
12680 | All Israel are brothers,and how better honor the Sabbath than by making the lip- babble a reality? |
12680 | Am I going to have my breakfast in peace? 12680 Am I playing the part so badly as all that?" |
12680 | And ai n''t I older than you? |
12680 | And ai n''t you four? |
12680 | And did he? |
12680 | And do the Goldsmiths know of your discontent? |
12680 | And do you really believe that we are sanctified to God''s service? |
12680 | And do you really think we two between us can fill up the paper every week? |
12680 | And does lack of modern lights constitute ignorance? |
12680 | And does your teacher know everything? |
12680 | And have you been happy, Benjy? |
12680 | And have you been inside? |
12680 | And how did their families live? |
12680 | And how did you repair the breach? |
12680 | And how is the child? |
12680 | And how is your sister Hannah? 12680 And how is_ The Flag of Judah_?" |
12680 | And how many tongues do you know? |
12680 | And how much do you think I gave for them? |
12680 | And if I do sing the Passover_ Yigdal_ instead of the New Year, have I not reason, seeing I have_ no bread in the house_? 12680 And is this what one shows to a young girl?" |
12680 | And leave me? |
12680 | And says not the Talmud,put in the Pole as if he were on the family council,"''Flay a carcass in the streets rather than be under an obligation''?" |
12680 | And suffered much? |
12680 | And suppose? 12680 And the poor fellow''s father and mother?" |
12680 | And then you would want to go? |
12680 | And thou hast the heart to leave me? |
12680 | And ven? 12680 And was n''t I born afore you?" |
12680 | And what can he do? 12680 And what did Milly say then?" |
12680 | And what did you think of it? 12680 And what does he say?" |
12680 | And what harm is he doing you? |
12680 | And what has become of her? |
12680 | And what is this place, Burnmud, I ask to go to? |
12680 | And what is_ her_ inclination? 12680 And what was the good of that?" |
12680 | And what will they give thee for it? 12680 And when wilt thou read it to me?" |
12680 | And where is Bobby? |
12680 | And where is the_ Cohen_? |
12680 | And who''s Sam? |
12680 | And why are n''t you at school? |
12680 | And why have you broken your resolution? |
12680 | And why not? |
12680 | And would n''t you if you had your own way? |
12680 | And would you like to be a teacher? |
12680 | And you have been reading it? |
12680 | And you really think I am Sam Levine''s wife? |
12680 | And you really think that Judaism is not dead, intellectually speaking? |
12680 | And you would really not mind whom I married? |
12680 | And your Bessie? |
12680 | And your father and mother? |
12680 | And your relatives? |
12680 | And, naturally, everybody detests me? |
12680 | Any gold lace? |
12680 | Are the Belcovitches all well? 12680 Are the same people living here?" |
12680 | Are you a Socialist, then? |
12680 | Are you a_ Cohen_? |
12680 | Are you not happy? |
12680 | Are you_ Meshuggah_? |
12680 | Are your mother and father well? |
12680 | Art thou Benjamin? |
12680 | Art thou a man or a woman? |
12680 | At the British Museum? |
12680 | Becky married yet? |
12680 | Beenah, hast thou heard aught about our Daniel? |
12680 | Besides, will you deny they have the organ in their Sabbath services? |
12680 | Bessie, was n''t it? |
12680 | Better than the Crystal Palace, where they take the boys? |
12680 | But Dickens-- did he know Latin or Greek? |
12680 | But I shall be up soon, wo n''t I? 12680 But Rosenbaum is a good pull- down on the other side, eh?" |
12680 | But about all those meetings? |
12680 | But about my marrying him-- you are not really in earnest? |
12680 | But d''yer suppose I should just find a buyer named Esther Ansell? |
12680 | But did I tell you the story of the woman who asked me a question the other day? 12680 But did n''t you get another?" |
12680 | But did n''t you look for her? |
12680 | But do you mean to say you look upon them as facts? |
12680 | But father? |
12680 | But have you Socialistic sympathies? |
12680 | But have you the wherewithal to support her? |
12680 | But how about meetings? |
12680 | But how came you to marry him? |
12680 | But how can I forget? |
12680 | But how is the Messiah to redeem his people? |
12680 | But how will you live? |
12680 | But how will your audience understand it? |
12680 | But if he is as ignorant as all that, how could he have written the letter? |
12680 | But if he would n''t? |
12680 | But if nobody has read the man''s book,Raphael Leon ventured to interrupt at last,"is it quite fair to assume his book is n''t fit to read?" |
12680 | But is it recovered from the circumcision? |
12680 | But is n''t it all absurd, father? |
12680 | But is n''t it_ Schnorring_ to be dependent on strangers? |
12680 | But is n''t that a narrow conception of God''s revelation? |
12680 | But is the author to blame for that? 12680 But is the civilized world any better? |
12680 | But it has not cost you forty pounds yet? |
12680 | But ought you not rather to utilize yourself for the correction of the portrait of Abrahams? |
12680 | But sha n''t we want a publisher? |
12680 | But shall we consider expense where your health is concerned? |
12680 | But she does n''t mean it, does she, father? |
12680 | But suppose you fail? |
12680 | But surely you do n''t also long to return to Palestine? |
12680 | But then what will become of the next number? |
12680 | But then, what about this? |
12680 | But thou didst not? |
12680 | But what if the mechanism of competitive society works so that thousands do n''t even get the plainest living? 12680 But what if they want to take him altogether at a higher salary?" |
12680 | But what is to be said of a rich community which recruits its clergy from the lower classes? 12680 But what is to become of me-- of my conversion?" |
12680 | But what was the use of that? 12680 But what will you do?" |
12680 | But what wilt thou do? |
12680 | But what? |
12680 | But where are all the people going? 12680 But where is everybody? |
12680 | But where shall I get six pounds from? |
12680 | But wherefore should he lie? |
12680 | But who''d have_ me_? 12680 But why ca n''t they save the Jews altogether?" |
12680 | But why do Christians all reverence this book? 12680 But why do I feel good when I read what Jesus said?" |
12680 | But why must we preserve any boundaries? 12680 But why postpone the inevitable?" |
12680 | But why should n''t I buy it for myself? |
12680 | But why should n''t Jews without Judaism marry Christians without Christianity? 12680 But why should n''t we have them now?" |
12680 | But why? |
12680 | But will it come to anything? |
12680 | But wo n''t we be terribly late? |
12680 | But would n''t that be wasting money? |
12680 | But you can leave out some advertisements? |
12680 | But you do n''t mean to say your father would forbid you to marry a man you cared for, just because he was n''t_ froom_? |
12680 | But you love your religion more, my child? |
12680 | But you said business was all right? |
12680 | But you surely would n''t call Hannah a divorced woman? |
12680 | But you will not do this? |
12680 | But you would n''t make a cult of beauty? |
12680 | But you-- whatever your change-- you have not lost faith in primaries? |
12680 | But, Rosetta, what has Raphael Leon to do with my getting into Parliament? |
12680 | But, father,asked Hannah,"do n''t you believe any Jew ever really believes in Christianity?" |
12680 | But,said the actor- manager, with a sudden recollection,"how about the besom?" |
12680 | Ca n''t they? |
12680 | Ca n''t you say you want to buy it for yourself? 12680 Ca n''t you see that it''s false economy to risk a break- down even if you use yourself purely for others? |
12680 | Ca n''t you sell something? |
12680 | Call me a visitor? |
12680 | Call that a ay- puth? |
12680 | Can I do anything for you, mum, afore I go to bed? |
12680 | Can not you read in them? |
12680 | Can not you trust me? |
12680 | Can there be any doubt of it? 12680 Can you lend me six pounds?" |
12680 | Can you undertake to print an eight- page paper? |
12680 | Can you wonder at it? 12680 Certainly; is it not a command--''Be fruitful and multiply''?" |
12680 | Could n''t we be more than friends? 12680 Could n''t your sister Adelaide do you a story?" |
12680 | Could the Masters make men? |
12680 | Couldst thou not look to the apples? 12680 Cruel, it is n''t half what he deserves,"said Mrs. Goldsmith,"or ought I to say she? |
12680 | Dear? 12680 Deny it, indeed? |
12680 | Did I not say you vould produce the finest paper in the kingdom? 12680 Did he write the Psalms?" |
12680 | Did n''t I say an Englishman could never master the Talmud? |
12680 | Did n''t you drop it on that beastly dog? |
12680 | Did not King David fight the Philistines as well as write the Psalms? |
12680 | Did you call me, Hannah? |
12680 | Did you not see Daniel with her at the ball? |
12680 | Did you settle the dispute satisfactorily? |
12680 | Did you, really? |
12680 | Do I know? 12680 Do I? |
12680 | Do I? 12680 Do n''t I look old enough already?" |
12680 | Do n''t you feel cold, working? |
12680 | Do n''t you know,he gasped,"that the ministers always send up their own sermons, pages upon pages of foolscap?" |
12680 | Do n''t you remember me? |
12680 | Do they? |
12680 | Do you call that being a_ Schnorrer_? |
12680 | Do you dare mention the Name even when you propose to profane it? 12680 Do you ever see that paper?" |
12680 | Do you expect that fellow Sidney Graham back? |
12680 | Do you imagine I am only thinking of my own suffering? 12680 Do you know I am so glad you did n''t pay me the obvious compliment?" |
12680 | Do you know I have summonsed Morris Kerlinski? |
12680 | Do you know that anecdote about the two Jews in the Transvaal? |
12680 | Do you know the story? |
12680 | Do you know who that was, Joe? |
12680 | Do you know,he said in the course of the meal,"I feel I ought not to have told you what a wicked person I am? |
12680 | Do you love him so much, Hannah? |
12680 | Do you mean I''m to take part in my own conversion? |
12680 | Do you mean it? |
12680 | Do you mean the young man with the dyed carnation in his buttonhole and the crimson handkerchief in his bosom? |
12680 | Do you mean to say I ca n''t marry Hannah? |
12680 | Do you mean to say that my father was an Epicurean? |
12680 | Do you mean to say you print them all with your own hand? |
12680 | Do you mean, perhaps, that_ you_ have been getting money out of him? |
12680 | Do you realize what sort of a position you are asking me to keep? 12680 Do you remember the time you did n''t go?" |
12680 | Do you suffer from headaches? |
12680 | Do you suppose a man can take such a step as that without its getting known? 12680 Do you think George Eliot and Lessing did n''t understand the Jewish character?" |
12680 | Do you think I ca n''t take care of myself, that I need any one to protect me or to help me? |
12680 | Do you think I could face my father and mother, knowing I was about to wound them to the heart? 12680 Do you think it''s a good match?" |
12680 | Do you think so? 12680 Do you think so?" |
12680 | Do you think that''s it? |
12680 | Do you think the paper''ll live? |
12680 | Do you want any more? |
12680 | Do you want to? |
12680 | Do you? |
12680 | Does oor birfday come before mine, then? |
12680 | Done? 12680 Dost thou contradict the Prayer- book?" |
12680 | Dost thou forget whom thou talkest to? |
12680 | Eh, Parliament? 12680 Eh? |
12680 | Eh? 12680 Eh? |
12680 | Ephraim, what think you I got this fish for? 12680 Esther, d''ye mean?" |
12680 | Ev yer forgotten what I promised yer? |
12680 | Fanny Belcovitch, did you say? |
12680 | Father, dost thou hear? |
12680 | Father,cried Hannah in piercing tones,"can nothing be done?" |
12680 | Father,she said nervously, blushing a little,"who was that you said you had in your eye?" |
12680 | Finding out what? |
12680 | Going to be divorced from him to- morrow? |
12680 | Ha, then it vill appear in the other half,_ hein_? |
12680 | Hannah,he said, his voice tremulous with pain and astonishment,"dost thou, too, set light by thy father?" |
12680 | Has Goldsmith agreed to your terms, then? |
12680 | Has anything happened? |
12680 | Has one of you ever been there? |
12680 | Has she got a holiday to- day, too? |
12680 | Hast thou any one in thine eye? |
12680 | Have n''t I remembered you all these years? 12680 Have n''t I written letters for twenty years?" |
12680 | Have n''t they got no fire-_goyas_? 12680 Have n''t you come back to England to get a wife? |
12680 | Have n''t you detected the cloven hoof in my leaders? 12680 Have they?" |
12680 | Have you brought any crumbs with you? 12680 Have you done preaching at me, Raphael?" |
12680 | Have you made a good journey this time? |
12680 | Have you never taken soup at the Kitchen? |
12680 | Have you not head enough to see that that is all bunkum? 12680 Have you not, my sweet, innocent young lady, heard the story of the two Jews in Burgos Cathedral?" |
12680 | Have you said the afternoon prayer, boys? |
12680 | Have you told her? |
12680 | He''s a bit of a gambler and a spendthrift, is n''t he? 12680 Henry,"she continued impressively,"how would you like to get into Parliament?" |
12680 | Here, Michael, what do you think I gave for all this lot? |
12680 | Ho, you''re sending me away, are you? |
12680 | How are you, Becky? |
12680 | How are you, Esther? |
12680 | How are you, Solomon? |
12680 | How are you? 12680 How are you?" |
12680 | How are your people in America? |
12680 | How can I eat? 12680 How can a piece of fun, a joke, be a valid marriage?" |
12680 | How can a woman be satisfied? |
12680 | How can it die? 12680 How can one be respectable on three pounds a week? |
12680 | How can that be? |
12680 | How can we afford it when I lose a morning''s work into the bargain? |
12680 | How can we spare the money? |
12680 | How can you say that? 12680 How can you suspect me of writing orthodox leaders?" |
12680 | How could either of you have borne the sights and smells of the steerage? 12680 How dare you come to- night?" |
12680 | How darest thou take all this money from strangers, and perfect strangers? 12680 How do you justify that?" |
12680 | How do you know I could? |
12680 | How do you know he has? |
12680 | How do you know? |
12680 | How do you know? |
12680 | How do you make that out? |
12680 | How do you mean? |
12680 | How does Miss Ansell live? 12680 How goes it with you?" |
12680 | How is it possible? |
12680 | How is that possible? |
12680 | How is your Hannah''s late husband? |
12680 | How is your son Daniel? |
12680 | How know you that? |
12680 | How long was that ago? |
12680 | How many brothers and sisters have_ you_ got? |
12680 | How many seahs do you think one could safely carry? |
12680 | How many shall you want? |
12680 | How many times shall I tell you? 12680 How much is it?" |
12680 | How much that? |
12680 | How much will they want for it? |
12680 | How shall I not? 12680 How should I know? |
12680 | How should I know? 12680 How will you get the money to travel with?" |
12680 | How wilt thou, an old man, face the sea and the strange faces all alone? 12680 How''s baby? |
12680 | How? 12680 How?" |
12680 | I always told Addie Raphael could never write so eloquently; did n''t I, Addie? 12680 I do n''t know, I have done a good deal in gems; but where_ is_ the Rabbi?" |
12680 | I forgive him that because you know he''s not very presentable, is he, Esther? |
12680 | I know,he said,"Becky has a lot of young men after her, but what are they but a pack of bare- backs? |
12680 | I said, and ven ve are not in Poland must n''t ve keep_ none_ of our religion? |
12680 | I say, why ca n''t you leave the old man alone? |
12680 | I shall see you again before you go to America? |
12680 | I suppose Mr. Weingott is getting a good living now in Manchester? |
12680 | I suppose it is all about now? |
12680 | I suppose you have come to scold me for not answering the invitation to speak at the distribution of prizes to your religion class? |
12680 | I thought the_ Flag_ was your own? |
12680 | I thought you were old Four- Eyes,the boy murmured in confusion--"Wasn''t he here just now?" |
12680 | I''ll tell you what, Sam, ca n''t you come back for next Saturday week? |
12680 | I? 12680 I?" |
12680 | If Esther wanted us to know her address, what can prevent her sending it? |
12680 | If the latest news made a column when it was first set up before the accident, how can it make less now? |
12680 | Immediately after_ Shool_ I spake with the Rabbi and he said''Bear, are thy_ Tephillin_ in order?'' 12680 Indeed?" |
12680 | Is Saul also among the prophets, is Levi also among the story- tellers? |
12680 | Is he at home? |
12680 | Is it a part? |
12680 | Is it absurd that you should be scorched if you play with fire? |
12680 | Is it in my hand to do or to forbear? |
12680 | Is it like the one Bessie Sugarman''s got? |
12680 | Is it so astonishing to you? |
12680 | Is it worth while bringing a scandal on the community for the sake of ten shillings? 12680 Is it your wish to marry soon, then?" |
12680 | Is marriage a_ Mitzvah_, then? |
12680 | Is n''t it astonishing how names repeat themselves? 12680 Is n''t it rather to his credit that he has conquered his bad habits?" |
12680 | Is n''t that like a steam- hammer cracking a nut or Hoti burning down his house to roast a pig? 12680 Is n''t that the thought deep down in your heart of hearts?" |
12680 | Is she still as pretty? |
12680 | Is that by way of compensation for losing my husband? |
12680 | Is that in the prayer- book? |
12680 | Is that pin- mark gone away yet, Milly, from the precious little thing? |
12680 | Is that the way you sit on the books sent in for review? |
12680 | Is that what you judge by, Debby? |
12680 | Is that what you two have been plotting? 12680 Is the gentleman waiting to see me?" |
12680 | Is there anything lacking in your life, then? |
12680 | Is your grandmother in town? |
12680 | Is your sister engaged yet? |
12680 | It did n''t seem probable, did it? |
12680 | It was Shmool''s sister that married Hyam Robins, was n''t it, mother? |
12680 | It''s a healthy sign of affection, is a storm- cloud, but do n''t you think it''s just a wee, tiny, weeny bit too previous? |
12680 | It''s not your line, eh? |
12680 | Kids are a beastly nuisance,said Levi,"do n''t you think so, Esther?" |
12680 | Lend thee--? |
12680 | Let go, d''you hear? |
12680 | May I ask him up here? |
12680 | May I come in? |
12680 | May I trouble you to put on your things at once, Miss Ansell? |
12680 | May we not dream nobler dreams than political independence? 12680 Me? |
12680 | Me? 12680 Me?" |
12680 | Mother,said Hannah, passionately breaking the silence,"are you going to stay here while Levi is dying in a strange town?" |
12680 | My Ebenezer is_ Barmitzvah_ next_ Shabbos_ week; vill you do me the honor to drop in wid your moder and fader after_ Shool_? |
12680 | My brothers, how can we keep Judaism in a land where there is no Socialism? 12680 My butter? |
12680 | My dear Mr. Brandon, why will you persist in making me out a liar? |
12680 | My dear, how can he? |
12680 | No, how can we say that? |
12680 | No, is there aught between them? |
12680 | No, what is it? |
12680 | No, what talkest thou? |
12680 | No, why should you? |
12680 | No, why? |
12680 | No? 12680 No?" |
12680 | No? |
12680 | No? |
12680 | No? |
12680 | Nonsense, what maiden would have me? |
12680 | Nonsense, why not? |
12680 | Nonsense? |
12680 | Not Reb Shemuel? |
12680 | Not a Jew? |
12680 | Not like thy English drinks, eh? |
12680 | Not marry a_ Cohen_? 12680 Not practicable?" |
12680 | Not? |
12680 | Now, what can I do for you? |
12680 | O Benjy-- Is it really you? 12680 Of course there are snobs amongst us, but is it not the same in all sects?" |
12680 | Oh yes, you''re always first in your class, ai n''t you? |
12680 | Oh, Sidney, what are you saying? |
12680 | Oh, but suppose I sha n''t want to get married? |
12680 | Oh, ca n''t he? |
12680 | Oh, did I? 12680 Oh, do you think so?" |
12680 | Oh, have you brought that? |
12680 | Oh, how are you, grandmother? |
12680 | Oh, how can you talk so heartlessly? |
12680 | Oh, how could I, Benjy? |
12680 | Oh, how is Miss Hyams? 12680 Oh, indeed, what did she want?" |
12680 | Oh, is that to- day? |
12680 | Oh, no, how could I? |
12680 | Oh, not at all? |
12680 | Oh, then you agree with the others about the book? |
12680 | Oh, where could I get a number? |
12680 | Oh, why will you misconstrue everything I say? |
12680 | Oh, why will you sneer at Strelitski? |
12680 | Oh, will you, Benjy? 12680 On a holiday?" |
12680 | On what? |
12680 | Or have you, perhaps, saved up a tidy sum of money? |
12680 | Orthodox? 12680 Otherwise where would be the fun of being grown up? |
12680 | Outsiders admitted? |
12680 | Painted in the best style, for a tanner--"A spoonge, mister? |
12680 | Perhaps I write you a comic opera for your company--_hein_? 12680 Perhaps the prize- distribution is over?" |
12680 | Phwat''s the matther? |
12680 | Really? |
12680 | Shall I buy it up and let you work it on your lines? |
12680 | Shall I march about in this weather? 12680 Shall I sit still like thee while our home is eaten up around us?" |
12680 | Shall my writings not suffice? 12680 She cut herself adrift?" |
12680 | She played a timbrel, though, did n''t she? |
12680 | She said:''Selina Green, and what did Moses do when the Children of Israel grumbled for water?'' 12680 She, too, is ill. And how will the children do without thee? |
12680 | Should I? |
12680 | Sister? |
12680 | So? |
12680 | So? |
12680 | Strelitski is n''t married, is he? |
12680 | Sugarman the_ Shadchan''s_ daughter? |
12680 | Sugarman''s daughter? |
12680 | Suppose you had been in want and I could have helped you? |
12680 | Suppose,she said slowly,"I wanted to marry a Christian?" |
12680 | Surely we were friends? |
12680 | Surely you can write to her publishers? |
12680 | Surely you know that all these miracles were false? |
12680 | Surely you know what you are? |
12680 | Talking of Karlkammer''s article, are you ever going to use up Herman''s scientific paper? |
12680 | Tell me, your aunt is called Mrs. Levine, is n''t she? |
12680 | That little girl your father brought upstairs here on the Rejoicing of the Law, that was your sister, was n''t it? |
12680 | The RÃ © dacteur vill not redact long,_ hein_? |
12680 | The long one in his prize poem? |
12680 | Then I suppose you have the means? |
12680 | Then do you think we shall tell him we ca n''t afford to give him more? |
12680 | Then if there is no one else in your thoughts, why should n''t it be me? 12680 Then they do n''t sit on the stairs in the morning any more?" |
12680 | Then we can be married at Liverpool before sailing? |
12680 | Then why are you smiling? |
12680 | Then why did n''t you stop me? |
12680 | Then why give up your platform, your housetop, whence you may do so much good? 12680 Then you will live with your people, I suppose?" |
12680 | Then you will remain a good Jew,said Mendel, trembling all over,"even when we are far away?" |
12680 | Then''ow can your birfday come afore mine? |
12680 | Then, vy not take another eighth of a ticket? |
12680 | Then, why waste it? |
12680 | Then-- what-- how? |
12680 | There, Esther, is n''t that just what I''ve been saying in other words? |
12680 | They put all those petty little things in the Jewish papers, do n''t they? |
12680 | They write that themselves? |
12680 | They''ve got a father, have n''t they? 12680 This man-- tell me, my daughter, thou lovest him still?" |
12680 | Thou art not angry with me, father? |
12680 | Thou hast heard? |
12680 | Thou hast not heard talk of him and Sugarman''s daughter? |
12680 | Thou hearest? |
12680 | Thou meanest that I am not guiltless; that I should have kept him at my side? |
12680 | Thou seest my sorrows? 12680 Thou seest, Shemuel?" |
12680 | Thou wilt not forget? |
12680 | Thou wilt take this journey though I forbid thee? |
12680 | Thou wilt travel with ware in the country? |
12680 | Three guineas? |
12680 | Tink not? 12680 To make you laugh?" |
12680 | To whom are you apologising? |
12680 | To whom? |
12680 | To whom? |
12680 | Twopence? |
12680 | Vat vill you give me, if I find you a RÃ © dacteur? |
12680 | Vat you care? 12680 Vat you think me?" |
12680 | Vere''s my poem, my great poesie? |
12680 | Vould our Sages( their memories for a blessing) put anything into the Talmud that vasn''t true? |
12680 | Vy not? 12680 Vy not? |
12680 | Vy vill you not let me get_ you_ a vife, Mr. Hyams? 12680 Vy you no let me address meetings-- not de little ones in de street, but de great ones in de hall of de Club? |
12680 | Vy? 12680 Was he well?" |
12680 | Was it a nice play, Miriam? |
12680 | Was it made of sapphire? |
12680 | Was it serious? |
12680 | Was it treacherously to undermine Judaism that you so eagerly offered to edit for nothing? |
12680 | Was it? |
12680 | Was n''t she your art- critic? |
12680 | Was n''t that the man who appeared at the police- court the other day for being drunk and disorderly? |
12680 | We are so ignorant of our own history-- can we wonder at the world''s ignorance of it? 12680 Well, I am to take it for granted you will not write that antidote?" |
12680 | Well, MÃ © she, whither fliest thou? 12680 Well, and what did Miss Hyams say then?" |
12680 | Well, but do you think it''s honorable? |
12680 | Well, but then what am I to say to the Committee? |
12680 | Well, but what about your own son? |
12680 | Well, but wo n''t she cry and be miserable here, if you read, and with no Isaac to play with? |
12680 | Well, did n''t you say we must make a holiday to- day? |
12680 | Well, did you enjoy yourselves? |
12680 | Well, dost thou expect luck and blessing to crawl into it? 12680 Well, have I time? |
12680 | Well, how do you expect me to get the knowledge? |
12680 | Well, how goes it, Reb MÃ © she? |
12680 | Well, is n''t that a compensation? |
12680 | Well, must you put in your leader? |
12680 | Well, sir, and is not that a good reason? |
12680 | Well, what is it? 12680 Well, what of it? |
12680 | Well, when are you going to get him? |
12680 | Well, who else_ is_ there? |
12680 | Well, why do n''t you wipe it up, stupid? |
12680 | Well, you know whether you believe in Judaism or not? |
12680 | Well? 12680 Well?" |
12680 | Well? |
12680 | Well? |
12680 | What ails thee? |
12680 | What allegory is that of Raphael''s? |
12680 | What am I better than another Jew-- than yourself for instance-- that I should n''t marry a divorced woman? |
12680 | What are we all but_ Schnorrers_, dependent on the charity of the Holy One, blessed be He? 12680 What are you saying? |
12680 | What are you talking about, Esther? |
12680 | What are you talking about? |
12680 | What are you to him? 12680 What art thou saying? |
12680 | What art thou waiting about for? |
12680 | What became of the grandmother you mentioned? |
12680 | What business? |
12680 | What can I do for you to- day? 12680 What can you do?" |
12680 | What degradation is there in art teaching a noble lesson? |
12680 | What did I tell thee, Shemuel? 12680 What do I want with a man?" |
12680 | What do other girls do? 12680 What do you mean by the true Hamlet?" |
12680 | What do you mean? |
12680 | What do you mean? |
12680 | What do you mean? |
12680 | What do you mean? |
12680 | What do you say? |
12680 | What does he know of the Holy Tongue? |
12680 | What does he say, Esther? |
12680 | What does he say? |
12680 | What does it matter? 12680 What dost thou want, Esther?" |
12680 | What else do authors write for? 12680 What else?" |
12680 | What for? |
12680 | What for? |
12680 | What has kept you? |
12680 | What hast thou done? |
12680 | What hast thou done? |
12680 | What have I done for you? 12680 What have I done?" |
12680 | What have they done to you now? |
12680 | What have you done to my child? |
12680 | What have you got hold of? |
12680 | What have you got your new coat on for? 12680 What is a paper for except to right wrongs?" |
12680 | What is it to that which our ancestors suffered for the glory of the Name? |
12680 | What is it, my daughter? |
12680 | What is it? |
12680 | What is that? |
12680 | What is the matter with the boy? 12680 What is the matter, my dear?" |
12680 | What is the matter? 12680 What is the matter?" |
12680 | What is the matter? |
12680 | What is the truth? |
12680 | What is the use of talking about the old Jews? 12680 What is the use?" |
12680 | What is this mania for keeping up an effete_ ism_? 12680 What is your own salary?" |
12680 | What journey? 12680 What madness is this? |
12680 | What maiden? 12680 What maiden? |
12680 | What maiden? |
12680 | What makes you so naughty? |
12680 | What man? |
12680 | What new reasons have you discovered to think so? |
12680 | What news? |
12680 | What right, have you to say it must not be? |
12680 | What say you, Hannah? 12680 What sayest thou? |
12680 | What says he? |
12680 | What says he? |
12680 | What says he? |
12680 | What sin have I committed; that thou shouldst punish my child thus? |
12680 | What then does it refer to? 12680 What time can you be ready by?" |
12680 | What was it we used to say in school? 12680 What weepest thou, Esther?" |
12680 | What will you do when it rains? |
12680 | What would be the use of my deceiving you? |
12680 | What would become of Solomon and Ikey and little Sarah? |
12680 | What''s come over you? 12680 What''s on?" |
12680 | What''s that about a Rav, Esther? |
12680 | What''s that to do with it? 12680 What''s that you''re reading?" |
12680 | What''s that? |
12680 | What''s that? |
12680 | What''s that? |
12680 | What''s the good of lessons? 12680 What''s the matter with the girl, mother?" |
12680 | What''s the matter, father? |
12680 | What''s the matter? 12680 What''s the matter?" |
12680 | What''s the use of always complaining? |
12680 | What''s this about a new Jewish paper? |
12680 | What''s to do with you? |
12680 | What''s two thousand in seven years in London? 12680 What''s up now, mother?" |
12680 | What, are n''t you_ frooms_? |
12680 | What, have n''t you noticed all Jewish sermons are eloquent?. |
12680 | What, the lion without the mane? 12680 What? |
12680 | What? |
12680 | What? |
12680 | What? |
12680 | What_ Shool_ will you be going to for Passover? 12680 When Hillel the Great summed up the law to the would- be proselyte while standing on one leg, how did he express it? |
12680 | When did I visit your people? 12680 When may I hope for the honor of another visit from a real live editor?" |
12680 | Whence comes it? |
12680 | Where are you living? |
12680 | Where are your machines? |
12680 | Where did you get that from? 12680 Where didst thou first meet him?" |
12680 | Where is Leah? |
12680 | Where is it? 12680 Where was I? |
12680 | Where''s Esther? |
12680 | Where''s everybody? |
12680 | Where, then? 12680 Where? |
12680 | Where? |
12680 | Where? |
12680 | Wherefore should I give thee my right hand? |
12680 | Wherefore? 12680 Which baby?" |
12680 | Which man do you mean? |
12680 | Which of all these objections am I to answer? |
12680 | Whither goest thou? |
12680 | Whither goest thou? |
12680 | Who am I to save Judaism? 12680 Who but myself?" |
12680 | Who is it now? |
12680 | Who is it, father? |
12680 | Who is taking material views of life now? |
12680 | Who is that stout gentleman with the bald head? |
12680 | Who need ever know? 12680 Who spoke to thee?" |
12680 | Who spoke to thee? |
12680 | Who told me, indeed? 12680 Who told you Mrs. Henry Goldsmith turned her adrift?" |
12680 | Who told you that? |
12680 | Who told you that? |
12680 | Who told you the Reformers do this? |
12680 | Who was that, Leonard? |
12680 | Who would make friends with me, Miss Ansell? |
12680 | Who''s that? 12680 Who''s that?" |
12680 | Who''s that? |
12680 | Who? 12680 Whom else has a daughter the right to ask mercy from, if not her father?" |
12680 | Why are you not at the_ Flag_? 12680 Why are you so cold to me?" |
12680 | Why blame them? 12680 Why could n''t you write us a Jewish serial story?" |
12680 | Why did I not think of finding out before? 12680 Why did n''t he describe our circles?" |
12680 | Why did you abolish the old style of minister who had to slaughter the sheep? 12680 Why do n''t you have a real fire? |
12680 | Why do n''t you throw that awful staring thing away? |
12680 | Why do you make it so hard for me to speak? 12680 Why do you make so much bother?" |
12680 | Why do you not ask her to marry you? 12680 Why dost thou speak so harshly of thy fellow- creatures?" |
12680 | Why have you not told Addie? |
12680 | Why not have the sermon good? |
12680 | Why not? 12680 Why not? |
12680 | Why not? 12680 Why not? |
12680 | Why not? |
12680 | Why not? |
12680 | Why not? |
12680 | Why not? |
12680 | Why not? |
12680 | Why not? |
12680 | Why should I forget? 12680 Why should I marry any?" |
12680 | Why should I not talk about love? |
12680 | Why should I not? |
12680 | Why should I now? 12680 Why should I subject myself to petty martyrdom for the sake of an outworn creed and a decaying sect?" |
12680 | Why should I waste money on new papers when I can always forget the_ London journal_ sufficiently? |
12680 | Why should we be married in a synagogue? |
12680 | Why should you not come with me to my_ Beth- Hamidrash_ to- night, to the meeting for the foundation of the Holy Land League? 12680 Why waste money?" |
12680 | Why were they false? |
12680 | Why, did n''t he give you anything at all? |
12680 | Why, how canst thou ever repay it? |
12680 | Why, is she married? |
12680 | Why, what do you want to stay for? 12680 Why, what do you work at?" |
12680 | Why, what harm have they done you? |
12680 | Why, what has happened to him? |
12680 | Why, what have you ever done for us? 12680 Why, what made you think so?" |
12680 | Why, what tales? |
12680 | Why, what''s happened? |
12680 | Why-- are-- you-- not? |
12680 | Why? 12680 Why?" |
12680 | Why? |
12680 | Why? |
12680 | Why? |
12680 | Why? |
12680 | Will not? |
12680 | Will to- morrow this time suit thee? |
12680 | Will you come, mother, or must I go alone? |
12680 | Will you look at this fish? 12680 Will your sister join in the I- spy- I?" |
12680 | Wilt thou have another cup of coffee, Shemuel? |
12680 | Wo n''t you take a chair? |
12680 | Wo n''t you tell me your trouble? |
12680 | Work? |
12680 | Would he not have told us? |
12680 | Would know what, dear? |
12680 | Would n''t you like to be in the green country to- day? 12680 Would you be so good as to point out where I have gone wrong?" |
12680 | Yea, and said not Rabban Gamliel, the son of Rabbi Judah the Prince,''it is commendable to join the study of the Law with worldly employment''? 12680 Yer means bizness, does yer?" |
12680 | Yes, and did I not teach him to walk alone? |
12680 | Yes, but how are we to get these reports, especially from the provinces? |
12680 | Yes, but is n''t it the Bible that says,''The fathers have eaten a sour grape and the teeth of the children are set on edge''? |
12680 | Yes, but why have n''t_ I_ got a wife? 12680 Yes, is n''t it?" |
12680 | Yes, is there anything odd about it? |
12680 | Yes, that''s the point of the story, and I think the Rebbitzin had the best of it, eh? |
12680 | Yes, why not? 12680 Yes, why not?" |
12680 | Yes, why? |
12680 | Yes,she said, sharply,"which would you like?" |
12680 | Yes-- What is the use-- now? |
12680 | You do n''t like that style of art? |
12680 | You do n''t mean that? |
12680 | You do n''t really mean to go? |
12680 | You do n''t? |
12680 | You do? 12680 You have left off being orthodox?" |
12680 | You have made her; vy should she survive you? 12680 You have n''t had a quarrel?" |
12680 | You know what lovely weather it''s been all day? |
12680 | You read a great deal, do n''t you? |
12680 | You remember your marriage in fun to Sam? |
12680 | You vill put it in next veek? |
12680 | You want an eloquent, persuasive man, with a gift of the gab--"Did n''t I tell you so? |
12680 | You were taken away to be educated, was it not? |
12680 | You will not leave me? |
12680 | You will not, I suppose, go over to the Reform Synagogue? |
12680 | You will speak to your daughter? |
12680 | You wo n''t open on_ Shabbos_? |
12680 | You would use Jewish forms to outwit Jewish laws? |
12680 | You''ll come in and have a cup of tea with us, wo n''t you, after we''ve lodged the_ Greeners_? |
12680 | You''re not, either, are you? |
12680 | You''ve got a different form provided for you, have n''t you? |
12680 | Your copy? 12680 Your husband?" |
12680 | Your name''s Ezekiel, is n''t it? |
12680 | _ Hot aner etwas zu sagen gegen dem secretary_? |
12680 | _ Hot aner etwas zu sagen gegen dem treasurer_? |
12680 | _ Hot aner etwas zu sagen gegen mir_? |
12680 | _ Mazzoltov_? 12680 _ Nu_, how goes it, Becky?" |
12680 | _ Nu_, how goes it, Benjamin? |
12680 | _ Oh_, is he? 12680 _ Sind sie zufrieden mit ihrer Secretary_?" |
12680 | _ Sind sie zufrieden mit ihrer Treasurer_? |
12680 | _Are you a- going?" |
12680 | _( Are you satisfied with your chairman?) 12680 ''Hoo, yes, teacher, would n''t that be jolly?'' 12680 ''How canst thou know better than I?'' 12680 ''Well,''we asked,''have you seen him?'' 12680 ''What art thou doing?'' 12680 ''What''s the matter?'' 12680 ''What, more than double?'' 12680 A beggarly five shillings? 12680 A niece of mine marry a man of such family?'' 12680 A storm of protest raged in his heart-- all he had meant to say to her rose to his lips, but he only said,Must you go?" |
12680 | Abraham Barnett, in his fifty- fourth--""But death is always shocking; what''s wrong about that?" |
12680 | After a pause, she asked timidly:"Why not stay here?" |
12680 | After all, what have I to do in England? |
12680 | After all, would it be so outrageous to call? |
12680 | After an agonized pause, he said:"Tell me, Hannah, is there nothing I can do to make atonement to thee?" |
12680 | Ai n''t I five?" |
12680 | All I say is you would n''t like father coming in before all the girls in your class, would you, now?" |
12680 | All right?" |
12680 | Aloud she said,"No? |
12680 | Am I not the accepted son- in- law of the house, you silly timid little thing? |
12680 | Am I responsible for that?" |
12680 | Am_ I_ happy? |
12680 | And Sarah and Isaac and Rachel shall go to a proper boarding school, and Solomon-- how old will he be then?" |
12680 | And den you vill write about me-- ve vill put up for Vitechapel at de elections, ve vill both become membairs of Parliament, I and you, eh?" |
12680 | And did he think she could thus unceremoniously be handed over to somebody else? |
12680 | And have n''t you had any other friends?" |
12680 | And here?" |
12680 | And how goes it with the father and the family in America?" |
12680 | And how many is that, eh? |
12680 | And in so sad a world was there not something ignoble about happiness, a selfish aloofness from the life of humanity? |
12680 | And in your prognostications of the future of the Jews have you not forgotten the all- important factor of Palestine?" |
12680 | And now, dear, can I help you with your sewing?" |
12680 | And so you really do n''t know what''s become of her?" |
12680 | And suppose I refuse to take in the new Jewish paper? |
12680 | And the wife taunted her husband yet further, saying,"Dost thou think that Elijah the prophet will call upon thee or that the Messiah will come?" |
12680 | And then there is Miss Cissy Levine-- you have read her novels, of course? |
12680 | And then there would be no need for him to stand in the Lane with lemons or''four- corner fringes,''would there?" |
12680 | And then what of the hopes of worldly wealth she had built on Benjamin''s genius? |
12680 | And thou lovest him, dost thou not?" |
12680 | And vas I not born to be a RÃ © dacteur, a Editor, as you call it? |
12680 | And what did he live on now? |
12680 | And what did he send me? |
12680 | And what though the level of the wine subsided not a barley- corn? |
12680 | And what was your father, I should like to know?" |
12680 | And what will be now? |
12680 | And who knows? |
12680 | And who was she, that she should venture to hope for love? |
12680 | And who''s he?" |
12680 | And why did I come to England? |
12680 | And why is there no fire?" |
12680 | And why, if we determine to break from it, shall we pretend to keep to it? |
12680 | And will you do me a favor?" |
12680 | And yet would not his crude view be right? |
12680 | Another glass stout? |
12680 | Any weddings to- day?" |
12680 | Are n''t they cooeying for us?" |
12680 | Are not we Jews always the first prey of new ideas, with our alert intellect, our swift receptiveness, our keen critical sense? |
12680 | Are there not plenty of subjects for the Jew''s pen without his attacking his own people? |
12680 | Are we to cripple our lives for the sake of a word? |
12680 | Are your parents alive?" |
12680 | At last one turned to the other and said,''Knowest them what, Moses? |
12680 | At last she recovered herself and cried reproachfully, Oh Sigismund, why do you persist in coming here, when the Duke forbids it?'' |
12680 | Becky said,"All right, how are you?" |
12680 | Belcovitch?" |
12680 | Benjamin laughed a superior laugh,"Oh, ca n''t I? |
12680 | Bensh(? |
12680 | Besides when I was earning five shillings a week, I could buy father a new coat, could n''t I? |
12680 | Besides, had not the hypocrites really enjoyed her book? |
12680 | Besides, he was used to these jeremiads now-- had he not often heard them from Sidney? |
12680 | Besides, who else would know all the little things he writes about?" |
12680 | Besides, why should we give our friends the chance to cold- shoulder us? |
12680 | Black and slippery, and the Angel going a- hunting?" |
12680 | But a man can be out doing what he pleases, eh, Solomon?" |
12680 | But do n''t you-- don''t all idealists-- overlook the quieter phenomena? |
12680 | But do you wonder at the intolerance of every nation towards its Jews? |
12680 | But even so where is the eighteenpence to come from?" |
12680 | But for all that why should you keep my sixpence?" |
12680 | But he answered:"Elijah the prophet walketh the earth, never having died; who knows but that he will cast an eye my way?" |
12680 | But how can we go up? |
12680 | But how do you know his name?" |
12680 | But how will you live?"'' |
12680 | But if I went to a gathering for you how should I know which were Jews?" |
12680 | But if_ you_ see it, why not show the world the other side of the shield?" |
12680 | But in England-- in England alone-- what is my welcome? |
12680 | But these donkey- head English rich people-- what help can you expect from them? |
12680 | But vat can you expect? |
12680 | But vy come not beaudiful maidens to_ me_?" |
12680 | But vy have I not my copy by post? |
12680 | But what am I to do?" |
12680 | But what are you after all? |
12680 | But what can I do for you?" |
12680 | But what in Heaven''s name can your father have seen him doing?" |
12680 | But what is become of thine apple? |
12680 | But what''s the use of it now?" |
12680 | But when do we start?" |
12680 | But where is this comedy to be played?" |
12680 | But where is your fighting- editor? |
12680 | But where will be the Judaism in all this? |
12680 | But where''s your mother?" |
12680 | But who can tell?" |
12680 | But who speak her like me and you? |
12680 | But-- overwhelming thought-- had not Sugarman also said she loved him? |
12680 | By the by, are you going to review the poison? |
12680 | By the way, are you engaged yet, Esther?" |
12680 | By the way, did you see the letter complaining of our using that quotation, on the ground it was from the New Testament?" |
12680 | COMEDY OR TRAGEDY? |
12680 | Ca n''t you make one of your clever distinctions even when there''s more than a trifle concerned?" |
12680 | Came the spirit of her third uncle and said:''Angel, hast thou not erred? |
12680 | Came then the spirit of her second uncle and said:''Angel, what blazonest thou? |
12680 | Can any one show me where it stands that we must not smoke on_ Shabbos_? |
12680 | Can he go behind the Torah?" |
12680 | Can not I read between the lines of your leaders?" |
12680 | Can not we be a conscious force, making for nobler ends? |
12680 | Can that be you, Betsy?" |
12680 | Can you not guess that this damnable white tie has been choking the life and manhood out of me? |
12680 | Cheap now, you know?" |
12680 | Coleman?" |
12680 | Come thou and be our Chief Rabbi?'' |
12680 | Come up and dine with us again soon, will you? |
12680 | Comedy or Tragedy? |
12680 | Could a satirist have invented anything funnier? |
12680 | Could any man deserve the trust of this celestial soul? |
12680 | Could it be that Hannah''s earnestness was infecting him? |
12680 | Could n''t we commence again-- where we left off""How do you mean?" |
12680 | Could one almost hear the rustling of the prophet''s spirit through the room? |
12680 | Could she ever really have walked them with light heart, unconscious of the ugliness? |
12680 | Could she really care if his health gave way? |
12680 | Could we not be the centre of new sociologic movements in each country, as a few American Jews have been the centre of the Ethical Culture movement?" |
12680 | Could we not, for instance, be the link of federation among the nations, acting everywhere in favor of Peace? |
12680 | Could''st thou not let me die in peace? |
12680 | Den vat become of you? |
12680 | Did n''t I tell you about it? |
12680 | Did n''t you tell me that we should never rise to the surface?" |
12680 | Did not Moses our teacher keep sheep? |
12680 | Did not thy father, peace be upon him, promise me two hundred gulden with her?" |
12680 | Did the Rabbis know of it? |
12680 | Did the gray atmosphere that overhung them ever lift, or was it their natural and appropriate mantle? |
12680 | Did those initials never strike you? |
12680 | Did you ever have a young man, Debby?" |
12680 | Did you give it me?" |
12680 | Did you hear, Mrs. Hyams, of Mrs. Jonas''s luck?" |
12680 | Did you never hear of it? |
12680 | Didst thou not know?" |
12680 | Do Jews suppose they alone are free from the snobbery, hypocrisy and vulgarity that have shadowed every society that has ever existed?" |
12680 | Do my children think to shame me before my own relative?" |
12680 | Do n''t I say every morning''Blessed art Thou, O Lord our God, who hast not made me a woman''?" |
12680 | Do n''t you know the New Testament is a wicked book? |
12680 | Do n''t you remember, Benjy?" |
12680 | Do n''t you see they''re half- printed already?" |
12680 | Do n''t you smell it?" |
12680 | Do n''t you think I''d paint anonymously if I dared? |
12680 | Do they expect the Messiah to fall from heaven? |
12680 | Do they say this? |
12680 | Do we go direct from London?" |
12680 | Do you ask me, your father, Reb Shemuel, to consent to such a profanation of the Name?" |
12680 | Do you ever call her over the coals for gossiping?" |
12680 | Do you ever remember me going to the Board of Guardians? |
12680 | Do you fear she would refuse?" |
12680 | Do you hear?" |
12680 | Do you know I haf proved that Virgil stole all his ideas from the Talmud?" |
12680 | Do you know I picked her out of the gutter, so to speak?" |
12680 | Do you know him?" |
12680 | Do you know my little Esther took the scholarship for logic at London? |
12680 | Do you know what my holiness consists in? |
12680 | Do you know what the boys say about us priests when we''re blessing you common people? |
12680 | Do you know, ever since then I''ve suspected he''s one of us; perhaps you can tell me, Esther? |
12680 | Do you not know that for the sin of swearing your children die young?'' |
12680 | Do you not know that the mist- like centre of the sapphire symbolizes the cloud that enveloped Sinai at the giving of the Law?" |
12680 | Do you not understand? |
12680 | Do you reverse?" |
12680 | Do you suppose everybody in the world''s named Esther Ansell or is capable of improvement?" |
12680 | Do you think I could stand having my hands and feet tied with phylacteries?" |
12680 | Do you think I have not told myself all these things a thousand times? |
12680 | Do you think I have not tried every kind of opiate? |
12680 | Do you think I would not die to make Hannah happy?" |
12680 | Do you think there''s anything, Esther, in that idea of its being a woman?" |
12680 | Do you wish me to go?" |
12680 | Does any of you believe that?" |
12680 | Does he still have all those_ Greeners_ coming to ask him questions?" |
12680 | Does he still wear those two beastly little curls at the side of his head? |
12680 | Does n''t this appendix about ben Samuel show that it was never meant to be taken seriously?" |
12680 | Dogs are beasts, are n''t they?" |
12680 | Dost thou think thy mother will obey thee rather than her husband?" |
12680 | Dost thou think,"he concluded doubtfully,"that thou hast sufficient ingenuity to work in the besom now that the play is written?" |
12680 | Dost thou wish me to catch my death of cold?" |
12680 | Dutch Debby pretends to love her like a mother-- and why? |
12680 | Eh? |
12680 | Eh?" |
12680 | Eighteen? |
12680 | Esther?" |
12680 | For Judaism was worked out from within-- Abraham asked,''Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?'' |
12680 | From what? |
12680 | From who else shall we look for sympaty?" |
12680 | Graham?" |
12680 | Graham?" |
12680 | Graham?" |
12680 | Guess who from?" |
12680 | Had he not read them in Esther''s book? |
12680 | Had her earlier day- dream left her no wiser than that? |
12680 | Had n''t you better go before you give yourself-- and me-- more cause for regret?" |
12680 | Had n''t you better go down to your friend? |
12680 | Had n''t you better send across again for old Hyams?" |
12680 | Has he got a better offer from America?" |
12680 | Has my Milly forbidden thee to see me?" |
12680 | Has n''t anything been heard of her? |
12680 | Has n''t he been a_ Shadchan_ himself? |
12680 | Hast thou not noticed that I have a besom in all my plays?" |
12680 | Have I ever told you my idea that vegetarianism is the first step in a great secret conspiracy for gradually converting the world to Judaism? |
12680 | Have I found your religion at last?" |
12680 | Have I not given you the idea of starting this paper? |
12680 | Have I not lost enough by marrying thy sister? |
12680 | Have n''t you got a handkerchief to put round your throat? |
12680 | Have n''t you got better use for your money?" |
12680 | Have n''t you let your pipe go out? |
12680 | Have we made ourselves? |
12680 | Have we not a special supper to- night?" |
12680 | Have we not enemies enough that we must quarrel and split up into little factions among ourselves? |
12680 | Have you ever tasted pork, Esther?" |
12680 | Have you missed us very much?" |
12680 | Have you never been to one?" |
12680 | Have you never guessed it? |
12680 | Have you not been good to_ me_? |
12680 | Have you?" |
12680 | He began to stammer, then took his pipe out of his mouth and said more calmly;"How should I know anything about Miss Ansell?" |
12680 | He is very ill.""Has he written to say so?" |
12680 | He patted Becky''s curly head and said:"Well, Becky, when shall we be dancing at your wedding?" |
12680 | He prevaricated by retorting,"Why should I not?" |
12680 | He went on humming a sprightly air, then, suddenly interrupting himself, he said,"but have you got an advertisement canvasser, Mr. De Haan?" |
12680 | Her face relaxed a little as she said:"Why, have n''t you been to one of these affairs before?" |
12680 | Hey? |
12680 | Hey?" |
12680 | Hillel said more wisely:''If I help not myself who will help me?'' |
12680 | His lips were moving; was it in grateful prayer, in self- reproach, or merely in nervous trembling? |
12680 | How can the heavenly fire live on five shillings? |
12680 | How can they? |
12680 | How can we hope to succeed unless we are thoroughly organized? |
12680 | How can your life be a blank, with Judaism yet to be saved?" |
12680 | How canst thou go glaziering? |
12680 | How could I be?" |
12680 | How could he ever have had other than an intellectual thought of her; how could any man, even the religious Raphael? |
12680 | How could he have missed seeing? |
12680 | How dare you rob me of my cigar-- is that keeping_ Shabbos_?" |
12680 | How dared she write disdainfully of Raphael''s people? |
12680 | How is it the Chinese have got on all these years without religion? |
12680 | How is it?" |
12680 | How is she?" |
12680 | How is this? |
12680 | How is your head feeling now?" |
12680 | How is your wife?" |
12680 | How long has he been dead?" |
12680 | How many of the councillors believe in their Established Religion? |
12680 | How much better then a live lion than a dead dog? |
12680 | How much commission vill you give me if I find you a maiden vid a hundred pound?" |
12680 | How much commission vill you give me?" |
12680 | How much do you think I gave for this splendid lot? |
12680 | How much longer will you bend your neck to the yoke of superstition while your bellies are empty? |
12680 | How much was in it?" |
12680 | How much will you give for a solid man?" |
12680 | How much will you want for finding him a_ Calloh_?" |
12680 | How shalt thou carry the heavy crate on thy shoulders?" |
12680 | How would you like to get married?" |
12680 | How''s that for witnesses? |
12680 | How''s this?" |
12680 | How, indeed, could she earn a living? |
12680 | How_ are_ you? |
12680 | I always said you would grow up clever, did n''t I, though?" |
12680 | I am a great actor--_hein_? |
12680 | I am not bound to advertise it, am I? |
12680 | I hope the paper is selling?" |
12680 | I know I do not speak English like a native-- but what language under the sun is there I can not write? |
12680 | I mean, can I see him?" |
12680 | I said,''Why not? |
12680 | I suppose it will be advanced?" |
12680 | I write for an orthodox paper?" |
12680 | If you are bent upon going away, why deny me the pleasure of the society I am about to lose for ever?" |
12680 | If you do n''t care for my plan,"he concluded anxiously,"what''s yours?" |
12680 | Is Mrs. Simons living here still?" |
12680 | Is he deaf, dumb, blind, unprovided with legs? |
12680 | Is it not a beautiful title? |
12680 | Is it not enough that he feels that we have crippled his life for the sake of our Sabbath? |
12680 | Is it not enough your daughter does n''t ask to marry a Christian? |
12680 | Is it not so, Becky? |
12680 | Is it not the thirty- first day since the birth? |
12680 | Is it ready to be redeemed?" |
12680 | Is it too much to hope that he will be induced to stand?'' |
12680 | Is it wise to we d with the gray spirit of the Ghetto that doubts itself?" |
12680 | Is n''t it a beauty? |
12680 | Is n''t it a lark? |
12680 | Is n''t life hard enough without inventing a new hardship? |
12680 | Is n''t that the thought deep down in your heart of hearts?" |
12680 | Is n''t there something of the kind in Esther-- in Miss Ansell''s book? |
12680 | Is not_ Shabbos_ a day of rest, and how can we rest if we smoke not? |
12680 | Is orthodoxy either so inefficacious or so moribund as you fancy? |
12680 | Is she married yet?" |
12680 | Is that a bargain?" |
12680 | Is that the copy?" |
12680 | Is the Almighty modaist? |
12680 | Is the clothes- brush here?" |
12680 | Is there any other house, where the company is so exclusively Jewish, that could boast of a better gathering?" |
12680 | Is there any particular reason why you want to know?" |
12680 | Is there any such thing as an absolute system of morality? |
12680 | Is your Daniel in?" |
12680 | It was a very difficult point, for how could you tell whether the pin had in any way contributed to the fowl''s death? |
12680 | It will be written in English?" |
12680 | It would be awkward if an aggrieved reader came in and mistook me for the editor, would n''t it? |
12680 | It''s Purim, but how many of us have been to hear the-- the what do you call it?--the_ Megillah_ read? |
12680 | It''s my private business, is n''t it? |
12680 | Jeshurun vax fat and kick? |
12680 | Jews may be below Judaism, but are not all men below their creed? |
12680 | Just fancy not being able to join fellows at supper, because you must n''t eat oysters or steak? |
12680 | Kidneys or regents, my child?" |
12680 | Leon, do you not understand? |
12680 | Leon?" |
12680 | Look at my legs-- has your mother got such legs? |
12680 | Love improved even his powers of conversation, for when Belcovitch held forth at length Shosshi came in several times with"So?" |
12680 | May I announce him? |
12680 | Me?" |
12680 | Me?" |
12680 | Mendel repeated:--"Would he not have told us?" |
12680 | Milly''s door was half open, but she knocked at it and said to the char- woman:"Is Mrs. Phillips in?" |
12680 | Moses did not disclaim the implied compliment to his rigid honesty but answered:"Where is my head? |
12680 | Mr. Phillips''s business been doing badly? |
12680 | Much obliged.--Now I have bethought myself why should we not work out our own salvation? |
12680 | Must a Jew needs have a Jewess to help him break the Law?" |
12680 | My scholarship, my poetry, my divine dreams-- what are these to a besotted, brutal congregation of Men- of- the- Earth? |
12680 | Nay, was it not because, while the manna fell, there could be no lack of fish to fry, that they lingered forty years in a dreary wilderness? |
12680 | No, how could there be? |
12680 | No, no, be silent if you can say nothing to strengthen me in my resolution: am I not weak enough already? |
12680 | Not even on the Sabbath?" |
12680 | Now in the East there gleams again a star of hope-- why shall we not follow it? |
12680 | Now is holocaust made of a people''s bread- crumbs, and now is the national salutation changed to"How do the_ Motsos_ agree with you?" |
12680 | Now what is the explanation?" |
12680 | Now, do you see? |
12680 | Now, why not write an antidote to that book? |
12680 | O why have I not the bird''s privileges as well as its gift of song? |
12680 | Oh, do you know, Debby, father said the other day I ought n''t to come here?" |
12680 | Oh, what is it, father?" |
12680 | Oh, why could David not have fixed the hour earlier, so as to spare her an ordeal so trying to the nerves? |
12680 | Oh, why did he not come and save her? |
12680 | Oh, why had she deserted them? |
12680 | Oh, why is religion such a curse?" |
12680 | Once touch anything, and where are you to stop? |
12680 | Or have Jews the brazenness to assert it is all invention?" |
12680 | Peradventure have you something for me?" |
12680 | Perhaps you would like me to marry in a synagogue?" |
12680 | Pinch me, will you?" |
12680 | Pinchas?" |
12680 | Race affinity is a potent force; why be in a hurry to dissipate it? |
12680 | Raphael smiled good- naturedly and, turning to De Haan, said:"But do you think there is any hope of a circulation?" |
12680 | Reb Shemuel?" |
12680 | Save her? |
12680 | Sawest thou not his face when I spake of Sugarman''s daughter?" |
12680 | Schnecks(? |
12680 | Shall it be the talk of Berlin, of Constantinople, of Mogadore, of Jerusalem, of Paris, and here it shall not be known? |
12680 | Shall we say done?" |
12680 | She an upstart, an outsider? |
12680 | She asked him''why?'' |
12680 | Since when have you developed this extraordinary enthusiasm for Jewish history? |
12680 | Sit down, wo n''t you? |
12680 | So I said to the wranglers:''Why did Jacob say that? |
12680 | So I thinks to myself, thinks I, now what is there that Leah would like? |
12680 | So she murmured instead,"What can detain him?" |
12680 | Socialism meant shorter hours and higher wages and was obtainable by marching with banners and brass bands-- what need to inquire further? |
12680 | Stay-- what was that journal resting against the half- loaf as for perusal during the meal? |
12680 | Suppress the consciousness as she would in her maiden breast, had she not been urged hither by an irresistible impulse? |
12680 | Sure you wo n''t jump in? |
12680 | That lot? |
12680 | That was your idea, was n''t it, Hannah?" |
12680 | That''s it, Pinchas, is n''t it?" |
12680 | The candles may gutter out at their own greasy will-- unsnuffed, untended-- is not Sabbath its own self- sufficient light? |
12680 | The first symptom of returning rationality was her inquiry--"What sort of a journey did you have back?" |
12680 | The orator threw his chest forwards and gazing fearlessly at the assembly cried in a stentorian voice:_"Sind sie zufrieden mit ihrer Chairman? |
12680 | Then David said:"But have you the courage to do this and remain in London?" |
12680 | Then David wound up, as if there had been no break, with an elliptical,"would n''t you?" |
12680 | Then he said,"Hullo, Benjy, have you got any spare buttons?" |
12680 | Then teacher said:''Well, why not ask the Head Mistress for a holiday this afternoon? |
12680 | Then they asked:''Wilt thou rescind the edict against the Jews?'' |
12680 | Then, seeing him rise as if to go, she said:"Wo n''t you have a cup of tea?" |
12680 | There are no miracles now- a- days, are there?" |
12680 | There was a tense silence for a few seconds, then old Hyams said:"Why not? |
12680 | There were mingled sounds, men asking each other dubiously,"What says he?" |
12680 | There''s Esther,--an idle, lazy brat, always reading story- books; why does n''t she sell flowers or pull out bastings in the evening?" |
12680 | They did n''t let you finish teaching the boy his Portion because you could n''t write English?" |
12680 | They may be the best fellows going, honorable, high- minded, generous-- why expect them to be martyrs more than other Englishmen? |
12680 | They''ve rebuilt it, have n''t they? |
12680 | This is the manners and religion they teach thee at thy school, eh? |
12680 | Thou hast not gorged it already?" |
12680 | Thou must go at once and ride both ways, else how shall we know what has happened? |
12680 | Vat mattairs? |
12680 | Vat mattairs? |
12680 | Vat vill be my end? |
12680 | Vat vill happen? |
12680 | Ve are already like brothers--_hein_? |
12680 | Vy should we lif here in captivity? |
12680 | Vy should you not haf de Oder?" |
12680 | Vy you not listen to me? |
12680 | Was I not born on the ninth of Ab?" |
12680 | Was Mr. Armitage in England? |
12680 | Was he nice like Lord Eversmonde or Captain Andrew Sinclair? |
12680 | Was it fair to his readers? |
12680 | Was it not so? |
12680 | Was it not the_ London Journal_? |
12680 | Was it possible it could have taken even her childish feet six strides to cross them, as she plainly remembered? |
12680 | Was it racial affinity, or was it merely the spiritual affinity of souls that feel their identity through all differences of brain? |
12680 | Was it really worth while to trouble the clear depths of her spirit with his turbid past? |
12680 | Was it that she thought of her own dead mother and applied the lines to herself? |
12680 | Was n''t that the young man who married the Widow Finkelstein?" |
12680 | Was not the publishing day of_ Our Own_ at hand? |
12680 | Was this the sequel to the strange episode in Mr. Henry Goldsmith''s library? |
12680 | Was tobacco known to Moses our Teacher? |
12680 | We''ve been through some beastly bad times, have n''t we, Esther? |
12680 | Well, and how_ are_ you?" |
12680 | Well, are you going or must I?" |
12680 | Well, how much d''yer want?" |
12680 | Well, what was I telling you? |
12680 | Were the fathers of the Mishna also fathers of families?" |
12680 | Wh- o- o?" |
12680 | What about_ Our Own_, eh?" |
12680 | What are you doin'', leavin''things leak through our ceiling?" |
12680 | What are you talking about?" |
12680 | What canst thou do, what canst thou do? |
12680 | What change had come over him? |
12680 | What constituency would have me?" |
12680 | What did you mean by telling your wife you were sorry she had not a fourth uncle?" |
12680 | What do you care for Judaism? |
12680 | What do you do for a living?" |
12680 | What do you mean?" |
12680 | What do you say, dear?" |
12680 | What do you think my father wanted me to be? |
12680 | What does it matter about my butter? |
12680 | What does it matter if it''s a he, or a she?" |
12680 | What for?" |
12680 | What had been the use of all his long prepay rations to write great novels? |
12680 | What had she been doing all these years, amid her books and her music and her rose- leaves, aloof from realities? |
12680 | What had she in common with all this mean wretchedness, with this semi- barbarous breed of beings? |
12680 | What has happened?" |
12680 | What hath he done?" |
12680 | What have I done with my little brown book?" |
12680 | What have I--? |
12680 | What have you determined?" |
12680 | What have you to do with love? |
12680 | What hopes could she yet cherish? |
12680 | What inspiration for the soul is there in the sight of snuffy collectors that have the air of_ Schnorrers_? |
12680 | What is he going to do in America?" |
12680 | What is his name?" |
12680 | What is its_ raison d''être_?" |
12680 | What is there strange about me?" |
12680 | What living can you earn, you with your gloves? |
12680 | What need have we to seek the sanction of any Rabbi? |
12680 | What says the Prayer- book? |
12680 | What shall we do with it?" |
12680 | What sort of life would he lead the poor Reb and his wife? |
12680 | What stands in the letter?" |
12680 | What were they doing now, without her mother- care, out and away beyond the great seas? |
12680 | What would people say? |
12680 | What wrong had she ever done that she so young and gentle should be forced to make so cruel a choice between the old and the new? |
12680 | What''s that great ugly picture over there?" |
12680 | What''s that noise?" |
12680 | What''s the good of that to me? |
12680 | What''s the good of the men who visit father? |
12680 | What?" |
12680 | When Alte first went to school in London, the Head Mistress said,"What''s your name?" |
12680 | When Levi asked the introductory question, it set her wondering what would become of him? |
12680 | When a book''s spiled like that, what can you expect for it?" |
12680 | When shall I bring him for your inspection?" |
12680 | When she paused, Shosshi said:"Have you heard Reb Shemuel preach? |
12680 | When the day of the excursion came my_ Shabbos_ coat was in pawn, was n''t it?" |
12680 | When the wicked man has waxed fat and kicked the righteous skinny man, shall the two lie down in the same dust and the game be over? |
12680 | Where am I to get pennies from?" |
12680 | Where are the little girls in white pinafores with pink sashes who brightened the Ghetto on high days and holidays? |
12680 | Where are you?" |
12680 | Where could you match such a bevy of brunettes, where find such blondes? |
12680 | Where did you put it? |
12680 | Where else?" |
12680 | Where is she? |
12680 | Where is the beauteous Betsy of the Victoria Ballet? |
12680 | Where were the roses and lilies, the cedars and the fountains? |
12680 | Where would the art of the world be if the second Commandment had been obeyed? |
12680 | Where''s that one I gave you? |
12680 | Where''s that to come from?" |
12680 | Where''s the old man? |
12680 | Where''s your pouch?" |
12680 | Which is Yiddish for"has any one anything to say against me?" |
12680 | Who and what am I? |
12680 | Who are our guests now? |
12680 | Who are you?" |
12680 | Who cares for poetry?" |
12680 | Who could comprehend as she these stunted souls, limited in all save suffering? |
12680 | Who is he?" |
12680 | Who is it? |
12680 | Who is there worthy to alter them? |
12680 | Who knows but I am the Messiah? |
12680 | Who knows but that it will be born again in us if we are only patient? |
12680 | Who knows if he will be alive when we come? |
12680 | Who knows that the great people will not be angry if I bring thee with me? |
12680 | Who knows what more luck my father might drop in for? |
12680 | Who knows, too, but that we are in the way of a gentleman marrying her? |
12680 | Who says I shall not smoke? |
12680 | Who was she to aspire to such a match? |
12680 | Who will be spokes- woman?'' |
12680 | Who will infuse into him the true patriotic fervor, the love of his race, the love of Zion, the land of his fathers?" |
12680 | Who will vaccinate him against free- thinking as I would have done? |
12680 | Who would n''t like to catch hold of thy cloak to go to heaven by? |
12680 | Who would think she was the child of a pauper emigrant, a rough jewel one has picked up and polished? |
12680 | Who''ll be a penny the worse for it?" |
12680 | Why ca n''t Judaism take a natural view of things and an honest pride in its genuine history, instead of building its synagogues on shifting sand?" |
12680 | Why ca n''t Solomon go out with matches?" |
12680 | Why ca n''t father earn a living and give out the washing? |
12680 | Why ca n''t he speak English?" |
12680 | Why ca n''t we drag in a couple of thousand names every week?" |
12680 | Why can I not pair at will? |
12680 | Why did he come to England? |
12680 | Why did n''t you write to me you were coming?" |
12680 | Why do n''t they brighten the piece up with ballet- girls?" |
12680 | Why do n''t you let Jane cut the bread and butter instead of lazing in the kitchen?" |
12680 | Why do n''t you see more of him?" |
12680 | Why do n''t you take example by your teacher? |
12680 | Why do you keep him on?" |
12680 | Why does n''t he come?" |
12680 | Why give it an extra advertisement by slating it?" |
12680 | Why had he developed so disagreeably? |
12680 | Why had he not thought of so likely a place for a_ littà © rateur_? |
12680 | Why must we adopt the stupid customs of the heathen? |
12680 | Why must we exist at all as a separate people?" |
12680 | Why not? |
12680 | Why not?" |
12680 | Why not?" |
12680 | Why not?" |
12680 | Why should God not teach through a great race as through a great man?" |
12680 | Why should I not?" |
12680 | Why should he die? |
12680 | Why should he disturb her anew? |
12680 | Why should it not be trimmed into concordance with the culture of the time? |
12680 | Why should n''t you? |
12680 | Why should the Creator deceive us?" |
12680 | Why should the Jews claim the patent in those moral ideas which you find just as well in all the great writers of antiquity? |
12680 | Why should we be so conventional, you and I? |
12680 | Why should we let it ruin our lives? |
12680 | Why should we not have our own country?" |
12680 | Why should we not live together as students, too?" |
12680 | Why should we not revive or strengthen that, rather than waste ourselves on impracticable novelties? |
12680 | Why should you put it that way? |
12680 | Why should you risk infection for our sakes?" |
12680 | Why should you think that?" |
12680 | Why this new- born interest in Esther? |
12680 | Why was n''t he made sub?" |
12680 | Why you tell dem, no? |
12680 | Why, who ever heard of such foolish haste? |
12680 | Why--?" |
12680 | Why? |
12680 | Will it suspend publication?" |
12680 | Will you be able to get a circulation?" |
12680 | With all its love and reverence, do you think it forgets I am its hireling? |
12680 | Wo n''t Sidney stare if you pulverize him in_ The Flag of Judah_? |
12680 | Wo n''t you come and treat me to a cup of chocolate at Bonn''s, just to show you have n''t forgot_ Olov hasholom_ times?" |
12680 | Wo n''t you come round this morning and play I- spy- I in our street? |
12680 | Wo n''t you let me be your friend?" |
12680 | Wo n''t you say''yes''? |
12680 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
12680 | Would he not have told you what? |
12680 | Would manhood bring enfranchisement to him as womanhood was doing to her? |
12680 | Would n''t it be nice if we could have them and be out in the sunshine in Victoria Park?'' |
12680 | Would she believe that her father was right in holding that a special Providence watched over him? |
12680 | Would you believe she did n''t make them red hot first? |
12680 | Yes, four pounds, and what think you I have bought with it? |
12680 | You agree?" |
12680 | You are married-- not? |
12680 | You ca n''t afford more? |
12680 | You could n''t do that, could you?" |
12680 | You do n''t mind being my wife for a fortnight, I hope, Miss Jacobs?" |
12680 | You do n''t say so?" |
12680 | You know what Jews are-- they wo n''t ask''is this paper wanted?'' |
12680 | You look pale, my dear; what''s the matter?" |
12680 | You love the women, hey?" |
12680 | You shall be a teacher, I prophesy, and who knows? |
12680 | You vill come?" |
12680 | You will permit that I seat myself at the table?" |
12680 | You wo n''t back out?" |
12680 | You?" |
12680 | Your congregation would--""Crucify me between two money- lenders?" |
12680 | _ Nu_, how goes it with thee?" |
12680 | _ What_ had she in common with all this mean wretchedness? |
12680 | and I said,''Gott in Himmel, Milly, dost thou want to swear my eyes away? |
12680 | and a grandmother?" |
12680 | and suppose?" |
12680 | and where the jocund synagogue dignitary who led off the cotillon with her at the annual Rejoicing of the Law? |
12680 | breaking off an engagement?" |
12680 | do you find Socialism, too, in orthodox Judaism?" |
12680 | dost thou make mock of my legs, too?" |
12680 | he said, wistfully,"do you think there''ll be another funeral soon?". |
12680 | he said,"how did you come by this?" |
12680 | he said;"who would have thought of seeing you here? |
12680 | he went on, encouraged by Simcha''s smiling face,"of the old Reb and the_ Havdolah_? |
12680 | or your English stockbrokers and Rabbis? |
12680 | said Benjamin decisively;"I''m going to be a very rich man--""Are you, Benjy?" |
12680 | said Pinchas to Reb Shemuel,"ignorant fanatics, how shall a movement prosper in their hands? |
12680 | said Sampson proudly,"Who would believe the little beggar had no existence? |
12680 | said Sidney reproachfully,"how_ can_ you be so conventional?" |
12680 | said Sidney, pricking up his ears;"doubled your circulation already?" |
12680 | said Solomon, piteously,"do n''t you know Cabalah?" |
12680 | said Sugarman sternly,"do you forget it is the Sabbath? |
12680 | said Sugarman, clacking his tongue in horror,"have you perhaps an objection to his marrying?" |
12680 | said Sugarman;"Why have n''t you asked me to find Shosshi a wife? |
12680 | they''ll balance it in their hand, as if weighing up the value of the advertisements, and ask''does it pay?'' |
12680 | what? |
12680 | where did_ you_ spring from?" |
12680 | why did''st thou drag me to this impious country? |
12680 | why didst thou not take him then?" |
46312 | Am pum pull eo,& c.[ 33] A favourite quotation of Pistol''s("_ Have we_ not Hiren here?"). |
46312 | Divineor"Dear"? |
46312 | From Spain what bringeth our traveller? 46312 Joy''s?" |
46312 | Sed quid offeremus? 46312 Them, and_ yourself too_"? |
46312 | Who[13] calls Jeronimo? 46312 _ His_ shape makes mankind_ females''jealousy_"? |
46312 | choice? |
46312 | swerved( an imperfect rhyme to"erred")? |
46312 | ''Tis but to learn to live; and does that disgrace a man? |
46312 | ''Tis perfecter than brightest names can light it; Call it Heaven''s mirror? |
46312 | ''Tis so; else how should such vile baseness taint As force it be made slave to nature''s paint? |
46312 | 10 Deep contemplation''s wonder? |
46312 | 10 Do not I put my mistress in before, And piteously her gracious aid implore? |
46312 | 10 Fair lady- widow, and my worthy mistress, Do you keep silence for a wager? |
46312 | 10 Shall mercenary thoughts provoke me write-- Shall I for lucre be a parasite? |
46312 | 10 What stinking scavenger( if so he will, Though streets be fair) but may right easily fill His dungy tumbrel? |
46312 | 100 Would ever any erudite pedant[396] Seem in his artless lines so insolent? |
46312 | 102_ Qu._ Where I am? |
46312 | 10_ To._ What? |
46312 | 110 Is''t possible such sensual action Should clip the wings of contemplation? |
46312 | 119_ Ge._ Nay, dear mother, can you steal no more money from my father? |
46312 | 121_ Ge._ Kneel? |
46312 | 121_ Qu._ And you have good security? |
46312 | 12_ Go._ From whom come your letters, Master Wolf? |
46312 | 12_ Tha._ Would any woman but I be abused to her face? |
46312 | 12_ Who cries out murther? |
46312 | 130 Whilst my tongue''s tied with bonds of blushing shame, For fear of broaching my concealèd name? |
46312 | 130_ Cap._ Do you hear, sir? |
46312 | 134_ Qu._ Am I free o''my fetters? |
46312 | 139_ Sec._ Pity of all true love, Mistress Bramble; what, weep you to enjoy your love? |
46312 | 13_ Ga._ O''my word here''s a most fine place to stand in; did you see the new ship launched last day, Mistress Fond? |
46312 | 140_ Mass._ Do you hear dissimulation, woman sinner? |
46312 | 140_ Qu.__ Did live imprison''d in my wanton flesh_--_ To._ What then, sir? |
46312 | 140_ Rog._ What a spite''s this; I had kept in my breath of purpose, thinking to go away the quieter, and must we now back? |
46312 | 150 Hath not he strongly justled from above The eagle from the stairs of friendly Jove? |
46312 | 158_ Pe._ If it do, canst thou tell me how I may cure it? |
46312 | 161_ Sea._ What''s that, good colonel? |
46312 | 170_ Ge._ But will she get him to set my knight up too? |
46312 | 180 Shall I find trading Mecho never loath Frankly to take a damning perjured oath? |
46312 | 186_ Br._ But is not that your wife, neighbour? |
46312 | 189 What could I do withal? |
46312 | 191_ Qu._ Must Golding sit upon us? |
46312 | 196_ Wi._ Wilt thou come in, sweet Cu? |
46312 | 1:--"What shall I have my son... a gull, a rook, a_ shot- clog_, to make suppers and be laugh''d at?" |
46312 | 20 But wilt thou needs, shall thy dad''s lacky brat Wear thy sire''s half- rot finger in his hat? |
46312 | 20 Who''s there? |
46312 | 202_ Go._ Which is he? |
46312 | 21_ Fr._ Is the knight any scholar too? |
46312 | 21_ Ga._ But there are no giants in the castle, are there? |
46312 | 21_ Mi._ What is the matter, sir? |
46312 | 221_ Tha._ Is not all this the same in you? |
46312 | 23_ Sca._ But is there such treasure there, captain, as I have heard? |
46312 | 242_ Ge._ At baboon? |
46312 | 260 Who drinks a puddle that may taste a spring? |
46312 | 275_ Sec._ What should I say?--how miraculously sorts this!--was not I at home, and called thee last night? |
46312 | 2:--"_ Monopoly._ Which is the dearest ward in prison, Sergeant? |
46312 | 30 There Juno''s brat forsakes Neries''(?) |
46312 | 30 What, is''t not possible thy cause maintain Before the dozen Areopagites? |
46312 | 30_ Mass._ Art not Gniaca turn''d apostata? |
46312 | 353_ Who calls Jeronimo?_ iii. |
46312 | 359 Hiren("Hast thou not Hiren here? |
46312 | 36_ Sca._ And is it a pleasant country withal? |
46312 | 378 Trow(= think you? |
46312 | 39_ Isa._ Why dost thou come again? |
46312 | 406 Make("What should we make here? |
46312 | 40_ Fr._ Who?--Quicksilver? |
46312 | 42_ Pe._ What are they? |
46312 | 50 Hath not strong reason moved the legists''mind, To say the fairest of all nature''s kind The prince by his prerogative may claim? |
46312 | 50 Is she not weary yet of lust and life? |
46312 | 52_ To._ Which on''hem is''t is so devout-- the knight or the t''other? |
46312 | 58[_ Exit cum servis.__ Gui._ This is conversion, is''t not-- as good as might have been? |
46312 | 60 All Protean forms, thy wife in venery, At thy enforcement takes? |
46312 | 60 What, though the blooms of young nobility, Committed to your Rhodon''s custody, Ye, Nero- like, abuse? |
46312 | 60 What-- the forlorn hope, in black, despairing? |
46312 | 60 Who''s this lies murder''d? |
46312 | 70_ Pe._ But can we not be bailed, Master Bramble? |
46312 | 71_ Abi._ Who? |
46312 | 80 What danger durst you hazard for my love? |
46312 | 80 What, shall not Rosamond[395] or Gaveston Ope their sweet lips without detraction? |
46312 | 82_ Si._ Why, madam? |
46312 | = What business have we here? |
46312 | A prentice, quoth you? |
46312 | A sailor''s cap?--how shall she put it off When thou present''st her to our company? |
46312 | A stitch''d taffeta cloak, a pair of slops 160 Of Spanish leather? |
46312 | Am I not to be married? |
46312 | And I pray you, what is a Paradox? |
46312 | And art thou come? |
46312 | And can you do any work belongs to a lady''s chamber? |
46312 | And canst thou not distinguish love by that? |
46312 | And from thyself unto thyself dost send, And in the same thyself thyself commend? |
46312 | And how approve you your sister''s fashion? |
46312 | And how chance ye came no sooner, knight? |
46312 | And how has my poor knight done all this while? |
46312 | And tell me, what shall we pawn next? |
46312 | And when shall''s be married, my knight? |
46312 | And why should it be so? |
46312 | And, now I remember my song o''the Golden Shower, why may not I have such a fortune? |
46312 | Are all things ready, sir? |
46312 | Are not my lines Right in the swaggering humour of these times? |
46312 | Are there not younger brothers enough, but we must Branch one another? |
46312 | Are you in earnest, Master Wolf? |
46312 | Are you pleasèd all? |
46312 | Are your cross- points discovered? |
46312 | Art not my footstool-- did not I create thee, And made thee gentle, being born a beggar? |
46312 | At all? |
46312 | At whose suit, Master Wolf? |
46312 | Be drums or rattles in thy head; Are not thy brains well tempered? |
46312 | Beauty''s resistless thunder? |
46312 | But does he pump it, or racket it? |
46312 | But must thy envious hungry fangs needs light On_ Magistrates''Mirror_? |
46312 | But see-- who''s yonder? |
46312 | But when they are spent, must not they strive to get more, must not their land fly? |
46312 | But when will he do good? |
46312 | But will you needs stay? |
46312 | But, boy, first tell, think''st thou I am in love? |
46312 | But, gentlemen, why stood you so prepost''rously? |
46312 | But, humble Satire, wilt thou deign display These open nags, which purblind eyes bewray? |
46312 | But, sirra Lynceus, Seest thou that troop that now effronteth us? |
46312 | Call it perfection? |
46312 | Can Cynthia Not know the goodly- form''d Pasithea? |
46312 | Can blood weigh down my soul? |
46312 | Can fire, can time, can blackest fate consume So rare creation? |
46312 | Can not a poor mistaken title''scape, But thou must that into thy tumbrel scrape? |
46312 | Can we discover no discoveries? |
46312 | Can you affect me? |
46312 | Canst thou not, Lynceus, cast thy searching eye, And spy his imminent[519] catastrophe? |
46312 | Canst thunder cannon- oaths, like th''rattling 80 Of a huge, double, full- charg''d culvering? |
46312 | Canst use a false- cut die With a clean grace and glib facility? |
46312 | Charge him, if he love his life, to attend us; can we not reach Blackwall( where my ship lies) against the tide, and in spite of tempests? |
46312 | Chaucer is hard even to our understandings: who knows not the reason? |
46312 | Child, madam-- why do you weep thus? |
46312 | Claridiana, what''s the matter? |
46312 | Come back: tell me, why shouldst thou think 10 That same''s a love- letter? |
46312 | Come, shall we go visit the discontented Lady Lentulus, whom the Lord Mendoza has confess''d to his chirurgion he would have robb''d? |
46312 | Come, what comrades are you to meet withal? |
46312 | Come, why dost thou weep now? |
46312 | Cu? |
46312 | Curio, know''st my sprite? |
46312 | Did ever any ear e''er hear him speak Unless his tongue of cross- points did entreat? |
46312 | Did ever eye see the like footing of a tree, or could any tree but an Athenian tree do this? |
46312 | Did ever such a strain Rise from an apish schoolboy''s childish brain? |
46312 | Did he doo''t in this form? |
46312 | Did never Saturn see, or ne''er see such? |
46312 | Did you ever manifest your sweetheart''s nose, that I might nose him by''t? |
46312 | Did''st thou not kill him drunk? |
46312 | Didst thou to Venice go ought[374] else to have, 140 But buy a lute and use a courtesan,[375] And there to live like a Cyllenian? |
46312 | Do I offer to mortgage my ladyship for you and for your avail, and do you turn the lip and the alas to my ladyship? |
46312 | Do not I flatter, call her wondrous fair, Virtuous, divine, most debonair? |
46312 | Do not you know me, then? |
46312 | Do we not know nor- north- east, north- east- and- by- east, east- and- by- north? |
46312 | Do you not know him? |
46312 | Do you see yond''fellow? |
46312 | Do you understand me, sir? |
46312 | Does Eolus thy stomach gnaw, Or breed there vermin in thy maw? |
46312 | Does any consume with the salt French rheum? |
46312 | Does any dream? |
46312 | Does any walk, Or in his sleep affrighted talk? |
46312 | Does any waste in his marrow? |
46312 | Does he come? |
46312 | Dost know this? |
46312 | Dost not observe this? |
46312 | Dost remember where we were last night? |
46312 | Dost thou hope for grace with Ladies, by thy novel doctrine? |
46312 | Dost thou not blush, good Ned, that such a scent Should rise from thence, where thou hadst nutriment? |
46312 | Dost thou not see my face? |
46312 | Dost thou not tremble, sour satirist, Now that[595] judicial Musus readeth thee? |
46312 | Dost thou see my daughter here? |
46312 | Drusus or Roscio? |
46312 | Ends not my poem then surpassing ill? |
46312 | Every day has been A black day with her since her husband died; And what should we unruly members make[127] here? |
46312 | Faith say, what fashion art thou thinking on? |
46312 | Faith, what cares he for fair Cinædian boys, Velvet- caped[458] goats, Dutch mares? |
46312 | Fie, Gallus, what, a sceptic Pyrrhonist, When chaste Dictynna breaks the zonelike twist? |
46312 | For tell me, critic, is not fiction The soul of poesy''s invention? |
46312 | Fraternum amorem, jus sacrati foederis Fideique sanctæ, vinculo astrinxit Jupiter; Quæ vis lacesset? |
46312 | From Belgia, what but their deep bezeling,[381] Their boot- carouse[382] and their beer- buttering? |
46312 | Gniaca is the Count of Gazia[ Gaeta? |
46312 | Ha''you brought any money, mother? |
46312 | Ha, boy? |
46312 | Ha? |
46312 | Had she no other but that good face to dote upon? |
46312 | Hamlet, are you mad? |
46312 | Hark you; what lady''s that? |
46312 | Has any senator begg''d my pardon upon my wife''s prostitution to him? |
46312 | Has the lustful monster, all back and belly, starved me thus? |
46312 | Has your grace your sense? |
46312 | Hast any money about thee? |
46312 | Hast thou need of him and wouldst find him kind? |
46312 | Hast thou no feeling of thyself and me? |
46312 | Hath it gone round, Captain? |
46312 | Hath not my goddess, in the vaunt- guard[341] place, The leading of my lines their plumes to grace? |
46312 | Hath not rich Milo then deep- reaching wit? |
46312 | Hath our bright brother, the fair Lord of days, Into their eyes shed his us- dark''ning rays? |
46312 | Have I taken all this pains to bring thee to hanging, and dost thou slip now? |
46312 | Have they not power as well to cool and shade, As for to heat men''s hearts? |
46312 | He writes, he rails, he jests, he courts( what not? |
46312 | How could gentlemen be unthrifts if their humours were not fed? |
46312 | How did your biscuit hold out, sir? |
46312 | How dost thou like the knight, Sir Flash? |
46312 | How fares your honour? |
46312 | How hast thou got repute Of a sound censure? |
46312 | How low shall I crouch away, that no eye may see me? |
46312 | How must I bear my hands? |
46312 | How now, Count Arsena? |
46312 | How now, Piso, Aurelius''ape, What strange disguise, what new deformèd shape, Doth hold thy thoughts in contemplation? |
46312 | How now, son? |
46312 | How now? |
46312 | How shall we punish him, madam? |
46312 | How should I blaze this feature As firm and constant as eternity? |
46312 | How should their humours be fed but by white meat, and cunning secondings? |
46312 | How strangely speaks, yet sweetly doth he sing? |
46312 | How was I shipwrack''d? |
46312 | How would merchants thrive, if gentlemen would not be unthrifts? |
46312 | How, then, shall his smug wench, How shall her bawd( fit time) assist her quench 30 Her sanguine heat? |
46312 | I never wrong''d thee, Spaniard-- did I? |
46312 | I pray, my lord, do you woo every lady In this phrase you do me? |
46312 | I say; madam, are you that were in for all day, now come to be in for all night? |
46312 | If e''er you heard him courting Lesbia''s eyes, Say( courteous sir), speaks he not movingly, From out some new pathetic tragedy? |
46312 | If not, why in thy wits half capreal Lett''st thou a superscribèd letter fall? |
46312 | If not, would vice and odious villany Be still rewarded with high dignity? |
46312 | If thou hast perused me, what lesser favour canst thou grant than not to abuse me with unjust application? |
46312 | Immodest looseness? |
46312 | In her aspect mild Honour sits and smiles; And who looks there, were it the savage bear But would derive new nature from her eyes? |
46312 | Invide, Brittannas complexe, Tridentifer,[618] oras, Cur tam longa piæ mora gaudia distulit urbis? |
46312 | Is any a slug? |
46312 | Is any blind? |
46312 | Is any bound, or loose behind? |
46312 | Is any deaf? |
46312 | Is any foul, that would be fair? |
46312 | Is any so spent, that his wife keeps Lent? |
46312 | Is he come yet? |
46312 | Is he not a god That can command what other men would win With the hard''st advantage? |
46312 | Is not my pen complete? |
46312 | Is not the face the index of the mind? |
46312 | Is not this rare? |
46312 | Is there no comfort left? |
46312 | Is there no end of grief? |
46312 | Is there no law for one that marries a woman''s daughter against her will? |
46312 | Is this a man? |
46312 | Is thy soul guilty of so base a fact? |
46312 | Is virtue strange to heaven? |
46312 | Is''t Christmas, You go a- gaming to your neighbour''s house? |
46312 | Is''t because your husband is so near, and your heart yearns to have a little abused him? |
46312 | Is''t not bright Euthera? |
46312 | Is''t one that grafts my forehead now I am in prison, and comes to see how the horns shoot up and prosper? |
46312 | Is''t you, my noble lord? |
46312 | Isabella, art thou blind? |
46312 | Jaques, Jaques? |
46312 | Know''st thou the character? |
46312 | Lad, hast an epigram, Wilt have it put into the chaps of fame? |
46312 | Lady Lentulus, is this the badge of all your suitors? |
46312 | Lady, was it you?_ iii. |
46312 | Lady, was it you?_[34] how does our master? |
46312 | Let me see; O I am scarce able to look about me: where is there any seamark that I am acquainted withal? |
46312 | Light? |
46312 | Look down; know''st them? |
46312 | Look; am I not in habit as fantastic as thyself? |
46312 | Loose conscience is free From all conscience, what else hath liberty? |
46312 | Lucia, new set thy ruff; tut, thou art pure, Canst thou not lisp"good brother,"look demure? |
46312 | Luscus, what''s play''d to- day? |
46312 | Lynceus, canst thou scent? |
46312 | Madam, sit; how fare you? |
46312 | Master Touchstone? |
46312 | Master Wolf, you look hungry, methinks; have you no apparel to lend Francis to shift him? |
46312 | May not some great court- lady, as she comes from revels at midnight, look out of her coach as''tis running, and lose such a jewel, and we find it? |
46312 | May one be with child afore they are married, mother? |
46312 | Mean''st thou that senseless, sensual epicure-- That sink of filth, that guzzel[517] most impure-- What, he? |
46312 | Mistagogus, what means this prodigy? |
46312 | Murder and lust, the least of which is death, And hath she yet any false hope of breath? |
46312 | Musical Charms, Familiar Receipts,_ Sing their Songs, viz._:_ Chorus._ What is''t you lack, what would you buy? |
46312 | Must naught but clothes, and images of men, But spriteless trunks, be judges of thy pen? |
46312 | My lord, Know you this gallant? |
46312 | My lord, will you have a sociate? |
46312 | My soul is vex''d; what power will resist, Or dares to stop a sharp- fang''d satirist? |
46312 | My worshipful father, what do you please to charge them withal? |
46312 | No, I scorn it; is this the trick thou said''st thou had''st? |
46312 | No: 20 She can forsake me when pleasure''s in the full, Fresh and untired; What would she on the least barren coldness? |
46312 | Now who dares not call This Æsop''s crow-- fond, mad, fantastical? |
46312 | Now, lady''s my comfort, what profane ape''s here? |
46312 | O can it be the spirit''s function, The soul, not subject to dimension, Should be made slave to reprehension Of crafty nature''s paint? |
46312 | O my new thoughts to this brave sprightly lord Was fix''d to[ by?] |
46312 | O sing pæana to my learnèd muse:_ Io bis dicite!_ Wilt thou refuse? |
46312 | O wit''s quick traverse, but_ sance ceo''s_[?] |
46312 | O, who heard his chops E''er chew of ought but of some strange disguise? |
46312 | Off with this gown, for shame''s sake, off with this gown: let not my knight take me in the city- cut in any hand: tear''t, pax on''t( does he come?) |
46312 | Old Jack of Paris- garden, canst thou get A fair rich suit, though foully run in debt? |
46312 | On what coast are you, think you? |
46312 | Or did my lust beguile me of my sense, 50 Making me feast upon such dangerous cates, For present want, that needs must breed a surfeit? |
46312 | Or hath some daring spirit forgot Jove''s ire And to grace them stol''n his celestial fire? |
46312 | Or is there none, Or are they all, like mine, relentless stone?" |
46312 | Or what say you to a fine scaling- ladder of ropes? |
46312 | Or with a pawn shall give a lordship mate, In statute- staple[465] chaining fast his state? |
46312 | Or, there may be a pot of gold hid o''the backside,[105] if we had tools to dig for''t? |
46312 | Peace, Cynic; see, what yonder doth approach; 160 A cart? |
46312 | SATIRE V._ Totum in toto._ Hang thyself, Drusus: hast nor arms nor brain? |
46312 | Sad Bruto, say, Art anything but only sad[380] array? |
46312 | Say who acts best? |
46312 | Seest thou yon gallant in the sumptuous clothes, How brisk, how spruce, how gorgeously he shows? |
46312 | Shall Cossus make his well- faced wife a stale,[471] To yield his braided[472] ware a quicker sale? |
46312 | Shall Damas use his third- hand ward as ill As any jade that tuggeth in the mill? |
46312 | Shall Faunus spend a hundred gallions Of goat''s pure milk to lave his stallions, As much rose- juice? |
46312 | Shall Furia broke her sister''s modesty, And prostitute her soul to brothelry? |
46312 | Shall all the world of fidlers follow me, 130 Relying on my voice in musickry? |
46312 | Shall brainless cittern- heads,[416] each jobbernoul,[417] Pocket the very genius of thy soul? |
46312 | Shall broking panders suck nobility, Soiling fair stems with foul impurity? |
46312 | Shall cock- horse, fat- paunch''d Milo stain whole stocks Of well- born souls with his adultering spots? |
46312 | Shall not your worship ha''the refusal? |
46312 | Signior Claridiana, what weapon had you for this bloody act? |
46312 | Signior Claridiana, you were by the lady when I fell: Do you think I hurt her? |
46312 | Signior, what would you have more? |
46312 | Signiors, can not you tell us How our prince''s kinsman came wounded to the death Nigh to your houses? |
46312 | Sirra livery cloak, you lazy slipper- slave, Thou fawning drudge, what, wouldst thou satires have? |
46312 | Sirrah Golding, wilt be ruled by a fool? |
46312 | Sister, do my cheeks look well? |
46312 | Speak freely, captain; where found you him wounded? |
46312 | Speak, music: what''s his name? |
46312 | Speak, ye that never heard him ought but rail, Do not his poems bear a glorious sail? |
46312 | T._ But must this young man, an''t please you, madam, run by your coach all the way a- foot? |
46312 | T._ I know that: but----_ Ge._ What, sweet mother, what? |
46312 | T._ O madam, why do you provoke your father thus? |
46312 | T._ What should one do? |
46312 | Tailor, Poldavy, prithee, fit it, fit it: is this a right Scot? |
46312 | Tell me true, Dost thou not think that letter is of love? |
46312 | Tell me, Galliottæ, what means this sign, 110 When impropriate gentles will turn Capuchine? |
46312 | Tell me, brown Ruscus, hast thou Gyges''ring, That thou presumest as if thou wert unseen? |
46312 | The cap''ring god- head[234] tilting in the air? |
46312 | The serpent''s wit to woman rest in me; By that man fell, then why not he by me? |
46312 | Then views not Cynthia sweet Sophrosyne, Long honour of most rare virginity, But now much happy in her noble choice? |
46312 | They see one another._ Who have we there? |
46312 | Thou Cynic dog, see''st not the[512] streets do swarm With troops of men? |
46312 | Thou hast been my woman''s pander for a crown, And dost thou stand upon thy honesty? |
46312 | Trusty Anna, 230 Hast thou pack''d up those monies, plate, and jewels I gave direction for? |
46312 | Tuscus, hast Beuclerc''s arms and strong sinews, Large reach, full- fed veins, ample revenues? |
46312 | Tut, who maintains such goods, ill- got, decay? |
46312 | Was ever such astronomers? |
46312 | Was there ever such a game at noddy? |
46312 | Were not you one that took boat late this night, with a knight and other gentlemen at Billingsgate? |
46312 | What Myrmidon, or hard Dolopian, What savage- minded rude Cyclopian, But such a sweet pathetic Paphian Would force to laughter? |
46312 | What are these ships but tennis- balls for the winds to play withal? |
46312 | What art thou but black clothes? |
46312 | What can you answer to escape tortures? |
46312 | What cold Saturnian Can hold, and hear such vile detraction? |
46312 | What cruel Charms bereft The patrons of our youth? |
46312 | What daring flames beam such illustrious light, Enforcing darkness from the claim of night? |
46312 | What dart used death? |
46312 | What defect does he see in me? |
46312 | What desperate young swaggerer would have been abroad such a weather as this, upon the water? |
46312 | What else is wanting to make our harmony full? |
46312 | What else? |
46312 | What else? |
46312 | What hotch- potch gibberidge doth the poet bring? |
46312 | What icy Saturnist, what northern pate, But such gross lewdness would exasperate? |
46312 | What is it that you need? |
46312 | What is''t you''ll buy, sir? |
46312 | What lack you? |
46312 | What madness is''t for me to trust you then? |
46312 | What modest brain can hold, But he must make his shame- faced muse a scold? |
46312 | What must I do, my friend? |
46312 | What news at the Court of Aldermen? |
46312 | What news from Rodio? |
46312 | What other cause But chaste Brownetta,[352] Sporo thither draws? |
46312 | What say the other prisoners? |
46312 | What says my nephew? |
46312 | What sayst thou to tickling to death with bodkins? |
46312 | What shall we do? |
46312 | What shall we do? |
46312 | What should I say? |
46312 | What should I style you? |
46312 | What strangeness is''t, that from the Turtle''s ashes Assumes such form, whose splendour clearer flashes Than mounted Delius? |
46312 | What supernatural Paradox? |
46312 | What then? |
46312 | What will not an usurous knave be, so he may be rich? |
46312 | What will not poor need force? |
46312 | What will they think of me? |
46312 | What would you say and I would name a party saw your husband court, kiss, nay, almost go through for the hole? |
46312 | What would you? |
46312 | What would your highness more? |
46312 | What''s in''t? |
46312 | What''s the cause, lady? |
46312 | What''s the news with that fellow? |
46312 | What''s there? |
46312 | What''s your ship''s name, I pray? |
46312 | What, Don Sago, colonel of the horse? |
46312 | What, droops the new Pegasian inn? |
46312 | What, hath Rhamnusia spent her knotted whip, That ye dare strive on Hebe''s cup to sip? |
46312 | What, in a passion, signior? |
46312 | What, not_ mediocria firma_ from thy spite? |
46312 | What, though Iberia yield you liberty, To snort in sauce of Sodom villainy? |
46312 | What? |
46312 | When saw you my wife? |
46312 | When some sly golden- slopp''d Castilio Can cut a manor''s strings at primero? |
46312 | When,[277] villain? |
46312 | Where are their hats and feathers, their rapiers and their cloaks? |
46312 | Where are they? |
46312 | Where hath the orphan( that is to receive great portions) less cause to mourn the loss of parents? |
46312 | Where was my mind before-- that refined judgment That represents rare objects to our passions? |
46312 | Where''s my lord Medina? |
46312 | Where''s my woman, I pray? |
46312 | Where''s that strong deity You do ascribe to your philosophy? |
46312 | Where''s then_ I will_? |
46312 | Which of all thy gallants and gamesters, thy swearers and thy swaggerers, will come now to moan thy misfortune, or pity thy penury? |
46312 | Who can not rail, and with a blasting breath Scorch even the whitest lilies of the earth? |
46312 | Who can not rail?--what dog but dare to bark''Gainst Phoebe''s brightness in the silent dark? |
46312 | Who can not stumble in a stuttering style, And shallow heads with seeming shades beguile? |
46312 | Who kiss a subject that may hug a king? |
46312 | Who knocks? |
46312 | Who knows not what ensues? |
46312 | Who lies there? |
46312 | Who says the sun is cause of ugly night? |
46312 | Who shall I have to keep my counsel if I miss thee? |
46312 | Who would have thought it? |
46312 | Who would imagine that such squint- eyed sight Could strike the world''s deformities so right? |
46312 | Who would not chuck to see such pleasing sport-- To see such troops of gallants still resort Unto Cornuto''s shop? |
46312 | Who would not hear the nightingale still sing, Or who grew ever weary of the spring? |
46312 | Who would not shake a satire''s knotty rod, When to defile the sacred seat of God Is but accounted gentlemen''s disport? |
46312 | Who would not strain a point of neighbourhood For such a point device? |
46312 | Who''ll cool my rage? |
46312 | Whose house is this stands open? |
46312 | Why babblest thou of deep divinity, And of that sacred testimonial, Living voluptuous like a bacchanal? |
46312 | Why did not we hire some villain to fire our houses? |
46312 | Why dost thou halt? |
46312 | Why looks neat Curus all so simp''ringly? |
46312 | Why may not we two rise early i''the morning, Sin, afore anybody is up, and find a jewel i''the streets worth a hundred pound? |
46312 | Why not, when court of stars shall see these crimes? |
46312 | Why speak you this broken French when y''are a whole Englishman? |
46312 | Why sweat I out my brain In deep designs to gay boys, lewd and vain? |
46312 | Why, how now, currish, mad Athenian? |
46312 | Why, then, should Duceus boast? |
46312 | Why---- 43_ To._ Why? |
46312 | Will any sottish dolt repute, Or ever think me Orpheus absolute? |
46312 | Will nothing humble you? |
46312 | Will you kill each other? |
46312 | Wilt thou bear tankards, and mayst bear arms? |
46312 | Wilt thou cry,"what is''t ye lack?" |
46312 | With her paramour she flies to Pavia, where she meets Massino''s friend Gniaca, Count of Gaza or Gazia[ Gaeta?]. |
46312 | With what forehead or face dost thou offer to chop logic with me, having run such a race of riot as thou hast done? |
46312 | With what kill''d you our nephew? |
46312 | Would any Lady change her hair? |
46312 | Would damned Jovians be of all men praised, And with high honours unto heaven raised? |
46312 | Would the Knight o''the Sun,[100] or Palmerin of England, have used their ladies so, Sin? |
46312 | Would you have headlong run to infamy-- In so defamed a death? |
46312 | Y''are both agreed, are ye not? |
46312 | Ye curious sots, vainly by Nature led, Where is your vice or virtuous habit now? |
46312 | Ye mimic slaves, what, are you perch''d so high? |
46312 | Yet deem''st that in sad[499] seriousness I write Such nasty stuff as is_ Pygmalion_? |
46312 | Yet why should he steal, That is a loaden vine? |
46312 | Yon is a youth whom how can I o''er- slip, Since he so jump doth in my meshes hit? |
46312 | You ask, perhaps, who I am that thus conceitedly salute you? |
46312 | You hear how our lady is come back with her train, from the invisible castle? |
46312 | You know his wife''s land? |
46312 | You talk of disguising? |
46312 | Your gallèd hides? |
46312 | [ 124] What says Master Security? |
46312 | [ 12] 121_ Go._ What would you ha''me to do? |
46312 | [ 177]_ Men._ Who does the young count marry? |
46312 | [ 26] Does it clip close, and bear up round? |
46312 | [ 294] Has pleasure once again turned thee again A devil? |
46312 | [ 30] Are you mine? |
46312 | [ 310]_ i.e._, can not I be saved by"benefit of clergy"? |
46312 | [ 325]_ Cla._ Slave, know''st thou this? |
46312 | [ 351] Lock of hair? |
46312 | [ 359]"Is the reference to Essex''s expedition to Cadiz in 1596? |
46312 | [ 394] Must thou needs detract And strive to work his ancient honour''s wrack? |
46312 | [ 439] How now, Brutus, what shape best pleaseth thee? |
46312 | [ 488] hast Hallirhothius slain? |
46312 | [ 501] Think''st thou that genius that attends my soul, And guides my fist to scourge magnificos, Will deign my mind be rank''d in Paphian shows? |
46312 | [ 518] Why, sour satirist, 50 Canst thou unman him? |
46312 | [ 55] Whither run you now? |
46312 | [ 59]_ Pe._ Was there ever such a lady? |
46312 | [ 74]_ I.e._, think you? |
46312 | [ or] dost thou leave Thy splendour off and trust of gods deceive? |
46312 | [_ Begirt him with soldiers.__ Sago._ What needs this strife? |
46312 | [_ Exit creeping.__ Sl._ What young planet reigns now, trow,[74] that old men are so foolish? |
46312 | [_ Exit._[ 127]"What should we make here?" |
46312 | [_ Exit.__ Ann._ Your lordship will command me no further service? |
46312 | [_ Exit.__ Isa._ Takest thou delight to torture misery? |
46312 | [_ Exit.__ Qu._ Was ever rascal honey''d so with poison? |
46312 | [_ Gives a book.__ Isa._ You put me to my book, my lord; will not that save me? |
46312 | [_ Gives him a letter.__ Rog._ Chastity? |
46312 | [_ She trips about the stage.__ Ge._ Has the Court ne''er a trot? |
46312 | [_ Strikes her._ Darest thou control me when I say no? |
46312 | [_ They take the women, and dance the first change.__ Men._ Fair widow, how like you this change? |
46312 | ], and it follows that Guido would be the name of the Count of Massino[ Messina?]. |
46312 | _ 1st Gent._ Un poure chevalier d''Angleterre? |
46312 | _ 1st Pyr.__ Murder, murder!__ 2d Pyr.__ Who calls out murder? |
46312 | _ 2d Sen._ Will you appeal for mercy to the duke? |
46312 | _ 2nd Gent._ A poor knight of England?--a poor knight of Windsor, are you not? |
46312 | _ Abi._ How, how? |
46312 | _ Abi._ What''s here?--a ship sailing nigh her haven? |
46312 | _ Abi._ What, not to save mine honour? |
46312 | _ Abi._ Why should a weak man, that is so soon satisfied, desire variety? |
46312 | _ Abi._ Why, dost think I''ll make my husband a cuckold? |
46312 | _ Abi._ Wilt''ou, little Jew? |
46312 | _ Abi._ You see no likelihood of that: would it not fain be in the haven? |
46312 | _ Ambo._ Nothing else? |
46312 | _ Ann._ What mean you, nobles? |
46312 | _ Anna._ Madam, did you call? |
46312 | _ Br._ Why, but what is''t you are in for, sir? |
46312 | _ Cap._ Are you deaf, you make no answer? |
46312 | _ Cap._ Are you mad? |
46312 | _ Cap._ What groan is that? |
46312 | _ Cap._ You do confess the murder? |
46312 | _ Cla._ Dost make a mummer of me, ox- head? |
46312 | _ Cla._ Now what other troubled news, that we must back thus? |
46312 | _ Cla._ The like have I; what would your highness more? |
46312 | _ Cla._ What have we here-- the Art of Brachygraphy? |
46312 | _ Cla._ Who? |
46312 | _ Cynth._ But, look, whose eyes are those that shine more clear Than lightning thrown from shield of Jupiter? |
46312 | _ Dr._ How fare you now, lady? |
46312 | _ Dr._ You shall have all things fit, sir; please you have any more wine? |
46312 | _ Duke._ On what ground sprung your hate to him we loved? |
46312 | _ Duke._ Signior, think, and dally not with heaven, 90 But freely tell us, did you do the murder? |
46312 | _ Duke._ You do confess the murder done by both? |
46312 | _ Enter Pages 4.__ Their Song, dialoguewise._ Where shall we find relief? |
46312 | _ Fr._ Is this he? |
46312 | _ Fr._ What''s he? |
46312 | _ Fr._ Why will he do so? |
46312 | _ Fr._ Why, but is his offence such as he can not hope of life? |
46312 | _ Ge._ A nun? |
46312 | _ Ge._ Alas, mother, what should I do? |
46312 | _ Ge._ And is this a gentleman''s daughter new come out of the country? |
46312 | _ Ge._ Ay,--why?--you do not scorn my ladyship, though it is in a waistcoat? |
46312 | _ Ge._ Dost remember since thou and I clapt what- d''ye- call''ts in the garret? |
46312 | _ Ge._ Dost thou think she''ll do''t? |
46312 | _ Ge._ How now? |
46312 | _ Ge._ How say you by that? |
46312 | _ Ge._ Is my knight come? |
46312 | _ Ge._ Or may not some old usurer be drunk overnight, with a bag of money, and leave it behind him on a stall? |
46312 | _ Ge._ What writing is it, knight? |
46312 | _ Gni._ On whom would my Isabella be revenged? |
46312 | _ Gni._ Sing notes of pleasure to elate our blood: Why should heaven frown on joys that do us good? |
46312 | _ Gni._ What''s this to my Isabella? |
46312 | _ Go._ And the alderman of the ward wherein I dwell to appoint me his deputy----_ To._ How? |
46312 | _ Go._ And what''s the other? |
46312 | _ Go._ But is it possible that you, seeing your sister preferred to the bed of a knight, should contain your affections in the arms of a prentice? |
46312 | _ Go._ Do you know''hem, father? |
46312 | _ Go._ No; where is she? |
46312 | _ Go._ Sir, the knight and your man Quicksilver are without; will you ha''''hem brought in? |
46312 | _ Go._ What are their names, say they? |
46312 | _ Go._ What are those, Master Constable? |
46312 | _ Go._ What do ye lack, sir? |
46312 | _ Go._ What mean you, sir? |
46312 | _ Go._ Why do you not carry''hem to Bridewell, according to your order, they may be shipped away? |
46312 | _ Go._ Why, how now, sir? |
46312 | _ Gui._ O, sir, Who but the very heir of all her sex, That bears the palm of beauty from''em all? |
46312 | _ Gui._ What say''st thou, Mizaldus? |
46312 | _ Gui._ What''s here? |
46312 | _ Gui._ Whither is she gone, signior? |
46312 | _ Gui._ You know not wherefore? |
46312 | _ Gui.__ Sancta Maria!_ what think''st thou of this change? |
46312 | _ Hem, nosti''n?_ Curio, know''st me? |
46312 | _ Hem, nosti''n?_ Curio, know''st me? |
46312 | _ Ho._ Who would you speak with, sir? |
46312 | _ Isa._ And kiss thus too? |
46312 | _ Isa._ Can you do nothing, my Lord Cardinal? |
46312 | _ Isa._ Canst thou not tell? |
46312 | _ Isa._ Dare you revenge my quarrel''gainst a foe? |
46312 | _ Isa._ May we not be reprieved? |
46312 | _ Isa._ My lord, will you pursue the plot? |
46312 | _ Isa._ Sir, have you left naught behind? |
46312 | _ Isa._ That kiss shall serve To be a pledge, although my lips should starve.--[_ Aside._] No trick to get that vizor from his face? |
46312 | _ Isa._ Then there''s no hope of absolute remission? |
46312 | _ Isa._ What, dost thou think thy lady is so fond? |
46312 | _ Isa._ Women are witless that can not dissemble: 120 Now I am sick again.--Where''s my Lord Massino? |
46312 | _ Isa._ You''re all for this world, then why not I? |
46312 | _ Isa._[_ Aside._] He speaks not to this pledge; has he no mistress? |
46312 | _ Lady Len._ Lord Bridegroom, will you interpret me? |
46312 | _ Lady Len._ Who speaks in music to us? |
46312 | _ Lan._ Why dost view me thus? |
46312 | _ Mass._ Came my friend hither-- Count Gniaca? |
46312 | _ Mass._ Is not thy lady mad? |
46312 | _ Mass._ Lock''d against me-- my saucy malapert? |
46312 | _ Mass._ Lordship? |
46312 | _ Mass._ My name is Massino:[292] dost thou know me? |
46312 | _ Mass._ Thou shame to friendship, what intends thy hate? |
46312 | _ Mass._ Welcome to Pavy, sweet; and may this kiss Chase melancholy from thy company; Speak, my soul''s joy, how fare you after travel? |
46312 | _ Mass._ What cuckold laid his horns in my way? |
46312 | _ Mass._ What sport affords this climate for delight? |
46312 | _ Mass._ What was''t I fell withal? |
46312 | _ Mass._ What?--hath thy faith and reason left thee both, 50 That thou art only flesh without a soul? |
46312 | _ Mass._ Where''s my Isabella? |
46312 | _ Men._ How now, lady? |
46312 | _ Men._ Signior Rogero, are you yet qualified? |
46312 | _ Men._ Some bawdy riddle, is''t not? |
46312 | _ Men._ Wilt thou ram up thy porch- hold? |
46312 | _ Mi._ How now, Master Wolf? |
46312 | _ Miz._ What should we do in this countess''s dark hole? |
46312 | _ O_[99]_ hone, hone, o no nera!_& c. Canst thou tell ne''er a one, Sin? |
46312 | _ Pe._ A porcpisce!--what''s that to th''purpose? |
46312 | _ Pe._ And what upon her head? |
46312 | _ Pe._ But then it will want weight? |
46312 | _ Pe._ But what said my father- in- law, Master Wolf? |
46312 | _ Pe._ Nay, then, what kind of figent wit hast thou? |
46312 | _ Pe._ Pray thee, forbear; shall he lose his provision? |
46312 | _ Pe._ What is it, pray thee, gossip? |
46312 | _ Pe._ What mean you, sir? |
46312 | _ Pe._ Why, how now, gossip? |
46312 | _ Pe._ Will you not take security, sir? |
46312 | _ Pe._ Wilt thou be gone, sweet honey- suckle, before I can go with thee? |
46312 | _ Perfectioni Hymnus._ What should I call this Creature, Which now is grown unto maturity? |
46312 | _ Qu._ How like you it, gentlemen? |
46312 | _ Qu._ How now, Master Wolf?--what news?--what return? |
46312 | _ Qu._ Not a penny? |
46312 | _ Qu._ Pickle? |
46312 | _ Qu._ Shame? |
46312 | _ Qu._ Sweet Touchstone, will you lend me two shillings? |
46312 | _ Qu._ What stratagem have you now? |
46312 | _ Qu._ Why then, sir, what say you to forty pound in roasted beef? |
46312 | _ Qu._''Sfoot; lend me some money;_ hast thou not Hiren here?_[33]_ To._ Why, how now, sirrah? |
46312 | _ Qu.__ I was a courtier in the Spanish Court, and Don Andrea was my name.__ To._ Good master Don Andrea, will you march? |
46312 | _ Qu.__ Who cries on murther? |
46312 | _ Rog._ Dost think to save me and hang thyself? |
46312 | _ Rog._ Not too fast, gentlemen; what''s our crime? |
46312 | _ Rog._ Satan, why hast thou tempted my wife? |
46312 | _ Rog._ Shall any broken quacksalver''s bastard oppose him to me in my nuptials? |
46312 | _ Rog._ Signior, sir? |
46312 | _ Rog._ Well, what time goes the jakes- farmer? |
46312 | _ Rog._ Yes; does any man think I''ll go like a sheep to the slaughter? |
46312 | _ Rog._[196] Zounds,[197] do you think I will not? |
46312 | _ Sago._ What rarity[279] of women feeds my sight, And leads my senses in a maze of wonder? |
46312 | _ Scr._ Your worships deliver this as your deed? |
46312 | _ Sec._ Am I not born to furnish gentlemen? |
46312 | _ Sec._ Be sure, brave gossip, all that I can do, To my best nerve, is wholly at your service: Who is the woman, first, that is your friend? |
46312 | _ Sec._ How now, Master Francis? |
46312 | _ Sec._ How now, my coy wedlock;[53] I make you strange of so noble a favour? |
46312 | _ Sec._ I have done, I have done, sir; will you lead, Master Bramble? |
46312 | _ Sec._ I hope in the morning yet your knighthood will breakfast with me? |
46312 | _ Sec._ No, Master Captain? |
46312 | _ Sec._ Well wooded? |
46312 | _ Sec._ What is he? |
46312 | _ Sec._ What say you to me, sir? |
46312 | _ Sec._ Who calls? |
46312 | _ Sec._ Why, sir, what if you should slip away now with my wife''s best gown, I having no security for it? |
46312 | _ Shep._ To be pluck''d are roses blown, To be mow''d are meadows grown[ sown? |
46312 | _ Si._ But, sweet Frank, when shall my father Security present me? |
46312 | _ Si._ No, madam; but I make question who will lend anything upon it? |
46312 | _ Sir Pe._ Sir, you mistrust not my means? |
46312 | _ Sl._ Look up, father; are you acquainted with this mark? |
46312 | _ Sp._ Why, is she inhabited already with any English? |
46312 | _ Tha._ And why not_ Adventurer_? |
46312 | _ Tha._ But you mean they shall come in at the backdoors? |
46312 | _ Tha._ Do you ask a woman that question, my lord, when she enforcedly pursues what she''s forbidden? |
46312 | _ Tha._ Mine''s an azure shield: marry, what else? |
46312 | _ Tha._ What, husband-- at your prayers so seriously? |
46312 | _ Tha._ What, is your ladyship hurt? |
46312 | _ Tha._ Why? |
46312 | _ Tha._ You mean me and my husband? |
46312 | _ Tha._[179] You''ll be constant? |
46312 | _ The Description of this Perfection._ Dares then thy too audacious sense Presume define that boundless_ Ens_, That amplest thought transcendeth? |
46312 | _ The Forlorn Hope_? |
46312 | _ The_ AUTHOR_ in praise of his precedent Poem._ Now, Rufus, by old Glebron''s fearful mace, Hath not my muse deserved a worthy place? |
46312 | _ To._ And whither with you now? |
46312 | _ To._ How now, sir? |
46312 | _ To._ Is''t possible? |
46312 | _ To._ Nay but, nay but, how dost thou like her behaviour and humour? |
46312 | _ To._ None more welcome, I am sure? |
46312 | _ To._ Say''st thou so? |
46312 | _ To._ Sayest thou so? |
46312 | _ To._ So, sir; nothing but flat Master Quicksilver( without any familiar addition) will fetch you; will you truss my points, sir? |
46312 | _ To._ To the coming off an''him? |
46312 | _ To._ What? |
46312 | _ To._ Who is this?--my man Francis, and my son- in- law? |
46312 | _ To._ Who''s that? |
46312 | _ To._ With me, boy? |
46312 | _ Wi._ Cuckold, husband? |
46312 | _ Wi._ Did you suspect me? |
46312 | _ Wi._ Where is my Cu there? |
46312 | _ Wo._ Do you know it, sir? |
46312 | _ Wo._ Humility, sir? |
46312 | _ Wo._ I''ll tell you anon, Sir Petronel; who is''t? |
46312 | _ Wo._ Where is he? |
46312 | _ Wo._ Where''s Master Touchstone? |
46312 | _ Wo._ Who''s that? |
46312 | _ Wo._ Why, you are not mad, sir? |
46312 | a knight and his fellow thus accoutred? |
46312 | a nun substantive? |
46312 | a tumbrel? |
46312 | am I forced to bear The blasting breath of each lewd censurer? |
46312 | and how does my knight? |
46312 | and how far is it thither? |
46312 | and out doth draw 110 His transform''d poniard, to a syringe straw, And stabs the drawer? |
46312 | and shall earth display Brighter than us and force untimely day? |
46312 | and to whom? |
46312 | art not Gniaca-- hah? |
46312 | avaunt, base muddy scum, Think you a satire''s dreadful sounding drum Will brace itself, and deign to terrify Such abject peasants''basest roguery? |
46312 | but if a privy search should be made, with what furniture are you rigged now? |
46312 | but seriously, how dost repute him? |
46312 | can our soul Be underling to such a vile control? |
46312 | can_ will_ and_ fate_ Have both their seat and office in your pate? |
46312 | commended his calf or his nether lip? |
46312 | did I gain my wealth by ordinaries? |
46312 | did he eat him? |
46312 | do ye know where you are? |
46312 | do you hear, father? |
46312 | does he not look big? |
46312 | does the toy take you, as they say? |
46312 | dost thou jest at thy lawful master, contrary to thy indentures? |
46312 | dost thou survive to rejoice me? |
46312 | for why, I pray? |
46312 | furr''d with beard-- cast in a satin suit, Judicial Jack? |
46312 | has not a woman reason to love the taking up of her clothes the better while she lives, for this? |
46312 | hast thou ever read i''the chronicle of any lady and her waiting- woman driven to that extremity that we are, Sin? |
46312 | hath sweet- tongued Mercury Advanced his sons to station of the sky And throned them in thy wreath? |
46312 | have I caught you? |
46312 | have we never heard of Virginia? |
46312 | have you honoured this presence with a fair gentlewoman? |
46312 | have you the cause natural for it? |
46312 | hear you? |
46312 | his horses are now coming up to bear down his lady; wilt thou lend him thy stable to set''hem in? |
46312 | how do you fancy her choice? |
46312 | how likest thou the elephant? |
46312 | how will all this be maintained now? |
46312 | is not thy hand hereto, 192 And writ in blood to show thy raging lust? |
46312 | is the hurricano coming? |
46312 | is there more toys yet? |
46312 | is there such shevoiliers? |
46312 | is this seemly for a man of your credit, of your age, and affection to your wife? |
46312 | it is not borrowing of money, then? |
46312 | lady, was it you?_"[ 35]"_ I.e._, will make you go to Tyburn. |
46312 | light? |
46312 | methinks I hear him cry,"The honourable fencing mystery Who doth not honour?" |
46312 | mum? |
46312 | my castle? |
46312 | my wife?--chaste? |
46312 | no: by exchanging of gold? |
46312 | no: by keeping of gallants''company? |
46312 | nobody at thy heels, Frank? |
46312 | nor plain eastward? |
46312 | nor the Cavallaria? |
46312 | nor the Colonoria? |
46312 | or Sir Lancelot? |
46312 | or Sir Tristram? |
46312 | or a nun adjective? |
46312 | or could any nymph move it but an Athenian nymph? |
46312 | our husbands? |
46312 | quibus Armis dolisve insanus utetur furor? |
46312 | quod scelus quatiet? |
46312 | shall I make any know my home, that has known me thus abroad? |
46312 | stand with a bare pate, and a dropping nose, under a wooden pent- house, and art a gentleman? |
46312 | straight he must begin To rave outright,--then thus:"Celestial bliss, Can Heaven grant so rich a grace as this? |
46312 | the Knight''s Ward? |
46312 | the Saracen''s Head? |
46312 | the drunken hiccup so soon this morning? |
46312 | thinks my knight adventurer we can no point of our compass? |
46312 | thou misproud prentice, darest thou presume to marry a lady''s sister? |
46312 | untruss me? |
46312 | upon his heart had spread), Was penn''d by Roscio the tragedian? |
46312 | we have too few such knight adventurers; who would not sell away competent certainties to purchase, with any danger, excellent uncertainties? |
46312 | what Ganymede is that doth grace The gallant''s heels? |
46312 | what a sheepish beginning is here? |
46312 | what censor interdicts The venial scapes of him that purses picks? |
46312 | what commodity? |
46312 | what dost thou think? |
46312 | what hope, when some rank nasty wench Is subject of their vows and confidence? |
46312 | what is become of poor Mistress Security? |
46312 | what kind of figent[65] memory have you? |
46312 | what loose action are you bound for? |
46312 | what nun? |
46312 | what ostent is this? |
46312 | what peace of lustful flesh Hath Luscus left, his Priape to redress? |
46312 | what say you to figs and raisins? |
46312 | what shall become of us? |
46312 | what shame? |
46312 | what to long for? |
46312 | what token is it? |
46312 | what vein''s this, ha? |
46312 | what will you do? |
46312 | what would I not do? |
46312 | what would I say? |
46312 | what''s this? |
46312 | what''s yonder brisk neat youth''Bout whom yon troop of gallants flocken so, And now together to Brown''s Common go? |
46312 | what, are my doors unbarr''d? |
46312 | when that his lordship miss''d, And is of all the throngèd[370] scaffold hiss''d; O is not this a courteous- minded man? |
46312 | when to take physic? |
46312 | where am I cast ashore now, that I may go a righter way home by land? |
46312 | where have you been to- night? |
46312 | where learn''st thou these terms, trow? |
46312 | where should I seek the gad- fly? |
46312 | where to be melancholy? |
46312 | where''s the rendezvous? |
46312 | where''s the supper? |
46312 | which way shall I bend my desperate steps, In which unsufferable shame and misery Will not attend them? |
46312 | whither do these monkeys carry me? |
46312 | whither''s fled my sprite''s alacrity? |
46312 | who be you, I pray? |
46312 | who shall teach me to use the bridle when the reins are in mine own hand? |
46312 | who taught you this morality? |
46312 | who''ll stay my itching fist? |
46312 | why stay you there musing? |
46312 | will Luxurio keep so great a hall That he will prove a bastard in his fall? |
46312 | wilt not believe me? |
46312 | wilt thou make thy wit a courtezan For every broken handcraft''s artisan? |
46312 | zounds, que?" |
6930 | By whose mischievous arts mischievous> harmful; ill- intentioned 3 Are you misshapen thus, as now I see? 6930 Might I"( then, laughing, said 6 The knight)"inquire of you, what were those three, 7 Which your proffered courtesy denied? |
6930 | ( 1) SOME IMPORTANT DATES IN THE LIFE OF EDMUND SPENSER? 1552 Born at East Smithfield, London. |
6930 | ( chiefly in northern dialect) 2 The righteous man, to make him daily fall? |
6930 | ); promised 8 By wise Fidelia? |
6930 | 1 And called,"Pyrochles, what is this I see? |
6930 | 1 And is there care in heaven? |
6930 | 1 And said,"Why Archimago, luckless sire, sire>{ Aged or elderly man; father; the original form of"sir"} 2 What do I see? |
6930 | 1 And, weeping, said,"Ah, my long- lacked lord, 2 Where have you been thus long out of my sight? |
6930 | 1 But ah, who can deceive his destiny, deceive> prove false to; defraud 2 Or ween by warning to avoid his fate? |
6930 | 1 Dunwallo died( for what may live for ay?) |
6930 | 1 How oft do they their silver bowers leave, bowers> chambers[ heaven] 2 To come to succour us, that succour want? |
6930 | 1 The damsel paused, and then thus fearfully: 2"Ah nurse, what needs you to eke my pain? |
6930 | 1 Thereat Sir Guyon smiled;"And is that all,"Thereat> At that 2 Said he,"that you so sore displeased has? |
6930 | 1 To whom Cymochles said:"For what are you, 2 That make yourself his daysman, to prolong daysman> arbitrator prolong> postpone 3 The vengeance prest? |
6930 | 1 Who now shall give to me words and sound 2 Equal to this haughty enterprise? |
6930 | 1 Who wonders not, that reads so wondrous work? |
6930 | 1"Ah read,"quoth Britomart,"how is she hight?" |
6930 | 1"But how long time,"said then the Elfin knight, time>[ a time] 2"Are you in this misformed house to dwell?" |
6930 | 1"But if to love disloyalty it be, 2 Shall I then hate her, that from death''s door 3 Me brought? |
6930 | 1"But read,"said Glauce,"you magician, read> make known, declare 2 What means shall she out seek, or what ways take? |
6930 | 1"But, foolish boy, what boots your service base boots> avails 2 To her, to whom the heavens do serve and sue? |
6930 | 1"Good or bad,"gan his brother fierce reply, gan> did 2"What do I reck, sith he died entire? |
6930 | 1"Is not He just, that all this does behold 2 From highest heaven, and bears an equal eye? |
6930 | 1"Is not His deed, whatever thing is done Is>[ Is it] 2 In heaven and earth? |
6930 | 1"O what avails it of immortal seed seed> offspring 2 To been bred and never born to die? |
6930 | 1"Then is he not more mad,"said Paridell, 2"That has himself to such service sold, 3 In doleful thraldom all his days to dwell? |
6930 | 1"Unthankful wretch,"said he,"is this the meed meed> reward 2 With which her sovereign mercy you do quit? |
6930 | 1"Vainglorious Elf,"said he,"do not you weet weet> know, understand 2 That money can your wants at will supply? |
6930 | 1"What lady, man?" |
6930 | 1"What mean these bloody vows, and idle threats, idle> empty 2 Thrown out from womanish impatient mind? |
6930 | 1"What secret place,"quoth he,"can safely hold 2 So huge a mass, and hide from heaven''s eye? |
6930 | 1"What world''s delight, or joy of living speech, 2 Can heart, so plunged in sea of sorrows deep, 3 And heaped with so huge misfortunes, reach? |
6930 | 1"Why then do you, O man of sin, desire 2 To draw your days forth to their last degree? |
6930 | 102.34 Say on_ Fradubio_ then, or man, or tree, 2 Quoth then the knight, by whose mischieuous arts Art thou misshaped thus, as now I see? |
6930 | 103.43 Who now is left to keepe the forlorne maid 2 From raging spoile of lawlesse victors will? |
6930 | 105.15:5) 6 What is become of great Acrates''son? |
6930 | 108.1 AY me, how many perils doe enfold 2 The righteous man, to make him daily fall? |
6930 | 109.26 And am I now in safetie sure( quoth he) 2 From him, that would haue forced me to dye? |
6930 | 109.47 Is not he iust, that all this doth behold 2 From highest heauen, and beares an equall eye? |
6930 | 112.30 What meane these bloudy vowes, and idle threats, 2 Throwne out from womanish impatient mind? |
6930 | 1580[ 28]? Marries Machabyas Chylde. |
6930 | 2 What hellish furie hath at earst thee hent? |
6930 | 2 What hellish fury has at erst you hent? |
6930 | 2 languishing? |
6930 | 2 so?) |
6930 | 201.11 How may it be,( said then the knight halfe wroth,) 2 That knight should knighthood euer so haue shent? |
6930 | 201.12 Therewith amoued from his sober mood, 2 And liues he yet( said he) that wrought this act, And doen the heauens afford him vitall food? |
6930 | 201.52:5_ 7 torment? |
6930 | 203.28:1, 307.9:3_ 1"O foolish Faery''s son, what fury mad 2 Has you incensed to hasten your doleful fate? |
6930 | 203.43:9 Depart to woods vntoucht,& leaue/o proud di/ daine? |
6930 | 206.49 And cald,_ Pyrochles_, what is this, I see? |
6930 | 207.11 Vaine glorious Elfe( said he) doest not thou weet, 2 That money can thy wantes at will supply? |
6930 | 207.9:3) 208.24 Said he then to the Palmer, Reuerend syre, 2 What great misfortune hath betidd this knight? |
6930 | 208.15 Good or bad( gan his brother fierce reply) 2 What doe I recke, sith that he dyde entire? |
6930 | 208.28 To whom_ Cymochles_ said; For what art thou, 2 That mak''st thy selfe his dayes- man, to prolong The vengeance prest? |
6930 | 208.54 But read what wicked hand hath robbed mee 2 Of my good sword and shield? |
6930 | 209.9 Gramercy Sir( said he) but mote I+ weete+, 2 What straunge aduenture do ye now pursew? |
6930 | 210.40_ Donwallo_ dyde( for what may liue for ay?) |
6930 | 3 And is the point of death now turned from me, 4 That I may tell this hapless history?" |
6930 | 3 For who can tell( and sure I fear it ill) 4 But that she is some power celestial? |
6930 | 3 Is not the measure of your sinful hire hire> wages 4 High heaped up with huge iniquity, 5 Against the day of wrath, to burden you? |
6930 | 3 Were it not better I that lady had, 4 Than that you had repented it too late? |
6930 | 3 What heavens? |
6930 | 3 felicitie;> felicitie? |
6930 | 3 surpryse? |
6930 | 300.3 How then shall I, Apprentice of the skill, 2 That whylome in diuinest wits did raine, Presume so high to stretch mine humble quill? |
6930 | 302.20 Who wonders not, that reades so wonderous worke? |
6930 | 302.35 The Damzell pauzd, and then thus fearefully; 2 Ah Nurse, what needeth thee to eke my paine? |
6930 | 303.25 But read( said_ Glauce_) thou Magitian 2 What meanes shall she out seeke, or what wayes take? |
6930 | 304.1 WHere is the Antique glory now become, 2 That whilome wo nt in women to appeare? |
6930 | 304.60 O when will day then turne to me againe, 2 And bring with him his long expected light? |
6930 | 305.46 But if to loue disloyalty it bee, 2 Shall I then hate her, that from deathes dore Me brought? |
6930 | 305.47 But foolish boy, what bootes thy seruice bace 2 To her, to whom the heauens do serue and sew? |
6930 | 309.7 In vaine he feares that, which he can not shonne: 2 For who wotes not, that womans subtiltyes Can guilen_ Argus_, when she list+ misdonne+? |
6930 | 310.26 What Ladie, man? |
6930 | 310.3:1) boot> avail 4 To fret for anger, or for grief to moan? |
6930 | 311.19 Ah gentlest knight aliue,( said_ Scudamore_) 2 What huge heroicke magnanimity Dwels in thy bounteous brest? |
6930 | 311.45 Ne did he spare( so cruell was the Elfe) 2 His owne deare mother,( ah why should he+ so? |
6930 | 311.48:1] amate> cast down; act as a mate to( see 101.47:8- 9) 5 For hoped love to win me certain hate? |
6930 | 4 Are not all knights by oath bound, to withstond Oppressours powre by armes and puissant hond? |
6930 | 4 For what hath life, that may it loued make, And giues not rather cause it to forsake? |
6930 | 4 In heauenly mercies hast thou not a part? |
6930 | 4 In heavenly mercies have you not a part? |
6930 | 4 O how can beautie maister the most strong, And simple truth subdue auenging wrong? |
6930 | 4 Or thine the fault, or mine the error is, In stead of foe to wound my friend amis? |
6930 | 4 Or what needs her to toil, sith fates can make what needs>[ why is it necessary for] sith> since 5 Way for themselves, their purpose to partake?" |
6930 | 4 Or what needs her to toyle, sith fates can make Way for themselues, their purpose to partake? |
6930 | 4 Or yours the fault, or mine the error is, Or> Either 5 Instead of foe to wound my friend amiss?" |
6930 | 4 To comfort me in my distressed plight? |
6930 | 4 Who better can the way to heauen aread, Then thou thy selfe, that was both borne and bred 6 In heauenly throne, where thousand Angels shine? |
6930 | 4 Why then should witless man so much misween misween> hold the wrong opinion 5 That nothing is, but that which he has seen? |
6930 | 4 Why then should witlesse man so much misweene That nothing is, but that which he hath seene? |
6930 | 4 bright,> bright? |
6930 | 4 faire> fayre_ 1590;_ Faire_ 1609_ 1"But read what wicked hand has robbed me read> make known 2 Of my good sword and shield?" |
6930 | 5 A> And_ 1596, 1609_ 1"What mister wight,"said he,"and how arrayed?" |
6930 | 5 Angel, or goddess, do I call you right? |
6930 | 5 Is not His law,_ Let every sinner die: 6 Die shall all flesh_? |
6930 | 5 Then, when they had despoiled her tire and caul, despoiled> stripped tire> head- dress caul>{ Netted cap worn by women; here? supporting a wig?} |
6930 | 5 Then, when they had despoiled her tire and caul, despoiled> stripped tire> head- dress caul>{ Netted cap worn by women; here? supporting a wig?} |
6930 | 5 Why should you then despair, that chosen are? |
6930 | 5 field> fied_ 1596_ 1 Who now is left to keep the forlorn maid 2 From raging spoil of lawless victor''s will? |
6930 | 5 nye? |
6930 | 5"But deeds of arms must I at last be fain fain> obliged 6 And ladies''love, to leave, so dearly bought?" |
6930 | 5"Where is,"said Satyrane,"that paynim''s son, paynim> pagan, heathen 6 That him of life, and us of joy, has reft?" |
6930 | 6 Ah God, what horrour and tormenting griefe My hart, my hands, mine eyes, and all assayd? |
6930 | 6 Do not I kings create, and throw the crown 7 Sometimes to him that low in dust does lie? |
6930 | 6 Do not I kings create, and throw the crowne Sometimes to him, that low in dust doth ly? |
6930 | 6 How may straunge knight hope euer to aspire, By faithfull seruice, and meet amenance, 8 Vnto such blisse? |
6930 | 6 How oft that day did sad_ Brunchildis_ see The greene shield dyde in dolorous vermell? |
6930 | 6 Is not enough foure quarters of a man, Withouten sword or shield, an host to quaile? |
6930 | 6 Is not short pain well borne, that brings long ease, 7 And lays the soul to sleep in quiet grave? |
6930 | 6 Is not short paine well borne, that brings long ease, And layes the soule to sleepe in quiet graue? |
6930 | 6 O how, said he, mote I that well out find, That may restore you to your wonted well? |
6930 | 6 O what of Gods then boots it to be borne, If old_ Aveugles_ sonnes so euill heare? |
6930 | 6 O ye braue knights, that boast this Ladies loue, Where be ye now, when she is nigh defild 8 Of filthy wretch? |
6930 | 6 O you brave knights, that boast this lady''s love, boast> brag of; extol 7 Where be you now, when she is nigh defiled 8 Of filthy wretch? |
6930 | 6 Or+ hast thou,+ Lord, of good mens cause no heed? |
6930 | 6 Perdie( said_ Britomart_) the choise is hard: But what reward had he, that ouercame? |
6930 | 6 Tell then,{ o^} Lady tell, what fatall priefe Hath with so huge misfortune you opprest? |
6930 | 6 What bootes it all to haue, and nothing vse? |
6930 | 6 What flames( quoth he) when I thee present see, In daunger rather to be drent, then brent? |
6930 | 6 What if within the Moones faire shining spheare? |
6930 | 6 What if within the moon''s fair shining sphere; 7 What if in every other star unseen 8 Of other worlds he happily should hear? |
6930 | 6 Where may that treachour then( said he) be found, Or by what meanes may I his footing tract? |
6930 | 6 Who euer heard of th''Indian_ Peru_? |
6930 | 6 Who then can striue with strong necessitie, That holds the world in his still chaunging state, 8 Or shunne the death ordaynd by destinie? |
6930 | 6 Why should not that dead carrion satisfie The guilt, which if he liued had thus long, 8 His life for due reuenge should deare abie? |
6930 | 6 Why should not that dead carrion satisfy 7 The guilt which, if he lived had thus long, 8 His life for due revenge should dear aby? |
6930 | 6 Your cruel eyes endure so piteous sight, sight>[ a sight] 7 To shed your lives on ground? |
6930 | 6"O how,"said he,"might I that well out find, out find> discover 7 That may restore you to your wonted well?" |
6930 | 6"Pardie,"said Britomart,"the choice is hard: Pardie> Truly;"by God"7 But what reward had he that overcame?" |
6930 | 6"What flames,"quoth he,"when I you present see, 7 In danger rather to be drenched, than burnt?" |
6930 | 6"Where may that treacher then,"said he,"be found, treacher> deceiver; traitor 7 Or by what means may I his footing tract?" |
6930 | 635 Who then ought more to fauour her, then you 636 Moste noble Lord, the honor of this age, 637 And Precedent of all that armes ensue? |
6930 | 6_ Occasion_;>_ Occasion_,_ 1609_ 1"His be that care, whom most it does concern,"2 Said he,"but whither with such hasty flight 3 Are you now bound? |
6930 | 7 Is not enough your evil life forespent? |
6930 | 7 Is then unjust to each his due to give, Is>[ Is it] 8 Or let him die, that loathes living breath, 9 Or let him die at ease, that lives here uneath? |
6930 | 7 Or where has he hung up his mortal blade, mortal> lethal 8 That has so many haughty conquests won? |
6930 | 7 What mean you by this reproachful strife? |
6930 | 7 he> be_ 1596_ 1"How may it be,"said then the knight half wroth, 2"That knight should knighthood ever so have shent?" |
6930 | 7 this> but this his_ 1590_ 8 damnifyde? |
6930 | 7"What need of arms, where peace does ay remain,"ay> ever, always 8 Said he,"and battles none are to be fought? |
6930 | 8 Ah God, what other could he do at least, But loue so faire a Lady, that his life releast? |
6930 | 8 Ah curteous knight( quoth she) what secret wound Could euer find, to grieue the gentlest hart on ground? |
6930 | 8 Ah gentle Squire( quoth he) tell at one word, How many foundst thou such to put in thy record? |
6930 | 8 And him that raignd, into his rowme thrust downe, And whom I lust, do heape with glory and renowne? |
6930 | 8 And him that reigned, into his room thrust down, room> place, space 9 And whom I lust, do heap with glory and renown?" |
6930 | 8 Been they all dead, and laid in doleful hearse; Been>[ Are] hearse> coffin; tomb, grave 9 Or do they only sleep, and shall again reverse? |
6930 | 8 Bene they all dead, and laid in dolefull herse? |
6930 | 8 Is this the battell, which thou vauntst to fight With that fire- mouthed Dragon, horrible and bright? |
6930 | 8 Or doen+ you+ loue, or doen you lacke your will? |
6930 | 8 Or let him die, that loatheth+ liuing+ breath? |
6930 | 8 Or who shall not great+_ Nightes_+ children scorne, When two of three her Nephews are so fowle forlorne? |
6930 | 8 What booteth then the good and righteous deed, If goodnesse find no grace, nor righteousnesse no meed? |
6930 | 8 What boots then the good and righteous deed, boots> avails[ one] 9 If goodness find no grace, nor righteousness no meed? |
6930 | 8 What coward hand shall doe thee next to die, That art thus foully fled from famous enemie? |
6930 | 8 What herce or steede( said he) should he haue dight, But be entombed in the rauen or the kight? |
6930 | 8 Why Dame( quoth he) what hath ye thus dismayd? |
6930 | 8 weare,> weare? |
6930 | 8"Ah, courteous knight,"quoth she,"what secret wound 9 Could ever find to grieve the gentlest heart on ground?" |
6930 | 9 After so wicked deed why live you longer day?" |
6930 | 9 Or do your feeble feet unweeting hither stray? |
6930 | 9 Or fruitfullest Virginia who did ever view? |
6930 | 9 What frays you, that were wo nt to comfort me afraid?" |
6930 | : FE_ 1 Then Una thus:"But she, your sister dear, 2 The dear Charissa, where is she become? |
6930 | > so? |
6930 | > torment{inverse?} |
6930 | > was? |
6930 | >[ Is it not enough that your evil life has been utterly wasted? |
6930 | ? 1577[ 25] Visits Ireland. |
6930 | ? 1584[ 32] Becomes deputy to the Clerk of the Council of Munster, Lodowick Bryskett. |
6930 | ? Birth of daughter Katherine;? death of Machabyas Chylde. |
6930 | ? Birth of daughter Katherine;? death of Machabyas Chylde. |
6930 | Ah dearest dame( quoth he) how might I see 4 The thing, that might not be, and yet was donne? |
6930 | Ah who can loue the worker of her smart? |
6930 | All that I need I haue; what needeth mee 4 To couet more, then I haue cause to vse? |
6930 | And if I dye, who will saye, This was Immerito? |
6930 | And if I starve, who will record my cursed end? |
6930 | And if I waste who will bewaile my heavy chance? |
6930 | And is the point of death now turnd fro mee, 4 That I may tell this haplesse history? |
6930 | And is there love 2 In heavenly spirits to these creatures base, to> for 3 That may compassion of their evils move? |
6930 | And must you of necessitie have my judgement of hir indeede? |
6930 | And with continuall watch did warely keepe; 4 Who then would thinke, that by his subtile trains He could escape fowle death or deadly paines? |
6930 | Angell, or Goddesse do I call thee right? |
6930 | Asked why? |
6930 | But can ye read Sir, how I may her find, or+ where?+ 9 where? |
6930 | But now aread, old father, why of late 6 Didst thou behight me borne of English blood, Whom all a Faeries sonne+ doen nominate+? |
6930 | But what aduenture, or what high intent 4 Hath brought you hither into Faery land, Aread Prince_ Arthur_, crowne of Martiall band? |
6930 | But what art thou, that telst of Nephews kilt? |
6930 | But whence should come that harme, which thou doest seeme 4 To threat to him, that minds his chaunce t''abye? |
6930 | But>[ But may] his>[ Despair''s] 109.31 How may a man( said he) with idle speach 2 Be wonne, to spoyle the Castle of his health? |
6930 | Can Night defray The wrath of thundring_ Ioue_, that rules both night and day? |
6930 | Did not He all create 3 To die again? |
6930 | For perdie else how mote it euer bee, 8 That euer hand should dare for to engore Her noble bloud? |
6930 | For who can tell( and sure I feare it ill) 4 But that she is some powre celestiall? |
6930 | Gloriana>( The Faery Queen; Elizabeth) 210.1 WHo now shall giue vnto me words and sound, 2 Equall vnto this haughtie enterprise? |
6930 | Henalois>( The men of Hainaut) 6 How oft that day did sad Brunchildis see 7 The green shield dyed in dolorous vermilion? |
6930 | How have I wearied, with many a stroke, The stately walnut- tree, the while the rest, Under the tree fell all for nuttes at strife? |
6930 | How oft do they with golden pineons, cleaue 4 The flitting skyes, like flying Pursuiuant, Against foule feends to aide vs millitant? |
6930 | How often have I scaled the craggie oke All to dislodge the raven of her nest? |
6930 | How shall she know, how shall she find the man? |
6930 | How then should I, without another wit, Thinck ever to endure so tedious toyle? |
6930 | How then? |
6930 | I:241) 653 Your sovereign goddess''most dear delight, 654 Why do I send this rustic madrigal, 655 That may your tuneful ear unseason quite? |
6930 | In? August, to Dublin with Lord Grey. |
6930 | Is all his force forlorne, and all his glory donne? |
6930 | Is not enough thy euill life forespent? |
6930 | Is not enough your evil life forespent? |
6930 | Is not enough, that I alone doe dye, 4 But it must doubled be with death of twaine? |
6930 | Is not his law, Let euery sinner die: 6 Die shall all flesh? |
6930 | Is not the measure of thy sinfull hire 4 High heaped vp with huge iniquitie, Against the day of wrath, to burden thee? |
6930 | Is not_ Transit Gloria_ the lesson taught everywhere? |
6930 | Is then vniust to each his due to giue? |
6930 | Is this the ioy of armes? |
6930 | Liues any, that you hath thus ill apaid? |
6930 | Mote I( then laughing sayd 6 The knight) inquire of thee, what were those three, The which thy proffred curtesie denayd? |
6930 | O who can tell 9 The hidden power of herbs, and might of magic spell? |
6930 | O who can tell The hidden power of herbes, and might of Magicke spell? |
6930 | Of all Love takes equal view: 6 And does not highest God vouchsafe to take 7 The love and service of the basest crew? |
6930 | Or did his life her fatall date expyre, 4 Or did he fall by treason, or by fight? |
6930 | Or doen they onely sleepe, and shall againe reuerse? |
6930 | Or doen thy feeble feet vnweeting hither stray? |
6930 | Or doth thy iustice sleepe, and silent ly? |
6930 | Or fruitfullest_ Virginia_ who did euer vew? |
6930 | Or let him die at ease, that liueth here vneath? |
6930 | Or speake ye of report, or did ye see 6 Iust cause of dread, that makes ye doubt so sore? |
6930 | Or wants she health, or busie is elsewhere? |
6930 | Or what doth his bad death now satisfy 4 The greedy hunger of reuenging ire, Sith wrathfull hand wrought not her owne desire? |
6930 | Or where hast thou thy wonne, that so much gold 4 Thou canst preserue from wrong and robbery? |
6930 | Or where hath he hong vp his mortall blade, 8 That hath so many haughtie conquests wonne? |
6930 | Or who in venturous vessell measured 8 The+_ Amazons_+ huge riuer now found trew? |
6930 | Or who shal lend me wings, with which from ground 4 My lowly verse may loftily arise, And lift it selfe vnto the highest skies? |
6930 | Or who shall let me now, 4 On this vile bodie from to wreake my wrong, And make his carkasse as the outcast dong? |
6930 | Or, more probably: Has not enough of your evil life already been utterly wasted?] |
6930 | Red Deer} 8 Whose right haunch erst my steadfast arrow strake? |
6930 | See_ Iliad_ 8.18- 27; 109.1:1- 2, 207.46) 6 Which fast is tied to Jove''s eternal seat? |
6930 | See_ Met._ 6.126) ween> imagine 2 That sullen Saturn ever weened to love? |
6930 | Shall he thy sins vp in his knowledge fold, 4 And guiltie be of thine impietie? |
6930 | Smith, since the line is hypermetrical_ 1"How hight he then,"said Guyon,"and from whence?" |
6930 | Smith, who cites 202.4:5_ 1"How may a man,"said he,"with idle speech idle> empty; weak- headed 2 Be won to spoil the castle of his health?" |
6930 | To>[ As to] mail> chain- mail; chain- armour 6 Is not enough four quarters of a man, 7 Without sword or shield, a host to quail? |
6930 | Was he still residing at Dublin, or had he transferred his home to that southern region which is so intimately associated with his name? |
6930 | Were it not better, I that Lady had, 4 Then that thou hadst repented it too late? |
6930 | What bootes it him from death to be vnbound, 8 To be captiued in endlesse duraunce Of sorrow and despaire without aleggeaunce? |
6930 | What could you more, could you more>[ more could you do, more could you offer] 4 If she were yours, and you as now am I? |
6930 | What frayes ye, that were wo nt to comfort me affrayd? |
6930 | What hard mishap is this, 3 That has you hither brought to taste my ire? |
6930 | What heauens? |
6930 | What if in euery other starre vnseene 8 Of other worldes he happily should heare? |
6930 | What iustice euer other iudgement taught, 4 But he should die, who merites not to liue? |
6930 | What need of armes, where peace doth ay remaine, 8( Said he) and+ battailes none are to be+ fought? |
6930 | What needes of daintie dishes to deuize, 4 Of comely seruices, or courtly trayne? |
6930 | What then must needs be done, needs be done>[ needs doing] 7 Is it not better to do willingly, 8 Than linger till the glass be all outrun? |
6930 | What wit of mortal wight wight> man 9 Can now devise to quit a thrall from such a plight? |
6930 | What wit of mortall wight Can now deuise to quit a thrall from such a plight? |
6930 | What wreaked I of wintrie ages waste? |
6930 | Where be the braue atchieuements doen by some? |
6930 | Where is( said_ Satyrane_) that Paynims sonne, 6 That him of life, and vs of ioy hath reft? |
6930 | Who shall him rew, that swimming in the maine, 8 Will die for thirst, and water doth refuse? |
6930 | Why dame( quoth he) what oddes can euer bee, 4 Where both do fight alike, to win or yield? |
6930 | Why shouldst thou then despeire, that chosen art? |
6930 | Will not long misery late mercy make, 8 But shall their name for euer be defast, And quite from+ of the earth+ their memory be rast? |
6930 | _ 1590, 1596_ 1"O when will Day then turn to me again, 2 And bring with him his long expected light? |
6930 | _ 1596_ 1 And said,"Sith then you know all our grief Sith> Since grief> suffering, pain 2( For what do not you know? |
6930 | _ 1596_ 1 Nor did he spare( so cruel was the elf) elf> mischievous child 2 His own dear mother( ah, why should he so? |
6930 | _ Ps._ 90.6) 9 That flowers so fresh at morn, and fades at evening late? |
6930 | abide> remain 8"Ah, gentle squire,"quoth he,"tell, at one word, gentle> noble; gentle 9 How many found you such to put in your record?" |
6930 | all this for a song? |
6930 | and is there loue 2 In heauenly spirits to these creatures bace, That may compassion of their euils moue? |
6930 | apaid> pleased; repaid 8 Or do you love, or do you lack your will? |
6930 | apply> bring to bear 3 Against the fort of reason evermore 4 To bring the soul into captivity? |
6930 | be these the parts 6 Of glorious knighthood, after bloud to+ thrust+, And not regard dew right and iust desarts? |
6930 | bulwark> rampart, ramparts bids>? proclaims to,? tells( assuming that"naught avail"is intended to be read in quotation marks, i.e. |
6930 | bulwark> rampart, ramparts bids>? proclaims to,? tells( assuming that"naught avail"is intended to be read in quotation marks, i.e. |
6930 | cause> case, suit; cause 7 Or does Your justice sleep, and silent lie? |
6930 | deadly> mortally damnified> brought to destruction; injured 9 Pyrochles, O Pyrochles, what is you betide?" |
6930 | dear> precious; costly; grievous 304.38 O what auailes it of immortall seed 2 To beene ybred and neuer borne to die? |
6930 | did not he all create To die againe? |
6930 | doom> judgement, sentence 3 What justice ever other judgement taught, justice>[ system of justice] 4 But he should die, who merits not to live? |
6930 | equal> impartial 3 Shall He your sins up in His knowledge fold, 4 And guilty be of your impiety? |
6930 | first> original, former 205.18 Thereat Sir_ Guyon_ smilde, And is that all 2( Said he) that thee so sore displeased hath? |
6930 | forewarn>? give warning of( see 304.25- 6; this use is not in_ OED_) sacred>{ Holy by association with a god( i.e. |
6930 | goodly> courteously; well gan> did gest> exploit, deed 110.16 Then_ Vna_ thus; But she your sister deare, 2 The deare_ Charissa_ where is she become? |
6930 | happen>[ chance to] 109.46 Why then doest thou,{ o^} man of sin, desire 2 To draw thy dayes forth to their last degree? |
6930 | haughty> exalted, of exalted courage; proud 9 Is all his force forlorn, and all his glory done?" |
6930 | haughty> lofty, noble 3 Or who shall lend me wings, with which from ground 4 My lowly verse may loftily arise, 5 And lift itself to the highest skies? |
6930 | he>[ Atin] 7"What dismal day has lent this cursed light, 8 To see my lord so deadly damnified? |
6930 | hide>[ hide it] 3 Or where have you your won, that so much gold won> dwelling- place 4 You can preserve from wrong and robbery?" |
6930 | him>[ Furor] 3 But whence should come that harm, which you do seem 4 To threat to him, that minds his chance to aby?" |
6930 | how euer may Thy cursed hand so cruelly haue swayd 8 Against that knight:+ Harrow+ and+ well away,+ After so wicked deed why liu''st thou lenger day? |
6930 | hue> appearance 5 How then? |
6930 | humblesse> humility, humbleness 103.27 And weeping said, Ah my long lacked Lord, 2 Where haue ye bene thus long out of my sight? |
6930 | idle> futile 3 All that I need I have; what needs me needs me> do I need; need do I have 4 To covet more than I have cause to use? |
6930 | infect 6 Tell then, O lady tell, what fatal proof proof> experience, trial 7 Has with so huge misfortune you oppressed? |
6930 | invade> intrude upon, attack 8 What coward hand shall do you next to die, do> cause 9 That are thus foully fled from famous enemy?" |
6930 | is she become>[ has she gone, is she] 3 Or wants she health, or busy is elsewhere?" |
6930 | languor> sorrow 8"Why, dame,"quoth he,"what has you thus dismayed? |
6930 | meed> reward 4 Are not all knights by oath bound to withstand 5 Oppressors''power by arms and puissant hand? |
6930 | merry> pleasant sign> emblem 110.62 Vnworthy wretch( quoth he) of so great grace, 2 How dare I thinke such glory to attaine? |
6930 | my loves queene and goddesse of my life, Who shall me pittie when thou doest me wrong? |
6930 | needs you> need do you have eke> augment 3 Is not enough that I alone do die, not>[ it not] 4 But it must doubled be with death of twain? |
6930 | of all loue taketh equall vew: 6 And doth not highest God vouchsafe to take The loue and seruice of the basest crew? |
6930 | one> joint, simultaneous 302.40 Daughter( said she) what need ye be dismayd, 2 Or why make ye such Monster of your mind? |
6930 | out of hand> straight away 305.5 What mister wight( said he) and how arayd? |
6930 | out seek>[ seek out] 3 How shall she know, how shall she find the man? |
6930 | pain> troubles, difficulty 303.56 Ah read,( quoth_ Britomart_) how is she hight? |
6930 | paynim> pagan, heathen foiled> repulsed; defeated; trampled underfoot 208.1 ANd is there care in heauen? |
6930 | paynim> pagan, heathen knife> sword 106.39 Ah dearest Lord( quoth she) how might that bee, 2 And he the stoutest knight, that euer wonne? |
6930 | perforce> by force 7 Ah who can love the worker of her smart? |
6930 | power>[ the power] 207.20 What secret place( quoth he) can safely hold 2 So huge a masse, and hide from heauens eye? |
6930 | price> pay for 109.38 What franticke fit( quoth he) hath thus distraught 2 Thee, foolish man, so rash a doome to giue? |
6930 | price> pay for that>[ that which] 5 But what are you, that tell of nephews killed?" |
6930 | purpose> discourse, conversation; questions 112.14 What needs me tell their feast and goodly guize, 2 In which was nothing riotous nor vaine? |
6930 | quoth she,"how might that be, 2 And he the stoutest knight, that ever won?" |
6930 | relating to the Greeks and Romans) become> gone 2 That whilom wo nt in women to appear? |
6930 | reproach> shame 4 What can I less do, than her love therefore, 5 Sith I her due reward can not restore? |
6930 | reproachful> disgraceful 8 Is this the battle which you vaunt to fight vaunt> boast 9 With that fire- mouthed dragon, horrible and bright? |
6930 | ruth> sorrow, calamity; occasion for regret 9 But can you read, sir, how I may her find, or where?" |
6930 | smarts> sharp pains 5 Is this the joy of arms? |
6930 | spill> mar 7 Lives any, that you has thus ill apaid? |
6930 | stay> await, remain for 204.41 How hight he then( said_ Guyon_) and from whence? |
6930 | to late age>[ to those living in recent times] 6 Who ever heard of the Indian Peru? |
6930 | unwreaked> unavenged 6 Or have You, Lord, of good men''s cause no heed? |
6930 | vain> futile; foolish 6 What boots it all to have, and nothing use? |
6930 | vain> vain; foolish 3 What needs of dainty dishes to devise, dainty> choice, delicious devise> talk, recount 4 Of comely services, or courtly train? |
6930 | vantage> advantage aread> divined; declared 303.21 And sayd, Sith then thou knowest all our griefe, 2( For what doest not thou know?) |
6930 | various editors_ 1"And am I now in safety sure,"quoth he, 2"From him that would have forced me to die? |
6930 | weened> supposed 6 Ah God, what horror and tormenting grief 7 My heart, my hands, my eyes, and all assayed? |
6930 | what altars? |
6930 | what altars? |
6930 | what couldst thou more, 4 If she were thine, and thou as now am I? |
6930 | what enraged heates 4 Here heaped vp with termes of loue vnkind, My conscience cleare with guilty bands would bind? |
6930 | what hard mishap is this, That hath thee hither brought to taste mine yre? |
6930 | what then must needs be donne, Is it not better to doe willinglie, 8 Then linger, till the glasse be all out ronne? |
6930 | whilom wo nt> used of old 3 Where be the brave achievements done by some? |
6930 | whose sound>(? The sound of the river; or:? the sound of hoofs passing over the bridge. |
6930 | whose sound>(? The sound of the river; or:? the sound of hoofs passing over the bridge. |
6930 | why hath he me abhord? |
6930 | wights> people 102.43 But how long time, said then the Elfin knight, 2 Are you in this misformed house to dwell? |
6930 | with equal crime>? with equal sin("equal"can also have the meaning"impartial"; and"crime"can mean"accusation". |
34598 | ''And cousin Felix?'' 34598 ''And do you often come here?'' |
34598 | ''And where is at home?'' 34598 ''Has mademoiselle got up yet?'' |
34598 | ''Have you never noticed a lady in black who sits very near the imperial box? 34598 ''How do you like our ladies?'' |
34598 | ''How?'' 34598 ''I hope,_ ma reine_, you will help me bear my misfortune?'' |
34598 | ''Very good; but what am I to do?'' 34598 ''Well,''said I,''that''s a nice predicament; what''s to be done next?'' |
34598 | ''What does that mean?'' 34598 ''What name was that?'' |
34598 | ''What right?'' 34598 ''Where?'' |
34598 | ''Why?'' 34598 ''With pleasure; but how?'' |
34598 | ''_ Et vous m''aimez vraiment, Elà © onore?_''said a soft but manly voice. 34598 A bottle of claret?" |
34598 | A game at piquet? |
34598 | A lady? |
34598 | A most pleasant gentleman-- would you like to have supper now, sir? 34598 Am I dreaming? |
34598 | Am I not your mother? |
34598 | Am I really at this moment a_ persona grata_ to you, Timm? |
34598 | And Franz is perfectly satisfied with his position here? |
34598 | And Helen? |
34598 | And are you doing what you do for the father''s sake, or for your own? |
34598 | And are you going to stay there? |
34598 | And if I do not insist? |
34598 | And if I had seen him in Fichtenau? |
34598 | And if I had seen him since quite frequently? |
34598 | And if I succumb? |
34598 | And may I beg you will inform us of your own? |
34598 | And on whom else can it depend? |
34598 | And that is-- what, Timm? |
34598 | And the great mystery? |
34598 | And the mystery itself-- the Great Mystery? |
34598 | And the third-- the last stage? |
34598 | And what are we to live on in Paris? |
34598 | And what do you ask on your side? |
34598 | And what has become of Christian? |
34598 | And what has become of the dress- coat? |
34598 | And what is that? |
34598 | And what says Miss Helen? |
34598 | And what will papa say? 34598 And when you spoke of brown hair and brown eyes, did you think of this lady?" |
34598 | And which is that? |
34598 | And which is the second stage? 34598 And why all this? |
34598 | And why do you think I know anything about her? |
34598 | And why does he not send us the originals? |
34598 | And you believe it? |
34598 | And you refused all that splendor to remain faithful to your old flag? |
34598 | And you think the gypsy will come back again? |
34598 | And you think the world says nothing about you? |
34598 | And you visited at Letbus House? |
34598 | And you were in St. Petersburg twenty- four years ago? |
34598 | And you will wait in patience till-- you can see the bottom of my heart? |
34598 | And you-- Helen? |
34598 | And your-- and the prince? |
34598 | And-- the third? |
34598 | Another game, Barnewitz? |
34598 | Are not the Waldenbergs of Slavonic descent? |
34598 | Are these men mad? |
34598 | Are they not the children of men? |
34598 | Are you going to destroy your greatest happiness? 34598 Are you in earnest?" |
34598 | Are you in love with the girl? |
34598 | Are you piping in that way? |
34598 | Are you quite so sure of that? |
34598 | Are you quite sure? |
34598 | Are you ready? |
34598 | Are you still angry, Emily? |
34598 | Are you the devil? |
34598 | As far as I know, no one? 34598 As heretofore, Albert mine?" |
34598 | As you know_ me_? |
34598 | But are you quite alone? |
34598 | But do you really think that all who are not nobles are unfit for this profession? |
34598 | But do you think this people will ever dare venture upon a revolution? |
34598 | But how about the dress- coat, Bemperlein? |
34598 | But how can I escape? 34598 But how can you ask me that, Miss Sophie?" |
34598 | But how did you come to make such a funny experiment? |
34598 | But how do you know he is to be here? |
34598 | But how does the unlucky husband bear his misfortune? |
34598 | But suppose you talked in your dreams? 34598 But what has become of Marie, or whatever the stupid thing''s name was?" |
34598 | But what is it then? |
34598 | But where? |
34598 | But who has dunned you? |
34598 | But who is it? |
34598 | But who is_ she_? |
34598 | But whom do you mean, Bemperly? |
34598 | But why do I ask? 34598 But why do you mind the others? |
34598 | But why does she run away so often, then? |
34598 | But why on earth have n''t you seen him? |
34598 | But wo nt they hand us over to the police? |
34598 | But would not that be fearful? |
34598 | But, Bemperly, how do you reconcile it with such a lofty Platonic love to lie on your knees like a Don Carlos? 34598 But, Bemperly,"she cried,"how will you find that out?" |
34598 | But, Timm, are you going to run into your ruin with your eyes open? 34598 But, Timm, do you think I am a child?" |
34598 | But, dear Emily, might you not have escaped that? |
34598 | But, my dear Mrs. Clemens,squeaked Doctor Kubel,"do you really think those parts are quite suitable for our new friends at their first debut?" |
34598 | But,he said,"what, after all, is the whole story to you?" |
34598 | Can you ask me? |
34598 | Can you ask me? |
34598 | Can you ask that, Emily? |
34598 | Can you believe it, Melitta, that I could now almost wish you would show less readiness to restore to me my child, and the woman to whom I owe her? |
34598 | Can you doubt it? |
34598 | Certainly; but what do you mean? |
34598 | Czika, is it really you? |
34598 | Did I ever love? |
34598 | Did I not tell you I might annoy you, Oswald? 34598 Did I not tell you that Marguerite is no longer with the Grenwitz people?" |
34598 | Did I not tell you? |
34598 | Did anybody see you when you left? |
34598 | Did he not take them again? |
34598 | Did not Hortense and Clotilde scratch each other''s eyes out? |
34598 | Did you give her a note? |
34598 | Did you hear me? |
34598 | Did you not say she had taken the business quite lately? |
34598 | Did you notice the count this morning, Nadeska? |
34598 | Did you observe anything particular? |
34598 | Did you really think so? |
34598 | Do I interrupt you? |
34598 | Do I know it? 34598 Do n''t you know anything?" |
34598 | Do you believe it, Melitta? 34598 Do you come at last,_ ma mignonne_? |
34598 | Do you come by appointment? |
34598 | Do you feel strong enough? 34598 Do you imagine my mother will accept such a gift? |
34598 | Do you know him? |
34598 | Do you know his majesty so intimately? |
34598 | Do you know that I escaped but by a hair''s breadth staining my sword with the blood of him who is my father? 34598 Do you know what you once told me in Grunwald? |
34598 | Do you know where we live? |
34598 | Do you know whom I have just seen? |
34598 | Do you know,she asked,"who Czika''s father is?" |
34598 | Do you not know me, Isabel? |
34598 | Do you really wish to know? |
34598 | Do you recognize me also? |
34598 | Do you recognize me? |
34598 | Do you recollect the party at my house last summer? 34598 Do you see him anywhere?" |
34598 | Do you think I am a child, Grenwitz? 34598 Do you think so eloquent a speaker at the great meeting at the Booths can long remain unknown to us?" |
34598 | Do you think so, Nadeska? |
34598 | Do you too think so, baron? |
34598 | Do you want the first four hundred at once? |
34598 | Doctor Birkenhain''s asylum, sir? 34598 Does she also know more than she ought to know?" |
34598 | Exhausted? |
34598 | For God''s sake, my dear sir,cried the frightened professor,"are you going to ruin me? |
34598 | For Heaven''s sake, Oswald, what are you going to do? |
34598 | For instance? |
34598 | For instance? |
34598 | For whom do you tremble; for me? 34598 Good evening, most honored friends and betrothed,"said he, as he entered the room;"do I disturb your devotions?" |
34598 | Had we better go over it once more? |
34598 | Had you not better go to his house and see, Franz? |
34598 | Hamet? 34598 Has Berger been made aware of my arrival?" |
34598 | Has he been here? 34598 Has nobody been here?" |
34598 | Has not Bemperlein come? |
34598 | Has she brown eyes, Bemperlein? |
34598 | Has your grace any other orders? |
34598 | Have you any news about them? |
34598 | Have you confessed your love to her? |
34598 | Have you had bad news? |
34598 | Have you heard from him lately? |
34598 | Have you heard from your cousin? |
34598 | Have you lately noticed anything peculiar in Berger? |
34598 | Have you the courage to walk a little further with me into the park? |
34598 | Here? |
34598 | His what? |
34598 | How I got hold of it? 34598 How I got hold of it?" |
34598 | How are you, Oswald? |
34598 | How can I know? 34598 How can that be,"inquired again the man from Fichtenau;"do n''t they melt in summer?" |
34598 | How can we find out if we really love? |
34598 | How can you ask? 34598 How can you ask? |
34598 | How can you talk so? 34598 How did she get there?" |
34598 | How did the count look? |
34598 | How did you get here? |
34598 | How do things look at home? |
34598 | How do you know it? 34598 How do you know that?" |
34598 | How do you know, then, that she loves you too? |
34598 | How do you like the beer, Cotterby? |
34598 | How is it, Melitta? |
34598 | How is she? |
34598 | How is that? |
34598 | How is your father to- day? |
34598 | How must it look now in the Grenwitz park? |
34598 | How old? |
34598 | How shall I live then? 34598 How so, old fellow? |
34598 | How so? |
34598 | How so? |
34598 | How so? |
34598 | How so? |
34598 | How so? |
34598 | How so? |
34598 | How? |
34598 | Hundreds? |
34598 | I can not tell you,said Melitta;"do you know, Oldenburg?" |
34598 | I do not interrupt, I hope? |
34598 | I have done nothing to deserve so great a favor; but then, on the other hand, would grace be grace if it could be deserved? |
34598 | I hope it was not the coat in which you were confirmed? |
34598 | I hope nothing has happened? |
34598 | I see you looking at me expectantly, with your soft, blue eyes; I see your lips trembling with the question: What is the matter, dearest? 34598 I should like nothing better; but the question is: Can I do it? |
34598 | I should stay here, and without you? |
34598 | I thought the question was in the singularis of_ hospes_? |
34598 | I thought there was but one way? |
34598 | I wonder if he is still alive? |
34598 | I-- and angry? |
34598 | If Czika is willing to go with you, why not? |
34598 | If I know it? 34598 If they do not mean to throw up fortifications here, where will they do it?" |
34598 | If you can tell the truth, man,he said, with weird- sounding voice,"answer me; have you told the truth?" |
34598 | If you think that waiting is the best I can do in this case, why do you advise me then to do just the opposite? |
34598 | In Southtown, I think? |
34598 | In summer,said Mr. Schmenckel, by no means taken aback;"in summer? |
34598 | In the first place,said Sophie,"as regards the exterior-- for you do attach some importance to appearances, Bemperlein, do you not?" |
34598 | In this case, for instance? |
34598 | In which part will you, madame, give us an example? |
34598 | Is Czika with her? |
34598 | Is Mrs. Braun at home? |
34598 | Is everything ready? |
34598 | Is he dead? |
34598 | Is he not a dark- haired man, as long as his name, with a face like a melancholy bulldog? |
34598 | Is it always open? 34598 Is it not so with me too?" |
34598 | Is it thus with us? |
34598 | Is n''t it? 34598 Is that an answer?" |
34598 | Is that low person not my father? |
34598 | Is that so very uncommon? |
34598 | Is that so? |
34598 | Is that you? |
34598 | Is the Baroness Cloten here? 34598 Is the author of the''Cornflowers''a murderer-- a wretched assassin?" |
34598 | Is the gentleman still there? |
34598 | Is there any mail leaving to- night? |
34598 | Little Louisa be d----d."Or have they sent you a little note, which you had conveniently forgotten? |
34598 | Look here, Albert mine,said Toby;"how are you standing with the baroness? |
34598 | May I beg to know, Mr. Timm, why you honor me with this communication? |
34598 | May I see her? |
34598 | May I, really? |
34598 | Melitta,said Oldenburg, offering her both hands,"can you forgive me?" |
34598 | Mr. Drostein? 34598 My carriage; do you hear?" |
34598 | My star? |
34598 | Nice girl, your excellency, is n''t she? 34598 No man will ever know----""_ Will_ know? |
34598 | No; why? |
34598 | None in the house? 34598 Nothing else?" |
34598 | Oh certainly, certainly? |
34598 | Oh no? |
34598 | Oh, is that all? 34598 Oh,"said Miss Sophie, unconsciously dropping her gay tone;"why so?" |
34598 | Once more, Emily: what do you want me to do if they overtake us? |
34598 | Only in memory of him? 34598 Our guests, dear_ collega_?" |
34598 | Owe so much? 34598 Raimund, Raimund, what are you going to do?" |
34598 | Shall I see you again? |
34598 | She is at Miss Bear''s house, is she not? |
34598 | She worthy of me? |
34598 | Straight ahead? |
34598 | Tell me, Timm, have you-- have you seen her since she has come to Grunwald? |
34598 | Thanks, Cotterby,said Mr. Schmenckel,"modesty adorns a man, but why should I conceal it that it was on your account I was making that journey? |
34598 | That is more than I want, if you know the track to Barow? |
34598 | The love of the neighbor? |
34598 | The old dragon,grumbled Felix, sinking back exhausted;"what can have gotten into her head to make her all of a sudden so liberal? |
34598 | Then I shall see you again? |
34598 | Then Mrs. Jager has not told you yet? |
34598 | Then give me the Czika? |
34598 | Then tell me, how is little Marguerite? |
34598 | Then tell me; how did you get the money? |
34598 | Then you are still keeping up your relations with the family? |
34598 | Then you do not feel happy here, Helen? |
34598 | Then you loved him too? 34598 Then you really think of making this ridiculous affair public?" |
34598 | Then, have you seen her to- day? |
34598 | To stay? |
34598 | To us? 34598 To- night?" |
34598 | Upon whom? |
34598 | Very fine,said Berger;"do you know any more?" |
34598 | Very well-- and the other? |
34598 | Was it not your will? |
34598 | Well then, troubled? |
34598 | Well, and how did the matter end? |
34598 | Well, and what was the great trifle? |
34598 | Well, and which reading do you prefer? |
34598 | Well, and who won the wager? |
34598 | Well, and why not? |
34598 | Well, darlings, do you come with full purses? 34598 Well, did n''t I tell you?" |
34598 | Well, does it not look like mockery that he is coming? 34598 Well, gentlemen, is n''t that a fine song?" |
34598 | Well, how did matters go? |
34598 | Well, how do you like it? |
34598 | Well, little Schmenckel, how do? |
34598 | Well, tell me then frankly, what do you ask? |
34598 | Well, what do you say, Alexandrina? |
34598 | Well, what is it? |
34598 | Well,he said, in order to gain time for consideration,"why would your excellency like to know?" |
34598 | Well? |
34598 | Well? |
34598 | Well? |
34598 | Well? |
34598 | What are those pyramids? |
34598 | What can he want? |
34598 | What can you do? 34598 What could I do with my freedom if I were to lose you?" |
34598 | What did you say? |
34598 | What do they say about me? |
34598 | What do you know? |
34598 | What do you mean by your riddle? |
34598 | What do you mean, father? |
34598 | What do you mean? |
34598 | What do you say, Bemperly? |
34598 | What do you say? |
34598 | What do you think of our new colleague, Winimer? |
34598 | What do you think, gentlemen,he said;"are we going to be left alone long?" |
34598 | What do you want of me? |
34598 | What do you want? |
34598 | What do you want? |
34598 | What does she say? 34598 What does that matter?" |
34598 | What does that mean? |
34598 | What does your excellency desire? |
34598 | What does your grace desire? |
34598 | What good does it do,he said,"to lift the veil which so many years have spread over the past? |
34598 | What have I done? 34598 What interest have you in her?" |
34598 | What is it, Helen? |
34598 | What is it, Nadeska? |
34598 | What is it, my dear sir? |
34598 | What is it? 34598 What is it? |
34598 | What is it? |
34598 | What is it? |
34598 | What is it? |
34598 | What is it? |
34598 | What is on the paper, Marguerite? |
34598 | What is she going to do? |
34598 | What is that? |
34598 | What is that? |
34598 | What is the matter with the paper? |
34598 | What is the matter, father? |
34598 | What is the matter, girl? |
34598 | What is the matter, young gentleman? |
34598 | What is the matter? |
34598 | What is the matter? |
34598 | What is the matter? |
34598 | What is this in me which rouses me at this very moment, when I least expected it, to oppose your wisdom? |
34598 | What is this? |
34598 | What ought you to do? |
34598 | What papers are those on the escritoire? |
34598 | What shall we do? |
34598 | What was on the paper? |
34598 | What was the matter? |
34598 | What way shall we go? |
34598 | What were you going to do in Egypt? |
34598 | What will he do? |
34598 | What will you bet, sir? |
34598 | What would you do there? |
34598 | What''s the matter? 34598 What''s the matter?" |
34598 | What? |
34598 | When did you have that interview with the baroness? |
34598 | When did you see him? |
34598 | When is that reported to have taken place? |
34598 | When? |
34598 | Where are you going to now? |
34598 | Where are you staying? |
34598 | Where did you meet Oswald Stein the last time since you saw him in Fichtenau? |
34598 | Where is mother? |
34598 | Where is the princess? |
34598 | Where is the professor? |
34598 | Where is your donkey, Czika? |
34598 | Who else? 34598 Who is Hamet, Czika?" |
34598 | Who is it? |
34598 | Who is the lady? |
34598 | Who is the unfortunate man? |
34598 | Who is the young man? |
34598 | Who says so? |
34598 | Who says so? |
34598 | Who says so? |
34598 | Who tells you that I saw him at all in Fichtenau? 34598 Who was it?" |
34598 | Who was that strange person? |
34598 | Who, your grace? |
34598 | Who? |
34598 | Who? |
34598 | Whom do you expect, my dear sir? |
34598 | Whom? |
34598 | Whose foot did not yet cross this threshold? |
34598 | Why can you not do it? |
34598 | Why did n''t you do it? |
34598 | Why did you give your promise then? |
34598 | Why did you not call, as you promised the other day? |
34598 | Why did you not come to me directly? |
34598 | Why did you take the count into your confidence? 34598 Why do you say_ was_?" |
34598 | Why exactly in my case? |
34598 | Why never? 34598 Why not, dear doctor?" |
34598 | Why not? 34598 Why not? |
34598 | Why not? 34598 Why not?" |
34598 | Why not? |
34598 | Why not? |
34598 | Why not? |
34598 | Why not? |
34598 | Why should I not? 34598 Why the same person?" |
34598 | Why will you not leave us as we are? |
34598 | Why, Doctor,said Sophie, gayly,"are you such a foe to friendly chats that your presence must need make an end to them? |
34598 | Why, does the baron nowadays take an interest in farming? 34598 Why, you are prodigiously gracious to- day,_ ma tante_?" |
34598 | Why? 34598 Why? |
34598 | Why? |
34598 | Why? |
34598 | Will he be able to read the Captain? |
34598 | Will nobody help me? |
34598 | Will those butterflies ever meet again in life? |
34598 | Will you do me a favor, Bemperlein? |
34598 | Will you give me your boy? |
34598 | Will you permit me to do so? |
34598 | Will you please, sir, step into the garden- room? |
34598 | Will you sit down? |
34598 | Will you take my arm now? |
34598 | Will you then tell me where the money comes from? |
34598 | Will,he continued,"you hesitate, and fear, and negotiate, while your brethren are murdered in the next street? |
34598 | With whom have I the honor? |
34598 | With whom have I the honor? |
34598 | Without telling me how the----? |
34598 | Wo n''t do; and besides, what security can you give me that all the payments will be made? |
34598 | Wo nt you take a ride with me, Baumann? |
34598 | Yes; do n''t you know it? 34598 You are jesting,"said the poetess, tapping him gently on the arm with the book which she was holding in her hand;"why should I have any privilege?" |
34598 | You are not an artist? |
34598 | You are surely coming, Helen? |
34598 | You are the leader of these men? |
34598 | You are the man who wrote to Count Malikowsky day before yesterday? |
34598 | You can do that; but do n''t you see that that is utterly impossible in my case? 34598 You can not be in earnest?" |
34598 | You here? 34598 You know exactly what you have to say?" |
34598 | You mean to betray me a little, do you? 34598 You mean to say, that I am worthy of her?" |
34598 | You recollect that I commenced last summer at Grenwitz a foolish sort of a thing with a little black- eyed witch of a French girl? |
34598 | You surely do not imagine we would refuse to acknowledge legitimate claims against us? |
34598 | You think I am not going to do that? 34598 You will not leave, I am sure?" |
34598 | You? |
34598 | You? |
34598 | Your Marguerite? 34598 Your name is Schmenckel?" |
34598 | Your name? |
34598 | Your old admirer? |
34598 | _ Bon jour, ma tante!_ must I say, so early or so late? 34598 _ Comment?_"exclaimed the count, with an astonishment which was not affected in this case. |
34598 | ''Ah, I have caught you, rascal?'' |
34598 | ''And where is his daughter?'' |
34598 | ''And who can that be?'' |
34598 | ''But,_ mon cher_,''he said again and again,''do n''t you see that you still love her?'' |
34598 | ''How did he get hold of her?'' |
34598 | ''How do you like the little Malikowsky?'' |
34598 | ''How so, highness?'' |
34598 | ''How so?'' |
34598 | ''What will you bet, Christian?'' |
34598 | ''Where?'' |
34598 | ''Who is she?'' |
34598 | ''Who is she?'' |
34598 | ''Why not?'' |
34598 | ''Would you not have given up the sovereignty?'' |
34598 | A bullet? |
34598 | A deep blush overspread her face, her eyes flamed up-- was it love or was it hatred, who knows? |
34598 | A sleigh coming behind us? |
34598 | A window was opened up- stairs; an old woman looked out and asked what I wanted? |
34598 | A young man stepped out and asked the porter if a gentleman and a lady who had arrived from Paris perhaps a quarter of an hour ago were at home? |
34598 | After thinking the matter over for some time, therefore, he exploded:"How is your wife, Cloten?" |
34598 | Albert mine, eh?" |
34598 | All of a sudden she asked, her eyes still cast down,"Would you, if you had been insulted, be the first to offer the hand for reconciliation?" |
34598 | Almost despairing, he asked, therefore,"But, Miss Sophie, how do you distinguish sympathy from love? |
34598 | Am I Oldenburg? |
34598 | Am I not Baroness Cloten? |
34598 | Am I right?" |
34598 | Am I right?" |
34598 | Am I right?" |
34598 | Am I right?" |
34598 | And did I not hear how serpents''tongues hissed around you? |
34598 | And did you not tell me you loved Helen?" |
34598 | And do you think it is different in higher and the very highest families?" |
34598 | And how can I make atonement? |
34598 | And how can one hate one''s own self?" |
34598 | And if I am not mistaken, Bemperlein, you mentioned only last night that my father- in- law had expressed himself in the same manner?" |
34598 | And if I should not wish it to be so any longer-- what then?" |
34598 | And if she says No?" |
34598 | And is such annihilation possible as long as we continually cling to life and to all that makes life dear to us? |
34598 | And now, one thing more: how long do you propose staying in Fichtenau?" |
34598 | And now,"concluded Bemperlein, taking both of Sophie''s hands in his own,"what do you say, now you know all?" |
34598 | And suppose the fellow is not your son, then----""But why should n''t he be my son?" |
34598 | And was she not the child''s mother? |
34598 | And was she the only one who labored under this illusion, and whom he had allowed to remain blind from fear of an explanation? |
34598 | And was the girl not as fondly attached to her as a daughter could be to a mother? |
34598 | And what do you want with so much money at once? |
34598 | And what had he gained in return for so much lost happiness? |
34598 | And what is the great wonder, after all? |
34598 | And what would Helen say? |
34598 | And who has ever faithfully stood by me in the strife of life, when no one else troubled himself about me? |
34598 | And who was this bird Ph[oe]nix?" |
34598 | And why am I that? |
34598 | And why die? |
34598 | And why? |
34598 | And yet could she let the two go out again into the wide world? |
34598 | And yet, if I thus live through him only, do I therefore really belong to him? |
34598 | And yet, what right had she to a love which she had refused a hundred times, and which she had so grievously insulted by her love for another man? |
34598 | And, if there must be a reckoning between us, have you not to forgive and forget far more in me than I in you? |
34598 | And_ have_ you given her a kiss?" |
34598 | Anything else, sir?" |
34598 | Anything else? |
34598 | Are my rank, my honor, my fortune to depend on the whim of a chambermaid, the discretion of a heartless rouà ©, and the silence of a rope- dancer? |
34598 | Are there no other men in the world but Oswald and the prince? |
34598 | Are these last verses true? |
34598 | Are these my hands? |
34598 | Are they not-- myself? |
34598 | Are you Melitta? |
34598 | Are you content?" |
34598 | Are you going to honor us with your presence for any length of time, sir? |
34598 | Are you going to kill your mother?" |
34598 | Are you going to order supper, sir? |
34598 | Are you not now to me what you have always been? |
34598 | Are you ready?" |
34598 | As soon as he saw me he paused and said:"What do you think of a theory, doctor, which has never been tried practically?" |
34598 | As they passed each other the driver checked the horses a moment, and a voice asked:"This is the track, is n''t it?" |
34598 | At last the gentleman said:"''And when shall I see you again?'' |
34598 | At last, when the young man wound up with the painful complaint"Why did you send me into this troublesome world? |
34598 | At what price? |
34598 | Because Felix may inherit the entail?" |
34598 | But a cup of strong beef tea with an egg stirred in? |
34598 | But are you quite sure that that is so? |
34598 | But had she not prepared her isolation herself? |
34598 | But how can I return into your society, after leaving in the manner in which I did? |
34598 | But how, if you can not have all at once; if you must sacrifice the one or the other!--how then? |
34598 | But now tell me why said lady must necessarily have brown hair and brown eyes?" |
34598 | But tell me, has no one heard anything yet of the reckless couple?" |
34598 | But tell me, is it not a wonderful country, this Thuringia? |
34598 | But the living? |
34598 | But the other? |
34598 | But was not Sophie in town? |
34598 | But was not the ground giving way under her feet? |
34598 | But what am I saying? |
34598 | But what does that amount to? |
34598 | But what is that?" |
34598 | But what will bring death really-- a death from which the soul can never awake again?" |
34598 | But who can ever judge rightly of problematic characters? |
34598 | But you were surely not going to give me the complete history of your life? |
34598 | But you will certainly stay over night, sir? |
34598 | But, because he is not worthy of you, must you therefore marry a man for whom your heart feels nothing, however estimable he may otherwise be? |
34598 | But, gentlemen, what is that?" |
34598 | But,_ mon Dieu_, what is the matter? |
34598 | Can I do anything for you? |
34598 | Can a vampire die of his own venomous glance? |
34598 | Can so restless a mind ever restrict itself to the narrow limits of a family circle? |
34598 | Can you guess who they are?" |
34598 | Can you guess who they were?" |
34598 | Caspar Schmenckel could hold his head high again and----"Why on earth, old man, are you coming only now?" |
34598 | Christian anchorites, Flagellants, pillar- saints, and ascetics of every kind? |
34598 | Cotterby?" |
34598 | Could Felix Grenwitz fail where Albert Timm had succeeded? |
34598 | Could I close my ear to the siren- song that never sounded nearer or dearer to me? |
34598 | Could it be Doctor Braun, who was going away? |
34598 | Could she have come for his sake? |
34598 | Could she have found out the purpose of his journey? |
34598 | Could the step, the fatal step, be retraced? |
34598 | Could you not arrange it so, my dear Mrs. Jager, that I should meet him at your house as if by mere chance? |
34598 | Despise the world!--why not? |
34598 | Did I not see with what intense hatred basilisk eyes glared at you? |
34598 | Did I not tell you the baron had engaged her to play his great- aunt?" |
34598 | Did I not tell you we should be man and wife four weeks hence? |
34598 | Did I not tell you,''In our heart are the stars of our fate?'' |
34598 | Did Oswald know his own history? |
34598 | Did he dream of it, when it drove him from the ruins of Karnak to his home in the far North? |
34598 | Did not his friends think the same? |
34598 | Did not misfortune follow his footsteps? |
34598 | Did she not feel hearty friendship, deep, sincere regard for him? |
34598 | Did she not owe all the successes she had ever had in life to herself alone, and so also this last one? |
34598 | Did the old one give in promptly?" |
34598 | Did they contain that great mystery which was yet hidden from him by a thick veil? |
34598 | Do n''t forget that; do you hear?" |
34598 | Do n''t you think so?" |
34598 | Do n''t you think, mamma, I can go out quite alone with Czika?" |
34598 | Do n''t you want to marry Miss Helen? |
34598 | Do not you think so too, Franz?" |
34598 | Do you call the man so to whom you owe so much?" |
34598 | Do you know that he loved you unto death-- that he loved you more than his own life?" |
34598 | Do you know the hand- writing, Baron Cloten?" |
34598 | Do you know this?" |
34598 | Do you love me? |
34598 | Do you love that man? |
34598 | Do you recollect what I told yon already at Grenwitz? |
34598 | Do you want to know who the bow is? |
34598 | Do you wish me to leave you alone?" |
34598 | Do you?" |
34598 | Doctor Braun? |
34598 | Doctor O. Stein? |
34598 | Does not one hand wash the other? |
34598 | Does the other interview with the great unknown stand in any connection with your story?" |
34598 | Does your excellency know the song of the midges?" |
34598 | Eh, Fox?" |
34598 | Eh? |
34598 | Emily tore herself from her brother''s arms, and cried, stretching out her hands as if to keep him away from her,"Where do you come from? |
34598 | Emily!--what had Emily that the others did not have, except that she happened to be the last? |
34598 | Emily? |
34598 | Fond of pretty women, count?--such a pretty child, with brown eyes, dark hair, and a slight, graceful person, like Czika? |
34598 | For having committed treason against her own child; for was not the love for a man who filled her whole heart treason against her child? |
34598 | For his country''s sake? |
34598 | For the dead? |
34598 | For was not the winged genius one of the heavenly choirs? |
34598 | For whom? |
34598 | Frau von Berkow is ill, is she?" |
34598 | Given? |
34598 | Had I not come here as a physician? |
34598 | Had I not sworn never again to admit softer feelings to my heart? |
34598 | Had he heard right? |
34598 | Had he not seen how the sweet hope of at last calling Melitta his own had been recently put off once more, and further than ever? |
34598 | Had she come to tell him that she had forgiven him?--that she was still his Melitta? |
34598 | Had she not been forced to think and care for them all; to compel them almost to accept their good fortune? |
34598 | Had she not been unspeakably happy with him? |
34598 | Had she not loved him very, very much? |
34598 | Had she not repelled good people, who had come to her with open hearts, by her cool politeness? |
34598 | Had she not watched over her in health, and nursed her in sickness? |
34598 | Had she spoken the truth? |
34598 | Had we not better send for a carriage?" |
34598 | Handsome, he is not; witty, he is not; good, he is probably also not exactly; but what does it matter? |
34598 | Has a brutal blow of fate suddenly reduced you in the discussion to an_ absurdum_? |
34598 | Has he not nobler ends to live for than to make a woman happy? |
34598 | Has it come to that already? |
34598 | Has little Louisa caught you?" |
34598 | Has the count consented to be present when the ladies come?" |
34598 | Has your excellency ever been in St. Petersburg? |
34598 | Have I not found in Braun a friend of whom I have every reason to be proud? |
34598 | Have I not spent the happiest days of all my joyless life there? |
34598 | Have you a note to take up?" |
34598 | Have you all at once changed your views? |
34598 | Have you forgotten the days at Berkow five years ago? |
34598 | Have you formed any friendship, during the time you spent at Miss Bear''s school, which has lasted beyond those years?" |
34598 | Have you got it all well in your head now?" |
34598 | Have you got it, eh? |
34598 | Have you heard both parties? |
34598 | Have you not paid the penalty of your wrong-- if wrong it was to follow the impulse of a free heart-- with a thousand tears? |
34598 | Have you seen her to- day?" |
34598 | He asked if you were alone? |
34598 | He pressed Oswald''s hand, who said, smiling:"Found your oldest enemy? |
34598 | He was henceforth to be master at Grenwitz? |
34598 | Her arm rested more firmly on his arm, when she replied, after a pause,"Is the medallion very dear to you?" |
34598 | Her first question was, therefore,"Do you really know Mademoiselle Marguerite, Bemperlein? |
34598 | Here is a letter for you; one of your servants brought it; I suppose it is from your father?" |
34598 | High rank? |
34598 | Hortense, who knew Emily''s weak point, carried her malice so far as to turn round to her continually with a"_ qu''en dites-- vous, chère amie? |
34598 | How I got out? |
34598 | How can a prudent youth like yourself ever laugh aloud? |
34598 | How could I do it? |
34598 | How could a young man, in whom the current of full youthful life had been so long artificially dammed up, avoid going astray? |
34598 | How could that be if Stein were a bad man?" |
34598 | How did it go? |
34598 | How did she get here? |
34598 | How did you fall out?" |
34598 | How did you get hold of that?" |
34598 | How do you do, counsellor?" |
34598 | How do you like my story, professor?" |
34598 | How do you like the She Bear? |
34598 | How far is it? |
34598 | How far will it send the arrow? |
34598 | How long will it be before these buds and blossoms will change into glorious flowers, and ripen to luscious fruit? |
34598 | How the scene had changed since then? |
34598 | How was he when you knew him?" |
34598 | How was he yesterday?" |
34598 | How, noble Don, are you ashamed to confess the lady of your overflowing heart? |
34598 | Husbands, wife, can afford a joke, eh?" |
34598 | I ask you, upon your conscience, do you know a lady with brown hair and brown eyes?" |
34598 | I do not underrate that, I am sure; but many a father has done that cheerfully for his son, why should not for once a son do that for his father? |
34598 | I have burnt my fingers to draw the chestnuts out of the fire for you, eh? |
34598 | I have the honor to address Count Grieben?" |
34598 | I hope it is really an accident only which procures me at this moment the pleasure of your company?'' |
34598 | I hope you are well; and I hope the same of your still warmly attached T. G.""You know the hand- writing?" |
34598 | I hope, Albert mine, my boy, you have got all the lots of money which you have made such an unusual show of, of late, in an honest way?" |
34598 | I mean of that angelic nature which is perceptible to other mortals also? |
34598 | I mean, do you know that she is a good girl; that she has a good heart; in one word, that she is worthy of my good Bemperlein?" |
34598 | I presume you are performing here in the capital with your troupe?" |
34598 | I replied;"but why do you ask?" |
34598 | I should like to see you so much, but-- can you venture to come without rousing suspicion? |
34598 | I suppose you can leave me the papers? |
34598 | I thought, what does it matter whether you break down to- day or to- morrow? |
34598 | I turn back? |
34598 | I went up to her, took her hand-- upon my word I could not help it-- and said-- what else could I say?--''why do you cry, Mademoiselle?'' |
34598 | I will try to overcome my childish bashfulness-- who could that be?" |
34598 | I wonder if it is time yet?" |
34598 | I''ll send for him and tell him so to his face; and, besides, I''ll warn him not to say a word... What is it?" |
34598 | I, who picked you up from the gutter?" |
34598 | If I were to turn back, even at this the eleventh hour, from the way which leads in the end to Doctor Birkenhain''s insane asylum? |
34598 | If we do not before.... What do you say, Oswald?" |
34598 | If you will love me a little----""Can you doubt it?" |
34598 | In short, shall we have our wedding day four weeks from to- day?" |
34598 | In sleep? |
34598 | In the meantime----""You are living in private?" |
34598 | In this house? |
34598 | Is all right in there? |
34598 | Is asceticism not the consistent pursuit of holiness? |
34598 | Is fortune ever to appear to us only as a_ fata morgana_--charming in its beauty and treacherously fleeting? |
34598 | Is it an accident that saints appear odd in the eyes of the multitude, and the company of publicans and sinners is the best in the eyes of holy men? |
34598 | Is it not but too probable that this mirage may look charming at a distance, but when seen near by, would quickly dissolve into ethereal vapor? |
34598 | Is it not the curse of an evil deed that it brings forth more and more evil deeds? |
34598 | Is it not very natural that like all the great of the earth, she is likely to have her head turned? |
34598 | Is it not worthy to be the heart of Germany, and thus the heart of the heart of our continent, in fact of the inhabited globe? |
34598 | Is it not, count? |
34598 | Is it possible that you still love this man?" |
34598 | Is it possible that you were right? |
34598 | Is it really you?" |
34598 | Is it reasonable to sacrifice the wife to a rigorous moral law, which the husband does not consider binding? |
34598 | Is life so very contemptible? |
34598 | Is n''t he a famous fellow? |
34598 | Is not contempt of the world, and of one''s self, the consistent effect of asceticism? |
34598 | Is not love stronger than faith and hope; how can it fail to be stronger than foolish prejudices?" |
34598 | Is not the love of our neighbor, the purest form of love, identical with sympathy?" |
34598 | Is that generous? |
34598 | Is that so?" |
34598 | Is the gate locked?" |
34598 | Is there no such thing in the world as gratitude? |
34598 | Is this my head? |
34598 | Is this my proud sister? |
34598 | Is this the same earth that exhaled a soft, balsamic breath, like the kiss of a loved one? |
34598 | It is true the step was a bold one, but what is it that love does not dare? |
34598 | It is your hair, Miss Helen; and only in memory of him?" |
34598 | Leave them alone? |
34598 | Let me look at you in the light? |
34598 | Little Emily, eh? |
34598 | Love? |
34598 | May I be permitted to place the document in those beautiful hands?" |
34598 | May I have the honor, Miss Helen?" |
34598 | May I hope, madame? |
34598 | May I make you acquainted with my friend Cotterby? |
34598 | May I tell what you replied, Cotterby?" |
34598 | May I tell why you did so, Cotterby?" |
34598 | May not much come right again, even if everything does not turn out well? |
34598 | May not what he now aims at as his highest happiness, soon become to him an intolerable chain? |
34598 | Melitta here? |
34598 | Might I not succeed in finding my way out of this labyrinth, if I had such a friend by my side? |
34598 | Might he not take up one of these odd notions at the very moment when he ought to have acted promptly? |
34598 | Might she not look up the friend whom she had so sadly neglected during the last days in Grunwald? |
34598 | Miss Mal has not put her veto upon it?" |
34598 | Miss Sophie? |
34598 | Mr. Schmenckel continued his story:"''The little Malikowsky?'' |
34598 | Must I lose my last child then?" |
34598 | Must there be many more sacrifices? |
34598 | N''est ce pas, Emilie?_"and to force her in this way to reply in a manner which might be clever in spirit but was very imperfect in form. |
34598 | Next door? |
34598 | No appetite? |
34598 | No? |
34598 | No? |
34598 | No? |
34598 | No? |
34598 | Nothing else I can do for you, sir? |
34598 | Now tell me: Do you love me? |
34598 | Now, when his companion ceased, he said-- an ironical smile playing around his lips--"Are you quite sure of that? |
34598 | Oh, Miss Helen, do you really know how dearly he loved you? |
34598 | Oh, were not both dead? |
34598 | Once more: Are you willing to pay or not?" |
34598 | Or do you allow no questions to be asked?" |
34598 | Or do you think Baron Barnewitz, young Grieben, or whoever else belongs to that clique, would leave me unnoticed and unobserved?" |
34598 | Or have you sold your dreams also to the princess?" |
34598 | Oswald could not hear everything they said, but why was that necessary? |
34598 | Oswald did not ask him how? |
34598 | Ought he not to turn back and knock at the gate behind which Berger had disappeared? |
34598 | Pale face, large eyes, chin rather long?'' |
34598 | Perhaps Mrs. Rose knows also what became of the child?" |
34598 | Petersburg?" |
34598 | Petersburg?" |
34598 | Pitcher of water? |
34598 | Power, and honor, and distinction? |
34598 | Pretty well; why?" |
34598 | Raimund, is this your gratitude for all my love?" |
34598 | Rose has hardly taken up her business again, when the bell wakes her one fine night, and who do you think wants her? |
34598 | Rose----""She was there, too?" |
34598 | Rose?" |
34598 | Schmenckel?" |
34598 | Shall I be able to embrace you once more? |
34598 | Shall I do it?" |
34598 | Shall I go with you?" |
34598 | Shall I read it to you?" |
34598 | Shall I send a servant for you?--and when?" |
34598 | Shall I tell you a few anecdotes of our own circles? |
34598 | Shall we say day after to- morrow, at seven?" |
34598 | Shall we sit down in the meantime? |
34598 | She had always trembled for his life, from childhood up; were her fears to be realized now? |
34598 | She went to the window and said,"Who is there?" |
34598 | Should she send for the doctor? |
34598 | Since when are you back?" |
34598 | Sophie was surprised by Bemperlein''s repeated question:"But there will be no other visitor to- night?" |
34598 | Suppose I were to make up my mind to abandon this striving after exalted ideals which threaten to ruin my mind? |
34598 | Tell me, Berger, did you ever love with all the strength of your heart? |
34598 | That I do not see what it all means? |
34598 | That you have only thought of this impudent invention because I am unwilling to waste the rest of my fortune upon your mad dissipation?" |
34598 | The proud young eagle, Why does he stay so far, Amid gray crows and rooks, He my life''s only star? |
34598 | Then again the same voice:"The ice is strong enough for two horses?" |
34598 | Then they are neighbors, and must needs see each other frequently-- is not that perfectly natural? |
34598 | Then turning to the prince,"Will you go now, sir, or not?" |
34598 | These confidential interviews, short as they were, no doubt interfered somewhat with business, but what could be done? |
34598 | They rose suddenly from their seats; they crowded around the sobbing poetess; they asked one another what was the matter with Mrs. Jager? |
34598 | Timm?" |
34598 | Timm?" |
34598 | To bring you gold, which you will gamble away? |
34598 | To this place, which had such mournful associations for her? |
34598 | To whom?" |
34598 | Was Bemperlein jealous? |
34598 | Was I not here now under the pretext of being a physician? |
34598 | Was he not a very sick patient himself? |
34598 | Was he not of all men the least fitted for such a mission? |
34598 | Was he right? |
34598 | Was he the interpreter of the fragments of Chrysophilos, or was he not? |
34598 | Was here to- day.... Where he lives? |
34598 | Was his hatred to be as blind as his love? |
34598 | Was it Oswald, who had since spent several evenings there, once in company with Helen Grenwitz, who had frightened away Bemperlein? |
34598 | Was it an accident? |
34598 | Was it my fault if our last meeting ended as it did?" |
34598 | Was it not charming, Arthur?" |
34598 | Was it not his fate to carry confusion and sorrow wherever he went? |
34598 | Was it only the effect of his melancholy humor? |
34598 | Was it purpose? |
34598 | Was it really to be his fate to sow love and reap indifference? |
34598 | Was it the dark, misty evening? |
34598 | Was it the effect of the ghastly light, or merely the expression of what was going on within? |
34598 | Was not Berger far superior to him in strength of mind, as well as in nobility of soul? |
34598 | Was not that a horse''s hoof? |
34598 | Was not that a ring at the bell? |
34598 | Was not that house, with its high prison- walls, the best refuge for hearts that were as weary of the world as his was? |
34598 | Was not the silent figure by Miss Roban, Helen? |
34598 | Was not this betrayal a just punishment for having cared so much for her own happiness, and so little for that of the boy? |
34598 | Was not, after all, everything and anything possible in this false world? |
34598 | Was really everything to end well, after all? |
34598 | Was she looking for him? |
34598 | Was she the famous author of the"Cornflowers,"or was she not? |
34598 | Was she to bridle her inordinate desires, now that her heart for the first time clearly felt its own capacities? |
34598 | Was that the solution of the great mystery, the squaring of the circle? |
34598 | Was that, then, the last conclusion of wisdom? |
34598 | Was the indestructible pillar of her success not snapping suddenly like a bruised reed? |
34598 | Was there anything wrong and anything right in the world?--the world to be a cosmos? |
34598 | Was there really a way yet out of this horrible labyrinth, in which she had lost herself? |
34598 | Was this his dearly- beloved sea, on which his dreams and his hopes had so often taken wings in company with countless gulls? |
34598 | Was this the hospitable house of dear friends, who were so proud of their perfect humanity? |
34598 | Was this the realization of her proudest hopes? |
34598 | Well, but now, Albert mine, it is your turn to tell me how you have managed to be such a rich man of late?" |
34598 | Well, gentlemen, what do you say, shall we have a nice song? |
34598 | Well, what do you say of that?" |
34598 | Were the blissful days of Berkow really to return once more? |
34598 | Were they grateful? |
34598 | What am I to do? |
34598 | What can I be to him? |
34598 | What can you do with her? |
34598 | What could I do? |
34598 | What could I do? |
34598 | What could he do, Mr. John Cotterby, of Egypt, if, for want of better times to come, the church on the square was to this day without a steeple? |
34598 | What did he want in Grunwald? |
34598 | What did he want?" |
34598 | What did she come for? |
34598 | What did she say to that? |
34598 | What did you think of our performance to- day, count?" |
34598 | What do I care now for all the bitter drops that fell into the cup of intoxicating sweetness? |
34598 | What do women know of the true love which men feel in their hearts? |
34598 | What do you mean?" |
34598 | What do you say?" |
34598 | What do you say?" |
34598 | What do you say?'' |
34598 | What do you think about that, old boy?" |
34598 | What do you think of this original metre, which seems to be worthy of our Freiligrath? |
34598 | What do you think, Berger?" |
34598 | What do you want here?" |
34598 | What do you want of her?" |
34598 | What do you want, restless, wild heart!--Love? |
34598 | What does Marguerite say to our new plan?" |
34598 | What does he want here? |
34598 | What does it amount to? |
34598 | What does that mean? |
34598 | What does that old wig, Balthasar, know of my lungs? |
34598 | What dreams are coming to him in his sleep? |
34598 | What else can we do?" |
34598 | What had he been told just now? |
34598 | What had he to give-- he the beggar? |
34598 | What has happened?" |
34598 | What have I said?" |
34598 | What is it? |
34598 | What is she thinking of as she now comes slowly down the walk, her eyes fixed upon the ground? |
34598 | What is that? |
34598 | What is the matter now? |
34598 | What is the rest of the world to us? |
34598 | What is there in a name? |
34598 | What is to be done? |
34598 | What is to pay?" |
34598 | What matters it who they were in life? |
34598 | What ought I to do?" |
34598 | What ought she to do? |
34598 | What was Felix when he ceased to be the presumptive heir to the entailed estates? |
34598 | What was I going to say? |
34598 | What was I to do? |
34598 | What was he to do in Grunwald? |
34598 | What was poor Felix in comparison with this proud eagle? |
34598 | What was that she had seen and heard? |
34598 | What was to be done? |
34598 | What will you say to your Czika, if she asks you why another person than the poor woman whom she calls mother is the wife of her father?" |
34598 | What would have become of me if Franz had not been there?" |
34598 | When I was in the door he called after me,''Apropos, Mr. Bemperlein, do you happen to know when Doctor Stein will be back again?'' |
34598 | When are you to be at Primula''s house?" |
34598 | When do we leave?" |
34598 | When do you desire me to send it to you?" |
34598 | When shall we carry it out?" |
34598 | Where I come from? |
34598 | Where are the red rays of the sun now? |
34598 | Where is she?" |
34598 | Where is the box I gave you, Claus?" |
34598 | Where is your sharp, penetrating mind, which used to solve the hardest problems as in play? |
34598 | Where on earth have you been hiding all this time? |
34598 | Where they led him? |
34598 | Where was he now? |
34598 | Where was he now? |
34598 | Where your brilliant fancy, which threw even upon every- day occurrences a bewitching light? |
34598 | Which are you willing to give up? |
34598 | While I was busy with the fainting girl, I asked the maid if Leonora was at all subject to such attacks; what was the general state of her health? |
34598 | Who can cast aside true love so promptly? |
34598 | Who can tell what the strange man wants in Paris? |
34598 | Who can tell why he left those whom he had so tenderly befriended almost at the threshold of the house? |
34598 | Who could resist such inspiration? |
34598 | Who does not know it? |
34598 | Who else could this be but Helen? |
34598 | Who had time to- night to help and to save? |
34598 | Who has given you the right to think so little of us?" |
34598 | Who has made that unwise law? |
34598 | Who knows whether we shall ever speak to each other again? |
34598 | Who says so? |
34598 | Who was Eberhard Wolfgang Berger? |
34598 | Who was Oswald Stein? |
34598 | Who was there?" |
34598 | Who would have thought that we should have such excellent company to- night?" |
34598 | Whom will you give them for their personal attendants?" |
34598 | Why could not they marry each other if they liked it? |
34598 | Why did he treat her so differently from all other women, of whom he got tired so soon? |
34598 | Why did she tell him that she would never marry the prince? |
34598 | Why did you leave your post at that very hour, which was the decisive hour? |
34598 | Why did you let me wander about so long in this darkness?" |
34598 | Why did you let yourself be led by the nose once more, when you ought to have known perfectly well how it would end? |
34598 | Why do n''t you give up the stupid college, and live only for me?" |
34598 | Why do we use the hand, when the bow lies idle in the grasp, close by us? |
34598 | Why do you kick against the pricks to which all the cattle patiently submit? |
34598 | Why do you let your beer grow stale, and make a face like a tanner whose skins have been washed down the stream? |
34598 | Why do you wish him to come? |
34598 | Why does the fellow not come? |
34598 | Why have you not come to see me since the other night, when you promised to call again? |
34598 | Why is Felix your special protà © gà ©? |
34598 | Why must O have Felix in my house, whom I can not bear, and do without Helen, whom I love? |
34598 | Why not in wine, when sleep is not to be had? |
34598 | Why not rather live? |
34598 | Why she gave-- why she gave now, after having declared it only a few days before utterly impossible to raise the means-- what did he care for that? |
34598 | Why should I be better off? |
34598 | Why should you remain with a wretched wight A puppet of wood on a couch of ice?''" |
34598 | Why then should you and I obey it? |
34598 | Why, look at the lion- hearted Bemperlein? |
34598 | Why, what are you thinking of? |
34598 | Will I live to see it? |
34598 | Will he come to- night? |
34598 | Will you be back in time for supper, sir? |
34598 | Will you be good enough to inquire if she receives company, and carry this-- this card?" |
34598 | Will you come? |
34598 | Will you come?'' |
34598 | Will you dine with me to- morrow? |
34598 | Will you do it?" |
34598 | Will you do it?'' |
34598 | Will you do me a favor?" |
34598 | Will you drink a glass of wutki punch with me to- night, after the performance is over? |
34598 | Will you favor us with your company for a few moments?" |
34598 | Will you go with me? |
34598 | Will you have the kindness to introduce me to the old gentleman? |
34598 | Will you help me, Barnewitz?" |
34598 | Will you please tell the baroness so?" |
34598 | Will you sing it, dear Helen?" |
34598 | Will you take a seat by my daughter Thusnelda, Doctor Stein? |
34598 | Will you take my arm? |
34598 | Will you take that upon yourself? |
34598 | Wo nt you, dear mamma?" |
34598 | Wo nt you, mamma, wo nt you let me go over with Baumann and buy the donkey? |
34598 | Would he not be sure thus to cool his heated brow forever, and to silence the hammering pulsations in his temples for all eternity? |
34598 | Would not the gentleman be pleased to call again to- morrow morning? |
34598 | Would she not have sacrificed whole years of her existence, if by so doing she could have restored his child to him? |
34598 | Would you not justly look upon a man who could give such an answer as a monster of heartlessness, as a horrible instance of ingratitude? |
34598 | Would you rather be the count''s son and inherit his wretched feebleness, his poisoned blood? |
34598 | Yes, or no?" |
34598 | Yes; but what shall we do with the big fellow there on the sofa, who has been drinking for twelve to- day?" |
34598 | You do not know me?" |
34598 | You do not love the prince? |
34598 | You do not want to see me?" |
34598 | You have not followed the voice of your heart, which warned you against the stern dark man, but the counsels of your mother? |
34598 | You have perhaps a relation of yours there? |
34598 | You have seen the count this morning?" |
34598 | You know how very hard it is for him to let me go from him; and shall I just now ask such a sacrifice from him, when he needs me more than ever? |
34598 | You know, I suppose, that the two met in Paris and witnessed the whole revolution? |
34598 | You think I should let them alone, every one of them? |
34598 | You will not be happy with him; but who is happy in this world? |
34598 | You will surely not increase the hardship by being unnecessarily severe against the poor girl? |
34598 | You, who are shedding tears, because I, Oldenburg, do not understand you, or will not understand you?" |
34598 | You, yourself, would never have thought of it; but that man-- how did you call him?" |
34598 | _ Adieu, ma reine!_''"''You wo n''t go already?'' |
34598 | _ Apropos_, have you heard anything of Oswald Stein? |
34598 | _ Qu''en dites- vous, Monsieur?_ The good old lady tripped away to attend to the beef tea herself, as no one else could make it as well. |
34598 | _ What_ has happened?" |
34598 | a fellow like you?" |
34598 | and are not the two estates to be the dower of the young lady?" |
34598 | and can love die, as the summer dies, and the flowers, and the warm sunlight?" |
34598 | and fooled by whom? |
34598 | and for whom? |
34598 | and the professor if his wife was subject to such attacks? |
34598 | and to deny her before me-- me, the wise Merlin, who can hear the grass grow and the eyes sigh? |
34598 | and whence? |
34598 | and where the bright flowers? |
34598 | and worse than that, a poor wife!--what has become of your former principles? |
34598 | are you wounded?" |
34598 | asked Berger;"are you really nothing but a whitewashed grave? |
34598 | asked Claus, turning round and showing his white teeth,"that there is n''t a horse that can overtake Fox? |
34598 | asked the lady, with a melancholy smile;"my star? |
34598 | can you forgive me?" |
34598 | cried Mr. Schmenckel, striking the table with his gigantic hand"Do I look as if I was not up to having children?" |
34598 | cried the young man,"is it possible that such a folly can last so long? |
34598 | do you see her frequently?" |
34598 | does she live in this city?" |
34598 | exclaimed the poetess, casting away the pen;"is it you, Oswald? |
34598 | he murmured;"and you-- why did you not tell me?" |
34598 | he replied, sadly;"What I want here? |
34598 | he said, sadly;"is that your old love? |
34598 | he said, turning to Oldenburg;"would you relentlessly condemn a man whose greatest misfortune it probably was to have been born in these days?" |
34598 | how do you know that?" |
34598 | is it more than an illusion, such as is not uncommon in fanciful men-- one of those fixed ideas in which very obstinate minds take delight? |
34598 | is it not? |
34598 | or do you not love me?" |
34598 | or for him? |
34598 | or was it a blood- dripping cave of brutal Troglodytes? |
34598 | said Adolphus bitterly;"have you fallen so low that you follow a man who no longer loves you? |
34598 | said Barnewitz, thrusting his hands into his pockets with an air of contempt"I suppose you think you are wonderfully successful with the sex?" |
34598 | said Helen,"Oswald?" |
34598 | said Oswald, who did not think for a moment of doubting the fable;"how old was the child, then, when she came to join you?" |
34598 | said Sophie,"has my old admirer really come to that at last?" |
34598 | said Timm, giving way;"is he crazy too?" |
34598 | said Timm;"do you think I covet the glory of a political martyr? |
34598 | said Timm;"you would like to raise the treasure by yourself? |
34598 | screamed the princess, rising suddenly from her chair and clinging to her son,"what do you mean to do?" |
34598 | that the passion which is glowing within me is never to be cooled? |
34598 | that the worship of a single one can not count for much with her? |
34598 | the same earth which shone in its wedding garment? |
34598 | to make such a concession to the rabble? |
34598 | to whom you are a burden? |
34598 | to you? |
34598 | was that fortunate?" |
34598 | water to drink? |
34598 | what can it be?'' |
34598 | what do you know of the angelic character of your Marguerite? |
34598 | what is that?" |
34598 | what is the matter?" |
34598 | what they did and suffered, blundered and sinned, desired and failed to achieve? |
34598 | where the green leaves? |
34598 | which embraced the high sky like a bride in the light of countless stars? |
34598 | which was to afford her the means always to enjoy a comfortable existence such as alone seemed to be suitable for the character of the young girl? |
34598 | who would give much to get rid of you again? |
34598 | why not? |
34598 | will you humiliate yourself before her, the proud beauty? |
34598 | will you make this angel also wretched? |
34598 | you say? |
6829 | ''A lion''s skin?'' |
6829 | ''Ah, talking of superstition, now,''says Eucrates,''that reminds me: what do you make of oracles, for instance, and omens? |
6829 | ''And what is to be our course?'' |
6829 | ''And what were the spirits doing?'' |
6829 | ''And what,''Arignotus next asked,''is the subject of your learned conversation? |
6829 | ''And you can actually make a man out of a pestle to this day?'' |
6829 | ''Ask one of these brawling bawling censors, And what do_ you_ do? |
6829 | ''Confound it, sir,''he might exclaim,''what is the noise about? |
6829 | ''Do you suppose,''asked Eucrates,''that he is the only man who has seen such things? |
6829 | ''Doing? |
6829 | ''Doubt the word of Eucrates, the learned son of Dino? |
6829 | ''Have you never noticed as you came in that beautiful one in the court, by Demetrius the portrait- sculptor?'' |
6829 | ''How long is this to go on?'' |
6829 | ''In other words, you do not believe in the existence of the Gods, since you maintain that cures can not be wrought by the use of holy names?'' |
6829 | ''Ion,''said I,''about that one who was so old: did the ambassador snake give him an arm, or had he a stick to lean on?'' |
6829 | ''Of course I do; but what have wings and eyes to do with one another?'' |
6829 | ''Oh, you keep a man, do you?'' |
6829 | ''Perhaps it is the pitchy darkness of the infernal regions that runs in your head? |
6829 | ''Perhaps,''I suggested,''it is not Pelichus at all, but Talos the Cretan, the son of Minos? |
6829 | ''Twas at the Saturnalia, the day I made that pease- pudding, with the two slices of sausage in it? |
6829 | ''Unconsciously, then; what is it?'' |
6829 | ''Well,''said the proconsul,''I pardon him this time at your request; but if he offends again, what shall I do to him?'' |
6829 | ''What are we coming to?'' |
6829 | ''What do you think of my play, Demonax?'' |
6829 | ''What herds, what waggons have you, Arsacomas?'' |
6829 | ''What is this I hear?'' |
6829 | ''What liar took you in like that, sir?'' |
6829 | ''What of Otus and Ephialtes now?'' |
6829 | ''What should they be, Lord, but those of absolute reverence, as to the King of all Gods?'' |
6829 | ''What statue is this?'' |
6829 | ''What was that about, Arignotus?'' |
6829 | ''What will you have?'' |
6829 | ''What, Tychiades,''says Cleodemus, with a faint grin,''you do n''t believe these remedies are good for anything?'' |
6829 | ''What,''I exclaimed,''you saw this Hyperborean actually flying and walking on water?'' |
6829 | ''What,''said he,''is my country expecting me to do my duty?'' |
6829 | ''When are those hecatombs coming?'' |
6829 | ''Who told you I was a philosopher?'' |
6829 | ''Why did he not make you a Greek instead?'' |
6829 | ''Why no more ambrosia?'' |
6829 | ''Why, you know that you have on an eagle''s right wing?'' |
6829 | ''Will it surprise you to learn that I am a fellow- craftsman?'' |
6829 | ), and who wanted people to go for five years without speaking? |
6829 | ... No answer? |
6829 | A doctor? |
6829 | A man is saved by art, not by the absence of it? |
6829 | A mathematician? |
6829 | After all, it is natural enough: what should you do but admire these trifles? |
6829 | Again, I suppose you will pass Aristippus of Cyrene as a distinguished philosopher? |
6829 | Again, did not Aristogiton, poor and of mean extraction, as Thucydides describes him, sponge on Harmodius? |
6829 | Ah, Anacharsis, if the love of fair fame were to be wiped out of our lives, what good would remain? |
6829 | Ah, and what are the prizes, now? |
6829 | Ah, yes, tell me about him: they say he is your son? |
6829 | All these effects, and no effecting Providence? |
6829 | All this was food for laughter, as well it might be, to the Indians and their king: Take the field? |
6829 | Am I not even in sleep to find a refuge from Poverty, Poverty more vile than your vile self? |
6829 | Am I not the Sun? |
6829 | And I? |
6829 | And did you like being a man best, or receiving the addresses of Pericles? |
6829 | And everything moves casually, by blind tendency? |
6829 | And have you grappled with Aristophanes and Eupolis? |
6829 | And her name? |
6829 | And how are you going to do that? |
6829 | And how big, now, did the towns and the people look from there? |
6829 | And how should that be? |
6829 | And in Scythia''good men''receive sacrifice just the same as Gods? |
6829 | And in what form was your spirit next clothed, after it had put off Pythagoras? |
6829 | And is it in your power to unspin what they have spun? |
6829 | And now look at it from the patron''s point of view; does he get his money''s worth? |
6829 | And now what about those many points in which your art is superior to Rhetoric and Philosophy? |
6829 | And now, what are we to do? |
6829 | And pleasure a good? |
6829 | And the regulation of the universe is not under any God''s care? |
6829 | And then in the dining- room, where is his match, to jest or to eat? |
6829 | And this being so, why should not the same principles be extended further?'' |
6829 | And we may call a sponger an out- diner? |
6829 | And what am I going to be next? |
6829 | And what are his other doings, to which all your household are witnesses?'' |
6829 | And what do I want with a garlanded column over my grave? |
6829 | And what good do you suppose you are going to do by pouring wine on it? |
6829 | And what if he has? |
6829 | And what is the result? |
6829 | And what makes Simon so pale? |
6829 | And what more natural than that she should love poetry, and make it her chief study? |
6829 | And what of him? |
6829 | And what was his reason? |
6829 | And what wonder, if the fairest of Ionian cities has given birth to the fairest of women?'' |
6829 | And what would you have me do, my boy? |
6829 | And when you were Pythagoras? |
6829 | And where shall I begin? |
6829 | And who is this Syrian? |
6829 | And whom does he send to dwell with the heroes? |
6829 | And why? |
6829 | And will you scout Euripides too, then? |
6829 | And you never even asked her name? |
6829 | And your versatility has even changed sexes? |
6829 | And, Pan,--have they become more virtuous under the hands of the philosophers? |
6829 | Antisthenes? |
6829 | Archilochus? |
6829 | Are not these admirable deeds, and shall not the doers be counted as Gods by all who esteem prowess? |
6829 | Are the Gods going to push Destiny aside and make a bid for government? |
6829 | Are the prizes too small? |
6829 | Are we to understand that you possess literary discernment without the assistance of any study? |
6829 | Are you afraid I shall be suffocated in the confinement of the tomb? |
6829 | Are you counting upon Atticus and Callinus, the copyists, to put in a good word for you? |
6829 | Are you going to retract what you said? |
6829 | Are you going to tell me that a man who finds out that he is to die by a steel point can escape the doom by shutting himself up? |
6829 | Are you merely seizing an opportunity of displaying your wealth? |
6829 | Are you now to learn that freedom from hunger and thirst is better than meat and drink, and insensibility to cold better than plenty of clothes? |
6829 | Are you now to learn that life and death are the highest considerations among mankind? |
6829 | As for Momus, what is dishonour to him? |
6829 | As he went, he put questions to me about earthly affairs, beginning with, What was wheat a quarter in Greece? |
6829 | Ask them, Where is Demosthenes now? |
6829 | Asked whether he ate honey- cakes,''Do you suppose,''he said,''that bees only make honey for fools?'' |
6829 | At this moment of depression-- I was very near tears-- who should come up behind me but Empedocles the physicist? |
6829 | Banqueter was the word used for sponger in his day; what does he say? |
6829 | Because he wants the art which would enable him to save his life? |
6829 | Blasphemer, have you ever been a voyage? |
6829 | But I am rather curious on one point: what are your favourite books among so many? |
6829 | But Zeus bent upon me a Titanic glance, awful, penetrating, and spoke: Who art thou? |
6829 | But all this lamentation, now; this fluting and beating of breasts; these wholly disproportionate wailings: how am I the better for it all? |
6829 | But in----? |
6829 | But perhaps you will doubt my word too?'' |
6829 | But proceed, son of Mnesarchus: how came you to change from man to bird, from Samos to Tanagra? |
6829 | But that_ Philosophy_ should lack unity, and even conflict with itself like instruments out of tune-- how can that be tolerated? |
6829 | But there: what need to go back to Orpheus and Neanthus? |
6829 | But they only jeered at me:''Are you going to lie all day about our country and our river, pray? |
6829 | But what I want to know is, how did it happen? |
6829 | But what about your transformations? |
6829 | But what are you laughing at? |
6829 | But what brings you here, Hermes? |
6829 | But what could you find to admire in Orestes and Pylades, that you should exalt them to godhead? |
6829 | But what do you expect from them? |
6829 | But what is the use of that? |
6829 | But what is your solution of the problem? |
6829 | But what made you ask me about the Fates? |
6829 | But what matter what her head was like, or that every one knew how a long illness had treated her? |
6829 | But what put it into your head to make that law about meat and beans? |
6829 | But what sort of a guess do you make at the sponger''s behaviour in war? |
6829 | But what were you going to say about Simon? |
6829 | But when it comes to national lies, when one finds whole cities bouncing collectively like one man, how is one to keep one''s countenance? |
6829 | But who is this breathless messenger? |
6829 | But why deal in conjecture when there are facts to hand? |
6829 | But why not? |
6829 | But would that be quite a worthy conception of divine beings? |
6829 | But would you mind giving a name to all this? |
6829 | But you may well despise me: why do I sit here listening to all this, with my thunder- bolt beneath my arm? |
6829 | By the way, do all who enter get them? |
6829 | By your leave I will proceed to apply the two definitions to what I wrote; which of them fits it? |
6829 | Call in the painters, perhaps, selecting those who were noted for their skill in mixing and laying on their colours? |
6829 | Can we doubt that he is in the right of it? |
6829 | Can you doubt that he who cures the ague may also inflict it at will?'' |
6829 | Can you explain it? |
6829 | Can you give me any more? |
6829 | Can you help me to it? |
6829 | Can you match that, friend? |
6829 | Can your sapience point to any single convenience of life, of which we are deprived in the lower world? |
6829 | Come, my fine fellow, is it not all ridiculous? |
6829 | Consider; will Croesus''s passage of the Halys destroy his own realm, or Cyrus''s? |
6829 | Contempt? |
6829 | Could any man be more abominably misused? |
6829 | Cower ye confounded at these momentous tidings? |
6829 | Did it all happen as Homer describes? |
6829 | Did you ever go through the_ Baptae_[ Footnote: See Cotytto in Notes.]? |
6829 | Did you ever hear of Pythagoras of Samos, son of Mnesarchus? |
6829 | Dining out, in fact? |
6829 | Dinomachus, for instance, wanted to know''how big were the Goddess''s dogs?'' |
6829 | Do the Fates also control you Gods? |
6829 | Do you close your ears even to Zeus''s thunder, atheist? |
6829 | Do you ever read the speech of Aeschines against Timarchus? |
6829 | Do you know what I think we had better do, Hermes? |
6829 | Do you recognize the distinction between_ differentia_ and_ indifferentia_? |
6829 | Do you see him? |
6829 | Do you see? |
6829 | Do you suppose we do not know how to account for your annoyance? |
6829 | Do you teach rhetoric, then? |
6829 | Do_ you_ depend from their thread? |
6829 | Does a man commit a murder? |
6829 | Does he rob a temple? |
6829 | Does he think we all hail from Miletus or Samos? |
6829 | Does not such ingratitude as this render him liable to the penalties imposed by the marriage- laws? |
6829 | Doth none rise? |
6829 | Dream, my good man? |
6829 | Drink, open the case.... Not a word? |
6829 | Ever since we were united in friendship, are we not one flesh? |
6829 | Everything proceeds from the Fates, you say? |
6829 | Fine promises, these, are they not? |
6829 | For her stature, let it be that of Cnidian_ Aphrodite_; once more we have recourse to Praxiteles.--What think you, Polystratus? |
6829 | Gentlemen, can you tolerate such sentiments? |
6829 | Gold the only thing you can find to admire? |
6829 | Ha, ha, friend cock, have I learnt to turn a simile already? |
6829 | Had I not some reason to be annoyed with you? |
6829 | Has Earth produced a new brood of giants? |
6829 | Have I misunderstood your figure, or is this a fair deduction from it? |
6829 | Have the Titans broken their chains, overpowered their guards, and taken up arms against us once more? |
6829 | Have you any preference among our Gods? |
6829 | Have you important news from Earth? |
6829 | Have you thought better of it? |
6829 | Heracles''s right hand is occupied with the club, and his left with the bow: how is he to hold the ends of the chains? |
6829 | Here we are; what do I do next? |
6829 | Hermes, is it in order that this dog- faced Egyptian person should sit in front of me, Posidon? |
6829 | Hermes, of all people, grudge a man a little thievery? |
6829 | Hipponax? |
6829 | Homer may go hang: what does a babbling poet know about dreams? |
6829 | Honour bright? |
6829 | How are we to cure Timocles of the impediment in his speech? |
6829 | How are you to know the difference between genuine old books that are worth money, and trash whose only merit is that it is falling to pieces? |
6829 | How did you manage, then? |
6829 | How do I know that these cures are brought about by the means to which you attribute them? |
6829 | How do they go? |
6829 | How do you develop perfect virtue out of clay and training? |
6829 | How do you make that out? |
6829 | How do you make that out? |
6829 | How is that? |
6829 | How should that be? |
6829 | How so? |
6829 | How so? |
6829 | How their theories conflict is soon apparent; next- door neighbours? |
6829 | How was he punished? |
6829 | How was he to resist this pretty woman, with her captivating manners, her well- timed tears, her parenthetic sighs? |
6829 | How would the God of Friendship meet the case? |
6829 | How? |
6829 | However;--what was your sex next time? |
6829 | Hush, Pan: was not that Hermes making the proclamation? |
6829 | I answered all these questions, and he proceeded:--''Tell me, Menippus, what are men''s feelings towards me?'' |
6829 | I cried;''Hippocrates must have sacrifices, must he? |
6829 | I exclaimed;''so he was a doctor too?'' |
6829 | I expect you had a pleasant time of it, living on the very fat of the land? |
6829 | I shall throw you out, perhaps, if I keep on calling you different things? |
6829 | I suppose you did not happen to see Socrates or Plato among the Shades?'' |
6829 | I thought bath- time would never come; I could not keep my eyes off the dial: where was the shadow now? |
6829 | I tremble for their fate: were they drowned, or did some miraculous providence deliver them? |
6829 | I want to know whether you have a profession of any sort; for instance, are you a musician? |
6829 | I''m not easy about all that plate either: what if some one should knock a hole in the wall, and make off with it? |
6829 | If he is, does he get them out of his own means, or from some one else? |
6829 | If in praising a dog one should remark that it was bigger than a fox or a cat, would you regard him as a skilful panegyrist? |
6829 | If the truth must out, we sit here with a single eye to one thing-- does a man sacrifice and feed the altars fat? |
6829 | In Heaven''s name, what does he expect to get from him? |
6829 | In the daytime, or at night? |
6829 | In the name of goodness, Menippus, what are these astronomical sums you are doing under your breath? |
6829 | Indeed? |
6829 | Is a war- tax to be levied? |
6829 | Is he clever? |
6829 | Is it a lovely portrait? |
6829 | Is it all true that they sing of Destiny and the Fates-- that whatever they spin for a man at his birth must inevitably come about? |
6829 | Is it because I am not a bald, bent, wrinkled old cripple like yourself? |
6829 | Is it equal to that of the Fates? |
6829 | Is it just your way of showing the public that you can afford to spend money even on things that are of no use to you? |
6829 | Is it with tales like these that Homer has prevailed on you? |
6829 | Is she a Fate too? |
6829 | Is that so very portentous? |
6829 | Is the inheritance to your liking? |
6829 | Is the love of gold so absorbing a passion? |
6829 | Is this one of the things it is not proper for me to know? |
6829 | Is your name Zeus, or not? |
6829 | It follows that, if sponging was the negative of art, the sponger would not save his life by its means? |
6829 | It makes me quite angry: what satisfaction can there be to men of their good qualities in deceiving themselves and their neighbours? |
6829 | Know you not that an Emperor has many eyes and many ears? |
6829 | Letters we know, Medicine we know; Sponging? |
6829 | May we pass this as one of my five? |
6829 | Moreover, sponging is not to be classed with beauty and strength, and so called a quality instead of an art? |
6829 | My Pythagoras no better than he should be? |
6829 | My gallant cock has positively laid eggs in his time? |
6829 | My son, why this haste? |
6829 | Namely----? |
6829 | Names? |
6829 | Nay, we can do better: have we not Homer, best of painters, though a Euphranor and an Apelles be present? |
6829 | Need I point out the useful purposes that gold serves? |
6829 | Need I say more? |
6829 | No, no; you answer my question first; what makes you believe in them? |
6829 | Nor can we blame them: they are but men; how should they know truth, when the divinity whose mouthpieces they were is departed from them? |
6829 | Now even granting that you do, what is the use of knowing what one has to expect, when one can by no possibility take any precautions? |
6829 | Now for the horses and dogs and frogs and fishes: how did you like that kind of thing? |
6829 | Now that ship would not have sailed, without a steersman; and do you suppose that this great universe drifts unsteered and uncontrolled? |
6829 | Now there, madam, you are unreasonable: how can he possibly make a dialogue of it all by himself? |
6829 | Now what good can they get out of it? |
6829 | Now, Hermes, Hera, Athene, what is our course? |
6829 | Now, Syrian: what do you say to that? |
6829 | Now, Toxaris: do you mean to tell me that you people actually_ sacrifice_ to Orestes and Pylades? |
6829 | Now, honestly, Mnesippus, does not that doubt look a little like envy? |
6829 | Now, now: weeping? |
6829 | Now, what do you say to this proposal? |
6829 | Now, what do you think is the way to sharpen your sight?'' |
6829 | Of course you know that? |
6829 | Of these pairs, which do you consider the best? |
6829 | Oh, I see; using stars to steer by, like the Phoenicians? |
6829 | Oh, not_ all_ the altars; what harm do they do, so long as incense and perfume is the worst of it? |
6829 | Oh, yes, no doubt;_ he_ called Apollo rich,''rolling in gold''; but now where will you find Apollo? |
6829 | Or again with the hurry of business-- fiscal-- legal-- military? |
6829 | Or are they passed over in favour of the orators? |
6829 | Or did you put your trust in Artemis? |
6829 | Orders to be issued, treaties to be drawn up, estimates to be formed? |
6829 | Our Menippus a literal godsend from Heaven? |
6829 | Perhaps a trade is more in your way; are you a carpenter or cobbler? |
6829 | Philocles, what_ is_ it that makes most men so fond of a lie? |
6829 | Philosophers caring to sponge? |
6829 | Philosophers? |
6829 | Plato? |
6829 | Possess us; are not we thine own familiars? |
6829 | Pray when are they likely to have time to spare for me? |
6829 | Put on your clothes? |
6829 | Pythagoras has carded and spun? |
6829 | Pythagoras the mistress-- and the mother-- of a Pericles? |
6829 | Reel off the exordium in Homer? |
6829 | Ride or out- ride, shoot or out- shoot? |
6829 | Sacrifice to them? |
6829 | Scant and broken sleep, troubled dreams, perplexities, forebodings? |
6829 | Seriously now, are not these refinements of yours all child''s play-- something for your idle, slack youngsters to do? |
6829 | Shall I proceed, or is the inference clear? |
6829 | Shall an Ethiopian change his skin? |
6829 | Shall we take war time first, and see who will do best for himself and for his city under those conditions? |
6829 | Similarly, if a man involuntarily performed a good action, he would not reward him? |
6829 | So I presume an out- diner is better than a diner? |
6829 | So he came and asked him:''Who, pray, are you, that you should pour scorn upon me?'' |
6829 | So his supplies will never run short? |
6829 | So mighty is the issue; believe me, it behoves us all to search out salvation; and where lies salvation? |
6829 | So sponging is an art, eh? |
6829 | So sponging is an art? |
6829 | So you are a sponger? |
6829 | So, if sponging has all these marks, it must be an art? |
6829 | Solon, did Lycurgus take his whippings at the fighting age, or did he make these spirited regulations on the safe basis of superannuation? |
6829 | Some one tried to make a fool of him by asking, If I burn a hundred pounds of wood, how many pounds of smoke shall I get? |
6829 | Sponging is an old word; what does it really mean? |
6829 | Still busy with vain phantoms, chasing a visionary happiness through your head, that''fleeting''joy, as the poet calls it? |
6829 | Suppose a man commits a crime accidentally: does he punish him just the same? |
6829 | Surely you know, Cyniscus, what punishments await the evil- doers after death, and how happy will be the lot of the righteous? |
6829 | Take an instance: if a man who did not understand navigation took charge of a ship in a stormy sea, would he be safe? |
6829 | Tell me, then, and be damned to you, do you deny that the Gods exercise providence? |
6829 | Than mine? |
6829 | That is how things go on board your ship, sir wiseacre; and who shall count the wrecks? |
6829 | That is not the case; the greater the drain upon it in the course of exercise, the greater the supply; did you ever hear a story about the Hydra? |
6829 | That venerably bearded sexagenarian, with his philosophic leanings? |
6829 | The innocent? |
6829 | The possession of gold the sole happiness? |
6829 | The resentments of courtiers and the machinations of conspirators? |
6829 | The sophist had not had enough;''_ You_ are no infant,''he went on,''but a philosopher, it seems; may one ask what marks the transformation?'' |
6829 | Then when Homer says, for instance, in another place, Lest unto Hell thou go,_ outstripping Fate_, he is talking nonsense, of course? |
6829 | Then when I slew the lion or the Hydra, was I only the Fates''instrument? |
6829 | Then who was I, do you know? |
6829 | Then you have seen the_ Aphrodite_, of course? |
6829 | There are three Fates, are there not,--Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropus? |
6829 | There is a nasty sound about the word sponger, do n''t you think? |
6829 | They were strangers to you: strangers, did I say? |
6829 | This is something like friendship, is it not,--to accept such a bequest as this, and to show such respect for a friend''s last wishes? |
6829 | This was no earthly vision, Lycinus; surely she must have dropped from the clouds.--And what was she doing? |
6829 | To Simon''s? |
6829 | To hear you, one might think it was Polus or Aristodemus, not Zeus; and why, pray, if something of that sort is not bothering you? |
6829 | To run or out- run? |
6829 | To what end the gluing and the trimming, the cedar- oil and saffron, the leather cases and the bosses? |
6829 | Wait a minute: have I ever been changed in this way? |
6829 | Was Democritus alarmed at the ghosts? |
6829 | Was not this advice superfluous, seeing that the end must come? |
6829 | Was your patient a second Epimenides?'' |
6829 | Well now, is the number of friendships to be limited, or does wealth of instances itself constitute one claim to superiority? |
6829 | Well then, you must surely have come on some embarrassing home- truths in that play? |
6829 | Well then: you know your Homer and Hesiod, of course? |
6829 | Well, Cyniscus? |
6829 | Well, Justice: yonder is our road: straight in the line for Sunium, to the foot of Hymettus, taking Parnes on our right; you see those two hills? |
6829 | Well, Pythagoras,--or is there any other name you prefer? |
6829 | Well, Rhetoric, when are you going to begin? |
6829 | Well, and Achilles: was he so much better than other people, or is that all stuff and nonsense? |
6829 | Well, and why did you not copy Lycurgus and whip your young men? |
6829 | Well, but all men-- ay, all nations-- have acknowledged and, feted Gods; was it all delusion? |
6829 | Well, but is the appropriation of what belongs to others no offence? |
6829 | Well, but-- will they come? |
6829 | Well, how shall we manage? |
6829 | Well, never mind; what was she like? |
6829 | Well, the sponger does that; why is he privileged to offend? |
6829 | Well, what am I to do? |
6829 | Well, what is Art? |
6829 | Well, who will dare dispute_ my_ claim? |
6829 | Well, you will let me describe as civil scenes the market, the courts, the wrestling- schools and gymnasia, the hunting field and the dining- room? |
6829 | Well? |
6829 | Were you ever at Cnidus? |
6829 | What about these two charges just brought against a rhetorician? |
6829 | What about this? |
6829 | What about your friend Eucrates? |
6829 | What answer is possible to such ribaldry? |
6829 | What are they? |
6829 | What are we to say they are doing? |
6829 | What are you laughing at, Anacharsis? |
6829 | What can save you then? |
6829 | What can the matter be, then? |
6829 | What can you mean? |
6829 | What could induce me, misguided insect that I was, to leave that life without so much as a grain of gold- dust to supply my needs in this one? |
6829 | What did I tell you, Gods? |
6829 | What do you mean by hounding them against me? |
6829 | What do you say? |
6829 | What do you think of him, Toxaris? |
6829 | What do you think? |
6829 | What else of godlike and sublime was in their conduct? |
6829 | What harm did these men do? |
6829 | What has a refined bewitching orator to do with the vulgar masculine? |
6829 | What impression does one get of the sponger''s actual life, when one compares it with the other? |
6829 | What is a henchman, slaves and friends being excluded? |
6829 | What is it that Pindar says about gold? |
6829 | What is it? |
6829 | What is that? |
6829 | What is the exact contribution to it of dust and summersaults? |
6829 | What is the matter? |
6829 | What is the meaning of this? |
6829 | What is this Providence? |
6829 | What is your idea, now, in all this rolling and unrolling of scrolls? |
6829 | What matter, friend? |
6829 | What need to mention that the most religious race on earth, the Egyptian, never tires of divine names? |
6829 | What say the poets? |
6829 | What shall I do, Zeus? |
6829 | What should he know of the matter? |
6829 | What sort of a dinner was it? |
6829 | What was Tibius doing with those fine great kippers yesterday? |
6829 | What will be the result? |
6829 | What will she make of it, I wonder? |
6829 | What will the defendant have to say to that, I wonder? |
6829 | What will thine utterance be? |
6829 | What, Eucrates, of all credible witnesses? |
6829 | What, Hermes? |
6829 | What, Zeus? |
6829 | What, are all the events we see uncontrolled, then? |
6829 | What, still puzzling over the import of a dream? |
6829 | What, without meat or drink? |
6829 | What, you miscreant, no Gods? |
6829 | What, you turned into a hawk or a crow on the sly? |
6829 | What? |
6829 | When a speaker passes over essential matters in silence, has the court no penalty for him? |
6829 | When any one asks what the art is, how do we describe it? |
6829 | When do you do your reading? |
6829 | When he talks like that, do you take offence and fling the book away, or has_ he_ your licence to expatiate in panegyric? |
6829 | Whence comes this resistless plague among us? |
6829 | Where he tells how the daughter, the brother, and the wife of Zeus conspired to imprison him? |
6829 | Where is my dagger? |
6829 | Where is our handsome musician now? |
6829 | Where is the right thing to be found? |
6829 | Where is your military gymnasium, then? |
6829 | Where shall we go first? |
6829 | Wherefore thus brooding, Zeus? |
6829 | Which is to be first? |
6829 | Which is----? |
6829 | Which one? |
6829 | Which would you take, if you had the choice?-To sail, or to out- sail? |
6829 | Who are they, and what is the extent of their power? |
6829 | Who are you, that you should protest in the Gods''name? |
6829 | Who ever came away from dinner in tears? |
6829 | Who is she, and whence? |
6829 | Who is umpire? |
6829 | Who of womankind shall be compared to her In comeliness, in wit, in goodly works? |
6829 | Who was that? |
6829 | Who will sacrifice to you, if he does not expect to profit by it? |
6829 | Who wins? |
6829 | Who wins? |
6829 | Who would care to do a glorious deed? |
6829 | Who would dare attempt such a thing, with him tasting your food and drink? |
6829 | Who would not despise the city whose guards are such miserable creatures? |
6829 | Who would not go through this amount of preparatory toil, and take his chance of a choking or a dislocation, for apples or parsley? |
6829 | Whom but the wicked? |
6829 | Whom does he punish in particular? |
6829 | Why are you so sorry for me? |
6829 | Why do you smile? |
6829 | Why do your young men behave like this, Solon? |
6829 | Why does not the official there separate them and put an end to it? |
6829 | Why seize upon the rising generation so young, and subject them to such toils? |
6829 | Why that ribald laughter, Momus? |
6829 | Why, Tychiades, what else was Patroclus''s relation to Achilles? |
6829 | Why, have you ever known any one with such a strong natural turn for lying? |
6829 | Why, how would you like it done? |
6829 | Why, if these were ruined, how could the orators ever make another speech, with the best of their stock- in- trade taken from them? |
6829 | Why, now? |
6829 | Why, what means this? |
6829 | Why, what sane man would call sponging a profession? |
6829 | Why, who would believe the story, when I told him that I had it from a cock? |
6829 | Why, you must know Pan, most festive of all Dionysus''s followers? |
6829 | Why? |
6829 | Why? |
6829 | Will Apollo''s answer to the Lydian suit you? |
6829 | Will he be converted there and then into a stalwart, comely warrior, clearing the river at a bound, and staining its waters with Phrygian blood? |
6829 | Will he prove a slayer of Asteropaeuses and Lycaons, and finally of Hectors, he who can not so much as bear Achilles''s spear upon his shoulders? |
6829 | Will she contrive to put all these different types together without their clashing? |
6829 | Will you allow Homer to have been an admirable poet? |
6829 | Will you have it all? |
6829 | Will you never stop? |
6829 | Will you remember to tell Zeus all this? |
6829 | Wind and Scimetar not Gods? |
6829 | With a whirr and a crash Let the levin- bolt dash-- Ah, whither? |
6829 | With fear and suspicion? |
6829 | With whom does it lie to check and remedy this state of things? |
6829 | Would you have me break in? |
6829 | Would_ you_ have stood it, when that fisherman from Oreus stole your trident at Geraestus? |
6829 | Yes, I think you have dealt with that point sufficiently; apart from that, how do you show the inferiority of Philosophy to your art? |
6829 | Yes, you have proved him a good man; but can you show him to have been not Achilles''s friend, but a sponger? |
6829 | Yes? |
6829 | Yes? |
6829 | Yes? |
6829 | Yet begin I will; how can I draw back when she is there? |
6829 | Yet surely nothing could be clearer: who could observe such a man at work, and abstain from the inevitable allusion to pearls and swine? |
6829 | Yet what right have_ I_ to complain? |
6829 | You doubt of that judgement- seat before which every soul is arraigned? |
6829 | You have quite forgotten the way, I suppose, in all this time? |
6829 | You hesitate? |
6829 | You hold toil to be an evil? |
6829 | You know Ion? |
6829 | You know how confident and impressive I always was as a public speaker? |
6829 | You know my neighbour and fellow craftsman, Simon, who supped with me not long since? |
6829 | You leave us nothing, then? |
6829 | You must be jesting, Posidon; you can not have forgotten that we have no say in the matter? |
6829 | You must pluck out the feather first.... What''s this? |
6829 | You retire; you confess yourself beaten, then? |
6829 | You said that there were eunuchs in her train? |
6829 | You tell me, cock, that you have been a king yourself: now how did_ you_ find the life? |
6829 | You will admit that, if the principle of your life is to be pleasure, all your appetites have to be satisfied? |
6829 | You will agree with me that colour and tone have a good deal to do with beauty? |
6829 | You will deny all that too, of course? |
6829 | You will not grudge me that privilege? |
6829 | You would deprive even the Fates of honour? |
6829 | You would have me return to Earth, once more to be driven thence in ignominious flight by the intolerable taunts of Injustice? |
6829 | Your authority for all this, pray? |
6829 | Your jealousy will not take alarm at the prospect of a rival petrifaction at your side? |
6829 | Zeus has sent me down, Pan, to preside in the law- court.--And how do you like Athens? |
6829 | ], and for all these ages has enjoyed the blessings of perfect order in this ancient city? |
6829 | ]: yet I take it that the incompetence of their respective owners will be made clear; am I right? |
6829 | _ Dear sir, was it Apollo sent you here? |
6829 | _ Will you sit in the porch, when there is a_ parvys_ to hand? |
6829 | _"You? |
6829 | a relic from the time of Minos?'' |
6829 | accept the verdict and hold my tongue? |
6829 | and did the vegetables want more rain? |
6829 | and how was night possible in Heaven, with the sun always there taking his share of the good cheer? |
6829 | and the Portico thrown in, with the Miltiades and Cynaegirus on the field of Marathon? |
6829 | and your teeth chattering? |
6829 | and, if so, what else can possibly annoy you but love? |
6829 | are not our joys and our sorrows the same? |
6829 | array their hosts against him? |
6829 | asked Arignotus, scowling upon me;''you deny the existence of the supernatural, when there is scarcely a man who has not seen some evidence of it?'' |
6829 | between_ praeposita_ and_ rejecta_? |
6829 | by what right? |
6829 | could I go yet? |
6829 | destroy all those people for one man''s wickedness? |
6829 | did he call me best of rhetoricians, as when Chaerephon asked and was told who was wisest of his generation? |
6829 | did you like the idea of falling into the sea, and giving us a_ Mare Menippeum_ after the precedent of the_ Icarium_? |
6829 | do you expect it to filter through all the way to Hades? |
6829 | do you take them for Gods? |
6829 | had we suffered much from cold last winter? |
6829 | he exclaimed;''can he not hear at this distance?'' |
6829 | he must be feasted with all pomp and circumstance, and punctually to the day, or his leechship is angry? |
6829 | here on Areopagus I am to give juries to outsiders, who ought to be tried on the other side of the Euphrates? |
6829 | hold a session at once? |
6829 | how big am I? |
6829 | how did I come to leave out so essential a particular? |
6829 | how do you make good men of them? |
6829 | in God''s name, what shall we call_ your_ contribution to progress? |
6829 | is he engaging? |
6829 | is that the trouble? |
6829 | like yourself?'' |
6829 | no Providence? |
6829 | nor again why Socrates was handed over to the Eleven instead of Meletus? |
6829 | of inspired utterances, of voices from the shrine, of the priestess''s prophetic lines? |
6829 | or greater perhaps? |
6829 | or is workmanship to count most? |
6829 | or shall we say next year? |
6829 | or some greater, a mistress of the Fates? |
6829 | or will you grant an appeal? |
6829 | pale? |
6829 | pen a palinode like Stesichorus? |
6829 | people with beards just like mine; sepulchral beings, who are always getting together and jabbering? |
6829 | perhaps, like Hesiod, you received a laurel- branch from the Muses? |
6829 | shall I be able to live with them? |
6829 | shall they let wounds or weariness or discomfort incapacitate them before there is need? |
6829 | so bald, so plain, so prosy an announcement-- on this momentous occasion? |
6829 | that black should_ be_ black, white be white, and red play its blushing part? |
6829 | the eunuch a concubine, the landsman an oar, the pilot a plough? |
6829 | then, Polystratus, I beheld teeth whose whiteness, whose unbroken regularity, who shall describe? |
6829 | they said;''we never saw a coachman spilt; and where are the poplars? |
6829 | what has Dialogue but his cloak? |
6829 | where do you find the source of oracles and prophecies, if not in the Gods and their Providence? |
6829 | where thy city? |
6829 | wherefore apart, And palely pacing, as Earth''s sages use? |
6829 | who thy kin? |
6829 | why am I gibbous? |
6829 | why am I halved? |
6829 | why so vexed? |
6829 | why, do you suppose, if it was true, we would row or tow up stream for sixpences? |
6829 | will he acquit himself creditably? |
6829 | with the schoolroom it is different; or who ever went out to dinner with the dismal expression characteristic of going to school? |
6829 | would his acquisition leave him any wiser than it found him? |
6829 | you do not blush to call yourself a sponger? |
6829 | you doubt that there are punishments and rewards to come? |
9362 | Am I a bounden slave? |
9362 | Am I such a coward as to tell a lie in order to avoid a little pain more or less? 9362 Am I to tell mamma about this conversation?" |
9362 | An attorney? |
9362 | And Charlotte--? |
9362 | And Matthew Haygarth died very soon after this event? |
9362 | And are you going very far? |
9362 | And did Susan Meynell hear this? |
9362 | And do you really think he is in the dark-- my brother Philip, who can turn a man''s brains inside out in half an hour''s conversation? 9362 And do you think he believes in ghosts?" |
9362 | And how about the Samuel Meynell who died at Calais? 9362 And how about the lady he was said to have married in Spain?" |
9362 | And how am I to pay forty pounds in three months out of a pound a week? |
9362 | And how did you come to choose Huxter''s Cross for your holiday? |
9362 | And how do you know that you may n''t get the name of the place out of your friend the carver and gilder? |
9362 | And how was the old aunt? 9362 And if I extort the name we want from poor old Sparsfield''s recollection?" |
9362 | And in London? 9362 And in case it should be worth something?" |
9362 | And is Spotswold in this county? |
9362 | And it ai n''t often I make an oration, is it, Tony? |
9362 | And pray, who is to find the costs for this business? |
9362 | And so you''ve come back at last,said the Captain,"from Dorking?" |
9362 | And that the name ended in Cross? |
9362 | And the Haygarth business is to remain in abeyance while Miss Halliday goes through the tedious formula of a sentimental courtship? |
9362 | And the next,--my bulky friend number two,--with a cracked leather back and a general tendency to decay? |
9362 | And the next? |
9362 | And the sister went to her? |
9362 | And then I suppose there was a scene? |
9362 | And those are your lowest terms? |
9362 | And was Valentine Hawkehurst really happy at Newhall? |
9362 | And was nothing further ever discovered? |
9362 | And what do you ask for the forty odd letters? |
9362 | And what have you been doing while I have been away? |
9362 | And what is to be the next move? |
9362 | And what kind of bargain do you expect to make with me when Miss Halliday is my wife? |
9362 | And what may_ you_ be going to do with yourself to- day, Val? |
9362 | And what of the poor girl? |
9362 | And when does she want this new doctor called in? |
9362 | And when may I expect your marriage with Miss Halliday? |
9362 | And why should anything that I say make you unhappy, Mary Anne? |
9362 | And will Charlotte know-- will she know that I have been concerned in this business? |
9362 | And will you really make my caps, dear? |
9362 | And yet you belong to Ullerton, I suppose? |
9362 | And you have got a chance at last, eh? |
9362 | And you really think it would be better not to tell Charlotte? |
9362 | And you say there is an entry in the register? |
9362 | And you want me to begin work--? |
9362 | And you want me to go away? |
9362 | Any children, sir? |
9362 | Any more promoting work? |
9362 | Are the Judson family very friendly with one another? |
9362 | Are they tolerably long letters, or mere scrawls? |
9362 | Are you and he particularly intimate? |
9362 | Are you ill? |
9362 | Are your prospects so very black? |
9362 | As how, sir? |
9362 | Ay, poor lass, what of her? 9362 Because I''m his friend? |
9362 | But how about the legality of the Fleet marriage? |
9362 | But if he should want to write to me? |
9362 | But if you had a great fortune, Lotta, do n''t you think you would be very much disposed to leave me to plod on at my desk in Great Russell- street? 9362 But my brother Phil has been told nothing?" |
9362 | But the young lady''s mamma, sir-- she would look after her daughter, I suppose? |
9362 | But what business? |
9362 | But what is the meaning of this sudden move? 9362 But what''ll be your excuse for leaving town? |
9362 | But who knows what happiness may be waiting for you in the future, Di? |
9362 | But why sorry, my dear? |
9362 | But why? |
9362 | Can I trust her? |
9362 | Cruel to whom? |
9362 | Diana, why are you so unkind to me? |
9362 | Diana,cried Charlotte, reproachfully,"why do you speak so bitterly? |
9362 | Did he die unmarried? |
9362 | Did he tell you where he was going? |
9362 | Did n''t I, really? |
9362 | Did you? |
9362 | Died in America, did he? 9362 Do n''t you see that I am longing to confide in you? |
9362 | Do n''t you? 9362 Do the moneyed swells bite?" |
9362 | Do you know where he has gone? |
9362 | Do you know whether Christian Meynell was an only son, or the only son who attained manhood? |
9362 | Do you know whom the younger sister married? |
9362 | Do you know, or have you ever known, an attorney of the name of Brice in this town? |
9362 | Do you really think that Tom will soon be well and strong again? |
9362 | Do you remember the name of the man she married? |
9362 | Do you remember the name of the place she went to-- the town or village, or whatever it was? |
9362 | Do you think I care for the landau or the page? |
9362 | Do you think Tom''s in any danger? |
9362 | Do you think there is any possibility of obtaining orders, Mr. Hawkehurst? 9362 Do you think you would be a good hand at hunting up the missing links in the chain of a family history?" |
9362 | Does he know your real position? |
9362 | Going to leave town? |
9362 | Had he no sons? |
9362 | Has she fallen in love with some young chap? |
9362 | Have I? |
9362 | Have you any idea of the time at which she was married? |
9362 | He died at Calais? |
9362 | He was in Yorkshire? |
9362 | He''s in a bad way, is n''t he, Phil? |
9362 | How can I help being ridiculous? 9362 How could I come? |
9362 | How d''ye do, Hawkehurst? |
9362 | How did you discover Miss Halliday''s descent from Matthew Haygarth? |
9362 | How do I know that Georgy would have me, if he did leave her a widow? |
9362 | How do I know? 9362 How do you do, Diana?" |
9362 | How do you happen to know that? |
9362 | How do you mean? |
9362 | How is the new covert to be beaten? |
9362 | How many of such letters have you to sell? |
9362 | How''s Barlingford-- lively as ever, I suppose? |
9362 | How''s this? |
9362 | I do n''t think papa cares much about ghost- stories, does he, uncle George? |
9362 | I have conquered my evil spirit, Lotta, and there shall be peace and true love between us for evermore, shall there not, dearest friend? |
9362 | I suppose you can give me Hawkehurst''s address, in case I should want to write to him? |
9362 | I suppose you did n''t notice where he told the man to drive? |
9362 | I wonder what colour our hair will be when we touch that money? |
9362 | I wonder where the rich man is to come from who will marry Captain Paget''s daughter? |
9362 | I wonder whether he is any relation to the Sheldon who is in with a low set of money- lenders? |
9362 | I wonder whether that scoundrel Paget has come back to London? |
9362 | If I were drowning, do you think_ he_ would stretch out his hand to save me while you were within his sight? 9362 Is Mr. Hawkehurst in?" |
9362 | Is he? 9362 Is it likely to go very hard with him?" |
9362 | Is it not possible that Mr. Kingdon did marry Miss Meynell, after all? |
9362 | Is it only a coincidence,he thought to himself,"or is Horatio Paget on our track?" |
9362 | Is it safe to have her near me-- after-- after what she said to me in Fitzgeorge- street? 9362 Is it to be yes, or no, my dear?" |
9362 | Is she not? 9362 Is that last letter still in existence?" |
9362 | Is there anything the matter? |
9362 | It ai n''t a bad memory, is it, Tony? |
9362 | It''s a very nice thing you drop into, old fellow, is n''t it? |
9362 | Lawyer Brice''s sons? |
9362 | Letters from whom-- to whom? |
9362 | May I ask how it is you have taken it into your head to play the benevolent father in the matter of Valentine Hawkehurst and Miss Halliday? |
9362 | Meaning Miss Halliday, sir? |
9362 | Miss Meynell settled in Yorkshire, did she? |
9362 | Miss Susan Meynell died unmarried, I believe? |
9362 | Mr. Sheldon, I believe? |
9362 | My dear love, do you think I can not pity this injured lady? 9362 No?" |
9362 | Not Mr. Anthony Sparsfield? |
9362 | Now, then, what is it? |
9362 | O, he died abroad, did he? 9362 O, surely, sir, you can not mean it?" |
9362 | O, that''s a lower jaw, is it? 9362 O, that''s your ultimatum, is it, Mr. Joseph Surface?" |
9362 | Of all the pleasures and triumphs which girls of my age enjoy, is there one that I ever envied? 9362 One whom she loved and trusted, perhaps?" |
9362 | One- fifth? |
9362 | Ought n''t it? |
9362 | Over what period do the dates of these letters extend? |
9362 | Phil is off his feed, then; eh, Nancy? |
9362 | Pray how much do you expect to get out of Miss Halliday''s fortune? |
9362 | Quite appalling, is it not, mamma? 9362 She sent you to tell me that?" |
9362 | She was known to have died unmarried? |
9362 | She''ll be away ever so long, I suppose? |
9362 | Suppose my information took the form of letters? |
9362 | Suppose she can recover it without your agency? |
9362 | That if you ever did get a stroke of luck, I should have a share of it-- eh, Phil? |
9362 | That is to say, to my stepdaughter? |
9362 | The person for whom you are concerned is not Mr. Theodore Judson? |
9362 | Then it was a reinterment? |
9362 | Then this gentleman would have been no grand match for Miss Meynell, if--"If he had married her? 9362 They call it a hundred thousand down there, do they?" |
9362 | This one, for instance? |
9362 | Valentine Hawkehurst,he said,"shall we throw my brother Phil overboard altogether? |
9362 | Valentine, what do you mean? |
9362 | Was Christian Meynell''s father called William? |
9362 | Was I so obviously spoony? 9362 Was Valentine''s-- was your father''s life a very bad one?" |
9362 | Was my unhappy state so very conspicuous? |
9362 | Was that all? |
9362 | Was this son the only child? |
9362 | Well, sir? |
9362 | Well,said Mr. Sheldon the younger,"busy as usual? |
9362 | Were you angry with me just now? |
9362 | What Burkham is that? 9362 What about?" |
9362 | What am I to say to him if he has? 9362 What can it signify to me whom my stepdaughter marries?" |
9362 | What could have taken him to Yorkshire? |
9362 | What course ought I to take? 9362 What did I ask in life except his love?" |
9362 | What did you eat for breakfast? |
9362 | What do I know in his disfavour? 9362 What do they care what becomes of me?" |
9362 | What do you go about giving people Sheldon''s card for? |
9362 | What do you mean by my laying plans? |
9362 | What do you mean by that? |
9362 | What do you mean by the Meynell Bible? |
9362 | What do you mean by underhand work? |
9362 | What do you mean, Charlotte? |
9362 | What do you mean? |
9362 | What do you mean? |
9362 | What does anything matter? 9362 What does it matter to me where they go or what they do?" |
9362 | What has my roof to do with Tom Halliday''s illness-- or his death, if it came to that? 9362 What have I lost?" |
9362 | What in goodness''name has kept you out there all this time? |
9362 | What is it that obliges magazine- writers to be perpetually talking about Dr. Johnson? 9362 What is the matter, Nancy?" |
9362 | What is the use of my going home? |
9362 | What is this treasure, the loss of which makes me seem to myself such an abject wretch? 9362 What kind of agency, and where?" |
9362 | What kind of information, do you require? |
9362 | What new move is Phil going to make? |
9362 | What ought I to do? |
9362 | What part of Holborn? |
9362 | What promise? |
9362 | What reason have you for forming that idea? |
9362 | What sort of business is it? |
9362 | What the deuce has taken him off in such a hurry? |
9362 | What trains have left here within the last half- hour? |
9362 | What treachery is he engaged in now? |
9362 | What was this man''s Christian name? |
9362 | What would have become of me if Priscilla had refused to take me in? |
9362 | What''s the matter, Nancy? |
9362 | What''s the use of going to bed, if I ca n''t sleep? |
9362 | What, in the name of all that''s ridiculous, do you mean, Nancy? |
9362 | What, the Sheldon of Gray''s Inn? |
9362 | When did you hear it? |
9362 | When do you mean to tell her? |
9362 | Which? |
9362 | Who else but Theodore Judson should have employed you? 9362 Who says I am going to break it?" |
9362 | Who takes any heed of my feelings, or cares whether I am glad or sorry? |
9362 | Who told you that he offended me? |
9362 | Whose interest can be served by my showing you my poor aunt''s letter? 9362 Why do n''t you try to catch one of them for yourself?" |
9362 | Why do you imitate those people yonder, if you despise them so heartily? |
9362 | Why not, papa? |
9362 | Why not? |
9362 | Why should the money get into his hand? |
9362 | Why should you make the advancement of Miss Halliday''s claims contingent on her marriage? 9362 Why should you not desire or deserve her goodness?" |
9362 | Why so? 9362 Why, Valentine?" |
9362 | Why, dearest? |
9362 | Will it? |
9362 | Will she be glad to see me again? |
9362 | Will she ever believe how pure and true my love has been, if she comes to know this? |
9362 | Within the last ten years? |
9362 | Would it really, now? |
9362 | Would you have any objection to my taking a copy of these entries? |
9362 | Would you like to see him standing? |
9362 | Yes, she is very handsome, is she not? 9362 You are going to leave London?" |
9362 | You are not concerned in the endeavour to assert Theodore Judson''s claim to the late John Haygarth''s property, eh? |
9362 | You are sure he was buried at Calais? |
9362 | You are tired, Diana? |
9362 | You ca n''t remember what part of England it was that Christian Meynell''s daughter went to when she married? |
9362 | You did n''t happen to notice a dark- eyed, dark- haired young man among the passengers-- second class? |
9362 | You do n''t mind my smoke here? |
9362 | You feel quite clear as to the fact that Montagu Kingdon never did marry this young woman? |
9362 | You frighten me, Nancy,she whispered;"do you think that Tom is so much worse? |
9362 | You guessed my secret? |
9362 | You have been losing, I suppose, Mr. Hawkehurst,she said,"or you would not have come home?" |
9362 | You have found the entry of a second Haygarthian marriage? |
9362 | You mean to say that you will give me this fortune when I marry, papa? |
9362 | You think that Mr. Sheldon would let his stepdaughter marry a penniless man? |
9362 | You will come with us, wo n''t you, dear Di? |
9362 | You''ll be sure it goes on to the Alliance Office, eh, old fellow? |
9362 | You''ll come, I suppose, as usual, George? |
9362 | You''ll dine out of doors, I suppose? |
9362 | Young man, are you aware----? |
9362 | Your aunt Sarah? 9362 Your breakfast is ready for you downstairs, Mrs. Halliday,"he said presently;"had n''t you better go down and take it, while I keep watch here? |
9362 | Your old kind of work? |
9362 | _] Do n''t you see I''m engaged, Sophia Louisa? 9362 After all, are there not other people than Horatio Paget who wear cleaned lavender gloves? 9362 Ah, shall we ever meet again under such happy auspices? 9362 Ah, to be sure; I have some recollection: is she your father''s sister? |
9362 | Am I, so hopeless an outsider in the race of life, to come in with a rush and win the prize which Fortune''s first favourite might envy? |
9362 | And am I a man to talk about love, or to ask a woman to share my life? |
9362 | And did you gather from your clerk that Matthew Haygarth and his wife lived happily together? |
9362 | And how about his sons?" |
9362 | And poor Georgy had ample food for her jealous fears and suspicions; for where might a man not be who was so seldom at home? |
9362 | And the bulk of the Haygarthian fortune-- I suppose that''s something rather stiff?" |
9362 | And then I was obliged to go back to the old question, Was it possible that the Captain could have any inkling of my business? |
9362 | And then she looked piteously at Mr. Sheldon, and said,"What do you think I ought to do? |
9362 | And then that sighing and groaning and dolefulness of visage whenever the thought of the past came back to him? |
9362 | And was Miss Paget glad of his coming, and pleased to be in his company? |
9362 | And what have you been doing for the last day or two?" |
9362 | And what on earth can people have to say about it if he should die here instead of anywhere else?" |
9362 | And where have you been all this time? |
9362 | And who knows, after all, whether a dead man does n''t_ feel_ that sort of thing?" |
9362 | And you are such an excellent critic, Mr. Hawkehurst, and it would be so nice to have you with us,--wouldn''t it, Di? |
9362 | Are not the chief pleasures of life joys as perishable as the bloom on a peach or the freshness of a rose? |
9362 | Are these people kind to you? |
9362 | But do n''t you think I should be a villain if I traded on her girlish folly? |
9362 | But do you know I sometimes fancy I have spent my last jolly evening, and eaten my last oyster supper, on this earth? |
9362 | But how about Susan Meynell''s after- life?--the fourteen years in which she was lost sight of? |
9362 | But how are we to ferret out his doings in London? |
9362 | But how comes that young fellow to have an aunt at Dorking? |
9362 | But how is a man to carry off the woman he adores when he has not the_ de quoi_ for the first stage of the journey? |
9362 | But how should he get his first inkling of the business? |
9362 | But might not his attention have been attracted by that advertisement for heirs- at- law to the Haygarthian estate which appeared in the_ Times_? |
9362 | But the elder birds, Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon, are they kind?" |
9362 | But was not all this something too much of happiness for a man whose feet had trodden in evil ways? |
9362 | But what could a woman do who found herself in the midst of that dismal forest? |
9362 | But what"makes"the gallant Captain in Ullerton? |
9362 | But why am I to go back to London?" |
9362 | But why should I wonder about him, or trouble myself about him? |
9362 | But why should they not come to you-- brighter and better days?" |
9362 | Ca n''t you see that, man? |
9362 | Can I accept three thousand pounds for giving my dearest her birthright? |
9362 | Can I hope or believe it? |
9362 | Can I take advantage of her ignorance, and may it not be said that I traded on my secret knowledge? |
9362 | Can I take payment for a service done to her? |
9362 | Can any one know better than I that I shall be no nearer Charlotte Halliday in Yorkshire than I am in London? |
9362 | Can happiness so perfect, joy so sinless, endure? |
9362 | Can his presence in Ullerton have any relation to the business that has brought me here? |
9362 | Can you tell me where?" |
9362 | Charlotte,"exclaimed the young man, with sudden energy,"do you think you could ever come to distrust me?" |
9362 | Could I not be happy dissevered eternally from billiard- room and kursaal, race- ground and dancing- rooms? |
9362 | Could I not be happy with her here, among these forgotten hills, these widely scattered homesteads? |
9362 | Could Mr. Wendover give me any information relating to the Haygarth family? |
9362 | Could it be possible that I had overlooked some scrap of information more important than all that I had transcribed? |
9362 | Could there be any one upon this earth, even a Sheldon, incapable of appreciating the privilege of that divine creature''s presence? |
9362 | Did he ever look up to the top of the mountain and calculate the distance he must needs traverse before his task should be done? |
9362 | Did he take much luggage?" |
9362 | Did no dismal fatality follow the footsteps of Chatterton? |
9362 | Did you come into this room the night before last, when Georgy was asleep?" |
9362 | Do I think I shall ever be Queen of England? |
9362 | Do n''t you remember when we were children together how afraid she used to be of spoiling her frocks? |
9362 | Do n''t you think the surrounding circumstances are strange? |
9362 | Do they find their fulfilment in heaven, those visions of perfect bliss? |
9362 | Do you imagine that Valentine Hawkehurst ever thinks of me, or considers me?" |
9362 | Do you know I have dreamed of him sometimes? |
9362 | Do you know that in some places they call that fern Maria''s hair, and hold it sacred to the mother of Him who was born to- day? |
9362 | Do you think I am likely to play the Pharisee, and be eager to bespatter the grave of this poor sufferer? |
9362 | Do you think I have n''t seen how the land lies between you two? |
9362 | Do you think Mrs. Halliday will object to such a course?" |
9362 | Do you think he ever stops to consider whether I am that Diana Paget who was once his friend and confidante and fellow- wayfarer and companion? |
9362 | Do you think she would refuse to give you a temporary home if you sued to her_ in formâ pauperis?_""No, I do n''t think she would refuse. |
9362 | Do you think you shall be able to manage for us, Nancy?" |
9362 | Does he suspect the truth, I wonder? |
9362 | Does my F. stil use to speke harsh agenst me, or has he ni forgott their is sech a creetur living? |
9362 | For three mortal hours did I listen to my ancient mariner; and how much am I the wiser for my patience? |
9362 | Goodge?" |
9362 | Had not Mr. Sheldon made light of his friend''s malady, and what motive could he have for deceiving her? |
9362 | Had the Theodore Judsons some knowledge of a secret marriage on the part of Matthew Haygarth? |
9362 | Halliday?" |
9362 | Has Hawkehurst dined with you lately, by the way, Phil?" |
9362 | Has no mysterious ban been laid upon the men who have been called Dukes of Buckingham? |
9362 | Have n''t I dined at Bayswater when you''ve been there? |
9362 | Have you seen her lately?" |
9362 | Hawkehurst?" |
9362 | Hawkehurst?" |
9362 | He does n''t like my sitting up for him; but I wonder_ what_ time he would come home if I did n''t sit up for him?" |
9362 | He does write, does he not?" |
9362 | He had been brought up amongst people who treated literature as a trade as well as an art;--and what art is not more or less a trade? |
9362 | He had brothers, I suppose?" |
9362 | He said he should know the name if he heard it; why not try him with it?" |
9362 | Her father''s victims might be miserable, but was not she infinitely more wretched? |
9362 | How am I to disintegrate the mass of prosiness which I have heard this day? |
9362 | How could I bring myself to tell her that I must leave her?--how much less could I bring myself to do it? |
9362 | How could she doubt that he was wiser than herself in all matters connected with the medical profession? |
9362 | How did you discover the marriage- lines?" |
9362 | How did you ferret out the certificate of gray- eyed Molly''s espousals?" |
9362 | How did you find things?" |
9362 | How long would it all last? |
9362 | How long would the stockbroker float triumphantly onward upon that wonderful tide which is constituted by the rise and fall of the money- market? |
9362 | How many people do you think I''ve called upon to- day, eh, Val? |
9362 | How should he have met bright childlike creatures in the pathways which he had trodden? |
9362 | How was he to sever his frail skiff from that rakish privateer? |
9362 | I ask you, therefore, young man, what are you prepared to give?" |
9362 | I asked myself,"that I should go here or there at any man''s bidding, for the pitiful stipend of twenty shillings a week?" |
9362 | I may try my hardest to cut the past, but will Horatio Paget let me alone in the future? |
9362 | I now felt assured that there had been treachery here, as in the Goodge business; and I asked myself to whom could I impute that treachery? |
9362 | I presume, by the way, that such information as I may afford is likely to become a source of pecuniary profit to your employer?" |
9362 | I suppose you knocked about a good deal down there?" |
9362 | I suppose you know that she has n''t a sixpence in the world, that she can call her own?" |
9362 | I suppose you know what money your father left, including the sums his life had been insured for?" |
9362 | I wonder what I should have been like, by the bye, if I had been blest with five hundred a year?" |
9362 | I wonder what he is going to do at Rouen? |
9362 | I wonder whether they are real books, or only upholsterer''s dummies?" |
9362 | I would fain have asked Mr. Mercer to let me see this last letter written by Susan Meynell; but what excuse could I devise for so doing? |
9362 | If I say I have a headache, and stay in my own room while he is here, will the afternoon seem any more pleasant or any shorter to me? |
9362 | If he ca n''t keep hisself, how''s he to keep you?" |
9362 | If they must dig up persons from the past, why ca n''t they dig up newer persons than that poor ill- used doctor?" |
9362 | Indeed, when you look at life philosophically, what is there on earth that is_ not_ a question of time? |
9362 | Is it a good thing to have a great inheritance? |
9362 | Is it not a great conquest to have made? |
9362 | Is it not written on my heart? |
9362 | Is it old or young Mr. Grewter you want to see?" |
9362 | Is not Yorkshire my Charlotte''s birthplace? |
9362 | Is not that delightful?" |
9362 | Is the hawk to forego his natural prey for any such paltry consideration as a vulgar old woman or a brood of squalling brats? |
9362 | Is there any woman upon this earth who could render my existence supportable_ without_ billiards and beer?" |
9362 | Is there anything so wonderful in my having had a great- grandfather?" |
9362 | Is there not predestination? |
9362 | Is this to be? |
9362 | It is a settled thing that the place was in Yorkshire?" |
9362 | It is very foolish, is it not, Di?" |
9362 | It may be that he had been disturbed by a semi- consciousness of that curious gaze, for he looked at her angrily,--"What are you staring at, Nancy?" |
9362 | It seems like the price of a man''s life, does n''t it? |
9362 | John Haygarth, who died intestate, at Tilford Haven, in Kent, about a year ago?" |
9362 | Kingdon?" |
9362 | Likely to cut up for any considerable amount, eh? |
9362 | May I ask how I have become Mr. Hawkehurst all of a sudden, when for the last three years I have been usually known as Valentine-- or Val?" |
9362 | May she not have married some one else than Mr. Kingdon? |
9362 | Might he not reveal all to Charlotte, and attempt to place her lover before her in this most odious aspect? |
9362 | Might not that place have been Spotswold? |
9362 | Mrs Matthew Haygarth did not marry again? |
9362 | No more late hours, or oyster suppers, eh?" |
9362 | O, Valentine, must not that be terrible? |
9362 | O, Valentine, what am I telling you? |
9362 | O, by the way, how''s Diana? |
9362 | Of course you know that I have a stepdaughter?" |
9362 | Of course you would not wish Mr. Hawkehurst to be enlightened?" |
9362 | Of whom but of a daughter would he write as in this letter? |
9362 | Or even supposing she knows nothing, do you think her friends are as ignorant as she is? |
9362 | Or was it only a delusion of my own? |
9362 | Perhaps that was your idea?" |
9362 | Refuse the letters, and demand to have my principal''s money returned to me? |
9362 | Seen my brother George lately? |
9362 | Shall I call the day after to- morrow and tell you my adventures?" |
9362 | Shall I ever again find such kind friends or such a hospitable dwelling as those I shall leave amidst these northern hills? |
9362 | Shall I ever penetrate that mystery of the past? |
9362 | Shall I find him at the plough- tail, I wonder, this mute inglorious heir- at- law? |
9362 | Shall I offer him a pound a week, and ask him to retire into the depths of Wales or Cornwall, amend his ways, and live the life of a repentant hermit? |
9362 | Shall we explore the bookcase together?" |
9362 | Shall you and I go shares in this fortune?" |
9362 | She actually has relations; does n''t that sound strange to you and me?" |
9362 | She stole a rapid look at him as she answered,"What does it matter whether I call you by one name or another?" |
9362 | Sheldon?" |
9362 | Sheldon?" |
9362 | Sheldon?" |
9362 | Sheldon?" |
9362 | Sheldon?" |
9362 | Sheldon?" |
9362 | Should I be happy with that dear girl if she were mine? |
9362 | Should I not hear the rattle of the billiard- balls, or the voice of the_ croupier_ calling the main, as I sat by my quiet fireside? |
9362 | Suppose you found yourself suddenly possessed of a great fortune, Charlotte; what would you do with it?" |
9362 | Surely not: and, on the other hand, can I continue to woo my sweet one, conscious that she is the rightful claimant to a great estate? |
9362 | That is an outline of the story, is it not, Charlotte?" |
9362 | That is what one''s housemaid says, is n''t it, when she talks of leaving service and marrying some young man from the baker''s or the grocer''s? |
9362 | That was what her radiant face told me; and could I do less than believe the sweet confession? |
9362 | That''s a psychological mystery out of the way of Gray''s Inn, is n''t it?" |
9362 | The elderly dowagers do n''t come up to time, eh? |
9362 | The little woman ca n''t complain of me now, can she, Sheldon? |
9362 | The question is, whether she is to be provided for in this house or out of it; and whether I can make her serve me as I want to be served?" |
9362 | Then I am to understand that you decline to precipitate matters?" |
9362 | There was one point which I was bound to push home in the interests of my Sheldon, or, shall I not rather say, of my Charlotte? |
9362 | To what purpose? |
9362 | Truth, or honour, or honesty, or constancy? |
9362 | Very few orders for the complete set at ten- pound- ten?" |
9362 | Was I not bound to know every secret in the lives of Matthew Haygarth''s descendants? |
9362 | Was I not supposed to be at Dorking, enjoying the hospitality of an aged aunt? |
9362 | Was he altogether vile, she wondered, or was there some redeeming virtue in his nature? |
9362 | Was it for Charlotte''s sake, I wonder, that I was so ready to open my heart to everybody and everything in this unknown land? |
9362 | Was it not a hard thing that the bright creature, whom every one was ready to adore, must needs steal away this one heart? |
9362 | Was it not more than likely that Charlotte would be absent from London at this dismal season? |
9362 | Was it not very probable that Philip Sheldon would give him the cold shoulder? |
9362 | Was it only his vanished youth, which poor, sobered, converted, Wesleyanised Matthew regretted? |
9362 | Was n''t it wonderful?" |
9362 | Was she not most likely the same C. mentioned in conjunction with the little M. in the earlier letters? |
9362 | Was she not?" |
9362 | Was that a widower''s commonplace, I wonder, and did the unknown mourner console himself ultimately with a new wife? |
9362 | Was the visit a pleasant one?" |
9362 | Was there money in the parcel? |
9362 | Were not the Fates mocking this travel- stained wayfarer with bright glimpses of a paradise whose gates he was never to pass? |
9362 | Were not the western suburbs of that murky metropolis inhabited by Charlotte Halliday, and might he not hope to see her? |
9362 | Were you not of age on your last birthday?" |
9362 | What am I that I should work so good a change in my dear one? |
9362 | What am I to get while I''m looking for him? |
9362 | What are poor- rates intended for, I should like to know, if a man who pays four- and- twopence in the pound is to be pestered in this sort of way?" |
9362 | What assurance have I that I shall ever re- enter that pleasant dwelling? |
9362 | What but an instinctive consciousness of approaching happiness could have made me so light- hearted that morning? |
9362 | What consideration had they for heirs- at- law in the future, when under the soothing influence of a gin- bottle in the present? |
9362 | What could I say after this-- bound hand and foot as I am by my promise to Sheldon? |
9362 | What did it all mean, I wonder? |
9362 | What do you mean to propose?" |
9362 | What do you say to that? |
9362 | What does it matter how you come, if I can only have you? |
9362 | What excuse could he find for renouncing his share in the Omega- street lodgings, and setting up a new home elsewhere? |
9362 | What ground had she for complaint? |
9362 | What have I to offer to the woman I might pretend to love? |
9362 | What hold have I, a wanderer and vagabond, on the future which respectable people map out for themselves with such mathematical precision? |
9362 | What if my patron should have been struck by the same advertisement, and should have come to Ullerton on the same business? |
9362 | What if the pigeon has a widowed mother dependent on his prosperity, or half a dozen children who will be involved in his ruin? |
9362 | What is it that makes you so bitter? |
9362 | What is my burly friend here?" |
9362 | What is that man doing here? |
9362 | What is that word worth if it does not mean care and thought for another? |
9362 | What is the meaning of Horatio Paget''s lengthened abode in this town? |
9362 | What is the office so humble I would not fill for her dear sake? |
9362 | What makes you so anxious this morning?" |
9362 | What more could he wish? |
9362 | What more natural than that you two should make a match of it? |
9362 | What of him?" |
9362 | What on earth was there in a lump of letter- paper for any one to steal? |
9362 | What pleasure or distraction had the good housewives of Huxter''s Cross to lure them from the domestic delights of scrubbing and polishing? |
9362 | What possible motive could he have for doing so?" |
9362 | What right had I to be given to understand anything about these honest Meynells? |
9362 | What should you say to an affair that might put two or three thousand pounds in your pocket if it was successful?" |
9362 | What subtle instinct of the brain or heart made me aware that the desert region amongst the hills held earth''s highest felicity for me? |
9362 | What was I to do? |
9362 | What was it that she had lost? |
9362 | What was it? |
9362 | What will your mamma say to such an engagement? |
9362 | What, indeed, could this young adventurer demand from benignant Fortune above and beyond the blessings she had given him?? |
9362 | What, indeed, could this young adventurer demand from benignant Fortune above and beyond the blessings she had given him?? |
9362 | When did any married man ever take more than half a dozen oysters-- or take any undomestic pleasure for his own satisfaction? |
9362 | When do the prudent people ever stop to consider truth and honour, or old promises, or an affection that dates from childhood? |
9362 | When do you expect Tom and his wife?" |
9362 | Where am I to find my octogenarian prosers? |
9362 | Where is he to be found?" |
9362 | Where was this Goodge to be found? |
9362 | Where''s your check- book?" |
9362 | Where''s your master gone?" |
9362 | Who can this little M. be, of whom he writes so tenderly, except a child? |
9362 | Who can this woman be, whose ill health causes him such anxiety, unless a wife? |
9362 | Who could have betrayed a secret which was known only to George Sheldon and myself? |
9362 | Who could have told him? |
9362 | Who could say that it was not on Charlotte''s account he came so often, and lingered so long? |
9362 | Who else but Theodore Judson is interested in the Haygarth fortune? |
9362 | Who knows? |
9362 | Who shall say that he did not tell it to his only sister, though he was afraid to tell it to his wife? |
9362 | Who shall sound the heart of a man who lived a hundred years ago? |
9362 | Who, in these enlightened days, would trust his business to such a practitioner? |
9362 | Whom could she not persuade?" |
9362 | Whom did you meet there? |
9362 | Whom do you think I met at Newhall, Di?" |
9362 | Why am I here, and why is my life made up of baseness and lies? |
9362 | Why are you not at your practice? |
9362 | Why did the dingy house in John- street bring the tears into Matthew''s eyes? |
9362 | Why not assert her rights at once?" |
9362 | Why should I try to hide my feelings from you, Diana? |
9362 | Why should he announce me? |
9362 | Why the deuce could n''t he die in Ullerton? |
9362 | Why was I so sorry to leave Huxter''s Cross? |
9362 | Will Charlotte be told that she is the reverend intestate''s next of kin? |
9362 | Will he communicate at once with his brother? |
9362 | Will he release me from my oath of secrecy? |
9362 | Will he throw me overboard, I wonder? |
9362 | Will you let my''young man''come to tea once in a way?" |
9362 | Wo n''t you have a cigar?" |
9362 | Wot dose it matter to my sole wear my vile bodie is laid? |
9362 | Would he not have been pleased to walk into a raging furnace if there had been a chance of meeting Charlotte Halliday amid the flames? |
9362 | Would he please? |
9362 | Would it be possible to get a box, and for us all to go together?" |
9362 | Would you come, if I could manage to arrange it?" |
9362 | You did not know that your papa was here, did you, Diana, my dear? |
9362 | You know what a good critic Mr. Hawkehurst is?" |
9362 | You remember that man Palmer, at Rugely, who used to go to church, and take the sacrament?" |
9362 | You will take pity upon my forlorn state, wo n''t you, Di? |
9362 | You will try, wo n''t you?" |
9362 | You wo n''t walk off with Charlotte some fine morning and marry her at a registry- office, or anything of that kind, eh?" |
9362 | You would n''t care to speculate the chances, however well the business might promise?" |
9362 | You''ll have to find some record of his death, wo n''t you? |
9362 | You''ll let him come, wo n''t you, dear? |
9362 | You''re going to dine here to- night, of course? |
9362 | Your aunt loved a person called Montagu Kingdon-- her superior in station, perhaps?" |
9362 | Your idea is that there may have been a marriage previous to the one at Ullerton?" |
9362 | and could any man with his wits about him see you two sentimental young simpletons together_ without_ seeing how things were going on? |
9362 | and did they suspect the existence of an heir in the descendant of the issue of that marriage? |
9362 | and if so, can there be any doubt that she was the daughter of Matthew Haygarth? |
9362 | and may she not have left heirs who will arise in the future to dispute my darling''s claim? |
9362 | and what is to be my reward if I find him?" |
9362 | and when am I to begin my operations upon them?" |
9362 | and where is the fathom- line which shall plumb its mysteries? |
9362 | and who was the person that was to offer him money for the letters? |
9362 | and why did the memory of Vauxhall and Bartholomew fair seem so sweet to him? |
9362 | cried Charlotte, with undisguised regret;"and for a long time, I suppose?" |
9362 | cried the stockbroker;"when will lawyers''clerks have sense enough to know that nobody on this earth ever_ liked_ to wait? |
9362 | do you think I want to marry a rich man?" |
9362 | exclaimed Diana,"do you mean to say that you have promised to marry this man, of whom you know nothing but what is unfavourable?" |
9362 | exclaimed I;"am I to understand that the fortune left by the Reverend John Haygarth amounts to that sum?" |
9362 | he asked himself, impatient of some lurking weakness of his own;"what does it matter to me whether those two are friendly or unfriendly? |
9362 | he asked;"do you want to catch your death of cold?" |
9362 | in all the markets of this round world is there no better price for you than that? |
9362 | my young friend, how is it you grow first red and then white when I mention Miss Halliday''s husband?" |
9362 | or only a lay figure dressed up to fill a vacant chair in your drawing- room?" |
9362 | or shall I find an heiress with brawny arms meekly churning butter? |
9362 | or were there pensive memories of something even sweeter than youth associated with the coloured lamps of Vauxhall and the dinginess of Clerkenwell? |
9362 | or what will Mr. Sheldon say?" |
9362 | or will my dear one believe me an adventurer and fortune- hunter? |
9362 | she screamed,"do you think your papa would ever consent to such a thing?" |
9362 | were involved in this business, and were watching and counterchecking my actions with a view to frustrating the plans of my principal? |
9362 | what further boon could he implore from the Fates? |
9362 | what is this subtle power called love, which worketh such wondrous changes in the human heart? |
9362 | why cultivate such ponderous calves, and why so incline to sinews? |
9362 | why so superficial in the treatment of your roasts, so impetuous and inconsiderate when you boil? |
4900 | ''Sed de modo?'' 4900 And a few years beyond it?" |
4900 | And do you think yourselves more mighty than the Kings of England and France? |
4900 | And how did his Majesty receive the blow? |
4900 | And if a malefactor, why not a lawyer? |
4900 | And may I communicate Lord Burghley''s letter to any one else? |
4900 | And my husband might come too? |
4900 | And on the whole,observed the Lord Admiral,"do n''t you think that the putting an army in the field might be dispensed with for this year? |
4900 | And suppose our ministers do preach this doctrine, is there anything strange in it, any reason why they should not do so? |
4900 | And what becomes, then, of their promises? |
4900 | And what do you mean to do in the matter? |
4900 | And what is the-- governor''s pleasure? |
4900 | And what reason have we to hope,cried the Prince,"that your pledges, if made; will be redeemed? |
4900 | And what way will you take? |
4900 | And what,asked a deputy, smoothly,"is the point which touches you most nearly? |
4900 | And what,said she,"if a peace should come in the mean time?" |
4900 | Are there any private letters or papers in the bog? |
4900 | Are we to have a Paris massacre, a Paris blood- bath here in the Netherland capital? 4900 Are we to suffer such folk here,"he replied,"who preach the vile doctrine that God has created one man for damnation and another for salvation?" |
4900 | As for Don Charles,he says,"was he not our future sovereign? |
4900 | As to money--"How much money have I got? |
4900 | But how if they make war upon us? |
4900 | But if,argued the Duke of Aerschot,"the King absolutely refuse to do what you demand of him; what then?" |
4900 | But who is to bell the cat? |
4900 | But,asked Schetz,"what security do you offer us that you will yourselves maintain the Pacification?" |
4900 | But,asked a deputy,"if the Spanish fleet does not succeed in its enterprise, will the peace- negotiations be renewed?" |
4900 | But,replied the Prince,"if we are already accomplishing the Pacification, what more do you wish?" |
4900 | But,said the prince,"how did you dare to enter the Hague, relying only on the word of a Beggar?" |
4900 | Did he say anything of a pardon? |
4900 | Did you ever hear any one preach that? |
4900 | Die, treacherous villain? |
4900 | Do you hear what my son says? |
4900 | Do you not love your wife and children? |
4900 | Do you think this can be put down? |
4900 | Do you wish it sincerely? |
4900 | Expende Hannibalem: quot libras in duce summo Invenies?. |
4900 | For how much good will it do,said the King,"if we drive off Archduke Leopold without establishing the princes in security for the future? |
4900 | For who can warrant these villains from her,he said,"if that person live, or shall live any time? |
4900 | Fourteen millions? |
4900 | Has he a quarrel with any of the party? 4900 Have you heard whether my Grotius is to die, and Hoogerbeets also?" |
4900 | Ho, ho,said the Duke,"I am wanted for that affair, am I?" |
4900 | How am I to defend myself? |
4900 | How dare you bring me a dispatch without a signature? |
4900 | How many are there in the garrison? |
4900 | How many? |
4900 | I doubt if he accepts the suggestion,said Barneveld,"unless as a notorious trick, and if he did, what good would the promise of Spinola do us? |
4900 | I have tamed people of iron in my day,said he, contemptuously,"shall I not easily crush these men of butter?" |
4900 | I sent Richardot to you yesterday,said Alexander;"did he not content you?" |
4900 | Is he, or am I, to command in this campaign? 4900 Is it possible,"said the Advocate,"that so close an inspection is held over me in these last hours? |
4900 | Is the King dead? |
4900 | Is the army of the Prince of Orange a flock of wild geese,he asked,"that it can fly over rivers like the Meuse?" |
4900 | Is the word of a king,said the dowager to the commissioners, who were insisting upon guarantees,"is the word of a king not sufficient?" |
4900 | Is there no cushion or stool to kneel upon? |
4900 | May she at least receive the sacrament of the Lord''s Supper in her own chamber, according to the Lutheran form? |
4900 | Must they see this too? 4900 Of what particular point do you complain?" |
4900 | Rather a desperate undertaking, however? |
4900 | Shall I be secure there? |
4900 | Shall we go at once? |
4900 | Sire, is the Duke of Guise your friend or enemy? |
4900 | Sixteen? |
4900 | So that you do n''t mean,replied Schetz,"to accept the decision of the states?" |
4900 | Tell me,he cried,"by whose command Cardinal Granvelle administered poison to the Emperor Maximilian? |
4900 | To whom did he make that promise? |
4900 | War? |
4900 | We are travelling about like pilgrims,said Elizabeth,"but what is life but a pilgrimage?" |
4900 | Well, Sylla,he said very calmly,"will you in these my last moments lay down the law to me as to what I shall write to my wife?" |
4900 | Well, preacher,rejoined Maurice,"do n''t you think I know better?" |
4900 | What are you pulling at me for, mate? |
4900 | What can we possibly advise her Majesty to do? |
4900 | What can you do then? |
4900 | What could we desire more,wrote Aerssens to Barneveld,"than open war between France and Spain? |
4900 | What difference will it make,he asked,"whether we defer our action until either darkness or the General arrives? |
4900 | What do you say to that, Don Francis? |
4900 | What excuse is that? |
4900 | What has come to Hollock? |
4900 | What indulgence do you speak of? |
4900 | What is the man talking about? |
4900 | What is your own opinion on the whole affair? |
4900 | What is your price? |
4900 | What man living would go to the field and have his officers divided almost into mortal quarrel? 4900 What more can the queen do,"he observed,"than she is already doing? |
4900 | What need had the sovereign states of Holland of advice from a stadholder, from their servant, their functionary? |
4900 | What relatives? |
4900 | What terms of negotiation do you propose? |
4900 | What terms will you pledge for the repayment of the monies to be advanced? |
4900 | What then will become of our beautiful churches? |
4900 | What, Madam,he is reported to have cried in a passion,"is it possible that your Highness can entertain fears of these beggars? |
4900 | Whence has the Duke of Alva the power of which he boasts, but from yourselves-- from Netherland cities? 4900 Where are my dead forefathers at present?" |
4900 | Where are these ships of war, of which you were speaking? |
4900 | Wherein has the Pacification been violated? |
4900 | Who are you, and what do you want? |
4900 | Who asks you to do so? |
4900 | Who can doubt that in this passage of his story he is picturing his own visions, one of the fairest of which was destined to become reality? 4900 Who goes there?" |
4900 | Who goes there? |
4900 | Who would not confide,replied Neyen,"in the word of so exalted, so respectable a Beggar as you, O most excellent prince?" |
4900 | Why should van der Myle strut about, with his arms akimbo like a peacock? |
4900 | Why, why did you not write yourself? |
4900 | Will the Prince,asked the Landgrave,"permit my granddaughter to have an evangelical preacher in the house?" |
4900 | Will you do what I ask,demanded from the bed the voice of him who was said to be Ernest,"will you kill this tyrant?" |
4900 | Will you take the message? |
4900 | You are the author of the whole scheme,said Philip,"and if it, is all to vanish into space, what kind of a figure shall we cut the coming year?" |
4900 | You do n''t mean, then,repeated Schetz,"to submit to the estates touching the exercise of religion?" |
4900 | --"Has either of the brethren,"he added,"prepared a prayer to be offered outside there?" |
4900 | --"Why does not your Most Christian master,"asked Alva,"order these Frenchmen in Mons to come to him under oath to make no disturbance? |
4900 | A little startled, the Duke rejoined,"Do you doubt that the cities will keep their promises? |
4900 | After all, what was your Chevy Chace to stir blood with like a trumpet? |
4900 | After the declaration of independence and the repudiation of Philip, to whom did the sovereignty belong? |
4900 | After the envoy had taken his leave, the queen said to him in Latin,"Modicae fidei quare dubitasti?" |
4900 | Alas will it be maintained that in the two and a half centuries which have since elapsed the world has made much progress in a higher direction? |
4900 | Am I, then, in your opinion, forsaking you when I send you English blood, which I love, and which is my own blood, and which I am bound to defend? |
4900 | Ambassador, this time I hope that you are satisfied with me?" |
4900 | Ambassador, what shall I say to you? |
4900 | Amen?" |
4900 | And although he had mentioned no names, could the"eminent personages"thus cited at second hand be anybody but the Advocate? |
4900 | And how had the plot been revealed? |
4900 | And how were they to be punished? |
4900 | And if not, how was it to reassert its vitality? |
4900 | And if once the blacks had leave to run, how many whites would have to stay at home to guard their dissolving property? |
4900 | And in what way had he scandalized the government of the Republic? |
4900 | And is it not appalling to think of the''large constitution of this man,''when you reflect on the acres of canvas which he has covered? |
4900 | And now had not Francis Aerssens been the first to communicate to his masters the fruit which had already ripened upon Henry''s grave? |
4900 | And to whom belonged the right of prescribing laws and ordinances of public worship, of appointing preachers, church servants, schoolmasters, sextons? |
4900 | And what authority, I pray you, have you given him? |
4900 | And what had they got? |
4900 | And what said Maurice in reply? |
4900 | And what was the"rigorous and exemplary justice"thus inflicted upon the"quidam?" |
4900 | And what was this dependence on a foreign tyrant really worth? |
4900 | And wherewithal should I sustain this burthen? |
4900 | And why was the unfortunate Otheman thus hunted to his lair? |
4900 | And why? |
4900 | And yet what was the Emperor Charles to the inhabitants of the Netherlands that they should weep for him? |
4900 | And,"Oh, the wretched coward, the imbecile?" |
4900 | Are the sufferings of these obscure Christians beneath the dignity of history? |
4900 | Are the waves of the sea more inconstant-- is Euripus more uncertain than the counsels of such men?" |
4900 | Are these things related merely to excite superfluous horror? |
4900 | Are they thus to deal with a true patriot? |
4900 | Are we to have Paris weddings in Brussels also?" |
4900 | Are we to preach in barns? |
4900 | Are we to spend twelve hundred millions, and raise six hundred thousand soldiers, in order to protect slavery? |
4900 | Are you not very unhappy to live under those poor weak archdukes? |
4900 | Beggared and outcast, with literally scarce a shirt to his back, without money to pay a corporal''s guard, how was he to maintain an army? |
4900 | Besides the sons of the Advocate, his two sons- in- law, Brederode, Seignior of Veenhuizep, and Cornelis van der Myle, were constantly employed? |
4900 | Burghley to Croft.--"Did you order your servant to speak with Andrea de Loo?" |
4900 | Burghley.--"Who bade you say, after your second return to Brussels, that you came on the part of the Queen? |
4900 | But are there any trustworthy friends to the Union among the slaveholders? |
4900 | But has the art political kept pace with the advancement of physical science? |
4900 | But has the cause of modesty or humanity gained very much by the decorous fig- leaves of modern diplomacy? |
4900 | But if we take refuge with the Lord God, what can this inane, worn- out man and water- bubble do to us?" |
4900 | But of what avail were her timid little flutterings of indignation and resistance? |
4900 | But should the five Points or the Seven Points obtain the mastery? |
4900 | But supposing that all the charges had been admitted or proved, what course would naturally be taken in consequence? |
4900 | But was it a moment to linger? |
4900 | But was not Gondemar ever at his elbow, and the Infanta always in the perspective? |
4900 | But what care I? |
4900 | But what if they too should begin to move? |
4900 | But what profit could the Duke of Lerma expect by the continuance of the Dutch war, and who in Spain was to be consulted except the Duke of Lerma? |
4900 | But what was the design of the new confederacy? |
4900 | But what were such good gifts in the possession of rebels, seceders, and Puritans? |
4900 | But what were ties of blood compared to the iron bands of religious love and hatred? |
4900 | But when were doctors ever wanting to prove the unlawfulness of law which interferes with the purposes of a despot and the convictions of the bigot? |
4900 | But who were these"other"heretics? |
4900 | But who works like Sully? |
4900 | But whose arm was daring enough for such a stroke? |
4900 | But why should I not live in peace, if we were to be friends to each other? |
4900 | By what means will it be possible for the government fully to give you contentment?" |
4900 | Can I not speak a word or two in freedom? |
4900 | Can it be doubted that they will fly to arms at once, and give all their support to the King of Navarre, heretic though he be? |
4900 | Can we by reason even expect a good sequel to such iniquitous acts? |
4900 | Can you give me another? |
4900 | Compared to these, what were great moral and political ideas, the plans of statesmen, the hopes of nations? |
4900 | Could I make an appointment with you for either of those days? |
4900 | Could Philip or Alva have found in the wide world men to execute their decrees with more unhesitating docility, with more sympathizing eagerness? |
4900 | Could a more biting epigram be made upon the condition to which the nation had been reduced? |
4900 | Could antagonism be more sharply defined? |
4900 | Could the issue of the proposed negotiations be thought hopeful, or was another half century of warfare impending? |
4900 | Could there be a better illustration of the absurdities of such a system of Imperialism? |
4900 | Could they hope to see farther than that wisest and most experienced prince? |
4900 | Could they succeed in utterly demolishing that bulwark in the course of the day? |
4900 | Could you do that?" |
4900 | Did as plausible a pretext as that ever fail to a state ambitious of absorbing its neighbours? |
4900 | Did it seem credible that the fort of Zutphen should be placed in the hands of Roland York? |
4900 | Did not Louis of Nassau nearly entrap the Grand Commander? |
4900 | Did not preacher Hoe''s master aspire to the crown of Bohemia himself? |
4900 | Did they abhor the Contra- Remonstrants whom James and his ambassador Carleton doted upon and whom Barneveld called"Double Puritans"and"Flanderizers?" |
4900 | Do n''t you foresee that as soon as they die you will lose all the little you have acquired in the obedient Netherlands during the last fifty years?" |
4900 | Do you believe that my lords the States will agree to the proposition?" |
4900 | Do you care to know about the Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, that shall be King hereafter of Mexico( if L. N. has his way)? |
4900 | Do you not believe that Prince Maurice has designs on the sovereignty, and would prevent the fulfilment of the king''s hopes? |
4900 | Do you think that they would give themselves to the king if he assisted them? |
4900 | Do you think we came over here to spend our lives and our goods, and to leave all we have, to be thus used and thus betrayed by you? |
4900 | Do you want peace or war? |
4900 | Do you, think you have a child to deal with? |
4900 | Does it not seem to you a plot well woven as well in Holland as at this court to remove me from my post with disreputation? |
4900 | Dost think thyself beyond the reach of mischief? |
4900 | Even Caron was staggered? |
4900 | Even if I do assist the Hollanders, what wrong is that to him? |
4900 | Fish''s way of reproducing the expression without the insinuation which called it forth is a practical misstatement which does Mr. Motley great wrong? |
4900 | For what have I, unhappy man, to do here either with cause or country but for you?" |
4900 | For what purpose were these gatherings? |
4900 | For why have I exposed my property? |
4900 | From such a Regent, surrounded by such councillors, was the work of William de Nassau''s hands to gain applause? |
4900 | Governments given by royal commission, for example; what point could be clearer? |
4900 | Had he any landed property in England? |
4900 | Had he not discharged the Spaniards, placed the castles in the hands of natives, restored the privileges, submitted to insults and indecencies? |
4900 | Had he not done all he had ever promised? |
4900 | Had he really ever held any other office but that of master of the horse? |
4900 | Had it not been weakness to spare the traitors who had thus stained the childhood of the national joy at liberty regained? |
4900 | Had not Don Pedro de Toledo pompously announced this condition a year and a half before? |
4900 | Had not Esquire van Ostrum solemnly declared it at a tavern table? |
4900 | Had not Henry spurned the bribe with scorn? |
4900 | Had not a handful of warriors of their own race rifled the golden Indies? |
4900 | Had not cannon thundered and beacons blazed to commemorate that auspicious event? |
4900 | Had not the Pope and his cardinals gone to church in solemn procession, to render thanks unto God for the massacre of Paris? |
4900 | Had not the deeply injured and misunderstood Grotius already said,"If the trees we plant do not shade us, they will yet serve for our descendants?" |
4900 | Had not the heretics-- in the words of Inquisitor Titelmann-- allowed themselves, year after year, to be taken and slaughtered like lambs? |
4900 | Had not the redoubtable Alva been nearly made a captive? |
4900 | Had not their fathers, few in number, strong in courage and discipline, revelled in the plunder of a new world? |
4900 | Had not they fought within the bowels of the earth, beneath the depths of the sea, within blazing cities, and upon fields of ice? |
4900 | Had that"shadowy and imaginary authority"granted to Leicester not proved substantial enough? |
4900 | Had the city, indeed, been carried in the night; had the massacre already commenced; had all this labor and audacity been expended in vain? |
4900 | Had the creed of Luther been embraced only for such unworthy ends? |
4900 | Had they not done the work of demons for nine years long? |
4900 | Had they not eaten the flesh, and drank the hearts''blood of their enemies? |
4900 | Had they not had enough of the seed sown by that foe of God, Arminius? |
4900 | Had they not slaughtered unarmed human beings by townfuls, at the word of command? |
4900 | Had they not stained the house of God with wholesale massacre? |
4900 | Has his Church therefore come to caught? |
4900 | Has not the Pope intervened in the affair? |
4900 | Has the strong arm of the Lord thereby grown weaker? |
4900 | Hast flown to thy nest so early? |
4900 | Have we not showed it to Mr. Croft, one of your own colleagues? |
4900 | He asked the Bishop, with many expressions of amazement, whether pardon was impossible; whether delay at least might not be obtained? |
4900 | He came back and said to the prisoner,"Has my Lord any desire to speak with his wife or children, or any of his friends?" |
4900 | He then added with a half- smile,"Well, what is expected of me?" |
4900 | He then asked if the King thought that the princes had justice on their side, and whether, if the contrary were shown, he would change his policy? |
4900 | He waved his broadleaved felt hat for silence, and then exclaimed, in language which has been almost literally preserved, What would ye, my friends? |
4900 | He who has maintained and preserved you by His mercy, can you imagine that he permits you to walk alone in your utmost need? |
4900 | His name, and of what family? |
4900 | How appeal to the violent and deeply incensed Hohenlo? |
4900 | How can I negotiate after my private despatches have been read? |
4900 | How can he hope to conquer France? |
4900 | How can you expect anything interesting from such a human cocoon? |
4900 | How could Don John refuse the wager of battle thus haughtily proffered? |
4900 | How could Maximilian, sternest of Papists, and Frederick V., flightiest of Calvinists, act harmoniously in an Imperial election? |
4900 | How could he acknowledge his error? |
4900 | How could he help admiring Byron and falling into more or less unconscious imitation of his moods if not of his special affectations? |
4900 | How could he manifest confidence in the detested Norris? |
4900 | How could that diplomatist reply but with polite scorn? |
4900 | How could the Eldest Son of the Church and the chief of an unlimited monarchy make common cause with heretics and republicans against Spain and Rome? |
4900 | How could the nation now consent to the daily impositions which were practised? |
4900 | How could there be doubt or supineness on such a momentous subject? |
4900 | How else can these obliquities stand with her professions of love? |
4900 | How else could he hope to continue his massacre of the Protestants? |
4900 | How else could these enormous successes be accounted for? |
4900 | How else could thousands fall before the Spanish swords, while hardly a single Spanish corpse told of effectual resistance? |
4900 | How had they made that loan? |
4900 | How large a part of the human race were the Batavians? |
4900 | How long would that policy remain sound and united? |
4900 | How long would the Republic speak through the imperial voice of Barneveld? |
4900 | How many men,"he asked,"are required for garrisons in all the fortresses and cities, and for the field?" |
4900 | How much remains beyond what they have already acquired? |
4900 | How old were you when you first became a preacher?" |
4900 | How should Parma, seeing this obscures undersized, thin- bearded, runaway clerk before him, expect pith and energy from him? |
4900 | How were crimes like these to be visited upon the transgressor? |
4900 | How, indeed, could a different decision be expected? |
4900 | I doubt they will be suddenly enough awakened one day, and the cry will be,''Who''d have thought it?'' |
4900 | If I did not wish a pacific solution, what in the world forced me to do what I have done? |
4900 | If William of Orange must seek a wife among the pagans, could no other bride be found for him than the daughter of such a man? |
4900 | If defeated, what would become of the King''s authority, with rebellious troops triumphant in rebellious provinces? |
4900 | If neither of those days should suit you, could you kindly suggest another day? |
4900 | If she lose these opportunities, who can look for other but dishonour and destruction? |
4900 | If so much had been done by Holland and Zealand, how much more might be hoped when all the provinces were united? |
4900 | If so, how were they to be dislodged before their work was perfected? |
4900 | If so, was he willing to approve that treaty in all its articles? |
4900 | If such idiotic calumnies could be believed, what patriot in the world could not be doubted? |
4900 | If the Spaniard has designs against our State, has he not cause? |
4900 | If the twain as Holland wished, had become of one flesh, would England have been the loser? |
4900 | In whose- name and by what authority did they act against the sovereign? |
4900 | Is France to be saved by opening all its gates to Spain? |
4900 | Is France to be turned out of France, to make a lodging for the Lorrainer and the Spaniard?" |
4900 | Is it because she is hearkening to a peace? |
4900 | Is it drawn by pencils hostile to the English nation or the English Queen? |
4900 | Is it not better to deal with murder and oppression in the abstract, without entering into trivial details? |
4900 | Is it not evident that Lord Clarendon suggested the idea which Mr. Motley repelled as implying an insidious mode of action? |
4900 | Is it not obvious what manner of men they are? |
4900 | Is it possible that any wordly respect can efface the terror of Divine wrath? |
4900 | Is it strange that the Queen of England was deceived? |
4900 | Is not the example of Julich fresh? |
4900 | Is there anything else you seek?" |
4900 | Is there no envoy from Utrecht and the other Provinces?" |
4900 | Is there yet any appeal among the most civilized nations except to the logic of the largest battalions and the eloquence of the biggest guns? |
4900 | Is this my recompense for forty- three years''service to these Provinces?" |
4900 | Is this picture exaggerated? |
4900 | Is this young man also a minister?" |
4900 | Jeannin was present at the interview, although, as Aerssens well observed, the King required no pedagogue on such an occasion? |
4900 | La Motte asked when he had concluded,"Did my Lord say Amen?" |
4900 | Maurice was thus on the wrong side of the great channel by which Sluy''s communicated with the sea? |
4900 | Meantime Ancel was deputed by Henry to visit the various courts of Germany and the north in order to obtain, if possible, new members for the league? |
4900 | Meantime a resolution was passed by the States of Holland"in regard to the question whether Ambassador Aerssens should retain his office, yes or no?" |
4900 | Might not a shudder come over the souls of men as coming events vaguely shaped themselves to prophetic eyes? |
4900 | Moreover, who would not rather be a horse- keeper to her Majesty, than a captain to Barneveld or Buys?" |
4900 | Need men look further than to this simple fact to learn why Spain was decaying while the republic was rising? |
4900 | Need more be said to indicate the inevitable ruin of both government and people? |
4900 | O, have you been in Brabant, fighting for the states? |
4900 | O, have you brought back anything except your broken pates? |
4900 | On the other hand, what good could it do to the cause of peace, that these wonderful instructions should be published throughout the republic? |
4900 | Others asked him how long since he had sold himself to the Devil? |
4900 | Otherwise how could there be unanimous voting in parliament? |
4900 | Our enemies spare neither their money nor their labor; will ye be colder and duller than your foes? |
4900 | Renee, the sister of Bussy d''Amboise, had vowed to unite herself to a man who would avenge the assassination of her brother by the Count Montsoreau? |
4900 | Shall I say anything of Austria,--what can I say that would interest you? |
4900 | Shall all this be destroyed by the Spanish guns, or shall we rush to the rescue of our friends?" |
4900 | She was somewhat in a passion, but spoke with majestic moderation? |
4900 | Should I bestow as much on them as cometh to the value of my whole yearly rent?" |
4900 | Should I ruin myself for maintaining them? |
4900 | Should Maurice look calmly on while the enemy, whom he had made so painful a forced march to meet, moved off out of reach before his eyes? |
4900 | Should Philip administer his new kingdom by a viceroy, or should he appoint a king out of his own family? |
4900 | Should he continue in the trenches, pressing more and more closely the city already reduced to great straits? |
4900 | Should he fling himself upon Renty''s division which had so ostentatiously offered battle the day before? |
4900 | Should he go thence alive and unmolested? |
4900 | Should he throw himself across the river and rescue the place before it fell? |
4900 | Should mercenary troops at this late hour be sent for? |
4900 | Should not this conviction, on the part of men who had so many means of feeling the popular pulse, have given the Queen''s government pause? |
4900 | Should the whole army mutiny at once, what might become of the kingdom of Spain? |
4900 | Should they assemble the captains of the Military associations? |
4900 | Should they call themselves the"Society of Concord,"the restorers of lost liberty, or by what other attractive title should the league be baptized? |
4900 | Should they issue a proclamation? |
4900 | Should they summon the ward- masters, and order the instant arming and mustering of their respective companies? |
4900 | Should we lose many Kentuckians and Virginians who are now with us, if we boldly confiscated the slaves of all rebels? |
4900 | Tell me, I pray you, what would you do for his Majesty in case anything should be done for you? |
4900 | That done, what good can be accomplished by our arms? |
4900 | That monarch was implored to take, the sceptre of France, and to reign over them, inasmuch as they most willingly threw themselves into his arms? |
4900 | The Prince asked his sanguine partisan if he were still determined to carry out his project, with no more definite support than he had indicated? |
4900 | The Queen.--"And of the States?" |
4900 | The Queen.--"Are you sent only from Holland and Zeeland? |
4900 | The Queen.--"Then how were you sent hither?" |
4900 | The Queen.--"What? |
4900 | The assault was then ordered? |
4900 | The castle was carried, but what would become of the city? |
4900 | The following is all that has reference to the Prince:"Of what matters may I ordinarily write to his Excellency?" |
4900 | The forty days, promised as the period of Neyen''s absence, were soon gone; but what were forty days, or forty times forty, at the Spanish court? |
4900 | The motto,"incertum quo fate ferent"( who knows whither fate is sweeping her?) |
4900 | The proposition was hailed with acclamation, but who should invent the hieroglyphical costume? |
4900 | The question is distinctly proposed to us, Shall Slavery die, or the great Republic? |
4900 | The question was,"Did you confiscate the property because the crime was lese- majesty?" |
4900 | Thereupon he gave the Elector his hand.-- What now was the amount and meaning of this promise on the part of the Prince? |
4900 | They had, in reality, asked him but one question, and that a simple one-- Would he maintain the treaty of Ghent? |
4900 | They have not had wisdom enough to manage their own estates, and are they now to teach the King and your Highness how to govern the country? |
4900 | Think you I will be bound by your own speech to make no peace for mine own matters without their consent? |
4900 | To the threat of being invaded, and to the advice to close his gates, he answered,"Do you see these two doors? |
4900 | To this end had Columbus discovered a hemisphere for Castile and Aragon, and the new Indies revealed their hidden treasures? |
4900 | To whom, then, was the sacred debt of national and royal gratitude due but to Lamoral of Egmont? |
4900 | Upon this was built a chamber of marble mason- work, forty feet long, three and a half feet broad, as many high, and with side- walks[ walls? |
4900 | Upon this, Brederode, beside himself with rage, cried out vehemently,"Are we to tolerate such language from this priest?" |
4900 | Van der Veen gave him his hand, saying:"Sir, you are the man of whom the whole country is talking?" |
4900 | Very well, masters, do you not think I am assisting you when I am sending you four thousand foot and four hundred horse to serve during the war? |
4900 | Villiers was of the same opinion, and accordingly the councillor, in the excess of his caution, confided the secret only-- to whom? |
4900 | Walsingham to Bodman.--"Have you the copy still?" |
4900 | Was William of Orange to receive absolute commands from the Duke of Alva? |
4900 | Was a people not justified in rising against authority when all their laws had been trodden under foot,"not once only, but a million of times?" |
4900 | Was better proof ever afforded that God alone can protect us against those whom we trust? |
4900 | Was he not furious at the start which Heidelberg had got of him in the race for that golden prize? |
4900 | Was he not himself the mark of obloquy among the Reformers, because of his leniency to Catholics? |
4900 | Was he not mad with jealousy of the Palatine, of the Palatine''s religion, and of the Palatine''s claim to"hegemony"in Germany? |
4900 | Was he ready to dismiss his troops at once, and by land, the sea voyage being liable to too many objections? |
4900 | Was he satisfied that the Ghent Pacification contained nothing conflicting with the Roman religion and the King''s authority? |
4900 | Was it anxiety lest his victorious entrance into Paris might undo the diplomacy of his catholic envoys at Rome? |
4900 | Was it astonishing that murder was more common than fidelity? |
4900 | Was it more severe and sudden than that which betrayed monarchs usually inflict? |
4900 | Was it not a diplomatic masterpiece, that from this frugal store they could contrive to eke out seven mortal months of negotiation? |
4900 | Was it not madness for the stadholder, at the head of eight hundred horsemen, to assail such an army as this? |
4900 | Was it not strange that the letter had been so long delayed? |
4900 | Was it not to invoke upon his head the swift vengeance of Heaven? |
4900 | Was it possible for those envoys to imagine the almost invisible meanness of such childish tricks? |
4900 | Was it possible, then, for William of Orange to sustain the Perpetual Edict, the compromise with Don John? |
4900 | Was it probable that the lethargy of provinces, which had reached so high a point of freedom only to be deprived of it at last, could endure forever? |
4900 | Was it still to deserve the name? |
4900 | Was it strange that Orange should feel little affinity with such companions? |
4900 | Was it strange that a century or so of this kind of work should produce a Luther? |
4900 | Was it strange that a man, so thirsty for power, so gluttonous of flattery, should be influenced by such passionate appeals? |
4900 | Was it strange that hatred, incest, murder, should follow in the train of a wedding thus hideously solemnized? |
4900 | Was it strange that in Philip''s reign such energy should be rewarded by wealth, rank, and honour? |
4900 | Was it strange that the States should be distrustful of her intentions, and, in their turn, become neglectful of their duty? |
4900 | Was it strange that the proud Earl should be fretting his heart away when such golden chances were eluding his grasp? |
4900 | Was it strange that there should be murmurs at the appointment of so dangerous a chief to guard a wavering city which had so recently been secured? |
4900 | Was it that I might enrich myself? |
4900 | Was it that I might find new; ones? |
4900 | Was it thought to bait a trap for the ingenuous Netherlanders, and catch them little by little, like so many wild animals? |
4900 | Was it to be tolerated that base, pacific burghers should monopolize the treasure by which a band of heroes might be enriched? |
4900 | Was it to be wondered at that many did not see the precipice towards which the bark which held their all was gliding under the same impulse? |
4900 | Was not such a labourer in the vineyard worthy of his hire? |
4900 | Was not this opening of a cheerful and pacific prospect, after a half century''s fight for liberty, a fair cause for rejoicing? |
4900 | Was not this reasonable and according to the elemental laws? |
4900 | Was that buckler to be suffered to fall to the ground, or to be raised only upon the arm of a doubtful and treacherous friend? |
4900 | Was that hypocrisy? |
4900 | Was the sovereign people to wait for months, or years, before it regained its existence? |
4900 | Was the supreme power of the Union, created at Utrecht in 1579, vested in the States- General? |
4900 | Was there ever anything more stinging, more concentrated, more vigorous, more just? |
4900 | We confess what you say concerning the former requisitions and promises to be true, but when will you have done? |
4900 | Were every man obliged to give a reckoning of everything he possesses over and above his hereditary estates, who in the government would pass muster? |
4900 | Were not all lovers of good government"erecting their heads like dromedaries?" |
4900 | Were not carnage and plunder the very elements in which they disported themselves? |
4900 | Were not children, thus ready to dismember their mother, as foul and unnatural as the mother who would divide her child? |
4900 | Were not these amusements of the Netherlanders as elevated and humanizing as the contemporary bull- fights and autos- da- fe of Spain? |
4900 | Were these the words of a baffled conspirator and traitor? |
4900 | Were they now to be permitted to invade neutral territory, to violate public faith, to act under no responsibility save to their own will? |
4900 | Were they uttered to produce an effect upon public opinion and avert a merited condemnation by all good men? |
4900 | What a picture? |
4900 | What altar and what hearthstone had they not profaned? |
4900 | What are oaths and hostages when prerogative, and the people are contending? |
4900 | What are our evangelists about in Germany? |
4900 | What are we all but dirt and dust?" |
4900 | What are your children made of more than other people''s children? |
4900 | What army, what combination, what device, what talisman, could save the House of Austria, the cause of Papacy, from the impending ruin? |
4900 | What but failure and disaster could be expected from such astounding policy? |
4900 | What can I say to you of cis- Atlantic things? |
4900 | What can be more consistent than laws of descent, regulated by right divine? |
4900 | What can be more ticklish than to pass judgment on the tricks of those who are governing this state? |
4900 | What can you expect from them but evil fruit?" |
4900 | What chance had the impetuous and impatient young hero in such an encounter with the foremost statesman of the age? |
4900 | What could a single province effect, when its sister states, even liberty- loving Holland, had basely abandoned the common cause? |
4900 | What could be more childish than such diplomacy? |
4900 | What could be more hopeless than such negotiations? |
4900 | What could be more practical or more devout than the conception? |
4900 | What could half- armed artisans achieve in the open plain against such accomplished foes? |
4900 | What could such half- armed and wholly untrained partisans effect against the bravest and most experienced troops in the whole world? |
4900 | What could the brother hope by taking the field against Maurice of Nassau and Lewis William and the Baxes and Meetkerkes? |
4900 | What could they comprehend of living fountains and of heavenly dews? |
4900 | What course should he now pursue? |
4900 | What course was the Prince of Orange to adopt? |
4900 | What did Alexander, when in an arid desert they brought, him a helmet full of water? |
4900 | What did all this mean, it was demanded, this producing one set of propositions after another? |
4900 | What do you say to that?" |
4900 | What element had they not braved? |
4900 | What envoy will ever dare to speak with vigor if he is not sustained by the government at home? |
4900 | What envoy will ever dare to speak with vigour if he is not sustained by the government at home? |
4900 | What evidence could be more conclusive of a deep design on the part of Barneveld to sell the Republic to the Archduke and drive Maurice into exile? |
4900 | What fatigue, what danger, what crime, had ever checked them for a moment? |
4900 | What greater proof could be given of the incapacity of the Spanish court to learn the lesson which forty years had been teaching? |
4900 | What had the Prince of Conde, his comings and his goings, to do with this vast enterprise? |
4900 | What have I done that should cause the Queen to disapprove my proceedings? |
4900 | What have you to fear?" |
4900 | What holier triumph for the conqueror of the Saracens than the subjugation of these northern infidels? |
4900 | What hope of help can I have, finding her Majesty so strait with myself as she is? |
4900 | What if it were found out that we were all fellow- worms together, and that those which had crawled highest were not necessarily the least slimy? |
4900 | What if the fearful heresy should gain ground that the People was at least as wise, honest, and brave as its masters? |
4900 | What if the whole theory of hereditary superiority should suddenly exhale? |
4900 | What is it that your Excellency most desires? |
4900 | What is to prevent it? |
4900 | What liberal or healthy government would be possible otherwise? |
4900 | What machine was there that we did not employ? |
4900 | What matters it to them that blood flows, and that the miserable people are destroyed, who alone are good for anything?" |
4900 | What more conclusive indications could be required as to the guilt of the Moors? |
4900 | What more dreary than the perpetual efforts of two lines to approach each other which were mathematically incapable of meeting? |
4900 | What more natural than that it should be used again when the subject of appealing to chance came up in conversation? |
4900 | What motive had so many princes to traverse Philip''s designs in the Netherlands, but desire to destroy the enormous power which they feared? |
4900 | What need to dilate further upon such a minister and upon such a system of government? |
4900 | What need to pursue the barren, vulgar, and often repeated chronicle? |
4900 | What need to repeat the tragic, familiar tale? |
4900 | What noble principle, what deathless interest, was there at stake? |
4900 | What now was that England? |
4900 | What now was the disposition and what the means of the Provinces to do their part in the contest? |
4900 | What now was the political position of the United Provinces at this juncture? |
4900 | What now were its hopes of deliverance out of this Gehenna? |
4900 | What obstacle had ever given them pause in their career of duty? |
4900 | What precaution should: they take? |
4900 | What preparations had Spain and the Empire, the Pope and the League, set on foot to beat back even for a moment the overwhelming onset? |
4900 | What reported conversation can stand a captious criticism like this? |
4900 | What service doth he, Count Solms, Count Overatein, with their Almaynes, but spend treasure and consume great contributions?" |
4900 | What service had he to render in exchange? |
4900 | What should he do? |
4900 | What then would you more of me? |
4900 | What theology teaches your Highness to vent your wrath upon the innocent? |
4900 | What vulpine kind of mercy was it on the part of the Cardinal, while making such deadly insinuations, to recommend the imprisoned victim to clemency? |
4900 | What was a coasting- trade with Spain compared with this boundless career of adventure? |
4900 | What was his position at the moment? |
4900 | What was his position? |
4900 | What was his rank, they asked, what his ability, what: his influence at court? |
4900 | What was his work? |
4900 | What was it to them that carnage and plunder had been spared in one of the richest and most populous cities in Christendom? |
4900 | What was it to them that the imperial shuttle was thus industriously flying to and fro? |
4900 | What was left for them to do except to set up a tribunal in Holland for giving laws to the whole of Northern Europe? |
4900 | What was the aspect of affairs in Germany and France? |
4900 | What was to be done? |
4900 | What were debtors, robbers, murderers, compared to heretics? |
4900 | What were the Estates? |
4900 | What were they in a contest with the whole Roman empire? |
4900 | What were those opinions? |
4900 | What will prevent that? |
4900 | What will the Duke of Alva and all the Spaniards say of such a precipitate flight? |
4900 | What will you do for us in return for our assistance?" |
4900 | What, meanwhile, was the policy of the government? |
4900 | What, then, was the condition of the nation, after this great step had been taken? |
4900 | When are pomp and enthusiasm not to be obtained by imperial personages, at brief notice and in vast quantities, if managers understand their business? |
4900 | When before had a sovereign acknowledged the independence of his rebellious subjects, and signed a treaty with them as with equals? |
4900 | When did one man ever civilize a people? |
4900 | When this was done, he said,"John, are you to stay by me to the last?" |
4900 | When was France ever slow to sweep upon Italy with such a hope? |
4900 | When was ever an account of fifteen years''standing adjusted, whether between nations or individuals, without much wrangling? |
4900 | When we look for them the next morning, do we not find them withered leaves?" |
4900 | When were priestly flatterers ever wanting to pour this poison into the souls of tyrants? |
4900 | When would such an opportunity occur again? |
4900 | Whence all this Christian meekness in the author of the Ban against Orange and the eulogist of Alva? |
4900 | Whence his ships, supplies, money, weapons, soldiers? |
4900 | Where else upon earth, at that day, was there half so much liberty as was thus guaranteed? |
4900 | Where now were the vehement protestations of horror that her public declaration of principles and motives had been set at nought? |
4900 | Where should we be? |
4900 | Where was Farnese? |
4900 | Where was the supposed centre of that intrigue? |
4900 | Where was the work which had been too dark and bloody for their performance? |
4900 | Where was this hereditary chief magistrate to be found? |
4900 | Where was this vast sum to be found? |
4900 | Where would you find another king as willing to do it as I am?" |
4900 | Where, then, could even a loophole be found through which the possibility of a compromise could be espied? |
4900 | Whereupon cried Desiring Heart, Oh Common Comfort who is he? |
4900 | Which is the most wonderful manifestation in the history of this personage-- the audacity of the impostor, or the bestiality of his victims? |
4900 | Who better than he then, in this double capacity, to coil himself around the rebellion, and to carry the olive- branch in his mouth? |
4900 | Who but the fanatical, the shallow- minded, or the corrupt could doubt the inevitable issue of the conflict? |
4900 | Who can dispute that those interested ought to procure the execution of the treaty? |
4900 | Who could dream that this departure of an almost nameless band of emigrants to the wilderness was an epoch in the world''s history? |
4900 | Who could expect to contend with such a foe in the dark? |
4900 | Who could have feared any danger to the most powerful city in the Netherlands from so moderate a besieging force? |
4900 | Who could have foretold, or even hoped, that atoms so mutually repulsive would ever have coalesced into a sympathetic and indissoluble whole? |
4900 | Who could measure the consequences to Christendom of such a catastrophe? |
4900 | Who could reach him through that valley of death? |
4900 | Who doubts her participation in the Babington conspiracy? |
4900 | Who doubts that her long imprisonment in England was a violation of all law, all justice, all humanity? |
4900 | Who doubts that she was the centre of one endless conspiracy by Spain and Rome against the throne and life of Elizabeth? |
4900 | Who else could look into the future, and into Philip''s heart so unerringly? |
4900 | Who ever heard before of refusing audience to public personages? |
4900 | Who had been tampering with the Spaniards now? |
4900 | Who is going to believe that? |
4900 | Who is he that will refuse to spend his life and living in it? |
4900 | Who now did reverence to a King so criminal and so fallen? |
4900 | Who now should henceforth dare to say that one Spanish fighting- man was equal to five or ten Hollanders? |
4900 | Who was most dangerous to the United Provinces during those memorable peace negotiations, Spain the avowed enemy, or France the friend? |
4900 | Who were the people when the educated classes and the working classes were thus carefully eliminated? |
4900 | Who wishes to destroy the Union? |
4900 | Whom were they to trust? |
4900 | Whose arm should deal it? |
4900 | Whose but that of the Devonshire skipper who had already accomplished so much? |
4900 | Whose name was most familiar on the lips of the Spanish partisans engaged in these secret schemes? |
4900 | Why did not they formally offer the sovereignty of the Provinces to the Queen without conditions? |
4900 | Why did the archdukes not declare their intentions openly and at once? |
4900 | Why do ye murmur that we do not break our vows and surrender the city to the Spaniards? |
4900 | Why had Maurice opposed the treaty? |
4900 | Why has poor Netherland thus become degenerate and bastard? |
4900 | Why has the Almighty suffered such crimes to be perpetrated in His sacred name? |
4900 | Why have I left my son so long a prisoner? |
4900 | Why have I lost my brothers? |
4900 | Why have I put my life so often in, danger? |
4900 | Why should Meghem''s loitering and mutinous troops, arriving at the eleventh hour, share in the triumph and the spoil? |
4900 | Why should either Calvinists or Lutherans be tolerated in Styria? |
4900 | Why should not the Antwerp executioners claim equal commendation? |
4900 | Why should they do so? |
4900 | Why should they of all other people be made an exception of, and be exempt from, the action of a general edict? |
4900 | Why then was it not competent to other provinces, with equal allegiance to the treaty, to sanction the Reformed religion within their limits? |
4900 | Why was he there? |
4900 | Why, if he were really of so high quality as had been reported, was he thus neglected, and at last disgraced? |
4900 | Why, indeed? |
4900 | Why? |
4900 | Will my Lord please to prepare himself?" |
4900 | Will they not say that your Excellency has fled from the consciousness of guilt? |
4900 | With what chrism, by what prelate, should the consecration of Henry be performed? |
4900 | Without it, what exchequer can accept chronic warfare and escape bankruptcy? |
4900 | Without the sanction of all the United States, of what value was the declaration of Utrecht? |
4900 | Would it not be better to wait till nightfall? |
4900 | Would it not be better, then, that the poor man, to avoid starvation, should wait no longer, but accept bread wherever he might find it? |
4900 | Would not their appearance at this crisis rather inflame the rage than intimidate the insolence of the sectaries? |
4900 | Would the commissioners request him to retire honourably from the high functions which he had over and over again offered to resign? |
4900 | Yet before the ink had dried in James''s pen, he was proposing that the names of the mediating sovereigns should be omitted from the document? |
4900 | Yet how can I do it without money? |
4900 | Yet, after all, what had he accomplished? |
4900 | You will ask why I am in Mons at the head of an armed force: are any of you ignorant of Alva''s cruelties? |
4900 | You will be indulgent to my mistakes and shortcomings,--and who can expect to avoid them? |
4900 | and Henry III., could stand up on the blood- stained soil of the Netherlands and plead for liberty of conscience for all mankind? |
4900 | asked the Italian;"will you take 200,000 ducats?" |
4900 | asked the King;"a dozen millions?" |
4900 | could the Advocate-- among whose first words after hearing of his own condemnation to death were,"And must my Grotius die too?" |
4900 | cried the Prince,"what are you afraid of? |
4900 | do you look at the matter in that way?" |
4900 | he asked? |
4900 | he cried,"What will princes say, what will the world in general say, what will historians say, about the honour of the English nation?" |
4900 | how am I ever to get back my money? |
4900 | how the devil came you to send that courier to Rome about the English plot without giving me warning?" |
4900 | modicae fidei quare dubitasti?" |
4900 | said the Prince, looking gravely at Ryhove;"but upon what force do you rely for your undertaking?" |
4900 | she cried;"how are the affairs of Ireland to be provided for? |
4900 | they cried;"art thou terrified so soon? |
4900 | was it united? |
4900 | what a man I was once, and what am I now?" |
4900 | what availeth wit, when it fails the owner at greatest need? |
4900 | what fleets and floating cidadels did we not put in motion? |
4900 | what miracles of fire did we not invent? |
4900 | when should she serve,"said the Admiral,"if not at such a time as this? |
4900 | where is the golden statue? |
4900 | who is this boy that is preaching to me?" |
4900 | who is to pay the garrisons of Brill and Flushing?" |
4900 | would you have had me guilty of the slaughter of so many innocents, whose lives were committed to my charge, as well as the best? |
4900 | you whom I esteem as my father, can you suspect me of such guilt? |
16041 | A Catholic? |
16041 | A conspiracy? 16041 A convent, Anne? |
16041 | A duel? 16041 A gentleman? |
16041 | A grey cloak, did you say? |
16041 | A grey cloak? |
16041 | A letter? 16041 A nun?" |
16041 | A puppet? 16041 A woman?" |
16041 | A woman? |
16041 | Absolution for me? 16041 Absolution?" |
16041 | Accept your cloak? 16041 Adventures? |
16041 | Against what did I not complain? |
16041 | Against what? |
16041 | Against what? |
16041 | Aged me, Madame? |
16041 | Ah, Madame, what else could I do? |
16041 | Ah, but you heard what the vicomte said that day? |
16041 | Ah, it is you, Vicomte? |
16041 | Ah,said the vicomte;"so you ran about with a drawn sword last night? |
16041 | All this means that you will fight him? |
16041 | Alone? |
16041 | Am I a killer of old men? 16041 Am I your confidante in all things?" |
16041 | And Brother Jacques? |
16041 | And I have spent your gold, thinking it lawfully mine? 16041 And I, Monsieur Paul?" |
16041 | And Jehan will not tell you who Sister Benie was? |
16041 | And Madame de Brissac? |
16041 | And Marie de Touchet? |
16041 | And Monsieur de Leviston? |
16041 | And Monsieur de Saumaise? |
16041 | And Monsieur de Saumaise? |
16041 | And Monsieur le Comte''s play- woman? |
16041 | And Monsieur le Marquis? |
16041 | And Victor? |
16041 | And are not the Iroquois our friends? |
16041 | And by what name is he known? |
16041 | And does his Majesty intend to make Frenchmen of these savages? |
16041 | And have that boor D''Hérouville laugh? 16041 And he was an Indian who expressed that thought?" |
16041 | And he will be quiet and docile? |
16041 | And how are you this morning, Chevalier? |
16041 | And how goes Mazarin''s foreign policy? |
16041 | And if I should break my vows? |
16041 | And if I should use force? |
16041 | And if not? |
16041 | And if you find the paper? |
16041 | And is Monsieur le Marquis of a patient mind? |
16041 | And is there a remedy for a case such as you have described? |
16041 | And is this son handsome? |
16041 | And it was not you? |
16041 | And pain, Monsieur? |
16041 | And so you are from that country of which I have heard so much of late-- that France across the sea? |
16041 | And supposing it had been real, genuine? |
16041 | And the Chevalier is shielding him? |
16041 | And the Vicomte d''Halluys? |
16041 | And the motive? |
16041 | And the plot? |
16041 | And the unknown? |
16041 | And then? |
16041 | And they bring the savage? 16041 And this Marquis de Périgny; will not Father Chaumonot waste his time?" |
16041 | And this question? |
16041 | And we are nearing Rochelle? 16041 And what became of the grey cloak, Monsieur?" |
16041 | And what brought about this good fortune? |
16041 | And what does that fool know about my needs? |
16041 | And what''s to become of me? |
16041 | And when the clouds come, Monsieur le Vicomte, and shut out the moon, there is, then, a cessation to destiny? |
16041 | And who may say that immortality does not dwell in these thoughts? |
16041 | And will you pay me those ten thousand livres which you wagered against my claims for madame''s hand? |
16041 | And you are Father Chaumonot? |
16041 | And you are here in Quebec? |
16041 | And you come to me? |
16041 | And you could not leave me in peace, even here? |
16041 | And you do not wish satisfaction from me? |
16041 | And you have just returned from Rome? 16041 And you have not grown sick for home since you left the sea?" |
16041 | And you love her? |
16041 | And you love me still? |
16041 | And you loved Victor? |
16041 | And you saw the blow Monsieur du Cévennes struck me? |
16041 | And you searched diligently; you sought the four ends of France? |
16041 | And you will go to Quebec? |
16041 | And you will return to- morrow? |
16041 | And you will take part? |
16041 | And you, Madame? |
16041 | And you, Monsieur,banteringly,"did you not make him so?" |
16041 | And you, Monsieur; what are you doing here? |
16041 | And you? |
16041 | And you? |
16041 | And your antecedents? |
16041 | And your business? |
16041 | And your reward? |
16041 | And yours? |
16041 | Anne de Vaudemont? |
16041 | Anne, does any one know the human heart? 16041 Anne, have I had occasion to fall in love with any man when I know man so well? |
16041 | Annoy me? 16041 Another answer? |
16041 | Another letter? |
16041 | Are not Frenchmen building a city in the heart of their kingdom? |
16041 | Are you alone? |
16041 | Are you going to apologize for applying to me the term''dishonest''? |
16041 | Are you mad, Chevalier? |
16041 | Are you mad? |
16041 | Are you madame or mademoiselle? |
16041 | Are you not also a trite pattern? |
16041 | Are you quite sure? |
16041 | Are you some prince''s light- o''-love? |
16041 | Are you there, Paul? |
16041 | Are you weary of life, Monsieur? |
16041 | Are your ears like the sailors''of Ulysses, filled with wax? 16041 Between the hours of eleven and twelve?" |
16041 | Blundering fool,he cried passionately,"what have you said and done?" |
16041 | Boy,he said lowly and with apparent calm,"was not that a ship passing?" |
16041 | Brother Jacques is gone? |
16041 | Burning paper? |
16041 | But Du Cévennes and the others? |
16041 | But I?--I, whom you have made dance so sorrily?--but I? |
16041 | But September? |
16041 | But a new feather here? 16041 But can you not see how impossible life with you would be after this night? |
16041 | But if I go to him without forgiveness in my heart; if only my lips speak? |
16041 | But my wines? |
16041 | But supposing I change all this into something more than absurd? 16041 But supposing he should not find these incriminating papers? |
16041 | But the Chevalier; why did he not defend himself? |
16041 | But we are still tender toward the Chevalier? |
16041 | But what are you going to do with the property? |
16041 | But what made you speak? 16041 But what will you do?" |
16041 | But why De Brissac? 16041 But why do you call Monsieur le Chevalier the count?" |
16041 | But why should I give you a thousand livres? 16041 But why?" |
16041 | But will he become great? |
16041 | But will you listen to what I have to say? |
16041 | But will you not remove the mask? |
16041 | But you are glad, Paul,affectionately,"that I am with you?" |
16041 | But you, Monsieur? |
16041 | But you? 16041 But your future?" |
16041 | Calls himself the Chevalier du Cévennes? |
16041 | Calls himself? 16041 Can it be possible that I wrote this--''I kiss your handsome grey eyes a thousand times''?" |
16041 | Can it be,said Victor, breaking the spell,"can it be that we once knew Paris?" |
16041 | Can not? 16041 Can what be?" |
16041 | Can you be dissuaded? |
16041 | Can you forgive me, Margot? 16041 Chevalier,"said the vicomte,"do you remember Henri de Leviston?" |
16041 | Confiscated? |
16041 | Conspiring did not bring him here? |
16041 | Conspiring? |
16041 | Corporal,said the Chevalier,"will you pass me the corn?" |
16041 | Curse it, why did n''t I think of that? |
16041 | Cévennes? |
16041 | Cévennes? |
16041 | D''Halluys? |
16041 | D''Hérouville, you black scoundrel, why do you come so slowly? |
16041 | D''Hérouville? 16041 D''Hérouville? |
16041 | De Brissac? 16041 De Brissac?" |
16041 | De Leviston? |
16041 | Dear heart, are you not hiding something from me? 16041 Death? |
16041 | Diane, can it be you? |
16041 | Diane? |
16041 | Diane? |
16041 | Did I not prophesy that some day we should be at each other''s throats? |
16041 | Did I not tell you that I should kill you? |
16041 | Did I speak strange words when fever moved my tongue? |
16041 | Did he tell you my name? |
16041 | Did she die in peace? |
16041 | Did you come three thousand miles to accomplish this? |
16041 | Did you notice Brother Jacques''s eyes? |
16041 | Do I hear some one calling my name? |
16041 | Do I look ill? |
16041 | Do I understand you to say that the Chevalier is to sign for Quebec? |
16041 | Do I wear the shield of Perseus, and is the head of Medusa thereupon? 16041 Do we not die sometimes, Victor, while yet the heart and brain go on beating and thinking?" |
16041 | Do what? |
16041 | Do you believe in the holiness and sacredness of your office? |
16041 | Do you doubt my courage, Monsieur? |
16041 | Do you hear, Monsieur? |
16041 | Do you know her, then? |
16041 | Do you know what brought him here? |
16041 | Do you know what charity is? |
16041 | Do you know why she is here? |
16041 | Do you love Paris? |
16041 | Do you love the Chevalier? |
16041 | Do you mean to say that you, too, observed them? |
16041 | Do you mean to tell me that the Chevalier du Cévennes is the son of the Marquis de Périgny? |
16041 | Do you not hear me say that I love you? 16041 Do you really hate him?" |
16041 | Do you recall that when I touched that cloak it gave forth a crackling sound as of paper? |
16041 | Do you remember how Mazarin took away Scarron''s pension? 16041 Do you suppose that I could forget your face, a single contour or line of it?" |
16041 | Do you think that monsieur can see mademoiselle? |
16041 | Does any one else know that you have this paper? |
16041 | Does it burn like that, then? |
16041 | Does it pain you much, lad? |
16041 | Does not the name sound good? 16041 Does the day not carry you back to France?" |
16041 | Does the vicomte enter the bouts? |
16041 | Does this mean that, having lain upon my heart for more than a year, it is no longer of value to you? |
16041 | Does your head ache? |
16041 | Drinking? |
16041 | Eh, where indeed is yesterday? |
16041 | Eh, you laugh? |
16041 | Eh? 16041 Eh? |
16041 | Eh? 16041 Eh?" |
16041 | Else what, peace or war? |
16041 | Enemies, enemies? 16041 Eye? |
16041 | Father Chaumonot? |
16041 | Father? 16041 Father?" |
16041 | Fight you? 16041 For me? |
16041 | Forgive you for what? |
16041 | Forty thousand livres? |
16041 | Forty thousand livres? |
16041 | Frankly, Monsieur, how can he defend himself? |
16041 | Frankly, can I remain in France? 16041 Friends?" |
16041 | From behind? |
16041 | Gabrielle, you are not angry at me? 16041 Good God, Monsieur, then what is all this about?" |
16041 | Had he anything to say? |
16041 | Had you a mother, Monsieur? |
16041 | Has Mazarin published an edict forbidding a man to move his diaphragm? 16041 Has Monsieur le Comte ventured forth in this storm?" |
16041 | Has he committed a crime? |
16041 | Has he made a fool of himself here as in France? |
16041 | Has not Rochelle become suddenly attractive? |
16041 | Has she a pleasant voice? 16041 Has that woman been here again?" |
16041 | Hate him? 16041 Have I done that? |
16041 | Have I ever kept a secret from you, Victor? |
16041 | Have I ever met you till now? |
16041 | Have I not told you that I am drunk? 16041 Have I still a place to go?" |
16041 | Have I? |
16041 | Have they found him? |
16041 | Have you an enemy? 16041 Have you any money, Victor?" |
16041 | Have you anything on your mind of which you wish to be relieved? |
16041 | Have you anything to say, Monsieur? |
16041 | Have you come all this journey to mock me? |
16041 | Have you come to mock my death- bed? |
16041 | Have you ever burned a love- letter, Madame? |
16041 | Have you ever heard of the Marquis de Périgny? |
16041 | Have you ever searched the pockets? |
16041 | Have you ever thought of the future, Monsieur? |
16041 | Have you killed him, I say? |
16041 | Have you killed him? |
16041 | Have you no bogus paper to hold over my head? 16041 Have you no charity?" |
16041 | Have you no welcome, Madame? |
16041 | Have you not the cloak to offer which made me a widow? 16041 Have you played with him since?" |
16041 | Have you? |
16041 | Have you? |
16041 | He can be found? |
16041 | He does n''t approve, then? |
16041 | He drinks? |
16041 | He is not here at the château, then? |
16041 | He is seasick? |
16041 | He is troubled? |
16041 | He is very ill? |
16041 | He mentions my name? |
16041 | He sleeps? |
16041 | He? 16041 Heart? |
16041 | Henriot? |
16041 | Henriot? |
16041 | Her Majesty''s confessor? |
16041 | Her name? 16041 Her name?" |
16041 | His family? |
16041 | Homesick, eh? |
16041 | How about Madame Oriole; does she regret the lover of last year? |
16041 | How about mushrooms? 16041 How am I to know that it is genuine? |
16041 | How came you to sign that paper? |
16041 | How did I obtain it? 16041 How did you know that we were here?" |
16041 | How did you obtain that paper, Monsieur? |
16041 | How long ago since I was sober? 16041 How long have you been in Quebec?" |
16041 | How long must I lie in this cursed bed? |
16041 | How many times have you filched the Chevalier of his crowns by the use of clogged dice? 16041 How vital is this information?" |
16041 | I am old, eh, Monsieur? |
16041 | I ask you again, Messieurs, have you seen her? |
16041 | I grow old? 16041 I have seen him, Victor, and spoken to him,""A reconciliation? |
16041 | I have the honor, then, of bringing you the news? 16041 I thought that you possessed a miniature of him?" |
16041 | I thought you had gone to Holland? |
16041 | I wonder how it happens that I have never seen this daughter of the Montbazons? |
16041 | I wonder what they are doing at Voisin''s to- night? |
16041 | I, Monsieur? |
16041 | I, Monsieur? |
16041 | I? 16041 I? |
16041 | I? 16041 I?" |
16041 | I? |
16041 | I? |
16041 | If I should call for help? |
16041 | If he does none of these things,said the marquis,"why can not he live in peace here?" |
16041 | In God''s name, what shall I call you, then? |
16041 | In Heaven''s name, Paul,cried Victor,"what does this all mean?" |
16041 | In Quebec? |
16041 | In Quebec? |
16041 | In a mask? |
16041 | In all the hundred days of summer will there be a more perfect day for love than this? 16041 In what way, my son?" |
16041 | Is Monsieur le Chevalier going? |
16041 | Is Monsieur le Vicomte seasick? |
16041 | Is he a Catholic? |
16041 | Is he not handsome? |
16041 | Is he shielding some one, you ask? 16041 Is he thinking of the house of his fathers; or, has he looked too long upon Onontio''s daughter? |
16041 | Is it because they wish the great to smile on them? |
16041 | Is it gay, lad? |
16041 | Is it possible that I can still annoy you, Madame? |
16041 | Is it possible? |
16041 | Is it true that her Majesty is at times attacked by a strange malady? |
16041 | Is it you, lad? |
16041 | Is not madame''s name there? |
16041 | Is not that his title? |
16041 | Is not the Chevalier du Cévennes the marquis''s son? |
16041 | Is not the water beautiful and inviting? |
16041 | Is she some prince''s light- o''-love? |
16041 | Is that not a new word in your vocabulary? |
16041 | Is that not an excellent joke, my Corporal? |
16041 | Is that what he calls them? 16041 Is that you, Chevalier? |
16041 | Is that you, Victor? |
16041 | Is the Vicomte d''Halluys going to Spain also? |
16041 | Is there any way to prove that I love you? |
16041 | Is there more than one, then? |
16041 | Is there not peace wherever the peaceful heart is? 16041 Is there not something about the shape of this paper, Madame, that is familiar? |
16041 | Is there room in your company for another recruit? |
16041 | Is this once more a rebel city? 16041 Is your heart made of stone or of steel that you think you can undo what you have done? |
16041 | It is laughable, then? |
16041 | It is possible, then? |
16041 | It is you, Jehan? 16041 Jehan?" |
16041 | Justice? |
16041 | Know her? |
16041 | Know you one who calls himself the Chevalier du Cévennes? |
16041 | Ladies? 16041 Letter? |
16041 | Lied? |
16041 | Love him, Victor? |
16041 | Love him? |
16041 | Love you, Monsieur? |
16041 | Love? 16041 Love?" |
16041 | Madame, are you not truly a poet? |
16041 | Madame, have you met Monsieur le Chevalier du Cévennes, my son? |
16041 | Madame, will you do me the honor to accept my cloak? |
16041 | Madame,he asked,"have I not met you somewhere in wide and beautiful France?" |
16041 | Madame,he said, quietly,"whither were you bound?" |
16041 | Madame? |
16041 | Madame? |
16041 | Madame? |
16041 | Mademoiselle de Vaudemont,he said,"is it possible that I see you here in Rochelle?" |
16041 | Mademoiselle,when madame stood before him,"am I to have the happiness of being of service to you? |
16041 | Margot, are you still there? 16041 Margot?" |
16041 | Margot? |
16041 | Matter? 16041 Matter?" |
16041 | May I be so bold as to ask what took place between you and Monsieur le Marquis on the night of his arrival in Quebec? |
16041 | May I be so forward as to ask your name? |
16041 | Maître,said Victor to le Borgne,"is the private assembly in use?" |
16041 | Measure swords with him? |
16041 | Messieurs, will you permit me to speak to Mademoiselle de Longueville? |
16041 | Monsieur Breton? |
16041 | Monsieur Paul,said Breton gaily,"do we return to France on the Henri IV?" |
16041 | Monsieur Paul? |
16041 | Monsieur de Saumaise,said Anne,"will you take me to the pool? |
16041 | Monsieur du Cévennes? |
16041 | Monsieur goes abroad to- night? |
16041 | Monsieur le Comte has not come in yet? 16041 Monsieur le Comte was well when last you saw him?" |
16041 | Monsieur le Comte, then, is at Three Rivers? |
16041 | Monsieur le Comte? |
16041 | Monsieur le Comte? |
16041 | Monsieur le Comte? |
16041 | Monsieur le Marquis has wronged you? |
16041 | Monsieur le Marquis here? |
16041 | Monsieur le Marquis in Quebec? |
16041 | Monsieur le Vicomte,he said,"do you recognize these ten pieces of silver?" |
16041 | Monsieur will not be so rude? |
16041 | Monsieur, I proceed from Rouen to Rochelle; are you familiar with that city? |
16041 | Monsieur, are we to go to Sillery? |
16041 | Monsieur, are you indeed from the king? |
16041 | Monsieur, did I hear you say Quebec? |
16041 | Monsieur, do you know me? |
16041 | Monsieur, have you any reason for insulting me? |
16041 | Monsieur, is it not a grey cloak which you have to offer? |
16041 | Monsieur, it is true that your father has wronged you, but can you not forgive him? |
16041 | Monsieur, when did you arrive? |
16041 | Monsieur, you are a man of experience; are there not times when the best of us are unable to surmount temptation? |
16041 | Monsieur, you have heard of the Chevalier du Cévennes? |
16041 | Monsieur,he asked,"are you related to the poet De Saumaise?" |
16041 | Monsieur,he said peevishly,"have not the women told you that you are too handsome for a priest?" |
16041 | Monsieur,he said,"pardon me for interrupting you, but is it true that to- morrow you sail for Quebec?" |
16041 | Monsieur,repeated the major,"can you account for the Chevalier''s strange behavior?" |
16041 | Monsieur,said Breton timidly,"will you do me the honor to tell me what has happened? |
16041 | Monsieur,said Breton,"will you take this?" |
16041 | Monsieur,said Chaumonot, who overheard the request,"would you not rather I should read to you from the life of Loyola?" |
16041 | Monsieur,said a soft but thrilling voice from the doorway,"will you return to me my mask, which I dropped in this room a few moments ago?" |
16041 | Monsieur? |
16041 | More livres? |
16041 | Must I call for help? |
16041 | Must I call you a coward, Monsieur? |
16041 | Must I get it myself? 16041 My son has challenged you?" |
16041 | My son,she said, sweetly,"can you tell me who is that young man walking with Brother Jacques; the tall one?" |
16041 | My son? |
16041 | My superior, eh? |
16041 | Never to return to France? |
16041 | Never to see France again? |
16041 | News? |
16041 | No sign? |
16041 | No, Monsieur; you wish to use it? |
16041 | Nor what your object was in playing with my heart? |
16041 | Not by the sword, and the mask, and the grey cloak? |
16041 | Not even my son, eh, Monsieur? 16041 Not even myself? |
16041 | Not read it? |
16041 | Now, Messieurs, will you permit me to go? 16041 Now, what may he want?" |
16041 | Now? |
16041 | Of what consists greatness? |
16041 | Of what nature? |
16041 | Of what? 16041 Offended me? |
16041 | On my account? |
16041 | On what? |
16041 | Once more, will you stand aside, or must I call? |
16041 | Or a night at Voisin''s, with dice and the green board? |
16041 | Or a romp with the girls along the quays? |
16041 | Or of madame''s? |
16041 | Palsy? 16041 Paper? |
16041 | Papers? |
16041 | Paris? 16041 Patience? |
16041 | Paul, is not that a woman to be loved? |
16041 | Paul, lad,he cried,"have you heard the astonishing news?" |
16041 | Paul, you can not mean it? |
16041 | Paul,cried Victor;"my God, Paul, are you mad?" |
16041 | Paul? 16041 Paul?" |
16041 | Paul? |
16041 | Paul? |
16041 | Pay me? |
16041 | Peace? |
16041 | Peasant or noble? |
16041 | Playing the good Samaritan? |
16041 | Plutarch? 16041 Politics?" |
16041 | Quebec? |
16041 | Rabelaisian? |
16041 | Recognize? 16041 Recognize?" |
16041 | Repentance? |
16041 | Rochelle? 16041 Rochelle? |
16041 | Rude? 16041 Saumaise,"said the vicomte,"will you hold the watch?" |
16041 | Saumaise? |
16041 | Searched the pockets? |
16041 | September? 16041 Shall I call him back, Mignon?" |
16041 | Shall I gather you some chestnuts, Madame? 16041 Shall I seek Monsieur le Chevalier?" |
16041 | Shall we ever see our dear Paris again, Gabrielle? |
16041 | Shall you ever go back to France, Paul? |
16041 | Shall you leave any commands, Monsieur? |
16041 | Shall you remain here long? |
16041 | She comes from a good family? |
16041 | She comes from a good family? |
16041 | She is fleeing from some one? |
16041 | She is in trouble? |
16041 | She is worthy of a man''s love? |
16041 | She was in distress? |
16041 | She? |
16041 | Should I be here else? |
16041 | Should I have said''good night''? 16041 Sillery?" |
16041 | Sister Benie? |
16041 | Sister, are you too busy to attend the wants of a sick man? |
16041 | Sister, you are ill? |
16041 | Sleep? |
16041 | So De Brissac is dead? |
16041 | So it is you? 16041 So it was you?" |
16041 | So that is all you have to say? 16041 So that is why De Beaufort, thinking me to be the guilty man, sought me out and demanded the paper? |
16041 | So the Chevalier has a heart of gold? |
16041 | So the fool has told it here? |
16041 | So the little Father grows weak? |
16041 | So the marquis, my father, gives to the Church? 16041 So this is what brought him over here? |
16041 | So you love her? |
16041 | So your Excellency remembers me? |
16041 | So, sometimes you are called''Diane''? 16041 Sober? |
16041 | Suppose it was belated paternal love, as well as the sense of justice, that brings me into this desert? |
16041 | Supposed? 16041 Supposing I had a heart,"quietly;"how would you go about to wring it?" |
16041 | Supposing that I took you away somewhere, alone, with me, to a place where no one would find us? 16041 Supposing, after all, you had married him?" |
16041 | Take the brunt of a crime you supposed I had done? |
16041 | That fop? 16041 That man here? |
16041 | The Chevalier du Cévennes is living in Rochelle? |
16041 | The Chevalier du Cévennes? |
16041 | The Chevalier improves? |
16041 | The Chevalier? 16041 The Chevalier?" |
16041 | The Marquis de Périgny? 16041 The Vicomte d''Halluys?" |
16041 | The count was annoying you? |
16041 | The future? |
16041 | The grey cloak? |
16041 | The grey cloak? |
16041 | The grey cloak? |
16041 | The marquis and charity? 16041 The marquis wishes to speak to me, you say?" |
16041 | The vicomte? |
16041 | Then I shall send for him and Monsieur le Comte? |
16041 | Then the Chevalier is not all bad? |
16041 | Then the marquis has a son? |
16041 | Then you have a sword? |
16041 | Then you return to Paris to- morrow? 16041 Then your vocabulary consists of a dozen words, such as,''It is a far cry from the Louvre to this spot''?" |
16041 | There is danger, then? |
16041 | They have n''t tamed you, then? |
16041 | Think, Madame,he said eagerly;"is a dungeon more agreeable to you than I am, and would not a dungeon be worse than death?" |
16041 | To bring him back to France? |
16041 | To how many gallants have you shown this ridiculous letter? |
16041 | To love you, then, is insolence? |
16041 | To me? 16041 To me?" |
16041 | To whom did you lend the cloak? |
16041 | To you? 16041 To you?" |
16041 | To- morrow? 16041 Trustworthy? |
16041 | Victor, what has Monsieur le Chevalier done that he comes to this land? |
16041 | Victor? |
16041 | Warning? 16041 Was I so indiscreet?" |
16041 | Was I, Monsieur? |
16041 | Was it gold, or jewels? 16041 Was it you who came into that room at the Corne d''Abondance in Rochelle, and when I addressed you, would not speak? |
16041 | Was not that what you named me in the single hours? |
16041 | Was there a letter? |
16041 | Wedded to a fop, whose only thought was of himself? 16041 Well, Madame, have you no friendly welcome for one who loves you fondly? |
16041 | Well, Madame? |
16041 | Well, Mignon? |
16041 | Well, Monsieur,not over warmly,"what is it you have to say to me which necessitates my coming so far? |
16041 | Well, Monsieur,said the latter, pleasantly,"suppose we share the laurels?" |
16041 | Well, Monsieur? |
16041 | Well, Monsieur? |
16041 | Well, Monsieur? |
16041 | Well, Paul? |
16041 | Well,truculently,"if you were young?" |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Well? |
16041 | Were we not discoursing on affronts? |
16041 | What about these shores, Paul? |
16041 | What am I going to do? 16041 What am I to believe?" |
16041 | What are the games this afternoon? |
16041 | What are we all but a large family, with a worldly and a spiritual father? 16041 What are you doing here? |
16041 | What are you going to do with us? |
16041 | What are you going to do? |
16041 | What are you going to do? |
16041 | What became of it, Monsieur? |
16041 | What boat? |
16041 | What brought Monsieur le Chevalier du Cévennes, as he calls himself, to Quebec? |
16041 | What brought this on? |
16041 | What did I say? |
16041 | What did I understand you to say, Monsieur? |
16041 | What did he do to you? |
16041 | What did they say of me, even ten years ago? |
16041 | What did you say then? |
16041 | What did you say? |
16041 | What do you call him? |
16041 | What do you here, in Heaven''s name? |
16041 | What do you mean by this insolence? 16041 What do you want?" |
16041 | What does it all mean? 16041 What does it say?" |
16041 | What does that mean? |
16041 | What does the Chevalier say about your fighting his battles for him? |
16041 | What else could he do, being a gentleman? |
16041 | What has happened? |
16041 | What have I done? 16041 What have you to say, Madame?" |
16041 | What have you to say? 16041 What industrious friend has acquainted you with the state of affairs?" |
16041 | What is he doing here? |
16041 | What is her name, and what has she done? |
16041 | What is it you wish to say? |
16041 | What is it? |
16041 | What is it? |
16041 | What is it? |
16041 | What is it? |
16041 | What is that to you? |
16041 | What is that to you? |
16041 | What is the matter, Monsieur de Leviston? |
16041 | What is the matter? |
16041 | What is the matter? |
16041 | What is the meaning of all this? |
16041 | What is your name? |
16041 | What is your purpose in bringing me this lie? |
16041 | What is your religious name, Monsieur? |
16041 | What now? |
16041 | What o''clock is it? |
16041 | What shall I do? 16041 What shall I read, Paul?" |
16041 | What shall I say, Madame? |
16041 | What shall a gentleman do when his lackey starts to quote Plutarch? |
16041 | What the devil brings De Leviston so high on this side the water? |
16041 | What the devil did he call for, then? |
16041 | What was it the Jesuits said? 16041 What was it?" |
16041 | What will they do with us? |
16041 | What would you say, Jesuit? |
16041 | What would you? 16041 What would you?" |
16041 | What''s that to you? 16041 What, Monsieur?" |
16041 | What? 16041 What? |
16041 | What? |
16041 | What? |
16041 | Whatever made me bring you to the Corne d''Abondance? 16041 When are we to be returned to Quebec? |
16041 | When did D''Hérouville give these to you? |
16041 | Where did you go, Margot? |
16041 | Where do you wish me to go with you, Monsieur? |
16041 | Where do you wish to go, Paul? |
16041 | Where is Monsieur le Comte? |
16041 | Where is she? |
16041 | Wherefore this rage, Madame, shining in your beautiful eyes, thinning your lips, widening your nostrils? |
16041 | Which is it to be, Madame? |
16041 | Which is to say that you refuse to tell me? |
16041 | Which one? |
16041 | Whither bound? |
16041 | Whither is she bound? |
16041 | Who among us shall look upon these shores again? |
16041 | Who brought it? |
16041 | Who calls me by name? |
16041 | Who can explain? |
16041 | Who can he be? |
16041 | Who can say as to that? 16041 Who can say? |
16041 | Who can say? 16041 Who did this?" |
16041 | Who is she? |
16041 | Who is the sick man, my son? |
16041 | Who is this person who has aroused your displeasure, and what has he done that he may not sit in the presence of gentlemen? |
16041 | Who knows? |
16041 | Who put it there? |
16041 | Who told you to say that? 16041 Who was my mother?" |
16041 | Who will solve them? |
16041 | Who would not be? |
16041 | Who? |
16041 | Who? |
16041 | Who? |
16041 | Whom are you shielding? |
16041 | Why am I here? 16041 Why are you here in Quebec?" |
16041 | Why are you here? 16041 Why are you not in Montreal? |
16041 | Why did you let those opportunities pass? |
16041 | Why do I dislike that man? |
16041 | Why do you ask about the gloomy ship which is to take me to Quebec? |
16041 | Why do you come and stand at the side of the bed and stare at me when you suppose I am sleeping? 16041 Why do you doubt my love?''" |
16041 | Why do you warn me? |
16041 | Why do you wish to know? |
16041 | Why does your voice grow cold at the mention of his name? |
16041 | Why is it that women intrigue? |
16041 | Why not come to Quebec? 16041 Why not lure him into the cellar and lock him there?" |
16041 | Why not, Monsieur,said Victor, a bit of irony in his tones,"since you yourself are going that way?" |
16041 | Why should I have told you? 16041 Why, Monsieur, what have I said?" |
16041 | Why, then, did you not pick your quarrel with the count? |
16041 | Why, then, do not those on yonder ship sail to- morrow instead of to- day? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Will there be foils? |
16041 | Will you accept my cloak, Madame? |
16041 | Will you announce to his Eminence that I have returned from Rome, and also explain why you are looking at me with such bulging eyes? 16041 Will you be brief?" |
16041 | Will you grant me the pleasure of showing you the mission? |
16041 | Will you have the goodness to go to sleep? |
16041 | Will you lead me to his Excellency the governor? 16041 Will you let me teach you?" |
16041 | Will you not join me in a glass of the governor''s old burgundy as a toast to your success? |
16041 | Will you not sit down, Madame? |
16041 | Will you take it? |
16041 | Wine? |
16041 | With Monsieur le Comte? |
16041 | With me? |
16041 | Women? |
16041 | Worthy of being loved? 16041 Would I be here?" |
16041 | Would I have ventured into this desert? 16041 Would Monsieur le Marquis take all this trouble if Monsieur le Chevalier was anything but Monsieur le Comte?" |
16041 | Would he not prefer it so? |
16041 | Would she seek Spain? |
16041 | Yes, Monsieur le Vicomte, where were you on the night of the nineteenth of last February? |
16041 | Yes; God gives us a remedy even for such an ill."And what might the remedy be? |
16041 | You are Madame de Brissac? |
16041 | You are Sister Benie? |
16041 | You are a Jesuit? |
16041 | You are alone, Paul? |
16041 | You are but recently arrived? |
16041 | You are determined to meet D''Hérouville? |
16041 | You are going for a row upon the river? |
16041 | You are improving, Monsieur? |
16041 | You are married? |
16041 | You are of the fort? |
16041 | You are recruiting? |
16041 | You are still there? 16041 You ask me to weigh my words, Monseigneur?--to weigh my words?" |
16041 | You attended her down the stairs? |
16041 | You do not answer? 16041 You do not seem quite friendly toward the Marquis?" |
16041 | You have a friend who wishes to seek his fortune? |
16041 | You have been wounded? |
16041 | You have brought the certificate of my birth? |
16041 | You have found Madame de Brissac and are writing to her? |
16041 | You have full powers? |
16041 | You have had adventures? |
16041 | You have heard of Sisyphus, who was condemned eternally to roll a stone up a hill? 16041 You have lost a fortune, then?" |
16041 | You have not always been a priest? |
16041 | You have not always been a priest? |
16041 | You have not yet discovered who she is? |
16041 | You have received your commission, then? |
16041 | You have secured the papers? |
16041 | You have seen my son? |
16041 | You have some plan? |
16041 | You have tricked me in the name of God? |
16041 | You impugn the conduct or honor of some gentleman at my table? 16041 You know me, eh?" |
16041 | You know? 16041 You laugh, Monsieur?" |
16041 | You laugh, Monsieur? |
16041 | You ride, however? |
16041 | You say Madame de Brissac is in Quebec? |
16041 | You speak of soul, Monsieur? |
16041 | You thought that, Monsieur? |
16041 | You thought that? |
16041 | You weep? 16041 You were about to remark?" |
16041 | You were in this room? |
16041 | You were to become a nun? |
16041 | You were to read a book? |
16041 | You were young once? |
16041 | You will be my guest during your stay? |
16041 | You will do as you say: consign me to imprisonment or death? |
16041 | You will give me satisfaction, then? |
16041 | You will give me the recipe? |
16041 | You will hear my confession? |
16041 | You will not tell me who you are? |
16041 | You, Monsieur? |
16041 | You, Monsieur? |
16041 | You, Victor? |
16041 | You, a common trooper in Quebec? 16041 You, too, have suffered?" |
16041 | You, too, have suffered? |
16041 | You? 16041 You?" |
16041 | You? |
16041 | You? |
16041 | You? |
16041 | You? |
16041 | Your Excellency, who is this handsome young priest who goes by the name of Brother Jacques; of what family? |
16041 | Your Excellency,began the marquis, resuming his seat,"where may I find Monsieur le Comte d''Hérouville this evening?" |
16041 | Your name? |
16041 | Yours? |
16041 | _ When Ma''m''selle drinks from her satin shoe With a Bacchante''s love for a Bacchic brew!_"Reparation, Madame? |
16041 | ''Sit you down, sweet, till I wring your heart''? |
16041 | ''Where are the belles of the balconies?'' |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | ?" |
16041 | A bottle of wine, lad; and wherefore to- morrow? |
16041 | A grey cloak? |
16041 | A grey mask: what did it recall to him? |
16041 | A grey mask: what was such a thing doing in Quebec? |
16041 | A letter?" |
16041 | A nun? |
16041 | A woman? |
16041 | A word? |
16041 | Absolution? |
16041 | Ah, Gabrielle, Gabrielle, was that quite fair? |
16041 | Ah, Madame, will you forget that kiss? |
16041 | Ah, where was this labyrinth to lead, and who was to throw him the guiding thread? |
16041 | All this about you will one day be mine? |
16041 | Allow me to glance at it?" |
16041 | Am I a drunkard, a wine- bibber, a roisterer by night? |
16041 | Am I a gentleman, and a soldier, to sit with a reeking stable- boy?" |
16041 | Am I a ghost?" |
16041 | Am I a man to run after sentimentality? |
16041 | And I see you here in Quebec? |
16041 | And I struck you across the face with the lash? |
16041 | And as for Brother Jacques, it was:"And how is Monsieur Jacques''s health this fine morning?" |
16041 | And for all these meetings, for all her supplicating or imperious notes, what had been his reward? |
16041 | And for what? |
16041 | And had not he obstacles?--unrequited love, escutcheon to make bright and whole? |
16041 | And he married Mademoiselle de Montbazon? |
16041 | And he? |
16041 | And here I have been to Rome and back with a message which made the pope laugh; is it true that he is about to appoint a successor? |
16041 | And his play- woman? |
16041 | And how had he wronged that hand? |
16041 | And how went the war with Spain? |
16041 | And how, with madame here, to keep these three men from killing each other? |
16041 | And is not Madame de Montbazon your mother? |
16041 | And is there a man in all the world who loves you half as fondly as I? |
16041 | And masked? |
16041 | And of all those who called themselves my friends, has not he alone stood forth?" |
16041 | And on what is pride based if not upon the pomp of riches? |
16041 | And shall the Seneca see his favorite wife weep like a mother who has lost her firstborn?" |
16041 | And so De Brissac passed violently? |
16041 | And that cloak which I lent to you?" |
16041 | And that handsome Vicomte d''Halluys?" |
16041 | And that mysterious lady of high degree? |
16041 | And the marquis? |
16041 | And they call him the Black Kettle? |
16041 | And what about? |
16041 | And what are Catholicity and Huguenotism but political factions, with a different set of prayers? |
16041 | And what brought about this good fortune which has returned you to her Majesty''s graces?" |
16041 | And what can he be doing here?" |
16041 | And what had brought Monsieur le Marquis to Quebec, and how long was he to remain? |
16041 | And what is a soul?" |
16041 | And what is the widow''s portion? |
16041 | And what may this service be?" |
16041 | And when will my brother start out for the stone house of Onontio?" |
16041 | And whenever Father Chaumonot could spare the men, would he not be one of them to return to Quebec with her? |
16041 | And where are the belles of the balconies?_""That will do very well,"was the Chevalier''s comment. |
16041 | And where are the belles of the balconies?_"Ah, the golden nights, indeed! |
16041 | And where are the belles of the balconies?_"_ Prince, where is the tavern''s light that cheers? |
16041 | And where are the belles of the balconies?_"_ Prince, where is the tavern''s light that cheers? |
16041 | And where is yesterday?" |
16041 | And who among us shall look upon France again in the days to come? |
16041 | And who taught him French?" |
16041 | And who would suspect, to look at it now, that it had ever dusted the mosaics at the Vatican? |
16041 | And why not? |
16041 | And will you have Charlot hasten that pie? |
16041 | And winding in and out of all he heard was that mysterious voice asking:"Whither bound?" |
16041 | And yet who can say that we both may not return, only with fame marching on ahead to announce us in that wonderfully pleasing way she has?" |
16041 | And yet, why was he here? |
16041 | And you feared to offend me? |
16041 | And you have put your name to it, you, who have never been more serious than a sonnet? |
16041 | And you meet D''Hérouville in two days?" |
16041 | And you will also become affiliated with the Ursulines?" |
16041 | And you will tarry here till they find you, eh?" |
16041 | And you? |
16041 | And your friend, the Chevalier?" |
16041 | And, after all, what is a name but sounding brass? |
16041 | Are we not as brave and inventive as De Champlain, De Montmagny, De Lisle, and a host of others who have made money and name? |
16041 | Are we not fine fools? |
16041 | Are you about to play the vicomte''s trick second- hand?" |
16041 | Are you ill?" |
16041 | Are you not mischief endowed with a woman''s form?" |
16041 | Are you not telling me some dreadful lie?" |
16041 | Are you ready?" |
16041 | Are you sober enough to hear all about it now?" |
16041 | Aye, how fared Monsieur le Marquis these days? |
16041 | Brave? |
16041 | Brother Jacques? |
16041 | But are you sure that you love her?" |
16041 | But did you not stir a trifle too well?" |
16041 | But have n''t you the right? |
16041 | But how are you getting on with your Iroquois?" |
16041 | But how? |
16041 | But is yours honest, Monsieur? |
16041 | But love him with the heart''s love, the love which a woman gives to one man and only once?" |
16041 | But love him? |
16041 | But my son,"eagerly;"he is well? |
16041 | But shall I destroy it? |
16041 | But supposing Mazarin should be seeking her, paper or no paper, to force the truth from her?" |
16041 | But supposing you are in America at the time?" |
16041 | But what are five years to a man like yourself? |
16041 | But what is it to you? |
16041 | But what proof? |
16041 | But what''s this turmoil between our comrade Nicot and Maître le Borgne?" |
16041 | But who wore your grey cloak?" |
16041 | But why Canada? |
16041 | But why not D''Hérouville instead of me?" |
16041 | But why not enter the Ursulines with me? |
16041 | But why was this young woman, who was fit to grace a palace, why was she here incognito? |
16041 | But will you not remove your mask that I may look upon your face while you speak?" |
16041 | But you forgave him?" |
16041 | But you, Messieurs, you will defend yourselves?" |
16041 | CHAPTER III THE MUTILATED HAND"Monsieur Paul?" |
16041 | CHAPTER VI AN ACHATES FOR AN AENEAS"What are you doing here?" |
16041 | CHAPTER XX A DEATH WARRANT OR A MARRIAGE CONTRACT"Well, Gabrielle,"said Anne, curiously,"what do you propose to do?" |
16041 | Can I believe you? |
16041 | Can I not accompany you to Quebec? |
16041 | Can it be?" |
16041 | Can one offer an apology for what you have done? |
16041 | Can you define of what thought consists? |
16041 | Can you direct me to the Hotel de Périgny? |
16041 | Can you dissect the process of reason? |
16041 | Can you not smell the odor of mint, of earth, of the forest, and the water? |
16041 | Can you read?" |
16041 | Can you tell the color of an eye from this distance? |
16041 | Catharine? |
16041 | Challenge the vicomte, who had put D''Hérouville in the hospital that night of the fatal supper? |
16041 | Come, is there not something more than ten thousand livres behind that paper?" |
16041 | Come; what has the Society come to that frankness replaces cunning and casuistry? |
16041 | Come; what secret envy is yours, you who sleep on straw, in clammy cells, and dine on crusts?" |
16041 | Corrupt and degenerate you say? |
16041 | Could he carry it again? |
16041 | Courage? |
16041 | D''Hérouville? |
16041 | Dared he inquire for her, send a fictitious note enticing her forth from her room? |
16041 | De Meilleraye, you have won only three louis? |
16041 | Death? |
16041 | Did I not pass my youth in one,--to what end?" |
16041 | Did he love yonder woman, or was his fancy like mine, ephemeral? |
16041 | Did he pay you those pistoles he lost to you in December?" |
16041 | Did he really see these two old men climbing down the ship''s ladder to the boats? |
16041 | Did his Eminence say anything about wine, Georges?" |
16041 | Did she love another? |
16041 | Did she think him guilty of De Brissac''s death? |
16041 | Did the Onondaga wish to defy the law of their forefathers? |
16041 | Did the contents in any way concern him? |
16041 | Did they burn candles every night in here, or had the vicomte, relying upon a woman''s innate curiosity, lighted these candles himself? |
16041 | Did you read that letter which I sent to you?" |
16041 | Do you fear Mazarin, then, so much as that?" |
16041 | Do you know her?" |
16041 | Do you know how much longer we are to remain upon this abominable sea? |
16041 | Do you know how well I love you?" |
16041 | Do you know yours?" |
16041 | Do you not feel it beating against your own?" |
16041 | Do you not love Madame de Brissac? |
16041 | Do you not love your son?" |
16041 | Do you not recall the gay and brilliant marquis of fifteen years ago?" |
16041 | Do you not think that there is something manly about the Chevalier''s head?" |
16041 | Do you recall him? |
16041 | Do you recollect the coin? |
16041 | Do you remember how he used to twist it round and round when he visited the château? |
16041 | Do you remember that line,''I kiss your handsome grey eyes a thousand times?'' |
16041 | Do you remember the lilacs which grew by the western gates? |
16041 | Do you think he will become great and respected?" |
16041 | Do you think the lad has really forgiven me for what I have done to him? |
16041 | Do you wish me to shame you by calling them?" |
16041 | Does he think to brazen it out? |
16041 | Does it not recall to your mind something of vital importance?" |
16041 | Droll, is it not? |
16041 | Drunk? |
16041 | Eh, Monsieur?" |
16041 | Envy? |
16041 | Even a sword, dressed well, attracts the eye; and, heart of mine, what other aim have we poor mortals than to attract?" |
16041 | Fight you? |
16041 | For had I not your blood in my veins and were not my desires natural? |
16041 | For what had he to lose? |
16041 | For what purpose had you drawn your sword?" |
16041 | For who knows what spell the heretic Saracen may have cast over them?" |
16041 | For would she not be forced to remain here indefinitely? |
16041 | Force me to love you?" |
16041 | Forgive? |
16041 | Frankness in a Jesuit? |
16041 | Friendship? |
16041 | From whom?" |
16041 | Glories of the world, the love of women; did not all priests forswear these? |
16041 | Had he lied? |
16041 | Had he not shaved his crown that his head might have a pallet to sleep on and his hunger a crust? |
16041 | Had he not starved, begged, suffered? |
16041 | Had not the marquis said that he was too handsome for a priest? |
16041 | Had the possibility of the thousand livres become nothing? |
16041 | Had this poor victim of conspiracy, this puppet in the cruel game of politics, left behind in France some unhappy love affair? |
16041 | Had this strange old man, whom fate had made his father, come with repentance, but without mode of expression, without tact? |
16041 | Handsome? |
16041 | Hang it, Paul, what made you interfere?" |
16041 | Has Monsieur le Comte come in yet?" |
16041 | Has either of you seen Madame de Brissac? |
16041 | Has he ever taken me by the hand as natural fathers take their sons, and asked me to be his comrade? |
16041 | Has he ever taught me to rise to heights, to scorn the petty forms and molds of life? |
16041 | Has it ever occurred to you, my poet, to investigate Monsieur le Chevalier''s grey cloak; that is to say, search its pockets?" |
16041 | Has it not occurred to you that Madame de Brissac has that paper?" |
16041 | Has it not occurred to you, sweet? |
16041 | Has my love been else than honest? |
16041 | Has not the wine turned the world upside- down, brought you here only in fancy? |
16041 | Has that fool of a blood- letter made an ante- mortem?" |
16041 | Have I not a peculiar evidence of it this very moment?" |
16041 | Have I not already put France behind me?" |
16041 | Have I not been as the captive eagle, drawn down at every flight? |
16041 | Have I not succeeded in being written in Rochelle as a drunkard and a gamester? |
16041 | Have I not thought of you?" |
16041 | Have I wronged you in any way? |
16041 | Have I?" |
16041 | Have you a spirit? |
16041 | Have you any books?" |
16041 | Have you done so?" |
16041 | Have you gone to the trouble of having me legitimatized?" |
16041 | Have you had your supper?" |
16041 | Have you no canary in this abominable land?" |
16041 | Have you no welcome?" |
16041 | Have you not aged yourself?" |
16041 | Have you not had access to the Chevalier''s room? |
16041 | Have you read it?" |
16041 | Have you that letter? |
16041 | Have you thought of him, my poet? |
16041 | He did not know, then? |
16041 | He had lied, then, that mad night? |
16041 | He had suffered half the span of a man''s life; need he suffer longer? |
16041 | He is uninjured? |
16041 | He refused? |
16041 | He will be here soon?" |
16041 | He will write no more ballades, and rondeaux, and triolets; eh, Madame? |
16041 | His Eminence is giving a party?" |
16041 | Honestly, now, Chevalier, is it not the man rather than the escutcheon? |
16041 | How am I to tell that you are not doubling on the lie? |
16041 | How came it here? |
16041 | How came she here? |
16041 | How do these suppositions appeal to you, Madame?" |
16041 | How have you recruited?" |
16041 | How is it that you came to me?" |
16041 | How long before De Leviston and D''Hérouville will be out of hospital?" |
16041 | How many a fallen house looked longingly toward this promised land? |
16041 | How many a ruined gamester, hearing these words, lifted his head, the fires of hope lighting anew in his burnt- out eyes? |
16041 | How many men, he wondered, had been trapped, by madame''s eyes? |
16041 | How many times during the past four years had his master asked this question, always to receive the same answer? |
16041 | How many times had their paths neared, always to diverge again, because Fate had yet to prepare the cup of misery? |
16041 | How much did he pay you to act thus basely?" |
16041 | How would it please your priestly ear to be called''Monsieur le Marquis''?" |
16041 | How would you like a pheasant, my poet, and a bottle of Mignon''s bin of''39?" |
16041 | I have been your pastime? |
16041 | I have had only a bad dream, then? |
16041 | I have lost something; what is it?" |
16041 | I have now ceased to amuse you? |
16041 | I know you to be a brave man, Monsieur le Vicomte; but who can put a finger on your fancy? |
16041 | I shall be called Monsieur le Marquis; I shall possess famous châteaux and magnificent hôtels? |
16041 | I suppose, then, that this is also a forgery?" |
16041 | I wonder if roses grow in this new country? |
16041 | I wonder what that fool of a D''Hérouville was doing this morning with those dissatisfied colonists and that man Pauquet? |
16041 | I wonder where I have seen that younger fanatic?" |
16041 | I wonder where he has gone?" |
16041 | I wonder whither madame has flown? |
16041 | I wonder why she did not speak?" |
16041 | If we are a big family, as you say, Major, will you not always have a fatherly eye upon my friend? |
16041 | In God''s name, what possessed you to publish this misfortune?" |
16041 | In a moment of anger you told me this unholy lie, without cause, without definite purpose, without justice, carelessly, as a pastime?" |
16041 | In fact, what if Madame de Longueville, aided by the middle class, had once more taken up quarters in the Hôtel de Ville? |
16041 | In mercy''s name, what business has he there?" |
16041 | In mercy''s name, why? |
16041 | Is Sister Benie without? |
16041 | Is any man worthy of a woman''s love? |
16041 | Is everybody mad in Paris?" |
16041 | Is he anything like you, as you were in your youth?" |
16041 | Is he waving his hand, Victor? |
16041 | Is it Spain?" |
16041 | Is it heart to break the edict, to upset the peace of my household, to set tongues wagging? |
16041 | Is it really you, Gabrielle? |
16041 | Is it true that gold is picked up as one would pick up sand?" |
16041 | Is not all this because you are afraid to die without succession, the fear that men will laugh?" |
16041 | Is she pretty?" |
16041 | Is that explicit enough? |
16041 | Is that why the ash is black? |
16041 | Is there a Mademoiselle Catharine Coquenard upon your books?" |
16041 | Is there not something there to awaken your memory?" |
16041 | Is there something besides reading I can do?" |
16041 | Is this person a father? |
16041 | Is this person ill? |
16041 | It had a pleasant sound; what had she to say that necessitated this odd trysting place? |
16041 | It is nothing that I have suffered for three months as they in hell suffer for eternity? |
16041 | It is nothing that my trust in humanity is gone? |
16041 | It is nothing to have trampled on my illusions and bittered the cup of life? |
16041 | It was fine of the chevalier; do you not agree with me?" |
16041 | Jehan, after all, was it a dream?" |
16041 | Know her heart? |
16041 | Know her?" |
16041 | Love his son? |
16041 | Love you? |
16041 | Love you? |
16041 | Love? |
16041 | Love? |
16041 | Madame, you said that I had lost a valuable art; what was it?" |
16041 | Margot, Margot? |
16041 | Margot, a son? |
16041 | Margot?" |
16041 | Monsieur de Leviston is still in the hospital?" |
16041 | Monsieur de Saumaise knows, and the vicomte; why should you fear me, who have nothing but brotherly love for you?" |
16041 | Monsieur de Saumaise, have you any idea who stole your cloak?" |
16041 | Monsieur de Saumaise, the vicomte and Monsieur d''Hérouville; they are not with you?" |
16041 | Monsieur le Marquis is rich?" |
16041 | Monsieur will forgive me for recalling?" |
16041 | Monsieur, is not the lie on your side? |
16041 | Monsieur, you go a- courting without buckles on your shoes?" |
16041 | Monsieur,"addressing the Chevalier;"and how is the health of Monsieur le Marquis, your kind father?" |
16041 | Monsieur,"decidedly,"is it to be peace or war?" |
16041 | Must you be a nun, you who were once so gay?" |
16041 | Need I say more? |
16041 | Next to love, what is more to a man than a full stomach? |
16041 | Now, why does the marquis give to the Church? |
16041 | Of what use were youth and riches without a Paris? |
16041 | Or was his brain mocking him? |
16041 | Or was it his fancy? |
16041 | Or, is it''madame''instead of''mademoiselle''?" |
16041 | Passion first, or avarice; love or greed? |
16041 | Paul and she together in that room? |
16041 | Paul, Paul, can you love me still?" |
16041 | Paul, it is you? |
16041 | Perhaps I have not concerned myself sufficiently with women? |
16041 | Perhaps you can explain the Chevalier''s extraordinary conduct? |
16041 | Perhaps you will follow me? |
16041 | Place my neck under his heel? |
16041 | Poisoned herself? |
16041 | Presently she asked:"And who is this Chevalier du Cévennes?" |
16041 | Presently the Chevalier said to the vicomte:"Monsieur, will you be so kind as to seek my lackey? |
16041 | Presently the soldier said:"Shall we sail to- morrow, Master Mariner?" |
16041 | Quebec? |
16041 | Rather would I not have spoken yonder in France? |
16041 | Recollect, I do not say that the Chevalier is not the son of Madame la Marquise; I say, think you he is? |
16041 | Relent? |
16041 | Respect? |
16041 | Retract? |
16041 | Richelieu dead? |
16041 | Say then, who taught me? |
16041 | Shall I ask this question before all these men?" |
16041 | Shall I die to- morrow? |
16041 | Shall I give you absolution?" |
16041 | Shall I read to you?" |
16041 | Shall I see my beloved Paris again? |
16041 | Shall I weep? |
16041 | Shall an old man''s repentance knock at the heart of his son and find not charity there?" |
16041 | Shall he love a good woman some day? |
16041 | Should he put this aside? |
16041 | Should she send it directly to the marquis or to the son? |
16041 | Should that time ever come, will you promise me the happiness of administering to you the last sacraments?" |
16041 | Since they were soon to set about killing each other, what mattered the prologue? |
16041 | Since when did fathers set out for sons of the left hand? |
16041 | Since when had the Onondaga brother taken it upon himself to meddle with the affairs of the Senecas? |
16041 | Sleep? |
16041 | So Brother Jacques understood why the marquis had fought the Comte d''Hérouville? |
16041 | So his Eminence thinks that I shall be safer in the Bastille? |
16041 | So soon, Madame?" |
16041 | So the word and gratitude of Corn Planter become like walnuts which have no meat? |
16041 | So this thought was not alone his? |
16041 | So we also indulge in irony? |
16041 | Soul? |
16041 | Spain? |
16041 | Still, the question rises: for what shall I save him? |
16041 | Stolen, from you?" |
16041 | Stop? |
16041 | Supposing I should suddenly take you in my arms? |
16041 | Supposing, then, I kissed you, taking a tithe of your promises?" |
16041 | Take me to her? |
16041 | Ten thousand livres? |
16041 | That for every soul you have sent out of the world, you have brought another into it? |
16041 | That scar; what did it recall to his wandering mind? |
16041 | The Comte d''Hérouville in Rochelle? |
16041 | The astute vicomte, that diplomat?" |
16041 | The glories of the world, the love of women? |
16041 | The green lantern at last: was he too late? |
16041 | The helpless villainy of a Nero, or the calculating villainy of a Tiberius? |
16041 | The marquis gave to the Church? |
16041 | The marquis here in search of the Chevalier? |
16041 | The marquis nodded toward his wife''s portrait, as if to say:"You see, Madame?" |
16041 | The marquis, then, had lost some friend? |
16041 | The question is, can you bring him around?" |
16041 | The question is, is my past record as a soldier sufficient?" |
16041 | The vicomte slapped his sword angrily;"how many more acts are there to this comedy? |
16041 | The vicomte? |
16041 | The world is too small for both of us?''" |
16041 | There is still blood in your muddy veins, then? |
16041 | There was villainy, but of what kind? |
16041 | They will carry you up to the deck this afternoon?" |
16041 | Think you that it is Madame la Marquise''s son who ruffles it here in Paris under the name of the Chevalier du Cévennes? |
16041 | Think you to pass this way?" |
16041 | This day two weeks: will that be agreeable?" |
16041 | Those almost incredible eyes,--what mystery lurked in their abysmal greys? |
16041 | To what did he pretend? |
16041 | To what did the Chevalier pretend? |
16041 | To what lengths would he not go for her sake? |
16041 | To whom did it belong, this foundling book? |
16041 | To you? |
16041 | To- morrow? |
16041 | Touch anything which belongs to you? |
16041 | True, he had often kissed her perfumed tresses without her knowledge; but what was that? |
16041 | Truly, you can not wish me so unfortunate as that?" |
16041 | Turning to Brother Jacques, the marquis said:"Have I ever done you a service?" |
16041 | Upon what had he expended it, to have become thus beggared? |
16041 | Victor read over slowly what he had written:"_ Prince, where is the tavern''s light that cheers? |
16041 | Was he a gallant fellow like Victor? |
16041 | Was he not in your company three or four years ago? |
16041 | Was he not, as Mazarin had pointed out, a fool for his pains? |
16041 | Was hers a heart of ice which the warmth of love could not melt? |
16041 | Was his brain fooling him? |
16041 | Was it not gallant of him to accept punishment in Victor''s stead?" |
16041 | Was it of recognition? |
16041 | Was it rotten, or hard and sound? |
16041 | Was it the color of his eyes? |
16041 | Was it the wine that caused the shudder? |
16041 | Was not nature the great Satirist? |
16041 | Was not the law written plainly? |
16041 | Was not the name itself Fortune''s earnest, her pledge of treasures lightly to be won? |
16041 | Was she living or dead, in captivity or safe again in Quebec? |
16041 | Was she living? |
16041 | Was she some princess who had been hidden away during her girlhood, to appear only when the bud opened into womanhood, rich, glorious, and warm? |
16041 | Was she thinking of Breton, who was on his way to a strange land, who had left her with never a good by to dull the edge of separation? |
16041 | Was that it?" |
16041 | Was the Comte d''Hérouville among the conspirators?" |
16041 | Was the marquis telling the truth? |
16041 | Was the water clear?" |
16041 | Was there such a thing as a soul, and was the subtile force of hers compelling him to regret true happiness for the dross he had accepted as such? |
16041 | Was this the gallant who had attracted her fancy? |
16041 | Weary of life? |
16041 | Well, then, Monsieur le Marquis: do you suppose he has sent Jehan to verify the report that you sail for Quebec?" |
16041 | Well, why do you not speak?" |
16041 | Well?" |
16041 | Were they all alive, the good lads in his company? |
16041 | Were you mad, or drunk?" |
16041 | What about De Brissac''s play- woman?" |
16041 | What am I going to do? |
16041 | What are they doing there in Paris?" |
16041 | What are they trying to do? |
16041 | What are you doing here in Rochelle?" |
16041 | What are you doing?" |
16041 | What are you going to do? |
16041 | What brought you?" |
16041 | What can she have to say?" |
16041 | What could I do? |
16041 | What could he say? |
16041 | What could you not tell, if voice were given to you? |
16041 | What did D''Hérouville mean by that? |
16041 | What did it mean? |
16041 | What did it mean? |
16041 | What did she mean? |
16041 | What did that half smile signify? |
16041 | What do you mean, Monsieur?" |
16041 | What do you want?" |
16041 | What evil purpose lay behind it? |
16041 | What evil star shone over him that day when he crushed her likeness beneath his foot without looking at it? |
16041 | What had happened? |
16041 | What had he done? |
16041 | What had he to do with the affair?" |
16041 | What happens? |
16041 | What has brought you here?" |
16041 | What has happened?" |
16041 | What have you against the vicomte? |
16041 | What have you been doing with that sword?" |
16041 | What if he should die?" |
16041 | What if this document had fallen into D''Hérouville''s hands? |
16041 | What is her object in concealing her name? |
16041 | What is it all about, lad? |
16041 | What is it that comes with summer which makes all male life carry nosegays to my lady''s easement? |
16041 | What is new?" |
16041 | What is the hour?" |
16041 | What is this news which makes you weep?" |
16041 | What is your interest in the Chevalier''s welfare? |
16041 | What is your purpose?" |
16041 | What lay behind the veil of days to come? |
16041 | What manner of man was it? |
16041 | What may I do for you?" |
16041 | What more is there to be said? |
16041 | What must this man have been in his prime? |
16041 | What next?" |
16041 | What progress have you made, Monsieur? |
16041 | What romance lay smoldering beneath that black cassock? |
16041 | What secret grief? |
16041 | What shall I call it?" |
16041 | What shall I do to protect my guests?" |
16041 | What shall the toast be?" |
16041 | What shall we do with them here? |
16041 | What should he do with his useless life? |
16041 | What sin? |
16041 | What the devil brings him here into the wolf''s maw?" |
16041 | What the devil did we sign it for? |
16041 | What then, being neither one nor the other? |
16041 | What think you, Saumaise; does not this look like Gaston of Orléans?" |
16041 | What twist of fortune brings you to my household?" |
16041 | What was her object? |
16041 | What was her purpose? |
16041 | What was his antipathy to Mademoiselle de Montbazon? |
16041 | What was his misfortune to the vicomte that he should pick a quarrel on his account? |
16041 | What was it I doubted?" |
16041 | What was it that Monsieur Shakspere says? |
16041 | What was it you said that night at Rochelle? |
16041 | What was it? |
16041 | What was there in this handsome priest that stirred his antagonism? |
16041 | What was this locket which madame hid so jealously? |
16041 | What was this man D''Halluys driving at? |
16041 | What was this sudden chill? |
16041 | What was this sudden veil of mystery which hid him from her secret eyes? |
16041 | What was to be your gain in joining the conspiracy?" |
16041 | What was written within? |
16041 | What were they doing yonder in Paris? |
16041 | What will Monsieur Paul say when he sees it?" |
16041 | What will you do to- morrow?" |
16041 | What woman''s love could surmount this birth of mine, these empty pockets? |
16041 | What would be his end? |
16041 | What would he do? |
16041 | What would we have done without him?" |
16041 | What''s that?" |
16041 | What, fortune?" |
16041 | What, indeed, had she to say? |
16041 | What, then, will become of France, Jehan? |
16041 | When do these grasping Jesuits visit me?" |
16041 | When does the Henri IV sail?" |
16041 | When does the Henri IV sail?" |
16041 | When on board a ship, in whom do you place your trust?" |
16041 | When was I ever sober? |
16041 | When would he wake? |
16041 | When would the day come when the hedge of mystery inclosing her would be leveled? |
16041 | Where did you go that day?" |
16041 | Where did you go? |
16041 | Where else had he seen this face? |
16041 | Where had he seen it prior to that night at the Corne d''Abondance? |
16041 | Where is Brother Jacques? |
16041 | Where is La Place with its musketeers, Golden nights and the May- time breeze? |
16041 | Where is La Place with its musketeers, Golden nights and the May- time breeze? |
16041 | Where is Monsieur le Comte?" |
16041 | Where is the woman you wronged and cast aside, my mother?" |
16041 | Where place the blame? |
16041 | Where was all the gold Time had given to him? |
16041 | Where was her courage? |
16041 | Where was the dénouement on which she had builded so fondly? |
16041 | Where, indeed, are the belles of the balconies? |
16041 | Where? |
16041 | Which is it to be? |
16041 | Which shall it be?" |
16041 | Whither had it flown? |
16041 | Whither had she gone, carrying that brutal, unjust blow? |
16041 | Who are you?" |
16041 | Who can say?" |
16041 | Who could be calling this time of night? |
16041 | Who could say that all this was not a huge trap, the lid of which might fall any day? |
16041 | Who had loved him save Father Chaumonot? |
16041 | Who has been burning paper?" |
16041 | Who has heard you complain?" |
16041 | Who is madame?" |
16041 | Who is this Sister Benie?" |
16041 | Who were the participants?" |
16041 | Who will lend Lucifer a thousand livres and an''_ Absolvo te_''?" |
16041 | Who will notice it? |
16041 | Who would have dreamed that I should need an arm to lean on? |
16041 | Who, then, will succeed Monsieur le Marquis?" |
16041 | Whose death? |
16041 | Whose death? |
16041 | Whose death? |
16041 | Why did I come? |
16041 | Why did I leave France?" |
16041 | Why did she hold him, yet repel? |
16041 | Why do you ask?" |
16041 | Why do you hate Monsieur le Comte, my son?" |
16041 | Why do you wear the black robe, then? |
16041 | Why had he never taken by force that which entreaty did not win? |
16041 | Why had she been guilty of the inexcusable madness, the inexplicable folly, of this voyage? |
16041 | Why had the marquis given this man a thousand livres? |
16041 | Why not back to Paris, where Mazarin restored him to favor?" |
16041 | Why not come to Spain with me? |
16041 | Why not have done with a comedy which had grown stale? |
16041 | Why not he, too? |
16041 | Why not oil and water? |
16041 | Why not tell Monsieur du Cévennes that she was Gabrielle Diane de Montbazon, she whose miniature he had crushed beneath the heel of his riding boot? |
16041 | Why not''will not''?" |
16041 | Why not? |
16041 | Why should I be a Catholic, to exterminate all the Huguenots; a Huguenot, to annihilate all the Catholics? |
16041 | Why should I go to the trouble of having your title adjusted by parliamentary law? |
16041 | Why should he leave France, he, who possessed a fortune, who had Mazarin''s favor, and who had all the ladies at his feet?" |
16041 | Why should he not be a lover, likewise? |
16041 | Why was she never presented at court?" |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why? |
16041 | Why?" |
16041 | Will Monsieur permit a familiarity by recalling a forbidden subject?" |
16041 | Will he find me? |
16041 | Will he regain lucidity?" |
16041 | Will one of you lend him one?" |
16041 | Will the lackey be true? |
16041 | Will you accept a like?" |
16041 | Will you accept my sword and services?" |
16041 | Will you accept my sword?" |
16041 | Will you be my wife?" |
16041 | Will you call Major du Puys?" |
16041 | Will you call the major, or shall I?" |
16041 | Will you challenge him?" |
16041 | Will you direct me at once to the Hôtel de Périgny? |
16041 | Will you do me the honor and confidence, Madame, to follow me to the château?" |
16041 | Will you enjoy the dungeon? |
16041 | Will you follow me to your cabin?" |
16041 | Will you give it to me to carry to him?" |
16041 | Will you give me a kiss of your own volition, or must I use force again? |
16041 | Will you give me some hope, the barest straw?" |
16041 | Will you let go of my wrists?" |
16041 | Will you not let go? |
16041 | Will you not sit down?" |
16041 | Will you stand aside? |
16041 | Will you take upon yourself the responsibility of conducting me to his cabin? |
16041 | Will you tell me?" |
16041 | Will you walk with me?" |
16041 | Wine, Victor; do you hear me? |
16041 | Would he ever see her again? |
16041 | Would he see her? |
16041 | Would his father live or die, and would he send for him? |
16041 | Would she be in the gallery? |
16041 | Would she become a nun? |
16041 | Would she laugh, be indignant, storm or weep? |
16041 | Would she return to France in the spring? |
16041 | Would the ladies sometimes recall him in the tennis courts? |
16041 | Would this night dispel the mystery? |
16041 | Would you not like the love of women, endless gold, priceless wines, and all that the world gives to the worldly? |
16041 | You are certain that you wish to return to France; from passive danger into active?" |
16041 | You are not a common thief, then? |
16041 | You are quite sure of the Chevalier''s standing?" |
16041 | You are, then, about to seek the war- path?" |
16041 | You ask me if I am your confidante in all things; Anne, are you mine?" |
16041 | You came from France?" |
16041 | You do not disappear?" |
16041 | You do not know, then, from what family she originated?" |
16041 | You have been writing, Victor?" |
16041 | You have brought me another answer?" |
16041 | You have met the Marquis de Périgny?" |
16041 | You kiss my handsome grey eyes a thousand times, then? |
16041 | You know nothing about the paper, then?" |
16041 | You love the world too well; eh? |
16041 | You no longer crave my blood?" |
16041 | You say father?" |
16041 | You say that I lie; is not your own tongue crooked? |
16041 | You sent me a letter?" |
16041 | You spoke of papers: what gave you to believe there was more than one? |
16041 | You stood at the door of a convent; why did you not enter? |
16041 | You''ve been burning something?" |
16041 | a Heaven and a hell for the ant? |
16041 | a bastard?" |
16041 | a bed?" |
16041 | a woman?" |
16041 | am I not in trouble enough without that man rising up before me? |
16041 | and I bring you love?" |
16041 | and where? |
16041 | as Victor would say; is it possible for any man save Homer to be in two places at once? |
16041 | as my mother, whoever she may be, ceased to amuse?" |
16041 | been Monsieur le Comte this and Monsieur le Comte that? |
16041 | before you all? |
16041 | burn it like a love- letter?" |
16041 | corrupt and degenerate? |
16041 | cried Victor in surprise;"you have a new feather in your hat?" |
16041 | cried Victor, seizing the vicomte''s hand;"can you not see that he is mad? |
16041 | daughter of Perseus and Terra, you are still in human shape? |
16041 | dead? |
16041 | did you Huguenots eat so many horses that your gorge rises at the smell of one?" |
16041 | do men go mad this way?" |
16041 | do you ever think of Margot Bourdaloue?" |
16041 | does he carry his hatchet?" |
16041 | exclaimed the vicomte;"in Rochelle?" |
16041 | forfeited his rights in a moment of madness? |
16041 | from my son?" |
16041 | great and respected?" |
16041 | haughtily,"you parley with me?" |
16041 | have I not proved an apt scholar? |
16041 | have you turned coward, too? |
16041 | he said,"spoil the comedy with a death- scene? |
16041 | his Eminence said five years?" |
16041 | how can I tell you? |
16041 | how could he help it?" |
16041 | how could you do it?" |
16041 | in Quebec?" |
16041 | in a mask, eh? |
16041 | is all Paris in love with Madame de Brissac? |
16041 | it is Monsieur Nicot who has such a delicate nose?" |
16041 | live among these ghosts of happy times? |
16041 | lorded over your broad lands, believing myself to be heir to them? |
16041 | mockingly,"you forgive my attempt at Quebec to coerce you?" |
16041 | must I repeat a command?" |
16041 | must I think for you?" |
16041 | not by the sword, then?" |
16041 | not to face him with the foils?" |
16041 | of old age?" |
16041 | or was it the devil? |
16041 | or"Can you tell me where I may find a sword?" |
16041 | or, worse still, of conducting an intrigue with Madame de Brissac, whom he had never seen? |
16041 | replied the vicomte coolly;"and how do you account for that?" |
16041 | respect? |
16041 | said the vicomte;"so you are still burning with curiosity? |
16041 | shall the atheist doubt in his old age? |
16041 | snarled the marquis;"Have I not forbidden you this mummery in my presence? |
16041 | so it is you, wretched cloak, that gave way when I clung to you for help?" |
16041 | the marquis so many times a father, to die without legal issue?" |
16041 | the strange lackey inquired,"Are you seeking me?" |
16041 | the women?" |
16041 | then it was not Monsieur le Comte who spoke?" |
16041 | then you have gone to Parliament and had him legitimatized? |
16041 | then you really followed me this time? |
16041 | there is blood in you, then?" |
16041 | to be the Chevalier du Cévennes till the end? |
16041 | to feel, to care? |
16041 | to hear them laugh? |
16041 | two of them?" |
16041 | wearing her mask?" |
16041 | what have you done? |
16041 | who can say as to that?" |
16041 | wise poet, did you not hear me tell you never to sign your name to anything save poetry?" |
16041 | would she weep or laugh? |
16041 | you are talking about yourself?" |
16041 | you have dared to soil it?" |
16041 | you travel at night, and leave a cheery tavern like this?" |
16041 | you weep?" |
16041 | you will not forget me?" |
46505 | ''And thirsty, too?'' 46505 ''Are these the best you have?'' |
46505 | ''Could you repeat those names?'' 46505 ''Did you ever see a wild goose Sailing on the ocean?''" |
46505 | ''Do n''t you? 46505 ''Entertainment for man and beast?''" |
46505 | ''I wo nt, my dear boy; but what is the matter?'' 46505 ''No, sir-- would you like to see some?'' |
46505 | ''Then said they unto him; What shall we do that we might work the works of God? 46505 ''Were the waters of Saratoga beneficial to you, sir?'' |
46505 | ''What?'' 46505 ''When shall we all meet again?''" |
46505 | ''Who is he? 46505 ''Who''s there?'' |
46505 | ''_ Avezyouvuspaimum_?'' 46505 A little vinegar facilitates the process, does it not?" |
46505 | A small man-- is he not? 46505 A-- what?" |
46505 | Am I forgiven for my intrusion? |
46505 | Am I to be crossed and bullied forever by a meddling fool? 46505 Am I welcome?" |
46505 | Am I, also, to be refused? |
46505 | Among the number I may place my mistaking conceit for sensibility? |
46505 | And Arthur-- why is he neglected the division of spoils? |
46505 | And He is very pitiful and gracious? |
46505 | And I am always happy to meet Miss Ross-- but what is this about a boy killed? 46505 And are your aversions so strong that the manifold attractions of the metropolis can not shake them? |
46505 | And ca n''t you go to the theatre, and to shows and parties? |
46505 | And do you honestly credit the disinterestedness of human nature? |
46505 | And how are you setting about it? |
46505 | And how do you know that it is not? |
46505 | And how else could it be? |
46505 | And how is that better? |
46505 | And if I forbid this, and command you to continue your lessons? |
46505 | And if stocks fall, or a bank breaks? |
46505 | And if they would not be conciliated-- if upon the broad earth you had not an answering spirit? |
46505 | And is that all? |
46505 | And that you reject his attentions? |
46505 | And this party? |
46505 | And tried by what fire? |
46505 | And what come ye out into the wilderness for to see? |
46505 | And what did Josephine say to this? |
46505 | And what is there for me to do? |
46505 | And what new instance of his immaculateness has induced this sapient belief? |
46505 | And what place is to be honored by your preference? 46505 And where have you been traipsing?" |
46505 | And who adheres to this rule? |
46505 | And why do you not encourage these feelings? |
46505 | And why not? |
46505 | And why? |
46505 | And why? |
46505 | And wo n''t my talking annoy you? |
46505 | And you believed the mistress would imitate the maid''s example, Miss Anna? |
46505 | And you dare look in my eyes and deny one of your best friends? |
46505 | And you furnished the required information? |
46505 | And you love him very dearly,--do you not? |
46505 | And you-- Miss Carry-- what is your vote upon this important question? |
46505 | Are there any''propriety scruples?'' |
46505 | Are there no peculiarities in your lot? |
46505 | Are they here? |
46505 | Are those seats reserved for distinguished strangers? 46505 Are we to be favored with your company, Miss Ross?" |
46505 | Are we to have no dancing, Josey? |
46505 | Are you certain? |
46505 | Are you ever sad? |
46505 | Are you fond of this amusement? |
46505 | Are you going home to- night? |
46505 | Are you going, and with whom? |
46505 | Are you in pain this afternoon? |
46505 | Are you in the market for the first bidder? |
46505 | Are you inconsolable that I am single yet? |
46505 | Are you indisposed, Miss Ross? |
46505 | Are you infidel there also? |
46505 | Are you not going in? |
46505 | Are you pleased? |
46505 | Are you raving? 46505 Are you ready to rejoin your friends?" |
46505 | Are you serious in promising to go to this babyish fal- lal? |
46505 | Are you sure? |
46505 | Are you tempted to murder me? |
46505 | Are you well advised of this? |
46505 | Are you willing to brave Richard''s wrath, if it affects only yourself? |
46505 | Are your preparations concluded? |
46505 | Assuredly; but what put that into your head just now? |
46505 | At what hour will your ward arrive, sir? |
46505 | At what hour? |
46505 | At whose instance was this meeting brought about, gentlemen? |
46505 | But for a novelty, what say you to a trip to Saratoga? |
46505 | But if your friends were removed, and replaced by enemies? |
46505 | But what do you imagine to be the object of that flirtation? 46505 But what is a beautiful woman without softness, tenderness, effeminacy?" |
46505 | But what is a servant''s nursing, after yours? |
46505 | But what is she like? 46505 But what will they say?" |
46505 | But where did you get it, Rachel? 46505 But who may not, spiritually? |
46505 | But why am I to be there?--to receive Alboni''s apology? |
46505 | But why did I say she applied the test? 46505 But why this notion, just as we decided to go north? |
46505 | But you are happier than you used to be? |
46505 | But you''re goin''to be, I reckon? |
46505 | But your friends-- your mother? |
46505 | But,persisted Ida, warm in defence of her favorite Boz,"where shall we discover new phases of human nature? |
46505 | By my life, I_ will_ do it, and cut you off, without a copper, if you parley much more? |
46505 | By right of possession, I suppose? |
46505 | By whom? 46505 Can I do anything for you?" |
46505 | Can he like her? |
46505 | Can it be,she thought, with stirring pulses,"can it be that I may yet find a friend?" |
46505 | Can it be? |
46505 | Can not she see what they are doing? |
46505 | Can not you do it? |
46505 | Can nothing make her selfish? |
46505 | Can there be reason for this excessive grief? 46505 Can you love me after hearing this, Carry?" |
46505 | Can you read? |
46505 | Compton, my dear fellow, can you make room for me to pass? |
46505 | Daughter of the member from A----? |
46505 | Dermott behaves very decently, does he not? 46505 Did I say that you did? |
46505 | Did I sigh? 46505 Did I this day, for small or great, My own pursuits forego, To lighten, by a feather''s weight, The load of human woe?" |
46505 | Did Josephine hear of the affair from him? |
46505 | Did he speak of Dr. Carleton''s family? |
46505 | Did not you hear that Anna Talbot is to receive company to- morrow night? |
46505 | Did she tell you of it? |
46505 | Did you divine the cause of Helen''s embarrassment at my appearance, yesterday? |
46505 | Did you have it painted for a sign- board? 46505 Did you inquire after his sister''s health?" |
46505 | Did you know Mr. Holmes when he lived there? |
46505 | Did you never hear the''tailor''s wife and scissors?'' |
46505 | Did you speak with him? |
46505 | Do I believe you, when my eyes tell me this is neither your hand- writing or style? 46505 Do I look so?" |
46505 | Do all the duties of hospitality devolve upon Miss Ross? |
46505 | Do n''t you think your Rosinante would be benefitted by a taste of the spur? |
46505 | Do not I become the character? |
46505 | Do not the Scriptures speak of the veil that is upon their hearts? |
46505 | Do not what? |
46505 | Do you apprehend that I shall? |
46505 | Do you believe in the unity of the human race? |
46505 | Do you consider this probable? |
46505 | Do you despise me utterly? 46505 Do you favor the philosophy, which teaches that a certain amount of trouble is necessary for the complete development of character?" |
46505 | Do you hate him? |
46505 | Do you hear that, Arthur? |
46505 | Do you know that this habit of catching up one''s words is very rude? |
46505 | Do you know, that although it is only the second week of the session, you will be charged for the term? |
46505 | Do you like it? 46505 Do you like it?" |
46505 | Do you really think it sinful to go to balls? |
46505 | Do you recollect Talleyrand''s definition of speech? |
46505 | Do you recollect the visit to which he refers? |
46505 | Do you remember our conversation after the protracted meeting, last summer? |
46505 | Do you then think me the heartless creature I appear? 46505 Do you want us to send for him?" |
46505 | Do_ you_ love him? |
46505 | Does Miss Laura meet your wishes, as Mrs. Latham''s successor?'' |
46505 | Does Mrs. Read see him? |
46505 | For what purpose? |
46505 | From what motive? |
46505 | From whom? 46505 Germaine is not an''eligible''then?" |
46505 | Glad-- how? |
46505 | God can do as He pleases;--can He not? |
46505 | Had he been long absent from his own neighborhood? |
46505 | Had he resided there long? |
46505 | Had we not better ask Mr. Dana to pilot us? 46505 Had you ever seen your partner before?" |
46505 | Hang the survivor--"What naughty words are you saying? |
46505 | Has Arthur said anything to you of himself? |
46505 | Has my impatience offended? 46505 Has she taken the veil?" |
46505 | Has the world served you so unkindly, that you condemn your kind without reservation? |
46505 | Has there never been such a disappearance? |
46505 | Have I asked your advice? |
46505 | Have n''t I sent letters to every post- office in the Union, and not received a line in answer, since you parted company with Arthur and Carry? 46505 Have there not been times when we too were impatient-- despairing-- for no more weighty cause? |
46505 | Have you any requests to make, uncle Will? 46505 Have you but one sister?" |
46505 | Have you had much sorrow? |
46505 | Have you learned that song, according to promise? |
46505 | Have you spoken to Holmes? |
46505 | Have you walked yet? |
46505 | Have you_ no_ interest in this subject? |
46505 | He did not add, that his timely warning suppressed the responsive storm? |
46505 | He did not repeat a line of poetry, and ask the author''s name, I presume? |
46505 | He is an intimate friend of yours, then? |
46505 | He is more than that--"Who was it I heard wishing for a frolic? |
46505 | He was burnt alive-- was he not? |
46505 | He was so dear to us-- how can I endure the sight of her indifference? 46505 Helen,"said he, coaxingly,"are you in earnest about leaving me? |
46505 | How are you all? |
46505 | How are you going back? |
46505 | How are you, Celestia? 46505 How did you hear of it?" |
46505 | How do you account for it? 46505 How do you feel now?" |
46505 | How do you know, by personal experience? |
46505 | How far are they to go, after crossing the river? |
46505 | How is it, sir, that I hear so much more of this one of your former wards, than of his younger brother? |
46505 | How is she? |
46505 | How long have I slept? 46505 How long since it was taken?" |
46505 | How many children have you? |
46505 | How many rooms do you open? |
46505 | How much truth, do you imagine, is being uttered now in these rooms? |
46505 | How old are you, Ida? |
46505 | How old is Miss Ross? |
46505 | How should I know? 46505 How then do I live?" |
46505 | How will you send it? |
46505 | How? |
46505 | I am awake-- do you want anything? |
46505 | I am to understand that you disdain my offer to serve you? |
46505 | I do mean him; and he_ is_ a doting fool, to be playing the sighing lover at his age-- and to whom? 46505 I do n''t hear, will I''please come to what?''" |
46505 | I have heard the name-- who is he? |
46505 | I have no idea of going to the ball, and you would be the belle, if you were to attend; so there was no fibbing, was there? |
46505 | I noticed, as I came through, that the music room was more thinly- populated-- will you rest there? |
46505 | I plead guilty-- but if a mightier temptation has mastered my desire for liberty? 46505 I promised-- did I not?" |
46505 | I wonder if you do? |
46505 | I would not appear to dictate, but do you not fear Mr. Purcell may construe your non- attendance into disrespect to himself? |
46505 | Ida, my love, how do you do? |
46505 | If a skeleton were asked to describe his sensations in one word, whose name would he pronounce? |
46505 | If he renews his visits, will you inform me? |
46505 | If it is my duty at all, it is now, as much as then-- is it not? |
46505 | Is hardening the legitimate effect of sorrow? |
46505 | Is he a_ very_ dear friend? |
46505 | Is he as handsome as his brother? |
46505 | Is he much worse? |
46505 | Is he strict, much? 46505 Is he your beau?" |
46505 | Is it Emma''s husband? |
46505 | Is it not a popular fallacy that school- days are the happiest of one''s life? |
46505 | Is it not difficult to take a picture, the size of life, from a miniature? |
46505 | Is it not remarkable,said Josephine to her parent,"that polish and purify as you may, you can not cure an Irishman of vulgarity? |
46505 | Is it time to ring the prayer- bell, Ida? |
46505 | Is n''t it too early for them? |
46505 | Is not that your friend, Miss Read? |
46505 | Is she a relative? |
46505 | Is she in the house? |
46505 | Is she pretty? |
46505 | Is she your sister''s oldest child? |
46505 | Is that all? |
46505 | Is that surprising? |
46505 | Is that your regular pastor? |
46505 | Is the girl mad in good earnest? |
46505 | Is the likeness correct? |
46505 | Is the spot known to you? |
46505 | Is there any specified time? 46505 Is this being friendless?" |
46505 | Is what I am saying disagreeable to you? |
46505 | Is your judgment so unsparing? |
46505 | Is_ that_ there? 46505 It is set as a duett; will not your friend sing with you?" |
46505 | It is that you will every day, ask yourself,''What happiness does my soul desire that Christ can not, and will not bestow?'' 46505 It is unavoidable;--you must meet-- why delay it?" |
46505 | It was a servant, then? 46505 Josephine, are we engaged for to- morrow evening?" |
46505 | Lelia? 46505 Love?" |
46505 | May I ask what was her version of it? |
46505 | May I be umpire? |
46505 | May I choose whom I please? |
46505 | May I describe another mode of life and action? |
46505 | May I go up? |
46505 | May I participate, in virtue of my second- best claim? |
46505 | May we go, papa? |
46505 | Miss Ida, or cousin Ida? |
46505 | Miss Ida? |
46505 | Miss Ross''father was an early friend of yours,--a college chum,--was he not? |
46505 | Miss Ross, what shall I have the pleasure of helping you to? |
46505 | Most ladies are so versed in love affairs, as to understand the symptoms at a glance;--is not your eye sufficiently practiced? |
46505 | Mr. Copeland, can you spare me a minute of your valuable time? 46505 Mr. Dermott called you a second Malibran; or was it Sappho?" |
46505 | Must she pay the penalty of her parent''s fault? |
46505 | My daughter, why do you remain here, so far from those who can do you good? 46505 My dear child-- are you sick?" |
46505 | No-- what is it? |
46505 | Nor turn himself in it, I believe, madam? |
46505 | Not a convert, Charley? |
46505 | Not if I have duties which call me home? 46505 Not in comparison with his?" |
46505 | Not more than falls to the lot of many, more deserving of exemption.--Why? |
46505 | Not often, why do you ask? |
46505 | Nothing changes you, Mars''Charley? |
46505 | Out of humor, then? |
46505 | Perhaps you do not like the idea of resigning your freedom the very day you gain it? |
46505 | Shall I tell her? |
46505 | Shall you tell Lynn? |
46505 | She is an angel now-- is she not? |
46505 | She is the''sister''I have heard so much of? |
46505 | So you are rather glad I am back again? |
46505 | Still, what have I done? |
46505 | Thank you-- and you, Ida-- may I count upon you both? |
46505 | That sigh-- what is its interpretation? |
46505 | The camelia, Miss Ida, what is its emblem? |
46505 | The gifted,--or the fortunate? |
46505 | The manner displeased me most, and to- night, when I saw those fops-- could I be patient? |
46505 | The past can not return-- why refer to it? |
46505 | The pursuit of pleasure and ease is included in this prudent care of yourself, I presume, madam? |
46505 | The same-- what do you know of her? |
46505 | Then I am to do nothing? |
46505 | Then I will hide you-- shall I? |
46505 | Then may I stay with you awhile? 46505 Then when He knows that we are miserable and sinful and helpless, why does not He take pity on us, and make us good and happy?" |
46505 | Then you''d as lief as not interduce me, had n''t you? 46505 Then, will you deliver this letter immediately?" |
46505 | Then,''this cold world''has produced three, to whom its biting atmosphere was uncongenial-- may there not be more? 46505 There are good points in this working- day life of ours, are there not?" |
46505 | There must be an awkward squad,he said, afterwards,"and who is more fit to command it?" |
46505 | They are emblems to you-- of what? |
46505 | This is their outward lot; who knows their inner life? |
46505 | To the Lunatic Hospital? |
46505 | To what am I indebted for this superlative pleasure? |
46505 | Was I the only rhapsodizer? |
46505 | Was ever man more blessed in his friends? 46505 Was his sister with him? |
46505 | Well an implied one, then? |
46505 | Well-- and if I am not? |
46505 | Well? |
46505 | Were you introduced? |
46505 | Were you uneasy that we did not arrive? |
46505 | What an array of horrors you are manufacturing? |
46505 | What apology have_ you_, Josephine? |
46505 | What are you about to do? |
46505 | What are you looking at? |
46505 | What are you playing? |
46505 | What are you saying? 46505 What can I do? |
46505 | What casualty? |
46505 | What did she say? |
46505 | What did you call her? 46505 What did you reply?" |
46505 | What do you mean? |
46505 | What do you mean? |
46505 | What do you say now? |
46505 | What do you want? |
46505 | What handsome man was that, you were conversing with, awhile ago, Celestia? |
46505 | What has happened? |
46505 | What have you two been prosing about? |
46505 | What if I refuse to discharge the debt? |
46505 | What if I warn the girl? |
46505 | What if she were my sister? |
46505 | What if you had? |
46505 | What is he doing? 46505 What is it, Laura?" |
46505 | What is it, dear Lynn? |
46505 | What is strange? |
46505 | What is the conclusion of the whole matter? |
46505 | What is the matter with me? |
46505 | What is the matter? 46505 What is the tone of the note? |
46505 | What is this reformation? 46505 What is your age?" |
46505 | What is your name? |
46505 | What is your notion, Mr. Grant, of this hair- brained young lady? |
46505 | What is_ she_ about? |
46505 | What now? |
46505 | What ornaments? |
46505 | What reason have you to love her? |
46505 | What say you to adjourning to our chamber? 46505 What shall I do? |
46505 | What shall I sing? |
46505 | What the deuce are you talking about? |
46505 | What then? 46505 What then?" |
46505 | What time is it? |
46505 | What was I to you? 46505 What was it?" |
46505 | What will this tomfoolery cost? |
46505 | What, and who is she? |
46505 | What_ did_ you do? |
46505 | What_ do_ you mean? 46505 When did they start?" |
46505 | When did you come in? |
46505 | When did you come in?--down, I mean, and how are they at home? |
46505 | When did you get in? |
46505 | When do you go? |
46505 | When does your session close, Josey? |
46505 | When the chastening is guided by love, does it not melt and refine? 46505 Where are Helen and Miss Read?" |
46505 | Where are his parents? |
46505 | Where are the children? |
46505 | Where are the others? |
46505 | Where are those long- promised portfolios? |
46505 | Where does he live? |
46505 | Where had you met him, that you know him? |
46505 | Where is John? |
46505 | Where is Josephine? |
46505 | Where is she? |
46505 | Where is the church? |
46505 | Where is the use of reasoning? 46505 Where is_ she?_"she questioned. |
46505 | Where was Arthur? |
46505 | Where''s your liege- lord, my lady? |
46505 | Which brother? |
46505 | Which furnished you with a key-- you have a clear head, and a woman''s wit-- have you found no locks that it fitted? |
46505 | Which of these provisoes was wanting to ensure the success of the suit you negatived, upon the evening of our introduction? |
46505 | Who can it be? |
46505 | Who gave them to you? |
46505 | Who has done this? |
46505 | Who is here, that we can prefer to each other''s society? |
46505 | Who is it, sir? 46505 Who is this Mr. Read is convoying this way?" |
46505 | Who moved them? |
46505 | Who officiates the three other Sabbaths? |
46505 | Who said anything about him? |
46505 | Who says unmarried women can do nothing in the work of the world''s reformation? |
46505 | Who sent them? |
46505 | Who thought of this, a week ago? 46505 Who was she?" |
46505 | Who will bring me a doctor,--who, his mother? |
46505 | Who would not? |
46505 | Who wrote this theme? |
46505 | Who? 46505 Who? |
46505 | Whom did he ask for, John? |
46505 | Whom did he marry? |
46505 | Whom have you invited? |
46505 | Whom sir, and where? |
46505 | Whom were you speaking to when I awoke? |
46505 | Whom? |
46505 | Why did He allow us to take them, then? 46505 Why did he not come down to breakfast?" |
46505 | Why did you not send to Charley or me? |
46505 | Why did you stop me just now? |
46505 | Why dismiss him, then? |
46505 | Why do you discredit it? |
46505 | Why have you and Charley preserved such a mysterious silence respecting our former meeting? |
46505 | Why not do it yourself? 46505 Why not go down with me, ma''am? |
46505 | Why not? 46505 Why not?" |
46505 | Why should I kneel, Mr. Manly? 46505 Why should I stay?" |
46505 | Why so? 46505 Why you dislike these scenes? |
46505 | Why''poor?'' |
46505 | Why''too soon?'' |
46505 | Why, there is Mr. Euston-- what fault have you to find in him? |
46505 | Will he come? |
46505 | Will it be a very troublesome office? |
46505 | Will they not sit down? |
46505 | Will you accept me as your attendant, Miss Ross? 46505 Will you ask your brother to act? |
46505 | Will you bind yourself to behave better to your superiors-- Mr. Holmes included-- if I help you out of the scrape? |
46505 | Will you come? |
46505 | Will you eat a philopoena with me? |
46505 | Will you ever know him better? |
46505 | Will you give me a few hints as to my_ coiffure_? |
46505 | Will you honour me by a minute''s private conversation, sir? |
46505 | Will you love me too? |
46505 | Will you not trust yourself and our friend to me, Ida? |
46505 | Will you sing for me? |
46505 | Will you take them to him this morning? |
46505 | Will you, too? |
46505 | With me? 46505 Would you believe it? |
46505 | Yes-- why not? |
46505 | Yes-- will Josephine attend? |
46505 | Yet are we guiltless of similar failings? |
46505 | Yet you like to be here? |
46505 | You admit it, then? |
46505 | You applaud enthusiasm upon other subjects, why not in religion? |
46505 | You are better-- are you not? |
46505 | You are going to the party to- night, then? |
46505 | You are meditating a punishment for her-- what has she done that you have not? |
46505 | You are not in earnest, Ida? 46505 You did n''t like town- folks, I''spose?" |
46505 | You do n''t like him well enough, then? |
46505 | You do not affect the florid style now in vogue? |
46505 | You do not consider that the feebler intellect belongs of necessity, to the feebler body, do you? |
46505 | You do not object to their being taught if you are not troubled about it? |
46505 | You do not think it undignified to dance, do you? |
46505 | You do not think the inhabitants adapted to their abode, then? |
46505 | You go with us, Richard? |
46505 | You have been informed of the altercation that occurred in the Italian class to- day? |
46505 | You have been riding all day; have you dined? |
46505 | You have had a refreshing sleep, have you not, sir? |
46505 | You have known this? |
46505 | You have not eaten to- day-- you will take some nourishment if I bring it? |
46505 | You have not learned to love buttermilk, yet, Charley? |
46505 | You have revolved this issue often in your mind, even since you have been with us-- have you not? |
46505 | You have seen him, surely, Miss Ida? |
46505 | You know everybody,said she;"who is that gentleman talking with the bride?" |
46505 | You never deal there, I believe, sir? |
46505 | You play, I presume, Miss Ross? |
46505 | You remember the Scotchman''s definition of metaphysics-- what were you going to ask? |
46505 | You ride, do you not? |
46505 | You said, a year ago, you felt bound to fulfil your mother''s wishes, and that your inclinations leaned the same way-- how is it now? 46505 You say his father died by violence; was he murdered?" |
46505 | You will acquaint me with Pemberton''s proposals? |
46505 | You will have an instructress, then? 46505 You will like us better than you expect,"she said, rather awkwardly;"and your father will come soon to see you again-- will he not?" |
46505 | You will not be offended if I aid you in the work? |
46505 | You will not do anything in the settlement of this nonsensical matter until you confer with me? |
46505 | You will not stop at a single set then? |
46505 | You would go, if you received an invitation? |
46505 | You would not have known me,--would you, uncle Will? |
46505 | _ Are_ you going thus? 46505 _ I did not think I should die so soon!_ Is Lacy here?" |
46505 | ''"Do they love there still?''" |
46505 | ''A time to die;''--who sees in this permission to shorten his days?" |
46505 | ''Did you imagine that I was idle all the time I was in the country? |
46505 | ''Did you not promise to be good and patient?'' |
46505 | ''Forgotten any thing-- or is the woman dead?'' |
46505 | ''I have it,''thought I. I gave Celestia a nudge,''Do you hear that?'' |
46505 | ''Jeemes,''says she,''when folks''appetites gives out, they dies-- don''t they?'' |
46505 | ''Josey''--said he, simpering and giggling like a shame- faced school- boy.--''Can you guess why I consented to your having that dress?" |
46505 | ''Our Father--''is not a father''s care constant? |
46505 | ''These cost a great deal of money-- do you know it''?'' |
46505 | ''What is to pay?'' |
46505 | ''When will they return?'' |
46505 | ''You are hungry, ai n''t you?'' |
46505 | ''s professional call last night? |
46505 | Ai n''t none of''em rich?" |
46505 | Ai n''t you glad?'' |
46505 | Am I lost?" |
46505 | Am I to flatter myself that you have turned out of your way to see me?" |
46505 | And Ida''s constant thought of him was--"If he, calling himself unconverted, accomplishes so much-- what ought not I-- a Christian, to attempt?" |
46505 | And Laura-- do you hear? |
46505 | And as a starting- point to the conversation, why are you not in the other room?" |
46505 | And the assassin?" |
46505 | And this Lacy-- are you retaining him as a_ corps de reserve_?" |
46505 | And this universal love-- is it content to exist without a reciprocation?" |
46505 | And you''ve come home for good, honey?" |
46505 | Another perplexity assailed her;--should she tell Josephine of the visit she had had? |
46505 | Any news going?" |
46505 | Are strength and hardness synonymous?" |
46505 | Are we not proud of our pupil?" |
46505 | Are you all well?" |
46505 | Are you content with yourself and your mode of life?" |
46505 | Are you fond of out- door exercise?" |
46505 | Are you fond of riding, Miss Ross?" |
46505 | Are you going off to beautify, Miss Ida? |
46505 | Are you indisposed?" |
46505 | Are you principled against them?" |
46505 | Are you sick? |
46505 | Are you tired of us; or do you dislike our sketched route? |
46505 | As for Ida-- have any of you reflected how much of what you call her pride you are accountable for?" |
46505 | As for the rest of those you name-- when did they oppose anything you advocated?" |
46505 | As with a soda fount, have you but to twist a screw in the heart, and it bubbles up for any''unexceptionable,''who prays for it in a flowery speech?" |
46505 | Assuming that the plan is feasible and prudent in its main points, let us descend to the minutiae--''Repairs of building''--where is the room?" |
46505 | At best, what are the short years of toil and change we pass below, compared with the never- ending life of our heavenly home?" |
46505 | At length she inquired, meaningly,"by the way, Ida, when does your travelled Hibernian''lave this counthry?''" |
46505 | Be sane for five minutes; by what means has your happiness been put in his power?" |
46505 | But conscience answered--"Anger, not justice was the prompter,"and again, every feeling merged in one--"What will Carry think?" |
46505 | But how to get it? |
46505 | But how was this to end? |
46505 | But is it not more probable that she gave it her own coloring, than that he made a jest of us? |
46505 | But the relaxed limbs-- the unmoving figure-- was she then asleep? |
46505 | But will the time never come, when other claims will dispossess me of my place? |
46505 | Can I censure poor Helen, when I am myself so weak? |
46505 | Can I help you?" |
46505 | Can it be more humiliating to labor as my colleague, than the despised beneficiary of a niggardly relative?" |
46505 | Can it be that virtue thrives only in the shade?" |
46505 | Can the same be said of the menial classes in any other country under the sun?" |
46505 | Can they mislead?" |
46505 | Can we marvel that she shrined her in her heart of hearts as a being more than human-- scarcely less than divine? |
46505 | Can you perform my bidding, without asking questions?" |
46505 | Can you wish her again upon this sinful earth?" |
46505 | Carry would never forgive one who impugned your sincerity;--and what would Mr. Germaine say?" |
46505 | Carry''s was next-- was it not?" |
46505 | Charley had just asked,"Do you mean to give it up?" |
46505 | Charley? |
46505 | Comb my hair-- will you? |
46505 | Come,_ Ida_--be my friend-- will you not?" |
46505 | Could a false flirt copy Carry''s look and tone so faithfully? |
46505 | Could it be the modest Carry who spoke? |
46505 | Could it have been there while she sought it carefully and with tears? |
46505 | Could not she see that he was out of temper? |
46505 | Dana?" |
46505 | Dana?" |
46505 | Dare I say-- reply at once? |
46505 | Did I understand you to say, that you did not object?" |
46505 | Did I write you an account of my begging expedition?" |
46505 | Did human love, then, always terminate in misery? |
46505 | Did n''t I manage it nice?" |
46505 | Did n''t she, Josephine?" |
46505 | Did not you hear or see them?" |
46505 | Did you ever see a school- fellow of Carry''s named Emma Glenn, a modest, sweet- looking girl?" |
46505 | Did you know we lived here?" |
46505 | Did you never observe, Anna, that when the''brethren''are wrought up to the belligerent point, they are the fiercest of combatants?" |
46505 | Did you not promise to see life through my spectacles awhile? |
46505 | Diggans?" |
46505 | Do n''t you know him well, enough?" |
46505 | Do n''t you remember a certain gentleman, whose handsome face and saintly smile set off his religion so well?" |
46505 | Do you come here often?" |
46505 | Do you hear?" |
46505 | Do you know I am getting jealous?" |
46505 | Do you know the bride elect-- that is to be?" |
46505 | Do you not desire the prayer of Christians? |
46505 | Do you read the Bible-- may I ask?" |
46505 | Do you recollect the stormy November evening when you''took me in?'' |
46505 | Do you see that Peri with cerulean eyes, who is bowing to that gentleman''s petition for''the pleasure of her hand?''" |
46505 | Do you think then that a solitary manoeuvre has been unnoticed by me? |
46505 | Do you think you will be well enough?" |
46505 | Do you understand Scotch?" |
46505 | Do you understand me?" |
46505 | Does Helen receive him as your friend or as hers?" |
46505 | Does Mr. Pinely drink now?" |
46505 | Does he allude to it?" |
46505 | Does he believe in an hereafter? |
46505 | Does he make you get hard lessons?" |
46505 | Does the world heap no honors, lavish no applause upon her?" |
46505 | Does this sound ungrateful?" |
46505 | Dr. Carleton thanked her with moistened eyes; Arthur laughingly wondered--"what talent next? |
46505 | Emma, will you run up to them? |
46505 | For example, what are my school- duties, setting aside my studies?" |
46505 | Go with us-- will you not? |
46505 | Has disinterested affection an abode upon earth?" |
46505 | Has that room been ceiled yet?" |
46505 | Has your curiosity to behold Niagara diminished since your sight of''the Bridge?''" |
46505 | Has your residence here enlarged or contracted your sphere of usefulness?" |
46505 | Have I tasted all of earth''s delights at eighteen?" |
46505 | Have n''t you been introduced? |
46505 | Have they been filled regularly?'' |
46505 | Have we not time, and the knowledge that he is in the city, and liberty to communicate with him? |
46505 | Have you a liking for this stand?" |
46505 | Have you been in town long?" |
46505 | Have you brothers?" |
46505 | Have you ever met with a warm heart besides your own?" |
46505 | Have you finished your official returns of''killed, wounded and missing,''Miss Ross?" |
46505 | Have you forgotten what women are in their''hour of ease?'' |
46505 | Have you known him long?" |
46505 | He is all that a man should be-- let me say it-- I have never told you so before;--but is it true love expels friendship? |
46505 | He was invited-- did she warn him of my being there? |
46505 | He would obey, but his respect for her would be diminished;--as a final alternative, she must venture it-- but was there no other? |
46505 | He would say--''Shall I?'' |
46505 | His course was towards the door, but he stopped as he espied Ida"Miss Ross, have you a welcome in your''Retreat''for a storm- tossed wanderer? |
46505 | Holmes?" |
46505 | Horrid weather for March!--isn''t it? |
46505 | How can you think of it?" |
46505 | How could she present herself at the door of her, whom she had denounced as her mortal foe? |
46505 | How did your hear it?" |
46505 | How do you reconcile it with your conscience, to let your pearls attend a ball, Ida? |
46505 | How had the"bold, bad man"gone to his account? |
46505 | How happens it, that you are a novice? |
46505 | How has the world treated you since our parting?" |
46505 | How have you wiled away the day, Miss Alice?" |
46505 | How long do you intend to sponge-- to remain, I mean, with_ your friend_, Miss Ross?" |
46505 | How many are there?" |
46505 | How many shall I put down?" |
46505 | How much scouring and praying will cleanse them again for your use?" |
46505 | How shall we get him into the parlor?" |
46505 | I am afraid he is thoroughly selfish, and Josephine is too close a copy of him to suit my fancy-- but why think or speak of them? |
46505 | I gave Charley_ carte- blanche_ to ask any of my Richmond acquaintances-- and all for what? |
46505 | I have ascertained that you are unmarried-- are you heart- free? |
46505 | I kept a- lookin''at one, and then at''tother, and says he,''Ca n''t you choose between them?'' |
46505 | I may enter your little ones-- Laura included? |
46505 | I reckon not-- but who''s a goin''to do it? |
46505 | I saw him on the street a week ago-- another duel?" |
46505 | I was about to ask if I could assist you in any way?" |
46505 | I_ despise_ you, and I owe you nothing?" |
46505 | I_ do_ love you-- very dearly? |
46505 | Ida asked one question--"When was he attacked?" |
46505 | Ida inquired"when?" |
46505 | If a man is sleeping upon the sea- shore, the big waves washing his pillow at each surge, am I censurable if I end his happy slumbers? |
46505 | If alone then, how now? |
46505 | If this temper of spirit and heart was habitual to him, what may we not hope?" |
46505 | If your church commanded you to steal or kill, would you obey?" |
46505 | In the interim, are not we to be favoured with his company?" |
46505 | Is it a dinin''-day?" |
46505 | Is it magnetism-- animal electricity?" |
46505 | Is it not a fairy nook?" |
46505 | Is it not enough that he has helped to wreck my peace, but he must taunt me with it?" |
46505 | Is it so? |
46505 | Is it to be a girls''or a boys''school?" |
46505 | Is n''t that like Charley?" |
46505 | Is not this enough? |
46505 | Is not this scenery English, Mr. Holmes? |
46505 | Is she not a lovely babe?" |
46505 | Is that satisfied with its fare? |
46505 | Is the lady by the pier- table your cousin- german?" |
46505 | Is there any hope of my claiming nearer kinship?" |
46505 | Is there any hope?" |
46505 | Is there no sin in the earliest deviation from the right way?" |
46505 | Is this so?" |
46505 | Is this your gratitude?" |
46505 | Is your friend versed in classical lore, Miss Ross?" |
46505 | It came to Ida, like sudden death to a festival; producing not only sorrow and dismay, but a trembling insecurity-- an awful whisper--"Who next?" |
46505 | It is my fate-- I was not born to be loved-- I hate myself-- why should I inspire others with a different feeling?" |
46505 | It may be long before we have another opportunity to speak of these things; will you make me a promise?" |
46505 | It was a delicate and dangerous matter;--would he be a blind tool? |
46505 | It was_ not!_ Where then was the vigorous life which moved the still form within it? |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Lacy?" |
46505 | Laura, my daughter-- have you offered our guest refreshments?" |
46505 | May I come to you? |
46505 | May I presume to ask?" |
46505 | May we not hope for the pleasure of your company to dinner to- morrow?" |
46505 | Miss Morris, where do you purchase your ink?" |
46505 | Mr. Dana sends his respects, and will you step into the parlour? |
46505 | Mr. Read was in a draught-- what of that? |
46505 | Must I forget her also?" |
46505 | Must he, the loved and gifted, rest there forever? |
46505 | My errand is with Charley-- is he in?" |
46505 | My ideal says, gently, but decidedly--''_I_ think''--''_I_ will?''" |
46505 | Now the last query-- what shall we wear?" |
46505 | Now, sir, what do you propose to do?" |
46505 | Now, what shall I do to entertain you? |
46505 | Now, would you know me?" |
46505 | Of whom do you speak?" |
46505 | One met him, wherever he looked--"Despisest thou the riches of his forbearance, and love and long- suffering?" |
46505 | Or do you prefer that I shall meet you upon your own ground of satirical innuendo?" |
46505 | Oscar and I will not part company again so unceremoniously,--will we, old fellow? |
46505 | Others tell of unknown depths of happiness I have capacity to enjoy-- am I unreasonable in trusting that my turn will come? |
46505 | Pemberton?" |
46505 | Shakspeare or Charley?" |
46505 | Shall I have the pleasure of driving you out in the morning?" |
46505 | Shall I name him?" |
46505 | Shall I not have a spinster household?" |
46505 | She did not say,"Is there hope?" |
46505 | She had said,"what evil have I done?" |
46505 | She is your choice?" |
46505 | She named an article, and Celestia twitched her arm--"Who''s that?" |
46505 | Thar''s a heap of polite beaux-- ain''t there?" |
46505 | That''s''for good,''is n''t it?" |
46505 | The next?" |
46505 | The servants will attend en masse, to- morrow; why not follow their example?" |
46505 | There are three, besides yourself, Laura?" |
46505 | There is a loud hue and cry after''strong- minded women;''who says any thing about weak- minded men?" |
46505 | There were visitors in the parlor-- who had ventured through the storm? |
46505 | They are despicable in their worldliness and malice; shall I grovel and hiss with them? |
46505 | This is the sad tale-- is it quite new to you?" |
46505 | This music is too inspiriting, Miss Ross; am I reduced to the necessity of seeking another partner?" |
46505 | This phase of piety is the larvae stage, I imagine, Miss Ross?" |
46505 | This recklessness is, you think, more an impulse than a purpose?" |
46505 | To whom else can the suffering go? |
46505 | Was ever girl so impolitic? |
46505 | Was it a love- match?" |
46505 | Was there a"special Providence"in his being Mr. Germaine''s friend, and singling her out among a hundred strangers? |
46505 | Was there no remedy? |
46505 | Was this yours? |
46505 | Was_ his_ end approaching? |
46505 | We seldom see so large a tract, under as high cultivation, in this quarter of the globe; and where will we find another palace and park like that?" |
46505 | Were his candor-- his undisguised interest in her welfare, tokens of love, that ever seeks concealment? |
46505 | What ails her?" |
46505 | What are you going to learn so much for? |
46505 | What are you making?" |
46505 | What did he say? |
46505 | What did it mean? |
46505 | What directed his mind into the channel it took? |
46505 | What do you say now, Miss Ross? |
46505 | What do you say, sir, of a man who, in the presence of ladies, calls another a''farcical fool?''" |
46505 | What do you want?" |
46505 | What do_ you_ say?" |
46505 | What does Miss Ida say?" |
46505 | What had she done to draw down that stern, yet sorrowful rebuke? |
46505 | What head- dress?" |
46505 | What hold have you on this Miss Pratt''s confidence? |
46505 | What if he were himself one of this"religious sort?" |
46505 | What if we never meet again?" |
46505 | What in the name of all that is ridiculous and outrageous, brought you here alone, and has kept you here until the middle of the winter?" |
46505 | What is the matter?" |
46505 | What is your definition of flirting?" |
46505 | What is your ideal husband like?" |
46505 | What made you sick?" |
46505 | What potent''they''do you mean?" |
46505 | What shall I do?" |
46505 | What tempted her to ascend? |
46505 | What visionary who reads this, but has suffered from these morbose fits? |
46505 | What was his answer?" |
46505 | What was the weighty reflection?" |
46505 | What will you do? |
46505 | What will you get, Josey?" |
46505 | What wind has blown him hither? |
46505 | When did you come into the neighbourhood?" |
46505 | When did you get this letter?" |
46505 | When did you return, and why have not you written to me?" |
46505 | When he was here, I loved this earth, because he was upon it; its charm has gone-- and can I thank, or revere Him who bereaved me?" |
46505 | When is it to be?" |
46505 | When it''s clear weather, in summer, we meet out- doors;--it''s getting cool now--""And you are afraid of disturbing me; is that it?" |
46505 | Where does Mr. Copeland want you to go? |
46505 | Where is Helen?" |
46505 | Where is he, father?" |
46505 | Where is the mammet of fashion I would consult and trust as I do you? |
46505 | Where was he_ now_? |
46505 | Where will she board?" |
46505 | Who accompanies me?" |
46505 | Who can say,''I have made my heart clean-- I am pure from my sin?''" |
46505 | Who can tell what may happen before Spring? |
46505 | Who else knew it?" |
46505 | Who ever reads a new love story? |
46505 | Who is it?" |
46505 | Who is to remedy them? |
46505 | Who knows, Carry, but, unpromising as the field is, I may do as well as suffer, even there?" |
46505 | Who pardons a child''s faults more than a parent? |
46505 | Who relies more than a child? |
46505 | Who remembers that it is my birth- day? |
46505 | Who was your accomplice in this witty deception?" |
46505 | Who will love her now? |
46505 | Who would have expected this from a man of his phlegmatic constitution?" |
46505 | Who, and what is he?" |
46505 | Whom did you think I meant?" |
46505 | Whose goodness granted it this lovely home? |
46505 | Whose hand had fashioned it? |
46505 | Whose sun kissed it into bloom? |
46505 | Why could n''t you let_ her_ do it?" |
46505 | Why could n''t you?" |
46505 | Why did she inquire? |
46505 | Why did you discard him?" |
46505 | Why disclaim it? |
46505 | Why do n''t you answer me? |
46505 | Why do you talk of disgrace? |
46505 | Why do yourself such injustice? |
46505 | Why have you not ingratiated yourself with some''divine creature,''who has a rich papa? |
46505 | Why is that window open? |
46505 | Why not let your friends know that you have feeling? |
46505 | Why not think, write, talk of it?--""And_ act_ it?" |
46505 | Why seize upon every pretext to attack and wound one who never had an unkind thought of you?" |
46505 | Why the question?" |
46505 | Why trouble yourselves so much?" |
46505 | Why was it bestowed upon her-- a stranger, and so little attractive in her appearance? |
46505 | Why was she made to hear this recital? |
46505 | Why will men make a comfortless, doleful mystery of our cheerful, life- giving, home Faith? |
46505 | Why''too soon,''Ida? |
46505 | Why, do n''t you expect to get married? |
46505 | Why, especially, should he have asked permission to call? |
46505 | Will Mr. What''s- his- name be mad if I stay here?" |
46505 | Will it not be imprudent for Mr. Read to remain long at table, after the cloth is removed? |
46505 | Will not that interfere with your instructions?'' |
46505 | Will you dance? |
46505 | Will you do this?" |
46505 | Will you go?" |
46505 | Will you not delegate one of us to represent you this forenoon, while you take a ride?" |
46505 | Will you not tell me truly why you dislike me?" |
46505 | Will you oblige me now?" |
46505 | Will you wear or keep this image of him, by whom you were never forgotten-- not in the death- agony? |
46505 | Will your plans undergo any alteration in consequence? |
46505 | With my esteem for you, will not my desire to bring you together, grow stronger? |
46505 | With the Persian Poet, her heart cried out--"Where are they?" |
46505 | Would it increase her confidence in you or us? |
46505 | Would she not avoid us more then ever? |
46505 | Yet who knows the pains of her lot?" |
46505 | You all do n''t have no beaux while you''re at school, do you?" |
46505 | You and I know it-- why dispute it? |
46505 | You are disengaged?" |
46505 | You are distressed on account of sin; are you ashamed to have it known? |
46505 | You are superior to such narrow- mindedness, I hope, Miss Ida?" |
46505 | You are to pay your friend Carry a visit, are you not?" |
46505 | You did not misconstrue my attentions then-- tell me-- am I a knave-- a hypocrite in your sight?" |
46505 | You do n''t happen to have a fourpence in your pocket, my boy? |
46505 | You do not flirt, I understand, Miss Ross?" |
46505 | You do not object to my withdrawing_ now_?" |
46505 | You feared to weary me with particulars;--you have no other objection to my looking into them?" |
46505 | You have a splendid bouquet-- is this Mr. Cranleigh''s taste?" |
46505 | You have heard of the clay that lived with roses-- do you think that gentleman would appreciate the apologue?" |
46505 | You have not been troubling your brain with quibblings upon this subject, I hope?" |
46505 | You have not-- you never will forget him, but can you not believe that this, too, was intended for your good?" |
46505 | You have them?" |
46505 | You have too much care upon you, for so young a person; what do you say to my engaging a''help?'' |
46505 | You heard this?" |
46505 | You know the groom?''" |
46505 | You look upon me as a miracle of longevity, do you not?" |
46505 | You mentioned his sister- in- law, I think, Ida?" |
46505 | You saw him, Lelia?" |
46505 | You spoke of James a while ago; do you like him?" |
46505 | You trust in his judgment in other matters-- why not now? |
46505 | You understand?" |
46505 | You were so much together-- where are the pins? |
46505 | You will be as dear to me married as single; why should your affection decrease?" |
46505 | You will do as I wish?" |
46505 | You will go?" |
46505 | You would not rebel if you believed this? |
46505 | Young as you are you may know this?" |
46505 | Your dearest friends are with you-- what renders delay necessary or advisable?" |
46505 | Your provident brain has not picked her out, surely?" |
46505 | _ Dermarck!_ have you ever read Plutarch- es Liv- es, Homer''s Eyelids, Dance''s Diving Comedy and Campbell''s Gratitude of Wimming?'' |
46505 | _ You_ do not fear to accept my arm for a promenade? |
46505 | a''want of conformity to, or transgression of the law of God''--in moving through a certain form of steps to the sound of music?" |
46505 | and I hear, quite as much profundity of mind; is this so, Miss Read?" |
46505 | and Mrs. Truman solicit the pleasure--''hum-- no doubt they will be overjoyed--''evening, 27th August''--what is it, Carry?" |
46505 | and echo answered--"Where are they?" |
46505 | and for whom?" |
46505 | and he invited expressly to meet you-- it is well no one overheard you-- and you have not composed your conversation either? |
46505 | and if I wish to describe the Alps or Niagara, can you help me to a word?" |
46505 | and seeing her hesitate--"What does the Family Bible say? |
46505 | and the white spire-- had its silent gesture no significance? |
46505 | and what''s more, I do n''t believe it''s ever coming?'' |
46505 | and when?" |
46505 | and where are the fruits of her loving kindness? |
46505 | and''will you?'' |
46505 | are you then so sad?" |
46505 | at the peril of her life, if need be-- what were personal convenience and safety? |
46505 | by Helen?" |
46505 | can I not quiet you for an instant? |
46505 | can it be the delegate from A----? |
46505 | can not you leave Heaven for one short minute to comfort your child? |
46505 | could you not sacrifice your ease to secure the enjoyment of your friends?" |
46505 | did He say so, or did you?" |
46505 | did I not say you would have to abandon that air castle?" |
46505 | did I say death?" |
46505 | did he speak?" |
46505 | did n''t you know that?" |
46505 | did you think me ignorant of your glorious gift?" |
46505 | do I in truth, have the felicity?" |
46505 | do n''t it?" |
46505 | do n''t you want to see Aladdin''s lamp? |
46505 | do you know to whom you are speaking?" |
46505 | do you never mean to marry?" |
46505 | for what had she to love now? |
46505 | from you?" |
46505 | had she heard the words before? |
46505 | had you no sense of duty? |
46505 | has it expired?" |
46505 | have not they seen their tree? |
46505 | have not we a right to them?" |
46505 | have you kept yourself all the evening, Sir Truant?" |
46505 | how are you?" |
46505 | how can you hint such frightful things? |
46505 | how could he know when she was coming? |
46505 | how could you be angry with me?" |
46505 | how could you deceive me so?" |
46505 | how is her health?" |
46505 | how you reckon I know?" |
46505 | is it cool?" |
46505 | is it for me?" |
46505 | is it not, Charley?" |
46505 | is love made to order? |
46505 | is she not lovely?" |
46505 | is there not room in Thy fold for_ all_?" |
46505 | is this the revenge I have worked for? |
46505 | may I ask?" |
46505 | may I presume to ask whither you are going, on such a night?" |
46505 | must I say, that next to my wife, you are nearer to me than any woman living? |
46505 | now-- why did n''t you love him?" |
46505 | of mind or manner?" |
46505 | or was it that she might endure the pain she had inflicted upon others?" |
46505 | or, are you countrified upon principle?" |
46505 | pray, Mr. Holmes, is this a rehearsal, or a real performance?" |
46505 | questioned Ida, anxiously:"or do you say it for our sakes?" |
46505 | red- haired, stoops in the shoulders, and wears spectacles?" |
46505 | revengeful?" |
46505 | said I, rubbing my eyes,''Is it morning?'' |
46505 | said Mrs. Read;"what am I doing here? |
46505 | said she, looking wild,''You reckon he will speak to me? |
46505 | she was well and happy when she came to us; and what can have occurred since to affect her?" |
46505 | superb-- magnificent? |
46505 | that I have not divined even the motive of your altered behaviour to Miss Ross? |
46505 | that''s the door- bell I Ai n''t you going down, Miss Ida?" |
46505 | the brother, she had averred, was"all kindness and truth?" |
46505 | to be fondled and comforted into composure? |
46505 | turn back within sight of the Promised Land?" |
46505 | was there a gentleman of that name here last night?" |
46505 | we are good friends, and have had a nice talk, have we not, darling?" |
46505 | well-- you ai n''t married?" |
46505 | what ails you?" |
46505 | what can I say to you? |
46505 | what do I care where, or when you go?" |
46505 | what do you want?" |
46505 | what evidence have you that I have committed this egregious folly?" |
46505 | what had she, so queenly in her pride and beauty, to do with repentance? |
46505 | what has happened?" |
46505 | what have you to do with this miserable affair?" |
46505 | what is that girl driving at?" |
46505 | what may I hope to be? |
46505 | what ought I to do?" |
46505 | what pointed his finger to Lelia Arnold, and thereby probed her heart to its core? |
46505 | what shall I do? |
46505 | what shall I do?" |
46505 | what will be said?" |
46505 | what?" |
46505 | what_ did_ he say?" |
46505 | when did it happen? |
46505 | where are you?" |
46505 | where the heart, with its wealth of feeling? |
46505 | where the sister, in whose bosom she had lain for months, and eased her sorrows and heightened her joys? |
46505 | where the soul of splendid imaginings and lofty aspirations? |
46505 | where was Charley? |
46505 | where were those who had proudly borne the name of friend? |
46505 | where?" |
46505 | who believes that there are treasures under the waters which are worth the seeking?" |
46505 | who is the fortunate lady?" |
46505 | who was so unreasonable?" |
46505 | whom?" |
46505 | why ca n''t you give a direct answer? |
46505 | why do n''t Mr. Ashlin come?" |
46505 | why do nonentities, cumberers of the earth, spin out a tiresome life, and the loved and useful perish?" |
46505 | why do we love this world so well?" |
46505 | why must we have two faces?" |
46505 | why wait, until we have tasted and found them sweet, before He snatches them away?" |
46505 | will you give your attention for a minute?" |
46505 | wo n''t you?" |
46505 | would a tender mother''s arms never more embrace her,--the dear lips, now turned to dust, never cling to hers, in speechless fondness? |
46505 | you are well-- are you not?" |
46505 | you knew us too well? |
46505 | you know Miss Josephine as well as I do; what harm does my talking do? |
46505 | you think she''ll live''till day? |
4209 | ''Et in Arcadia Ego?'' 4209 A portfolio? |
4209 | About how long was she in the house? |
4209 | About what time of the day was it? |
4209 | After waiting so many terrible years, what are a few more hours of suspense? 4209 Ai n''t you aiming to prove she killed old marster? |
4209 | Am I a butcher, madam? 4209 Am I allowed the use of my shawl?" |
4209 | Am I so wantonly cruel, think you, that I gloat over your sufferings as a Modoc at sight of the string of scalps dangling at his pony''s neck? |
4209 | Am I unusually stupid, or are you rapt, beyond the realm of reason and mid- day common sense? 4209 An overwhelming conviction of the prisoner''s guilt impelled you to demand her arrest?" |
4209 | And if I have not blundered; and she be guilty? |
4209 | And that Auratum-- with a few rose geranium leaves added? |
4209 | And you are so glad to leave us? |
4209 | And you love him so insanely, that to secure his safety, existence here in this moral sty is sweet in comparison with freedom unshared with him? 4209 And you will not sit down?" |
4209 | Are you Miss Ellie''s daughter? |
4209 | Are you going to the Percy''s? |
4209 | Are you ill? 4209 Are you insane? |
4209 | Are you not the wife of Bedney, who saved my mother''s life, when the barn burned? |
4209 | Are you quite sure of his views? |
4209 | Are you really bent on humoring this insane or idiotic vagary? |
4209 | Are you shore you did n''t drap your hank''cher? |
4209 | Are you some exiled goddess travelling incognito? 4209 Arrested for what? |
4209 | As a friend to me? 4209 As it was at night, is there a possibility of your having mistaken some one else for the prisoner?" |
4209 | At present he is as much a beggar as I was that day when I first saw X--? 4209 At what hour on Thursday was the funeral sermon preached?" |
4209 | At what hour, do you think? |
4209 | BERTIE, IF YOU WANT THE LOST BUTTON WE BOUGHT AT LUCCA, WHEN CAN GIGINA HAND IT TO YOU IN ST. CATHERINE''S, CANADA? |
4209 | Because he is my lover? 4209 Because''Farleigh Court''may lie dangerously close to''Denzil Place''? |
4209 | Beryl, are you trying to elude me? |
4209 | Beryl, you consider me a dreadful, cruel old tyrant? |
4209 | But you said you had seen his face? |
4209 | But, Leo, what do you suppose Mr. Dunbar will think and say, when he hears of this extraordinary procedure? |
4209 | But-- I thought her child was a boy? |
4209 | By what witnesses will you prove it? |
4209 | Ca n''t you read? |
4209 | Can not I dispose at least of the income or interest? 4209 Can you find elsewhere a nobler field of work than surrounds you here?" |
4209 | Can you find no comfort in release? 4209 Can you look at me, and deny that you are screening your lover?" |
4209 | Can you read? |
4209 | Can you recall the date of the revision? |
4209 | Can you stay here awhile? |
4209 | Can you summon any witnesses to prove that you were not at Elm Bluff on the night of the storm? |
4209 | Claim? 4209 Come here to live? |
4209 | Could death have occurred in consequence of inhaling that chloroform? |
4209 | Could you possibly associate mercenary motives with any step which he might take? 4209 Dare I flatter myself, that my queen deigns to meet me half way?" |
4209 | Defy? 4209 Did He deliver His own Son from the pangs of death? |
4209 | Did I frighten you? 4209 Did Mitchell show you Leighton''s telegram?" |
4209 | Did he tell you the prisoner was his granddaughter? |
4209 | Did she ever for one instant deem the silken cords she hugged to her loyal, tender heart-- fetters? 4209 Did she hear it? |
4209 | Did she leave the house by the front door, or the side door? |
4209 | Did you ever see a sketch of Rossetti''s''Pandora''? |
4209 | Did you hear any name mentioned as that of the murderer? |
4209 | Did you hear any part of the conversation between the prisoner and Gen''l Darrington? |
4209 | Did you hear any unusual noise during the night? |
4209 | Did you make these sketches? |
4209 | Did you mention the fact to him? |
4209 | Did you mention to any person what you have told here to- day? |
4209 | Did you not question her about her presence there, at such an hour? |
4209 | Did you prove your faith by your works, and send him a large check? |
4209 | Did you reach New Orleans before his death? |
4209 | Did you see a gentleman who visited the prisoner? 4209 Did you see the old war- horse?" |
4209 | Disappointed? 4209 Do n''t know Spanish? |
4209 | Do n''t you know that the Grand Jury brought in a true bill against that young woman? 4209 Do you feel competent to teach a class in''water color'', in our Art School? |
4209 | Do you find that the demand for purely ornamental work renders this department self- sustaining? |
4209 | Do you imagine that desertion from our ranks will be so readily condoned? 4209 Do you know all I have done? |
4209 | Do you know anything about the statement made by the prisoner? |
4209 | Do you know exactly what time she died? |
4209 | Do you know exactly where to go? |
4209 | Do you know that recently earnest efforts have been made to induce the Governor to pardon you? 4209 Do you know what sum Mr. Darrington required while abroad?" |
4209 | Do you mean that my hands are tied; that if I should live, I can do nothing for more than two years? |
4209 | Do you mean that you want a dram to steady your nerves? |
4209 | Do you really think he intends marrying? |
4209 | Do you recall the position of the glass door on the west veranda; and also that the crimson drapery or curtain was drawn aside? |
4209 | Do you recollect any allusion to jewelry? |
4209 | Do you recollect that there was a violent thunder- storm the night of the murder? |
4209 | Do you refer to the trial next month? |
4209 | Do you regard me as an unscrupulous, calculating villain, who pretending kindness, plots treachery? 4209 Do you remember whether his vault in the wall was open, when you answered the bell?" |
4209 | Do you see it, Churchill? 4209 Do you see it?" |
4209 | Do you suppose I shall allow you to travel there without me? 4209 Do you think his face indicated that he had been engaged in a difficulty, in a fight? |
4209 | Do you, can you, believe her guilty? 4209 Does General Darrington''s granddaughter understand that Prince''s career will be ruined for want of the money to which he is entitled?" |
4209 | Does it occur to you that he will object very strenuously to seeing the personification of''that gloomy business''sitting at your hearth- stone? 4209 Does the nature of that work involve vows of celibacy?" |
4209 | Does your sister share equally? |
4209 | Doubtless to his office; where else should he be? 4209 For an absence of indefinite duration?" |
4209 | Given his hostess, and entourage, could he possibly have been less? 4209 Go back to X----? |
4209 | Has Ulysses the right to be curious? 4209 Has any clue been discovered which would indicate the murderer?" |
4209 | Has it become so intolerable that you desire to commit suicide, under the specious plea of philanthropic martyrdom? |
4209 | Have I forfeited your confidence? |
4209 | Have you a farm there? |
4209 | Have you advised him to submit tamely to the deprivation of his fortune? |
4209 | Have you considered the opposition which, without inconsistency, he can not fail to offer? 4209 Have you had the skulls polished for drinking cups, and printed the menus on cross- bones? |
4209 | Have you made him acquainted with this scheme? |
4209 | Have you no mercy? 4209 Have you received letters?" |
4209 | Have you relatives in this country? |
4209 | Have you special reasons for wishing to shun observation? |
4209 | Have you turned idjut, that you want us both to be devoured by the roarin''lion of the Law? 4209 He appeared very angry and excited?" |
4209 | He is not coming here? |
4209 | He knows that I am coming? |
4209 | He talked like a man in desperate haste, who was running to escape pursuit? |
4209 | He was entirely dependent on Gen''l Darrington? |
4209 | How can he? 4209 How can you connect so dreadful a crime with a young and beautiful woman, of whom you know absolutely nothing?" |
4209 | How can you expect me to believe your contradictory statements? |
4209 | How did you know that any engagement ever existed? |
4209 | How did you learn his name? |
4209 | How did you learn that she was the granddaughter of Gen''l Darrington? |
4209 | How did you manage it? |
4209 | How does he earn his bread? 4209 How does she seem now?" |
4209 | How far from town? |
4209 | How far is the bridge? |
4209 | How long do you propose to stay in New York? |
4209 | How long do you suppose I can endure this''death in life?'' 4209 How long have you been farming?" |
4209 | How long have you been here? |
4209 | How long was it, after you saw the man, before you heard the whistle of the freight train? |
4209 | How long was the prisoner in the General''s room? |
4209 | How many victims are required to appease the manes of Gen''l Darrington? 4209 How should I know? |
4209 | How soon do you wish to start? |
4209 | How soon? |
4209 | How was he dressed? |
4209 | How? 4209 Howdy do, Aunt Dyce? |
4209 | I am glad to hear it; but to what circumstance is so deckled a revulsion of sentiment attributable? |
4209 | I am to go to prison? 4209 I asked:''Madam, you seem a stranger; have you lost your way?'' |
4209 | I believe you are sacristan here? |
4209 | I believe you stated that your father originally drew up this paper, and that recently you altered and re- wrote it? |
4209 | I hope it is not true that the conditions of the will require you to remove from X--- and settle in New Orleans? 4209 I reckon you mean Gin''l Darrington, do n''t you? |
4209 | I think I understand; and if I am willing to run the risk, what then? |
4209 | I thought a liberal allowance had been settled upon him, and ample provision made for his future? |
4209 | I trust the case is not so hopeless? |
4209 | I understood that you had been an orphan for years? |
4209 | I? 4209 If I bring it to you, will you confess who smoked it last?" |
4209 | If I do, will you endorse me? |
4209 | If he had wished to disguise himself by blackening one side of his face, would he not have presented a similar appearance? |
4209 | If she is innocent, as you believe, why should she shrink from occupying the family homestead? 4209 If that were true, do you suppose I would allow her to remain one hour in this accursed cage of blood- smeared criminals?" |
4209 | If you had never set your eyes on me? 4209 If you knew my mother, how can you think it possible her child could commit an awful crime?" |
4209 | If you knew that your daughter''s life hung by a thread, would you deliberately take a pair of shears and cut it? |
4209 | In view of this palpable evasion of justice through obstinate non responsion, will it please the Court to overrule the prisoner''s objection? |
4209 | In what capacity did you serve when working on the road? |
4209 | Indeed? 4209 Into a what?" |
4209 | Is Miss Brentano there also? |
4209 | Is all hope over? 4209 Is he in peril?" |
4209 | Is it for this reason that you refuse to officiate as my bridesmaid? |
4209 | Is it friendly to desire the preservation of a life, whose probable goal seems the gallows, or perpetual imprisonment? 4209 Is it my Leo''s wish to leave me, to go alone?" |
4209 | Is it my privilege to decide who shall defend me? 4209 Is it not customary to preach the funeral sermons on Sunday?" |
4209 | Is it still there; do you see it? |
4209 | Is it the wish of the prisoner, that sentence should not be delayed? |
4209 | Is not this the identical handkerchief you found? |
4209 | Is there any change? |
4209 | Is this your itinerary, or Aunt Patty''s? |
4209 | It pleases you to ignore our past relations? |
4209 | It was last August that you made the sketch? |
4209 | Just now Kittie''s perceptions are awry, dazzled by the rose light that wrap? 4209 Justine, is Mrs. Graham here?" |
4209 | Knowing you had all my heart, you dared not let me learn that the rival existed only in my imagination? 4209 Leo, is this to be our first quarrel?" |
4209 | Leo, may I ask something? |
4209 | May I ask whether you expect to leave America immediately? |
4209 | May I come in? |
4209 | May I know why? |
4209 | Meanwhile I hope you see quite as clearly, that the thorns have all been stripped off and set thickly along my path? |
4209 | Mind you, Ned, you are not to interfere with me? |
4209 | Miss Gordon is a very noble woman, kinder to all the world than to herself; but did gratitude to her involve sacrifice of me? |
4209 | Miss Gordon, your uncle wishes to know whether you are ready to go home; as he has an engagement that calls him away? |
4209 | Mrs. Emmet, will you please be so good as to go up after a while, and see if mother needs anything? |
4209 | My peerless Leo, have you ceased to love me? |
4209 | Ned, what have you done? 4209 No papers of any description?" |
4209 | None whatever; but may I ask if you know him? 4209 Not even to clear away aspersion from his beloved name?" |
4209 | Of course there is some infernal trick about this; but how do you account for it? 4209 Oh, my vineyard, come tell me why thy grapes are bitter? |
4209 | One of his servants? 4209 Peas ripe?" |
4209 | Phryne before the Judges--or Long''s"Thisbe?" |
4209 | Pray be seated; and tell me to whom I am indebted for the pleasure of this visit? |
4209 | Rabbit''s foot? 4209 See that pretty little thing, with the yellow head? |
4209 | Shall I help you down the steps? |
4209 | Shall I infer that your history is unknown here? |
4209 | She betrayed so much trepidation and embarrassment, that your suspicion was at once aroused? |
4209 | She excited your suspicions at once? |
4209 | She was then going in the direction of''Elm Bluff?'' |
4209 | Since when have you known it? |
4209 | Sister Ruth, may I see you alone? |
4209 | Sister, shall I see you safe on the car? |
4209 | So tired, Dulce? 4209 Suppose I have not failed?" |
4209 | Suppose I intend to put your gratitude to the test? 4209 That I went there deliberately to steal, and then to avoid detection, killed him? |
4209 | The other person asked:''When is it due?'' 4209 The true question, therefore, for your consideration, is not the kind of evidence in this case, but it is, what is the result of it in your minds? |
4209 | Then a different voice asked:''When it that due?'' |
4209 | Then his life is so precious, you are resolved to die, rather than trust me? |
4209 | Then it is pathetically true that reverence for the Renaissance has not crossed the Atlantic? |
4209 | Then it was only a snare, that advertisement? 4209 Then the justice that fled from criminal law, steers equally clear of the civil code? |
4209 | Then we will ignore outraged ties of blood, and treat on the ground of mere humanity? 4209 Then what becomes of''Elm Bluff''and its fine estate?" |
4209 | Then you did not see her? |
4209 | Then you find that age has not drawn the fangs from the old crippled Darrington lion, nor clipped his claws? |
4209 | Then you have a theory concerning the person who perpetrated this awful crime? |
4209 | Then you have discovered nothing new during your absence? |
4209 | Then you have missed your marron glace? |
4209 | Then you have no desire to become a permanent resident? |
4209 | Then your probation ends, and you become permanently a Sister of the''Anchorage''? |
4209 | Then''a life for a life''no longer satisfies? 4209 This is your handkerchief?" |
4209 | Understand me? 4209 Walk in, Madam; or perhaps it may be Miss? |
4209 | Was he bareheaded? |
4209 | Was it not rather strange that none of your friends recognized the description of you, published in the paper? |
4209 | Was it not''Ricardo''? |
4209 | Was it on British soil, or in the United States? |
4209 | Was it one hour or two? |
4209 | Was it raining at all when you saw the woman standing on the track? |
4209 | Was that your usual custom? |
4209 | Was the lamp lighted where you tied your bundle? |
4209 | We? 4209 Well, Andrew, what is it?" |
4209 | Well, dear child, what is the trouble? 4209 Well, is the game worth the candle? |
4209 | Well, mother? |
4209 | Well, my dear Leo, what is burdening your generous heart? |
4209 | Well, sir, how did the prisoner impress you? |
4209 | Well, what luck? |
4209 | What ai n''t''spicious to you, Mars Lennox? 4209 What are your sources of information?" |
4209 | What conditions would you impose upon me? |
4209 | What did the Doctor say about me? |
4209 | What did you eat last night, Bedney? 4209 What do you know concerning the contents of your client''s will?" |
4209 | What do you mean by one side? 4209 What do you want of my''always- wide- awake- contrariness''? |
4209 | What does it mean? 4209 What does this mean? |
4209 | What else remains? 4209 What hankchuf, Marse Alfred? |
4209 | What is her age? |
4209 | What is it that sustains you in your frightful martyrdom? 4209 What is it, Aunt Patty? |
4209 | What is it, dearie? 4209 What is the matter, Sister?" |
4209 | What is the matter? 4209 What is the matter? |
4209 | What is the matter? |
4209 | What is the name of that person? |
4209 | What is the price of that cluster of Niphetos buds? |
4209 | What is the trouble? 4209 What is there left to fear? |
4209 | What is your business? |
4209 | What is your idea? |
4209 | What is your name? |
4209 | What name, miss, must I give, when the lie- yer finishes his bizness? |
4209 | What possible excuse can he offer for such negligence, when he knew that Leighton would read the service? |
4209 | What time is it? |
4209 | What time is it? |
4209 | What truth has been discovered? |
4209 | What was the condition of the room? |
4209 | What was the impression left upon your mind? |
4209 | What will be done now? |
4209 | What--? 4209 When Deacon Nathan brought you up to town, did you know for what purpose Mr. Dunbar wanted you?" |
4209 | When and where did you get it? 4209 When and where did you next see the prisoner?" |
4209 | When did you get back, Lennox? |
4209 | When did you return home? |
4209 | When do you expect to see Dunbar? |
4209 | When is that due? |
4209 | When will the examination take place? |
4209 | When will the next train leave here? |
4209 | When witness asked:Did not the great beauty of the embassadress accomplish the pardon and restoration of the erring mother?" |
4209 | When you heard that Gen''l Darrington had been murdered, did you think of this man and his singular behavior that night? |
4209 | Where are the bonds and other securities described in this paper? |
4209 | Where are you going? |
4209 | Where did you see my-- my--? |
4209 | Where did you sleep that night? |
4209 | Where did you stay while in town? |
4209 | Where do you live? |
4209 | Where is he? |
4209 | Where is she? |
4209 | Where is your chivalrous, courageous, unselfish, devoted lover? 4209 Where is your son Deucalion?" |
4209 | Where were you during that visit? |
4209 | Which is the Museum? |
4209 | Which is to signify that Miss Angerline smells a mouse? 4209 Who are you? |
4209 | Who dared to cut your hair-- and thrust that garb upon you? 4209 Who educated you?" |
4209 | Who found the chloroform vial? |
4209 | Who has been villifying of me? 4209 Who has supplanted me in your heart, for once I know it was all my own?" |
4209 | Who is that woman winding thread? |
4209 | Who lost the book? |
4209 | Who made you a judge of the value of souls? 4209 Who signed your order?" |
4209 | Who told you the prisoner had heard your conversation with the man you met that night? |
4209 | Why deny it, Leo? 4209 Why did you not give him the handkerchief you found?" |
4209 | Why did you not go to a hotel, as you were advised to do? |
4209 | Why did you not wait until I came home? 4209 Why distress yourself with sad forebodings? |
4209 | Why do you hazard that dangerous schedule, instead of waiting for the passenger express? |
4209 | Why do you persist in rejecting the overtures of those who could assist, who might successfully defend you? 4209 Why may I not assist in nursing?" |
4209 | Why not admit at once that, Bernice- like, you freely offered up your beautiful hair as love''s sacrifice? |
4209 | Why not? 4209 Why not? |
4209 | Why not? |
4209 | Why poor Kittie? 4209 Why should his literary taste disquiet you? |
4209 | Why should my cousin, whose present is so rose- colored, whose future so blissful, turn to rake amid the ashes of the past? |
4209 | Why should you hide, as though you were a culprit? 4209 Why should you infer that any such proposal has been made to me?" |
4209 | Why specifically for five years? |
4209 | Why waylay and torment me? 4209 Why were my orders not obeyed?" |
4209 | Why were you so unwilling that I should try to release you? |
4209 | Why will you persist in regarding as an enemy, the one person in all the world who is most anxious to befriend you? |
4209 | Why, how''dy, Mars Alfred? 4209 Why, my dear? |
4209 | Why, not for my sake, since I desire it so earnestly? |
4209 | Why? 4209 Why? |
4209 | Why? 4209 Why?" |
4209 | Why? |
4209 | Will Miss Gordon grant me a promenade in lieu of the dance, which misfortunes conspired to prevent me from securing earlier in the evening? |
4209 | Will he make no attempt to secure his rights? |
4209 | Will it comfort you to know that I suffer even more than you do; that I am plunged into a fiercer purgatory than that to which I have condemned you? 4209 Will the prisoner answer such questions as in the opinion of the court are designed solely to establish her innocence? |
4209 | Will you allow me, this Christmas morning, to comfort myself in some degree, by leaving here a few flowers to brighten your desolate surroundings? |
4209 | Will you be so good as to tell me my lover''s name, and where the fox terriers of the law unearthed him? |
4209 | Will you come back to X----and help me to establish a home for women, who are destitute alike of money and of family ties? 4209 Will you deliver into his hand the note I am writing?" |
4209 | Will you do me the kindness to persuade her to see me? |
4209 | Will you explain how your handkerchief chanced to be found on your grandfather''s pillow? 4209 Will you give me some paper and a pen?" |
4209 | Will you give me your interpretation of their message? |
4209 | Will you go with me to Elm Bluff? |
4209 | Will you go, Churchill, or shall I? |
4209 | Will you let me have the care of it? 4209 Will you please write out the proper form on the paper in front of you?" |
4209 | Will you sit a while with me? 4209 Will you stay with me? |
4209 | With your Honor''s permission, I should like to ask the prisoner whom she expected to see, when she recognized the voice? |
4209 | Witness? 4209 Would it be pardonable for me to ask whom you suspect; would it be a violation of professional etiquette for you to tell me?" |
4209 | Would you violate regulations by leaving the waiting- room open to- night? |
4209 | Yes, and I have come to take you where you can identify that face? |
4209 | Yes; can I ever forget any details of that night? 4209 Yet now, when I propose to live solely for somebody else, you shake me off, and repudiate me? |
4209 | Yet you withheld her message when I might have comforted her? |
4209 | You admitted her to your Master''s presence? |
4209 | You are Beryl Brentano, the granddaughter of General Darrington? |
4209 | You are going back to town? 4209 You are positive it was the twenty- sixth?" |
4209 | You are positive, you wo n''t try a little hot punch, or a glass of wine? |
4209 | You are quite willing, then, to see General Darrington''s granddaughter suffer for the crime? |
4209 | You are resolved neither to look at nor speak to me? 4209 You are sure he is a foreigner?" |
4209 | You are taking me to prison? |
4209 | You can afford to pay for her flight? |
4209 | You can not be the child of-- of Ellice? |
4209 | You can not forgive my rejection of the overtures for a compromise wrung from you by extremity of dread, when I started to Dakota? |
4209 | You carried her to his room? |
4209 | You deem me incapable of intentionally betraying your noble trust? |
4209 | You defy me? |
4209 | You dismiss me? 4209 You do not recollect any other circumstance?" |
4209 | You enticed me? |
4209 | You feel better now? |
4209 | You have been feeling her pulse, how is the fever? |
4209 | You have no interest, then, in discovering the wretch who murdered your master? 4209 You have set your heart on this; nothing less will content you?" |
4209 | You intend to take me to prison? |
4209 | You knew my mother? 4209 You know your A B C''s?" |
4209 | You live at No.--West-- Street, between 8th and 9th Avenue? |
4209 | You loved your little boy? |
4209 | You mean Mr. Dunbar? 4209 You mean those etchings; or the designs for the Christmas cards? |
4209 | You offer me this as a correct expression of Gen''l Darrington''s wishes regarding the distribution of his estate, real and personal? |
4209 | You prefer that your ideal should sacrifice you? 4209 You regard me as a vindictive old bear?" |
4209 | You still consider her guilty? |
4209 | You testified before the Coroner? |
4209 | You think the train was on time? |
4209 | You think, however, that I am the victim of some hallucination? |
4209 | You were crippled in a collision between two freight trains? |
4209 | You were led to infer that Gen''l Darrington had refused her application for money? |
4209 | You will not go to see the face? 4209 You will not? |
4209 | You--? |
4209 | Your brother? |
4209 | Your conscience tells you that--"Am I allowed a conscience? 4209 Your sister is not my enemy, I hope, and need I so rank your sister''s brother? |
4209 | ''"How far is the bridge?''" |
4209 | ''Pears to me, there''s nothing left to happen; but howsomever, if ther''s more to come, tell us what''s to pay now?" |
4209 | ''You imagine that I am the person who robbed you of Gen''l Darrington''s fortune? |
4209 | 19?" |
4209 | A lamp- post stood in front of the station, and he saw her plainly; asked her why she did not stay in the room, which he had left open for her? |
4209 | A woman guilty of taking that old man''s life? |
4209 | About as enticing as a plunge into a dry cistern, suddenly unroofed? |
4209 | After all my martyrdom, must I lose the one hope that sustained me?" |
4209 | After all, have we misread our classics? |
4209 | After leaving town is there a straight road?" |
4209 | After some unimportant preliminaries, the District Solicitor asked:"When did you first see the prisoner, who now sits before you?" |
4209 | Ah!--don''t you know? |
4209 | Am I, her child, the lawful heir of Gen''l Darrington''s fortune? |
4209 | And now may I ask, to whom my thanks are due?" |
4209 | Any message, Patterson?" |
4209 | Are antiquity and foreign birthplace imperatively essential factors in the award of praise for even faithful and noble work? |
4209 | Are the chances even? |
4209 | Are the children of Culture, the heiresses of"all the ages", really more refined than the proud old dames of the era of Spartacus? |
4209 | Are there any legal quibbles that could affect my rights?" |
4209 | Are we not one?" |
4209 | Are we too pure to follow where Christ led the way?" |
4209 | Are you afraid of me?" |
4209 | Are you akin to Parrhasius that you come to gloat over the agonies of a moral and mental vivisection? |
4209 | Are you and Dyce holding a camp meeting all by yourselves? |
4209 | Are you ashamed to show me your idol''s face?" |
4209 | Are you better?" |
4209 | Are you guilty, or not guilty?" |
4209 | Are you here hunting evidence on a death- bed? |
4209 | Are you married to that brute, and is it loyalty that nerves you? |
4209 | Are you very tired?" |
4209 | Are you, in your soul, at peace with God?" |
4209 | Arrest me? |
4209 | As a friend to General Darrington and his adopted son Prince? |
4209 | As for the lawyers? |
4209 | At last she said, in a tone peculiarly calm, like that of one talking in sleep:"What did it mean-- that verdict?" |
4209 | Athenian, Roman, Carthagenian, Syracusan? |
4209 | Aunt Patty, do you know where he has gone?" |
4209 | Baked possum, and fried chitterlings? |
4209 | Because I bemoan my rash haste, will you say good- bye kindly? |
4209 | Bedney, have you seen a ghost?" |
4209 | Beg pardon, madam, but would you be so good as to tell me whether this freak of nature was congenital, or the result of some frightful accident?" |
4209 | Beggared by time, could she afford to risk the eternal heritage? |
4209 | Besides, if you live to explain matters, there will be no necessity; but suppose you do not? |
4209 | Beyond the reach of the usurper''s witchery, was it not possible that she might regain the alienated heart? |
4209 | But first, tell me why she did not go to the hospital, and submit to the operation which she says will cure her?" |
4209 | But mebbe you do n''t know what this is, that I wrapped up in it, to bring us good luck?" |
4209 | But was the race fair? |
4209 | By daubing, or fiddling?" |
4209 | By what perverted organon of ethics has it come to pass in sociology, that the badge of favoritism is rarely the guerdon of merit? |
4209 | By what right dare you intrude upon me?" |
4209 | By whom?" |
4209 | Can it be possible? |
4209 | Can she behold without a shudder, this tell- tale instrument of her monstrous crime?" |
4209 | Can this generation"--in the foremost files of time--"afford to believe that a grim significance lurks in the desuetude of typical judicial ermine? |
4209 | Can you be generous and indulge my selfish whim?" |
4209 | Can you tell me nothing more?" |
4209 | Can you, by the wildest flight of fancy conjecture that aught but disgrace and utter ruin remain for me?'' |
4209 | Conscious of her innocence, she braves peril that would chill the blood of men, and extort almost any secret; and shall I tell you the reason? |
4209 | Could guilt be masked by this fair semblance of childlike guilelessness? |
4209 | Could he have supplanted Mr. Dunbar in her affection? |
4209 | Could n''t you leave her-- the child-- with me? |
4209 | Could she adopt this ruse to thwart pursuit of the man whom she idolized? |
4209 | Could she bear to wound that proud spirit? |
4209 | Could she stoop so low as to throw herself upon his mercy? |
4209 | Could the Christ to whom I dedicated it, fail to answer my prayer for success? |
4209 | Could you bleach out the blood that spots her soul?" |
4209 | Could you induce the telegraph operator here to have a message delivered to him on the train, before it reaches Washington City?" |
4209 | Darrington?" |
4209 | Deaden the stings of memory? |
4209 | Dear Bertie-- Bertie, are you listening?" |
4209 | Dear mother, my mother, would you shelter him, and leave your baby to die?" |
4209 | Did Sister Serena succeed in fitting the black dress I sent?" |
4209 | Did he understand as fully the marvellous change in the beautiful face, that had lured him from his chapel tryst with his betrothed? |
4209 | Did n''t I tell you so? |
4209 | Did she get the letter the Doctor said he wrote?" |
4209 | Did she know it? |
4209 | Did some prophetic intuition show her at that instant the Phicean Hill and its dread tenant, which sooner or later we must all confront? |
4209 | Did some subtle mesmeric current telegraph her soul, that her foul wrongs were at last avenged? |
4209 | Did the bloodthirsty soul of Tiberius comprehend the stainless innocence of the victims he crushed for pastime on the rocks below Villa Jovis? |
4209 | Did they tell you there is no chance for me?" |
4209 | Did you deem it a kindness to aid in binding her to an unloving husband? |
4209 | Did you ever hear of my pardoning a wrong against my family name and honor? |
4209 | Did you ever hear she had a lover?" |
4209 | Did you get lost hunting''Elm Bluff,''and miss your train on that account?" |
4209 | Did you get your greedy nature from some sable Dodonean ancestress? |
4209 | Did you go back to''Elm Bluff''that night, after I met you in the pine woods?" |
4209 | Did you know this?" |
4209 | Did you know this?" |
4209 | Did you lose anything that day you come to our house, and had the talk with old Marster?" |
4209 | Did you mean-- ah-- will you tell me now?" |
4209 | Did you never see a mule take the sulks on his way to the corn crib and the fodder rack, and refuse to budge, even for his own benefit? |
4209 | Did you shield the family name by enduring the purgatory of seeing your own on the list of penitentiary convicts? |
4209 | Did you understand my instructions?" |
4209 | Do I believe her guilty? |
4209 | Do I look like a criminal?" |
4209 | Do n''t you hear Pilot baying the cunstable?" |
4209 | Do not all of us sooner or later? |
4209 | Do not we likewise? |
4209 | Do the scales balance? |
4209 | Do we covet our neighbor''s lover?" |
4209 | Do you deliberately offer me this wanton insult?" |
4209 | Do you doubt that no sun sets, without seeing me on my knees, praying God''s blessing of perfect happiness for you? |
4209 | Do you imagine I shall ever lose sight of you, till the vows are uttered that make you my wife? |
4209 | Do you imagine that after all the injuries I have inflicted on you, I can consent to help you beggar yourself?" |
4209 | Do you mean that you are hunting down a woman?" |
4209 | Do you recollect Ortes''booty when Antwerp fell into Alva''s hands? |
4209 | Do you recollect that during the storm on the night of the murder the lightning was remarkably vivid and severe?" |
4209 | Do you remember a sombre book we read while yachting, which contained this brave confession of a woman, whose marriage made her historic? |
4209 | Do you think I can ever forget the blessedness of the balm that your faith in me poured into my crushed, despairing heart? |
4209 | Do you think I could bear to know that I had caused even a hand''s breadth of cloud to drift over the heavenly blue of your happy sky? |
4209 | Do you understand at last, why I must save him? |
4209 | Do you understand me so little, that you doubted my word?" |
4209 | Do you wonder I am afraid to die? |
4209 | Do you wonder that so charming and picturesque a tour tempts me sorely?" |
4209 | Do you, my princess?" |
4209 | Do you? |
4209 | Do you? |
4209 | Does any man live, idiotic enough to consider me so soft- hearted? |
4209 | Does it not make your head swim to spin round in this circle of reasoning? |
4209 | Does not this array of accusing circumstances demand as careful consideration, as the chain held up to your scrutiny by the prosecution? |
4209 | Does she spare the victim because it quivers, and dies hard?" |
4209 | Dunbar, did he refuse outright?" |
4209 | Far away, among the orange groves of Louisiana, would he forget his threat, or fail to execute it? |
4209 | Five years of penal servitude to ransom his soul; was the price exorbitant? |
4209 | For my sake can you endure till the end?'' |
4209 | For where else can I ever have a home, till I join my father and mother? |
4209 | For your sake I am here, hoping to spare you some pangs; to allow you at least an opportunity to see him--""What have you done? |
4209 | Glancing back as he untied his bridle rein, his unspoken comment was:"Superb woman; I wonder what brings her here? |
4209 | Governor Glenbeigh is worthy even of her, but will his devotion win her at last?" |
4209 | Grim sarcasm is it not, that the child of Independence Day should be locked up in a dungeon?" |
4209 | Guilty, or not guilty?" |
4209 | Had association lifted the brute''s instincts to the plane of human antipathies? |
4209 | Had not Homer a prevision of the faith that Aphrodites''altar belonged in the Temple of the Fates? |
4209 | Had relenting fate, or a merciful prayer- answering- God placed in her hand the long sought clue? |
4209 | Had she merely anticipated by an hour his petition for release? |
4209 | Had the jury so promptly decided to destroy her? |
4209 | Had the stars rolled back on their courses to rescue Sisera? |
4209 | Had the world swung from its moorings? |
4209 | Has Prince arrived?" |
4209 | Has nothing been heard from Dyce?" |
4209 | Has she any right to demand it?" |
4209 | Hast Thou indeed forsaken me?" |
4209 | Have I not suffered enough at your hands? |
4209 | Have I now the right to accept or reject proffered aid?" |
4209 | Have I suffered in vain? |
4209 | Have we, supercilious braggarts of this age of progress, attained the prudential wisdom of Sanhedrim? |
4209 | Have you found out who''Ricordo''is?" |
4209 | Have you left me anything to live for? |
4209 | Have you lost your senses?" |
4209 | Have you lost your way?" |
4209 | Have you no mothers, no sisters, whose memory can arouse some reverence, some respect for womanhood in your brutal souls?" |
4209 | Have you overdrawn your bank account?" |
4209 | Have you promised to dance with Mayfield? |
4209 | Have you spared any exertion to accomplish that which you believe would overwhelm me with sorrow?" |
4209 | Have you?" |
4209 | Having found my darling, can I afford to run the risk of losing her? |
4209 | He was most out of breath, but sez he:''Is the train in yet?'' |
4209 | Her conscience is lashing her; could you quiet that? |
4209 | Here, Leo, take your anemones; red, are they not, as the blood once chilled down yonder, in that huge stone kennel? |
4209 | Here-- what do you find in a huge stone well sunk into the bowels of the earth? |
4209 | Here?" |
4209 | How can your lofty soul, your pure heart, tolerate a creature so craven, so vile?" |
4209 | How dare you annoy me? |
4209 | How dare you cherish such a suspicion? |
4209 | How dare you commit your crimes, raise your red hands, in the sacred name of justice? |
4209 | How delightfully it will revive the dear old days to have him back? |
4209 | How did she find out?" |
4209 | How did you discover him?" |
4209 | How did you hear it?" |
4209 | How did you know who had found it?" |
4209 | How different the world would seem to her; but, what was a world worth, that had never known Mr. Dunbar? |
4209 | How do I know that you and Bedney are not the guilty parties, instead of General Darrington''s granddaughter? |
4209 | How fair and smooth, rosy and fragrant it appeared to her famishing heart? |
4209 | How have I hurt you? |
4209 | How incredible it seems that such awful crimes can be committed in our quiet neighborhood? |
4209 | How is he?" |
4209 | How many aeons divided the totem coyote from the she- wolf of Romulus and Remus? |
4209 | How many aeons shall we wait, to behold the leopard and the lamb pasturing together in peace? |
4209 | How many are required? |
4209 | How much had he discovered? |
4209 | How much more for one Grand Duke jasmine in the centre?" |
4209 | How should you know? |
4209 | How well she knew the ghastly ivory features, the sunken eyeless sockets-- of that veritable death''s head? |
4209 | Human nature is an infernally vexing bundle of paradoxes, and when a man throws his conscience in your teeth, what then? |
4209 | I am about to draw upon your sympathy; can I ever overdraw my account with that royal bank?" |
4209 | I expected that fate; but knowing the truth, would you have permitted the execution of that sentence?" |
4209 | I provided liberally for her once; can you expect me to do so again? |
4209 | I said,''A what?'' |
4209 | I said:''Are you sick, that you reject your meals?'' |
4209 | I saw him-- let me see? |
4209 | I sent for a copy of the will because--""May I tell you why? |
4209 | I shall wear my white rose to make all the future sweet with a blessed love; but have you no word of assurance for my hungry ears? |
4209 | I want to be entirely free, bound by no promise; and could I ask release, unless you accepted yours?" |
4209 | I wrote it, and as she stood looking at the paper, she said:"''Doctor do you believe in an Ahnung?'' |
4209 | I--""You imagine I am one of the generous contributors? |
4209 | I--? |
4209 | I?" |
4209 | If I could only find out which side he raily is on?" |
4209 | If I say to you, because I believed in you, trusted you, will you repay me now, by granting a favor which I shall ask?" |
4209 | If I should come back and ask you to take me for the remainder of my life, as a sister worker, will you let me die with the''anchor''on my breast? |
4209 | If I should live, how can I put the rightful owners in immediate possession? |
4209 | If a definite amount should be allowed me each year, during my minority, could I do as I please with that sum?" |
4209 | If anything happens, how shall I pacify Susie? |
4209 | If assured that her own affection was unpledged, would the bare form and ceremonial of honor bind his allegiance to his betrothed? |
4209 | If conscience bade you leave these peaceful and hallowed halls, for work far more difficult, would you hesitate to obey? |
4209 | If he is really your brother, what did you expect to accomplish by fostering my belief that he was your lover?" |
4209 | If her brother still lived, was the world so wide, that she could never trace his erring passage through it? |
4209 | If pupils will not heed admonition, and defy the efforts of instructors, is the institution responsible for the failure in education? |
4209 | If she answered, would the steel springs of some trap close upon her? |
4209 | If she died, could he escape the moral responsibility of having been her murderer? |
4209 | If she had defied her mother''s wishes, and refused to go to X--? |
4209 | If she threw herself even now upon his mercy, would he grant to her that which he had denied himself? |
4209 | If she were once more the Beryl of old, and he were free? |
4209 | If the accused administered chloroform, did it indicate that her original intention was solely to rob the vault? |
4209 | If the accused be innocent as the archangels, but suffer conviction and execution, what expiation can justice offer for judicially slaughtering him? |
4209 | If the gloomiest pessimist of this century can extract that comfort, what may I not hope for my future? |
4209 | If you are unwilling to speak to him, will you permit me to mention the subject to him?" |
4209 | If you habitually drink poppy juice, can you fail to be drowsy?" |
4209 | If you had never set your eyes on me? |
4209 | If you have robbed me of that which is all I care for on earth, what solace can I find in release? |
4209 | If, as you suggest, I should waive an examination, should I escape imprisonment?" |
4209 | If, in the last hour, you had known all my peril, all that my promise entails, would you have released me? |
4209 | If? |
4209 | In assailing the validity of circumstantial evidence, has he not cut his bridges, burned his ships behind him? |
4209 | In one way you can help me; do you know Dr. Grantlin of New York?" |
4209 | In the days when I wept for my-- shall I say''bisc''? |
4209 | In the matrix of time, do human tears and human blood- drops leave their record, to be conned when Nemesis holds her last assize? |
4209 | In the midst of her eloquent prologue would darkness smite suddenly, and end the drama? |
4209 | In what lines do your talents run?" |
4209 | In what way?" |
4209 | Inflicting upon himself the smarting sting of the keenest possible humiliation, could she hope that in the attainment of his aim he would spare her? |
4209 | Into what quagmire have your little feet slipped? |
4209 | Is Thy mercy a mockery?" |
4209 | Is it my Uncle, or-- or Lennox?" |
4209 | Is it so hard for us to keep the Ten Commandments? |
4209 | Is it that you will be there soon?" |
4209 | Is it true that in abstract valuation,"the bird in hand, is worth two in the bush?" |
4209 | Is it true that want of money obliged him to quit Germany before he obtained the university degree, for which his studies were intended to fit him?" |
4209 | Is it true, that"Orestes and Pylades have no sisters?" |
4209 | Is it you? |
4209 | Is justice a''daughter of the horse- leech''?" |
4209 | Is my darling too proud?" |
4209 | Is my sketch so good a portrait?" |
4209 | Is not the refusal of the prisoner proof positive,''confirmation strong as proofs of Holy Writ''of the truth of my theory? |
4209 | Is she entirely unconscious, or has she lucid intervals?" |
4209 | Is the act of administering the chloroform consistent with the theory of deliberate and premeditated murder? |
4209 | Is the house open? |
4209 | Is there a distinction, without a difference, between police gazettes and the journalistic press? |
4209 | Is your business urgent?" |
4209 | It is like the negative of a common photograph, brought out by a dark background; and do you notice the figures are invisible at certain angles? |
4209 | It is pleasure, it is virtue; what not? |
4209 | It is safer and less arduous to keep step with the main army; but some must perish on picket duty, and is the choice ours, when an order details us?" |
4209 | It means--"She held up her waxen hand, and into her voice stole immeasurable tenderness:"Shall I tell you all it means? |
4209 | Knee breeches, sun flowers, niello, cretonne, Nanking bowls, lily dados? |
4209 | Lennox, you know how often I have longed to make the journey to Greece, Asia Minor and Egypt; you remember I have repeatedly expressed the wish? |
4209 | Lennox?" |
4209 | Leo, no man can ever be worthy to call you wife, but perhaps I am less unworthy than you probably deem me? |
4209 | Life had poured its richest wine into the cup she held to her lips; should she risk spilling the priceless draught? |
4209 | Life is very uncertain, and if I should die, what would become of my Bertie? |
4209 | Look you, Leo, because I can not wear Kohinoor, must I disport myself without any diamond necklace? |
4209 | Looks innocent as a wax doll does n''t she? |
4209 | Married? |
4209 | May I speak at once, and explain the circumstances which you consider so mysterious as to justify the shameful indignity put upon me?" |
4209 | Meanwhile what becomes of the"Survival of the Fittest", which is only a euphemism for the strangling of the feeble by the strong? |
4209 | Mr. Churchill:"At that time did you suspect her relationship to your client, Gen''l Darrington?" |
4209 | Mr. Churchill:"Did you at that examination detect any traces of chloroform?" |
4209 | Mr. Mansfield, have you any good news for me?" |
4209 | Mrs. Singleton took both hands, and held them firmly:"Do you believe it right to commit suicide?" |
4209 | Murdered-- by whom?" |
4209 | My darling-- you dare not deny it? |
4209 | My dear girl, under which flag do you fight? |
4209 | My father''s Beryl? |
4209 | My good little girl, will you?" |
4209 | My monk of the mountains? |
4209 | Need I tell you that I am as innocent as you are? |
4209 | No joy in the consciousness of your triumphant vindication?" |
4209 | No power can undo the ruin, and since all that made it lovely-- its stainless purity-- is irrevocably destroyed, why preserve it? |
4209 | Now do you consider that she has any claim on me?" |
4209 | Now tell me how many of my rivals, how many audacious suitors you have held at bay, by these gay Penelope webs woven in my absence?" |
4209 | Now tell me, Leo, what you intend to do with your life?" |
4209 | Now tell me, do you know this?" |
4209 | Now what I wants to know is, WHAR is the''delectible corpus''what you lieyers argufied over?" |
4209 | Now what could I say? |
4209 | Now, honey, can you testify before God and man, that hank''cher ai n''t yourn?" |
4209 | Now-- will you leave me?" |
4209 | Of course you remember that he believes in evolution? |
4209 | Of course you understand Spanish?" |
4209 | On what ground, with what weapons would he force her to fight? |
4209 | Once, I gave you my sympathy; now, when I need help, will you give me yours?" |
4209 | Or because he may be a criminal? |
4209 | Or does the Sheriff want you?" |
4209 | Pardon me, how old are you?" |
4209 | Police after you? |
4209 | Poor thing, why did they let her come? |
4209 | Pray what is the fascination? |
4209 | Prince Darrington will take any legal steps to recover the legacy which the loss of the will appears to have cancelled?" |
4209 | Prince Darrington?" |
4209 | Putting her lips close to Beryl''s ear, she whispered:"Did you lose a sleeve button?" |
4209 | Quite surprised, are n''t you, dear?" |
4209 | Retracing her steps, Leo said falteringly:"In my efforts to comfort you, have I only wounded more sorely? |
4209 | Seems funny to you, doctor? |
4209 | Selfish you think? |
4209 | Sez I,''How do you know so much''? |
4209 | Sez I,''Who''? |
4209 | Sez he:''How fur is that bridge?'' |
4209 | Shall I be denied the recompense? |
4209 | Shall I give you the key to an enigma which she knows means death? |
4209 | Shall I read it?" |
4209 | Shall I tell you my mission here?" |
4209 | She added the dime to the pennies she could ill afford to spare from her small hoard, and said:"Will you be so kind as to sprinkle it? |
4209 | She answered slowly and solemnly:''An Ahnung-- a presentiment? |
4209 | She shudders at sight of the handkerchief; did she not give it to him, in some happy hour as a tender Ricordo? |
4209 | Should n''t you say she looks like an angel, and ought to be put on the altar to hear the prayers of sinners? |
4209 | Should not memories of Calypso incline him to unlock the fetters of Penelope?" |
4209 | Should she return to the"Anchorage", and advertise Bertie''s danger? |
4209 | Sick souls cry out to me louder than dying bodies; and who dare deny me the privilege of ministering to both? |
4209 | Since I have you, can I ever again feel tired?" |
4209 | Since he can never own''La Peregrina,''must he eschew pearl studs in his shield front? |
4209 | Singleton?" |
4209 | So, for Miss Gordon''s sake, you immolated me?" |
4209 | Some one on the other side asked:"What is the order? |
4209 | Stoicism, hedonism, the gospel of''Sweetness and Light''; what is it, may I ask, that your aesthetic priests furnish, to feed immortal British souls? |
4209 | Suppos''n appearances are agin her? |
4209 | Suppose each knows perfectly well that as regards the true gold, both are equally bankrupt? |
4209 | Suppose that he knew that Mrs. Brentano and her daughter would inherit a large fortune, if Gen''l Darrington died intestate? |
4209 | Suppose that this mysterious person was fully cognizant of the family secrets of the Darringtons? |
4209 | Suppose they had condemned me to death? |
4209 | Supposin''you did tell me, what''s the upshot?" |
4209 | Take it, and keep it up in my cell?" |
4209 | Tell me why you set this snare, baited with Bertie''s name?" |
4209 | Tell me, Bertie, have you made your eternal salvation sure? |
4209 | That I have just returned from a visit to him?" |
4209 | That is''Brother Luke''; looks like one of Il Frate''s wonderful heads, does he not? |
4209 | That was the meaning? |
4209 | That was the most merciful verdict they could give to the world?" |
4209 | That was the verdict of the jury?" |
4209 | The Judge repeated his question:"Is it the desire of the prisoner to answer the presentation of the prosecution? |
4209 | The case is too large? |
4209 | The end was not far distant, she must endure a little longer; but that last battle with Mr. Dunbar? |
4209 | The pergola-- with great amber grape clusters-- and white stars of jasmine shining through the leaves? |
4209 | The swaying of the veil of futurity, under the straining hands of our guardian angels? |
4209 | The world had cruelly misjudged her; was she any more lenient to those who might be equally innocent? |
4209 | Then he axed me:''When is that due?'' |
4209 | Then she leaned back, plying her knitting needles, and began to chant:"Who will be the leader when the Bridegroom comes?" |
4209 | Then the clerk of the court asked:"Gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon your verdict?" |
4209 | There is no objection?" |
4209 | They kindly tell me that illness and the doctor''s commands cost me the loss of my hair; and after all, why should I object to the convict coiffure? |
4209 | Three twenty- dollar gold coins were discovered on the carpet, and one in the vault; what became of the remain ing three hundred and twenty dollars? |
4209 | To ascertain exactly where he skulks, is my mission to Canada; for I thought I had schooled myself to bear the pain of--""What do you mean? |
4209 | To oppose this black and frightful host of proofs, what does she offer us? |
4209 | To suffer so long, so keenly, and yet lose the victory; could it be possible that her sacrifice would prove utterly futile? |
4209 | To the best of your knowledge and belief it is the identical handkerchief you found on Gen''l Darrington''s pillow?" |
4209 | To what quarter of the globe was he tracking the desperate culprit, who had fled sorely wounded from his murderous assault? |
4209 | To- day she asked herself:"What shall I do with my life?" |
4209 | Turning toward Beryl, he said:"If you left Elm Bluff at sunset, why did you not take the 7:15 train?" |
4209 | Turning, he laid his lips close to the silky fold of hair that had fallen across her ear:"If I dismiss this witness, will you tell me the truth? |
4209 | Two little red flannel safety bags, cure- alls, to be tied around our necks, close to our noses, as if we could not smell them a half mile off? |
4209 | Uncle, will you speak, or shall I?" |
4209 | Unperceived, Judge Dent had found a seat behind her, and leaning forward he whispered:"Will you permit me to speak for you?" |
4209 | Vindication? |
4209 | Was I not foredoomed to be always at the mercy of Tiberius?" |
4209 | Was it a beacon of hope, or did the rays fall on features cold under the kiss of death? |
4209 | Was it before or after dinner?" |
4209 | Was it only three days since the beginning of this excruciating martyrdom of soul; and how much longer could she endure silently, and keep her reason? |
4209 | Was it partition, or total loss, of her precious kingdom? |
4209 | Was it the same world? |
4209 | Was it true, that his hand had dashed a foul blot of shame upon the fall pure page of a girl''s existence, and written there the fatal finis? |
4209 | Was it worth while to save her against her will; to preserve the heart he coveted, for the vile miscreant to whom she had irrevocably given it? |
4209 | Was n''t appearances all agin Joseph''s bruthren when the money and the silver cup was found in their bags, and them afleein home? |
4209 | Was she a consummate actress, or had he made a frightful mistake, and goaded an innocent girl to the verge of frenzy? |
4209 | Was she feigning madness, or under the terrible nervous strain, did her mind wander? |
4209 | Was she indeed so unsuspicious of the quicksand on which stood the fair temple of her hopes in marriage? |
4209 | Was she running straight into some fatal trap, ingeniously baited with her brother''s portrait? |
4209 | Was she the same Beryl; was the eternal and unchanging God over all, as of yore? |
4209 | Was that witching light already fading in her sky? |
4209 | Was the accused utterly callous, or paralyzed by consciousness of her crime; or biding her time for a dramatic outburst of vindicating testimony? |
4209 | Was the officer the wary spider watching her movements, waiting to slip down the metal snare, and devour her hopes? |
4209 | Was the solution of Miss Gordon''s cold, calm indifference to be found in the presence and devotion of the Bishop? |
4209 | Was the storm even now muttering, that would rudely toss aside the rose leaves that garlanded the feet of her beloved? |
4209 | Was the weapon valued merely because of the possibility of fleshing it in the heart of him who had darkened her life? |
4209 | Was there any possible way by which she might be kept in ignorance of this foul disgrace? |
4209 | Was there any sign of blood, or anything that looked as if he had been bruised and wounded by some heavy blow?" |
4209 | We build chapels, and feed orphans, and clothe widows, and endow reformatories, and establish beds in hospitals, how? |
4209 | We say:''Lord what wilt Thou have us to do?'' |
4209 | Well may Bedney ask,''where is your corpus delicti?'' |
4209 | Were it not a bailable offence in the court of honor, if his arm fell palsied? |
4209 | Were you exposed to the worst of it?" |
4209 | Whar''s that oath you done swore, to help''fend Miss Ellie''s child? |
4209 | What a contrast it presented, to the steaming tin platter and dull tin quart cups carried daily to the adjoining cell? |
4209 | What a noble, pure face? |
4209 | What a theme for Dore or Munkacsy?" |
4209 | What a wonderful man he is, considering his age? |
4209 | What actuated you then? |
4209 | What ails you?" |
4209 | What an awful retribution for her disobedience to her parents? |
4209 | What are you going to do?" |
4209 | What are you running from?" |
4209 | What became of the handkerchief?" |
4209 | What can I do for you? |
4209 | What can I do?" |
4209 | What can you do? |
4209 | What conceivable interest had he in the destruction of Gen''l Darrington''s will? |
4209 | What corroding mildew of discontent has fallen from Mrs. Parkman''s velvet dress, and rusted the bright blade of your chivalry?" |
4209 | What could you do? |
4209 | What crown could fame bring to one, dwelling always in the chill shadow of a terrible shame? |
4209 | What damnable infatuation can bind you to that miserable poltroon, who skulks in safety, knowing that the penalty of his evil deeds falls on you? |
4209 | What detained you?" |
4209 | What did you find?" |
4209 | What does he comprehend of my past? |
4209 | What does society offer me? |
4209 | What else can I do with my life? |
4209 | What else does the world to which I belong, offer me now?" |
4209 | What had become of the proud, high- spirited ambitious girl, who laughed at adverse fortune, and forgot poverty in lofty aspirations? |
4209 | What have I done, my People? |
4209 | What have you done with my Bertie? |
4209 | What have you to dread?" |
4209 | What have you to say in defence?" |
4209 | What is presentiment? |
4209 | What is the matter now, Ned?" |
4209 | What is the matter, Aunt Dyce, you look troubled? |
4209 | What is the matter? |
4209 | What is the opinion of the world to me? |
4209 | What is the secret of the bleaching? |
4209 | What is this wicked world coming to? |
4209 | What is your purpose? |
4209 | What meant the light that broke upon her, as if the walls of heaven had fallen, and let all the glory out? |
4209 | What necromancy so wonderful, as the potentiality of if? |
4209 | What new hobby do you intend that I shall ride?" |
4209 | What next? |
4209 | What not? |
4209 | What papers are you searching for?" |
4209 | What think you of his scheme?" |
4209 | What think you of my idea?" |
4209 | What was there in the figure of a kneeling monk, to drive the blood in cold waves to her throbbing heart? |
4209 | What were the materials wherewith he worked? |
4209 | What will the world think of us, must be subordinated to, what is the best for my young sister, whose cross it is my duty to lighten? |
4209 | What witness? |
4209 | What would I not do-- what would I not suffer-- to secure your peace, and to prove my gratitude?" |
4209 | What''s she done now?" |
4209 | What''s that? |
4209 | What? |
4209 | When do you expect to take your departure?" |
4209 | When do you wish me to start?" |
4209 | When he told her it was, she said: Then it could not be construed into clemency or favoritism if you ordered me into solitary confinement? |
4209 | When the goal is in sight, do we dwell on the hazard, the strained muscles, the blistered feet, and the fierce thirst the long race- course cost us? |
4209 | When will the laws of heredity, and the by- laws of agnation result in an altruism, where human bloodshed is an unknown horror? |
4209 | Where can I find some water?" |
4209 | Where could she spend the next seven hours? |
4209 | Where did you find them?" |
4209 | Where do you hide yourself?" |
4209 | Where is Bertie? |
4209 | Where is Dyce? |
4209 | Where is Dyce?" |
4209 | Where is Thy justice? |
4209 | Where is he? |
4209 | Where is it?" |
4209 | Where is she? |
4209 | Where is the key of this room?" |
4209 | Where is your brother?" |
4209 | Where is your luggage?" |
4209 | Where is your trunk-- your baggage?" |
4209 | Where is yours? |
4209 | Wherein hast thou been wronged?" |
4209 | Which is the primitive and parent flame, the sacred fire of Pueblo Estufas, of Greek Prytaneum, of Roman Vesta, of Persian Atish- khudahs? |
4209 | Which side is you on?" |
4209 | Who do you expect me to ketch for two hundred and fifty dollars?" |
4209 | Who know that they are weary and spent, while the prize brightens, nears as they stretch panting to grasp it? |
4209 | Who lives in the present? |
4209 | Who murdered General Darrington?" |
4209 | Who rang?" |
4209 | Why could n''t you temperlize? |
4209 | Why did you allow me to suffer from a false theory, that you knew made my life a slow torture?" |
4209 | Why did you cast him off? |
4209 | Why did you conceal from me the fact that you had a brother? |
4209 | Why did you lead me astray, and confirm my suspicion that you were shielding a lover?" |
4209 | Why do you endure these horrors which might be abolished? |
4209 | Why hast Thou forsaken me?" |
4209 | Why have you told me you were at the mercy of Tiberius?" |
4209 | Why multiply cobwebs? |
4209 | Why not? |
4209 | Why should I? |
4209 | Why were valuable bonds untouched? |
4209 | Why will you not try a little of this port wine? |
4209 | Why you must help me to screen him from ruin?" |
4209 | Why, Sister? |
4209 | Why? |
4209 | Will Prince remain in X--?" |
4209 | Will theosophy ever explain and augment prescience? |
4209 | Will you ask that it may be given to me? |
4209 | Will you be loyal to your tyrant?" |
4209 | Will you believe me, if I swear to you, that I have come as a friend?" |
4209 | Will you confess all to me?" |
4209 | Will you cross- question the witness on the stand?" |
4209 | Will you follow the regimen I shall prescribe for yourself?" |
4209 | Will you give me the name of the man whom I am hunting? |
4209 | Will you lay your hand in mine just once, while I tell you?" |
4209 | Will you look through it?" |
4209 | Will you not be there?" |
4209 | Will you not trust me?" |
4209 | Will you notify him that he can obtain his book by calling at the''Anchorage''?" |
4209 | Will you permit such a shameful, cruel outrage? |
4209 | Will you read my confession?" |
4209 | Will you receive it now; will you look into the heart which I have bared for your scrutiny?" |
4209 | Will you ride with me tomorrow afternoon?" |
4209 | Will you send it to me?" |
4209 | Will you show me the way to the woman who wishes to see me?" |
4209 | Will you show us some of the work done in this department?" |
4209 | Will you take a seat, and excuse the feebleness that forces me to receive visits in my bed- room?" |
4209 | Will you tarnish your glory, and have all the world say that a nation who first dedicated a temple in their city, to Clemency, found none in yours? |
4209 | Women will only be in the way; and who could desire to contemplate so horrible a spectacle? |
4209 | Wonder what her business can be with the old general?" |
4209 | Would day never dawn again? |
4209 | Would no instinct of natural affection prompt him to seek news of the mother who had idolized him? |
4209 | Would starvation entitle her to drink? |
4209 | Would that be any warm poultice to your hurt feelin''s? |
4209 | Would the Sheriff in X----, would Mr. Dunbar himself, recognize her in her gray disguise? |
4209 | Would the shock of the tidings of her arrest kill her mother? |
4209 | Would you be so diabolical as to use against her any utterances of delirium?" |
4209 | Would you believe she is a mother? |
4209 | Would you have died content knowing that your idol was guarded and safe, behind the cold shield of your little girl''s polluted body? |
4209 | Would you think it friendly for people to say, if she did n''t they will soon turn her aloose? |
4209 | You are afraid she will slip through your fingers, and get to heaven without the help of the gallows and the black cap? |
4209 | You are goaded to confession now, because you believe that I have secured your lover? |
4209 | You are positive, this is the handkerchief Bedney found? |
4209 | You are shocked?" |
4209 | You are waiting to see Ned?" |
4209 | You call yourselves men? |
4209 | You claim to be his nearest blood relative?" |
4209 | You detailed nurses, who refused to serve; I volunteer; have you any right to reject me?" |
4209 | You do n''t remember your own ma, do you?" |
4209 | You grieve over my heartlessness? |
4209 | You have brought the paper?" |
4209 | You have exaggerated the debt which you acknowledge; are you prepared to cancel it? |
4209 | You have locked me away from a dying mother; disgraced an innocent life; broken a girl''s pure, happy heart; what else is there to dread? |
4209 | You have long held the first place in my esteem, why seek to impair my valuation of your character? |
4209 | You moved out to''Possum Ridge; can you remember exactly when you were last in town?" |
4209 | You seem to have had a long and trying journey, madam?" |
4209 | You think peace the summum bonum? |
4209 | You think that merely a rhetorical metaphor, a tragic trope? |
4209 | You understand it perfectly, do n''t you?" |
4209 | You want to clap spurs on fate, and make her lower her own last record? |
4209 | You wish you had never set your eyes on me? |
4209 | Your heart garners that insult to me?" |
4209 | Your pretty cottage? |
4209 | are you going to faint? |
4209 | can I deny him now the confession he wishes to offer you? |
4209 | how have I ever wronged you, that you persecute me so vindictively, that you stab the only comfort life can ever hold for me?" |
4209 | if denial of guilt be sufficient defence, who would ever be convicted?'' |
4209 | of what does that remind you? |
4209 | one darkey had not touched the pot; his forefinger was clean; so Mr. Dunbar says,''Luke, here is your thief?'' |
4209 | these many years-- by setting my left hand to gossip about my right? |
4209 | what''s to pay?'' |
4209 | when shall we dwell in Spain?" |
4209 | where-- where is he?" |
4209 | who could have been so guilty; and what motive could have prompted such a fiendish act?" |
4209 | you see? |
1365 | And sawest thou on the turrets The King and his royal bride? 1365 And wilt thou, little bird, go with us? |
1365 | Are you so much offended, you will not speak to me? |
1365 | Do we not learn from runes and rhymes Made by the gods in elder times, And do not still the great Scalds teach That silence better is than speech? |
1365 | Do you ne''er think what wondrous beings these? 1365 Does not all the blood within me Leap to meet thee, leap to meet thee, As the springs to meet the sunshine, In the Moon when nights are brightest? |
1365 | Has the audacious Frank, forsooth, Subdued these seas and lands? 1365 High over the sails, high over the mast, Who shall gainsay these joys? |
1365 | How should I be fair and fine? 1365 How should I be white and red, So long, so long have I been dead?" |
1365 | I will give thee my coat of mail, Of softest leather made, With choicest steel inlaid; Will not all this prevail? |
1365 | Is it my fault,he said,"that the maiden has chosen between us? |
1365 | Led they not forth, in rapture, A beauteous maiden there? 1365 Must I relinquish it all,"he cried with a wild lamentation,"Must I relinquish it all, the joy, the hope, the illusion? |
1365 | Must it be Calvin, and not Christ? 1365 Shall I have naught that is fair?" |
1365 | Shall the bold lions that have bathed Their paws in Libyan gore, Crouch basely to a feebler foe, And dare the strife no more? 1365 The winds and the waves of ocean, Had they a merry chime? |
1365 | Then why dost thou turn so pale, O churl, And then again black as the earth? |
1365 | Was it for this the Roman power Of old was made to yield Unto Numantia''s valiant hosts On many a bloody field? 1365 What is that,"King Olaf said,"Gleams so bright above thy head? |
1365 | What is this that ye do, my children? 1365 What right hast thou, O Khan, To me, who am mine own, Who am slave to God alone, And not to any man? |
1365 | What then, shall sorrows and shall fears Come to disturb so pure a brow? 1365 What was that?" |
1365 | Where are we? 1365 Who is thy mother, my fair boy?" |
1365 | Who knows? 1365 Why dost thou persecute me, Saul of Tarsus?" |
1365 | Why standest thou here, dear daughter mine? 1365 Why touch upon such themes?" |
1365 | Why, then, should I care to have thee? |
1365 | Wouldst thou,--so the helmsman answered,"Learn the secret of the sea? |
1365 | Yes; seest thou not our journey''s end? 1365 ''O,''said he in answer,''the bear understood me very well; did you not observe how ashamed he looked while I was upbraiding him?'' |
1365 | ''T is Ovid, is it not? |
1365 | ( Enter DON CARLOS) Don C. Are not the horses ready yet? |
1365 | *************** THE SONG OF HIAWATHA< Notes from HIAWATHA follow> INTRODUCTION Should you ask me, whence these stories? |
1365 | < Greek here> Then saith the Christ, as silent stands The crowd,"What wilt thou at my hands?" |
1365 | A SHADOW I said unto myself, if I were dead, What would befall these children? |
1365 | A charmer of serpents? |
1365 | A great Prophet? |
1365 | A spy in the convent? |
1365 | A voice seemed crying from that grave so dreary,"What wouldst thou do, my daughter?" |
1365 | After long years, Do they remember me in the same way, And is the memory pleasant as to me? |
1365 | Ah, have they grown Forgetful of their own? |
1365 | Ah, how can I ever hope to requite This honor from one so erudite? |
1365 | Ah, when, on bright autumnal eves, Pursuing still thy course, shall I Lisp the soft shudder of the leaves, And hear the lapwing''s plaintive cry? |
1365 | Ah, who hath been here before us, When we rose early, wishing to be first? |
1365 | Ah, who then can be saved? |
1365 | Ah, who would love, if loving she might be Like Semele consumed and burnt to ashes? |
1365 | Ah, why could we not do it? |
1365 | Ah, why has that wild boy gone from me?" |
1365 | Ah, why shouldst thou be dead, when common men Are busy with their trivial affairs, Having and holding? |
1365 | Ah, yes, they said, Missing, but whither had he fled? |
1365 | Ah? |
1365 | Alas why art thou here, And the army of Amurath slain, And left on the battle plain?" |
1365 | Am I a king, that I should call my own This splendid ebon throne? |
1365 | Am I a spirit, or so like a spirit, That I could slip through bolted door or window? |
1365 | Am I awake? |
1365 | Am I comprehended? |
1365 | Am I not Herod? |
1365 | Am I not always fair? |
1365 | Am I not? |
1365 | Am I now free to go? |
1365 | Am I so changed you do not know my voice? |
1365 | Am I still dreaming, or awake? |
1365 | Am I to blame Because I can not love, and ne''er have known The love of woman or the love of children? |
1365 | Among the Squires? |
1365 | And Ahab then, the King of Israel, Said, Hast thou found me, O mine enemy? |
1365 | And I answer,--"Though it be, Why should that discomfort me? |
1365 | And Jezebel, the wife of Ahab, came And said to him, Why is thy spirit sad? |
1365 | And Jezebel, the wife of Ahab, said, Dost thou not rule the realm of Israel? |
1365 | And Sigrid the Queen, in her haughty way, Said,"Why do you smile, my goldsmiths, say?" |
1365 | And are there none to die for Israel? |
1365 | And are these Jews that throng and stare and listen? |
1365 | And are we Jews or Christians? |
1365 | And are we the aunts and uncles?" |
1365 | And can it be enough for these The Christian Church the year embalms With evergreens and boughs of palms, And fills the air with litanies? |
1365 | And did not some one say, or have I dreamed it, That Humphrey Atherton is dead? |
1365 | And did they say What clothes I came in? |
1365 | And did you not then say That they were overlooked? |
1365 | And does that prove That Preciosa is above suspicion? |
1365 | And doth punishment now give me its place for a home? |
1365 | And doubting and believing, has not said,"Lord, I believe; help thou my unbelief"? |
1365 | And evermore beside him on his way The unseen Christ shall move, That he may lean upon his arm and say,"Dost thou, dear Lord, approve?" |
1365 | And for what? |
1365 | And for whom is meant This portrait that you speak of? |
1365 | And has Gordonius the Divine, In his famous Lily of Medicine,-- I see the book lies open before you,-- No remedy potent enough to restore you? |
1365 | And have I not King Charles''s Twelve Good Rules, all framed and glazed, Hanging in my best parlor? |
1365 | And have they with them a pale, beautiful girl, Called Preciosa? |
1365 | And if I will He tarry till I come, what is it to thee? |
1365 | And in the public market- place? |
1365 | And is Fra Bastian dead? |
1365 | And is it so with them? |
1365 | And is this not enough? |
1365 | And must he die? |
1365 | And no more from the marble hew those forms That fill us all with wonder? |
1365 | And none have been sent back To England to malign us with the King? |
1365 | And now be quiet, will you? |
1365 | And now what see you? |
1365 | And now, my Judas, say to me What the great Voices Four may be, That quite across the world do flee, And are not heard by men? |
1365 | And poor Baptiste, what sayest thou? |
1365 | And served him right; But, Master Merry, is it not eight bells? |
1365 | And shall I go or stay? |
1365 | And shall the sad discourse Whispered within thy heart, by tenderness paternal, Only augment its force? |
1365 | And shall this count for nothing? |
1365 | And tell me, she with eyes of olive tint, And skin as fair as wheat, and pale brown hair, The woman at his side? |
1365 | And the Duke of Lermos? |
1365 | And the golden crown of pride? |
1365 | And the statue? |
1365 | And the stranger replied, with staid and quiet behavior,"Dost thou remember me still, Elizabeth? |
1365 | And the wave of their crimson mantles? |
1365 | And then the Duchess,--how shall I describe her, Or tell the merits of that happy nature, Which pleases most when least it thinks of pleasing? |
1365 | And thou bringest nothing back with thee? |
1365 | And thou, Prometheus; say, hast thou again Been stealing fire from Helios''chariot- wheels To light thy furnaces? |
1365 | And thou, and he, and I, all fell to crying? |
1365 | And thou? |
1365 | And was this the meed Of his sweet singing? |
1365 | And we who are so few And poorly armed, and ready to faint with fasting, How shall we fight against this multitude? |
1365 | And what answer Shall I take back to Grand Duke Cosimo? |
1365 | And what are the studies you pursue? |
1365 | And what care I? |
1365 | And what dishonor? |
1365 | And what earthquake''s arm of might Breaks his dungeon- gates at night? |
1365 | And what have you to show me? |
1365 | And what is that? |
1365 | And what is this placard? |
1365 | And what is this, that follows close upon it? |
1365 | And what more can be done? |
1365 | And what poets Were there to sing you madrigals, and praise Olympia''s eyes and Cherubina''s tresses? |
1365 | And what says Goodwife Proctor? |
1365 | And what so great occasion of seeing Rome hath possessed thee? |
1365 | And what then? |
1365 | And what''s it for? |
1365 | And where is the Prince? |
1365 | And where''s your warrant? |
1365 | And wherefore gone? |
1365 | And which way lies Segovia? |
1365 | And whither goest thou, gentle sigh, Breathed so softly in my ear? |
1365 | And whither goest thou, gentle sigh, Breathed so softly in my ear? |
1365 | And who absolved Pope Clement? |
1365 | And who are you, sir? |
1365 | And who hath said it? |
1365 | And who is Parson Palmer? |
1365 | And whose tomb is that, Which bears the brass escutcheon? |
1365 | And why do the roaring ocean, And the night- wind, wild and bleak, As they beat at the heart of the mother, Drive the color from her cheek? |
1365 | And will the righteous Heaven forgive? |
1365 | And will you paint no more? |
1365 | And wilt thou die? |
1365 | And with the bitterness of tears These eyes of azure troubled grow? |
1365 | And with what soldiery Think you he now defends the Eternal City? |
1365 | And with whom, I pray? |
1365 | And wouldst thou venture? |
1365 | And yet who is there that has never doubted? |
1365 | And yet who knows? |
1365 | And you others? |
1365 | And you? |
1365 | And your Abbot What''s- his- name? |
1365 | Antiochus? |
1365 | Anything you are afraid of?" |
1365 | Are all set free? |
1365 | Are all things well with them? |
1365 | Are but dead leaves that rustle in the wind? |
1365 | Are not these The tempest- haunted Hebrides, Where sea gulls scream, and breakers roar, And wreck and sea- weed line the shore? |
1365 | Are there no brighter dreams, No higher aspirations, than the wish To please and to be pleased? |
1365 | Are there no other artists here in Rome To do this work, that they must needs seek me? |
1365 | Are there not other youths as fair as Gabriel? |
1365 | Are there robbers in these mountains? |
1365 | Are these celestial manners? |
1365 | Are these things peace? |
1365 | Are they all bewitched? |
1365 | Are they all dead? |
1365 | Are they asleep, or dead, That open to the sky Their ruined Missions lie, No longer tenanted? |
1365 | Are they going Up to Jerusalem to the Passover? |
1365 | Are thou not ashamed? |
1365 | Are we demoniacs, are we halt or blind, Or palsy- stricken, or lepers, or the like, That we should join the Synagogue of Satan, And follow jugglers? |
1365 | Are we not in danger, Perhaps, of punishing some who are not guilty? |
1365 | Are ye come hither as against a thief, With swords and staves to take me? |
1365 | Are ye deceived? |
1365 | Are ye ready, ye children, to eat of the bread of Atonement?" |
1365 | Are you Christian monks, or heathen devils, To pollute this convent with your revels? |
1365 | Are you Ernestus, Abbot of the convent? |
1365 | Are you a Prophetess? |
1365 | Are you convinced? |
1365 | Are you from Madrid? |
1365 | Are you incapable? |
1365 | Are you not afraid of the evil eye? |
1365 | Are you not penitent? |
1365 | Are you prepared? |
1365 | Are you such asses As to keep up the fashion of midnight masses? |
1365 | Are you the master here? |
1365 | Art thou Elias? |
1365 | Art thou a master Of Israel, and knowest not these things? |
1365 | Art thou afraid? |
1365 | Art thou afraid?" |
1365 | Art thou convinced? |
1365 | Art thou not One of this man''s also disciples? |
1365 | Art thou not better now? |
1365 | Art thou safe? |
1365 | Art thou so near unto me, and yet I can not behold thee? |
1365 | Art thou so near unto me, and yet thy voice does not reach me? |
1365 | Art thou the Christ? |
1365 | As we draw near, What sound is it I hear Ascending through the dark? |
1365 | Awake from thy sleep, O dreamer? |
1365 | BY FRANCOISE MALHERBE Will then, Duperrier, thy sorrow be eternal? |
1365 | Banished on pain of death, why come you here? |
1365 | Be born again? |
1365 | Be willing for my Prince to die? |
1365 | Bears not each human figure the godlike stamp on his forehead Readest thou not in his face thou origin? |
1365 | Beautiful in form and feature, Lovely as the day, Can there be so fair a creature Formed of common clay? |
1365 | Because I said I saw thee Under the fig- tree, before Philip called thee, Believest thou? |
1365 | Because Isaiah Went stripped and barefoot, must ye wail and howl? |
1365 | Because a quaking fell On Daniel, at beholding of the Vision, Must ye needs shake and quake? |
1365 | Behold them where they lie How dost thou like this picture? |
1365 | Benvenuto? |
1365 | Betray thee? |
1365 | Bewitched? |
1365 | Brook, to what fountain dost thou go? |
1365 | Brook, to what garden dost thou go? |
1365 | Brook, to what river dost thou go? |
1365 | But art thou safe? |
1365 | But by what instinct, or what secret sign, Meeting me here, do you straightway divine That northward of the Alps my country lies? |
1365 | But do I comprehend aright The meaning of the words he sung So sweetly in his native tongue? |
1365 | But how is this? |
1365 | But in what way suppressed? |
1365 | But in what way? |
1365 | But pray tell me, lover, How speeds thy wooing? |
1365 | But shall I not ask Don Victorian in, to take a draught of the Pedro Ximenes? |
1365 | But she smiled with contempt as she answered:"O King, Will you swear it, as Odin once swore, on the ring?" |
1365 | But tell me, has a band of Gypsies passed this way of late? |
1365 | But the statues without breath, That stand on the bridge overarching The silent river of death? |
1365 | But this deed, is it good or evil? |
1365 | But what are these grave thoughts to thee? |
1365 | But what brings thee, thus armed and dight In the equipments of a knight? |
1365 | But what of Michael Angelo? |
1365 | But when he came at length to the words Priscilla had spoken, Words so tender and cruel:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?" |
1365 | But where are the old Egyptian Demi- gods and kings? |
1365 | But where is thy sword, O stranger? |
1365 | But where wast thou for the most part? |
1365 | But wherefore do I prate of this? |
1365 | But wherefore should I jest? |
1365 | But who Shall roll away the stone for us to enter? |
1365 | But who is This floating lily? |
1365 | But who say ye I am? |
1365 | But who shall dare To measure loss and gain in this wise? |
1365 | But who''s this? |
1365 | But why should I fatigue myself? |
1365 | But why should the reapers eat of it And not the Prophet of Zion In the den of the lion? |
1365 | But why this haste? |
1365 | But why, dear Master, Why do you live so high up in your house, When you could live below and have a garden, As I do? |
1365 | But why, you ask me, should this tale be told To men grown old, or who are growing old? |
1365 | But, speaking of green eyes, Are thine green? |
1365 | By none? |
1365 | By what name shall I call thee? |
1365 | C. Why not? |
1365 | Can I go? |
1365 | Can a man do such deeds, and yet not die By the recoil of his own wickedness? |
1365 | Can any good come out of Nazareth? |
1365 | Can he be afraid of the bees? |
1365 | Can it be so? |
1365 | Can the Master Doubt if we love Him? |
1365 | Can the innocent be guilty? |
1365 | Can this be Martha Hilton? |
1365 | Can this be Sir Allan McLean? |
1365 | Can this be The King of Israel, whom the Wise Men worshipped? |
1365 | Can this be the Messiah? |
1365 | Can this be the dwelling Of a disciple of that lowly Man Who had not where to lay his head? |
1365 | Can you bring The dead to life? |
1365 | Can you direct us to Friar Angelo? |
1365 | Can you not drink your wine in quiet? |
1365 | Can you not turn your thoughts a little while To public matters? |
1365 | Can you sit down in them, On summer afternoons, and play the lute Or sing, or sleep the time away? |
1365 | Cardinal Salviati And Cardinal Marcello, do you listen? |
1365 | Children, have ye any meat? |
1365 | Come, Aleph, Beth; dost thou forget? |
1365 | Come, tell me quickly,--do not lie; What secret message bring''st thou here? |
1365 | Compare me with the great men of the earth; What am I? |
1365 | Corey in prison? |
1365 | Could I refuse the only boon he asked At such a time, my portrait? |
1365 | Could you not be gone a minute But some mischief must be doing, Turning bad to worse? |
1365 | Could you not paint it for me? |
1365 | Cried the fierce Kabibonokka,"Who is this that dares to brave me? |
1365 | Cueva? |
1365 | Cueva? |
1365 | D''ye hear? |
1365 | Dear Mary, are you better? |
1365 | Deep distress and hesitation Mingled with his adoration; Should he go, or should he stay? |
1365 | Descended from the Marquis Santillana? |
1365 | Did I dream it, Or has some person told me, that John Norton Is dead? |
1365 | Did I forsake my father and my mother And come here to New England to see this? |
1365 | Did I not caution thee? |
1365 | Did I not tell thee I was but half persuaded of her virtue? |
1365 | Did I not tell you they were overlooked? |
1365 | Did I say she was? |
1365 | Did he drink hard? |
1365 | Did he give us the beautiful stork above On the chimney- top, with its large, round nest? |
1365 | Did no one see thee? |
1365 | Did not an Evil Spirit come on Saul? |
1365 | Did not the Witch of Endor bring the ghost Of Samuel from his grave? |
1365 | Did the warlocks mingle in it, Thorberg Skafting, any curse? |
1365 | Did you meet Benvenuto As you came up the stair? |
1365 | Did you not On one occasion hide your husband''s saddle To hinder him from coming to the sessions? |
1365 | Did you not carry once the Devil''s Book To this young woman? |
1365 | Did you not hear it whisper? |
1365 | Did you not say the Devil hindered you? |
1365 | Did you not say the Magistrates were blind? |
1365 | Did you not say your husband told you so? |
1365 | Did you not scourge her with an iron rod? |
1365 | Didst thou hear, from those lofty chambers, The harp and the minstrel''s rhyme?" |
1365 | Didst thou rob no one? |
1365 | Do I look like your aunt? |
1365 | Do I not know The life of woman is full of woe? |
1365 | Do I not see you Attack the marble blocks with the same fury As twenty years ago? |
1365 | Do I stand too near thee? |
1365 | Do n''t you think so? |
1365 | Do ye consider not It is expedient that one man should die, Not the whole nation perish? |
1365 | Do ye see a man Standing upon the beach and beckoning? |
1365 | Do you abuse our town? |
1365 | Do you believe in dreams? |
1365 | Do you come here to poison these good people? |
1365 | Do you count as nothing A privilege like that? |
1365 | Do you ever need me? |
1365 | Do you ne''er think of Florence? |
1365 | Do you ne''er think who made them and who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought? |
1365 | Do you not hear the drum? |
1365 | Do you not know a heavier doom awaits you, If you refuse to plead, than if found guilty? |
1365 | Do you not know me? |
1365 | Do you not see her there? |
1365 | Do you not see them? |
1365 | Do you refuse to plead?--''T were better for you To make confession, or to plead Not Guilty.-- Do you not hear me?--Answer, are you guilty? |
1365 | Do you remember Cueva? |
1365 | Do you remember, Julia, when we walked, One afternoon, upon the castle terrace At Ischia, on the day before you left me? |
1365 | Do you remember, in Quevedo''s Dreams, The miser, who, upon the Day of Judgment, Asks if his money- bags would rise? |
1365 | Do you see anything? |
1365 | Do you see that Livornese felucca, That vessel to the windward yonder, Running with her gunwale under? |
1365 | Do you see that? |
1365 | Do you think She is bewitched? |
1365 | Do you think we are going to sing mass in the cathedral of Cordova? |
1365 | Does he not warn us all to seek The happier, better land on high, Where flowers immortal never wither; And could he forbid me to go thither? |
1365 | Does he ride through Rome Upon his little mule, as he was wo nt, With his slouched hat, and boots of Cordovan, As when I saw him last? |
1365 | Does he say that? |
1365 | Does he still keep Above his door the arrogant inscription That once was painted there,--"The color of Titian, With the design of Michael Angelo"? |
1365 | Does she Without compulsion, of her own free will, Consent to this? |
1365 | Does the same madness fill thy brain? |
1365 | Don C. And is it faring ill To be in love? |
1365 | Don C. And pray, how fares the brave Victorian? |
1365 | Don C. And where? |
1365 | Don C. But tell me, Come you to- day from Alcala? |
1365 | Don C. I do; But what of that? |
1365 | Don C. Jesting aside, who is it? |
1365 | Don C. Of course, the Preciosa danced to- night? |
1365 | Don C. Pray, how much need you? |
1365 | Don C. What was the play? |
1365 | Don C. Why do you ask? |
1365 | Don C. You mean to tell me yours have risen empty? |
1365 | Don L. Why not music? |
1365 | Dost thou accept the gift? |
1365 | Dost thou answer nothing? |
1365 | Dost thou gainsay me? |
1365 | Dost thou hear? |
1365 | Dost thou not answer me? |
1365 | Dost thou not know That I have power enough to crucify thee? |
1365 | Dost thou not know that what is best In this too restless world is rest From over- work and worry? |
1365 | Dost thou not see it? |
1365 | Dost thou not see upon my breast The cross of the Crusaders shine? |
1365 | Dost thou remember The Gypsy girl we saw at Cordova Dance the Romalis in the market- place? |
1365 | Dost thou remember Thy earlier days? |
1365 | Dost thou remember When first we met? |
1365 | Dost thou remember, Philip, the old fable Told us when we were boys, in which the bear Going for honey overturns the hive, And is stung blind by bees? |
1365 | Dost thou see on the rampart''s height That wreath of mist, in the light Of the midnight moon? |
1365 | Dost thou still doubt? |
1365 | Dost thou think So meanly of this Michael Angelo As to imagine he would let thee serve, When he is free from service? |
1365 | Doth he fall away In the last hour from God? |
1365 | Doth he make himself To be a Prophet? |
1365 | Doth he you pray to say that he is God? |
1365 | Doth his heart fail him? |
1365 | Doth not the Scripture say,"Thou shalt not suffer A Witch to live"? |
1365 | Dust thou believe these warnings? |
1365 | EPIMETHEUS OR THE POET''S AFTERTHOUGHT Have I dreamed? |
1365 | Earnestly prayed for his foes, for his murderers? |
1365 | Elias must first come? |
1365 | False friend or true? |
1365 | First love or last love,--which of these two passions Is more omnipotent? |
1365 | First say, who are you? |
1365 | First tell me what keeps thee here? |
1365 | First, what right have you To question thus a nobleman of Spain? |
1365 | For him? |
1365 | For swearing, was it? |
1365 | For what are all our contrivings, And the wisdom of our books, When compared with your caresses, And the gladness of your looks? |
1365 | For what purpose? |
1365 | For when the abbot plays cards, what can you expect of the friars? |
1365 | For wherein shall a man be profited If he shall gain the whole world, and shall lose Himself or be a castaway? |
1365 | For why should I With out- door hospitality My prince''s friend thus entertain? |
1365 | For ye have died A better death, a death so full of life That I ought rather to rejoice than mourn.-- Wherefore art thou not dead, O Sirion? |
1365 | For, do you see? |
1365 | Friend, wherefore art thou come? |
1365 | From the coming anguish and ire? |
1365 | From the distinguished poet? |
1365 | From what? |
1365 | Giles Corey''s wife? |
1365 | Giles, what is the matter? |
1365 | Good Alcuin, I remember how one day When my Pepino asked you,''What are men?'' |
1365 | Good Master Merry, may I say confound? |
1365 | Good Master, tell us, for what reason was it We could not cast him out? |
1365 | Goodman Corey, Say, did you tell her? |
1365 | HELEN OF TYRE What phantom is this that appears Through the purple mist of the years, Itself but a mist like these? |
1365 | Hail!--Who art thou That comest here in this mysterious guise Into our camp unheralded? |
1365 | Hardly a glimmer Of light comes in at the window- pane; Or is it my eyes are growing dimmer? |
1365 | Has he forgotten The many mansions in our father''s house? |
1365 | Has it the Governor''s seal? |
1365 | Has perchance the old Nokomis, Has my wife, my Minnehaha, Wronged or grieved you by unkindness, Failed in hospitable duties?" |
1365 | Hast thou again been stealing The heifers of Admetus in the sweet Meadows of asphodel? |
1365 | Hast thou been robbed? |
1365 | Hast thou done this, O King? |
1365 | Hast thou e''er reflected How much lies hidden in that one word, NOW? |
1365 | Hast thou forgotten thy promise? |
1365 | Hast thou given gold away, and not to me? |
1365 | Hast thou never Lifted the lid? |
1365 | Hath any man been here, And brought Him aught to eat, while we were gone? |
1365 | Have I divined your secret? |
1365 | Have I not sacked the Temple, and on the altar Set up the statue of Olympian Zeus To Hellenize it? |
1365 | Have I offended so there is no hope Here nor hereafter? |
1365 | Have I offended you? |
1365 | Have I thine absolution free To do it, and without restriction? |
1365 | Have any of the Rulers Believed on him? |
1365 | Have the Gods to four increased us Who were only three? |
1365 | Have ye forgotten certain fugitives That fled once to these hills, and hid themselves In caves? |
1365 | Have ye not read What David did when he anhungered was, And all they that were with him? |
1365 | Have ye not read, how on the Sabbath- days The priests profane the Sabbath in the Temple, And yet are blameless? |
1365 | Have you a stag''s horn with you? |
1365 | Have you done this, by the appliance And aid of doctors? |
1365 | Have you forgotten That in the market- place this very day You trampled on the laws? |
1365 | Have you forgotten The doom of Heretics, and the fate of those Who aid and comfort them? |
1365 | Have you forgotten that he calls you Michael, less man than angel, and divine? |
1365 | Have you forgotten? |
1365 | Have you found them? |
1365 | Have you heard what things have happened? |
1365 | Have you lifted me Into the air, only to hurl me back Wounded upon the ground? |
1365 | Have you not dealt with a Familiar Spirit? |
1365 | Have you not seen him do Strange feats of strength? |
1365 | Have you seen John Proctor lately? |
1365 | Have you seen my saddle? |
1365 | Have you signed it, Or touched it? |
1365 | Have you so soon forgotten all lessons of love and forgiveness? |
1365 | Have you thought well of it? |
1365 | He who foretold to Herod He should one day be King? |
1365 | He who is sitting there, With a rollicking, Devil may care, Free and easy look and air, As if he were used to such feasting and frolicking? |
1365 | Hear''st thou that cry? |
1365 | Hearest not the osprey from the belfry cry? |
1365 | Hearest thou not The flute players, and the voices of the women Singing their lamentation? |
1365 | Hearest thou voices on the shore, That our ears perceive no more, Deafened by the cataract''s roar? |
1365 | Heart''s dearest, Why dost thou sorrow so? |
1365 | Heart''s dearest, Why dost thou sorrow so? |
1365 | Heaven protect us? |
1365 | Hereafter?--And do you think to look On the terrible pages of that Book To find her failings, faults, and errors? |
1365 | Him that was once the Cardinal Caraffa? |
1365 | Him who redeemed it, the Son, and the Spirit where both are united? |
1365 | His form is the form of a giant, But his face wears an aspect of pain; Can this be the Laird of Inchkenneth? |
1365 | How came they here? |
1365 | How came this spindle here? |
1365 | How came you in? |
1365 | How can I tell the many thousand ways By which it keeps the secret it betrays? |
1365 | How can I tell the signals and the signs By which one heart another heart divines? |
1365 | How can a man be born when he is old? |
1365 | How can a man that is a sinner do Such miracles? |
1365 | How can it be that thou, Being a Jew, askest to drink of me Which am a woman of Samaria? |
1365 | How can these things be? |
1365 | How can you say that it is a delusion, When all our learned and good men believe it,-- Our Ministers and worshipful Magistrates? |
1365 | How canst thou help it, Philip? |
1365 | How canst thou rejoice? |
1365 | How could an old man work, when he was starving? |
1365 | How could the daughter of a king of France We d such a duke? |
1365 | How could you do it? |
1365 | How could you know beforehand why we came? |
1365 | How couldst thou see me? |
1365 | How dare you tell a lie in this assembly? |
1365 | How did it end? |
1365 | How did she look? |
1365 | How did you know the children had been told To note the clothes you wore? |
1365 | How do I know but under my own roof I too may harbor Witches, and some Devil Be plotting and contriving against me? |
1365 | How do you like that Cornish hug, my lad? |
1365 | How does that work go on? |
1365 | How far is it? |
1365 | How fare the Jews? |
1365 | How fares Don Carlos? |
1365 | How fares it with brothers and sisters thine?" |
1365 | How fares it with the holy monks of Hirschau? |
1365 | How have thine eyes been opened? |
1365 | How he entered Into the house of God, and ate the shew- bread, Which was not lawful, saving for the priests? |
1365 | How in the turmoil of life can love stand, Where there is not one heart, and one mouth, and one hand? |
1365 | How is she clad? |
1365 | How is she? |
1365 | How is that young and green- eyed Gaditana That you both wot of? |
1365 | How is the Prince? |
1365 | How is the Prince? |
1365 | How know you that? |
1365 | How know you that? |
1365 | How late is it, Dolores? |
1365 | How long is it ago Since this came unto him? |
1365 | How long shall I be with you, and suffer you? |
1365 | How long shall I still reign? |
1365 | How long, how long, Ere thou avenge the blood of Thine Elect? |
1365 | How may I call your Grace? |
1365 | How mean you? |
1365 | How more than we do? |
1365 | How my Quakers? |
1365 | How now, sir? |
1365 | How now? |
1365 | How opened he thine eyes? |
1365 | How shall I be seated? |
1365 | How shall I do it? |
1365 | How shall I e''er thank you For such kind language? |
1365 | How shall I more deserve it? |
1365 | How should we know? |
1365 | How shouldst thou know me, woman? |
1365 | How their pursuers camped against them Upon the Seventh Day, and challenged them? |
1365 | How was this done? |
1365 | How will men speak of me when I am gone, When all this colorless, sad life is ended, And I am dust? |
1365 | How with the rest? |
1365 | How''s this, Don Carlos? |
1365 | How''s this? |
1365 | How? |
1365 | I What is this I read in history, Full of marvel, full of mystery, Difficult to understand? |
1365 | I am ashamed Not to remember Reynard''s fate; I have not read the book of late; Was he not hanged?" |
1365 | I ask myself, Is this a dream? |
1365 | I betray thee? |
1365 | I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I knew not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song? |
1365 | I burn his house? |
1365 | I can not rest until my sight Is satisfied with seeing thee, What, then, if thou wert dead? |
1365 | I do adjure thee by the living God, Tell us, art thou indeed the Christ? |
1365 | I do not know thee,--nor what deeds are thine: Love, love, what wilt thou with this heart of mine? |
1365 | I fear to ask; yet wherefore are my fears? |
1365 | I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?" |
1365 | I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?" |
1365 | I hear your mothers and your sires Cry from their purgatorial fires, And will ye not their ransom pay? |
1365 | I know He is arisen; But where are now the kingdom and the glory He promised unto us? |
1365 | I not dare? |
1365 | I pray you, do you speak officially? |
1365 | I recognize thy features, but what mean These torn and faded garments? |
1365 | I said to Ralph, says I,"What''s to be done?" |
1365 | I saw the wedding guests go by; Tell me, my sister, why were we not asked? |
1365 | I see a gleaming light O say, what may it be?" |
1365 | I think the Essenians Are wiser, or more wary, are they not? |
1365 | I wonder now If the old man will die, and will not speak? |
1365 | I wonder who those strangers were I met Going into the city? |
1365 | I yield to the will divine, The city and lands are thine; Who shall contend with fate?" |
1365 | I''ll ride down to the village Bareback; and when the people stare and say,"Giles Corey, where''s your saddle?" |
1365 | III LORD, IS IT I? |
1365 | INTERLUDE"What was the end? |
1365 | If I have spoken evil, Bear witness of the evil; but if well, Why smitest thou me? |
1365 | If I tell you earthly things, And ye believe not, how shall ye believe, If I should tell you of things heavenly? |
1365 | If still further you should ask me, Saying,"Who was Nawadaha? |
1365 | If you already know it, why not tell me? |
1365 | In his case very ill. Don C. Why so? |
1365 | In raiment of camel''s hair, Begirt with leathern thong, That here in the wilderness, With a cry as of one in distress, Preachest unto this throng? |
1365 | In the workshop of Hephaestus What is this I see? |
1365 | In this life of labor endless Who shall comfort my distresses? |
1365 | In what gardens of delight Rest thy weary feet to- night? |
1365 | Indeed, since that sad hour I have not slept, For thinking of the wrong I did to thee Dost thou forgive me? |
1365 | Is Aretino dead? |
1365 | Is Faith of no avail? |
1365 | Is Florence then a place for honest men To flourish in? |
1365 | Is Hope blown out like a light By a gust of wind in the night? |
1365 | Is Master Corey here? |
1365 | Is he guilty? |
1365 | Is he in Antioch Among his women still, and from his windows Throwing down gold by handfuls, for the rabble To scramble for? |
1365 | Is he not sailing Lost like thyself on an ocean unknown, and is he not guided By the same stars that guide thee? |
1365 | Is it Castilian honor, Is it Castilian pride, to steal in here Upon a friendless girl, to do her wrong? |
1365 | Is it I? |
1365 | Is it Saint Joseph would say to us all, That love, o''er- hasty, precedeth a fall? |
1365 | Is it a foolish dream, an idle and vague superstition? |
1365 | Is it a ghost from the grave, that has come to forbid the betrothal? |
1365 | Is it a phantom of air,--a bodiless, spectral illusion? |
1365 | Is it changed, or am I changed? |
1365 | Is it fiction, is it truth? |
1365 | Is it finished? |
1365 | Is it for the poor? |
1365 | Is it honor For one who has been all these noble dames, To tramp about the dirty villages And cities of Samaria with a juggler? |
1365 | Is it my fault that he failed,--my fault that I am the victor?" |
1365 | Is it not he who used to sit and beg By the Gate Beautiful? |
1365 | Is it not so? |
1365 | Is it not so? |
1365 | Is it not so? |
1365 | Is it not true, that fourteen head of cattle, To you belonging, broke from their enclosure And leaped into the river, and were drowned? |
1365 | Is it not true, that on a certain night You were impeded strangely in your prayers? |
1365 | Is it not true? |
1365 | Is it not written,"Upon my handmaidens will I pour out My spirit, and they shall prophesy"? |
1365 | Is it perhaps some foolish freak Of thine, to put the words I speak Into a plaintive ditty? |
1365 | Is it so long ago That cry of human woe From the walled city came, Calling on his dear name, That it has died away In the distance of to- day? |
1365 | Is it the tender star of love? |
1365 | Is it then in vain That I have warned thee? |
1365 | Is it thou? |
1365 | Is it to bow in silence to our victors? |
1365 | Is it to shoot red squirrels you have your howitzer planted There on the roof of the church, or is it to shoot red devils? |
1365 | Is it you, Hubert? |
1365 | Is not Mount Tabor As beautiful as Carmel by the Sea? |
1365 | Is not his mother Called Mary? |
1365 | Is not this The carpenter Joseph''s son? |
1365 | Is she always thus? |
1365 | Is that my sin? |
1365 | Is that quite prudent? |
1365 | Is that your meaning? |
1365 | Is the house of Ovid in Scythian lands now? |
1365 | Is the maiden coy? |
1365 | Is there a land of such supreme And perfect beauty anywhere? |
1365 | Is there anything can harm you? |
1365 | Is there no other architect on earth? |
1365 | Is there no way Left open to accord this difference, But you must make one with your swords? |
1365 | Is this Guadarrama? |
1365 | Is this Jerusalem? |
1365 | Is this a dream? |
1365 | Is this a tavern and drinking- house? |
1365 | Is this apparition Visibly there, and yet we can not see it? |
1365 | Is this the fruit of my toils, of my vigils and prayers and privations? |
1365 | Is this the passage? |
1365 | Is this the road to Segovia? |
1365 | Is this the tenant Gottlieb''s farm? |
1365 | Is this the way A Cardinal should live? |
1365 | Is this the way I was going? |
1365 | Is this your son? |
1365 | Is thy name Preciosa? |
1365 | Is thy work done, Hephaestus? |
1365 | Is your name Kempthorn? |
1365 | Is''t silver? |
1365 | It is I. Dost thou not know me? |
1365 | It is not cock- crow yet, and art thou stirring? |
1365 | Jason, didst thou take note How these Samaritans of Sichem said They were not Jews? |
1365 | Jesus Barabbas, called the Son of Shame, Or Jesus, Son of Joseph, called the Christ? |
1365 | John Gloyd, Whose turn is it to- day? |
1365 | Justice? |
1365 | King Olaf laid an arrow on string,"Have I a coward on board?" |
1365 | Knowest thou Him, who forgave, with the crown of thorns on his temples? |
1365 | Knowest thou John the Baptist? |
1365 | Let me die; What else remains for me? |
1365 | Life- giving, death- giving, which will it be; O breath of the merciful, merciless Sea? |
1365 | Lightning''s brother, where is he? |
1365 | Logic makes an important part Of the mystery of the healing art; For without it how could you hope to show That nobody knows so much as you know? |
1365 | Lord, dost thou care not that my sister Mary Hath left me thus to wait on thee alone? |
1365 | Lord, he thought, in heaven that reignest, Who am I, that thus thou deignest To reveal thyself to me? |
1365 | Lord, is it I? |
1365 | Lord, is it I? |
1365 | Lord, is it I? |
1365 | MAD RIVER IN THE WHITE MOUNTAINS TRAVELLER Why dost thou wildly rush and roar, Mad River, O Mad River? |
1365 | Malaria? |
1365 | Marry, is that all? |
1365 | May not a saint fall from her Paradise, And be no more a saint? |
1365 | May not the Devil take the outward shape Of innocent persons? |
1365 | Meanwhile, hast thou searched well thy breast? |
1365 | Moreover, what has the world in store For one like her, but tears and toil? |
1365 | Mother, what does marry mean? |
1365 | Must each noble aspiration Come at last to this conclusion, Jarring discord, wild confusion, Lassitude, renunciation? |
1365 | Must even your delights and pleasures Fade and perish with the capture? |
1365 | Must it be Athanasian creeds, Or holy water, books, and beads? |
1365 | Must struggling souls remain content With councils and decrees of Trend? |
1365 | Must ye go stripped and naked? |
1365 | My Philip, prayest thou for me? |
1365 | My child, who is it? |
1365 | My son, you say? |
1365 | Need we hear further? |
1365 | No; you might as well say,"Don''t- you- want- some?" |
1365 | Not even a cup of water? |
1365 | Not to thy father? |
1365 | Nothing that you are afraid of?" |
1365 | Now in what circle of his poem sacred Would the great Florentine have placed this man? |
1365 | Now tell me which of them Will love him most? |
1365 | Now tell me, Padre Cura,--you know all things, How came these Gypsies into Spain? |
1365 | Now, Simon Kempthorn, what say you to that? |
1365 | Now, little Jesus, the carpenter''s son, Let us see how thy task is done; Canst thou thy letters say? |
1365 | Nymph or Muse, Callirrhoe or Urania? |
1365 | O Claudia, How shall I save him? |
1365 | O Death, why is it I can not portray Thy form and features? |
1365 | O Jason, my High- Priest, For I have made thee so, and thou art mine, Hast thou seen Antioch the Beautiful? |
1365 | O Joseph Caiaphas, thou great High- Priest How wilt thou answer for this deed of blood? |
1365 | O Priest, and Pharisee, Who hath warned you to flee From the wrath that is to be? |
1365 | O Sirion, Sirion, Art thou afraid? |
1365 | O beautiful, awful summer day, What hast thou given, what taken away? |
1365 | O hasten; Why dost thou pause? |
1365 | O how from their fury shall I flee? |
1365 | O most faithful Disciple of Hircanus Maccabaeus, Will nothing but complete annihilation Comfort and satisfy thee? |
1365 | O neighbors, tell me who it is that passes? |
1365 | O soul of man, Groping through mist and shadow, and recoiling Back on thyself, are, too, thy devious ways Subject to law? |
1365 | O thou spirit of grace, Where art thou now? |
1365 | O woman, what have I To do with thee? |
1365 | O ye Immortal Gods, What evil are ye plotting and contriving? |
1365 | O, not that; That is the public cry; I mean the name They give me when they talk among themselves, And think that no one listens; what is that? |
1365 | O, when shall he, for whom I sigh in vain, Beside me watch to see thy waking smile? |
1365 | O, where are now The splendors of my court, my baths and banquets? |
1365 | O, who shall give me, now that ye are gone, Juices of those immortal plants that bloom Upon Olympus, making us immortal? |
1365 | Of Denmark''s Juel who can defy The power?" |
1365 | Of death or life? |
1365 | Of me? |
1365 | Oh tell me, for thou knowest, Wherefore and by what grace, Have I, who am least and lowest, Been chosen to this place, To this exalted part? |
1365 | Oh, what was Miriam dancing with her timbrel, Compared to this one? |
1365 | Oh, who, then, is this man That pardoneth also sins without atonement? |
1365 | Old as I am, I have at last consented To the entreaties and the supplications Of Michael Angelo-- JULIA To marry him? |
1365 | On thy road Have demons crowded thee, and rubbed against thee, And given thee weary knees? |
1365 | One of my ancestors ran his sword through the heart of Wat Tyler; Who shall prevent me from running my own through the heart of a traitor? |
1365 | One of the brothers Telling scandalous tales of the others? |
1365 | Or art thou deaf, or gone upon a journey? |
1365 | Or by what reason, or what right divine, Can I proclaim it mine? |
1365 | Or do ye know, ye children, one blessing that comes not from Heaven? |
1365 | Or does He fear to meet me? |
1365 | Or does my sight Deceive me in the uncertain light? |
1365 | Or dost thou hold my hand, and draw me back, As being thy disciple, not thy master? |
1365 | Or has an angel passed, and revealed the truth to my spirit?" |
1365 | Or have the mountains, the giants, The ice- helmed, the forest- belted, Scattered their arms abroad; Flung in the meadows their shields? |
1365 | Or have thy passion and unrest Vanished forever from thy mind? |
1365 | Or litter to be trampled under foot? |
1365 | Or the earth- shaking trident of Poseidon? |
1365 | Or the heron, the Shuh- shuh- gah? |
1365 | Or the pelican, the Shada? |
1365 | Or the white goose, Waw- be- wawa, With the water dripping, flashing, From its glossy neck and feathers? |
1365 | Or was it Christian charity, And lowliness and humility, The richest and rarest of all dowers? |
1365 | Or wherefore was I born, If thou in thy foreknowledge didst perceive All that I am, and all that I must be? |
1365 | Or who takes note of every flower that dies? |
1365 | Our journey into Italy Perchance together we may make; Wilt thou not do it for my sake? |
1365 | POETIC APHORISMS FROM THE SINNGEDICHTE OF FRIEDRICH VON LOGAU MONEY Whereunto is money good? |
1365 | PRINCE HENRY, Why for the dead, who are at rest? |
1365 | Padre C. And pray, whom have we here? |
1365 | Padre C. Of what professor speak you? |
1365 | Pardon me This window, as I think, looks toward the street, And this into the Prado, does it not? |
1365 | Poisoned? |
1365 | Pontiff and priest, and sceptred throng? |
1365 | Pray tell me, Is there no virtue in the world? |
1365 | Pray tell ne, of what school are you? |
1365 | Pray who was there? |
1365 | Pray, Geronimo, is not Saturday an unpleasant day with thee? |
1365 | Pray, Master Kempthorn, where were you last night? |
1365 | Pray, art thou related to the bagpiper of Bujalance, who asked a maravedi for playing, and ten for leaving off? |
1365 | Pray, did you call? |
1365 | Pray, dost thou know Victorian? |
1365 | Pray, have you any children? |
1365 | Pray, how may I call thy name, friend? |
1365 | Pray, shall I tell your fortune? |
1365 | Pray, then, what brings thee back to Madrid? |
1365 | Pray, what is it? |
1365 | Pray, what''s the news? |
1365 | Pray, what''s your pleasure? |
1365 | Profess perfection? |
1365 | RONDEL BY JEAN FROISSART Love, love, what wilt thou with this heart of mine? |
1365 | Raphael is not dead; He doth but sleep; for how can he be dead Who lives immortal in the hearts of men? |
1365 | Remember Rahab, and how she became The ancestress of the great Psalmist David; And wherefore should not I, Helen of Tyre, Attain like honor? |
1365 | Resplendent as the morning sun, Beaming with golden hair?" |
1365 | Responds,--as if with unseen wings, An angel touched its quivering strings; And whispers, in its song,"''Where hast thou stayed so long?" |
1365 | Rome? |
1365 | SONG And whither goest thou, gentle sigh, Breathed so softly in my ear? |
1365 | Saw the moon rise from the water Rippling, rounding from the water, Saw the flecks and shadows on it, Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
1365 | Saw the rainbow in the heaven, In the eastern sky, the rainbow, Whispered,"What is that, Nokomis?" |
1365 | Say to me only, ye children, ye denizens new- come in heaven, Are ye ready this day to eat of the bread of Atonement? |
1365 | Say, are you guilty? |
1365 | Say, art thou greater than our father Jacob, Which gave this well to us, and drank thereof Himself, and all his children and his cattle? |
1365 | Say, can he enter for a second time Into his mother''s womb, and so be born? |
1365 | Say, can you prove this to me? |
1365 | Say, dost thou bear his fate severe To Love''s poor martyr doomed to die? |
1365 | Say, dost thou know him? |
1365 | Say, have the solid rocks Into streams of silver been melted, Flowing over the plains, Spreading to lakes in the fields? |
1365 | Say, have you seen our friend Fra Bastian lately, Since by a turn of fortune he became Friar of the Signet? |
1365 | Say, is not this the Christ? |
1365 | Say, will you smoke? |
1365 | Say, wilt thou forgive me? |
1365 | Say, would thy star like Merope''s grow dim If thou shouldst we d beneath thee? |
1365 | Seest thou shadows sailing by, As the dove, with startled eye, Sees the falcon''s shadow fly? |
1365 | Seest thou this woman? |
1365 | Ser Federigo, would not these suffice Without thy falcon stuffed with cloves and spice? |
1365 | Seriously enamored? |
1365 | Set in the bilboes? |
1365 | Shall I be mute, or vows with prayers combine? |
1365 | Shall I crucify your King? |
1365 | Shall I go with you and point out the way? |
1365 | Shall I refuse the gifts they send to me? |
1365 | Shall an impious soldier possess these lands newly cultured, And these fields of corn a barbarian? |
1365 | Shall he a bloodless victory have? |
1365 | Shall it be war or peace? |
1365 | Shall it, then, be unavailing, All this toil for human culture? |
1365 | Shall this man suffer death? |
1365 | Shall we not go, then? |
1365 | Shall we not then be glad, and rejoice in the joy of our children?" |
1365 | Shall we sit idly down and say The night hath come; it is no longer day? |
1365 | She had heard her father praise him, Praise his courage and his wisdom; Would he come again for arrows To the Falls of Minnehaha? |
1365 | She speaks almost As if it were the Holy Ghost Spake through her lips, and in her stead: What if this were of God? |
1365 | She standeth before the Lord of all:"And may I go to my children small?" |
1365 | Should he leave the poor to wait Hungry at the convent gate, Till the Vision passed away? |
1365 | Should he slight his radiant guest, Slight this visitant celestial, For a crowd of ragged, bestial Beggars at the convent gate? |
1365 | Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded? |
1365 | Sidonians? |
1365 | Simon, son of Jonas, Lovest thou me, more than these others? |
1365 | Simon, son of Jonas, Lovest thou me? |
1365 | Simon, son of Jonas, Lovest thou me? |
1365 | Since then this mighty orb lies open so wide upon all sides, Has this region been found only my prison to be? |
1365 | Sir, how is it Thou askest drink of me? |
1365 | Sister, dost thou hear them singing? |
1365 | So soon? |
1365 | So speak the Oracles; then wherefore fatal? |
1365 | So; can you tell fortunes? |
1365 | Some one perhaps of yourselves, a lily broken untimely, Bow down his head to the earth; why delay I? |
1365 | Speak; what brings thee here? |
1365 | Speaking against the laws? |
1365 | Still in her heart she heard the funeral dirge of the ocean, But with its sound there was mingled a voice that whispered,"Despair not?" |
1365 | Surely I know thy face, Did I not see thee in the garden with him? |
1365 | THE BELLS OF SAN BLAS What say the Bells of San Blas To the ships that southward pass From the harbor of Mazatlan? |
1365 | THE CASTLE BY THE SEA BY JOHANN LUDWIG UHLAND"Hast thou seen that lordly castle, That Castle by the Sea? |
1365 | THE EMPEROR''S GLOVE"Combien faudrait- il de peaux d''Espagne pour faire un gant de cette grandeur?" |
1365 | THE MEETING After so long an absence At last we meet again: Does the meeting give us pleasure, Or does it give us pain? |
1365 | THE RIVER What wouldst thou in these mountains seek, O stranger from the city? |
1365 | THE WAVE BY CHRISTOPH AUGUST TIEDGE"Whither, thou turbid wave? |
1365 | Tears came into her eyes, and she said, with a tremulous accent,"Gone? |
1365 | Tell me frankly, How meanest thou? |
1365 | Tell me, O Lord, And what shall this man do? |
1365 | Tell me, who is the master That works in such an admirable way, And with such power and feeling? |
1365 | Tell me, why is it ye are discontent, You, Cardinals Salviati and Marcello, With Michael Angelo? |
1365 | Tell the Court Have you not seen the supernatural power Of this old man? |
1365 | Tell us, Padre Cura, Who are these Gypsies in the neighborhood? |
1365 | Tell us, Philip, What tidings dost thou bring? |
1365 | Tell us, art thou the Christ? |
1365 | That I have also power to set thee free? |
1365 | That haunt my troubled brain? |
1365 | That something hindered you? |
1365 | That vanish when day approaches, And at night return again? |
1365 | That you would open their eyes? |
1365 | That''s not your name? |
1365 | That''s nuts to crack, I''ve teeth to spare, but where shall I find almonds? |
1365 | The Count of Lara? |
1365 | The Happiest Land The Wave The Dead The Bird and the Ship Whither? |
1365 | The Justice wrote The words down in a book, and then Continued, as he raised his pen:"She is; and hath a mass been said For the salvation of her soul? |
1365 | The Lord replied,"My Angels, be not wroth; Did e''er the son of Levi break his oath? |
1365 | The Primus of great Alcala Enamored of a Gypsy? |
1365 | The Ruler of the Feast is gazing at me, As if he asked, why is that old man here Among the revellers? |
1365 | The cup my Father hath given me to drink, Shall I not drink it? |
1365 | The daughter Of Wenlock Christison? |
1365 | The day is drawing to its close; And what good deeds, since first it rose, Have I presented, Lord, to thee, As offsprings of my ministry? |
1365 | The death- song they sing Even now in mine ear, What avails it? |
1365 | The deeds of love and high emprise, In battle done? |
1365 | The dreams of love, that were so sweet of yore, What are they now, when two deaths may be mine,-- One sure, and one forecasting its alarms? |
1365 | The greatest of all poets? |
1365 | The impatient Governor cried:"This is the lady; do you hesitate? |
1365 | The king looked, and replied:"I know him well; It is the Angel men call Azrael,''T is the Death Angel; what hast thou to fear?" |
1365 | The listening guests were greatly mystified, None more so than the rector, who replied:"Marry you? |
1365 | The monk? |
1365 | The star of love and dreams? |
1365 | The sunrise or the sunset of the heart? |
1365 | Then answer me: When certain persons came To see you yesterday, how did you know Beforehand why they came? |
1365 | Then asked him in a business way, Kindly but cold:"Is thy wife dead?" |
1365 | Then he said,"O Mudjekeewis, Is there nothing that can harm you? |
1365 | Then he turned and saw the strangers, Cowering, crouching with the shadows; Said within himself,"Who are they? |
1365 | Then how doth he now see? |
1365 | Then saith the Christ, as silent stands The crowd, What wilt thou at my hands? |
1365 | Then tell me, Why do you trouble them? |
1365 | Then tell me, Witch and woman, For you must know the pathways through this wood, Where lieth Salem Village? |
1365 | Then to the cobbler turned:"My friend, Pray tell me, didst thou ever read Reynard the Fox?" |
1365 | Then who can do it? |
1365 | Then why Doth he come here to sadden with his presence Our marriage feast, belonging to a sect Haters of women, and that taste not wine? |
1365 | Then why come you here? |
1365 | Then why pause with indecision, When bright angels in thy vision Beckon thee to fields Elysian? |
1365 | Then, what need Is there for us to beat about the bush? |
1365 | Then, will you drink? |
1365 | There is his grave; there stands the cross we set; Why dost thou clasp me so, dear Margaret? |
1365 | These the wild, bewildering fancies, That with dithyrambic dances As with magic circles bound me? |
1365 | Think ye, shall Christ come out of Galilee? |
1365 | Think you that I approve such cruelties, Because I marvel at the architects Who built these walls, and curved these noble arches? |
1365 | Think''st thou this heart could feel a moment''s joy, Thou being absent? |
1365 | Thirty? |
1365 | This is the house of the Prince of Peace, and would you profane it Thus with violent deeds and hearts overflowing with hatred? |
1365 | This land of sluices, dikes, and dunes? |
1365 | This water- net, that tessellates The landscape? |
1365 | Thou art the Christ? |
1365 | Thou canst supply thy wants; what wouldst thou more? |
1365 | Thou hast no hand? |
1365 | Thou hast seen the land; Is it not fair to look on? |
1365 | Thou here? |
1365 | Thou sayest I should be jealous? |
1365 | Thou seest the multitude that throng and press thee, And sayest thou: Who touched me? |
1365 | Thou, who wast altogether born in sins And in iniquities, dost thou teach us? |
1365 | Through the cloud- rack, dark and trailing, Must they see above them sailing O''er life''s barren crags the vulture? |
1365 | Thus, then,--believe ye in God, in the Father who this world created? |
1365 | Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food? |
1365 | To whom, then? |
1365 | Told my fortune? |
1365 | Tourney and joust, that charmed the eye, And scarf, and gorgeous panoply, And nodding plume, What were they but a pageant scene? |
1365 | V How can the Three be One? |
1365 | WHITHER? |
1365 | WILL EVER THE DEAR DAYS COME BACK AGAIN? |
1365 | Was he born blind? |
1365 | Was he one, or many, merging Name and fame in one, Like a stream, to which, converging Many streamlets run? |
1365 | Was it Shingebis the diver? |
1365 | Was it a wanton song? |
1365 | Was it for this I have followed the flying feet and the shadow Over the wintry sea, to the desolate shores of New England? |
1365 | Was it for this I have loved, and waited, and worshipped in silence? |
1365 | Was it not so, Francisco? |
1365 | Was it not? |
1365 | Was it the owl, the Koko- koho, Hooting from the dismal forest? |
1365 | Was it the wind above the smoke- flue, Muttering down into the wigwam? |
1365 | Was it then for heads of arrows, Arrow- heads of chalcedony, Arrow- heads of flint and jasper, That my Hiawatha halted In the land of the Dacotahs? |
1365 | Was it wrong That in an hour like that I did not weigh Too nicely this or that, but granted him A boon that pleased him, and that flattered me? |
1365 | Was she a lady of high degree, So much in love with the vanity And foolish pomp of this world of ours? |
1365 | Was there another like it? |
1365 | Well, Francisco, What speed with Preciosa? |
1365 | Well, Francisco, What tidings from Don Juan? |
1365 | Well, What of them? |
1365 | Well, what then? |
1365 | Well, where''s my flip? |
1365 | Well? |
1365 | Were it not better, then, To let the treasures rest Hid from the eyes of men, Locked in their iron chest? |
1365 | Were not the paintings on the Sistine ceiling Enough for them? |
1365 | Were you ever in love, Baltasar? |
1365 | Were you not frightened? |
1365 | What ails Baptiste? |
1365 | What ails the cattle? |
1365 | What ails the child, who seems to fear That we shall do him harm? |
1365 | What answer do you make to this, Giles Corey? |
1365 | What answer make you? |
1365 | What answer make you? |
1365 | What answer shall we make? |
1365 | What are the books now most in vogue? |
1365 | What are these idle tales? |
1365 | What are these paintings on the walls around us? |
1365 | What are those torches, That glimmer on Brook Kedron there below us? |
1365 | What are ye doing here? |
1365 | What are you doing here? |
1365 | What bee hath stung you? |
1365 | What bells are those, that ring so slow, So mellow, musical, and low? |
1365 | What brings the rest of you? |
1365 | What brings thee here? |
1365 | What brings thee hither to this hostile camp Thus unattended? |
1365 | What brings thee hither? |
1365 | What brings you forth so early? |
1365 | What but the garlands, gay and green, That deck the tomb? |
1365 | What can I do or say? |
1365 | What can I say Better than silence is? |
1365 | What can I say? |
1365 | What can he Who lives in boundless luxury at Rome Care for the imperilled liberties of Florence, Her people, her Republic? |
1365 | What can it mean, This rising from the dead? |
1365 | What can so many Jews be doing here Together in Samaria? |
1365 | What can this mean? |
1365 | What can this mean? |
1365 | What choice And precious things dost thou keep hidden in it? |
1365 | What convent of barefooted Carmelites Taught thee so much theology? |
1365 | What could I do? |
1365 | What craft of alchemy can bid defiance To time and change, and for a single hour Renew this phantom- flower? |
1365 | What deadly sin Have you committed? |
1365 | What did he do? |
1365 | What did you dream about? |
1365 | What did you hear? |
1365 | What disaster Could she bring on thy house, who is a woman? |
1365 | What do I care for the Doctor Seraphic, With all his wordy chaffer and traffic? |
1365 | What do I say of a murmur? |
1365 | What do they want? |
1365 | What do we gain by parleying with the Devil? |
1365 | What do we know of spirits good or ill, Or of their power to help us or to harm us? |
1365 | What do we? |
1365 | What do you think I heard there in the village? |
1365 | What do you want of Padre Francisco? |
1365 | What do you want of Padre Hypolito? |
1365 | What does he say? |
1365 | What does it say to you? |
1365 | What dost thou mean? |
1365 | What dost thou say of him That hath restored thy sight? |
1365 | What evil have I done? |
1365 | What fair renown, what honor, what repute Can come to you from starving this poor brute? |
1365 | What for? |
1365 | What frightens you? |
1365 | What further need Have we of witnesses? |
1365 | What further shall we do? |
1365 | What further would you see? |
1365 | What good thing shall I do, that I may have Eternal life? |
1365 | What greetings come there from the voiceless dead? |
1365 | What has a rough old soldier, grown grim and gray in the harness, Used to the camp and its ways, to do with the wooing of maidens? |
1365 | What has been done? |
1365 | What has happened? |
1365 | What has he done, Or left undone, that ye are set against him? |
1365 | What hast thou To bring against all these? |
1365 | What hast thou done to make thee look so fair? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What hast thou done? |
1365 | What have I to do With thee, thou Son of God? |
1365 | What have they done to me, that I am naked? |
1365 | What have we gained? |
1365 | What have we here, affixed to the gate? |
1365 | What have we here? |
1365 | What have you done that''s better? |
1365 | What have you here alone, Messer Michele? |
1365 | What holds he in his hand? |
1365 | What hope deludes, what promise cheers, What pleasant voices fill their ears? |
1365 | What hope have we from such an Emperor? |
1365 | What if they were dead? |
1365 | What instrument is that? |
1365 | What is Antiochus, that he should prate Of peace to me, who am a fugitive? |
1365 | What is amiss? |
1365 | What is death? |
1365 | What is he accused of? |
1365 | What is he doing? |
1365 | What is it to die? |
1365 | What is it you would warn me of? |
1365 | What is it, O my Lord? |
1365 | What is it, then? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is it? |
1365 | What is peace? |
1365 | What is that gun? |
1365 | What is that yonder in the valley? |
1365 | What is that yonder on the square? |
1365 | What is that? |
1365 | What is that? |
1365 | What is the course you here go through? |
1365 | What is the marble group that glimmers there Behind you? |
1365 | What is the name of yonder friar, With an eye that glows like a coal of fire, And such a black mass of tangled hair? |
1365 | What is their remedy? |
1365 | What is there To cause suspicion or alarm in that, More than in friendships that I entertain With you and others? |
1365 | What is there to prevent My sharing the same fate? |
1365 | What is this castle that rises above us, and lords it over a land so wide? |
1365 | What is this crowd Gathered about a beggar? |
1365 | What is this gathering here? |
1365 | What is this picture? |
1365 | What is this stir and tumult in the street? |
1365 | What is this thing they witness here against thee? |
1365 | What is thy name? |
1365 | What is thy will with me? |
1365 | What is your illness? |
1365 | What is your landlord''s name? |
1365 | What is your name? |
1365 | What is your name? |
1365 | What joy have I without thee? |
1365 | What lack I yet? |
1365 | What land is this that seems to be A mingling of the land and sea? |
1365 | What land is this that spreads itself beneath us? |
1365 | What land is this? |
1365 | What land is this? |
1365 | What lands and skies Paint pictures in their friendly eyes? |
1365 | What lights are these? |
1365 | What mad jest Is this? |
1365 | What man is that? |
1365 | What may I call your name? |
1365 | What may be The questions that perplex, the hopes that cheer him? |
1365 | What may your business be? |
1365 | What may your wish or purpose be? |
1365 | What means this outrage? |
1365 | What means this revel and carouse? |
1365 | What monstrous apparition, Exceeding fierce, that none may pass that way? |
1365 | What more of this strange story? |
1365 | What more was done? |
1365 | What more? |
1365 | What more? |
1365 | What news from Court? |
1365 | What news have you from Florence? |
1365 | What news is this, that makes thy cheek turn pale, And thy hand tremble? |
1365 | What next? |
1365 | What now Why such a fearful din? |
1365 | What now? |
1365 | What other instruments have we? |
1365 | What penitence proportionate Can e''er be felt for sin so great? |
1365 | What place is this? |
1365 | What potent charm Has drawn thee from thy German farm Into the old Alsatian city? |
1365 | What pressure from the hands that lifeless lie? |
1365 | What prince hereditary of their line, Uprising in the strength and flush of youth, Their glory shall inherit and prolong? |
1365 | What prompted such a letter? |
1365 | What salutation, welcome, or reply? |
1365 | What say the laws of England? |
1365 | What say ye, Judges of the Court,--what say ye? |
1365 | What say you to this charge? |
1365 | What say you? |
1365 | What say? |
1365 | What say? |
1365 | What secret trouble stirs thy breast? |
1365 | What see I now? |
1365 | What see you now? |
1365 | What see you? |
1365 | What seek ye? |
1365 | What seekest thou here to- day? |
1365 | What seekest thou? |
1365 | What seest thou? |
1365 | What shall I do? |
1365 | What shall I read? |
1365 | What shall I say to you? |
1365 | What shall we have therefor? |
1365 | What shall we say unto them That sent us here? |
1365 | What shape is this? |
1365 | What should I be afraid of? |
1365 | What should I fear? |
1365 | What should prevent me now, thou man of sin, From hanging at its side the head of one Who born a Jew hath made himself a Greek? |
1365 | What sound is that? |
1365 | What story is it? |
1365 | What strange guests has Minnehaha?" |
1365 | What tale do the roaring ocean, And the night- wind, bleak and wild, As they beat at the crazy casement, Tell to that little child? |
1365 | What testimony? |
1365 | What then was the Book You showed to this young woman, and besought her To write in it? |
1365 | What then will ye That I should do with him that is called Christ? |
1365 | What then-- when one is blind? |
1365 | What then? |
1365 | What think ye, would he care For a Jew slain here or there, Or a plundered caravan? |
1365 | What think ye? |
1365 | What think you of ours here at Salern? |
1365 | What think you of that bridge? |
1365 | What think you? |
1365 | What think you? |
1365 | What tidings bring ye? |
1365 | What torches glare and glisten Upon the swords and armor of these men? |
1365 | What was he doing there? |
1365 | What was it held me back From kissing her fair forehead, and those lips, Those dead, dumb lips? |
1365 | What was the bird that this young woman saw Just now upon your hand? |
1365 | What was the meaning of those words? |
1365 | What wilt thou That I should do to thee? |
1365 | What wilt thou do When I am dead, Urbino? |
1365 | What wilt thou give me? |
1365 | What wilt thou, then? |
1365 | What wise man wrote it? |
1365 | What woman''s this, that, like an apparition, Haunts this deserted homestead in broad day? |
1365 | What would be Their fate, who now are looking up to me For help and furtherance? |
1365 | What would the people think, If they should see the Reverend Cotton Mather Ride into Salem with a Witch behind him? |
1365 | What would you Have done to such a man? |
1365 | What would you further? |
1365 | What would you have me do? |
1365 | What would you see in Rome? |
1365 | What wouldst thou ask of us? |
1365 | What wouldst thou with me, A feeble girl, who have not long to live, Whose heart is broken? |
1365 | What wouldst thou? |
1365 | What wrong repressed, what right maintained, What struggle passed, what victory gained, What good attempted and attained? |
1365 | What''s happened to my wife? |
1365 | What''s the matter with you? |
1365 | What''s the news at Court? |
1365 | What''s yours? |
1365 | What, Captain Simon Kempthorn of the Swallow? |
1365 | What, again, Maestro? |
1365 | What, am I a Jew To put my moneys out at usury? |
1365 | What, but a transient gleam of light, A flame, which, glaring at its height, Grew dim and died? |
1365 | What, in a few short years, will remain of thy race but the footprints? |
1365 | What, think''st thou, is she doing at this moment; Now, while we speak of her? |
1365 | What? |
1365 | What? |
1365 | When came you in? |
1365 | When did he this? |
1365 | When did you come from Fondi? |
1365 | When first I sent you forth without a purse, Or scrip, or shoes, did ye lack anything? |
1365 | When hast thou At any time, to any man or woman, Or even to any little child, shown mercy? |
1365 | When he heard the owls at midnight, Hooting, laughing in the forest,"What is that?" |
1365 | When shall these eyes behold, these arms be folded about thee?" |
1365 | When was that? |
1365 | When will our journey end? |
1365 | When will that be? |
1365 | When will that be? |
1365 | When will that come? |
1365 | When you two Are gone, who is there that remains behind To seize the pencil falling from your fingers? |
1365 | Whence art thou? |
1365 | Whence come you now? |
1365 | Whence come you? |
1365 | Whence come you? |
1365 | Whence come you? |
1365 | Whence comest thou? |
1365 | Whence hast thou living water? |
1365 | Whence knowest thou me? |
1365 | Whence knowest thou these stories? |
1365 | Where Each royal prince and noble heir Of Aragon? |
1365 | Where I have eaten the bread and drunk the wine So many times at our Lord''s Table with you? |
1365 | Where are Bertha and Max? |
1365 | Where are Helios and Hephaestus, Gods of eldest eld? |
1365 | Where are my players and my dancing women? |
1365 | Where are my sweet musicians with their pipes, That made me merry in the olden time? |
1365 | Where are now the freighted barks From the marts of east and west? |
1365 | Where are now the many hundred Thousand books he wrote? |
1365 | Where are our shallow fords? |
1365 | Where are the children? |
1365 | Where are the courtly gallantries? |
1365 | Where are the gentle knights, that came To kneel, and breathe love''s ardent flame, Low at their feet? |
1365 | Where are the high- born dames, and where Their gay attire, and jewelled hair, And odors sweet? |
1365 | Where are the lute and gay tambour They loved of yore? |
1365 | Where are the others? |
1365 | Where are the witnesses? |
1365 | Where are they now? |
1365 | Where are they? |
1365 | Where are we, Philip? |
1365 | Where are you living? |
1365 | Where art thou, Chilion? |
1365 | Where can Victorian be? |
1365 | Where did you see it? |
1365 | Where had he hidden himself away? |
1365 | Where hast thou been so long? |
1365 | Where hast thou been to- day? |
1365 | Where hast thou been? |
1365 | Where have you been? |
1365 | Where is Baptiste? |
1365 | Where is Giles Corey? |
1365 | Where is Hermes Trismegistus, Who their secrets held? |
1365 | Where is John Gloyd? |
1365 | Where is Victorian? |
1365 | Where is he? |
1365 | Where is he? |
1365 | Where is she? |
1365 | Where is the King, Don Juan? |
1365 | Where is the Landlord? |
1365 | Where is the gentlemen? |
1365 | Where is the man? |
1365 | Where is the mazy dance of old, The flowing robes, inwrought with gold, The dancers wore? |
1365 | Where is the ring I gave thee? |
1365 | Where is the song of Troubadour? |
1365 | Where is this King? |
1365 | Where is thy brother?" |
1365 | Where is your master? |
1365 | Where should I have a book? |
1365 | Where stays the coward? |
1365 | Where the knights in iron sarks Journeying to the Holy Land, Glove of steel upon the hand, Cross of crimson on the breast? |
1365 | Where the merchants with their wares, And their gallant brigantines Sailing safely into port Chased by corsair Algerines? |
1365 | Where the pilgrims with their prayers? |
1365 | Where the pomp of camp and court? |
1365 | Where''s my horse? |
1365 | Where''s my horse? |
1365 | Where? |
1365 | Wherefore art thou not with him? |
1365 | Wherefore art thou the only living thing Among thy brothers dead? |
1365 | Wherefore can I not follow thee? |
1365 | Wherefore dost thou turn Thy face from me? |
1365 | Wherefore standest thou so white In pale moonlight?" |
1365 | Wherefore then Askest thou me of this? |
1365 | Wherefore? |
1365 | Whereunto shall I liken, then, the men Of this generation? |
1365 | Which is more fair, The star of morning or the evening star? |
1365 | Which may be Atreides, Menelaus, Odysseus, Ajax the great, or bold Idomeneus?" |
1365 | Which of them? |
1365 | Whither, oh, whither? |
1365 | Whither, or whence, With thy fluttering golden band?" |
1365 | Whither, with so much haste, As if a thief wert thou?" |
1365 | Who am I, that from the centre Of thy glory thou shouldst enter This poor cell, my guest to be? |
1365 | Who and what are ye, that with furtive steps Steal in among our tents? |
1365 | Who and what are you? |
1365 | Who and whence are they? |
1365 | Who are the deputies that make complaint? |
1365 | Who are these gentlemen? |
1365 | Who are they That bring complaints against me? |
1365 | Who are they? |
1365 | Who are they? |
1365 | Who are you? |
1365 | Who art thou, and what is the word That here thou proclaimest? |
1365 | Who art thou, and whence comest thou? |
1365 | Who art thou? |
1365 | Who art thou? |
1365 | Who art thou? |
1365 | Who braves of Denmark''s Christian The stroke?" |
1365 | Who built it? |
1365 | Who calls me? |
1365 | Who cares for death? |
1365 | Who comes next? |
1365 | Who dares To say that he alone has found the truth? |
1365 | Who did these things? |
1365 | Who do the people say I am? |
1365 | Who has searched or sought All the unexplored and spacious Universe of thought? |
1365 | Who hath set in motion That sorry jest? |
1365 | Who hears the falling of the forest leaf? |
1365 | Who here would languish Longer in bewailing and in anguish? |
1365 | Who hurt her then? |
1365 | Who is He; ye exclaim? |
1365 | Who is he? |
1365 | Who is it calls? |
1365 | Who is it coming under the trees? |
1365 | Who is it makes Such outcry here? |
1365 | Who is it smote thee? |
1365 | Who is it speaketh in this place, With such a gentle voice? |
1365 | Who is it speaks? |
1365 | Who is it that doth stand so near His whispered words I almost hear? |
1365 | Who is it that speaketh? |
1365 | Who is it? |
1365 | Who is it? |
1365 | Who is it? |
1365 | Who is poisoned? |
1365 | Who is safe? |
1365 | Who is that woman yonder, gliding in So silently behind him? |
1365 | Who is that youth with the dark azure eyes, And hair, in color like unto the wine, Parted upon his forehead, and behind Falling in flowing locks? |
1365 | Who is the champion? |
1365 | Who is there to tell me? |
1365 | Who is this Exhorting in the outer courts so loudly? |
1365 | Who is this beggar blinking in the sun? |
1365 | Who is this youth? |
1365 | Who is this, that lights the wigwam? |
1365 | Who is this? |
1365 | Who is thy father? |
1365 | Who is your God and Father? |
1365 | Who knoweth not Prometheus the humane? |
1365 | Who knows what may happen? |
1365 | Who knows? |
1365 | Who leads us with a gentle hand Thither, O thither, Into the Silent Land? |
1365 | Who made these marks Upon her hands? |
1365 | Who says that I am ill? |
1365 | Who shall answer or divine? |
1365 | Who shall call his dreams fallacious? |
1365 | Who shall dare My crown to take, my sceptre bear, As king among the Jews? |
1365 | Who shall say That from the world of spirits comes no greeting, No message of remembrance? |
1365 | Who shall say what dreams of beauty Filled the heart of Hiawatha? |
1365 | Who shall say what thoughts and visions Fill the fiery brains of young men? |
1365 | Who shall tell us? |
1365 | Who thus parts you, who should never from each other parted be?" |
1365 | Who told you of the clothes? |
1365 | Who waits for you at Fondi? |
1365 | Who was it fled from here? |
1365 | Who was it said Amen? |
1365 | Who was it touched my garments? |
1365 | Who was it? |
1365 | Who will be tried to- day? |
1365 | Who will care for the Puk- Wudjies? |
1365 | Who would have thought That Bridget Bishop e''er would come to this? |
1365 | Who would not love, if loving she might be Changed like Callisto to a star in heaven? |
1365 | Who would think her but fifteen? |
1365 | Who''s conceited? |
1365 | Who''s next? |
1365 | Who''s next? |
1365 | Who''s the tall man in front? |
1365 | Who''s there? |
1365 | Who''s there? |
1365 | Who, in his own skill confiding, Shall with rule and line Mark the border- land dividing Human and divine? |
1365 | Who? |
1365 | Whom seek ye? |
1365 | Whom seekest thou? |
1365 | Whom wait ye for? |
1365 | Whom will ye, then, that I release to you? |
1365 | Whom would you pray to? |
1365 | Whose hand shall dare to open and explore These volumes, closed and clasped forevermore? |
1365 | Whose was the right and the wrong? |
1365 | Why all this fret and flurry? |
1365 | Why am I here alone among the tombs? |
1365 | Why art thou here? |
1365 | Why art thou up so early, pretty man? |
1365 | Why art thou up so late, my pretty damsel? |
1365 | Why ca n''t they let him rest? |
1365 | Why callest thou me good? |
1365 | Why came you there? |
1365 | Why comest thou Into this dark guest- chamber in the night? |
1365 | Why comest thou hither So early in the dawn? |
1365 | Why did I leave it? |
1365 | Why did I leave my ploughing and my reaping To plough and reap this Sodom and Gomorrah? |
1365 | Why did I leave thee? |
1365 | Why did mighty Jove create thee Coy as Thetis, fair as Flora, Beautiful as young Aurora, If to win thee is to hate thee? |
1365 | Why did the Pope and his ten Cardinals Come here to lay this heavy task upon me? |
1365 | Why did you let this horrible deed be done? |
1365 | Why did you not lay hold on her, and keep her From self destruction? |
1365 | Why didst thou leave me? |
1365 | Why didst thou not commission thy swift lightning To strike me dead? |
1365 | Why didst thou return? |
1365 | Why do they linger? |
1365 | Why do ye crowd us? |
1365 | Why do ye seek the living among the dead? |
1365 | Why do you hurt this person? |
1365 | Why does he go so often to Madrid? |
1365 | Why does he seek to fix a quarrel on me? |
1365 | Why does she torture me? |
1365 | Why does the bride turn pale, and hide her face on his shoulder? |
1365 | Why does the bridegroom start and stare at the strange apparition? |
1365 | Why does your spectre haunt and hurt this person? |
1365 | Why dost thou bear me aloft, O Angel of God, on thy pinions O''er realms and dominions? |
1365 | Why dost thou hurl me here among these rocks, And cut me with these stones? |
1365 | Why dost thou lift those tender eyes With so much sorrow and surprise? |
1365 | Why dost thou persecute me, Saul of Tarsus? |
1365 | Why doth The Master lead us up into this mountain? |
1365 | Why drag again into the light of day The errors of an age long passed away?" |
1365 | Why entreat me, why upbraid me, When the steadfast tongues of truth And the flattering hopes of youth Have all deceived me and betrayed me? |
1365 | Why fill the convent with such scandals, As if we were so many drunken Vandals? |
1365 | Why frightened? |
1365 | Why hast thou sent for me? |
1365 | Why have I done this? |
1365 | Why howl the dogs at night? |
1365 | Why hurry through the world at such a pace? |
1365 | Why is it hateful to you? |
1365 | Why keep me pacing to and fro Amid these aisles of sacred gloom, Counting my footsteps as I go, And marking with each step a tomb? |
1365 | Why make ye this ado, and weep? |
1365 | Why must they drag him Out of his grave to give me a bad name? |
1365 | Why must you? |
1365 | Why not my displeasure? |
1365 | Why not? |
1365 | Why not? |
1365 | Why seek to know? |
1365 | Why should I live? |
1365 | Why should I not? |
1365 | Why should I paint? |
1365 | Why should I seek this Frenchman, Rabelais? |
1365 | Why should I tell you how all the rivers are frozen and solid, And from out of the lake frangible water is dug? |
1365 | Why should I toil and sweat, Who now am rich enough to live at ease, And take my pleasure? |
1365 | Why should Proctor say Such things bout me? |
1365 | Why should the world for thee make room, And wait thy leisure and thy beck? |
1365 | Why should their praise in verse be sung? |
1365 | Why should you not have Quakers at your tavern If you have fiddlers? |
1365 | Why shouldst thou be dead? |
1365 | Why shouldst thou hate then thy brother? |
1365 | Why so? |
1365 | Why so? |
1365 | Why stayest thou here? |
1365 | Why stayest thou, Prince of Hoheneck? |
1365 | Why then will you hunt each other? |
1365 | Why this rapture and unrest? |
1365 | Why troublest thou the Master? |
1365 | Why wait you? |
1365 | Why will you go so soon? |
1365 | Why will you harbor such delusions, Giles? |
1365 | Why will you not Give all your heart to God? |
1365 | Why would you have this ring? |
1365 | Why, Simon, is it you? |
1365 | Why, what evil hath he done? |
1365 | Why, what has he been doing? |
1365 | Why, who do you think? |
1365 | Why? |
1365 | Why? |
1365 | Will he instruct the Elders? |
1365 | Will it all vanish into air? |
1365 | Will it not interrupt you? |
1365 | Will no one answer? |
1365 | Will no one give me water? |
1365 | Will one draught Suffice? |
1365 | Will she become immortal like ourselves? |
1365 | Will some one give me water? |
1365 | Will ye be his disciples? |
1365 | Will ye not enter in to- day? |
1365 | Will ye promise me this before God and man?" |
1365 | Will you be seated? |
1365 | Will you condemn me in this house of God, Where I so long have worshipped with you all? |
1365 | Will you condemn me on such evidence,-- You who have known me for so many years? |
1365 | Will you let me stay A little while, and with your falcon play? |
1365 | Will you not drink the King? |
1365 | Will you not promise? |
1365 | Will you not taste it? |
1365 | Will you serenade her? |
1365 | Will you sit down? |
1365 | Will you swear? |
1365 | Will you take My life away from me, because this girl, Who is distraught, and not in her right mind, Accuses me of things I blush to name? |
1365 | Will you take the oath? |
1365 | Will you then leave me, Julia, and so soon, To pace alone this terrace like a ghost? |
1365 | Will you, sir, sign the book? |
1365 | Wilt thou as fond and faithful be? |
1365 | Wilt thou eat then? |
1365 | Wilt thou fight on the Sabbath, Maccabaeus? |
1365 | Wilt thou not come? |
1365 | Wilt thou not pause and cease to pour Thy hurrying, headlong waters o''er This rocky shelf forever? |
1365 | Wilt thou so love me after death? |
1365 | Wilt thou sup with us? |
1365 | Wist ye not That I must be about my Father''s business? |
1365 | With Proctor''s wife? |
1365 | With hand outstretched She said:"Giles Corey, will you sign the Book?" |
1365 | With his great eyes lights the wigwam? |
1365 | With permission, Monsignori, What is it ye complain of? |
1365 | With trembling voice he said,"What wilt thou here?" |
1365 | Woman, who are you? |
1365 | Woman, why weepest thou? |
1365 | Wore not his cheek the apple''s ruddy glow, Would you not say he slept on Death''s cold arm? |
1365 | Would the Vision come again? |
1365 | Would the Vision there remain? |
1365 | Would you hear more? |
1365 | Wouldst thou have done so, Elsie? |
1365 | Wrapt not in Eastern balms, Bat with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?" |
1365 | XII THE SON OF THE EVENING STAR Can it be the sun descending O''er the level plain of water? |
1365 | Ye Scribes, why come ye hither? |
1365 | Ye children, does Death e''er alarm you? |
1365 | Ye did not hear: why would ye hear again? |
1365 | Ye recording angels, Open your books and read? |
1365 | Ye who are blessed in loving, tell it me: Love, love, what wilt thou with this heart of mine? |
1365 | Yea, I know him; Who knows him not? |
1365 | Yea, it remaineth forevermore, However Satan may rage and roar, Though often be whispers in my ears: What if thy doctrines false should be? |
1365 | Yes, that were a pleasant task, Your Excellency; but to whom? |
1365 | Yet am I not of those who imagine some evil intention Brings them here, for we are at peace; and why then molest us?" |
1365 | Yet why should I fear death? |
1365 | Yet without illusions What would our lives become, what we ourselves? |
1365 | Yet,--for what reason not children? |
1365 | Yet,--why are ye afraid, ye children? |
1365 | You are Tituba? |
1365 | You are not angry with me,--are you, Gloyd? |
1365 | You dare not? |
1365 | You have read-- For you read all things, not a book escapes you-- The famous Demonology of King James? |
1365 | You know this mark? |
1365 | You like it? |
1365 | You own yourself a Quaker,--do you not? |
1365 | You remember, surely, The adventure with the corsair Barbarossa, And all that followed? |
1365 | You saw her? |
1365 | You were not at the play tonight, Don Carlos; How happened it? |
1365 | You were there? |
1365 | You''re not hurt,--are you, Gloyd? |
1365 | Your life is mine; and what shall now withhold me From sending your vile soul to its account? |
1365 | an adept? |
1365 | and his brethren and his sisters Are they not with us? |
1365 | and offered me The waters of eternal life, to bid me Drink the polluted puddles of the world? |
1365 | and safe from danger; Can you not, with all your cunning, All your wisdom and contrivance, Change me, too, into a beaver?" |
1365 | and that you left This woman here, your wife, kneeling alone Upon the hearth? |
1365 | and what are they like? |
1365 | and where The power of Kazan with its fourfold gates? |
1365 | and where are they That brought the gifts of frankincense and myrrh? |
1365 | and why com''st thou here?" |
1365 | answerest thou The High- Priest so? |
1365 | are these the guests whose glances Seemed like sunshine gleaming round me? |
1365 | are you going to slay me? |
1365 | are you on fire, too, old hay- stack? |
1365 | can you tell me where alight Thuringia''s horsemen for the night? |
1365 | canst thou endure so long? |
1365 | canst thou not be Blithe as the air is, and as free? |
1365 | could ye not watch with me for one hour? |
1365 | dead? |
1365 | do you mean to make war with milk and the water of roses? |
1365 | do you not hear? |
1365 | do you see at the window there That face, with a look of grief and despair, That ghastly face, as of one in pain? |
1365 | do you think our statutes are but paper? |
1365 | does no voice within Answer my cry, and say we are akin?" |
1365 | doth Charity fail? |
1365 | hast thou killed And also taken possession? |
1365 | have you, then, forgotten The story of Sophocles in his old age? |
1365 | he cried in terror,"What is that,"he said,"Nokomis?" |
1365 | he cried, desponding,"Must our lives depend on these things?" |
1365 | he cried, desponding,"Must our lives depend on these things?" |
1365 | he cried, desponding,"Must our lives depend on these things?" |
1365 | how canst thou mourn? |
1365 | how shall I be grateful For so much kindness? |
1365 | if thou art love, Why didst thou leave me naked to the tempter? |
1365 | in what deep Recesses of your realms of mystery Lies hidden now that star? |
1365 | in what realms afar, In what planet, in what star, In what vast, aerial space, Shines the light upon thy face? |
1365 | is Gabriel gone?" |
1365 | is it not enough? |
1365 | march again? |
1365 | must ye make A wailing like the dragons, and a mourning As of the owls? |
1365 | now say, if thou art wise, When the Angel of Death, who is full of eyes, Comes where a sick man dying lies, What doth he to the wight? |
1365 | or Hera''s girdle? |
1365 | or do they know indeed This man to be the very Christ? |
1365 | or was it real, What I saw as in a vision, When to marches hymeneal In the land of the Ideal Moved my thought o''er Fields Elysian? |
1365 | others Who have hearts as tender and true, and spirits as loyal? |
1365 | perhaps some friend May ask, incredulous;"and to what good end? |
1365 | said the young men, As they sported in the meadow:"Why stand idly looking at us, Leaning on the rock behind you? |
1365 | said you so? |
1365 | saith he;"Have naught but the bearded grain? |
1365 | shall I reign ten years? |
1365 | shouted the hasty and somewhat irascible blacksmith;"Must we in all things look for the how, and the why, and the wherefore? |
1365 | that it has not received? |
1365 | that once did visit me, Making night glorious with your smile, where are ye? |
1365 | that they were Medes and Persians, They were Sidonians, anything but Jews? |
1365 | there are yet four months And cometh, harvest? |
1365 | these The ways that win, the arts that please? |
1365 | to cherish God more than all things earthly, and every man as a brother? |
1365 | to hope, to forgive, and to suffer, Be what it may your condition, and walk before God in uprightness? |
1365 | was ever a grief like this? |
1365 | what ails thee, my poor child? |
1365 | what ails thee, sweet?" |
1365 | what are the tidings to- day? |
1365 | what can I do? |
1365 | what delight? |
1365 | what grief doth him oppress? |
1365 | what have I said? |
1365 | what holy angel Brings the Slave this glad evangel? |
1365 | what is the news, I pray? |
1365 | what madness has seized you? |
1365 | what murmurs arise from the heart of those mountainous deserts? |
1365 | what wonder- working, occult science Can from the ashes in our hearts once more The rose of youth restore? |
1365 | what would the world be to us If the children were no more? |
1365 | when shall they all meet again?" |
1365 | when the gate Of heaven is open, will ye wait? |
1365 | where? |
1365 | wherefore? |
1365 | who is this That looketh forth as the morning? |
1365 | who is this doll? |
1365 | who knowst? |
1365 | who may the bridegroom be?" |
1365 | who shall lead us thither? |
1365 | who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost clew regain? |
1365 | who the strong? |
1365 | who will e''er believe the words I say? |
1365 | who would not, then, depart with gladness, To inherit heaven for earthly sadness? |
1365 | why did your clouds retain For peasants''fields their floods of hoarded rain? |
1365 | why do ye play, And break the holy Sabbath day? |
1365 | why dream and wait for him longer? |
1365 | why is it That your hearts are so afflicted, That you sob so in the midnight? |
1365 | why open no abyss To bury in its chasm a crime like this? |
1365 | why will you harbor these dark thoughts? |
1365 | wilt thou return no more? |
1365 | wouldst thou so? |
1365 | you ask me; I answer by asking, Hail and snow and rain, are they not three, and yet one? |
9774 | A present? |
9774 | A sweet name, is it not? 9774 Ah, I read your thoughts: you wonder that Miss Caroline has not come back,--is not that it? |
9774 | Ah, Lady Jane-- lives at Paris-- so she does; Rue Chaussee d''Antin-- you know the House? 9774 Ah, Vargrave, how are you? |
9774 | Ah, how can I? |
9774 | Ah, how can you talk thus? 9774 Ah,"said Maltravers with a smile, half mournful, half bitter,"but are you not one of the Impostors?" |
9774 | All men have public character to stake; and if that be good, I suppose no stake can be better? |
9774 | And I am to understand that I have no chance, now or hereafter, of obtaining the affections of Evelyn? 9774 And Mr. Maltravers himself--?" |
9774 | And am I never to set a free foot on that soil again? |
9774 | And are you comfortable and contented, my poor friend? 9774 And at Christmas I may be gone hence forever,"muttered the invalid;"but what will that matter to him-- to any one?" |
9774 | And do you think that_ I_ will aid, will abet? |
9774 | And do you think, my lord, that Mr. Maltravers has never to this day ascertained what became of the poor young woman? |
9774 | And does she not like Italian music? |
9774 | And for that reason, chiefly, nay entirely, you condescend to forget what I have been, and seek my hand? 9774 And from whom,"said he, in a faint voice, as he calmly put down the verses,--"from whom did your mother learn these words?" |
9774 | And have we no chance of seeing Lady Vargrave in B-----shire? |
9774 | And how think you,said the Italian, aloud,--"how think you, that we have any chance of deliverance?" |
9774 | And in Heaven''s name, why? |
9774 | And is it true? 9774 And is there no power in genius?" |
9774 | And is this the room he chiefly inhabited,--the room that you say they show as his? |
9774 | And may I not hope, Mr. Maltravers,said he,"that before long our acquaintance may be renewed? |
9774 | And no other relatives? |
9774 | And now, before you go, will you tell me, as you are so wise, what I can do to make-- to make-- my mother love me? |
9774 | And send instantly for advice? |
9774 | And she will be yours, still? |
9774 | And this Maltravers-- she is romantic, I fancy-- did he seem captivated by her beauty or her fortune? |
9774 | And what are they, my lord? |
9774 | And what is that picture so carefully covered up? |
9774 | And what is that? |
9774 | And what of me? |
9774 | And what said you,--did you not tell her such words would break my heart? |
9774 | And what,asked Vargrave,--"what-- if the question be not presumptuous-- occasioned your unwilling absence?" |
9774 | And where does he live? |
9774 | And where does the old gentleman live? |
9774 | And where is Evelyn? |
9774 | And who are you?--what devil from the deep hell, that art leagued with my persecutors against me? |
9774 | And who is your nearest neighbour? |
9774 | And why are men made my foes? 9774 And why do you ask, my lord?" |
9774 | And why? 9774 And you are then Evelyn''s suitor,--you are he whom she loves? |
9774 | And you think him safe and honest? |
9774 | And you think him worthy of Miss Cameron? |
9774 | And you wo n''t let Burleigh in the meanwhile? |
9774 | And your opinion? |
9774 | Are we not daily told, do not our priests preach it from their pulpits, that the cottage shelters happiness equal to that within the palace? 9774 Are you fatigued or unwell, dear?" |
9774 | Are you going to Miss Cameron? |
9774 | Are you so easily spoiled? 9774 Are you so fond of the country, then?" |
9774 | Behold England, the wise, the liberal, the free England-- through what struggles she has passed; and is she yet contented? 9774 But are you prepared,--don''t you require time to man yourself?" |
9774 | But did you not tell me,said Caroline,"that Evelyn proposed and promised to place her fortune at your disposal, even while rejecting your hand?" |
9774 | But do you know who her mother was? 9774 But how are we sure that the results are such as you depict them? |
9774 | But how can you be sure that Mrs. Butler and Mrs. Cameron are one and the same person? 9774 But how long have you been here, Miss Cameron,--and your companions?" |
9774 | But how,said Evelyn, hesitatingly, after a pause,--"how is it that you have seen so much more of the world than I have? |
9774 | But how?--how, Lumley? 9774 But if she should resolve never to be Lady Vargrave--?" |
9774 | But is it true? 9774 But may not the old tie be renewed?" |
9774 | But she never fancies that you love me? |
9774 | But she-- how will she, who loves you so, submit to this separation? |
9774 | But what good will result to yourself in this project? 9774 But why can you not love Lord Vargrave? |
9774 | But why not have told me of this? 9774 But will she leave her mother?" |
9774 | But you do not remember me? |
9774 | But you go too, my dear Miss Cameron? |
9774 | But you surely have no intention of selling Burleigh? |
9774 | But you will not leave me to- night? 9774 But you wo n''t stay away so long again, will you? |
9774 | But, oh, Mr. Aubrey,said Evelyn, with an earnestness that overcame embarrassment,"have I a choice left to me? |
9774 | But,said Aubrey,"can we believe this new and astounding statement? |
9774 | But-- I beg pardon, your honour-- if they be great folks? |
9774 | By the by, you will want the five thousand pounds you lent me? |
9774 | Cameron is a Scotch name: to what tribe of Camerons do you belong? |
9774 | Can we, with new agencies at our command, new morality, new wisdom, predicate of the Future by the Past? 9774 Can you give me back years of hope and expectancy,--the manhood wasted in a vain dream? |
9774 | Can you not guess my secret? 9774 Can you really imagine she will still accept your hand?" |
9774 | Can_ you_ want a pleader? |
9774 | Caroline,said Mrs. Merton, affectionately,"are you not well? |
9774 | Dare I yet venture to propose? |
9774 | Dear friend,said he,"will you intrust this charge to myself? |
9774 | Did he not ask to see me? |
9774 | Did not your uncle tell you? |
9774 | Did the late lord marry at C-----? |
9774 | Did you ever meet him? |
9774 | Did you ever see Lady Vargrave? |
9774 | Did you never know that the Christian name of Evelyn''s mother is Alice? |
9774 | Did you not know Mr. Maltravers was gone? |
9774 | Did you think so, my dear? 9774 Do n''t you fear that the girls will catch cold? |
9774 | Do these remind you of your first charity to me? |
9774 | Do you not employ on behalf of individuals the same moral agencies that wise legislation or sound philosophy would adopt towards the multitude? 9774 Do you not hear me? |
9774 | Do you stay long? |
9774 | Does Evelyn ever talk of him? |
9774 | Does Lord Raby return to town, or is he now at Knaresdean for the autumn? |
9774 | Does not Miss Cameron look well? |
9774 | Does she then write much of Lord Vargrave? |
9774 | Does the poor woman live in the neighbourhood? 9774 Does your mother resemble you?" |
9774 | Doltimore has positively fixed, then, to go abroad on your return from Cornwall? |
9774 | Doltimore, I leave Knaresdean to- morrow; you go to London, I suppose? 9774 Dull? |
9774 | Evelyn,said Aubrey,"can you require to learn more; do you not already feel you are released from union with a man without heart and honour?" |
9774 | Evelyn,said the curate, with mild reproach,"have I not said that your mother has known sorrow? |
9774 | From Nature? |
9774 | Guests of ours,--Mrs. Leslie, whom you have often heard us speak of, but never met--"Yes; and the others? |
9774 | HAS not Miss Cameron a beautiful countenance? |
9774 | Had you not better give Caroline a hint? |
9774 | Has Lord Vargrave written to you lately? |
9774 | Has not Miss Cameron a beautiful countenance? |
9774 | Has that servant lived long with Lord Vargrave? |
9774 | Have you any commands at-----? |
9774 | Have you any horses on the turf? |
9774 | Have you heard again from her, this morning? |
9774 | Have you no orders to give, then, my lord? |
9774 | Have you no picture of her? |
9774 | He has a countenance which, if physiognomy be a true science, declares his praise to be no common compliment; may I inquire his name? |
9774 | He thinks but of the world, of pleasure; Maltravers is right,--the spoiled children of society can not love: why should I think of him? |
9774 | Him!--whom? |
9774 | How could he obtain entrance, how pass Lord Vargrave''s servants? 9774 How d''ye do, Maltravers?" |
9774 | How d''ye do, Mr. Maltravers? 9774 How do, sir?" |
9774 | How have I offended him? |
9774 | I beg pardon, sir, but I thought your honour would excuse the liberty, though I know it is very bold to--"What is the matter? 9774 I take the bishop:--do you think so really?--you are rather a politician?" |
9774 | I think of travelling in the East,said Lord Doltimore, with much gravity:"I suppose nothing will induce you to sell the black horse?" |
9774 | I understand this, Ernest; but why is your home so solitary? 9774 I will not see him,"said Maltravers, hastily moving towards the door;"you are not fit to--""Meet him? |
9774 | I!--did your mother never allude to that name before? |
9774 | I_ his_ intimate friend? |
9774 | If I mistake not,said Maltravers,"you are that Mr. Aubrey on whose virtues I have often heard Miss Cameron delight to linger? |
9774 | If the differences be the result of honest convictions on either side,--no; but are you honest, Lumley? |
9774 | If you could take C----- in your way? |
9774 | Is he handsome? |
9774 | Is it possible? 9774 Is it possible?" |
9774 | Is it time to go? |
9774 | Is it to ascertain this point that you have done me the honour to visit me? |
9774 | Is she as fond of music as you are? |
9774 | Is there? |
9774 | It is a thousand pities, Sir John,said Lord Raby,"that you have not a colleague more worthy of you; Nelthorpe never attends a committee, does he?" |
9774 | It is true,said Maltravers, with a tone of voice that showed he was struck with the remark;"but how have we fallen on this subject? |
9774 | It was the draught from the door; go on, I beseech you, the young lady, the friend, her name? |
9774 | Listen to me,resumed Vargrave:"with Alice Darvil you lived in the neighbourhood of-----, did you not?" |
9774 | May-- may-- we draw out the money to-- to-- show-- that-- that we are in earnest? 9774 Me-- how?" |
9774 | Monday? 9774 Mr. Maltravers? |
9774 | Mrs. Merton,said the rector, with great solemnity,"Miss Cameron may know no better now; but what will she think of us hereafter? |
9774 | My lord, can I speak with you a few moments? |
9774 | My mother-- she is well-- she lives-- what brings you hither? |
9774 | Never!--and yet, once I remember--"What? |
9774 | No, indeed; why do you ask? |
9774 | No-- what? |
9774 | No; but you are just as gay when you are in good spirits-- and who can be out of spirits in such weather? 9774 No? |
9774 | None? 9774 Not, surely, while betrothed to another?" |
9774 | Of Italy? |
9774 | Oh, how can you stay indoors this beautiful evening? 9774 Oh, my dear Miss Cameron,"said Mrs. Merton,"that is Burleigh; have you not been there? |
9774 | Perhaps she may have overheard some of the impertinent whispers about her mother,--''Who was Lady Vargrave?'' 9774 Perhaps you will take Grandmamma, then?" |
9774 | Perhaps you will take a seat in our carriage on Monday? |
9774 | Price, sir? |
9774 | Shall I break it to her? |
9774 | Shall I give your honour''s message? |
9774 | Shall I shut that door, my lord? |
9774 | Shall I sing to you the words I spoke of last night? 9774 Shall I write to Lord Vargrave?" |
9774 | Shall I, then, go to her? 9774 Sir,"said he, almost harshly, as he turned to the surgeon,"what idle doubts are these? |
9774 | So Lord Vargrave devoted himself to Miss Cameron? |
9774 | So you are come for your daily lesson, my young pupil? |
9774 | So you go to Cornwall to- morrow, Doltimore? |
9774 | So you like the Mertons? 9774 So you think I also am too old for a lover?" |
9774 | Tears, my child? |
9774 | That is a bad compliment to us,answered Evelyn, ingenuously;"do you think we are so little worthy your society as not to value it? |
9774 | That is a strange wish; but perhaps you have been crossed in love? |
9774 | The carriage is waiting,--are you ready? |
9774 | The particulars, Colonel? |
9774 | Then she knew this place before? |
9774 | Then why--"Why wish you wedded to another; why we d another myself? 9774 Then, do I love him as I dreamed I could love?" |
9774 | Think you,said Maltravers, in a hollow voice,"think you IT WAS YOUR FATHER?" |
9774 | This evening? |
9774 | To Merton Rectory? |
9774 | Unhappy man,said he, at length, and soothingly,"how came you hither? |
9774 | Vargrave is there still? |
9774 | Was Mr. Maltravers at Knaresdean? |
9774 | Was the girl who appeared at the gate of Hobbs''Lodge described to you? |
9774 | Well, I envy you; but is it a sudden resolution? |
9774 | Well, well, what message do you bring? |
9774 | Well, what can I do for you,--some little favour, eh? 9774 Well,"said Lady Vargrave, anxiously,"well?" |
9774 | Well,said Vargrave,"and where is it? |
9774 | Were not_ you_ the lover,--the accepted, the happy lover of Miss Cameron? 9774 What am I to do?" |
9774 | What are you going to----- for? |
9774 | What can you intend? |
9774 | What could take him to Paris? |
9774 | What does your lordship know of him? 9774 What has happened to you?" |
9774 | What impertinence is this? |
9774 | What is that? |
9774 | What is that? |
9774 | What is the matter, sir? |
9774 | What is the matter? 9774 What is the matter?" |
9774 | What is the nearest house,--your own? |
9774 | What is this? 9774 What is this?" |
9774 | What is your debt? |
9774 | What makes the charm of the place to Lady Vargrave? |
9774 | What o''clock is it? |
9774 | What would Evelyn say? |
9774 | What would society be if all men thought as you do, and acted up to the theory? 9774 What!--if he love her?" |
9774 | What''s your other name; why do you have such a long, hard name? |
9774 | What, in Indian ink? |
9774 | What, it would vex him so? |
9774 | Where is Lady Raby? |
9774 | Where is he going; where is the squire going? |
9774 | Where the deuce have you been? 9774 Who is this author that pleases you so much?" |
9774 | Who ought better to judge of the Eleusiniana than one of the Initiated? 9774 Who that loves truly has not? |
9774 | Why am I to be detained here? 9774 Why did you not tell me Lord Vargrave was so charming?" |
9774 | Why do n''t we begin? |
9774 | Why do you think so? |
9774 | Why does he write no more? |
9774 | Why, let me see,--what was her name? |
9774 | Will it be too late to try to- night? |
9774 | Will these suffice? |
9774 | Will you go there to- day? |
9774 | Will you join us, Sir John? |
9774 | Will you not dine with us to- day? |
9774 | Will you withdraw to the inner room? |
9774 | Will you? 9774 Wish me joy, madam?" |
9774 | With whom, then, do the last duties rest? |
9774 | Would Lord Vargrave do him the honour to dine with him at Caserta next Monday? |
9774 | You are acquainted with Mr. Merton, then? |
9774 | You are bitter, Lord Vargrave,said Caroline, laughing;"yet surely you have had no reason to complain of the non- appreciation of talent?" |
9774 | You are going to let Burleigh, I hear, to Lord Doltimore,--is it true? 9774 You are not serious about Lord Doltimore?" |
9774 | You do not care, then, whether this hero be handsome or young? |
9774 | You do not remember Mr. Cameron, your real father, I suppose? |
9774 | You do not remember your father, I believe? |
9774 | You do not think that we_ waste_ feeling upon human beings? |
9774 | You draw? |
9774 | You have managed to obtain terms with Mr. Douce, and to delay the repayment of your debt to him? |
9774 | You know Lord Vargrave, sir? |
9774 | You mean the forfeit money of thirty thousand pounds? |
9774 | You must be curious to know who the father of your intended wife was? |
9774 | You observe what a sensation she creates? |
9774 | You prefer coffee, Lord Vargrave? 9774 You seem to know the name?" |
9774 | You will not long remain in town now the season is over? |
9774 | You, Miss Merton? 9774 Your own name then?" |
9774 | _ Allons_!--will you not come home with us? |
9774 | _ Do_ you think so? 9774 _ Let_ Burleigh? |
9774 | *"What shall I do, a bachelor?" |
9774 | *"Why, in vain, do you catch at fleeting shadows? |
9774 | ** Has not all this proved prophetic? |
9774 | A million, did you say?" |
9774 | AH, who is nigh? |
9774 | Ah, Love is pensive,--is it not, Cleveland? |
9774 | Ah, does thy soul watch over me still? |
9774 | Ah, what is it you require? |
9774 | Ah, who shall determine the worth of things? |
9774 | Ah, why could they not be renewed? |
9774 | Ah, why was Legard absent? |
9774 | Am I mad? |
9774 | Am I not a villain? |
9774 | Am I not to be pitied?" |
9774 | And Alice!--Will the world blame us if you are left happy at the last? |
9774 | And Alice, her tale-- her sufferings-- her indomitable love!--how should he meet_ her_? |
9774 | And can you say fairly that by laws labour can not be lightened and poverty diminished? |
9774 | And have I not Sultan, too?" |
9774 | And have I-- I destroyed her joy at seeing you again? |
9774 | And her mother, sir,--she is dead?" |
9774 | And how, poor Alice, in that remote village, was chance to throw him in your way? |
9774 | And if he married Evelyn, and if Evelyn bought Lisle Court, would not Lisle Court be his? |
9774 | And so you think the Government can not stand?" |
9774 | And think you these crimes will go forever unrequited; think you that there is no justice in the thunderbolts of God?" |
9774 | And what are charity, generosity, but the poetry and the beauty of justice?" |
9774 | And what had so enchanted the poor prisoner, so deluded the poor maniac? |
9774 | And what think you of Miss Cameron, my intended?" |
9774 | And what, too, could her mother do without him; and why could he not write to the vicar instead of going to him? |
9774 | And why did Evelyn tremble? |
9774 | And yet in this village how can she compare him with others; how can she form a choice? |
9774 | And yet; is it illness, Ernest, or is it some grief that you hide from me?" |
9774 | And you still have scruples?" |
9774 | Any commands at C-----, or any message for Evelyn?" |
9774 | Apply the flame to the log on the hearth, or apply it to the forest, is there no distinction in the result? |
9774 | Are the affections so full of bitterness? |
9774 | Are we now contented? |
9774 | Are we the things to be gay,--''droll,''as you say? |
9774 | Are you going to the rectory?" |
9774 | Are you not grateful for your escape? |
9774 | Are you not my friend; am I not rich enough for both? |
9774 | Are you satisfied?" |
9774 | BUT how were these doubts to be changed into absolute certainty? |
9774 | Be just, my lord, be just, and exonerate us all from blame: who can dictate to the affections?" |
9774 | Beloved Evelyn, I may hope,--you will not resolve against me?" |
9774 | But I-- what can I bestow on you? |
9774 | But Lord Vargrave-- is he too old?" |
9774 | But are you sure that the thing is settled?" |
9774 | But can Maltravers adhere to his wise precautions? |
9774 | But can you tell me anything about my fair stranger and her friends? |
9774 | But could Maltravers meditate any hostile proceedings? |
9774 | But did Maltravers welcome, did he embrace that thought? |
9774 | But now, what is there left for me? |
9774 | But seriously, why on earth should political differences part private friendship? |
9774 | But this is blame that attaches only to the dead: can you blame the living?" |
9774 | But was Maltravers all the while forgetful of Alice? |
9774 | But what are such sober infirmities to the vices that arise from defiance and despair? |
9774 | But what does Doltimore suspect? |
9774 | But what had been the career, what the earlier condition and struggles of this simple and interesting creature? |
9774 | But what is the difference here between the rules of a village lord and the laws of a wise legislature? |
9774 | But who broached the absurd report?" |
9774 | But who does Miss Cameron resemble?" |
9774 | But who have just entered the opposite box? |
9774 | But who[ sinking his voice], who are those ladies?" |
9774 | But whom had Maltravers seen? |
9774 | But why should I leave you? |
9774 | But why this departure from your roof just when we ought to see most of each other? |
9774 | But you are not alone?" |
9774 | But you will not go yet?" |
9774 | But, Legard, was there aught in the manner, the bearing of Evelyn Cameron, that could lead you to suppose that she would have returned your affection? |
9774 | But, my lord, surely you will take some refreshment?" |
9774 | By the by, are we to say anything of the engagement?" |
9774 | CHAPTER V. TELL me, Sophy, my dear, what do you think of our new visitors? |
9774 | Can I be ungrateful, disobedient to him who was a father to me? |
9774 | Can I not return then to my-- to her-- yes, let me call her_ mother_ still?" |
9774 | Can I offer your lordship a glass of wine?" |
9774 | Can Lord Vargrave have gained his point? |
9774 | Can political differences, opposite pursuits, or the mere lapse of time, have sufficed to create an irrevocable gulf between us? |
9774 | Can this loss be so irremediable; may we not yet take precaution, and save, at least, some wrecks of this noble fortune?" |
9774 | Can you go to town to- morrow?" |
9774 | Can you learn who Lady Vargrave was? |
9774 | Can you suppose that, if she marry another, her husband will ever consent to a child''s romance? |
9774 | Can you tell what was the matter with her?" |
9774 | Could Evelyn hesitate; could Evelyn doubt? |
9774 | Could I have been justified in stealing her from the admiration that, at her age and to her sex, has so sweet a flattery? |
9774 | Could he love her,--her, so young, so inferior, so uninformed? |
9774 | Could not Miss Cameron,"he added, with a smile and a penetrating look,"tempt you into Devonshire?" |
9774 | Could you not save us both from the pain that otherwise must come sooner or later?" |
9774 | Devilish cold; is it not? |
9774 | Did any one ever know how that money went? |
9774 | Did society gain; did literature lose? |
9774 | Did you never hear of this before?" |
9774 | Did you not know that she was engaged to him from her childhood? |
9774 | Did you receive it?" |
9774 | Do n''t you think so? |
9774 | Do n''t you think so?" |
9774 | Do you feel no pain at the thought that-- that I am another''s?" |
9774 | Do you know her?" |
9774 | Do you not look on the past with a shudder at the precipice on which you stood? |
9774 | Do you not love Lord Vargrave?" |
9774 | Do you think she is bound by such an engagement?" |
9774 | Does it matter whether it be by the gossips of this age or the next? |
9774 | Down, Sultan; so you have found me out, have you, sir? |
9774 | Elton?" |
9774 | FRIEND after friend departs; Who hath not lost a friend? |
9774 | For if there had been any love between Maltravers and Evelyn, why should the former not have stood his ground, and declared his suit? |
9774 | Forgive me, but is not that my affair? |
9774 | HEARD you that? |
9774 | Had that fervid and romantic spirit been again awakened by a living object? |
9774 | Handsome, clever, admired, distinguished-- what can woman desire more in her lover, her husband? |
9774 | Has Colonel Maltravers been extravagant?" |
9774 | Has Mr. Howard engaged a lodging here?" |
9774 | Has anything chanced to arouse your-- shall I call it curiosity, or shall I call it the mortified pride of affection?" |
9774 | Has either nation fallen back? |
9774 | Has it never occurred to you that the winter is the season for escape?" |
9774 | Has_ he_ discovered the name_ I_ bear? |
9774 | Have I then concealed it so well? |
9774 | Have you any interest there still?" |
9774 | Have you any living that Charley Merton could hold with his own? |
9774 | Have you ever formed some fancy, some ideal of the one you could love, and how does Lord Vargrave fall short of the vision?" |
9774 | Have you heard anything of your brother lately?" |
9774 | Have you known Merton long?" |
9774 | Have you made up your mind to leave Burleigh on Saturday?" |
9774 | Have you never felt it, even with-- with your mother?" |
9774 | Have you no pity for her?" |
9774 | Have you no tie, no affection, no kindred; are you lord of yourself?" |
9774 | Have you read the book I sent you?" |
9774 | He desires still, but what? |
9774 | He gazed earnestly and long upon the working countenance of Legard, and said, after a pause,--"You, too, loved her, then? |
9774 | He might have made an admirable savage: but surely the mass of civilized men are better than the thief?" |
9774 | Her name, sir,--oh, what is her name? |
9774 | How can that innocent and joyous spirit sympathize with all that mine has endured and known? |
9774 | How can you raise the child of destitution and guilt to your own rank? |
9774 | How could I ever visit the place where I first saw_ her_?" |
9774 | How could she ever think of marrying Lord Vargrave, so much older,--she who could have so many admirers?" |
9774 | How could she then consent to the sacrifice which Maltravers is prepared to make? |
9774 | How did you like Alfieri?" |
9774 | How do we know whose fault it is when a marriage is broken off? |
9774 | How is it, Maltravers, that they see so little of you at the rectory? |
9774 | How know we that excellence may not be illimitable? |
9774 | How know we that there is a certain and definite goal, even in heaven? |
9774 | How old is he, do you think?" |
9774 | How say to her,''I have taken from thee thy last hope,--I have broken thy child''s heart''?" |
9774 | However, she turned away, and saying, with a forced gayety,"Well, then, you will not desert us; we shall see you once more?" |
9774 | I can not say more now; but will you remain at Dover a few days longer? |
9774 | I do n''t care for races, I never wished to go, I would much sooner have stayed; and I am sure Sophy will not get well without me,--will you, dear?" |
9774 | I grieve bitterly at the tenor of your too generous uncle''s will; can I not atone to you? |
9774 | I have arrived this day; and now-- but tell me, is it true?" |
9774 | I know that he has arrived, for his servant has been here to say so; has he uttered anything to distress you? |
9774 | I must neglect her no longer-- yet it is surely all safe? |
9774 | I never saw anything so perfect as the black one; may I ask where you bought him?" |
9774 | I read in the papers-- an-- an announcement-- which-- which occasions me the greatest-- I know not what I would say,--but is it true? |
9774 | I think I will take the queen''s pawn-- your politics are the same as Lord Vargrave''s?" |
9774 | I was in the lodge at the moment, my lord, and I explained--""That Mr. Ferrers and Lord Vargrave are one and the same? |
9774 | I will learn from her own lips-- yet, how can I meet her again? |
9774 | If Mr. Maltravers could spare two to that gentleman, who had, indeed, pre- engaged them? |
9774 | If so, am I not old enough to know it?" |
9774 | If so, where was the object found? |
9774 | If you continue to do so, do you know what Mrs. Hare and the world will say?" |
9774 | In the mighty organization of good and evil, what can we vain individuals effect? |
9774 | Is Democracy better than the aristocratic commonwealth? |
9774 | Is Evelyn, indeed, no longer free?" |
9774 | Is Lady Jane D----- to be married at last?" |
9774 | Is he at this hotel?" |
9774 | Is he one of your favourites, Miss Cameron?" |
9774 | Is it not so?" |
9774 | Is it possible? |
9774 | Is it so; is it? |
9774 | Is it so? |
9774 | Is it to the frost or to the sunshine that the flower opens its petals, or the fruit ripens from the blossom? |
9774 | Is it true that he is so much in debt, and is so very-- very profligate? |
9774 | Is it true, that Miss Caroline is going to marry his lordship? |
9774 | Is it with her, and her alone, that your dearest hopes are connected?" |
9774 | Is life, mere animal life, on the whole, a curse or a blessing?" |
9774 | Is man created for nothing nobler than freighting ships and speculating on silk and sugar? |
9774 | Is not the phaeton pretty? |
9774 | Is that your mother''s letter; is that her handwriting?" |
9774 | Is the wind there? |
9774 | Is there a secret? |
9774 | Is there no difference in the quality of that desire? |
9774 | Is there so much melancholy in life? |
9774 | It can not be that you would separate us?" |
9774 | It is the fashion nowadays to postpone budgets as long as we can,--eh? |
9774 | Leslie?" |
9774 | Look at the Greeks, who knew both forms; are they agreed which is the best? |
9774 | Lord Vargrave, you can never consent to that, I am sure?" |
9774 | Lord Vargrave--""Lord Vargrave again?" |
9774 | Lord Vargrave?" |
9774 | Maltravers was silent for some minutes; at length he said abruptly,"And you really loved her, Vargrave,--you love her still? |
9774 | Maltravers, in your earliest youth, did you form connection with one whom they called Alice Darvil?" |
9774 | Maltravers?" |
9774 | May I ask you to present them with my best-- best and most anxious regards? |
9774 | May I once, and for the last time, assume the austere rights of friendship? |
9774 | May he not be worthier, at all events, than this soured temper and erring heart? |
9774 | Meanwhile is there anything you would have added or altered?" |
9774 | Meanwhile, have you no friends, no relations, no children, whom you would wish to see?" |
9774 | Meanwhile, what was the effect that the presence, the attentions, of Maltravers produced on Evelyn? |
9774 | Merton''s?" |
9774 | Miss Cameron a young woman of bus- bus- business, my lord?" |
9774 | Miss Cameron is to be married to him very shortly,--is it not so?" |
9774 | Miss Cameron, did you ever know that wretched species of hysterical affection called''forced spirits''? |
9774 | Miss Cameron, you look pale-- you-- you have not suffered, I hope?" |
9774 | My father!--it is probable; yes, it may have been my father; whom else could she have loved so fondly?" |
9774 | My good friend,"and he turned to the scout,"may I request you to look in my room for my snuff- box? |
9774 | Nay, should I have indulged in a high and stirring career, for which my own fortune is by no means qualified? |
9774 | Nay, would his uncle, on whom he was dependent, consent to such a refusal? |
9774 | No books, no talk, no disputes, no quarrels? |
9774 | No; you say''not Legard:''who else is there?" |
9774 | Nobody does things like Lord Raby; do n''t you dance?" |
9774 | Nor you either?" |
9774 | Now, could you conveniently place a few thousands to my account, just for a short time? |
9774 | Now, he is a very good fellow, and I gave him that place to oblige you; still, as you are no longer a_ garcon_--but perhaps I shall offend you?" |
9774 | O Heaven!--what have ye then decreed? |
9774 | Oh, do you know, Doltimore, what little Desire says of you? |
9774 | On whom should vengeance fall? |
9774 | Or, on the other hand, could I have gone back to her years, and sympathized with feelings that time has taught me to despise? |
9774 | Ought I not fairly to tell him so? |
9774 | Ought I not to sacrifice my own happiness? |
9774 | Peers must not interfere in elections, eh? |
9774 | Perhaps Mr. Aubrey means to perfect the project by taking two outside places on the top of the coach?" |
9774 | Perhaps there is a son, the image of the sire?" |
9774 | Pray, why is the marriage between Lady C----- D----- and Mr. F----- broken off? |
9774 | Rank? |
9774 | Shall I speak with you a minute?" |
9774 | Shall I? |
9774 | She ought to mix more with those of her own age, to see more of the world before-- before--""Before her marriage with me? |
9774 | She sighed, and said in a very low voice, as to herself,"It is true-- how could I think otherwise?" |
9774 | She yet mourns, perhaps, my father, whom I never saw, whom I feel, as it were, tacitly forbid to name,--you did not know him?" |
9774 | Should I get them as her dependant? |
9774 | Snug sinecure for a favourite clerk, or a place in the Stamp- Office for your fat footman-- John, I think you call him? |
9774 | So you go to your villa every day? |
9774 | So you think I look well to- night? |
9774 | So, then, it was really premeditated and resolved upon-- his absence from the rectory; and why? |
9774 | Stay, what is this?" |
9774 | Still, he did not quite like the tone of voice in which Evelyn had put her abrupt negative, and said, with a slight sneer,--"If not that, what is he?" |
9774 | Suppose that I could bear this for myself, could I bear it for you? |
9774 | The butterfly that seems the child of the summer and the flowers-- what wind will not chill its mirth, what touch will not brush away its hues? |
9774 | The chance was lost; but why should it vex her,--what was he to her? |
9774 | The name is so common-- whom of that name have you known?" |
9774 | The name of Butler is in his family, eh?" |
9774 | The young lady is very handsome, almost too handsome for a wife-- don''t you think so? |
9774 | These people are kind to you?" |
9774 | This language is wanton cruelty,--it is fiendish insult,--is it not, Evelyn? |
9774 | Usury, usury, again!--he knew its price, and he sighed-- but what was to be done? |
9774 | Vargrave was talking to the deaf; what cared Maltravers for the world? |
9774 | WHY value, then, that strength of mind they boast, As often varying, and as often lost? |
9774 | WILL Fortune never come with both hands full, But write her fair words still in foulest letters? |
9774 | WILL nothing please you? |
9774 | Was I wrong to save him? |
9774 | Was Maltravers happy in his new pursuits? |
9774 | Was he at that time cheerful, in good spirits?" |
9774 | Was he to make her nobleness a curse? |
9774 | Was he to say,"Thou hast passed away in thy generation, and I leave thee again to thy solitude for her whom thou hast cherished as a child?" |
9774 | Was it only to make his old rival the purchaser, if he so pleased it, of the possessions of his own family? |
9774 | Was one a greater torment than the other is? |
9774 | Was the outer door closed?" |
9774 | Was this one of those moody and overwhelming paroxysms to which it had been whispered abroad that he was subject? |
9774 | Was your uncle ever accused of corruption? |
9774 | We may dismiss the postboys, Howard; and what time shall we summon them,--ten o''clock?" |
9774 | We might then be sure that he would have no selfish interest to further: he would not play tricks with his party-- you understand?" |
9774 | Wealth? |
9774 | Well, and how are all at home? |
9774 | Were you not?" |
9774 | What Englishman, what Frenchman, would wish to be a Swiss? |
9774 | What brought the old man hither?" |
9774 | What can I say to Evelyn? |
9774 | What can it give you to compensate for the misery of a union without love? |
9774 | What can we do when she leaves us?" |
9774 | What care_ you_ for observation? |
9774 | What could it be? |
9774 | What do I hear? |
9774 | What do you mean,--does she not love you?" |
9774 | What do you think would be the purchase- money?" |
9774 | What do you think?" |
9774 | What do you want?" |
9774 | What else, too, could be done? |
9774 | What form of government is then the best? |
9774 | What have we done? |
9774 | What in this brief life is a pang more or less? |
9774 | What is he; who is he?" |
9774 | What is the debt?" |
9774 | What is there against Legard?" |
9774 | What is to be done? |
9774 | What is to be done?" |
9774 | What matters it how frivolous and poor the occupations which can distract my thoughts, and bring me forgetfulness? |
9774 | What news about corn and barley? |
9774 | What say you, my fair ward?" |
9774 | What shall I do? |
9774 | What shall be done-- if Evelyn should love, and love in vain? |
9774 | What sort of a man is Lord Vargrave?" |
9774 | What sort of looking person was this Alice Darvil,--pretty, of course?" |
9774 | What sort of looking person?" |
9774 | What strange musick Was that we heard afar off? |
9774 | What time shall we start?--need not get down much before dinner-- one o''clock?" |
9774 | What was I to you that you should have sinned for_ my_ sake? |
9774 | What you have done in one village, why should not legislation do throughout a kingdom? |
9774 | What''s the matter?" |
9774 | What_ have_ I done?" |
9774 | When may I change?" |
9774 | Where are you going, Caroline?" |
9774 | Where are you staying?" |
9774 | Where could he fly from memory? |
9774 | Where have you been? |
9774 | Where is Evelyn?" |
9774 | Where is he? |
9774 | Where is the Dead?" |
9774 | Where is the goal, and what have we gained? |
9774 | Where was the safety- valve of governments, where the natural vents of excitement in a population so inflammable? |
9774 | Where was there ever an oligarchy equal to this? |
9774 | Where, in the page of history, shall we look back and say,''Here improvement has diminished the sum of evil''? |
9774 | Whereon do you look? |
9774 | Which do you think is the handsomer? |
9774 | While the bond lasts, who can be justified in tempting her to break it?" |
9774 | Who could ever have imagined my romantic friend would sink into a country squire?" |
9774 | Who is she, my lord?" |
9774 | Who shall say whether Voltaire or Napoleon, Cromwell or Caesar, Walpole or Pitt, has done most good or most evil? |
9774 | Who wants the arts of the milliner at seventeen? |
9774 | Who was your predecessor in that charming retreat?" |
9774 | Why am I never to speak of her first marriage, of my father? |
9774 | Why are my nights to be broken by the groans of maniacs, and my days devoured in a solitude that loathes the aspect of things around me? |
9774 | Why are serpents and fiends my comrades? |
9774 | Why can the fountain within never be exhausted? |
9774 | Why did she believe him capricious, light, and false? |
9774 | Why did she feel that a crisis of existence was at hand? |
9774 | Why did you not take me with you?" |
9774 | Why do n''t you cultivate his acquaintance?" |
9774 | Why do you look so grave? |
9774 | Why does she avoid all mention of her early days? |
9774 | Why does she look reproachfully at me, and shun me-- yes, shun me, for days together-- if-- if I attempt to draw her to the past? |
9774 | Why had she shut her softest thoughts from her soul? |
9774 | Why have I been so heavily visited, and why have you gone free? |
9774 | Why is my own sister become my persecutor? |
9774 | Why is there fire in my brain and heart; and why do you go free and enjoy liberty and life? |
9774 | Why is this? |
9774 | Why is this? |
9774 | Why may we not be friends again?" |
9774 | Why not have it over to- night? |
9774 | Why not say that under a borrowed name and in the romance of early youth you knew and loved Alice( though in innocence and honour)? |
9774 | Why not, then, come with Evelyn? |
9774 | Why now does your love so shame my own?" |
9774 | Why reserve the knowledge of the blessing until it has turned to poison? |
9774 | Why should I deem him unworthy of the treasure? |
9774 | Why should he love, and yet fly her? |
9774 | Why should she give me up to the torturer and the dungeon? |
9774 | Why this jealous pang? |
9774 | Why was she to go? |
9774 | Why will you not speak to my mother, implore her to let me remain? |
9774 | Why, does not that belong to Colonel Maltravers?" |
9774 | Why, through so many scenes and sufferings, have I still retained the vain madness of my youth,--the haunting susceptibility to love? |
9774 | Why, what can be your reason for hesitation?" |
9774 | Why, who could have taught you in this little village; or, indeed, in this most primitive county?" |
9774 | Why, why were you so long lost to me? |
9774 | Why?" |
9774 | Will you believe my regret that our acquaintance is now so brief?" |
9774 | Will you dine with me to- day, Lumley?" |
9774 | Will you forget and forgive, and shake hands once more? |
9774 | Will you listen to me? |
9774 | Will you take a little packet for me to the Home Office?" |
9774 | Will you tell your fair young friend that you have met an old gentleman who wishes her all happiness; and if she ask you his name, say Cleveland?" |
9774 | Will you write one line to me to say that I am authorized to reveal the secret, and that it is known only to me? |
9774 | Will you, dearest Lady Vargrave, make her accept all the homage which, when uttered by me, she seems half inclined to reject? |
9774 | Without a middle class, would there ever have been an interposition between lord and slave? |
9774 | Without an aristocracy, would there have been a middle class? |
9774 | Without economy, who can be just? |
9774 | Would Movement and Progress be without their divine uses, even if they limited their effect to the production of such a class? |
9774 | Would not such intelligence shock all pride, and destroy all hope? |
9774 | Yes, Evelyn shall be saved; but the rest-- the rest-- why do you turn away?" |
9774 | Yet what the distinction between the peasant and the prince, differing from that between the peasant and the savage? |
9774 | Yet, do you know, I more dread the caution respecting the first than all the candour that betrays the influence of the last? |
9774 | Yet, while one left the world an immortal heirloom of genius, where are the poets, the philosophers, the statesmen of the other? |
9774 | You analyze men''s motives-- how can you be sure you judge rightly? |
9774 | You are about to leave your home; new scenes will surround, new faces smile on you; dare I hope that I may still be remembered?" |
9774 | You are not then one of that family?" |
9774 | You ask what England has gained by her progress in the arts? |
9774 | You can join us at Christmas, I trust?" |
9774 | You can stay? |
9774 | You remember, for instance, young Legard? |
9774 | You saw the leading article in the----- to- day? |
9774 | You shake your head: why always avoid society? |
9774 | You start!--have you known one of that name?" |
9774 | You surprise me; where did you ever see Mr. Maltravers before?" |
9774 | You will not consummate your wrong to Alice Darvil by robbing her of the fruit of a life of penitence and remorse? |
9774 | You will not forget the letters of introduction? |
9774 | You will not suffer her to learn that her mother has done that which dishonours alike mother and child? |
9774 | You will not unveil her shame to her own daughter? |
9774 | You will stay at Dover?" |
9774 | _ thou_ love again? |
9774 | and I not know of it?" |
9774 | and can you suppose that it is your fortune I seek? |
9774 | and why now?" |
9774 | and why?" |
9774 | and you are going into his neighbourhood?" |
9774 | and you will write to me one little word-- to relieve me? |
9774 | and you, too, will not forget us?" |
9774 | and''What Cameron was Lady Vargrave''s first husband?'' |
9774 | are you really going to leave us?" |
9774 | but he is not about to leave the county?" |
9774 | but how can you account for it? |
9774 | certainly; will you come to my dressing- room?" |
9774 | did Mrs. Cameron ever reside in C-----?" |
9774 | do not alarm my wife-- she knows nothing; but I have just heard at Paris, that-- that he has escaped-- you know whom I mean?" |
9774 | do you blush at his name? |
9774 | do you think of going to Vienna?" |
9774 | does she resemble you?" |
9774 | exclaimed Mrs. Merton;"is that from the king? |
9774 | have not you got a country seat of your own, my lord? |
9774 | her name is Alice?" |
9774 | in the very hour of her joy at my return, is she to writhe beneath this new affliction?" |
9774 | interrupted the curate, gently;"your own good heart and pure intentions have worked out your own atonement-- may I hope also your own content? |
9774 | is he, then, in Paris?" |
9774 | or has--"( she added falteringly and timidly)--"has poor Evelyn offended you? |
9774 | said Sophy;"I may go to Evy? |
9774 | said he,"what is this? |
9774 | said he;"she is coming; you are not yet prepared to meet her!--nay, would it be well?" |
9774 | she lisped, putting up her face to be kissed;"how''s the pretty peacock?" |
9774 | she murmured, turning away;"how could I have mistaken that likeness?" |
9774 | she said, approaching him again;"have you seen Lord Vargrave? |
9774 | what can atone to me?" |
9774 | what can you mean?" |
9774 | what do I want to know? |
9774 | what matter names? |
9774 | what of her?" |
9774 | will_ she_ be happy? |
9774 | you are going into the country?" |
8688 | [ 364] And wo n''t we laugh? 8688 ''Tis garlic then? 8688 ''Tis not about that I ask you, but which, according to you, is the best measure, the trimeter or the tetrameter? 8688 (_ Addressing the Athenian._) Do n''t you feel of mornings a strong nervous tension? 8688 (_ He perceives Trygaeus astride his beetle._) Why, what plague is this? 8688 (_ Hearing money mentioned Clean turns his head, and Agoracritus seizes the opportunity to snatch away the stewed hare._) Where, where, I say? 8688 (_ Peace whispers into Hermes''ear._) Is that your grievance against them? 8688 (_ Pseudartabas makes a negative sign._) Then our ambassadors are seeking to deceive us? 8688 (_ To Peace._) What now? 8688 (_ To Strepsiades._) Did you hear their voices mingling with the awful growling of the thunder? 8688 (_ addressing one of his attendant officers_) what are you gaping at the crows about? 8688 --while that infamous_ Mad Ox_[423] was bellowing away on his side.--Do ye not blush, ye women, for your wild and uproarious doings? 8688 ... Why did I borrow these? 8688 ... and to converse with the clouds, who are our genii? 8688 A fatted bull? 8688 A great fat swine then? 8688 A purse? 8688 A sheep? 8688 Acharnians, what means this threat? 8688 Again you come back without it? 8688 All these? 8688 Am I a beggar? 8688 Am I compelled to hear myself thus abused, and merely because I love you? 8688 Am I drivelling because I demand my money? 8688 An you pity me, tell me, how did you get the idea to filch it from him? 8688 Anchovies, pottery? 8688 And Aphrodite, whose mysteries you have not celebrated for so long? 8688 And Attic figs? 8688 And actually you would claim the right to demand your money, when you know not a syllable of these celestial phenomena? 8688 And after him, who? 8688 And as to the rest, what do you wish to sell me? 8688 And do we give you two drachmae, that you should treat us to all this humbug? 8688 And do you see with what pleasure this sickle- maker is making long noses at the spear- maker? 8688 And first, answer me, did you beat me in my childhood? 8688 And for what lessons? 8688 And how could she speak to the spectators? 8688 And how ever did he set about measuring it? 8688 And how long was he replacing his dress? 8688 And how was it you did not see that you were getting so much into debt? 8688 And how, pray, would you propose to restore peace and order in all the countries of Greece? 8688 And how? 8688 And if I batter you to pieces with my fists, what will you do? 8688 And if he does n''t tell you? 8688 And if it fell into the watery depths of the sea, could it escape with its wings? 8688 And is it not right and meet? 8688 And is it not rightly done, since he refuses military service? 8688 And is it thick too? 8688 And not to Ares? 8688 And of what do they speak? 8688 And our demagogues? 8688 And our tragic poets? 8688 And pray, who are you? 8688 And should we still be dwelling in this city without this protecting stew- pan? 8688 And that is? 8688 And that? 8688 And the dragon? 8688 And the leather- seller must destroy the sheep- seller? 8688 And the spectators, what are they for the most part? 8688 And this female? 8688 And this other one? 8688 And this young woman, what countrywoman is she? 8688 And those stars like sparks, that plough up the air as they dart across the sky? 8688 And what am I to do? 8688 And what are masculine names? 8688 And what did he say about the gnat? 8688 And what did you learn from the master of exercises? 8688 And what do you drink yourself then, to be able all alone by yourself to dumbfound and stupefy the city so with your clamour? 8688 And what good can be learnt of them? 8688 And what harbour will you put in at? 8688 And what have you done with your sandals, you poor fool? 8688 And what if I prove to you by our school reasoning, that one ought to beat one''s mother? 8688 And what is he going to do with his mortar? 8688 And what is it I am to gain? 8688 And what is it I should learn? 8688 And what is life worth without these? 8688 And what is their rump looking at in the heavens? 8688 And what is this one''s fate? 8688 And what punishment will you inflict upon this Paphlagonian, the cause of all my troubles? 8688 And what shall I do with this tripe? 8688 And what will you give me for my trouble? 8688 And what will you give me in return? 8688 And when I lie beside her and caress her bosoms? 8688 And when they see Simon, that thiever of public money, what do they do then? 8688 And when you had become a man, what trade did you follow? 8688 And where are my neighbours of Cicynna? 8688 And wherein lies the harm of being so? 8688 And who is this Lamachus, who demands an eel? 8688 And who is this man suspended up in a basket? 8688 And who is this? 8688 And who says so? 8688 And who, pray, has been maltreating you? 8688 And whose are yours? 8688 And why bolts and bars? 8688 And why did he also name the last day of the old? 8688 And why do you always receive your pay, when none of these others ever get any? 8688 And why do you bite me? 8688 And why have the gods moved away? 8688 And why not? 8688 And why not? 8688 And why? 8688 And why? 8688 And why_ do_ you summon us, dear Lysistrata? 8688 And wise Cratinus, is he still alive? 8688 And you dare to demand money of me, when you are so ignorant? 8688 And you did not know, you never suspected, that they were goddesses? 8688 And you do n''t make him obey you? 8688 And you, Dracyllus, Euphorides or Prinides, have you knowledge of Ecbatana or Chaonia? 8688 And you, my pretty flat- fish, who declared just now they might split you in two? 8688 And you, old death- in- life, with your fire? 8688 And you, who are you? 8688 And you? 8688 And yours? 8688 And''tis with your yarn, and your skeins, and your spools, you think to appease so many bitter enmities, you silly women? 8688 And''twas with justice too; did they not break down my black fig tree, which I had planted and dunged with my own hands? 8688 Any statue? 8688 Are there any good men? 8688 Are we late, Lysistrata? 8688 Are you mad? 8688 Are you not going to cover your head immediately and ponder? 8688 Are you not holding back the salt? 8688 Are you surprised in adultery? 8688 Art thou sensible of the dangerous battle we are about to engage upon in defending the Lacedaemonians? 8688 Because you have put in too thick a wick.... Later, when we had this boy, what was to be his name? 8688 Being but a mortal, can you be stronger than a god? 8688 Believe you? 8688 Bound by such ties of mutual kindness, how can you bear to be at war? 8688 But I bethink me, shall I give her something to eat? 8688 But are they not going to show themselves? 8688 But are you a man or a Priapus, pray? 8688 But as you are so strong, why did you not circumcise me? 8688 But come( there are only friends who hear me), why accuse the Laconians of all our woes? 8688 But come, tell me what I_ should_ say? 8688 But come, tell me, you, who sell so many skins, have you ever made him a present of a pair of soles for his slippers? 8688 But do n''t you think the men will march up against us? 8688 But do n''t you think they want you just as badly? 8688 But do you believe there is more water in the sea now than there was formerly? 8688 But have you brought me a treaty? 8688 But how can that be? 8688 But how can you wipe, idiot? 8688 But how did the fight begin? 8688 But how to purify myself, before going back into the citadel? 8688 But how will you make the journey? 8688 But how, great gods? 8688 But if I do n''t want to be saved? 8688 But if our husbands drag us by main force into the bedchamber? 8688 But if they beat us? 8688 But if you imitate the cocks in all things, why do n''t you scratch up the dunghill, why do n''t you sleep on a perch? 8688 But if-- which the gods forbid-- we do refrain altogether from what you say, should we get peace any sooner? 8688 But is it my death you seek then, my death? 8688 But is it not Zeus who forces them to move? 8688 But my oath? 8688 But not the women? 8688 But perhaps some spectator, some beardless youth, who thinks himself a sage, will say,What is this? |
8688 | But presently we heard you asking out loud in the open street:"Is there never a man left in Athens?" |
8688 | But serious faith, ardent devotion, dogmatic discussion, is there a trace of these things? |
8688 | But tell me, what was the idea that miscarried? |
8688 | But tell me, who is it makes the thunder, which I so much dread? |
8688 | But tell me, who is this woman? |
8688 | But then what city shall we be able to stir up trouble in? |
8688 | But though it be true, need he say it? |
8688 | But what are those fellows doing, who are bent all double? |
8688 | But what are you driving at? |
8688 | But what did I? |
8688 | But what do you swear by then? |
8688 | But what does the oracle say? |
8688 | But what else is doing at Megara, eh? |
8688 | But what have you said? |
8688 | But what is in it? |
8688 | But what is my master doing? |
8688 | But what is this? |
8688 | But what is your name then? |
8688 | But what is your purpose? |
8688 | But what use is there in learning what we all know? |
8688 | But what will be done with him? |
8688 | But whatever do you do? |
8688 | But where can this man be found? |
8688 | But where get a white horse from? |
8688 | But where then did you get these pretty chattels? |
8688 | But where was she then, I wonder, all the long time she spent away from us? |
8688 | But where will the poor wretch get his food? |
8688 | But where, where? |
8688 | But who are you that thus repulses me? |
8688 | But who has called together this council of women, pray? |
8688 | But who would make so sorry a deal as to buy you? |
8688 | But why have they left you all alone here? |
8688 | But why start up into the air on chance? |
8688 | But will you buy anything of me, some chickens or some locusts? |
8688 | But will you do it? |
8688 | But you have not yet told me what makes the roll of the thunder? |
8688 | But you, why do n''t you get done with it and die? |
8688 | But your web that''s all being pecked to pieces by the cocks and hens, do n''t you care for that? |
8688 | But, come, will you repay me my money, yes or no? |
8688 | But, great gods, can it be I come too late? |
8688 | But, miserable man, where, where are we to do it? |
8688 | By the iron money of Byzantium? |
8688 | By what cunning shifts, pray? |
8688 | By which gods will you swear? |
8688 | By which gods? |
8688 | Call Myrrhiné hither, quotha? |
8688 | Can I do with them as I wish? |
8688 | Can a man strike out a brilliant thought when drunk? |
8688 | Can a wretched pair of slippers make you forget all that you owe me? |
8688 | Can any good thing come out of_ Lemnos_? |
8688 | Can anybody tell us where Lysistrata is? |
8688 | Can it be one of the gods of Carcinus? |
8688 | Can they eat alone? |
8688 | Can you be of the race of Harmodius? |
8688 | Can you eat chick- pease? |
8688 | Can you match me with a rival? |
8688 | Can you suggest anything? |
8688 | Come now? |
8688 | Come then, what must be done? |
8688 | Come, are you of honest parentage? |
8688 | Come, come, what are you asking for these two crests? |
8688 | Come, how is that, eh? |
8688 | Come, let us see, whose are these oracles? |
8688 | Come, outfence him with some wheelwright slang? |
8688 | Come, what are the male quadrupeds? |
8688 | Come, what are you waiting for? |
8688 | Come, what do you wish to say? |
8688 | Come, what is it? |
8688 | Come, what was the thing I taught you first? |
8688 | Come, what''s the best to give you to eat? |
8688 | Come, who wishes to take the charge of her? |
8688 | Come, will you do it-- yes or no? |
8688 | Could any man''s back and loins stand such a strain? |
8688 | Crates,[73] again, have you done hounding him with your rage and your hisses? |
8688 | Dear boy, will you vote for peace? |
8688 | Demos, do you see this stewed hare which I bring you? |
8688 | Dicaeopolis, will you buy some nice little porkers? |
8688 | Did you hear him? |
8688 | Did you mutter over the thing sufficiently through the night, spout it along the street, recite it to all you met? |
8688 | Did you not put enough strain on your breeches at Salamis? |
8688 | Did you see any other man besides yourself strolling about in heaven? |
8688 | Do n''t I look like a diviner preparing his mystic fire? |
8688 | Do n''t the men grow old too? |
8688 | Do n''t you feel sad and sorry because the fathers of your children are far away from you with the army? |
8688 | Do n''t you know all that a man should know, who is distinguished for his wisdom and inventive daring? |
8688 | Do n''t you know that Zeus has decreed death for him who is surprised exhuming Peace? |
8688 | Do n''t you pity the poor child? |
8688 | Do we not administer the budget of household expenses? |
8688 | Do you beat your own father? |
8688 | Do you consent to my telling the spectators of our troubles? |
8688 | Do you forget who you are? |
8688 | Do you hear that? |
8688 | Do you hear? |
8688 | Do you hesitate? |
8688 | Do you know what the oracle intends to say? |
8688 | Do you know what you had best do? |
8688 | Do you mean those of the beggar Philoctetes? |
8688 | Do you not hear them wheedling you, mighty god? |
8688 | Do you really wish to know the truth of celestial matters? |
8688 | Do you remember the time when silphium[100] was so cheap? |
8688 | Do you see how good it is to learn? |
8688 | Do you see that little door and that little house? |
8688 | Do you see these tiers of people? |
8688 | Do you see this, poor fellow? |
8688 | Do you see what you are doing; is not the female pigeon called the same as the male? |
8688 | Do you see? |
8688 | Do you take me for a fool then? |
8688 | Do you then believe there are gods? |
8688 | Do you think I have been long? |
8688 | Do you think I would sell my rump for a thousand drachmae? |
8688 | Do you turn your nose towards the cesspools? |
8688 | Do you understand that? |
8688 | Do you understand what he says? |
8688 | Do you understand, that, thanks to us, you will be loaded with benefits? |
8688 | Do you want me to perjure myself? |
8688 | Do you want to fight this four- winged Geryon? |
8688 | Do you want to know who I am? |
8688 | Do you wish that this election should even now be a success for you? |
8688 | Does any such being as Zeus exist? |
8688 | Does not the sum borrowed go on growing, growing every month, each day as the time slips by? |
8688 | Does that astonish you? |
8688 | Does the mind attract the sap of the water- cress? |
8688 | Dost thou hesitate and art thou fully steeped in Euripides? |
8688 | Dost thou not see this, that our cities will soon be but empty husks? |
8688 | Even if I have borrowed before witnesses? |
8688 | Exists there a mortal more blest than you? |
8688 | First of all, how is Sophocles? |
8688 | First, what are you doing up there? |
8688 | Firstly, what school did you attend when a child? |
8688 | For ready- money or in wares from these parts? |
8688 | For what purpose? |
8688 | For what sum will you sell them? |
8688 | Friends, do you hear the sacred formula? |
8688 | Go, ninny, blow yourself out with water; do you dare to accuse wine of clouding the reason? |
8688 | Good day, Lysistrata; but pray, why this dark, forbidding face, my dear? |
8688 | Good gods, what am I going to do with this fine ten- minae breast- plate, which is so splendidly made? |
8688 | Has anyone spoken yet? |
8688 | Has he done eating? |
8688 | Has he got one of our children in his house? |
8688 | Has no existence? |
8688 | Has the lash rained an army of its thongs on you and laid your back waste?" |
8688 | Have I robbed you of anything? |
8688 | Have we got back to the days of the festivals of Zeus Polieus,[552] to the Buphonia, to the time of the poet Cecydes[553] and the golden cicadas? |
8688 | Have you a natural gift for speaking? |
8688 | Have you any memory? |
8688 | Have you bored your friends enough with it? |
8688 | Have you decreed some mad expedition? |
8688 | Have you ever seen a beautiful, transparent stone at the druggists, with which you may kindle fire? |
8688 | Have you ever seen chastity of any use to anyone? |
8688 | Have you ever seen it raining without clouds? |
8688 | Have you forgotten how Periclides,[463] your own countryman, sat a suppliant before our altars? |
8688 | Have you got hold of anything? |
8688 | Have you gotten swellings in the groin with your journey? |
8688 | Have you not always shown that blatant impudence, which is the sole strength of our orators? |
8688 | Have you not routed him totally in this duel of abuse? |
8688 | Have you not sometimes seen clouds in the sky like a centaur, a leopard, a wolf or a bull? |
8688 | Have you not understood me then? |
8688 | Have you one word to say for yourselves? |
8688 | Have you reached such a pitch of madness that you believe those bilious fellows? |
8688 | Have you then such a good opinion of yourself? |
8688 | He has a self- important look; is he some diviner? |
8688 | Him? |
8688 | How are things going at Sparta now? |
8688 | How can I obey? |
8688 | How can all these fine distinctions, these subtleties be learned? |
8688 | How can one ever get out of an accusation with such a tone, summon witnesses or touch or convince? |
8688 | How can you make me credit that? |
8688 | How could I express my thoughts with the pomp of Euripides? |
8688 | How else? |
8688 | How else? |
8688 | How hold sway over a body of spectators, who were at the same time judges? |
8688 | How many times round the track is the race for the chariots of war? |
8688 | How now, are you afraid? |
8688 | How now, wretched man? |
8688 | How pray? |
8688 | How satisfy a public made up of so many and such diverse elements, so sharply contrasted by birth, fortune, education, opinion, interest? |
8688 | How shall I act here so that the spectators shall approve my judgment? |
8688 | How shall I manage it? |
8688 | How shall we set about removing these stones? |
8688 | How so, pray? |
8688 | How so? |
8688 | How so? |
8688 | How then did Cleonymus behave in fights? |
8688 | How then, if justice exists, was Zeus not put to death for having put his father in chains? |
8688 | How will that be, pray? |
8688 | How will you be able to learn then? |
8688 | How would you gain by that? |
8688 | How your lips quiver with the famous,"What have you to say now?" |
8688 | How"in front of Pylos"? |
8688 | How, varlet? |
8688 | How, you cursed animal, could the wolf ever unite with the sheep? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | How? |
8688 | I admire your inventive genius; but, where is he? |
8688 | I call you, Myrrhiné, Myrrhiné; will you not come? |
8688 | I may not denounce our enemies? |
8688 | I see another herald running up; what news does he bring me? |
8688 | I shall then be but half alive? |
8688 | I used to linger around the cooks and say to them,"Look, friends, do n''t you see a swallow? |
8688 | I wonder what then would you say, if you knew another of Socrates''contrivances? |
8688 | I? |
8688 | If Zeus strikes at the perjurers, why has he not blasted Simon, Cleonymus and Theorus? |
8688 | If anchovies are so cheap, what need have we of peace? |
8688 | If not, what use is his science to me? |
8688 | If you do not devour me? |
8688 | If you met Amynias, how would you hail him? |
8688 | If you were condemned to pay five talents, how would you manage to quash that verdict? |
8688 | If, when summoned to court, you were in danger of losing your case for want of witnesses, how would you make the conviction fall upon your opponent? |
8688 | In short, where are they then? |
8688 | In the name of all the gods, what is that? |
8688 | In what way does this concern me? |
8688 | In what way, an it please you? |
8688 | In what way, an it please you? |
8688 | In what way? |
8688 | Into Simonides? |
8688 | Is Euripides at home? |
8688 | Is he crazy? |
8688 | Is it a feather? |
8688 | Is it not I who curbed Gryttus,[96] the filthiest of the lewd, by depriving him of his citizen rights? |
8688 | Is it not Straton? |
8688 | Is it not a shame? |
8688 | Is it not a sin and a shame to see them carding and winding the State, these women who have neither art nor part in the burdens of the War? |
8688 | Is it not plain, that''tis Zeus hurling it at the perjurers? |
8688 | Is it not to convict him from the outset? |
8688 | Is it possible, Demos, to love you more than I do? |
8688 | Is it salt that you are bringing? |
8688 | Is it the filthy dress of the lame fellow, Bellerophon? |
8688 | Is it the god Pan''s doing? |
8688 | Is it then a smell like a soldier''s knapsack? |
8688 | Is it to cremate yourself? |
8688 | Is it true, what they tell us, that men are turned into stars after death? |
8688 | Is it true? |
8688 | Is that a little sow, or not? |
8688 | Is that not enough? |
8688 | Is that you, master? |
8688 | Is the moralist to despair and throw away his pen, because in so many cases his voice finds no echo? |
8688 | Is there anything worse than to have such a character? |
8688 | Is there then a day of the old and the new? |
8688 | Is this not a scandal? |
8688 | Is this not sufficient to drive one to hang oneself? |
8688 | Is"pour again"in the oracle? |
8688 | Knights, are you helping them? |
8688 | LYSISTRATA How so-- not the same thing? |
8688 | Lacedaemon? |
8688 | Let me bethink me, what is the most heroic? |
8688 | Let me see of what value to me have been these few pleasures? |
8688 | Let us see then, what is there in yours? |
8688 | Let us see, who of you is steady enough to be trusted by the Senate with the care of this charming wench? |
8688 | Listen to you? |
8688 | Lysistrata, say, what oath are we to swear? |
8688 | MAGISTRATE You? |
8688 | Master, have you got garlic in your fist, I wonder? |
8688 | Mortal, what do you want with me? |
8688 | Must I have him certificated for lunacy, or must I order his coffin? |
8688 | Must I leave my wool to spoil then? |
8688 | Must you have recourse to such jackanapes''tricks to supplant me? |
8688 | My father? |
8688 | My father? |
8688 | Myrrhiné, my little darling Myrrhiné, what are you saying? |
8688 | No one? |
8688 | Nor doubtless to Enyalius? |
8688 | Nothing is more pleasing, when the rain is sprouting our sowings, than to chat with some friend, saying,"Tell me, Comarchides, what shall we do? |
8688 | Now tell me, would not the women have done best to come? |
8688 | Now what will you say, if I beat you even on this point? |
8688 | Now, I am bound to start for Salamis; will you make it convenient to go up to- night to make her fastening secure?" |
8688 | Now, what tatters_ does_ he want? |
8688 | Now, where is the gentle goddess Peace? |
8688 | Now, why not first put down our loads here, then take a vine- branch, light it at the brazier and hurl it at the gate by way of battering- ram? |
8688 | Now, why should he do that? |
8688 | Of Phoenix, the blind man? |
8688 | Of the Odomanti? |
8688 | Of the dactyl? |
8688 | Of what King? |
8688 | Of what greedy fist? |
8688 | Of which reasonings? |
8688 | Of which statue? |
8688 | Officer, where are you got to? |
8688 | Oh, Triptolemus and Ceres, do ye thus forsake your own blood? |
8688 | Oh, indeed, a''skytalé,''is it? |
8688 | Oh, too credulous son of Cecrops,[116] do you accept that as a glorious exploit? |
8688 | On what day? |
8688 | On what terms? |
8688 | Once more, will you not let me speak? |
8688 | Our advocates, what are they? |
8688 | Over what? |
8688 | Own myself vanquished on a point like this? |
8688 | Phaleric anchovies, pottery? |
8688 | Poor little lad(_ addressing his penis_), how am I to give you what you want so badly? |
8688 | Pots of green- stuff[354] as we do to poor Hermes-- and even he thinks the fare but mean? |
8688 | Pray, what for? |
8688 | Prithee, tell me, what is it? |
8688 | Prytanes, will you let me be treated in this manner, in my own country and by barbarians? |
8688 | Rash reprobate, what do you propose doing? |
8688 | Really and truly? |
8688 | Refrain from what? |
8688 | Say on, what are your orders? |
8688 | Say, where shall I find the Senate and the Prytanes? |
8688 | Shall I pursue them at law or shall I...? |
8688 | Shall I really ever see such happiness? |
8688 | Shall I repeat the words? |
8688 | Shall I tell you what has happened to you? |
8688 | Shall not the air, which is boundless, produce these mighty claps of thunder? |
8688 | Shall we wager and submit the matter to Lamachus, which of the two is the best to eat, a locust or a thrush? |
8688 | Shameless as you may be, will you dare to show your face to the spectators? |
8688 | She asks, what will be the result of such a choice of the city? |
8688 | So Zeus, it seems, has no existence, and''tis the Whirlwind that reigns in his stead? |
8688 | So this is why you have lost your cloak? |
8688 | So you would pay ten minae[382] for a night- stool? |
8688 | So, you bite your lips, and shake your heads, eh? |
8688 | Socrates asked Chaerephon,"How many times the length of its legs does a flea jump?" |
8688 | Socrates, would you sacrifice me, like Athamas? |
8688 | Speak out, Laconians, what is it brings you here? |
8688 | Speak, Marilades, you have grey hair; well then, have you ever been entrusted with a mission? |
8688 | Stop, stay the hateful strife, be reconciled; what hinders you? |
8688 | Strymodorus, who would ever have thought it? |
8688 | Suppose I let fly a good kick at you? |
8688 | Suppose one of us were to break a stick across their backs, eh? |
8688 | Suppose that a Lacedaemonian had seized a little Seriphian[216] dog on any pretext and had sold it, would you have endured it quietly? |
8688 | Take back, take back your viands; for a thousand drachmae I would not give a drop of peace; but who are you, pray? |
8688 | Tell me, Hermes, my master, do you think it would hurt me to fuck her a little, after so long an abstinence? |
8688 | Tell me, Socrates, I pray you, who are these women, whose language is so solemn; can they be demigoddesses? |
8688 | Tell me, if I prove thoroughly attentive and learn with zeal, which of your disciples shall I resemble, do you think? |
8688 | Tell me, is it not right, that in turn I should beat you for your good? |
8688 | Tell me, my dear, what are your feelings with regard to them? |
8688 | Tell me, of all the sons of Zeus, who had the stoutest heart, who performed the most doughty deeds? |
8688 | Tell me, pray, what is that? |
8688 | Tell me, was it on the market- place or near the gates that you sold your sausages? |
8688 | Tell me, what is War preparing against us? |
8688 | Tell me, what is the Paphlagonian doing now? |
8688 | Tell me, what is this? |
8688 | Tell me, you little good- for- nothing, are you singing that for your father? |
8688 | Tell us, pray; what, not a word? |
8688 | Tell us, tell us, what is it? |
8688 | That dearest darling? |
8688 | That is what you assuredly would have done, and would not Telephus have done the same? |
8688 | The measures, the rhythms or the verses? |
8688 | The same for both? |
8688 | Then I am to snap up wisdom much as a dog snaps up a morsel? |
8688 | Then are we actually to believe that the necessity of his profession as a comic poet alone drove him into the faction of the malcontents? |
8688 | Then money is the cause of the War? |
8688 | Then trough is of the same gender as Cleonymus? |
8688 | Then what should I sing? |
8688 | Then what should be done? |
8688 | Then what_ do_ you want to know? |
8688 | Then who is that star I see over yonder? |
8688 | Then why do you turn away like that, and hold your cloak out from your body? |
8688 | Then why this helmet, pray? |
8688 | These women, have they made din enough, I wonder, with their tambourines? |
8688 | These women, these enemies of Euripides and all the gods, shall I do nothing to hinder their inordinate insolence? |
8688 | Those in which I rigged out Aeneus[209] on the stage, that unhappy, miserable old man? |
8688 | Thus, poor fool, the sea, that receives the rivers, never grows, and yet you would have your money grow? |
8688 | Thus, when I throw forth some philosophical thought anent things celestial, you will seize it in its very flight? |
8688 | To what part of the earth? |
8688 | To whom are you sacrificing? |
8688 | To whom? |
8688 | Trygaeus, where is Trygaeus? |
8688 | Two dealers, eh? |
8688 | Very well then, but how am I going to descend? |
8688 | Was I then so stupid and such a dotard? |
8688 | Was it hot? |
8688 | Was not the legislator who carried this law a man like you and me? |
8688 | We must refrain from the male organ altogether.... Nay, why do you turn your backs on me? |
8688 | Well then, Demos, say now, who has treated you best, you and your stomach? |
8688 | Well then, what must we do now? |
8688 | Well, how are things at Megara? |
8688 | Well, what is it you have there then? |
8688 | Well, what oath shall we take then? |
8688 | Well, what then? |
8688 | Well, what? |
8688 | Well? |
8688 | Well? |
8688 | Well? |
8688 | Were you not yourself in those days quite red in the gills with farting? |
8688 | What about? |
8688 | What ails you? |
8688 | What allies, I should like to know? |
8688 | What am I to do with them? |
8688 | What am I up to? |
8688 | What are these? |
8688 | What are they like then? |
8688 | What are they? |
8688 | What are you laughing at? |
8688 | What are you saying now? |
8688 | What are you then? |
8688 | What are you up to? |
8688 | What are you up to? |
8688 | What can I do in the matter? |
8688 | What can your drinking do to help us? |
8688 | What connection is there between Erectheus, the jays and the dog? |
8688 | What connection is there between a galley and a dog- fox? |
8688 | What connection? |
8688 | What could be better? |
8688 | What did he contrive, to secure you some supper? |
8688 | What do I bid? |
8688 | What do the hooked claws mean? |
8688 | What do they call themselves? |
8688 | What do they like most? |
8688 | What do want crying this gait? |
8688 | What do you bid for them? |
8688 | What do you lack more? |
8688 | What do you mean? |
8688 | What do you prefer? |
8688 | What do you propose to do then, pray? |
8688 | What do you purport doing? |
8688 | What do you say? |
8688 | What do you see? |
8688 | What do you think he will do? |
8688 | What do you think they resemble? |
8688 | What do you want of me? |
8688 | What do you want? |
8688 | What does he mean by that? |
8688 | What does he say? |
8688 | What does it mean? |
8688 | What does it say? |
8688 | What does the beetle mean?" |
8688 | What does the god mean, then? |
8688 | What else? |
8688 | What fate befell Magnes,[67] when his hair went white? |
8688 | What fitter theme for our Muse, at the close as at the beginning of his work, than this, to sing the hero who drives his swift steeds down the arena? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What for? |
8688 | What gives him such audacity? |
8688 | What good indeed? |
8688 | What grounds have you for condemning hot baths? |
8688 | What harm have I done you? |
8688 | What has happened to you? |
8688 | What has happened to you? |
8688 | What has that to do with the old day and the new? |
8688 | What have we here? |
8688 | What have you to say, then? |
8688 | What ill has Tlepolemus done you? |
8688 | What is Phidippides going to say? |
8688 | What is going to happen, friends? |
8688 | What is his dress like, what his manner? |
8688 | What is it I owe? |
8688 | What is it all about? |
8688 | What is it then? |
8688 | What is it then? |
8688 | What is it you fear then? |
8688 | What is it, old greybeard? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is it? |
8688 | What is that used for? |
8688 | What is that? |
8688 | What is the matter with you, father, that you groan and turn about the whole night through? |
8688 | What is the matter? |
8688 | What is the matter? |
8688 | What is the matter? |
8688 | What is the most important business you wish to inform us about? |
8688 | What is the reason of it all? |
8688 | What is the thunder then? |
8688 | What is there in that to make you laugh? |
8688 | What is there in that to surprise you? |
8688 | What is there then? |
8688 | What is this I see, ye wretched old men? |
8688 | What is this fable you are telling me? |
8688 | What is this? |
8688 | What is to be done with this trumpet, for which I gave sixty drachmae the other day? |
8688 | What is wheat selling at? |
8688 | What is your next bidding? |
8688 | What kind of animal is interest? |
8688 | What makes you so bold as to dare to speak to my face? |
8688 | What matters that I was born a woman, if I can cure your misfortunes? |
8688 | What mean you by these silly tales? |
8688 | What means this Chalcidian cup? |
8688 | What medimni? |
8688 | What money? |
8688 | What oath? |
8688 | What oracle ordered you to burn these joints of mutton in honour of the gods? |
8688 | What other news of Megara? |
8688 | What other oath do you prefer? |
8688 | What other victim do you prefer then? |
8688 | What plague have we here? |
8688 | What price then is paid for forage by Boeotians? |
8688 | What proof have you? |
8688 | What rags do you prefer? |
8688 | What rampart, my dear man? |
8688 | What reason have they for treating us so? |
8688 | What reason have you for thus dallying at the door? |
8688 | What sacrifice is this? |
8688 | What say you, all here present? |
8688 | What shall we do to her? |
8688 | What shall we do to her? |
8688 | What then will become of Clisthenes and of Strato? |
8688 | What then will you say when you see the thrushes roasting? |
8688 | What then? |
8688 | What then? |
8688 | What think you? |
8688 | What use calling upon Zeus? |
8688 | What was it then? |
8688 | What was the first thing? |
8688 | What was your device? |
8688 | What we all want, is to be abed with our wives; how should our allies fail to second our project? |
8688 | What were they doing up there? |
8688 | What will become of me? |
8688 | What will you give? |
8688 | What will you offer then? |
8688 | What words strike my ear? |
8688 | What would Marpsias reply to this? |
8688 | What would you have? |
8688 | What''s it all about? |
8688 | What''s that to you? |
8688 | What''s that you say? |
8688 | What, I? |
8688 | What, a man? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What? |
8688 | What_ do_ you bring then? |
8688 | Whatever do you want such a thing as that for? |
8688 | When his trouble first began to seize him, he said to himself,"By what means could I go straight to Zeus?" |
8688 | Whence comes this cry of battle? |
8688 | Whence has sprung this accursed swarm of Cheris[246] fellows which comes assailing my door? |
8688 | Where are you going? |
8688 | Where are you running to? |
8688 | Where are you, Strepsiades? |
8688 | Where can another seller be found, is there ever a one left? |
8688 | Where has he gone to then? |
8688 | Where have you ever seen cold baths called''Baths of Heracles''? |
8688 | Where is Amphitheus? |
8688 | Where is Cynalopex? |
8688 | Where is he, this unknown foe? |
8688 | Where is he? |
8688 | Where is my officer? |
8688 | Where is my other officer? |
8688 | Where is our Usheress? |
8688 | Where is the king of the feast? |
8688 | Where is the man who demands money? |
8688 | Where is the table? |
8688 | Where? |
8688 | Where? |
8688 | Wherein will that profit me? |
8688 | Which science of all those you have never been taught, do you wish to learn first? |
8688 | Which would you prefer? |
8688 | Which? |
8688 | Who am I? |
8688 | Who are all my creditors? |
8688 | Who are they? |
8688 | Who are you then? |
8688 | Who are you? |
8688 | Who are you? |
8688 | Who are you? |
8688 | Who asks to speak? |
8688 | Who causes the rain to fall? |
8688 | Who dares do this thing? |
8688 | Who ever saw an oxen baked in an oven? |
8688 | Who has mutilated their tools like this? |
8688 | Who himself? |
8688 | Who is here? |
8688 | Who is it? |
8688 | Who is this that dares to pass our lines? |
8688 | Who is this? |
8688 | Who is to speak first? |
8688 | Who is your father then? |
8688 | Who rules now in the rostrum? |
8688 | Who was her greatest foe here? |
8688 | Who was it then? |
8688 | Who will be my ally? |
8688 | Who will get us out of this mess? |
8688 | Who''s there? |
8688 | Whose are these goods? |
8688 | Why a chaplet? |
8688 | Why afflict Lysistratus with our satires on his poverty,[134] and Thumantis,[135] who has not so much as a lodging? |
8688 | Why did you not say so then, instead of egging on a poor ignorant old man? |
8688 | Why do you call me? |
8688 | Why do you come? |
8688 | Why do you embrace me? |
8688 | Why do you not hold yourself worthy? |
8688 | Why does not the work advance then? |
8688 | Why give me such pain and suffering, and yourself into the bargain? |
8688 | Why not leave me to wash my tripe and to sell my sausages instead of making game of me? |
8688 | Why not saddle Pegasus? |
8688 | Why not? |
8688 | Why not? |
8688 | Why should you call me? |
8688 | Why so? |
8688 | Why then did you light such a guzzling lamp? |
8688 | Why then do the magistrates have the deposits paid on the last of the month and not the next day? |
8688 | Why then drivel as if you had fallen from an ass? |
8688 | Why these cries? |
8688 | Why these pale, sad looks? |
8688 | Why, certainly I have, but what then? |
8688 | Why, is there not the harbour of Cantharos at the Piraeus? |
8688 | Why, then, does the oracle not say dog instead of dog- fox? |
8688 | Why, what are you astonished at? |
8688 | Why, what has happened? |
8688 | Why, where am I likely to be going across the sky, if it be not to visit Zeus? |
8688 | Why, where are they? |
8688 | Why, where has she gone to then? |
8688 | Why? |
8688 | Will anything that it behoves a wise man to know escape you? |
8688 | Will no one open? |
8688 | Will the Great King send us gold? |
8688 | Will the rhythms supply me with food? |
8688 | Will they eat them? |
8688 | Will ye all take this oath? |
8688 | Will you dare to swear by the gods that you owe me nothing? |
8688 | Will you never stop fooling the Athenians? |
8688 | Will you not bury that right away and pile a great heap of earth upon it and plant wild thyme therein and pour perfumes on it? |
8688 | Will you not even now let the strangers alone? |
8688 | Will you not let me speak? |
8688 | Will you obey me ever so little? |
8688 | With good wine, no doubt? |
8688 | With what end in view have they seized the citadel of Cranaus,[425] the sacred shrine that is raised upon the inaccessible rock of the Acropolis? |
8688 | Women, children, have you not heard? |
8688 | Would you deny the debt on that account? |
8688 | Would you like me to scent you? |
8688 | Yes, indeed, I see him; but who is it? |
8688 | You are but a mendicant and you dare to use language of this sort? |
8688 | You believe so? |
8688 | You do not reckon them masculine? |
8688 | You have become a lion and I never knew a thing about it? |
8688 | You have brought back nothing? |
8688 | You have thrown it? |
8688 | You love me? |
8688 | You really want to know? |
8688 | You really will not, Acharnians? |
8688 | You say no, do you not? |
8688 | You will not give me any meat? |
8688 | You will not hear me? |
8688 | You will not repay? |
8688 | You will say that Sparta was wrong, but what should she have done? |
8688 | You, Lysistrata, you who are leader of our glorious enterprise, why do I see you coming towards me with so gloomy an air? |
8688 | You? |
8688 | Your country? |
8688 | Your father? |
8688 | Your mind is on drink intent? |
8688 | Your name? |
8688 | Zeus, what art thou going to do for our people? |
8688 | Zeus,"he cries,"what are thy intentions? |
8688 | [ 177] Will you give me back my garlic? |
8688 | [ 208] And why dress in these miserable tragic rags? |
8688 | [ 248] What do you bring? |
8688 | [ 367] What is he going to tell us? |
8688 | [ 409] Now, what are you staring at, pray? |
8688 | [ 424] But why do we stand here with arms crossed? |
8688 | [ 42] Did you drink enough water to inspire you? |
8688 | [ 490] But why do they look so fixedly on the ground? |
8688 | [ 494] And where is Lacedaemon? |
8688 | [ 558] And yet who was braver than he? |
8688 | [ 80] Are you not rowing?" |
8688 | _ Her_? |
8688 | _ You_ do? |
8688 | a Megarian? |
8688 | a braggart''s? |
8688 | about what? |
8688 | accursed harlot, what do you mean to do here with your water? |
8688 | am I not free- born too? |
8688 | and furthermore, had she a friend who exerted himself to put an end to the fighting? |
8688 | and how was I then? |
8688 | and the safety of the city? |
8688 | and yet you have not left off white? |
8688 | are such exaggerations to be borne? |
8688 | are we to let ourselves be bested by a mob of women? |
8688 | are you asleep? |
8688 | are you blaming us for not having exposed you according to custom? |
8688 | are you for running away? |
8688 | are you reflecting? |
8688 | bewept Adonis enough upon their terraces? |
8688 | but what names do you want me to give them? |
8688 | but what other measures do you wish to take? |
8688 | but what shall I be, when you see me presently dressed for the wedding? |
8688 | can it be right to beat a father? |
8688 | citizens of Argos, do you hear what he says? |
8688 | do n''t shout, I beg you, dear little Hermes.... And what are you doing, comrades? |
8688 | do n''t you see, little fool, that then twice the food would be wanted? |
8688 | do you dare to jeer me? |
8688 | do you hear him? |
8688 | do you love me? |
8688 | do you not at every raid grub up the ground with your pikes to pull out every single head? |
8688 | do you not heed the herald? |
8688 | do you see that armourer yonder coming with a wry face? |
8688 | do you take away your son or do you wish me to teach him how to speak? |
8688 | do you want to make yourself vomit with this feather? |
8688 | do you wipe with both hands? |
8688 | does any of you recognize him? |
8688 | does that not please you? |
8688 | fellow, what countryman are you? |
8688 | great baboon, with such a beard do you seek to play the eunuch to us? |
8688 | has it not done me ills enough? |
8688 | how am I to pay the wages of my young foxes? |
8688 | how did you come here? |
8688 | how get the better of these ferocious creatures? |
8688 | how shall I give tongue to my joy and sufficiently praise you? |
8688 | how? |
8688 | if I say_ him_, do I make the_ trough_ masculine? |
8688 | in the name of the gods, are you purposing to assault me then? |
8688 | in the name of the gods, what possesses you? |
8688 | is it not so? |
8688 | is our Father, Zeus, the Olympian, not a god? |
8688 | is that not a sow then? |
8688 | looking for a tavern, I suppose, eh? |
8688 | must I really and truly die? |
8688 | must your body be free of blows, and not mine? |
8688 | my dears, methinks I see fire and smoke; can it be a conflagration? |
8688 | my good friend, did you have a good journey? |
8688 | my poor fellow, what is your condition? |
8688 | now what countrywomen may they be? |
8688 | of the earth, did you say? |
8688 | of what country, then? |
8688 | shall the men be underneath? |
8688 | shall we stop their cackle? |
8688 | the children are to weep and the fathers go free? |
8688 | to what god are you offering it? |
8688 | torch of sacred Athens, saviour of the Islands, what good tidings are we to celebrate by letting the blood of the victims flow in our market- places? |
8688 | twelve minae to Pasias? |
8688 | venerated goddess, who givest us our grapes, where am I to find the ten- thousand- gallon words[306] wherewith to greet thee? |
8688 | was this the way you robbed me? |
8688 | what Zeus? |
8688 | what are you doing? |
8688 | what are you doing? |
8688 | what are you drawing there? |
8688 | what are you going to say? |
8688 | what are you proposing to do? |
8688 | what bird''s? |
8688 | what can be done? |
8688 | what country are those animals from? |
8688 | what debt comes next, after that of Pasias? |
8688 | what do those cries mean? |
8688 | what do you call it? |
8688 | what do you reckon to sing? |
8688 | what does that matter to merry companions in their cups? |
8688 | what has happened to you? |
8688 | what have you got there so hard? |
8688 | what is this I hear? |
8688 | what is to be done? |
8688 | what is to become of us, wretched mortals that we are? |
8688 | what kind of bird is this? |
8688 | what matter of that? |
8688 | what says the oracle? |
8688 | what use of words? |
8688 | what will become of me? |
8688 | what would you do? |
8688 | what''s that you say? |
8688 | where did you discover them, pray? |
8688 | where is the doorkeeper? |
8688 | where must I bring my aid? |
8688 | where must I sow dread? |
8688 | where shall I find it? |
8688 | whither away so fast? |
8688 | who is burning down our house? |
8688 | who is this man, crowned with laurel, who is coming to me? |
8688 | who is this whining fellow? |
8688 | who wants me to uncase my dreadful Gorgon''s head? |
8688 | who will buy them? |
8688 | why art thou silent? |
8688 | why do you cry so? |
8688 | why should I dally thus instead of rapping at the door? |
8688 | why these tears? |
8688 | will daylight never come? |
8688 | will these nights never end? |
8688 | will you hear them squeal? |
8688 | will you kill this coal- basket, my beloved comrade? |
8688 | wo n''t the crests go any more, friend? |
8688 | wo n''t you come back home? |
8688 | would you mock me? |
8688 | would you not say him for Cleonymus? |
8688 | you declare war against birds? |
8688 | you down there, what are you after now? |
8688 | you fellow on the roof, what are you doing up there? |
8688 | you have the nature of a dog and you dare to fight a cynecephalus? |
8688 | you start, do you? |
8688 | you turn away your face? |
8688 | you would leave me, you would vanish into the sky, you would go to the crows? |
8688 | your name? |
5114 | A reliquary? 5114 A stranger in Al- Kyris?--and from beyond the seas? |
5114 | Absent? 5114 Ah, Lysia, hast thou played me false?".. |
5114 | Ah, Sah- luma is thine host? |
5114 | Am I disfigured, aged, lame, or crooked- limbed? 5114 And I knew not the things that were once familiar and my heart failed within me for very fear..."What did they mean, he wondered? |
5114 | And Lysia is..--? |
5114 | And dost thou plead for thine absent friend, Zoralin? |
5114 | And how hast thou left thy pale beauty Niphrata? |
5114 | And that is? |
5114 | And this Prophecy? |
5114 | And to- night we are to go in for them thoroughly, I suppose? |
5114 | And what does he say about it? |
5114 | And what of the other missing sixty- nine books? |
5114 | And who knows,he thought moodily,"how long they will go on intoning their dreary Latin doggerel? |
5114 | And who,questioned Heliobas, in tones of hushed reverence,"Who was this Being that thus enchants your memory?" |
5114 | And yet what IS Realism really? |
5114 | And your guess is...? |
5114 | Are not all men thought mad who speak the truth? |
5114 | Are there different laws for high and low? 5114 Are you grateful for being, as you think, deluded by a trance? |
5114 | Are you reading my thoughts, Heliobas? |
5114 | Art thou condemned to die, or dost thou seek an escape from death? |
5114 | Art thou repentant? 5114 Art thou true friend, or mere flatterer to that spoilt child of fair fame and fortune?" |
5114 | As a separate Personality that continues to live on when the body perishes? |
5114 | Aye, most assuredly? |
5114 | Aye, verily? 5114 Bring him back? |
5114 | But are they attainable? |
5114 | But art thou then indifferent to woman''s tenderness? |
5114 | But how and when did you come? |
5114 | But suppose--suggested Heliobas quietly,"suppose she were to find an even more complete happiness in making YOU happy?" |
5114 | But the question is,--considering how it was written,--can I, dare I call this poem MINE? |
5114 | But what IS life without plenty of money? |
5114 | But you yourself are in the world of men at this moment--argued Alwyn--"And you are free; did you not tell me you were bound for Mexico?" |
5114 | Canst thou do no better than sleep--he queried complainingly,"when thou art privileged to listen to an immortal poem?" |
5114 | Canst thou not be happy, Theos? |
5114 | Changed? 5114 Criminal as I am,"he murmured tremulously,"I glory in my crime, nor will I seek forgiveness? |
5114 | Dark? |
5114 | Did I hear you aright? |
5114 | Did I? |
5114 | Did it arise from a contemplation of the site of the Ruins of Babylon? |
5114 | Do n''t you want to tell me about it? |
5114 | Do you see that gentleman? |
5114 | Does going to Mexico constitute liberty? |
5114 | Does her singing still charm thee as of yore? 5114 Does''Zabastes''still loom on your horizon?" |
5114 | Done? 5114 Dost thou really believe,"he went on jestingly,"in the divinity of poets? |
5114 | Entirely"What was his leading principle? |
5114 | Even if such a belief should have no shadow of a true foundation? |
5114 | Evolution from what? |
5114 | Finished? |
5114 | Forgotten you? 5114 From Christ Himself in person?" |
5114 | From one atom? 5114 Good? |
5114 | Gratitude? |
5114 | HIS? 5114 Hast THOU not loved her also?" |
5114 | Have you dined, Alwyn? |
5114 | He, like many others of his class, never took the trouble to consider very deeply the inner meaning of Pilate''s famous question,''What IS Truth?'' 5114 How can it crush me?" |
5114 | How could she know? 5114 How did you come by it?" |
5114 | How long wilt thou be mute, my singing- emperor? |
5114 | How many lovers hast thou had, fair soul?.. |
5114 | How many more fairy tales are you going to weave for me out of your fertile Oriental imagination? 5114 How so?" |
5114 | How? |
5114 | How? |
5114 | I am afraid,she said smilingly,"you must find us all very stupid after your travels abroad? |
5114 | I heard that stanza somewhere when I was a boy... why do I think of it now? 5114 I see you are still under the sway of the Ange- Demon,"he remarked cheerfully, as he shook hands,"Is he not an amazing fellow? |
5114 | I suppose I am to understand by this that you will do nothing for me? |
5114 | I suppose,he said,"there is no doubt of his returning hither?" |
5114 | If only for the space of some few passing moments, was not thy soul ravished, thy heart enslaved, thy manhood conquered by her spell? 5114 If that is your opinion, why go at all?" |
5114 | In safety? |
5114 | Is not this... a very.. remarkable occurrence? |
5114 | Is the fool dead, or feigning death? |
5114 | Is this the way you account for idiocy and mania? |
5114 | Knowest thou not that too much mirth engenders weeping, and that excessive rejoicing hath its fitting end in grievous lamentation? 5114 Mr. Alwyn will know who she is, will he?" |
5114 | Must I remind you of your early lesson days? |
5114 | My lord goes to the Palace to- night to make his valued voice heard in the presence of the King? |
5114 | My lord''s guest goes with him? |
5114 | Nay, art THOU one of the escaped of Lysia''s lovers? |
5114 | Nay, but she speaks of dying.. said Theos quickly..."Wilt thou constrain her back from death?" |
5114 | Nay, dost thou deem me so indifferent, my noble friend? |
5114 | Nay, if you consider the whole episode a dream,he observed,"why trouble yourself? |
5114 | Nay, wouldst thou indeed have consoled her, Sah- luma? |
5114 | No one? |
5114 | No? 5114 No? |
5114 | No? |
5114 | Not even that two and two are four? |
5114 | Nothing? |
5114 | Now did I express the proper opinion? |
5114 | Or are you resting from literary labor? |
5114 | Part? |
5114 | Perhaps not!--but what is he to do, if nothing else is offered to him? 5114 Perhaps you will oblige me with your name?" |
5114 | Please, sir, a gentleman called--"Well!--you said I was out? |
5114 | Pray, how can you separate life from its worldly appendages? |
5114 | Right? 5114 SHALL come?" |
5114 | Safer? 5114 Sah- luma,"he said, in a tremulous, low tone,"tell me truly,--is it good for us to be here?" |
5114 | See you not.. whispered Sah- luma to his companion,--"how yon aged fool wears upon his breast the Symbol of his own Prophecy? |
5114 | See you not, Theos, how warm and soft and shuddering a curl it is? 5114 She gave a short laugh,--then relapsing into severity, she added..."You will, I hope, tell Mr. Alwyn I called?" |
5114 | So thou dost think that, wheresoever Niphrata hath strayed, Lysia can find her? |
5114 | Still impervious to beauty, old boy? |
5114 | Surely things are not so bad as they seem, Villiers,--he said gently--"Are you not taking a pessimistic view of affairs?" |
5114 | Surely--he said--"you will begin to proclaim it now?" |
5114 | Tell me,he said wistfully,"how has it happened? |
5114 | Tell me,pursued Heliobas,"how do you define the vital principle? |
5114 | That I should assert... and you deny... facts that God Himself will prove in His own way and at His own appointed time? 5114 The KING?" |
5114 | The King? |
5114 | The foot of the mountain, at which men now stand, grovelling and uncertain how to climb? 5114 The gates?" |
5114 | The time has come for what? |
5114 | Then are you all Chaldeans here? |
5114 | Then there is no freedom in Al- Kyris,--said Theos wonderingly--"if the whole city thus lies under the circumspection of a woman?" |
5114 | Then why do you give them? |
5114 | Then why... suggested Theos anxiously--"why not go forth and seek her now?" |
5114 | Then will you go abroad again? |
5114 | Then you did the Holy Land, I suppose? |
5114 | Then you will bring him back to- day? |
5114 | Then,said Hilarion wonderingly,"you admit this man possesses a power greater than your own?" |
5114 | Thinkest thou so? |
5114 | This is a city? |
5114 | Thou art a new comer,--a stranger, if I mistake not? |
5114 | Thou art confident Niphrata will return? |
5114 | Thou dost return straightway to Sah- luma... is it not so? |
5114 | Thou hast strange notions for one still young,he said..."What art thou? |
5114 | To thank me? |
5114 | Treachery? |
5114 | Was I not right in thinking you would never consent to be interviewed? |
5114 | Was the sunshine too strong, my friend, that thou didst thus bury thine eyes in thy pillow? |
5114 | Weeping? 5114 What ails thee? |
5114 | What ails you now, Villiers? |
5114 | What am I? |
5114 | What are you staring at me for? |
5114 | What art thou? |
5114 | What canst thou ask that I will not grant? |
5114 | What do you know of the Nunc Dimittis? |
5114 | What do you mean by Science? |
5114 | What do you mean? |
5114 | What dost thou mean by''good''? 5114 What evil hath befallen thee? |
5114 | What harm should come to her? |
5114 | What has happened, Sah- luma? 5114 What hast thou done to Niphrata, to thus grieve her gentle spirit beyond remedy?" |
5114 | What is this Khosrul? |
5114 | What language is this? |
5114 | What now, Gazra? 5114 What sayest thou, Sah- luma?" |
5114 | What shall we do about this? |
5114 | What sort of fellows are these? |
5114 | What was that''adventure''you spoke about in your letter from the Monastery on the Pass of Dariel? |
5114 | What!--art thou already persuaded? |
5114 | What''s the matter? |
5114 | What, in such a case, would become of all the nobler sentiments and passions of man,--love, hope, gratitude, duty, ambition? |
5114 | What.. what is this? |
5114 | What? |
5114 | Where is Khosrul? |
5114 | Whither should we go? 5114 Whither should we go?" |
5114 | Who and what was Nir- jalis? 5114 Who says it? |
5114 | Who, and what are you? |
5114 | Whom hast thou there? 5114 Why art thou so unmoved?" |
5114 | Why ask for the King''s Laureate? |
5114 | Why dost thou stare thus owl- like upon me? |
5114 | Why is it impossible? |
5114 | Why not? |
5114 | Why not? |
5114 | Why should I have feared Zephoranim? |
5114 | Why should I? |
5114 | Why, in the name of all the gods, SHOULD they be raised? |
5114 | Why, what CAN I do? |
5114 | Why? 5114 Why? |
5114 | Why? |
5114 | Why? |
5114 | Why? |
5114 | Will you accompany me to the refectory, Mr. Alwyn? 5114 Willing? |
5114 | Wilt drown for a statue''s sake? |
5114 | Wilt leave our noble hostess ere the entertainment has begun? 5114 You PRAY?" |
5114 | You are certain of what you say? |
5114 | You believe in the Soul? |
5114 | You can not? 5114 You care for Fame?" |
5114 | You know this book? |
5114 | You mean to infer that the brain can not act without the influence of the soul? |
5114 | You saw no one but her? |
5114 | You think_ I_ care for the world? 5114 You won special distinction and renown there, I believe, before you adopted this monastic life?" |
5114 | Your heart can not be broken? 5114 Your name must seem a curious one to these fellows"--observed Alwyn, when he had gone,--"Unusual and even mysterious?" |
5114 | is that one can never be quite certain of anything? |
5114 | ''Prepare to die, O Zephoranim?'' |
5114 | ''The work is finished, most illustrious?" |
5114 | ''Tis a theory both strange and wild!--hast ever heard of it before?" |
5114 | --Here, collecting his scattered manuscripts, he put them by--"I''ve done work for the present,"--he said--"Shall we go for a walk somewhere?" |
5114 | --and he bent over her more ardently--"must I not meet my death at thy hands? |
5114 | --and his voice, even to his own ears, had a solemn as well as passionate thrill,--"Lysia, what wouldst thou have with me? |
5114 | --assented Villiers-"But what else do you expect from modern society? |
5114 | --he demanded irritably.."Art thou not my friend and worshipper? |
5114 | --he repeated, his thoughts instantly reverting to his friend''s vaguely hinted love- affair,--"What name?" |
5114 | --he said in a low, uncertain voice,--"Sah- luma, canst thou expect mercy from a woman who has once been so merciless?" |
5114 | --he said, scarcely conscious of the words he uttered--"Will you not tell me your name?" |
5114 | --replied Heliobas gayly--"And why not? |
5114 | --she asked--"The riotous crowd in the marketplace-- the ravings of the Prophet Khosrul? |
5114 | --she declared, with a ponderous attempt at playfulness--"You read the papers, do n''t you?" |
5114 | .. the patient grief of all- appealing Nature, commingled with the dreadful, yet majestic silence of an unknown God? |
5114 | ... A Woman or a Goddess?--a rainbow Flame in mortal shape?--a spirit of earth, air, fire, water? |
5114 | ... A friend?" |
5114 | ... ARDATH? |
5114 | ... And why have ye bound this aged fool with such many and tight bonds? |
5114 | ... Are his deeds so noble? |
5114 | ... Are my senses deceived? |
5114 | ... Are ye all turned renegades and traitors that ye will suffer him to go free and triumph in his lawless heresy? |
5114 | ... Are you''going over''to some Church or other?" |
5114 | ... Art thou not all in all to me? |
5114 | ... Canst never speak plain?" |
5114 | ... Come, delay no longer, I beseech thee!--do I not love thee, friend?--and would I urge thee thus without good reason? |
5114 | ... Could there be any one so marvellously privileged? |
5114 | ... Darest thou speak of treachery and Lysia in the same breath? |
5114 | ... Did she not hear Sah- luma''s pleading in her behalf? |
5114 | ... Do you call that friendship?" |
5114 | ... Doth she not dance a madness into the veins? |
5114 | ... Down into the blazing area of the fast- perishing Temple? |
5114 | ... FIVE THOUSAND YEARS? |
5114 | ... Had his life gone back in some strange way? |
5114 | ... Has God taught THEE the way to Everlasting Life?" |
5114 | ... Has the Laureate''s friendship thus misguided thee?" |
5114 | ... How hast thou used the talisman of thy genius? |
5114 | ... How shall the King quench it? |
5114 | ... Hyspiros a literary juggler and trickster? |
5114 | ... Is he a baby in swaddling- clothes that he can not be trusted out alone to take care of himself? |
5114 | ... Is not SHE a willingly violated vestal? |
5114 | ... Is not a producer of poems always considered more or less of a fool nowadays, no matter how much his works may be in fashion for the moment? |
5114 | ... Is there fresh havoc in the city? |
5114 | ... Is there none in all Al- Kyris?" |
5114 | ... Love? |
5114 | ... Nay, what should I do? |
5114 | ... Not till then?" |
5114 | ... Or was the work too vast for his ability? |
5114 | ... Past love? |
5114 | ... Shall there be no more heart- longings because ye are cold? |
5114 | ... Tell me, fair Angel, do I wake or sleep? |
5114 | ... Then.. is Khosrul right after all, and must one learn wisdom from a madman? |
5114 | ... Theos stared aghast at the glowing sky... whither had she gone? |
5114 | ... WHO WAS HE? |
5114 | ... What CAN you expect from a community which is chiefly ruled by moneyed parvenus, BUT vulgarity? |
5114 | ... What abject terror makes ye thus quiver like aspen- leaves in a storm? |
5114 | ... What ails thee?" |
5114 | ... What business can he have with me?" |
5114 | ... What business had you to stop on the way at any hotel? |
5114 | ... What could he say? |
5114 | ... What did it mean? |
5114 | ... What gates? |
5114 | ... What is her crime, ye fiends? |
5114 | ... What is innocence? |
5114 | ... What means this symbol to thine eyes? |
5114 | ... What moved thee to such frenzied utterance? |
5114 | ... What seest thou?" |
5114 | ... What seest thou?" |
5114 | ... What shall be done or said of it, in five thousand years, that has not already been said and done?" |
5114 | ... What shall hinder me from at once slaying thee?" |
5114 | ... What then was the actual worth of Fame? |
5114 | ... What was that? |
5114 | ... Where was that? |
5114 | ... Who IS Baines Bryce? |
5114 | ... Who gave thee leave to add more fuel to my flame of torment? |
5114 | ... Why burden thyself with a corpse when thou mightest rescue a living man? |
5114 | ... Why did their dark and frozen depths appear to retain a strange, living undergleam of melting, sorrowful, beseeching sweetness? |
5114 | ... Why doth the Law, beholding these things, remain in her case dumb and ineffectual?" |
5114 | ... Why such unmanly sorrow for one who is not worthy of thee?" |
5114 | ... Why wearest thou the garb of our citizens?" |
5114 | ... Why wouldst thou pray to be a servant of the Cross? |
5114 | ... Will he make our pulses beat with any happier thrill, or stir our blood into a warmer glow? |
5114 | ... Wilt curse the King? |
5114 | ... Wilt lose me now? |
5114 | ... Wilt mislead the people? |
5114 | ... Wilt thou become inglorious? |
5114 | ... Wilt thou take up arms against thyself and Destiny? |
5114 | ... a new disciple of the Mystics? |
5114 | ... a sensual egotist? |
5114 | ... a warrior stricken strengthless by the mummeries of priestcraft,--the juggleries of a perishing creed? |
5114 | ... after all, what did it matter? |
5114 | ... alas, what am I? |
5114 | ... am I not he whom thou lovest?" |
5114 | ... and are we not all weary to death of his bombastic mouthing? |
5114 | ... and dost thou dare to pretend that she hath preferred THEE, a mere singer of mad songs, to ME? |
5114 | ... and dost thou mourn her still?" |
5114 | ... and for me?" |
5114 | ... and have you not ASKED to be deceived?" |
5114 | ... and is there not a tender witchery in the delineation of my maiden- heroine, so warmly fair, so wildly passionate? |
5114 | ... and shall not one brief hour of love with me console the weariest maid that ever pined for passion? |
5114 | ... and that what we men call death is not a conclusion but merely a new beginning? |
5114 | ... and thinkest thou that we shall ever regret the loss of Heaven?" |
5114 | ... and what IS being in one''s right mind? |
5114 | ... and why art thou here? |
5114 | ... and why were they all so silent as though struck dumb by some unutterable dismay? |
5114 | ... and why? |
5114 | ... and will the grave seal down their hopes forever?" |
5114 | ... and wilt THOU pretend to be stronger than the rest? |
5114 | ... and yet if he indeed had such power of love, would it be generous or just to exert it? |
5114 | ... are not her vows long since broken? |
5114 | ... because men are vile, must a vile god be invented to suit their savage caprices? |
5114 | ... beneath the brightness of the moon? |
5114 | ... but dost thou think to what thou wouldst so eagerly persuade me? |
5114 | ... cheated, as it were, into a sort of semi- belief in the life to come by means of mesmerism? |
5114 | ... could he in very truth do it? |
5114 | ... could there be a more dazzling existence than that enjoyed by this child of happy fortune, this royal Laureate of a mighty King? |
5114 | ... do ye not all blaspheme?" |
5114 | ... do you think me crazed for saying so?" |
5114 | ... dost thou frown at me? |
5114 | ... doth SHE not count her lovers by the score? |
5114 | ... doth she not eclipse all known or imaginable beauty? |
5114 | ... for if she were, why should she veil her native glory in such simple maiden guise? |
5114 | ... for without it, how shall thy fame be held long in remembrance? |
5114 | ... has gossip whispered thee the name of the poor virgin self- destined for this evening''s sacrifice?" |
5114 | ... hast thou caught contagion from Niphrata, and art thou too, sick of love?" |
5114 | ... hast thou ill news?" |
5114 | ... hast thou not given thyself body and soul into my keeping? |
5114 | ... have I not given ye warning? |
5114 | ... he was in Al- Kyris!--why was he so distressed about it? |
5114 | ... here in this dark abode where none may linger and escape with life? |
5114 | ... here? |
5114 | ... his fame?" |
5114 | ... how bridge the depths between our parted souls? |
5114 | ... how darest thou speak of love to the Priestess of the Faith?" |
5114 | ... how had he vanished? |
5114 | ... how shall the mighty monarch defend his people against it? |
5114 | ... how shall thy muse- grown laurels escape decay? |
5114 | ... how was it worked up?" |
5114 | ... if not a Prototype of the future, was it a Record of the Past? |
5114 | ... imprisonments? |
5114 | ... in what blind uncertainty and pain? |
5114 | ... in what timeless trance of soul- bewilderment? |
5114 | ... is his mind so stainless? |
5114 | ... is his wisdom so great? |
5114 | ... is it so?" |
5114 | ... is not her life a life of wanton luxury and open shame? |
5114 | ... is she not fair? |
5114 | ... is the famous Sah- luma gone?" |
5114 | ... love,... or... base desire? |
5114 | ... loved before? |
5114 | ... might he not gather it? |
5114 | ... more deaths? |
5114 | ... more troublous tidings? |
5114 | ... must divine Religion be dragged down from its pure throne to pander to the selfish passions of the multitude? |
5114 | ... need I say more? |
5114 | ... no mercy in the icy fate that rules our destinies? |
5114 | ... not happy in MY house,--protected by MY patronage? |
5114 | ... now, Theos Alwyn"... he continued, apostrophizing himself aloud,--"Are you contented? |
5114 | ... of what avail is it for me to struggle in this dark and difficult world? |
5114 | ... or a Thought of Beauty embodied into human sweetness and made perfect? |
5114 | ... or a student of the Positive Doctrines?" |
5114 | ... or an actually existent Being? |
5114 | ... or dost thou seek an escape from death?" |
5114 | ... or had Sah- luma never truly died at all? |
5114 | ... or had he merely DREAMED of a former existence different to this one? |
5114 | ... or hast thou no remembrance of the nearest road to thine own dwelling?" |
5114 | ... or is thy manful guise mere feigning, and dost thou fear me?" |
5114 | ... or is thy voice too weak for such impassioned cadence? |
5114 | ... or was he hopelessly brain- sick with delusions, and dreaming again? |
5114 | ... or was this stately Chaldean monk, with the clear, pathetic eyes and tender smile, and the symbol of Christ on his breast, wiser than both? |
5114 | ... or.. didst thou discover the King?" |
5114 | ... parted before? |
5114 | ... ready to be made less than the lowest of the low? |
5114 | ... settest thou a limit to the power of the King? |
5114 | ... slain him utterly? |
5114 | ... so grave and rich and marvellously musical, yet thrilling with such heart- moving suggestions of mingled pride and plaintiveness? |
5114 | ... that is enough for you in this world,... and as for a next world, who believes in it?--and who, believing, cares?" |
5114 | ... that is to say, first principles, as that ten is more than three? |
5114 | ... the Press? |
5114 | ... the Ruins of Babylon? |
5114 | ... the life of a drunken voluptuary? |
5114 | ... the sudden arrest and imprisonment of many,--and the consequent wrath of the King?" |
5114 | ... things that like faint, floating clouds rimmed with light, suggest without declaring a glory unperceived?" |
5114 | ... those marvellous mountains that oft wear crowns of ice on their summits and yet hold unquenchable fire in their depths? |
5114 | ... thou who art Man, and therefore NO hero? |
5114 | ... thou who art an Emperor of Song? |
5114 | ... thou who camest to me so sweetly at the first? |
5114 | ... to build up hopes without foundation? |
5114 | ... to call upon God when there is no God? |
5114 | ... to dethrone and destroy the oppressor? |
5114 | ... to die? |
5114 | ... to elevate and purify the world? |
5114 | ... to long for Heaven when there is no Heaven? |
5114 | ... to pass through the darkest phase of world- existence known in all the teeming spheres? |
5114 | ... to rouse the noblest instincts of thy race? |
5114 | ... to uphold the cause of Justice? |
5114 | ... was it love indeed that he felt? |
5114 | ... was she in very truth that shining Peri whose aerial loveliness had so long haunted his imagination? |
5114 | ... were these the"silver eyes"in which Esdras had seen"signs and wonders"? |
5114 | ... what a rapture trembled through her sweet caressing voice!--"My Theos, who is so worthy to win back what is thine own, as thou? |
5114 | ... what can a man do better than enjoy?" |
5114 | ... what could he prove? |
5114 | ... what do you see?" |
5114 | ... what does he do, to merit a future life? |
5114 | ... what had it to do with his immediate position? |
5114 | ... what hast thou? |
5114 | ... what have I seen? |
5114 | ... what love? |
5114 | ... what menace? |
5114 | ... what of him? |
5114 | ... what of the Press? |
5114 | ... what promise? |
5114 | ... what says the beauteous Virgin to her willing slave?" |
5114 | ... what warning? |
5114 | ... what was that low, far- off rumbling as of underground wheels rolling at full speed? |
5114 | ... when shall it be unraveled? |
5114 | ... where hast thou been?".. |
5114 | ... where,--where had this tragedy been previously enacted? |
5114 | ... who can prove that the heavenly bodies are given to the study of music? |
5114 | ... why did they suggest themselves? |
5114 | ... why do ye deem love a sin and passion a dishonor? |
5114 | ... why gaze on me with so distraught a countenance? |
5114 | ... why not call it by the name of the ideal heroine whose heart- passion and sorrow formed the nucleus of the legend? |
5114 | ... why not? |
5114 | ... why should I aid thee? |
5114 | ... why wilt thou be thus self- disgraced and all inglorious? |
5114 | ... why, why had she left him"lost"as she herself had said, in a world that was mere emptiness without her? |
5114 | ... wilt denounce the Faith? |
5114 | ... wiser in the wisdom of eternal things than any of the subtle- minded ancient Greek philosophers or modern imitators of their theories? |
5114 | ... would he,--could he ever forget it? |
5114 | ... wronged each other and God before? |
5114 | ... ye WILL hear me? |
5114 | ... yet almost a platitude, for did not every one occupy themselves exclusively with the Now, regardless of future consequences? |
5114 | ..."Thinkest thou in very truth that I shall live again? |
5114 | ..."and he detached a spray from the bosom of her dress--"What hast thou to do with the poet''s garland? |
5114 | ..."and he struggled violently to release himself from Theos''s resolute and compelling grasp.."Where wouldst thou drag me?" |
5114 | ..."and she drooped her head lower and lower till her dark, fragrant tresses touched his brow..."Then,... thou dost love me?" |
5114 | ..."he resumed tenderly--"Come!--Why art thou thus silent? |
5114 | A Poet!--who wants me in this age of Sale and Barter? |
5114 | A genius must surely be more or less conscious of his superiority to those who have no genius? |
5114 | A singer of sad songs? |
5114 | A vision? |
5114 | ART THOU READY? |
5114 | Accursed work!--Will none undo it?" |
5114 | Al- Kyris was truly a Vision,--the rest was,--What? |
5114 | All at once a voice marvellously tender, clear, and pathetic trembled on the silence,--was it, could it be the voice of Khosrul? |
5114 | Alwyn?" |
5114 | Alwyn?" |
5114 | Am I in my right mind? |
5114 | Am I incongruous, and out of keeping with the march of modern civilization?" |
5114 | And FROM WHENCE came the atom? |
5114 | And could injustice be associated with divine law? |
5114 | And he( the Angel) took me by the right hand and comforted me and set me upon my feet and said unto me:"''What aileth thee? |
5114 | And how could he accuse Sah- luma of literary theft, when he had none of his own dated manuscripts to bear out his case? |
5114 | And if both Spiritual and Material BE accepted, then how can we reasonably dare to set a limit to the manifestations of either the one or the other? |
5114 | And is it supposed to contain a fragment of the true cross? |
5114 | And shall I not win my own death- garland of asphodel?" |
5114 | And so Khosrul disturbed the flood of thine inspiration to- night, good minstrel? |
5114 | And the King? |
5114 | And then what do you think happened?" |
5114 | And thy poems,... the fruit of thy heaven- sent but carelessly accepted inspiration,--who is there that remembers them? |
5114 | And turning to Khosrul he added--"Wilt break a lance of song with me, sir gray- beard? |
5114 | And was it not possible that this Spectre of Self might still be clinging to him? |
5114 | And what is Material Force but the visible manifestation of the Spiritual behind it? |
5114 | And what of Edris? |
5114 | And where had he been before he ever saw Ardath? |
5114 | And why the NECESSITY of any atom?" |
5114 | And why? |
5114 | And why? |
5114 | And, respecting the testimony offered by sight and sense, can YOU rely upon such slippery evidence?" |
5114 | Angel she was,--angel she ever would be,--and yet-- what did she SEEM? |
5114 | Are they men and women of commonplace and thoroughly material life? |
5114 | Are we able to explain all the numerous and complex variations and manifestations of Matter? |
5114 | Are we fooled by an evil fate?--or do we in our loves and marriages deliberately fool ourselves?" |
5114 | Are you quite convinced of your folly? |
5114 | Are you ready to being your spells?--and shall I say the Nunc Dimittis?" |
5114 | Are you still so much of a sceptic that you think an ANGEL would have bidden you seek a place that had no existence? |
5114 | Arrests? |
5114 | Art not these dry and vacant forms sufficiently eloquent of the all- omnipotence of Decay?" |
5114 | Art thou dead to the honor of thy calling, that thou dost wilfully consent to be the victim of wine- bibbing and debauchery? |
5114 | Art thou fooled likewise with the glimmering Soul- mirage of a never- to- be- realized future? |
5114 | Art thou ready, proud King? |
5114 | Baines Bryce, Esq.''? |
5114 | But I say, why did n''t you come straight here, bag, baggage, and all? |
5114 | But am I logical? |
5114 | But how? |
5114 | But now, tell me, have you thoroughly understood all I have said to you?" |
5114 | But tell me frankly, if I am as famous as you say, how did I become so? |
5114 | But tell me, Sah- luma, how could she know I was a guest of thine?" |
5114 | But was it a real awakening? |
5114 | But was it well for even a great man to admire his own greatness? |
5114 | But what danger? |
5114 | But what next? |
5114 | But what of that, little one? |
5114 | But what of the''cello?" |
5114 | But what was ARDATH? |
5114 | But what was this"Ardath"to him, he mused?--What did it signify? |
5114 | But whither? |
5114 | But who is going to be wise, or strong, or diplomatic enough to reform it? |
5114 | But would he believe in, or accept, the warning? |
5114 | But, Alwyn, you have n''t told me how you like the''get- up''of your book?" |
5114 | But,--speaking of the river-- didst thou remark it on thy way hither?" |
5114 | By my faith, thou art like Theos yonder, and hast chosen to wear a sprig of my faded crown for thine adornment-- is''t not so?" |
5114 | COULD he rely on sight and sense... DARED he take oath that these frail guides of his intelligence could never be deceived? |
5114 | Can I do so now-- to- night-- at once?" |
5114 | Can YOU understand it?" |
5114 | Can a Critic enter more closely into the secrets of Nature than a Poet? |
5114 | Can not these arms embrace?--these lips engender kisses?--these eyes wax amorous? |
5114 | Can you, will you help me in the search? |
5114 | Canst compose when thou art drunk, my dainty Laureate? |
5114 | Canst thou tell? |
5114 | Come, wilt thou? |
5114 | Come,... shall we join the brethren?" |
5114 | Could love COMPEL her, he wondered, to come to him once more while yet he lived on earth? |
5114 | Could that apply to him? |
5114 | Could there be a more perfect head than that dark one crowned with myrtle? |
5114 | Did all Sah- luma''s light follies, idle passions, and careless cruelties remain inherent in him? |
5114 | Did n''t I tell you I was n''t at home to ANYBODY?" |
5114 | Did they actually intend to worship her, he wondered? |
5114 | Did we not see it weighted with iron and laid elsewhere...?" |
5114 | Didst thou overtake and steadily confront yon armed and muffled stranger?" |
5114 | Do I not pay thee to abuse me? |
5114 | Do they disagree among themselves, and speak against one another? |
5114 | Do they love notoriety? |
5114 | Do they serve themselves more than others? |
5114 | Do they, can they honestly believe in God, I wonder? |
5114 | Do you profess to be wholly without it?" |
5114 | Do you remember it?" |
5114 | Does the world know her marvellous origin? |
5114 | Dost thou think they write what they mean, or practice what they preach? |
5114 | Dost thou write follies also? |
5114 | Dreams are seldom realized,... and as to the name of Ardath, have you ever heard it before?" |
5114 | Escape from death? |
5114 | Fame? |
5114 | Fame? |
5114 | For had not the crazed Prophet called Lysia an"unvirgined virgin and Queen- Courtesan"? |
5114 | For if thou art a stranger and knowest naught of us, how speakest thou our language? |
5114 | For life is nothing but vexation and suffering; are we dogs that we should lick the hand that crushes us?" |
5114 | For while thine unbelief resists my pleading, how can I lead thee from danger into safety? |
5114 | Forgotten Sah- luma? |
5114 | Friend Poet, do you think that even Heaven is wholly happy to one who loves, and whose Beloved is absent?" |
5114 | From whence do you come?" |
5114 | God Himself will not constrain it,--how then shall we? |
5114 | Good to be here? |
5114 | HIS life a glory to the world? |
5114 | HOW HAD IT HAPPENED? |
5114 | HOW LONG WILT THOU SEVER ME FROM THY SOUL AND LEAVE ME ALONE AND SORROWFUL AMID THE JOYS OF HEAVEN?'' |
5114 | Had he heard any of the conversation that had just passed between Lysia and himself? |
5114 | Had he the same pride of intellect, the same vain- glory, the same indifference to God and Man? |
5114 | Had not she, Edris, consigned him to his"own disdain, Athwart the raptures of a visioned bliss?" |
5114 | Has he failed to kneel to the passing Ship of the Sun? |
5114 | Has he returned in safety?" |
5114 | Has love, the primal mover of all things, no hold upon thee? |
5114 | Hast been his fly- i''-the- ear or cast- off sandal- string? |
5114 | Hast lost some maiden love of thine? |
5114 | Hast thou been grudged sufficient wine that thou dost envy me my slumber? |
5114 | Hast thou held converse with the Angels, and is Past and Future ONE with thee in the dream of the departing Present? |
5114 | Hast thou no vestige of a heart, my friend? |
5114 | Hath Sah- luma been present at their singing lesson?" |
5114 | Hath he not denounced the faith of Nagaya and foretold the destruction of the city times out of number? |
5114 | Hath it not a certain exquisite smoothness of rhythm like the ripple of a woodland stream clear- winding through the reeds? |
5114 | Hath not the High Priestess of Nagaya slaves enough to work her will? |
5114 | Hath seen her? |
5114 | Have I not challenged the very heavens for thy sake? |
5114 | Have I not ministered to grief as well as joy? |
5114 | Have you ever considered the particular weight of that word''MAN''in that text? |
5114 | Have you not desired to blazon your name on the open scroll of the world? |
5114 | He knew it well? |
5114 | He laughed lightly, and once more shook hands, while Alwyn, looking at him wistfully, said:"I wonder when we shall meet again?" |
5114 | He looked at them in doubt that was almost dread,... were they real? |
5114 | Here he looked about him in confused bewilderment.."Where is Lysia? |
5114 | His heart beat quickly-- could he believe her? |
5114 | How can it be otherwise? |
5114 | How can you serve me? |
5114 | How comes it your dull eyes and ears were fixed so fast upon yon dotard miscreant whose days are numbered? |
5114 | How could he speak against this friend whom he loved,.. aye!--more than he had ever loved any living thing!--besides what could he prove? |
5114 | How could he tell? |
5114 | How do you like my practical dissection of your new- found joys?" |
5114 | How had he managed to invest himself with such an overpowering distinction of look and grace of bearing? |
5114 | How have I offended? |
5114 | How if she were a wingless angel,--made woman? |
5114 | How long wilt mouth thy words? |
5114 | How many men would have loved thee as I have loved? |
5114 | How was my''celebrity''first started? |
5114 | How would it be, some of them thought, if they were more frequently brought into contact with such royal and gracious manhood? |
5114 | How?" |
5114 | Hyspiros a traitor to the art he served and glorified? |
5114 | I am perplexed at heart and slow of thought; wilt thou assure me faithfully, that this God- Man thou speakest of is not yet born on earth?" |
5114 | I have a dream,... and I see a woman in the dream"--here he suddenly corrected himself..."a woman did I say? |
5114 | I miss thy soft blush and dimpling smile,--what ails thee, my honey- throated oriole?" |
5114 | I suppose in the East, where the sun is so warm and bright, the people are always cheerful?" |
5114 | I think we''d better accept,--what do you say?" |
5114 | I wonder if the man I seek is really here, or whether after all I have been misled? |
5114 | I, Zephoranim, the destroyer of my friend and first favorite in the realm? |
5114 | I? |
5114 | If these poor lover- victims merited their doom, why is not Lysia slain? |
5114 | If, for instance, the King were made aware of Sah- luma''s intrigue with Lysia, would not his rage and jealousy exceed all bounds? |
5114 | In appearance, do you mean? |
5114 | In brief, you have recovered your lost inspiration; the lately dumb oracle speaks again:--and are you not satisfied?" |
5114 | In the first place, then, let me ask you, have you told any one, save me, the story of your Ardath adventure?" |
5114 | In the first place... WHO WAS HE? |
5114 | In what vast mystery have I been engulfed? |
5114 | In what way can Heliobas, who is dead to the world, serve one for whom surely as yet the world is everything?" |
5114 | Incongruous? |
5114 | Inconsistent? |
5114 | Into what vast realms of translucent light or drear shadow? |
5114 | Is it not better so than that the Universe should continue to seem beautiful only through the medium of a lie?" |
5114 | Is not this true philosophy, my Theos? |
5114 | Is she not a peerless moon of womanhood? |
5114 | Is that prudent? |
5114 | Is there a man in Al- Kyris who will treat as an enemy one whom Sah- luma calls friend?" |
5114 | Is there a next world for this?" |
5114 | Is this land a dream? |
5114 | Is this true? |
5114 | It SHOULD be,--but what IS it? |
5114 | It is purely a caprice of the imagination,--and what is imagination? |
5114 | Justice? |
5114 | Kill Sah- luma? |
5114 | Learning and scholarship? |
5114 | Like Shelley, he inquired,"If God has spoken, why is the world not convinced?" |
5114 | Long ago? |
5114 | Love is the only god-- who would doubt his sovereignty, or grudge him his full measure of worship? |
5114 | MYSELF or SAH- LUMA?" |
5114 | May it not happen, on occasions, that the so- called fool shall teach a lesson to the so- called wise man? |
5114 | Maybe YOU know something of its whereabouts?" |
5114 | Might he not possibly guard him in some way and ward off impending danger? |
5114 | Moreover, what do you mean by a''living Reality''? |
5114 | Moreover,--what is guilt? |
5114 | Mourn and bend ye all beneath the iron stroke of Destiny!--for know ye not how fierce a thing has come upon Al- Kyris? |
5114 | Mrs. Flummery in her presentation- dress''.. except Mrs. Flummery''s own particular friends? |
5114 | My name is Alwyn...""Theos Alwyn, the English author, I presume?" |
5114 | NOW do you remember? |
5114 | Nay now, what will ye do in extremity?--Will ye chant hymns to the Sun? |
5114 | Nay, why shrink from me? |
5114 | Nevertheless her sole delight was still to serve me,--could I debar her from that joy because I saw therein some danger for her peace? |
5114 | No?" |
5114 | Nothing? |
5114 | Now then, will you have the kindness to tell Mr. Alwyn I am here?" |
5114 | Now, if it be true, as I have often thought, that I COULD compel,--by what right dare I use such power, if power I have upon her? |
5114 | Now, suppose that, after all, Mr. Alwyn DOES care to submit to the operation, you will let me know, wo n''t you?" |
5114 | Of course he could easily repeat his boyhood''s verses word for word,... but what of that? |
5114 | Oh unwise, benighted fool!--where were my thoughts? |
5114 | Oh, speak!--is there no deeper divine intention in the marvellous destiny that has brought us together?--thou, pure Spirit, and I, weak Mortal? |
5114 | Oh, wilt thou leave me desolate and alone? |
5114 | Oh, you MUST remember? |
5114 | On his way, however, he paused and turned round:"Has Niphrata yet come home?" |
5114 | One must live? |
5114 | Only a torch for burning and no hammer for building? |
5114 | Or is it the fashion of Al- Kyris to condemn a man unheard?" |
5114 | Perhaps, said I, there is no assurance but in the notions of reason? |
5114 | Perhaps... who knows? |
5114 | Presently Heliobas spoke again in his customary light and cheerful tone:"Are you writing anything new just now?" |
5114 | Presently he inquired:"How comes it, Sah- luma, that the corpse of Nir- jalis was found on the shores of the river? |
5114 | Restrain thy wild and wandering fancies? |
5114 | SENTENCED joy? |
5114 | SOON MAY THE CHILD BE BORN WHO SHALL BANISH THE AGE OF IRON?" |
5114 | Sah- luma conquered, with an effort, his momentary irritation, and resumed coldly:"From whence do you come, fair sir? |
5114 | Salvation and Immortality? |
5114 | Say, hast thou occupied thyself with so much friendly consideration on my behalf, as I have on thine?" |
5114 | Self- surrender? |
5114 | Shall I show her up?" |
5114 | Shall it not be so, Lysia? |
5114 | Shall we go?" |
5114 | She was a living, breathing woman-- an actual creature of flesh and blood,--yet how account for her appearance on the field of Ardath? |
5114 | Shuddering with a vague dread, he asked himself the next question,... FROM WHENCE HAD HE COME? |
5114 | Since when have soldiers grown deaf to the voice of their sovereign? |
5114 | So you are an''interviewer''for the Press?" |
5114 | Soldiers and statesmen may bend the knee to their chosen rulers, but to whom shall poets bend? |
5114 | Some trick has been played on me... who brought me here? |
5114 | Speak!--What seest thou?" |
5114 | Speak, fair Queen!--how can I serve thee?" |
5114 | Speak-- how shall we cheer each other in the shadow- realm of fiends? |
5114 | Still, I should like to have them all the same,--will you let me write them out just as you have translated them?" |
5114 | Surely even a professor from Hypharus could find no more, and no less than four?" |
5114 | Surely there was no passing through such a barrier as this? |
5114 | Tell me, good Zel, what is the name of the self- offered Victim?" |
5114 | Tell me-- have we not met before? |
5114 | The Poet knows the truth,--but what are Poets? |
5114 | The flesh and blood, bone and substance that perishes in a brief seventy years or so and crumbles into indistinguishable dust? |
5114 | The question remains,... what IS logic? |
5114 | The religion of that long- buried city had been mere mummery and splendid outward show,--what was the religion of London? |
5114 | The rich man gains his cause,--the beggar loses it,--how can it be otherwise, while lust of gold prevails? |
5114 | Then straightway he became indignant on his friend''s behalf,--why should Sah- luma be blamed? |
5114 | Then where is the wise man''s superiority if a fool can instruct him? |
5114 | Then why do we dare to doubt the certainly conceivable variations and manifestations of Spirit? |
5114 | Then why must I lose thee? |
5114 | Then,--from whence had this music its origin? |
5114 | Theos what? |
5114 | They SHOULD be different? |
5114 | This is the letter to Elzear,"--here he held out a folded paper--"will you take it now?" |
5114 | Thou art too humble, methinks, for the minstrel- vocation,--dost call thyself a Minstrel? |
5114 | Thou must abide with me for all the days of thy sojourn here.... Art willing?" |
5114 | Thus much wisdom he had acquired,--and what more? |
5114 | To comfort the afflicted? |
5114 | To hours of pain and bitterness, as well as to long days of ease and amorous dreaming? |
5114 | To live a mortal life? |
5114 | Traitor or spy? |
5114 | Upon this the SENSES replied: What assurance have you that your confidence in REASON is not of the same nature as your confidence in US? |
5114 | Vex not thy soul as to thy friend''s virtues or vices-- what are they to thee? |
5114 | Villiers looked at him questioningly:"Tired of your own celebrity, Alwyn?" |
5114 | WHAT atom? |
5114 | WHERE ARE THOU?'' |
5114 | WHERE IS THE FIELD OF ARDATH?" |
5114 | WHOM had he seen? |
5114 | WHY did he love Sah- luma so ardently, he wondered? |
5114 | WHY was it that every smile on that proud mouth, every glance of those flashing eyes, possessed such singular, overwhelming fascination for him? |
5114 | Was ever a more indiscreet lie? |
5114 | Was ever poet, king, or even emperor, housed more sumptuously than this, he thought? |
5114 | Was he glad of the prospect, he asked himself? |
5114 | Was he then so selfish? |
5114 | Was he, Theos Alwyn, wiser than Democritus? |
5114 | Was his companion then a fitting Spectre? |
5114 | Was it dead with the Dream of Sah- luma? |
5114 | Was it not possible for men to be the gods of this world, rather than the devils they so often are? |
5114 | Was she REAL?--or a phantom? |
5114 | Was she not here a moment since? |
5114 | Was she not safer as thy slave?" |
5114 | Was she,--even she, God''s Angel, so far removed from pride, as to be uncertain of her lover''s reception of such a gift of love? |
5114 | Was there a choir practising inside at this hour of the night? |
5114 | Was there, COULD there be something not yet altogether understood or fathomed in the Christian creed? |
5114 | Was there, could there, be anything mysterious or sacred in this"wiste field"anciently known as"Ardath"? |
5114 | Was this Lysia? |
5114 | We believe in no actual Creed,--who does? |
5114 | We have met before!--Why,--after all that has passed,--do we meet again?" |
5114 | We see the outer Appearance of the woman, but what of that? |
5114 | Wear and tear and worry of modern existence?--Oh yes, I know!--but why the wear tear and worry at all? |
5114 | Well,--if there WERE angels, why not? |
5114 | Were they not the flowers of ARDATH? |
5114 | What admonition does it hold for thee? |
5114 | What ails thee now? |
5114 | What ails thee? |
5114 | What assurance have you that all you feel and know does actually exist? |
5114 | What can I, or you, or any one, do against the iron force of Free- Will? |
5114 | What could she mean? |
5114 | What did it all mean? |
5114 | What did she mean? |
5114 | What didst thou say? |
5114 | What dost thou here? |
5114 | What dost thou need of praise? |
5114 | What flowers were those she wore at her breast!--so white, so star- like, so suggestive of paradise lilies new- gathered? |
5114 | What frenzy possesses thee?" |
5114 | What hast thou to do with Zephoranim, that thou dost wind thy many coils about his heart? |
5114 | What hath he done? |
5114 | What have I to do with love? |
5114 | What have you there?" |
5114 | What if thou wert offered his place? |
5114 | What in the name of all her beautiful, delicate, glowing youth, had she to do with death? |
5114 | What is evil? |
5114 | What is good? |
5114 | What is it for? |
5114 | What is it? |
5114 | What is this that parts us?" |
5114 | What is this woman to thee?" |
5114 | What knowest thou of His Majesty''s humors? |
5114 | What means this throaty clamor? |
5114 | What might they mean to him, here and now? |
5114 | What mysterious agency sets the heart beating and the blood flowing? |
5114 | What mysterious indication of affinity did they read in one another''s faces? |
5114 | What news hast thou, my sweet? |
5114 | What next? |
5114 | What of the High Priestess then? |
5114 | What of the poem? |
5114 | What of the"Flower- crowned Wonder"of the Field of Ardath, strayed for a while out of her native Heaven? |
5114 | What sayest thou now of doom,--of judgment,--of the waning of glory? |
5114 | What sayest thou of Heaven? |
5114 | What shall be told concerning His most marvellous Beauty? |
5114 | What shall prevent me?" |
5114 | What slight Figure was that, pacing slowly, serenely, and all alone in the moonlight? |
5114 | What sombre cloud has crossed thy wine- hued heaven? |
5114 | What spectral shadow of dread hovered above this brilliant scene of high feasting and voluptuous revelry? |
5114 | What unusual sight attracted them? |
5114 | What was any physical suffering compared to such a frenzy of mind- agony? |
5114 | What was it then? |
5114 | What was the man talking about? |
5114 | What was the time? |
5114 | What were the sufferings of Nir- jalis now? |
5114 | What would be the result? |
5114 | What!--Sah- luma,--a Poet, whose songs of Love were so perfect, so wildly sweet and soul- entrancing-- HE, to be ignorant of Love''s true meaning? |
5114 | What!--dost thou play the heroic with me? |
5114 | What!--ye WILL see me now? |
5114 | What, as a rule, DO men believe in? |
5114 | What-- WHAT was that dazzling something in the air that flashed and whirled and shone like glittering wheels of golden flame? |
5114 | When at last he had retired for a breathing- while, Heliobas turned to Alwyn with the question:"What do you think of him?" |
5114 | When did the idea first strike you?" |
5114 | When he had gone, Theos looked up from the news- scroll he was perusing:"Is it not strange Niphrata should have left thee thus, Sah- luma?".. |
5114 | When should he again meet her? |
5114 | Whence results the confidence I have in sensible things? |
5114 | Where didst thou see him?" |
5114 | Where do you come from, old fellow?" |
5114 | Where had he gone? |
5114 | Where hast thou wandered so long, thou Goddess of Morn? |
5114 | Where have I strayed? |
5114 | Where is Elzear the hermit? |
5114 | Where is there any freedom in life? |
5114 | Where is thy fool Zebastes? |
5114 | Where is thy sight.. thy memory? |
5114 | Where then, if not here, could she find happiness?" |
5114 | Where was this place, he wondered wearily?--When had he seen it? |
5114 | Where? |
5114 | Whether wilt thou go? |
5114 | Whither art thou bound?" |
5114 | Whither wouldst thou wander in search of me? |
5114 | Who among men would turn aside from high feasting and mirthful company? |
5114 | Who but a madman would be honest in these days of competition and greed of gain? |
5114 | Who could gaze on the exquisite outlines of a form fairer than that of any sculptured Venus and refuse to acknowledge its powerfully sweet attraction? |
5114 | Who could look on such delicate, dangerous, witching charms unmoved? |
5114 | Who could she be? |
5114 | Who is there here that believes in the Sun as a god, or in Nagaya as a mediator? |
5114 | Who says I am famous?" |
5114 | Who speaks of the cool sweetness of the grave,--the quiet ending of all strife,--the unbreaking seal of Fate, the deep and stirless rest? |
5114 | Who will join with me in a lament for Al- Kyris? |
5114 | Who wrote the story? |
5114 | Whom have ye seized thus roughly? |
5114 | Whose handwriting should it be?" |
5114 | Why dost thou thus disquiet thyself concerning the end of life, seeing that verily it hath NO end? |
5114 | Why should we willfully JAR God''s music, of which we are a part? |
5114 | Why talk thus wildly? |
5114 | Why thus hanker after a phantom loveliness? |
5114 | Why was he set apart thus, solitary, poor, and empty of all worth, WHILE ANOTHER REAPED THE FRUITS OF HIS GENIUS? |
5114 | Why? |
5114 | Will I be drunk at sunrise? |
5114 | Will a Zabastes move us to tears and passion? |
5114 | Will they take money for their professed knowledge? |
5114 | Will ye supplicate Nagaya? |
5114 | Will you explain?" |
5114 | Will you? |
5114 | Wilt drink with me?" |
5114 | Wilt moralize on the folly of the time,--the vices of the age? |
5114 | Wilt preach? |
5114 | Wilt prophesy? |
5114 | Wilt thou also maintain a creed of hope when naught awaits us but despair? |
5114 | Wilt''blind thyself with beauty''as thou say''st? |
5114 | With all the coyness, all the beauty sheen Of thy rapt face? |
5114 | Woe is me that ye would not listen when I called, but turned every man to his own devices and the following after idols? |
5114 | Would we might die most absolutely thus, heart against heart, never to wake again and loathe eathtypo or archaism? |
5114 | Yet the question still remained--, was Khosrul right or wrong? |
5114 | Yet where was the resemblance? |
5114 | Yet why? |
5114 | Yet, how are we to fathom her nature? |
5114 | Yielding to a sudden impulse, Alwyn spoke his thought aloud:"Heliobas,"he said,"tell me, could not I, too, become a member of your Fraternity?" |
5114 | You are QUITE sure I can not see him?" |
5114 | You know what one of your modern writers says of life? |
5114 | You know what that means?" |
5114 | You really like the appearance of it, then? |
5114 | You say he was without faith?" |
5114 | You spoke of having gathered one of the miracle- flowers on the Prophet''s field,--may I see it?" |
5114 | Young and pretty?" |
5114 | a choice morsel for a lover''s banquet? |
5114 | a poet- heart, to feel the misery of the world? |
5114 | and Sah- luma laughed musically.."My simple friend, dost thou ask me such a babe''s question?"... |
5114 | and Sah- luma smiled at Theos as he spoke--"Thou wilt accompany me to the King, my friend?" |
5114 | and a look of pathetic sorrow came over her face.."How could I, even for thee, my Theos, forsake my home in Heaven?" |
5114 | and also how foolish was thy fancy last night with regard to the armed masquerader thou didst see in Lysia''s garden?" |
5114 | and cool thy head at the first fountain?" |
5114 | and dost thou not comprehend the intention of the Highest in manifesting it unto thee? |
5114 | and he paused at the side of the girl standing by the harp--"Hast thou sung many of my songs to- day? |
5114 | and his aged face took upon itself a ghastly greenish pallor--"Hear you not the muttering of the thunder underground? |
5114 | and how shall we pacify her righteous wrath, concerning this too tranquil death of the undeserving and impure?" |
5114 | and then for evermore His sacred Name shall dominate and civilize the world...""What Name?".. |
5114 | and was it not a parting of soul from soul? |
5114 | and when we come face to face with the Last Dark Mystery, what shall our little wisdom profit us?" |
5114 | and when? |
5114 | and whether Religion will in the future occupy no more serious consideration than the Drama? |
5114 | and why art thou so disquieted? |
5114 | and why is thine understanding troubled and the thoughts of thine heart? |
5114 | and wilt thou sue for pardon?" |
5114 | art thou there, Sah- luma? |
5114 | ask your name?" |
5114 | asked Theos half banteringly, as he took his arm--"Dost thou love no one?" |
5114 | but WHERE? |
5114 | but still, would not everything that happened in the ACTUAL world merge into that same undecided dimness with the lapse of time? |
5114 | but was there no after- means of lifting it from thence, and placing it where best such carrion should be found? |
5114 | called Theos, running after him.."Tell me,--is this the way to the palace of the King''s Laureate?" |
5114 | canst tell me whither we should turn? |
5114 | cried Villiers, sitting bolt upright and shooting out the word like a bullet from a gun,--"Free? |
5114 | cried Zephoranim at last, dashing away the drops his merriment had brought into his eyes--"Wilt kill me with thy bitter- mouthed jests? |
5114 | demanded Alwyn.."Why should not clerics be told, once and for all, how ill they perform their sacred mission? |
5114 | demanded Heliobas--"If so, what then?" |
5114 | did ever man possess so dulcet a voice, he thought? |
5114 | didst thou not see the Black Disc last night in Lysia''s palace?" |
5114 | do n''t you think bed suggests itself as a fitting conclusion to our converse?" |
5114 | do n''t you think so?" |
5114 | dost thou blaspheme my lady''s name and yet not fear to die?" |
5114 | echoed Sah- luma petulantly.."Nay, have I done nothing more than this? |
5114 | ejaculated Sah- luma amazedly,"Not happy with ME? |
5114 | exclaimed Villiers petulantly, throwing down his bow in disgust,--"What business had you to think anything about it? |
5114 | for the night is almost past,--the morning is at hand, and danger threatens thee,--wouldst thou be found here drunk at sunrise?" |
5114 | for who ever heard the midnight stars or any other stars chant? |
5114 | from an Angel to a mortal? |
5114 | good?" |
5114 | he asked after a while--"You said you were on the search for a new sensation- did you experience it?" |
5114 | he asked listlessly.."What is its nature and whom doth it concern?" |
5114 | he asked, suspiciously--"And has the Silver Nectar failed of its usual action, and driven thy senses to the winds, that thou ravest thus? |
5114 | he asked, taking him by the arm,--"Are the pleasures of Fame already exhausted?" |
5114 | he cried almost furiously,--"Why dost thou mock me then with this false image of a hope unrealized? |
5114 | he cried gayly,--"Where is thy master Sah- luma? |
5114 | he cried, enthusiastically clasping him by both hands,--"Where, in the name of all the gods, hast thou been roaming? |
5114 | he cried,"what doth this fellow prate of? |
5114 | he cried.... then he added eagerly,"May I look at it?" |
5114 | he demanded gayly,--"Am I so bronzed?" |
5114 | he demanded gently--"Canst thou not improvise a canticle of love even in the midst of thy soul''s sudden sadness?" |
5114 | he demanded in a stern yet tremulous voice..."A thousand? |
5114 | he demanded..."What is thy calling?" |
5114 | he echoed, with an accent of incredulous amazement..."The King? |
5114 | he groaned inwardly, as he endeavored to calm the tempest of his unutterable despair,--"Who am I? |
5114 | he inquired gravely,"How?" |
5114 | he inquired--"Can it be well for men to cling superstitiously to a false doctrine?" |
5114 | he murmured pettishly, turning his head round toward Theos as he spoke--"Was ever a more foolish child than Zoralin? |
5114 | he murmured with compassionate tolerance--"Have I not told thee that five thousand years and more must pass away ere the prediction be accomplished? |
5114 | he murmured--"why taunt me with the name?" |
5114 | he murmured.."What moves thee to blurt forth such strange and unwarrantable sayings? |
5114 | he mused, as he noticed this brilliant and singular decoration,"an emblem of the fraternity, I suppose, meaning... what? |
5114 | he mused--"fools or knaves? |
5114 | he muttered in a thrilling whisper that penetrated to every part of the vast hall--"Wilt force me to drink blood?" |
5114 | he muttered under his breath,..."The King? |
5114 | he muttered with white lips.."Treachery? |
5114 | he muttered..."Why am I thus bound?--why can I not be free?" |
5114 | he observed, putting up his sword with a sharp clatter into its shining sheath,--"What name sayst thou? |
5114 | he queried lightly,"and wilt thou also be one of us? |
5114 | he said again, trembling in the excess of mingled hope and fear..."Hast thou then returned again from heaven, to lift me out of darkness? |
5114 | he said hastily in English,"I think I am not mistaken-- your name is, or used to be Heliobas?" |
5114 | he said hastily--"What are Kings to thee? |
5114 | he said listlessly.."Is it not as it was in the old time,--thou to command, and I to obey? |
5114 | he said pettishly, yet with a vacant smile,--"what question didst thou bawl unmusically in mine ear? |
5114 | he said thickly.."Did ye not hear me? |
5114 | he said with a touch of melancholy surprise in his tone--"Then wherefore art thou here? |
5114 | he thought half resentfully--"and how dares he predict for the adored, the admired Sah- luma so dark and unmerited an end? |
5114 | he whispered..."Saw you not the King?" |
5114 | her unselfish worship? |
5114 | how came he there? |
5114 | how can we decide? |
5114 | how comes it then that all Sah- luma''s work is but the reflex of my own? |
5114 | how do you know"... and Villiers shook his head dubiously--"What man can be certain of his own destiny?" |
5114 | how many have you? |
5114 | interrupted Theos, with eager abruptness..."Canst thou pronounce it?" |
5114 | is not the way made plain?" |
5114 | is the sun quenched in heaven? |
5114 | laughed Sah- luma--"Thinkest thou Lysia''s lake of lilies is a common grave for criminals? |
5114 | let us hope for the best-- God''s ways are inscrutable-- and you tell me that now-- now after your strange so- called''vision''--you believe in God?" |
5114 | murmured Heliobas, in a tone of suggestive inquiry--"really nothing?" |
5114 | murmured Villiers dubiously.--"What is she like? |
5114 | must I repeat the same thing twice? |
5114 | nothing so apparently rare that can not be reduced at once from the ignorant exaggerations of enthusiasm to the sensible level of the commonplace? |
5114 | now, if thou lovest me indeed...""Love thee?" |
5114 | one can not help wondering.. are their aspirations all in vain? |
5114 | or a student of the art of song?" |
5114 | or are they only acting the usual worn- out comedy of a feigned faith?" |
5114 | or rather a continuation of some strange impression received in slumber? |
5114 | or the glittering summit itself which touches God''s throne?" |
5114 | queried Alwyn.--"Does anybody know? |
5114 | queried Heliobas, meaningly,"or you HOPE? |
5114 | said Heliobas softly--"Your appearance indicates happiness,--is your life at last complete?" |
5114 | said the voice..."Wouldst thou crown Me, Theos, with so perishable a diadem?" |
5114 | said this personage in a rough voice as he withdrew his weapon--"What idle fellow art thou? |
5114 | she asked--"a city of men who labor for good, and serve each other?" |
5114 | she cried--"Art thou angel or demon that thou darest defy me? |
5114 | she murmured wistfully--"Tell me,--am I welcome?" |
5114 | she was his own heartworshipped Angel,--but on what errand had she wandered out of paradise? |
5114 | she whispered gently--"Happy as other men are, when loved as thou art loved?" |
5114 | she whispered.."Quick.. why dost thou hesitate?" |
5114 | since when hath he deserted his Court of Love for the colder chambers of the Sacred Temple?" |
5114 | then, turning to Theos, he inquired--"Wilt thou also wear a minstrel- garland, my friend? |
5114 | this small and insignificant court,--had so far escaped the fire, and was as cool and sombre as a sacred tomb set apart for some hero,... or Poet? |
5114 | thou hast no faculty in that kind? |
5114 | thou that wert the complacent braggart of love,--the self- sufficient proclaimer of thine own prowess, where is thy boasted vigor now? |
5114 | warn him against what? |
5114 | was it only through time- serving creatures such as this miserable Zabastes, that the after- glory of perished poets was proclaimed to the world? |
5114 | was there something supernatural in the music, notwithstanding its human- seeming speech and sound? |
5114 | was thy hot pursuit in vain? |
5114 | well,--what then?--Must I love many in return? |
5114 | what WAS his native tongue? |
5114 | what dost thou think of her? |
5114 | what had come to the fellow, he wondered? |
5114 | what hast thou done with the treasures bestowed upon thee by the all- endowing Angels? |
5114 | what link could there be between a mere man like ourselves and heaven? |
5114 | what mattered it to him that King, Laureate, and people had all prostrated themselves before her in reverent humility? |
5114 | what next? |
5114 | what the worth of Fame, if it were not made to serve as a bright incentive and noble example to others of less renown? |
5114 | what then? |
5114 | what then? |
5114 | what was he thinking of? |
5114 | what was that? |
5114 | what.. WHAT was it that Sah- luma sang? |
5114 | where shal I find her if not in the FIELD OF ARDATH?" |
5114 | where, in God''s name, had he seen all this marvelous, witching, maddening loveliness BEFORE? |
5114 | whether the two are likely to become one? |
5114 | who was she? |
5114 | whom had he met there?--and how had he come to Al- Kyris from thence? |
5114 | why not? |
5114 | why should we linger? |
5114 | why, why could he not take this dear companion away out of possible peril? |
5114 | wilt thou stint the generous juice that warms my soul to song? |
5114 | yes!--but are not men more inconsistent than the very beasts of the field their tyranny controls? |
5114 | yes,--but was it not almost base on his part to shield himself with that Divine Light and do nothing further? |
5114 | yet what could he say? |
5114 | yet what was he in himself? |
5114 | you will not? |
5114 | you would not drag her spiritual and death unconscious brightness down to the level of the''reality of a merely human life? |
34748 | ''And if I lose my scalp among them-- what then?'' 34748 ''And therefore you are frightened at seeing me, as Hamlet was before his father''s ghost?'' |
34748 | ''And who is the Alexander whose Aristotle I am to be?'' 34748 ''And you call that a tempting offer? |
34748 | ''Are you not ashamed, Harald,''I said,''to tease the poor, innocent lamb in this way? 34748 ''Certainly; shall I introduce you?'' |
34748 | ''How so?'' 34748 ''Interrupted Sacrifice?'' |
34748 | ''That was Professor Berger?'' 34748 ''There you are right And now?'' |
34748 | ''Why not? 34748 ''Why, what is the matter?'' |
34748 | ''Why?'' 34748 ''Will you give me your arm, dear Marie?'' |
34748 | ''You are a candidate for honors?'' 34748 A girl, the Czika?" |
34748 | A letter? 34748 A nice little puppy; and the young beauty is to have him for her husband-- is that so?" |
34748 | Ah, Baumann, is everybody out? |
34748 | Ah, I suppose that is the reason why Doctor Stein has not come down? |
34748 | Ah, pshaw!--are you in earnest, baron, or are you trying to chaff me again? |
34748 | Ah, then I must not ask for more? |
34748 | Ah, very kind, baroness-- very kind-- baroness, you have not had the goodness yet to introduce me-- Baron Felix, I suppose? |
34748 | Ah_ voilà_, dear Timm, how do you do? |
34748 | All the better,said Melitta;"that is settled then?" |
34748 | Almost genteel? 34748 Already tired?" |
34748 | Already? 34748 Am I Malte''s keeper?" |
34748 | Am I cross? |
34748 | Am I in love now? |
34748 | And Helen? |
34748 | And John? |
34748 | And can I afford you any compensation? |
34748 | And did I not honor it? 34748 And do you also think that this-- that this man-- I can hardly speak of it calmly-- that this Stein is really Harald''s son?" |
34748 | And do you not know that cheerful eyes weep most readily? |
34748 | And do you think these people understand any other kind of talking? |
34748 | And for myself? |
34748 | And had the baron no friend who might have stood by him in his last hour? |
34748 | And have_ you_ had such experience? |
34748 | And how did Baron Harald go about to win his wager? |
34748 | And how did you get to this secluded spot? |
34748 | And how much longer do you expect to stay here? |
34748 | And how old was Baron Harald when his father died? |
34748 | And if I assure you of the contrary? |
34748 | And if I can not believe that you love me, who is to blame for it? 34748 And if I had not accepted the challenge?" |
34748 | And if she does not change it? |
34748 | And if that had been my wish-- suppose it was my wish-- is not the gentleman''s duty to honor the lady''s will, especially if he loves that lady? |
34748 | And if they announce to- night your engagement to Felix to the assembled guests? |
34748 | And if you are not more afraid of a thunder- storm than I am-- or are you afraid? |
34748 | And if your parents insist? |
34748 | And is not love the greatest flattery? |
34748 | And may I ask what brought you to Grenwitz? |
34748 | And may I ask what took you away so suddenly from our neighborhood? |
34748 | And the estate is entailed? |
34748 | And the girls? |
34748 | And the maids? |
34748 | And the name of Oldenburg? |
34748 | And the pain had entirely left him an hour ago? |
34748 | And then, Bruno? |
34748 | And what did the company say? |
34748 | And what do you mean to do? |
34748 | And what do you say to that? |
34748 | And what evidences have you? |
34748 | And what makes such a remarkable personage of the baron, aside from his illustrious descent? |
34748 | And what was Miss Marie doing in the mean time? |
34748 | And where and when do you think you have seen Czika? |
34748 | And where are you going now? |
34748 | And where do the boys sleep? |
34748 | And where is our little foundling? |
34748 | And where is that? |
34748 | And where is the evil? |
34748 | And where is your tent, doctor? |
34748 | And who has inspired me with such bold hopes, if it is not you yourself? |
34748 | And who is the beautiful Brisæis they have stolen from you? |
34748 | And who were these sad friends? |
34748 | And why not? |
34748 | And will you have the kindness to mention them? |
34748 | And with whom? |
34748 | And you are walking the long way quite alone, mother? |
34748 | And you fancy that I am this personified ideal? 34748 And you have allowed this child, your child, to follow the wild gypsy woman into the wide world?" |
34748 | And you have been here long? |
34748 | And you mean really to go? |
34748 | And you put the arm- chair in its place? |
34748 | And you will marry me, really? 34748 And you will really go to- morrow?" |
34748 | And-- Oswald? |
34748 | And-- we were discussing the question on the way-- will your charming cousin be here also? |
34748 | Are there justices of the peace out there? |
34748 | Are they going to dance? |
34748 | Are we going to dance? |
34748 | Are we quite safe here? |
34748 | Are you dead, quite dead? |
34748 | Are you enthusiastic about Miss Helen? |
34748 | Are you going to draw my likeness? |
34748 | Are you going to stay? |
34748 | Are you going, or not? |
34748 | Are you in earnest? |
34748 | Are you in earnest? |
34748 | Are you mad, Grenwitz? |
34748 | Are you not going to dance to- night, baroness? |
34748 | Are you quite alone, my good woman? |
34748 | Are you quite sure of that? |
34748 | Are you quite sure, Miss Emily, you are not playing comedy at this very moment? |
34748 | Are you sure? |
34748 | Are you the candidate here? |
34748 | Are you unwell? |
34748 | Are you very sleepy? |
34748 | Baumann asked me the same question, and I answered: Fie, are you not ashamed to say such a thing, Baumann? |
34748 | Because you know what happens to enthusiasts at that time of life, according to Goethe? 34748 Because-- I told you, because I am a stranger; because she might say to me: Sir, what is that to you? |
34748 | Bonc[oe]ur? |
34748 | Bruno, Bruno, what does that mean? |
34748 | But I do not understand you, Cloten? |
34748 | But I thought she was made from the rib of man? |
34748 | But about the varied life and early death, is that quite sure? 34748 But confess, it has tired you? |
34748 | But did you not just now count the two estates as part of the family fortune? |
34748 | But do we not often obtain something from Fate, merely because we wish for it most ardently, almost impertinently? 34748 But had we not better follow our charming hostess into the garden?" |
34748 | But had we not better go in? |
34748 | But he will be? |
34748 | But how could that be? |
34748 | But if she can not love Felix? |
34748 | But if you should leave us? |
34748 | But is not that more or less the way with all children? |
34748 | But perhaps in other stars? |
34748 | But the fellow looks almost genteel? |
34748 | But there must be no scene? |
34748 | But they sent us a box only the other day? |
34748 | But what am I to do down stairs? |
34748 | But what did you keep for yourself? |
34748 | But what do you think you can do? 34748 But what has become of the mother, or whoever that brown woman was?" |
34748 | But what in heaven''s name makes you think so? 34748 But where is he?" |
34748 | But which of us is now the enthusiast? |
34748 | But why do you exile yourself into this solitude? 34748 But why do you not eat? |
34748 | But why do you walk all the way to church if you do not believe in anything? |
34748 | But why does he expose himself to the danger? |
34748 | But why not take them both with you to Cona? |
34748 | But why that? |
34748 | But why, my dear sir? 34748 But will the child go with us? |
34748 | But with all consideration to your time and your disposition, might you not have fixed these limits a little too narrow? |
34748 | But you know, I suppose, that Berkow is dead and the widow has come back? |
34748 | But you promised to stay as long as possible, that is, till the appointment with the Brown Countess forced you to return? |
34748 | But you surely have a few minutes? |
34748 | But you would not be sorry, I am sure, if we understood the allusion, eh? |
34748 | But, dear aunt, why do n''t you do now what you omitted to do then? 34748 But, for Heaven''s sake, what is the matter?" |
34748 | But, mamma, I have always heard that Stantow and Baerwalde belong to papa, and that he can dispose of them as he likes? |
34748 | But, my dear friend, how could there be a country and no justices? |
34748 | But,cried Bruno,"I thought you were her friend, I thought you were fond of her? |
34748 | By the way, did I tell you that I mean to send my Julius, a few days hence, to the college at Grunwald? |
34748 | Can Cziko show me the way to Berkow? |
34748 | Can you get us some? |
34748 | Can you mention one? |
34748 | Can you? 34748 Certainly-- and without his Mentor''s advice?" |
34748 | Certainly; what is it? |
34748 | Cloten, pay forfeit,said Oldenburg once more, and sang through his teeth:"Pine cones-- ace of hearts-- Why, my love, why, it smarts? |
34748 | Come a little more this way.--Helen, you like Doctor Stein? 34748 Could you find the place again?" |
34748 | Did I not tell you I had full board? 34748 Did I not tell you?" |
34748 | Did I promise? |
34748 | Did anything special occur, madam? |
34748 | Did ladies ever come to the castle? |
34748 | Did not I always say there was something the matter tonight? |
34748 | Did she look pretty? |
34748 | Did she send me her love? |
34748 | Did the letter contain things which you would not like to be seen by others? |
34748 | Did the people really believe that, and did the gentlemen try to keep up the conversation in Latin? |
34748 | Did you ever communicate this wish to your father, when you conversed with him about this mysterious affair? 34748 Did you get very wet?" |
34748 | Did you not intend asking him out for a few days during the hunting season? 34748 Did you not mean to give up dreaming?" |
34748 | Did you see it, Cloten? |
34748 | Did you see your old admirer, Emily? |
34748 | Did you speak very freely in your letter? |
34748 | Do I disturb you, dear Helen? |
34748 | Do n''t stay away too long,said the baroness,"we shall have a little supper.--_Que voulais- je dire? |
34748 | Do n''t you know our quiet life, my dear Melitta? 34748 Do n''t you know that was the way before Abraham to speak of the children of nobles who had married beneath their rank?" |
34748 | Do they not publish it every year, to the infinite dismay of the haughty Anna Maria, who is as miserly as she is haughty? 34748 Do you believe that he has ever spoken ten words to me since that he is here?" |
34748 | Do you feel worse, Bruno? |
34748 | Do you fell refreshed by your nap, dear Grenwitz? |
34748 | Do you know him well? 34748 Do you know that gentleman?" |
34748 | Do you know the last news? |
34748 | Do you know the last news? |
34748 | Do you know, I fear, or rather I hope, you will not be able to carry out the plans of your eccentric friend as far as he intended? |
34748 | Do you know, Oswald, I think Aunt Berkow is quite fond of you? |
34748 | Do you know,said the boy to Oswald,"that I was determined beforehand to hate you?" |
34748 | Do you like pistol- shooting? |
34748 | Do you never make verses? |
34748 | Do you really think that brown woman, whom I at least saw only in passing, is her mother? |
34748 | Do you really wish it, Melitta? |
34748 | Do you remember the evening on the edge of the water, sir? |
34748 | Do you see that pine cone up there, Baron Langen? |
34748 | Do you think I like it? |
34748 | Do you think I like to dance when you are away? |
34748 | Do you think I mean it well with you? |
34748 | Do you think any dandy likes to see another man surpass him in pistol- shooting, dancing, courting, etc., if that is the pride of his little soul? 34748 Do you think so? |
34748 | Do you think so? 34748 Do you think so?" |
34748 | Do you think so? |
34748 | Do you think the world deserves seeing our heart? |
34748 | Do you think we only love those we treat unceremoniously? |
34748 | Do you wish to be alone? |
34748 | Do you wish your revenge, Baron Cloten? |
34748 | Does she pine after her mother? |
34748 | For Heaven''s sake,cried Helen;"what can have happened? |
34748 | For heaven''s sake, what does this mean, Bruno? |
34748 | For myself? |
34748 | From Grenwitz? 34748 From whom have I heard that expression before?" |
34748 | Gentlemen, would you like to try my new pistols? |
34748 | Go on, go on,he murmured through his firmly closed teeth;"I am not afraid of thee.... How, is your courage already exhausted? |
34748 | Good- morning, mother,said the latter, stopping;"is the village there before us Fashwitz?" |
34748 | Had we better not go? |
34748 | Had we not better go in, Oswald? |
34748 | Had you not better stay here? |
34748 | Has Helen come by yet? |
34748 | Has anybody else a desire to bet? |
34748 | Has he any children? |
34748 | Has he been travelling? |
34748 | Has he really seen you or were you only a dream to him? |
34748 | Has my excellent cousin made another conquest there? 34748 Has your Italian been of much use to you?" |
34748 | Have I deserved that? |
34748 | Have you always been convinced that I loved you? |
34748 | Have you any cards, Frederick? |
34748 | Have you any idea what time it is? |
34748 | Have you done, Grenwitz? |
34748 | Have you done, Oldenburg? |
34748 | Have you ever tried it? |
34748 | Have you never tried to find the Brown Countess? |
34748 | Have you no parents, no near relatives? |
34748 | Have you often had opportunity in your travels to come in contact with this interesting race? |
34748 | Have you room for me there? |
34748 | Have you seen Doctor Stein anywhere? |
34748 | Have you seen Doctor Stein? |
34748 | Have you seen the Czika? |
34748 | Have you twisted your foot, dearest cousin? |
34748 | His fortune? 34748 Horrible,_ mon cher_? |
34748 | Hortense,whispered Cloten, overjoyed, to his lady,"do you know who is to take you in?" |
34748 | How are matters at Grenwitz? |
34748 | How can I guess? 34748 How can the poor baron help it, if the bread and butter of every day''s life are not to his taste?" |
34748 | How could they get there? 34748 How could you shut up your heart for so many days when you knew I was standing outside knocking for admission? |
34748 | How did it happen? |
34748 | How did this happen? |
34748 | How do you feel? |
34748 | How do you get here, boy? |
34748 | How do you know that? |
34748 | How do you know that? |
34748 | How do you know, dear Anna Maria? |
34748 | How do you like that mask? |
34748 | How do you like that, gentlemen? |
34748 | How do you mean? |
34748 | How do you mean? |
34748 | How else could he be a problematic character? 34748 How have I deserved such very great kindness?" |
34748 | How is Bruno? |
34748 | How is Bruno? |
34748 | How is he? |
34748 | How is he? |
34748 | How is it? |
34748 | How long has that being going on? |
34748 | How long has this been so, and how did it come about? |
34748 | How long have you been here at Grenwitz, doctor? |
34748 | How old are you, Mother Claus? |
34748 | How should you know it, to be sure, in this secluded village, inhabited only by rude ichthyophagi? 34748 How so, my dear sir?" |
34748 | How so? |
34748 | How so? |
34748 | How so? |
34748 | How so? |
34748 | How will you get along without your pony, Julius? |
34748 | How would you like a game of ten- pins? |
34748 | I am quite right again,he said;"have I really been fainting? |
34748 | I am such a child, am I not? 34748 I am very happy here, and how could it be otherwise? |
34748 | I break off here, in order not to anticipate too fully my oral report( perhaps you will shortly be in Grunwald? 34748 I can beat you there,"said the professor;"who do you think, madam, returned last night?" |
34748 | I can rely upon that, Oldenburg? |
34748 | I fond of him? |
34748 | I had made up my mind to spend part of the night here,said Oswald;"but now, I suppose that is not necessary?" |
34748 | I have the pleasure of addressing Doctor Stein? |
34748 | I him love? 34748 I him love?" |
34748 | I know it will come so,she murmured,"but why must he cruelly break the short dream of my happiness?" |
34748 | I mean, what kind of love is that of which the books have so much to say? 34748 I only think and feel so when I am dead drunk, as now.--What was that?" |
34748 | I presume it is in connection with the papers which you hold in your hand, baron? |
34748 | I presume that was a romance? |
34748 | I say conscientious, excellent man? 34748 I say, baron, could you not let me have a copy like yours? |
34748 | I say, bring me a glass of wine, do you hear? |
34748 | I suppose the ball is over now? |
34748 | I suppose you take a special interest in all girls who are fresh from school? |
34748 | I think the baroness told me you came from the capital? |
34748 | I think the man is a great original; but why did he look at me all the time, with his big bright eyes? |
34748 | I thought he had written to you? |
34748 | I thought there would be dancing? |
34748 | I was asking, dear Melitta, whether you had enough red yarn? |
34748 | I wonder if you are going to quarrel about that man? 34748 I wonder what this veiled image means? |
34748 | I, angry with you? |
34748 | I? |
34748 | If I believe it? |
34748 | If you could write them till dinner- time? 34748 In the mean time the man had come near,''Is that you, Marie?'' |
34748 | In the other world? |
34748 | Indeed? |
34748 | Is Oldenburg coming to- night? |
34748 | Is he a good man? |
34748 | Is he dead? |
34748 | Is he married? |
34748 | Is he still angry,he thought,"because I left him at home yesterday? |
34748 | Is he your friend? |
34748 | Is it far to Cona? |
34748 | Is it not a good chair, young master? |
34748 | Is it not strange,said Oswald, after a short pause,"what inapproachable beings some of us children of Adam are? |
34748 | Is it not their privilege to be loved without being specially grateful for it? 34748 Is it not, darling? |
34748 | Is it not? |
34748 | Is it possible you are disappointed in the young baron? |
34748 | Is it possible? 34748 Is it possible?" |
34748 | Is not it a scandal? |
34748 | Is she coming? |
34748 | Is she not coming back? |
34748 | Is that Baron Cloten''s sentiment towards me? |
34748 | Is that a cymbal hanging on the tree there? |
34748 | Is that all? |
34748 | Is that possible? |
34748 | Is that really so? 34748 Is that you, Oswald?" |
34748 | Is that you, mamma? 34748 Is that you, master?" |
34748 | Is that you, young master? |
34748 | Is that your final decision? |
34748 | Is the baroness in the parlor? |
34748 | Is the doctor at home? |
34748 | Is there any explanation how this sudden attack has come on? |
34748 | Is there any love without jealousy? |
34748 | Is there no hope? |
34748 | Is there no water near by? |
34748 | Is there nothing to put under his head? |
34748 | Is this forest never to have an end? |
34748 | Julius has not had an accident? 34748 Julius, did I throw you into a ditch?" |
34748 | Just imagine this Stein-- we are quite_ entre nous_ here? |
34748 | Like what? |
34748 | Malte is weak and sickly, and you ought to be patient with him; but if you are really fond of your aunt, why are you so cross to her? |
34748 | Mamma says you are very fond of Doctor Stein-- is that so? |
34748 | May I offer you a cigar? |
34748 | May I offer you my drops, baron? 34748 Might not that be a proof that, after all, the much talked of unhappiness of such people is not so very great?" |
34748 | Might not the beauty of the performer affect the impartiality of the judgment? |
34748 | Miss Emily,said Felix, gravely,"will you do me the honor to tell me whether you have any special reasons for such an assertion?" |
34748 | Miss Helen? |
34748 | Miss Klaus,said Oldenburg, holding up a card;"who, by all the Olympic gods, is Miss Klaus?" |
34748 | Mother Claus sends me----"Who? |
34748 | Must I hear that word again? 34748 My advice?" |
34748 | My dear Miss Emily, I beseech you, collect yourself and make me not wretched----"Then you do not love me? |
34748 | My uncle keeps a nice set of servants, do n''t you think so? |
34748 | No, why? |
34748 | No, you do not do that-- and then, are we not brothers? 34748 No----""Ah, quite_ en famille_, then? |
34748 | No; why? |
34748 | No? 34748 Nor Aunt Berkow?" |
34748 | Not even by your parents? |
34748 | Not even by your parents? |
34748 | Not possible? |
34748 | Not quite so fast,said the baroness;"what would you advise now?" |
34748 | Not so bad,said Oswald;"and who is that fat lady with the masculine features who is just coming in with her three pretty daughters?" |
34748 | Not with Felix, I hope? |
34748 | Not worth reading? |
34748 | Not you, Arthur? |
34748 | Nothing,_ mon prince_, nothing,replied Albert, laughing;"is it absolutely necessary always to mean something when we say something? |
34748 | Now I come,said the slater, as he fell from the roof;"what on earth does that mean? |
34748 | Now, Oswald,said Melitta, fixing her eyes firmly on his,"is that kind in you? |
34748 | Of course about a lady? |
34748 | Of whom, Melitta? |
34748 | Of your friends? |
34748 | Oh no, baron----"_ Eh bien, nous voilà d''accord!_ Will you give me your arm? 34748 Oldenburg,"said Barnewitz,"did Cloten ask you to let him sit by my wife, or was it a notion of your own?" |
34748 | On what occasion did Frau von Berkow make the acquaintance of the gypsy? |
34748 | On what? |
34748 | One thing more,said the latter, pausing a moment,"do you believe Grenwitz will consent?" |
34748 | Only partially,said Oswald,"as I have only inherited a part of his skill in pistol- shooting.--Shall we go for a moment to the stand? |
34748 | Or can you find the key to the pantry? |
34748 | Or marble coldness? |
34748 | Oswald, will you do me a very, very great favor? |
34748 | Our bets have been a dollar so far-- does that suit you? |
34748 | Perhaps a mistake? |
34748 | Perhaps the man owes his life to a visit of the sons of heaven to the daughters of earth? |
34748 | Perhaps you stayed too long in the garden this morning? |
34748 | Really,said Oswald, letting the letter drop in his lap,"are you quite sure of that, good Bemperlein? |
34748 | Really? 34748 Really?" |
34748 | Revised and augmented? |
34748 | Scold me? |
34748 | See there, Cloten, how are you,_ mon brave_? |
34748 | Shall I chain the falcon? 34748 Shall I turn the music for you, Helen?" |
34748 | Shall we go in? |
34748 | She is not coming-- yes, was not that her voice? 34748 Six bottles forfeit, up to the cotillon to- night?" |
34748 | So Oldenburg is back again? 34748 Stein-- hm, hm; I beg your pardon, sir, where do you come from?" |
34748 | Stein? 34748 Suppose we go through the forest?" |
34748 | Suppose we say next Sunday? |
34748 | Surely not from a copy? |
34748 | Thank you, papa, pretty good; why? |
34748 | That is strong-- why? |
34748 | That is the way of life,said Oswald,"and what is the good?" |
34748 | That misty outline? |
34748 | That misty outline? |
34748 | The Oldenburgs are of ancient family? |
34748 | The man from the moon? |
34748 | The matter? 34748 The nobles? |
34748 | The old story? |
34748 | The story certainly is rather tragic than comic,said Oswald;"and have they never found any trace of the mother or her child?" |
34748 | Then it is hardly probable that the poor woman is still alive? |
34748 | Then it is simply from gratitude? |
34748 | Then leave Czika here, will you? 34748 Then old Baumann was the mysterious horseman?" |
34748 | Then she did not take her own life, as people say? |
34748 | Then she is in the garden? |
34748 | Then such attacks are not dangerous? |
34748 | Then the baron is dead? |
34748 | Then there if little hope of complete recovery? |
34748 | Then we can not invite the fair lady to our ball to- morrow? |
34748 | Then you do love me, Oswald? |
34748 | Then you have been in Italy? |
34748 | Then you know the sad story? |
34748 | Then you think he has really found the papers? |
34748 | Then you will come to- morrow? |
34748 | Then you will give her the letter? |
34748 | Then you will give up your place? |
34748 | Then you would let me stay here a few days? |
34748 | There you are, little savage,said the lady, stroking the dark curls of the boy;"where have you been all the afternoon?" |
34748 | There, on the table,said Felix,"in the ebony box-- press the spring down-- not younger? |
34748 | This tendency of the baroness, I should think, does not serve to make your position in Grenwitz very pleasant? |
34748 | This very summer? 34748 To be sure, and how about the key to the pantry?" |
34748 | To be sure,replied Bruno, who accompanied him;"have you never seen it before?" |
34748 | To somebody else? 34748 Too late? |
34748 | Under his head? 34748 Was he a handsome man?" |
34748 | Water near by? 34748 Well, Mr. Jager,"said the baroness,"are you also firmly convinced of the young man''s innocence?" |
34748 | Well, and the doctor, of course, who else? |
34748 | Well, and----? |
34748 | Well, do you know, too, that Oldenburg is going to be married? |
34748 | Well, guess? |
34748 | Well, now-- what does that mean? |
34748 | Well, what do you say, dear friend? |
34748 | Well, what do you think of my_ maître d''hôtel_? |
34748 | Well, what does our magic table have to offer? |
34748 | Well, what does that mean? |
34748 | Well, what was I going to say? 34748 Well, where is Cloten with his last piece of news?" |
34748 | Well,said Oswald,"how was that?" |
34748 | Well,said Oswald,"not much that is good there?" |
34748 | Well? |
34748 | Well? |
34748 | Well? |
34748 | Were you all that time up at the castle? |
34748 | What ails you, young master? |
34748 | What are you doing here so late at night? |
34748 | What are you going to do, Helen? |
34748 | What are you going to do? |
34748 | What are you to look for? |
34748 | What can that be? |
34748 | What could I do? 34748 What could I do? |
34748 | What did she do? |
34748 | What do you call Problematic Characters? |
34748 | What do you mean? |
34748 | What do you mean? |
34748 | What do you say, dottore, shall we have a little race to that cottage? |
34748 | What do you think of this poem? |
34748 | What do you want? |
34748 | What do you wish? |
34748 | What does Mother Claus want of me? |
34748 | What does that mean? |
34748 | What else would have been the use of my wearing a sword by my side so long? |
34748 | What else? |
34748 | What have I in common with him? 34748 What have we to drink for our guest, Baumann?" |
34748 | What have you done? |
34748 | What induced me? |
34748 | What is it the last eight days have changed in me? 34748 What is it?" |
34748 | What is that, Oswald? |
34748 | What is that? |
34748 | What is that? |
34748 | What is the matter with Mother Claus? |
34748 | What is the matter with the boy? |
34748 | What is the matter with the girl? |
34748 | What is the matter, Bruno? |
34748 | What is the matter, Melitta? |
34748 | What is the matter, dear aunt? |
34748 | What it can be? |
34748 | What on earth can be the matter to- night? |
34748 | What ought I to do? |
34748 | What right have I to be so? |
34748 | What was her name? 34748 What was it?" |
34748 | What was that? |
34748 | What was that? |
34748 | What was the meaning of that affair between Barnewitz and Cloten just now? |
34748 | What were you saying, my dear Anna Maria? |
34748 | What, baron? |
34748 | What? |
34748 | What? |
34748 | What? |
34748 | When are you going to leave us? |
34748 | When one sees the sky looking so deep blue, one would be tempted to consider bad weather a fairy fable-- don''t you think so? |
34748 | When will you call to- morrow? |
34748 | Where are you going to, my darling? |
34748 | Where did you draw that? |
34748 | Where does Doctor Braun live? |
34748 | Where from? |
34748 | Where is Czika, Charles? |
34748 | Where is Czika? |
34748 | Where is Malte? |
34748 | Where? |
34748 | Where? |
34748 | Who are the two pretty girls who are just now coming across the room, walking arm in arm? |
34748 | Who do you mean? |
34748 | Who does not know it? |
34748 | Who else? |
34748 | Who is that young man? |
34748 | Who is that? |
34748 | Who is that? |
34748 | Who is the gentleman? |
34748 | Who is the man with you? |
34748 | Who is this ph[oe]nix? |
34748 | Who is to have the Berkow? |
34748 | Who is to have the honor of sitting by your wife? |
34748 | Who knows how long the boy may loiter about here? 34748 Who knows? |
34748 | Who on earth has made you believe that bloody story? |
34748 | Who on earth was that? |
34748 | Who says that? |
34748 | Who wants to be the next? |
34748 | Who was the fool who caused this intermezzo? |
34748 | Who will marry me? 34748 Who will take it?" |
34748 | Who? 34748 Whom do you want, my boy?" |
34748 | Whom? 34748 Why are you not always here?" |
34748 | Why did Helen go away? |
34748 | Why did Helen stop playing so suddenly? |
34748 | Why did the Brown Countess wish to see you, then? 34748 Why did you not call me before? |
34748 | Why did you not come to see us, as you promised? 34748 Why did you not pay forfeit, Cloten?" |
34748 | Why do n''t you dance? |
34748 | Why do n''t you turn him out? |
34748 | Why do you ask that curious question? |
34748 | Why do you look at me so astonished? |
34748 | Why do you speak so politely to me, young master? 34748 Why just in my case?" |
34748 | Why must I see that fearful vision just to- day? 34748 Why not now, Bruno?" |
34748 | Why not you? |
34748 | Why not? 34748 Why not? |
34748 | Why not? |
34748 | Why not? |
34748 | Why not? |
34748 | Why not? |
34748 | Why not? |
34748 | Why should I be a painter? |
34748 | Why so? |
34748 | Why so? |
34748 | Why unfortunately? 34748 Why, Bruno, is hatred so sweet?" |
34748 | Why, Oldenburg, you do n''t want to persuade an old fox like myself that you only looked at the sweet grapes from a distance? |
34748 | Why, little fool? |
34748 | Why, my proud little lord, will you despise all low- born men? |
34748 | Why, you would not believe that stupid nonsense, Cloten? 34748 Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Will you bring the dark man to that place when the full moon stands in the heavens as it does now? 34748 Will you come with me a little way?" |
34748 | Will you get in now, doctor? |
34748 | Will you go with me to Italy next fall? 34748 Will you have the kindness to pull that bell- rope twice?" |
34748 | Will you not join the company, doctor? |
34748 | Will you not tell_ me_, Bruno, what brought on the attack? |
34748 | Will you often come to this place? |
34748 | With me and Frau von Berkow? 34748 Without any cause?" |
34748 | Wo n''t you look, Baumann, if it is there? |
34748 | Wo n''t you sit down? 34748 Would it be indiscreet to ask you the name of your lady?" |
34748 | Would it not be better you made an end to your miserable life? |
34748 | Would you be good enough to take off your spectacles,said Oswald? |
34748 | Yes or no? |
34748 | Yes, thanks to my policy to keep my existence as unknown as possible, for what could a mouse like myself do against puss in boots? 34748 Yes, why?" |
34748 | Yes,said the woman, with a vivacity rare at her time of life;"are you going to church there?" |
34748 | Yes----"And the ivy wreath around the head of Apollo? |
34748 | You are coming back, Helen? |
34748 | You are not angry with me, Oswald? |
34748 | You are not fond of music? |
34748 | You are quite young yet, Mr.--how was your name? 34748 You are surely not in earnest?" |
34748 | You are worse, Bruno, than you wish to confess,he said, sitting down on the edge of the bed;"you have your old pain, have not you?" |
34748 | You can not send him off unceremoniously? |
34748 | You can not walk without support, and will you not grant me the pleasure to render you this slight service? |
34748 | You do not imagine_ you_ are the happy one? |
34748 | You do not mean to venture the whole sum at once, Grenwitz? |
34748 | You do not really think_ Rudolphe, grand duc régnant de Gerolstein_, to be true to life? |
34748 | You have a new one, I believe? |
34748 | You have not told me yet what you dreamt? |
34748 | You have really frightened us; what in the world was the matter? |
34748 | You have taken supper there? |
34748 | You hope that? 34748 You know Baron Oldenburg?" |
34748 | You know where the man lives? |
34748 | You lived some time in Grunwald? |
34748 | You mean the least plain? |
34748 | You mean to settle there? |
34748 | You read the letter? |
34748 | You said? |
34748 | You seem to be a great advocate of entails? |
34748 | You smile: oh, my dear friend, why can a mere supposition excite me to such a degree? 34748 You to me? |
34748 | You to me? |
34748 | You understand, Barnewitz? |
34748 | You were not asleep, then? |
34748 | You were very fond of the professor? |
34748 | You wild, good, noble fellow,he said to himself,"what are you doing in this world of womanish men? |
34748 | You will not betray what I am going to tell you? |
34748 | You will not do that, I hope, Bruno? |
34748 | You? |
34748 | Young people? 34748 Your saint?" |
34748 | _ Bon!_ And will you mention one of the thousand proofs? |
34748 | _ C''est- à- dire?_"The one she likes to dance with. |
34748 | _ Lui malheureux? 34748 _ Mon Dieu!_"said Langen;"and have you really inherited this fanatic hatred against my caste from your father?" |
34748 | _ Plaît- il?_I mean, it is desperately tiresome to live year after year in this hole, and, moreover, to live here in such very charming society. |
34748 | _ Pourquoi pas, mon cher?_"Because-- oh, pshaw!--because----"_ Je suis au désespoir, mon brave_; but Barnewitz has proposed you himself! |
34748 | _ Un_ what? |
34748 | _ Vous ne savez pas ce que c''est qu''un forçat?_"No-- never mind. 34748 _ Vous êtes bien aimable, monsieur_,"she replied, accepting the offered arm;"are you quite sure, Mr. Stein, you are not of noble birth?" |
34748 | ''And if she has taken her life, I am her murderer,''he said.--''Who else?'' |
34748 | ''Are you sick, child?'' |
34748 | ''But where does the girl get the gold chain from around her neck, which we admired only the other day, when you wore it?'' |
34748 | ''Including the jockeys?'' |
34748 | ''Is she dead?'' |
34748 | ''Well, are you the keeper?'' |
34748 | ''What do you desire, young man?'' |
34748 | ''What is the matter, child?'' |
34748 | ''What is the matter?'' |
34748 | ''Where is the Jew?'' |
34748 | ''Why do you not come alone?'' |
34748 | ''You knew it, and yet you accompanied the old lady here? |
34748 | ''pon honor? |
34748 | --"A fairy tale?" |
34748 | --"Are you very fond of Mr. Stein, Bruno? |
34748 | --"I mean the château in the forest, where Melitta lives."--"Melitta? |
34748 | --"The old story, Bruno?" |
34748 | --''And where have they put all the works of art which have been produced since that time?'' |
34748 | --''And you think he will keep his promise?'' |
34748 | --''Are you quite sure of that, child? |
34748 | --''But how in Heaven''s name did you get here, if you did not come as her companion?'' |
34748 | --''How do you know, Miss Marie?'' |
34748 | --''How shall I ever thank you for your kindness?'' |
34748 | --''Is she of noble birth?'' |
34748 | --''Listen, old one,''he said,''what if I meant it in good earnest this time? |
34748 | --''Oh, certainly.''--''Why?'' |
34748 | --''Then you are not the old lady''s companion?'' |
34748 | --''What do you mean?'' |
34748 | --''What do you say, dear Harald?'' |
34748 | --''What is the matter?'' |
34748 | --''Why now?'' |
34748 | --''Your Harald?'' |
34748 | --that means, of course, Bemperlein as well as Baumann, eh?" |
34748 | ..."Do you think she really understands them?" |
34748 | 3.--"What do you know of my father''s fate? |
34748 | A low, threatening growl, close to his ear? |
34748 | A man like him, thoroughly_ blasé_, never becomes again a real man, and can Helen ever love such a person? |
34748 | After they had been walking for some time in silence, he said, therefore, taking her arm in his:"How is your health, my child?" |
34748 | All right again, Charles?" |
34748 | Am I not the same I was; only that the bitter regret at having hurt your feelings has made my love for you deeper and warmer?" |
34748 | Am I right?" |
34748 | Am I to be the most humble tool of these selfish, haughty, heartless aristocrats?" |
34748 | And I have often thought in my mind, if she would not have had a better life of it if she had really been my child? |
34748 | And above all, how much of the secret was she to tell Felix? |
34748 | And by whom? |
34748 | And can she invest her money better than in the purchase of a handsome fellow for her husband, who would otherwise not think of marrying her? |
34748 | And can you prevent all the misery that must needs spring from such a match? |
34748 | And does Melitta really think she can marry Oldenburg after Berkow''s death? |
34748 | And does she love me?" |
34748 | And for praising your pronunciation of French to my niece? |
34748 | And had he not seen again and again that love is fond of hiding under the mask of indifference? |
34748 | And has not Miss Helen very strange notions?" |
34748 | And has not a mother the right to know her daughter''s secrets? |
34748 | And have I succeeded? |
34748 | And have I unwittingly killed two birds with one stone? |
34748 | And how does my cousin look? |
34748 | And if the aunt does not object, she who Harald says is so proud and haughty, how can the other relations say anything against it?'' |
34748 | And is it true that we may return to him at any time, if we only wish to do so with all our heart? |
34748 | And is life worth anything without love? |
34748 | And just now?--now? |
34748 | And now that the lava stream had once broken through the crater, what could stop it on its destructive course? |
34748 | And now, while he was in the very heart of the heath was not that another horse he heard, or was it merely the echo? |
34748 | And on the other side: Is she not free? |
34748 | And over for the sake of a woman whom he loved, and who yet could never be his own? |
34748 | And suppose he should be roused, what does it help him if I am present? |
34748 | And then, at the resurrection, as they call it, what would become of all the people? |
34748 | And then, was not Berger right in saying that it was immaterial whether I went east or west? |
34748 | And then: Was that jealousy at least perfectly dead now? |
34748 | And then: what is a love which counts upon a reward? |
34748 | And was she not tall and lithe like a deer? |
34748 | And were her rosy lips not half opened as if for a kiss? |
34748 | And what better can we wish one another than rest, whether we are noblemen or peasants, young folks or old?" |
34748 | And what had induced him to accept it, except his friendship for Professor Berger, whose advice he had followed, contrary to his own conviction? |
34748 | And what is he to me after all? |
34748 | And when the girl had left us, he came up to me and said, hissing the words through his white teeth:''What did you tell her, old one?'' |
34748 | And why had she just now remembered that there were in her wardrobe a few pretty bows, which had lain there unused for years? |
34748 | And would they not charge him, if he declined the challenge, with want of that delicate sense of honor of which these nobles were so proudly boasting? |
34748 | And yet you seem to think it important to go there?" |
34748 | And yet, do I not love him all the more now?" |
34748 | And yet, why should it not be so? |
34748 | And yet: Why does he also say nothing of Oldenburg''s presence? |
34748 | And you are going, going now-- but what is that? |
34748 | And you are here quite alone with your grief, and no one to sympathize with your suffering?" |
34748 | And you expect people to enjoy themselves? |
34748 | Another cup, my honored guest? |
34748 | Anxious again? |
34748 | Apropos Barnewitz-- no bad effects, baron? |
34748 | Apropos, how long have you been here? |
34748 | Apropos, who is that young man with whom you were talking just now? |
34748 | Are not my blood, my life, my soul, all your own? |
34748 | Are the gooseberries ripe?" |
34748 | Are the two events perhaps connected with each other?" |
34748 | Are the wise men of the East right when they say that the whole life of man is but one great mistake? |
34748 | Are there any cards to be had?" |
34748 | Are they not afraid of you already now, when you are a mere boy; what will they do when you grow up to be a man? |
34748 | Are we all of us lost sons, who have forsaken our good old father''s house to feed upon the husks? |
34748 | Are you a little fond of me, dear Marguerite? |
34748 | Are you angry with me?" |
34748 | Are you angry, Oswald? |
34748 | Are you angry?" |
34748 | Are you anything of a sportsman?" |
34748 | Are you as fond of roses as I am?" |
34748 | Are you comfortable, doctor? |
34748 | Are you drunk again? |
34748 | Are you fond of riding?" |
34748 | Are you going to tell us or not?" |
34748 | Are you in? |
34748 | Are you mad, Arthur?" |
34748 | Are you mocking me when you talk so? |
34748 | Are you not ashamed, Mr. Wrampe, to be such a coward? |
34748 | Are you quite safe here? |
34748 | Are you quite sure of that? |
34748 | Are you quite sure of that? |
34748 | Are you quite wet through again, as usually? |
34748 | Are you satisfied now? |
34748 | Are you satisfied?" |
34748 | Are you still angry with me?" |
34748 | Are you unwell?" |
34748 | Are you unwell?" |
34748 | Are you very much ashamed? |
34748 | Are your pistols provided with hair- triggers, baron?" |
34748 | As he got in, Albert called out over the garden wall:"Can you take me with you,_ Monsieur le docteur_?" |
34748 | At last he stammered:"Your and my child?" |
34748 | At last-- I was almost desperate-- in the library of the great monastery on Mount Athos----""Where is that, Baron?" |
34748 | At that moment the door opened slowly, a face with spectacles looked cautiously in, and a squeaking voice asked:"May I enter, madam?" |
34748 | Baron Barnewitz, to introduce me to the gentleman who has been pleased to form so good an opinion of my skill?" |
34748 | Baron Cloten, is that really you? |
34748 | Bauer?" |
34748 | Before their unhappiness is not so very great? |
34748 | Bemperlein?" |
34748 | Bemperlein?" |
34748 | Bruno is sure to say: Shall I carry your shawl, Helen? |
34748 | But I suppose you have much to do?" |
34748 | But I think you look upon things as a little too dark----""Only too dark?" |
34748 | But could I anticipate that you would make me acquainted with Colonel St. Cyr himself? |
34748 | But do you think he will propose?" |
34748 | But how about the women? |
34748 | But how are you?" |
34748 | But how did it come about, I wonder, that I have thus given way to my natural disposition for a whole week? |
34748 | But how is it, may I not offer you my congratulations?" |
34748 | But if a man of our day is pursued by the devil''s own knaves, his creditors, where can he flee to? |
34748 | But is the Grenwitz estate really so magnificent?" |
34748 | But seriously, professor, will you come and let us have a little shooting at a mark?" |
34748 | But she? |
34748 | But then there will be another remarkable personage there-- just guess, Berkow?" |
34748 | But to provide for two----""And for yourself?" |
34748 | But was not that your father''s voice? |
34748 | But we women-- what on earth would become of us if we had to be firm like that when we want a little happiness? |
34748 | But what is that? |
34748 | But what meant the grave expression which was now frequently seen on his white forehead and in his blue eyes? |
34748 | But what nectar can be as sweet as the kisses from the dewy lips of a young, lovely creature? |
34748 | But what was she to do? |
34748 | But where are the dear boys? |
34748 | But who is safe against scoffers? |
34748 | But why did Melitta never tell me how she stands with regard to that long ghost there? |
34748 | But why do you cry, little simpleton? |
34748 | But why do you dislike these_ Mystères_?" |
34748 | But why do you talk so formally?" |
34748 | But you must look friendly when I mention you to him, you hear?" |
34748 | But you must promise not to show it to anybody?" |
34748 | But you will not tell that to anybody?'' |
34748 | But, pray be candid, and tell me if you do not think that the whole is, after all, a little too idealistic for our modern taste?" |
34748 | But, seriously speaking, why do you come so late, and----""In such a condition? |
34748 | But,_ à propos_, what does it mean that the old woman called you in that odd way,''Young master?'' |
34748 | By the way, how is the child? |
34748 | By your leave, young master, how old are you now?" |
34748 | Can I dream of intruding upon a class of men who will ever look at me askant? |
34748 | Can I open my heart to them? |
34748 | Can I, the enthusiast for liberty, ever marry the aristocrat? |
34748 | Can you guess, doctor?" |
34748 | Can you understand it, dottore?" |
34748 | Champagne here-- Home?--why? |
34748 | Claus?'' |
34748 | Come, pet, I want to introduce you to my friends; one you know already-- but you must be quite nice and polite, you hear?'' |
34748 | Consider, if anybody should see you here, or hear you----""What do I care for the others? |
34748 | Could Baron Cloten be the author of the challenge? |
34748 | Could Bruno have found the letter? |
34748 | Could a summer morning really be so rich in splendor, a summer evening really so soft and almost lascivious? |
34748 | Could any fair- minded man blame him if he took no notice of the challenge of an anonymous writer? |
34748 | Could he have been in earnest in the change of life which he so often discussed with the baroness? |
34748 | Could he have wished to restore it to her? |
34748 | Could not his uncle the major lend him a few hundred dollars? |
34748 | Could she yield now? |
34748 | Could you not try, Oswald, to throw it through the open window into her room? |
34748 | Could you take that for a moment in earnest?" |
34748 | Did I not leave that very night at a word, at a mere sign? |
34748 | Did I not tell you so? |
34748 | Did I not tell you that I often spend a night here? |
34748 | Did I not tell you? |
34748 | Did Malte run away and come back, and is this the feast of the fatted calf?" |
34748 | Did Miss Helen know that she was the cause of all these great and small changes? |
34748 | Did he love his children very much? |
34748 | Did he think the books which Helen had so far used for her studies of History and Literature still suitable for her? |
34748 | Did not the brown woman in the forest see it at the first glance? |
34748 | Did not the sudden cry, the shrill piping of the seamen sound like plaintive notes? |
34748 | Did she ever love her husband? |
34748 | Did she ever speak to you of a man who was at all times ready to receive her at his house?'' |
34748 | Did she ever tell you that she would leave me? |
34748 | Did she, who knew his former manner of life, really believe he would keep his promise? |
34748 | Did you bring the book home with you, baron?" |
34748 | Did you know a Mr. P. there? |
34748 | Did you not tell me he was a great favorite of yours?" |
34748 | Did you tell papa and mamma?" |
34748 | Do n''t I know Breesen?" |
34748 | Do n''t you agree with me that it is better to take the child with us to the interview? |
34748 | Do n''t you hear how rain and wind howl with the hounds? |
34748 | Do n''t you know, Charles, who that can be?" |
34748 | Do n''t you see he is tired and hungry? |
34748 | Do n''t you see, Felix, what they are after? |
34748 | Do n''t you see, too, that this one fact speaks volumes? |
34748 | Do n''t you think so, Miss Emily?" |
34748 | Do n''t you think so, baron?" |
34748 | Do n''t you think so?" |
34748 | Do n''t you think so?" |
34748 | Do n''t you think, aunt, that man Stein, with his corrupt notions, may exercise a bad influence on Helen as well as on Bruno?" |
34748 | Do they care for my wishes? |
34748 | Do they not rather distress me with their plans and suggestions, which make the blood curdle in my veins? |
34748 | Do you come to sing me to sleep? |
34748 | Do you ever drink grog?" |
34748 | Do you have a letter?" |
34748 | Do you hear the nightingale sing? |
34748 | Do you hear, Adolphus?" |
34748 | Do you hear,_ madame la baroness_? |
34748 | Do you hear: at once?" |
34748 | Do you hear? |
34748 | Do you know that in Grunwald they have never yet got over your desertion? |
34748 | Do you know the poor devil has killed himself?" |
34748 | Do you know the pretty story they have about him and the king?" |
34748 | Do you know what that is? |
34748 | Do you know where he is?" |
34748 | Do you know where we were a month ago this day? |
34748 | Do you know, Cloten, what I was studying while you were amusing yourselves with hunting and gambling?" |
34748 | Do you know, dearest Anna Maria, that I shall be thirty this very year? |
34748 | Do you love another person?" |
34748 | Do you love me now, at this moment, as you think you can love a woman upon earth?" |
34748 | Do you love me? |
34748 | Do you love the doctor?" |
34748 | Do you not see how her big, proud eyes are searching steadily, but unceasingly, all over the salon?" |
34748 | Do you not see that I am chained to this place? |
34748 | Do you think I do not know what it means when aunty and Felix put their heads together, and look from time to time stealthily at you? |
34748 | Do you want it? |
34748 | Doctor Braun says so, to be sure, but who can trust all physicians? |
34748 | Doctor, must I die? |
34748 | Doctor, you are a dangerous man, and I shall see myself compelled to forbid you the house?" |
34748 | Does Hortense tell her friends such pretty stories? |
34748 | Does he feel that he has no longer all my love? |
34748 | Does not one call his place Solitude, another Sans Souci, and still another Bellevue-- why should not one of them have called his Paradise? |
34748 | Does the name come from you?" |
34748 | Eh?--Oldenburg, doctor, not already? |
34748 | Emily, child, where are your eyes? |
34748 | Farewell, Melitta!--Melitta, have you not one kind word for me?" |
34748 | Fatigued by the heat? |
34748 | Felix?" |
34748 | For Heaven''s sake advise me, what must I do to get rid of the man in a decent way?" |
34748 | For even if Berkow is really on the point of death, what can Oldenburg have to do there, he who is the cause of the whole misery? |
34748 | For what meant, after all, those fine phrases about Oswald''s goodness of heart, and the sympathy she felt for his secret sorrow? |
34748 | Four years? |
34748 | Glass champagne? |
34748 | Good evening, doctor; where do you come from? |
34748 | Had Count Grieben recovered from his attack of acute rheumatism, and would he be able to be present to- night? |
34748 | Had Harald really promised to marry the girl? |
34748 | Had he never heard birds sing, that he must now listen forever to their simple piping? |
34748 | Had he never seen flowers, that he must stand and gaze at their bright colors and strange forms without ever being tired? |
34748 | Had he not all the time felt in his soul that she, the haughty aristocrat, would drop him again sooner or later? |
34748 | Had he not found this to be so even in the two characters which were so far above the common mass, in Melitta and Oldenburg? |
34748 | Had he not so far succeeded in all cases? |
34748 | Had he not, the very first time when he heard Oldenburg''s name mentioned, recognized in that man almost instinctively his rival? |
34748 | Had he received orders to the purpose, or did he know his mistress so perfectly, that he preferred not to tell the whole truth in a case like this? |
34748 | Had it not blazed up again in bright flames when he found Melitta''s image behind the curtain in the baron''s room? |
34748 | Had not his luck with women become proverbial among his comrades, each one of whom looked upon himself as a Paris? |
34748 | Had the mystery of the forest chapel fallen into indiscreet hands? |
34748 | Has Cousin Felix yet made his declaration?" |
34748 | Has he found Egypt as tiresome as our own country here?" |
34748 | Has she not begged and robbed and done worse things than that perhaps for her child? |
34748 | Has that any connection with Oldenburg''s return? |
34748 | Has your son ever had an attack before?" |
34748 | Hast thou indulged in nectar of the flowers, Hast thou enjoyed the fragrance of the bowers, From evening until early break of day? |
34748 | Have I given you, unknowingly, cause to----""What can you mean?" |
34748 | Have you a_ vis- à- vis_?" |
34748 | Have you always had such fine weather of late?" |
34748 | Have you another cigar? |
34748 | Have you any news about----""About my Czika? |
34748 | Have you any orders, sir?" |
34748 | Have you anything more to do here?" |
34748 | Have you done? |
34748 | Have you ever talked with Oldenburg about me?" |
34748 | Have you never been in the house?" |
34748 | Have you not felt with me, that here, far from the turmoil of the markets of men, the voice of poetry is heard speaking to us distinctly?" |
34748 | Have you not noticed her? |
34748 | He called out merrily:"Which is the way to Berkow, O hawk?" |
34748 | He came forward, offered Oswald fearlessly the tin cup which he was holding in his hand, and said:"Will you drink, sir?" |
34748 | He can be as wild as a colt; I do n''t know what is the matter with him now, or rather I know it, but----"--"But?" |
34748 | He can not have any money-- why else would he plague himself with these boys? |
34748 | He forced himself, therefore, to sit still and to ask, with apparent calmness:"Was Baron Berkow one of Harald''s friends? |
34748 | He is better-- is he not? |
34748 | He is gone.--Oswald, you love me? |
34748 | He is not dead?" |
34748 | He knelt down before her and said, seizing her hand as it hung by her side:"Have I offended you, Melitta?" |
34748 | He might have thrown himself instantly at Melitta''s feet to cry out: Do I not love you, Melitta? |
34748 | He must tear himself away from this intoxicating magic world, and should it break his heart? |
34748 | He spoke to the man, a thing he had never done before; he asked him if he was married? |
34748 | He stepped close up to the unfortunate girl and said:"Will you listen to me calmly a few moments?" |
34748 | Here the wife betrays the husband, and there the husband the wife? |
34748 | Hm!--Doctor, will you do me the honor to take a glass of champagne with me? |
34748 | How can I get ready in an hour?" |
34748 | How can a girl with such a face, such eyes, and such hair, be anything else but proud? |
34748 | How can men so entirely different from each other, descend from the same original pair? |
34748 | How can such a man feel love? |
34748 | How can that be? |
34748 | How can you ask my opinion about a man whom you have loved, whom you perhaps still love? |
34748 | How can you be so offended at a word, which did not mean anything at all,''pon honor? |
34748 | How can you cry when you make me so inexpressibly happy? |
34748 | How can you ever expect to have men, when home and school and life all unite to break the proud strength of youthful hearts in the germ already? |
34748 | How did Helen receive this news? |
34748 | How do they stand with each other? |
34748 | How do you do?" |
34748 | How do you like Helen Grenwitz?" |
34748 | How do you like him, dear Helen?" |
34748 | How do you like these trousers? |
34748 | How do you like this coat?" |
34748 | How does the gypsy woman get the name of the nut- brown countess?" |
34748 | How great a part? |
34748 | How had Harald gone about to get the better of her so completely? |
34748 | How have I deserved it, that you should think so meanly of me? |
34748 | How have I deserved the interest you take in my fate? |
34748 | How if he should arise as her avenger-- if he should avenge those tears of a low- born maid in the blood of a nobleman? |
34748 | How in the world did you manage to tame the wild leopard in so few days?" |
34748 | How is it about our champagne?" |
34748 | How is my worthy uncle and my excellent aunt? |
34748 | How is our dear good baron, and how is the excellent baroness? |
34748 | How long has she been there now? |
34748 | How long have I been so?" |
34748 | How long is it since I have the honor of serving under you? |
34748 | How many does that make?" |
34748 | How she looked at me-- and what would she say if she had witnessed the scene in the window? |
34748 | How was the last line,''The false image of May?'' |
34748 | How was the old song?" |
34748 | How you look again!--quite covered with heather, as usual; what are the gentlemen to think?" |
34748 | How you looked and if you were cheerful? |
34748 | How? |
34748 | How_ can_ you take an interest in this Chourineur, this_ maître d''école_, this Chouette and all the other rascally people? |
34748 | I am Professor Berger; whom have I the honor to address?'' |
34748 | I am not quite so bad, am I, as the old one says?'' |
34748 | I am only on sufferance here in the house; shall I be grateful for that? |
34748 | I am sure you will admit the little one among your pupils? |
34748 | I ask you where?" |
34748 | I asked,''where will you go to now, at night, and in such a night? |
34748 | I beg your pardon, sir, are you on a visit there?" |
34748 | I did not make the world, and, as far as I know, you did not make it Why, then, should we two rack our brains about it? |
34748 | I do not know if we agree on this point, my dear sir?" |
34748 | I gathered courage, therefore, as she was about to pass by me with a''Good- day, Mother Claus, how are you?'' |
34748 | I gave half to my brothers----""And the other half to your sisters?" |
34748 | I had fully reconquered her favor, but at what cost? |
34748 | I intended, therefore, to come and ask you what I ought to do?" |
34748 | I must change my lodgings-- why? |
34748 | I remember now that I have been struck by her before-- she looks like-- well, like what?" |
34748 | I should not like to stand at ten feet distance from him, with the seconds behind us?" |
34748 | I suppose I shall have to call you Baron Stein hereafter?" |
34748 | I suppose you can not forget what I told you the other night? |
34748 | I surely have the pleasure and the honor to see before me Doctor Stein? |
34748 | I thought she was going to take her own life, and said, horrified:''For God''s sake, child, what do you mean?'' |
34748 | I thought you had learnt what to think of the vows of men? |
34748 | I was quite surprised to hear that you knew him before, as cadet, I suppose?" |
34748 | I was told you and Robin had broken your necks at the last fox- hunt?" |
34748 | I will count one, two, three, and he who gets there first----""Well?" |
34748 | I wonder if Cloten is not ashamed to play such a farce before the eyes of the woman he has loved? |
34748 | I wonder if she has not some things that belonged to Miss Innocence in her possession, that might lead to further discoveries? |
34748 | I would rather not meet him, but what can I do? |
34748 | If he should burn the letter without reading it? |
34748 | If not before men, certainly before the Judge who looks into the heart? |
34748 | In another place:"Could it not be stipulated that the stewards, headmen, housekeepers, etc., of the tenants must be confirmed by the baron? |
34748 | In whose person?" |
34748 | Is he always so sad and silent?" |
34748 | Is he too in the plot? |
34748 | Is it because the mind, capable of seizing what is imperishable, eternal, has no need of the mere perishable body? |
34748 | Is it far from here?" |
34748 | Is it hatred-- is it love?" |
34748 | Is it impossible to love a boy and a beloved one at the same time, and with equal fervor? |
34748 | Is it not here also true, that he who asks for a reward has already his reward?" |
34748 | Is it permitted to look at it?" |
34748 | Is it possible? |
34748 | Is little Marguerite alone to blame for it? |
34748 | Is not Mr. Stein a very handsome man? |
34748 | Is not all right again? |
34748 | Is not that well said? |
34748 | Is not that wonderful?" |
34748 | Is not the moon shining through the trees? |
34748 | Is not their whole life an unbroken intrigue? |
34748 | Is she not her child a thousand times more than mine? |
34748 | Is she to remain forever in the boarding- school in Hamburg? |
34748 | Is that right so, darling? |
34748 | Is the boy really as stupid as he looks?" |
34748 | Is the dear face about to bend down and to kiss him, as it did in the dream? |
34748 | Is the heart of man so small that one sentiment must crowd out another to find room there? |
34748 | Is there no such thing as desire without love? |
34748 | It is in my study at Cona; or would you like to have it at once?" |
34748 | Jager?" |
34748 | Just carry him in, will you? |
34748 | Left somewhat early-- heat really abominable----""Wo n''t you put down your hat, Cloten?" |
34748 | Lemonade or champagne?" |
34748 | Let the disobedient child have her way? |
34748 | Listen, little Czika, will you go with me?" |
34748 | May I begin?" |
34748 | May I do that?" |
34748 | May I have the honor of the first dance, if I am not too late?" |
34748 | May I have the honor to take you back to the house?" |
34748 | May I have the honor to take you to her?" |
34748 | May I offer you a cigar till dinner is ready?" |
34748 | May I read them?" |
34748 | May I venture the attempt to put the correctness of my views to the test?" |
34748 | May I?" |
34748 | Melitta has returned? |
34748 | Melitta made no reply; suddenly she said, speaking low and quick:"Have you seen much of him since that Sunday at Barnewitz?" |
34748 | Melitta, by our former friendship, by the memory of our common youth and its happiness, tell me, did you never believe that I loved you?" |
34748 | Might he not draw back, and would not Helen then triumph after all? |
34748 | Might not Melitta remain his after all? |
34748 | Might not the afternoon lessons be altogether omitted? |
34748 | Might not then all come right? |
34748 | Miss Emily?" |
34748 | Miss Marie, have you a moment''s time? |
34748 | Must Bruno die, die before me, in order that I may love Melitta? |
34748 | Must I not always fear to offend them if I speak what I think? |
34748 | Must not all fall to ruin if such a magnificent pillar could stand no longer? |
34748 | My old admirer? |
34748 | My wife faints at any time, for reasons and without reasons-- why? |
34748 | Never, at any time?" |
34748 | No doubt-- Bruno, does this byroad lead anywhere else, except to Berkow?" |
34748 | No? |
34748 | Not as much as I love you, but still, you love me a little, eh, Oswald?" |
34748 | Not to your worthy cousin Felix?" |
34748 | Not you!--Is it not written in the lines of your hand? |
34748 | Nothing you want?'' |
34748 | Now she looked up and asked:"For whom was the letter intended?" |
34748 | Now, is not that charming?" |
34748 | Now, my dear sir, after you have had the goodness to listen to this long story of mine, pray tell me, what would you do in my place? |
34748 | Of course you are the challenger?" |
34748 | Oldenburg''s last words: Who of us is still able to love with all his heart? |
34748 | On the morning of the decisive day, Berger said to me:''Do you know, dear Stein, I have a great mind to reject you?'' |
34748 | One day he came to me, an open letter in his hand, and asked:"''Would you like to become a tutor in a nobleman''s family?'' |
34748 | Or can you perhaps tell me where your mistress is, my good dog? |
34748 | Or could you really, by mere chance, be a little fond of me? |
34748 | Or did she find another explanation for the melancholy look in Oswald''s blue eyes? |
34748 | Or do you really mean to say that Emily von Breesen deserves being called so?" |
34748 | Or love without desire? |
34748 | Or was the meeting accidental, and the mysterious rider the real writer? |
34748 | Oswald asked, trembling;"am I in a dream? |
34748 | Oswald found it hard to rest contented, but what could he do? |
34748 | Oswald had to tell him what she wore, whether she looked handsome, very handsome, handsomer than any of the other ladies? |
34748 | Oswald, you do love me-- don''t you? |
34748 | Perhaps he wished to silence his conscience or make up for lost time; who knows? |
34748 | Perhaps she loves him still?--And where did he come from just now? |
34748 | Perhaps to- morrow afternoon?" |
34748 | Professor Berger? |
34748 | Qu''en dites- vous, Mademoiselle?_""I have to write some letters, and will go to my room,"said Oswald, going into the house. |
34748 | Sacrifice her long- cherished plans to a foolish girl''s whims? |
34748 | Second Lieutenant Felix Baron Grenwitz-- resignation accepted-- why, what is that? |
34748 | Shall I go in white? |
34748 | Shall I introduce you?" |
34748 | Shall we go this way?" |
34748 | Shall we look in the garden?" |
34748 | She called him:"What do you want, little one?" |
34748 | She had never really loved him-- perhaps-- no, certainly never loved him-- but is true love always the last reward of a woman''s highest favor? |
34748 | She is to have the room next door, do you hear?'' |
34748 | She looked so bright and sensible, with her big blue eyes; how could she let him deceive her so? |
34748 | She often speaks of you, and asks why the man with the blue eyes does not come back again? |
34748 | She whispered a few words in his ear, in her own language, and at once the boy started up and said to Oswald:"Will you follow me, sir?" |
34748 | Should he accept the harmless part which chance seemed to allot to him? |
34748 | Should he enter the lists without knowing anything of the weapons, the witnesses, the place, or even his adversaries? |
34748 | Should he ever return into that world with fresh, bold mind? |
34748 | Should he expose himself to the perhaps very ignoble vengeance of the young noblemen? |
34748 | Since when has this comedy been played?" |
34748 | Sons of heaven? |
34748 | Stein?" |
34748 | Stein?" |
34748 | Still at school? |
34748 | Suddenly a Jew, a pedler, looked over the fence, and when he saw us he cried into the garden:''Nothing you want? |
34748 | Suddenly a large dark object loomed up before him, and at the same moment a rough, deep voice cried out:"_ Qui vive?_""_ Moi!_"answered Oswald. |
34748 | Suddenly she raised her head and said, fixing her glittering eyes on Oswald:"Do you know the dark man who brings me my Czika back?" |
34748 | Suppose we go, too? |
34748 | Surely no man would refuse the request of a lady, and especially of an unprotected, helpless woman? |
34748 | Tell me only this one thing: Am I victimized for the sake of another? |
34748 | Tell me, dear sir, has not the sojourn under our lowly roof reminded you of certain parts of his lovely idyl? |
34748 | Tell me, have you really become the baron''s bosom friend in this short time, as report says?" |
34748 | Tell them it was a mere hypothesis of yours----""A what?" |
34748 | That I may not perish with cold in winter and with heat in summer; that I do not risk every day breaking my neck on the steep narrow staircase? |
34748 | That I should have to leave the innocent soul of my poor child in such hands? |
34748 | That I would hear from the lips of that veteran, in my beloved mother- tongue, the heroic death of my father? |
34748 | That all below is destined for the silent grave, Where lies the beauty now and all the brave, The far renowned, the great of ev''ry sort? |
34748 | That gate there is open, is it not? |
34748 | That, this key in her hand became a thief''s tool-- what did it matter? |
34748 | The Blue Flower, after which the great Minnesinger was longing? |
34748 | The band had no sooner found their retreat discovered than they had broken up their tents and moved, no one knew where? |
34748 | The baron asked him hospitably why he was in such a hurry, and if he would not stay a few days to recover from his arduous labors? |
34748 | The door opened; old Hermann looked in and said:--"Baron Cloten wishes to present his respects, sir; are you at home?" |
34748 | The first question he asked me was:''Have you heard from her?'' |
34748 | The maid had met the baroness in one of the passages, and the latter had asked her whose letter that was? |
34748 | The man is a widower?" |
34748 | The old baron looks like a wet chicken in the rain; the old baroness like a dethroned Hecuba-- isn''t it Hecuba? |
34748 | The only question was, how the letter could reach Helen? |
34748 | The other day I came in twice, and what did he want? |
34748 | The servants, to be sure, had to be told towards noon that I could not find Miss Marie,--had they seen her anywhere? |
34748 | Then she came back into the room and said:"Do you go straight back to Cona?" |
34748 | Then she hates this man? |
34748 | Then, after a short pause, she said:"And what external advantages can such a match have? |
34748 | There is no other visitor here now?" |
34748 | There never were any women there I would speak of, except one, except one----""And who was that one?" |
34748 | They might have been sitting thus for a quarter of an hour, when the baron suddenly said:"You do n''t smoke?" |
34748 | Think for a moment that I had written these verses and felt impelled to read them to you? |
34748 | This is not a fancy picture?" |
34748 | Timm?" |
34748 | To be sure, my dear old papa-- he would not abandon me if matters came to the worst; but, great Heavens, is it not bad enough to have to fear a worst? |
34748 | Try kindness once more, or drop the mask, and command where prayers had been of no avail? |
34748 | Walking on foot and over utterly unknown roads----""But why did you undertake that?" |
34748 | Was he not too young at that time?" |
34748 | Was he, perhaps, one of Cloten''s spies? |
34748 | Was his passion returned? |
34748 | Was it a phantom? |
34748 | Was it all over? |
34748 | Was it any better than the mark he made on the hard sand which the next wave washed away forever? |
34748 | Was it because he had not deserved it, that the blessing was not fulfilled? |
34748 | Was it my desire which brought us here together? |
34748 | Was it my will which made us meet at the ball at Barnewitz? |
34748 | Was it not this way? |
34748 | Was it reality? |
34748 | Was it the offspring of his overwrought imagination? |
34748 | Was not that a famous story, dottore?" |
34748 | Was she disappointed in her heart? |
34748 | Was that his face? |
34748 | Was that his voice which now said:"Baroness, they are rising from table: may I offer you my arm?" |
34748 | Was that my reward for holding you up to my nephew as a pattern of a well- bred young man who knows what he owes to ladies? |
34748 | Was that really old Baumann on Brownlock? |
34748 | Was the dream near the pond about to be fulfilled? |
34748 | We easily become attached even to strangers in travelling; how much more welcome is the friend of our youth whom we unexpectedly meet with abroad? |
34748 | Well then, my serious friend, what is the matter?" |
34748 | Well, I hope we shall find you quite well again when we return-- probably in two or three days.--Ah, mademoiselle, everything in readiness? |
34748 | Well, and how do you like your cousin?" |
34748 | Well, how do you like my story?" |
34748 | Well, how do you like the chapel?" |
34748 | Well, what do you say, doctor?" |
34748 | Were not these words written for me also, who think no cushion too soft, no carpet too yielding, no dish too delicate, and no wine too costly? |
34748 | Were these sparkling lights the same lonely stars to which he had now and then glanced up as he came from the opera or from a party? |
34748 | What are you sitting there for? |
34748 | What brings him back to us? |
34748 | What can I do here? |
34748 | What can my opinion matter to you?" |
34748 | What can that be? |
34748 | What can you say in reply?" |
34748 | What could have induced the Brown Countess to leave her child, which she seemed to love most devotedly, so unceremoniously in the hands of strangers? |
34748 | What could he do now? |
34748 | What could he have to do there? |
34748 | What did I promise? |
34748 | What did I tell you yesterday? |
34748 | What do you know of his circumstances?" |
34748 | What do you say to our coming back so soon? |
34748 | What do you say to that?" |
34748 | What do you say, doctor-- could you do me the honor to pay me a visit some one of these days? |
34748 | What do you say, doctor; shall we continue our philosophic conversation as peripatetics in the open air? |
34748 | What do you say?" |
34748 | What do you say?" |
34748 | What do you see? |
34748 | What do you think of immortality?" |
34748 | What do you think of my offer?'' |
34748 | What do you think, little Margerite, would you like to be the wife of Albert Timm, Esquire, owner of Castle Grenwitz, etc.? |
34748 | What does eternity know of either? |
34748 | What for?" |
34748 | What had become of the high notions which he had formerly loved to dwell upon? |
34748 | What had he done? |
34748 | What harm has the unfortunate man done you?" |
34748 | What has parted the two?--Which of them spoke the word that parted them, as it seems, forever? |
34748 | What has the little angler been fishing for here in these troubled waters?--But now, Barnewitz, I ask with Hamlet: Whither do you lead me? |
34748 | What have I done for my child? |
34748 | What have I to do here among these wolves? |
34748 | What have you not to answer for? |
34748 | What have you studied?'' |
34748 | What if I am really tired of this wild life, which must, after all, lead me sooner or later to the devil? |
34748 | What if I want to marry the girl?'' |
34748 | What is that in the very suspicious- looking bottle up there on the book- shelf? |
34748 | What is the matter?" |
34748 | What justifies your presumption?" |
34748 | What mattered it to any one? |
34748 | What of him? |
34748 | What of the great plans he had cherished? |
34748 | What should it be?" |
34748 | What the silence to which he, the talkative man, now condemned himself for hours? |
34748 | What was he to do? |
34748 | What was to become of her? |
34748 | What were their relations? |
34748 | What would Professor Berger say, if he saw his lovely bud unfolded now into a dark- red rose? |
34748 | What"lady"was meant? |
34748 | What, especially, the restless industry with which he stood all day long bent over his drawing- board, busy with pencil and brush? |
34748 | When are you going to give your great ball?" |
34748 | When can he have come back?" |
34748 | When do you want the papers?" |
34748 | When does service begin?" |
34748 | When he became old and stiff, they called him old Adam-- have you ever heard of a noble who was called Adam, Cloten?" |
34748 | When he saw Marie, who had started up at his entrance, frightened, he laughed and said:''Do I find you here, my dove? |
34748 | When we hear the voice of the god of love, asking us in our paradise:"Where art thou?" |
34748 | When?" |
34748 | Where are the tea- things, I wonder? |
34748 | Where are you? |
34748 | Where can she be?" |
34748 | Where did she come from?" |
34748 | Where did you meet the two?" |
34748 | Where had I been? |
34748 | Where have you been, darling doll? |
34748 | Where is Baron Oldenburg? |
34748 | Where is mam''selle?" |
34748 | Where is my Julius?" |
34748 | Where is the eye which satisfies us so that we would never like to look into another again, more brilliant, more fiery than the first? |
34748 | Where on earth is Bruno?" |
34748 | Where the restless longing to see her face, to hear her voice? |
34748 | Where was now all the happiness he used to feel when he recalled her and the sunny hours he had spent with her? |
34748 | Where would be the difference, if that were so? |
34748 | Where? |
34748 | Whether he had any children? |
34748 | Whether you studied much? |
34748 | Which of the ladies do you think the prettiest?" |
34748 | Which of us can love with all his heart? |
34748 | Which of us has yet a whole heart? |
34748 | Which way shall we go?" |
34748 | Who arranged that scene in the garden of the village Serra di Falco? |
34748 | Who can analyze beauty? |
34748 | Who can catch the sunbeams? |
34748 | Who can reduce the song of the nightingale to notes? |
34748 | Who is it?'' |
34748 | Who is there?" |
34748 | Who knows? |
34748 | Who knows? |
34748 | Who lives for us? |
34748 | Who of us has still a whole heart for living or for dying? |
34748 | Who of us still has a whole heart? |
34748 | Who put those flowers there?" |
34748 | Who takes the bet?" |
34748 | Who told you all that?" |
34748 | Who was the"person"who wished to make his personal acquaintance? |
34748 | Who would have suspected Baron Harald Grenwitz of such plebeian foibles? |
34748 | Why are millions of faithful believers strengthened when they turn their faces to the East at prayers? |
34748 | Why are you not always here?" |
34748 | Why ask for a secret rendezvous? |
34748 | Why did Baron Harald want to know what had become of that pretty girl Marie? |
34748 | Why did Miss Marguerite''s voice sound less sharp now than formerly? |
34748 | Why did even Malte pay attention to the game when they played at graces, and try to catch the hoops occasionally? |
34748 | Why did he not desire it? |
34748 | Why did she herself appoint this rendezvous?" |
34748 | Why did she manage to put the child into your hands? |
34748 | Why did she now always appear with a smiling face at table, and endeavor not to let the conversation die out during the meal? |
34748 | Why do n''t you talk, Oswald?" |
34748 | Why do you drive through the ditch, if you have a bridge within ten yards? |
34748 | Why do you look so solemn and thoughtful? |
34748 | Why do you, who could so easily afford it, not rather live on the_ Boulevard des Capucines_, or in Pall- Mall, London, than on this northern shore?" |
34748 | Why does he keep it secret, when he knows of how much interest it must be for me? |
34748 | Why does she always call you her young master, dottore?" |
34748 | Why does the criminal condemned for life not dash his brains out against his prison walls? |
34748 | Why does the poor fellow who is to be hanged on the morrow not hang himself the night before? |
34748 | Why does the poor shipwrecked mariner strain his eyes for half a century gazing over the wild waste of waters? |
34748 | Why does the wanderer who has lost his way drag himself forward through the deep snow? |
34748 | Why does your heart beat so? |
34748 | Why else was the baroness now all mildness and goodness? |
34748 | Why is it a comfort to lovers merely to stretch out the hand in the direction of the beloved one? |
34748 | Why must a foul worm have been gnawing at the beautiful flower? |
34748 | Why must the pure garments of his angel be dragged through the mire of vulgar life? |
34748 | Why not ask that servant there?" |
34748 | Why not? |
34748 | Why not? |
34748 | Why should I not sit here? |
34748 | Why should a man,_ comme vous_, to whom the whole world is open, marry a poor girl who not even is handsome?" |
34748 | Why should he not fall in love with Emily von Breesen? |
34748 | Why should he not watch the transition and enjoy the first balmy fragrance as the full- blown flower opened to new- born love? |
34748 | Why should the baron not write to his steward? |
34748 | Why should we not live a long time happily together?" |
34748 | Why should you poets anyways insist upon purposely spoiling all the little pleasure that is left us on this melancholy planet? |
34748 | Why should_ I_?" |
34748 | Why such ceremonies? |
34748 | Why then will you waste your love on one who shows himself so utterly unworthy of such a precious gift? |
34748 | Why this mysterious manner in a man who looked like frankness and candor itself? |
34748 | Why this poison in the cup of his love? |
34748 | Why was he born? |
34748 | Why would you, for instance, die instantly,''if Fate should deny you such wondrous bliss?'' |
34748 | Why, yesterday he has been running about all day long without me, and today he has not looked at me once; he is perfectly indifferent to me, you hear? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why? |
34748 | Why?" |
34748 | Why?" |
34748 | Will you arrange it with mademoiselle?" |
34748 | Will you come to- morrow evening, or some other evening, when you have time and inclination, and drink a glass of punch with me?'' |
34748 | Will you do me a favor, baron?" |
34748 | Will you follow my advice? |
34748 | Will you give me permission to find one?" |
34748 | Will you leave that also to me?" |
34748 | Will you listen to my advice?" |
34748 | Will you permit me to set you down here? |
34748 | Will you please pull the bell just over your head? |
34748 | Will you sit down?" |
34748 | Will you vegetate on and on till every illusion has been killed, and you have thrown everything overboard that was once dear and sacred to you? |
34748 | Will you wait till your patience is fully exhausted, like poor, great- hearted Berger? |
34748 | Wo n''t you come in?" |
34748 | Wo n''t you, doctor?" |
34748 | Would he weave another wreath of sonnets and press it on her rich hair? |
34748 | Would his pride be roused if he saw how little Helen thought of him, how she despised him, in fact? |
34748 | Would n''t it be famous? |
34748 | Would two lessons a week suffice for her? |
34748 | Would you have believed me such a fool?" |
34748 | Yes or no?" |
34748 | Yes?--tell me, I am no coward; I knew it yesterday already; must I die? |
34748 | You are coming, Oldenburg?" |
34748 | You are laughing? |
34748 | You are, no doubt, a painter?" |
34748 | You ask me, finally, whether I believe now that you mean it well with me? |
34748 | You can not help me when I am sleeping?" |
34748 | You do not believe in it?" |
34748 | You do not object?" |
34748 | You have brought your things, I hope?" |
34748 | You have evidently all the qualifications for the latter, while here it is simply impossible for you to develop your full powers?" |
34748 | You have not told me yet whether I have hurt your feelings unwittingly, by some thoughtless word, perhaps?" |
34748 | You know how to swim?" |
34748 | You know in that matter?" |
34748 | You know it, and you are not afraid to stay alone with the baron for hours and days? |
34748 | You know:_ Dulce est desipere in loco._""What kind of a horrible lingo is that again, baron?" |
34748 | You must admit, my dear Anna Maria, that he has neither the beauty nor the address which are commonly expected in such a character?" |
34748 | You never recollected that expression, Cloten?" |
34748 | You or I?" |
34748 | You ought to get married, mademoiselle?" |
34748 | You permit me to remain faithful to my habit of smoking a light cigar after my sermon?" |
34748 | You recollect the beautiful story in Novalis''works? |
34748 | You say then, they make you work like a_ forçat_?" |
34748 | You ugly? |
34748 | You were spared, I trust, the unpleasant alternative of hurting the feelings of those privileged beings, or your own honor?" |
34748 | You will be in time yet I beg your pardon, sir, but what is your name?" |
34748 | You will come?" |
34748 | You will give me your arm, Doctor Stein?" |
34748 | You''ll excuse my curiosity,_ monsieur le baron_?" |
34748 | Young Grieben First Lieutenant? |
34748 | Your feeble health-- the dangers of a sea- voyage-- and then: will Heligoland really benefit you? |
34748 | Your mother has spoken to you about that, hm, hm?" |
34748 | _ Je suis si pauvre et si laide!_""What is that?" |
34748 | _ Ma foi, chère tante_, has not my most worthy uncle been nearly twenty years under your orders? |
34748 | _ Mademoiselle, n''avez- vous pas mon fichu? |
34748 | _ Qu''en dites- vous, Monsieur le docteur? |
34748 | a paid servant, with whom the parents, moreover, are very much dissatisfied,--what can you say to that?" |
34748 | ah, Baumann, why did you carry me that day out of the fire? |
34748 | and I may hope?" |
34748 | and did he think the morning or the evening better for the purpose? |
34748 | and how can I tell her so without making myself ridiculous in my own eyes, after having said so to I know not how many in all the languages I know? |
34748 | and is faithlessness a law of nature?" |
34748 | and then to Oswald, who had been silent, meditating on the enigmatical character of the man by his side:"I look to you a little crazy, doctor, eh?" |
34748 | and under what pretext could you gain admittance there?--But never mind-- where is the letter?" |
34748 | and whither bound? |
34748 | and_ vice versâ_: is your wife in love with this lovely youth?" |
34748 | asked Bruno;"why do you cry? |
34748 | asked Oswald, smiling;"you or I?" |
34748 | asked the baroness, turning to her hostess;"are we going to have a large company?" |
34748 | asked the poetess,"On my Rooster?" |
34748 | but too often also in our dreams? |
34748 | called Felix,"we are going down to the beach; will you join us?" |
34748 | called Helen,"will you have the kindness to come here for a moment?" |
34748 | commanded Oswald;"how can I lift the man without you? |
34748 | cried Adolphus;"well, would not that be nice? |
34748 | cried Felix, laughing in a manner which was by no means flattering for the poor old gentleman,"if I believe it? |
34748 | cried Mr. Bemperlein--"nothing extraordinary? |
34748 | cried Oswald, astonished;"and have you lived all the time in this village?" |
34748 | divine, divine-- these English misses.--But what did she mean?" |
34748 | he murmured,"than to drag the burden of life still farther, to your own harm and to nobody''s joy? |
34748 | he said,''I sleep? |
34748 | how does it happen that I have not seen you to- day-- nor yesterday?" |
34748 | in Palermo? |
34748 | laughed Mr. Timm;"why should you? |
34748 | love me really? |
34748 | may be he is in love, or he is crazy? |
34748 | my dear, we can be jealous, can we? |
34748 | no? |
34748 | or do you desire me to come to Grenwitz? |
34748 | or is the Havana you are smoking the last of the Mohicans?" |
34748 | or like that? |
34748 | or looked up at his window? |
34748 | or,''Can I help you, dear Mrs. Claus? |
34748 | puff!--"is a thoroughly Germanic, I might almost say, a thoroughly Christo- Germanic element?" |
34748 | replied Felix,"what has happened that I should cry? |
34748 | replied the servant,"or what?" |
34748 | said Albert"If you have not time now that the old scarecrow is gone, when will you have time? |
34748 | said Bruno, raising his head defiantly;"why should I be fond of him? |
34748 | said Felix,"will you please form a cotillon? |
34748 | said Mr. Bemperlein, rubbing his hands with delight,"and what would you do next, my dear sir?" |
34748 | said Oldenburg, who had remained seated at the table;"how many have you had, doctor, this week? |
34748 | said Oswald, taking a seat in the doctor''s carriage;"did Bruno not find you at home?" |
34748 | said Oswald, when they had handed him a loaded pistol;"that one at the extreme end of the branch?" |
34748 | said one voice,--it was Baron Oldenburg,--"was not that the pretty Emily? |
34748 | said the baron, stopping suddenly,"are you really such a novice in love that I must give you an explanation of that farce? |
34748 | said the passionate girl, raising herself suddenly,"then you do not love me? |
34748 | she cried, rocking to and fro, joyous as a child that has had its will;"did I not tell you?" |
34748 | she said, and as she looked into my face, which was probably quite sad and sober, she cried:''For heaven''s sake, I hope nothing bad has happened?'' |
34748 | she said, offering me her hand, where are you going to? |
34748 | tell mademoiselle she need not come to help to coffee; I''ll do it myself; she had better stay in the linen- room.--And, what was it? |
34748 | that life is short? |
34748 | the young baron had gone away that morning-- how far? |
34748 | there are some glasses left-- Countess Grieben-- Baron Oldenburg-- Baroness Nadelitz-- are you mad, Barnewitz? |
34748 | to fall in love with whom?" |
34748 | under his head? |
34748 | was heard once more from the target"You see?" |
34748 | what am I saying? |
34748 | what brings you here?" |
34748 | what death of life? |
34748 | what is the matter with you? |
34748 | what is the matter? |
34748 | what is to be over between us?" |
34748 | what must I think of you?'' |
34748 | what shall we do?" |
34748 | what was the use troubling one''s self about such people? |
34748 | whether she had smiled? |
34748 | who can be cruel enough to refuse the love of such a heart? |
34748 | who is that young man, crossing the lawn there with Bruno?" |
34748 | why did he cause so much grief and pain to himself and others, if it was all to end in nothing? |
34748 | why do you not talk? |
34748 | why not? |
34748 | with a camellia in my hair, or a rose? |
34748 | you do not know Professor Berger?'' |
34748 | you permit me then to see your mistress? |
40264 | ''Get rid''? 40264 ''_ Déjà?_''"she murmured. |
40264 | ''_ Stieg je ein Freund Dir aus dem Grabe wieder?_''murmured Clare. |
40264 | A school? |
40264 | About Miss Hartill? |
40264 | Afraid of whom? |
40264 | After all,he said meditatively,"you''re a dear, but you are n''t the only woman in the world, are you?" |
40264 | All day long? |
40264 | Alwynne,he said, in his most matter- of- fact voice,"had n''t you better tell me all about it?" |
40264 | Alwynne-- come to me for Christmas? |
40264 | Alwynne----? |
40264 | Alwynne? 40264 Alwynne? |
40264 | Alwynne? |
40264 | Am I awfully early? 40264 Am I? |
40264 | Am I? 40264 And having found out?" |
40264 | And homework? |
40264 | And last week-- and the week before-- and the week before that? 40264 And meet one?" |
40264 | And that you do n''t like me? |
40264 | And the devil? |
40264 | And what were you thinking of, Louise, for two long hours? |
40264 | And why not? |
40264 | And you''re never on the late side, are you? |
40264 | And you''ve never noticed? 40264 Angry? |
40264 | Annoyed? 40264 Answer? |
40264 | Any answer, Miss? |
40264 | Any message? |
40264 | Are n''t you? 40264 Are the grapes very sour?" |
40264 | Are there any letters, Baxter? 40264 Are they?" |
40264 | Are we? |
40264 | Are you asleep? 40264 Are you by any chance serious?" |
40264 | Are you coming, Roger? |
40264 | Are you going to make one for Miss Vigers? |
40264 | Are you going? |
40264 | Are you going? |
40264 | Are you hurt? 40264 Are you quite sure it''s all right? |
40264 | Are you really going? |
40264 | Are you really? |
40264 | Are you sure? 40264 Are you, Miss Durand?" |
40264 | Are you, dear? |
40264 | Are you? |
40264 | As if----"Yes, it''s rather unlikely, is n''t it? |
40264 | At me, then? |
40264 | At once? |
40264 | At school? 40264 At the same time----""At the same time?" |
40264 | At this time of day? 40264 Aunt Alice, I say-- how much of that is just-- Aunt Jean?" |
40264 | Badly? |
40264 | Be off? 40264 Because?" |
40264 | Been getting into difficulties? 40264 Behind the hill?" |
40264 | Besides what? |
40264 | Blackberries? |
40264 | Brand? 40264 But Elsbeth does, does n''t she?" |
40264 | But Miss Vigers----I ask you, Miss Hartill, what would be the use of talking about Napoleon to Miss Vigers? |
40264 | But a good friend, I hope? |
40264 | But afterwards? |
40264 | But even then, though I had been neglectful-- oh, Roger, what made Louise do it? 40264 But have n''t you been to look for them?" |
40264 | But how can it be fair? 40264 But if Alwynne were engaged to me?" |
40264 | But if we could find some one-- to help us eat up the turkey-- and spend the evening-- it would be rather jolly, do n''t you think? 40264 But it''s Christmas Day?" |
40264 | But loyal still? |
40264 | But should you care? |
40264 | But the other two, Miss Durand-- the other two? 40264 But what did it matter?" |
40264 | But what ideas, Miss Hartill? 40264 But where did the lie come in?" |
40264 | But why do you say that-- in that tone? |
40264 | But why? 40264 But why? |
40264 | But why? 40264 But why?" |
40264 | But why? |
40264 | But why? |
40264 | But you can me? |
40264 | But you coached her too-- didn''t you notice either? |
40264 | But you do think I have a chance? |
40264 | But you''re not going? |
40264 | But your work? 40264 But, excuse me"--Clare was elaborately respectful--"has Napoleon any traceable connection with the kidnapping of my class?" |
40264 | But-- but-- when Miss Marsham comes in-- you can hear a pin drop----Is he nice? |
40264 | Ca n''t I? 40264 Cackle, cackle, cackle,"muttered Alwynne viciously;"awfully funny, is n''t it?" |
40264 | Clare Hartill-- I suppose you''ve heard of Clare Hartill? |
40264 | Clare, do n''t you see? 40264 Clare, what am I thinking of? |
40264 | Clare, what has happened? 40264 Clare-- you did n''t, did you?" |
40264 | Clarissa who? |
40264 | Come to dinner? |
40264 | Could we hide it? 40264 Crossing water?" |
40264 | Cynthia? |
40264 | D''you mean-- you do n''t want to hear from me either? |
40264 | Did I really do anything wrong? 40264 Did I see you at lunch, Louise? |
40264 | Did I? |
40264 | Did Miss Hartill ask you to tell me that? 40264 Did he shrug you out of existence?" |
40264 | Did he? |
40264 | Did n''t I tell you to learn_ Childe Roland_, too? 40264 Did n''t you see?" |
40264 | Did n''t you? |
40264 | Did she tell the child so? |
40264 | Did you hear, Alwynne? 40264 Did you lend the tooth- glass?" |
40264 | Did you think I should wear it? |
40264 | Did you understand it, kid? |
40264 | Did you? 40264 Did you?" |
40264 | Do I know them? |
40264 | Do I? |
40264 | Do I? |
40264 | Do n''t you believe it, Miss Hartill, quite? |
40264 | Do n''t you see? |
40264 | Do n''t you see? |
40264 | Do n''t you think every woman is, if she gets the chance? 40264 Do n''t you think it aches all day? |
40264 | Do n''t you think it''s often easier to talk to strangers? 40264 Do n''t you think my heart aches?" |
40264 | Do n''t you want it? |
40264 | Do n''t you, Elsbeth? |
40264 | Do they have everything else with the boys? |
40264 | Do they? |
40264 | Do we? |
40264 | Do what? |
40264 | Do you believe in hell? |
40264 | Do you hear that? 40264 Do you know yourself?" |
40264 | Do you like fairy tales? 40264 Do you mind my asking? |
40264 | Do you never laugh when you''re serious? |
40264 | Do you think I could n''t get rid of her if I wanted to? 40264 Do you think no one has ever hurt me?" |
40264 | Do you think so? 40264 Do you think so?" |
40264 | Do you think so? |
40264 | Do you want a bath? 40264 Do you want me to come?" |
40264 | Do you? |
40264 | Do you? |
40264 | Do you? |
40264 | Does it answer? |
40264 | Does it hurt, Alwynne? 40264 Does one?" |
40264 | Does she just? 40264 Does she repel you?" |
40264 | Does she want a finger in the pie, then? |
40264 | Dreamt what? |
40264 | Easy? |
40264 | Elsbeth discussed me?--with you? |
40264 | Elsbeth,she said meekly,"please wo n''t you come and tuck me up?" |
40264 | Emma, do you see this? 40264 Emma? |
40264 | Excuse me, Miss Vigers, were you wanting to speak to me? 40264 Finish it all up-- d''you hear? |
40264 | Finished? |
40264 | For a little thing like that? 40264 For children?" |
40264 | For the average woman? 40264 Get where?" |
40264 | God helps? |
40264 | God hopes? |
40264 | Good- bye? 40264 Had a doze? |
40264 | Has n''t any one told you? 40264 Has that child had any breakfast?" |
40264 | Have a candy? |
40264 | Have n''t you ever, Louise? |
40264 | Have n''t you heard of Dene Compton? 40264 Have you ever seen a liner launched? |
40264 | Have you finished with Miss Durand? 40264 Have you finished your plate?" |
40264 | Have you noticed the Charette comedy? |
40264 | Have you quarrelled badly? |
40264 | Have you told her so? |
40264 | He helped those----Was that what They meant? |
40264 | Here-- what about this? |
40264 | How can I get married,cried Alwynne, in sudden exasperation,"when I''m not in love with you? |
40264 | How can I? 40264 How can you?" |
40264 | How dare you say that? 40264 How did you hear?" |
40264 | How do I know? 40264 How do you mean,''supposed''?" |
40264 | How else am I to get hold of any-- that I like? |
40264 | How long has this been going on? |
40264 | How many types of schoolgirl have you met, Henrietta? 40264 How old is your friend?" |
40264 | How shall I know about you, if you do n''t write to me? |
40264 | How should I know? 40264 How-- three?" |
40264 | How? |
40264 | Hypnotism? |
40264 | I am to remember every detail of your epistles? |
40264 | I believe you''re shocked because I talked so much about food? |
40264 | I daresay you are surprised that I consult you, for we need not pretend, need we, that we have ever quite agreed over Alwynne? 40264 I do n''t know-- I wonder if you''re right? |
40264 | I do so like my friends to know each other, do n''t you? |
40264 | I have misinterpreted----? |
40264 | I hope she was not distressed? |
40264 | I hope you do n''t spoil her, Alwynne? 40264 I hope you see what an idiot you''ve been?" |
40264 | I mean-- you were the last person to see her? |
40264 | I say, were you late? |
40264 | I say-- is anything the matter? |
40264 | I sha n''t be in the way? |
40264 | I should have thought-- suicide-- bad for the school''s reputation? |
40264 | I sit here and let you go-- I see two people''s lives being spoiled-- for the want of a----"What? |
40264 | I suppose it would be more attractive, for instance, than to be Lady Bountiful to a village? |
40264 | I suppose you wo n''t come and cook me another to- night? |
40264 | I suppose your goal is a head mistress- ship? |
40264 | I think----"Yes, Alwynne? |
40264 | I went to tea with her-- it must have been that day-- the eighth? |
40264 | I went up to the room where she had changed, to see that the children had gone----"She fell from that room? |
40264 | I wonder if you would tell me exactly what happened? |
40264 | I wonder what you will say? 40264 I wonder,"said Clare, laughing naturally,"what made her say that?" |
40264 | I? 40264 I?" |
40264 | Ices? |
40264 | If Louise''s life was so little worth living that she threw it away-- doesn''t it prove she had her hell down here? 40264 If what, Alwynne?" |
40264 | If what, Alwynne? |
40264 | If what? |
40264 | If you could n''t help it? |
40264 | If you tell me what for? |
40264 | Impossible for her to have spoken with Louise? |
40264 | Impressions-- vague ideas-- is it fair to formulate them? 40264 Is Daffy? |
40264 | Is he a master, then? |
40264 | Is it any good? |
40264 | Is it late? 40264 Is it? |
40264 | Is it? |
40264 | Is n''t it disgusting? 40264 Is n''t there an afternoon examination? |
40264 | Is no one coming in to lunch? |
40264 | Is she? |
40264 | Is that Meredith? |
40264 | Is that all you see? |
40264 | Is that all? 40264 It was an amazing performance, was n''t it? |
40264 | It was ghastly, you know-- so many people-- crowding and gaping-- I dream of all those crowded faces----"Well? |
40264 | It''s deadly sin? 40264 Jean, will you never let that foolish gossip be? |
40264 | Jolly place, is n''t it? 40264 Look, Clare, are n''t they darlings? |
40264 | Louise? 40264 Love must be blind-- is that the idea? |
40264 | Mademoiselle? 40264 May I? |
40264 | Me? 40264 Miss Durand, which side do I come on from? |
40264 | Miss Durand? |
40264 | Miss Hartill, did you know my Mother? |
40264 | Miss Hartill, may I speak to you? |
40264 | Miss Hartill, was it all right? 40264 Miss Hartill-- you are not suggesting----?" |
40264 | Miss Hartill-- you believe in God? |
40264 | Miss Hartill-- you do believe in God? |
40264 | Miss Hartill? |
40264 | Miss Vigers? 40264 Miss Vigers? |
40264 | More bacon, Louise? |
40264 | Mother, did you hear? 40264 Mother?" |
40264 | Mrs Bennett in the Garden of the Hesperides, Louise? |
40264 | My dear Clare-- could any one snub me? 40264 My dear, would you let Louise frizzle if it were in your hands? |
40264 | My good child-- what do you know about it? |
40264 | Never? |
40264 | No, you ca n''t, can you? |
40264 | Not hear? 40264 Not when I chop up your best pink roses?" |
40264 | Not yours? 40264 Now?" |
40264 | Of course the kitchen fire''s out? |
40264 | Of insanity? 40264 Oh, Clare, I''d love to-- you know I''d love to-- but how could I? |
40264 | Oh, Clare, do n''t you know? 40264 Oh, Miss Hartill-- why beat about the bush? |
40264 | Oh, Roger, you''re not angry with me? |
40264 | Oh, Roger-- why? 40264 Oh, if you''re trying to trap me?" |
40264 | Oh, we''re two overwrought women, are n''t we? 40264 Oh, what is it? |
40264 | Oh, why is she so touchy? 40264 Oh, why not, Miss Hartill? |
40264 | Oh, you do, do you? 40264 Oh? |
40264 | Oh? |
40264 | Oh? |
40264 | One day you''ll believe it.--All right-- you can ask your Miss Hartill-- or shall I write? |
40264 | Perhaps,said Roger, with elaborate irony,"you''d like to give her this? |
40264 | Please, wo n''t you sit down? |
40264 | Please-- won''t you leave Clare out of it? 40264 Presupposing an engagement?" |
40264 | Really-- I can hardly tell you-- blondes and brunettes, do you mean? 40264 Roger, do n''t you think that Alwynne----?" |
40264 | Roger,said a soft and wheedling voice,"would n''t you_ like_ to write to me? |
40264 | Roger,she said hesitatingly,"suppose some one were unkind to me-- hurt me-- hurt me badly, very often, almost on purpose-- would you defend me? |
40264 | Roger-- you do understand? 40264 Roger? |
40264 | Roger? |
40264 | Roger? |
40264 | Rude? 40264 Scratches? |
40264 | See Roger off? |
40264 | Shall I come with you? |
40264 | Shall I tell you? 40264 Shall I tell you?" |
40264 | She knew you were coming? |
40264 | She left, of course? |
40264 | She might have been afraid-- you might have shrunk----"From Clare? |
40264 | She never married? |
40264 | She said so? |
40264 | She''s not married? |
40264 | Shouldering the wise man''s burden already? |
40264 | So I had better not tease at all? |
40264 | So I''ve a bad influence, Alwynne? 40264 So is Alwynne-- you would n''t call her abnormal?" |
40264 | So we need n''t think about her any more? 40264 So you think I did n''t understand your essay?" |
40264 | Sorry? |
40264 | Suppose I pull it out? 40264 Ten? |
40264 | Tennis? |
40264 | That Alwynne''s a new girl? 40264 That she killed herself?" |
40264 | That tall girl with the yellow hair? 40264 That? |
40264 | The Lumsdens? 40264 The fifty- pound job, eh?" |
40264 | The head- master? |
40264 | The top floor? 40264 Then how did you persuade Miss Hartill?" |
40264 | Then the New is different? 40264 Then what did you mean?" |
40264 | Then what possesses you to steer your cockle- boat on to Meredith? 40264 Then what were you doing?" |
40264 | Then what? |
40264 | Then why do you grudge it? |
40264 | Then why should n''t you come to me instead? 40264 Then why,"he said quietly, meeting her eyes,"were you frightened at the inquest?" |
40264 | Then you think it was-- that-- too? 40264 Then you will leave it, as it is?" |
40264 | Then, Roger dear-- if you are coming, and it''s no bother, and you can spare them, would you bring me a tiny bunch of your roses? 40264 There was no rehearsal yesterday?" |
40264 | There you''ll be at Dene, miserable-- you will be miserable, Roger? |
40264 | They are very sweet, Roger-- are they from home-- from Dene, I mean? 40264 They? |
40264 | Think what? |
40264 | This? |
40264 | To me----"To you? |
40264 | To please you, or to punish some one else? 40264 To- day? |
40264 | Too fond of me? 40264 Too fond of me?" |
40264 | Um? |
40264 | Uncoached? |
40264 | Unless,she said, whispering,"you saw her-- you too? |
40264 | Want to know? |
40264 | Was it? |
40264 | Was n''t Louise in the room at the time? |
40264 | Was n''t it quite as amusing as a prize- giving? |
40264 | Was she angry? |
40264 | Was she really a fairy? |
40264 | Water? |
40264 | Well, Louise? 40264 Well, Lower Fifth-- what do you think of it?" |
40264 | Well, anyhow, I think-- don''t you think that it''s rather likely that fairyland is the fourth dimension? 40264 Well, are you pleased to see me?" |
40264 | Well, but-- where is it? |
40264 | Well, what am I to do? 40264 Well, what else?" |
40264 | Well, what happened? |
40264 | Well, you see, I''d got some roses----"Pale pink and yellow? 40264 Well,"said Alicia with a twinkle as they walked home together later,"what did you think of him?" |
40264 | Well-- Elizabeth Bennett, and the Little Women, and Garm, and Amadis of Gaul----"Oh-- not real people? |
40264 | Well-- about the roses? 40264 Well-- heaven follows-- and hell-- don''t they? |
40264 | Well-- what do you think of her, eh? 40264 Well-- you know how Miss Hartill hates birthdays?" |
40264 | Well? 40264 Well?" |
40264 | Well? |
40264 | Well? |
40264 | Well? |
40264 | Well? |
40264 | Well? |
40264 | Well? |
40264 | Well? |
40264 | Were you fond of them? 40264 Were you?" |
40264 | What about me? |
40264 | What about this? 40264 What about your bunch?" |
40264 | What am I to do with you, Louise? 40264 What am I to do? |
40264 | What are you talking about? |
40264 | What are you talking about? |
40264 | What are you two driving at? 40264 What could they? |
40264 | What did she say? |
40264 | What did you mean just now? |
40264 | What do you mean? 40264 What do you mean?" |
40264 | What do you mean? |
40264 | What for? |
40264 | What happened then? |
40264 | What happened to her? |
40264 | What have you got hold of? |
40264 | What is it, Louise? |
40264 | What is it? |
40264 | What is it? |
40264 | What is the matter? |
40264 | What more can one ask? |
40264 | What next? 40264 What on earth did you see in that?" |
40264 | What on earth----? |
40264 | What on earth----? |
40264 | What rehearsal? |
40264 | What shall I do? 40264 What shall I do?" |
40264 | What things? |
40264 | What time is she likely to turn up? |
40264 | What was it, Louise? 40264 What were you doing just now? |
40264 | What''s a proper one, Louise? |
40264 | What''s she driving at, Aunt Alice? |
40264 | What''s that got to do----? |
40264 | What''s that? |
40264 | What''s the matter with the girl? |
40264 | What''s the matter with you? |
40264 | What''s the matter with you? |
40264 | What''s the matter, child? |
40264 | What''s the matter? |
40264 | What''s wrong with getting married, Alwynne? |
40264 | What''s wrong? |
40264 | What, Miss Hartill? |
40264 | What, Miss Hartill? |
40264 | What, Roger? |
40264 | What? |
40264 | What? |
40264 | What? |
40264 | What? |
40264 | What? |
40264 | When I get on the subject of Alwynne''s adorableness----he laughed back at her,"we''re obviously cousins, are n''t we? |
40264 | When did you find the time? |
40264 | Where did it come from? |
40264 | Where do you get all these books, Louise? |
40264 | Where is he going? 40264 Where''s cook going?" |
40264 | Where''s the difference? 40264 Where''s the difference?" |
40264 | Which is it, anyhow? |
40264 | Which is what? |
40264 | Which is your favourite stone? |
40264 | Who came to the rescue? |
40264 | Who did you think it was? |
40264 | Who else? |
40264 | Who else? |
40264 | Who is Louise? |
40264 | Who was he? |
40264 | Who, for instance? |
40264 | Who? |
40264 | Why did n''t you ask her with Alwynne? |
40264 | Why did you come? |
40264 | Why did you single out_ King John_, Miss Hartill? |
40264 | Why do you call yourself such names? 40264 Why do you sneer at Clare? |
40264 | Why do you think I came round to see you to- day? |
40264 | Why forty? |
40264 | Why not? 40264 Why not? |
40264 | Why not? 40264 Why not?" |
40264 | Why not? |
40264 | Why not? |
40264 | Why not? |
40264 | Why not? |
40264 | Why on earth did n''t she let me know? 40264 Why on earth do you sit there and grunt at me like that? |
40264 | Why this championship? 40264 Why were you late? |
40264 | Why wo n''t you go back through the wood? |
40264 | Why wo n''t you understand? 40264 Why, do you know them?" |
40264 | Why,cried Alwynne, flaming out at her,"d''you think I''m afraid of you? |
40264 | Why? 40264 Why?" |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Will she? |
40264 | Will you stop, please? 40264 Witch Hill?" |
40264 | With me? |
40264 | With you? |
40264 | With your secret griefs? 40264 Wo n''t you sit down? |
40264 | Wo n''t you tell me just exactly what you did mean? |
40264 | Would n''t let her? |
40264 | Would you care if I did n''t? |
40264 | Would you like me to speak to Louise, before you? |
40264 | Would you? |
40264 | Would-- liking awfully-- do, Roger? 40264 Yes, Miss Hartill?" |
40264 | Yes, Miss Hartill? |
40264 | Yes, Miss Vigers? |
40264 | Yes, is n''t it? |
40264 | Yes, very ridiculous, is n''t it? 40264 You and Elsbeth?" |
40264 | You are going to leave me to myself then? 40264 You are moving me down? |
40264 | You could do that, could n''t you? |
40264 | You did? 40264 You do n''t think she''s getting too keen, working too hard?" |
40264 | You do n''t want it? |
40264 | You do now? |
40264 | You found out something? |
40264 | You have? |
40264 | You kick at the privileges of friendship already? 40264 You mean to say-- you deliberately did that poor old thing out of her job? |
40264 | You mean-- she must have stood on the ledge-- to make those marks? |
40264 | You realised the responsibility you incurred? |
40264 | You saw them? |
40264 | You see, I was giving them Elocution-- they''re learning the_ Incident in the French Camp_--you know? |
40264 | You see, it was my fault? |
40264 | You think her the obstacle? |
40264 | You think it''s all silly imaginings, then? |
40264 | You think me a frantic old clucking hen, do n''t you? 40264 You think she has genius?" |
40264 | You think,he said,"that she would be content with me-- with marriage as a career? |
40264 | You want to think so? |
40264 | You went up again? |
40264 | You were expecting-- Louise? |
40264 | You wo n''t be annoyed? |
40264 | You would n''t make fun? |
40264 | You would n''t tell any one? 40264 You''ll come to- morrow? |
40264 | You''ll enjoy that? |
40264 | You''ll excuse me, wo n''t you? 40264 You''ll write to me, wo n''t you?" |
40264 | You''re sure? |
40264 | You''ve answered it already? 40264 You? |
40264 | You? |
40264 | You? |
40264 | You? |
40264 | You? |
40264 | Your engagement ring, was n''t it? |
40264 | Your friend--''Clare''--Miss----? |
40264 | _ Is_ anything wrong? |
40264 | _ My_ engagement ring? |
40264 | _ To the high road where the cripple-- where the cripple_----Oh, Miss Hartill,she cried imploringly,"is n''t it enough?" |
40264 | A brat to play with? |
40264 | A few words from Miss Hartill-- a prompting or two-- a leading question-- could have broken the ice of your shyness for you, eh? |
40264 | A garbled version of that last interview? |
40264 | A home? |
40264 | A plum, a cherry and a fig? |
40264 | A tin- opener? |
40264 | Affection? |
40264 | After all, was she not worrying herself unduly? |
40264 | After all, what did it matter? |
40264 | After all, what real difference could it make to Louise?... |
40264 | After all, what''s a shilling''s worth of crockery a week compared with a good cook? |
40264 | After all-- why should she bother to change? |
40264 | Agatha?" |
40264 | Ah, yes-- they''re a lovely colour, are n''t they?" |
40264 | Alicia was flatteringly in need of her help for the Easter church decorations, and how could Alwynne refuse? |
40264 | All these?" |
40264 | Always afraid of breaking rules? |
40264 | Alwynne caught her up uneasily--"Clare-- you''re not going to scold? |
40264 | Alwynne spoke with eyes fixed upon the dexterous fingers--"You challenged me, do n''t you remember, Clare? |
40264 | Alwynne''s"Oh?" |
40264 | Alwynne-- what about you?" |
40264 | Am I not neglecting this? |
40264 | Am I to be disobeyed by my own children? |
40264 | And Elsbeth? |
40264 | And I said-- why on earth did n''t she complain to you? |
40264 | And Jean? |
40264 | And how is Elsbeth, and why did n''t you bring her with you? |
40264 | And how much extra work have you, Louise?" |
40264 | And if the apostles could n''t, could Christ Himself? |
40264 | And in what unholy school had she learned it all-- this baby of thirteen? |
40264 | And she never looks at her god''s feet, does she? |
40264 | And the next, and the next? |
40264 | And then to say what I did? |
40264 | And then, to Henrietta again,"I suppose the gong will go in a minute?" |
40264 | And this play says-- do you remember? |
40264 | And what on earth would staff and school say? |
40264 | And when had Louise been late before? |
40264 | And when she is squeezed dry and flung aside, who will the next victim be? |
40264 | And when she was dead, poor baby, ca n''t you trust God to have taken charge of her? |
40264 | And why were they both laughing like that? |
40264 | And you kindly read it to us for her? |
40264 | And you never told?" |
40264 | And you said, would I ever have the patience, let alone my clumsy fingers? |
40264 | And you? |
40264 | Another point-- could Authority, surveying matters impartially, see any harm in running down town when she was out of candy? |
40264 | Any message?" |
40264 | Any of you fools? |
40264 | Anything else?" |
40264 | Are n''t you coming to see me off?" |
40264 | Are n''t you ever curious, Louise? |
40264 | Are n''t you going to be friends?" |
40264 | Are the girls working properly? |
40264 | Are there any letters?" |
40264 | Are those big ones daffodils, or jonquils, or narcissi? |
40264 | Are you always going to be angry? |
40264 | Are you aware of the time?" |
40264 | Are you aware of the time?" |
40264 | Are you five or fifty? |
40264 | Are you going to let me feel neglected?" |
40264 | Are you going to run away?" |
40264 | Are you going to spoil my afternoon?" |
40264 | Are you happy?" |
40264 | Are you her messenger?" |
40264 | Are you ill? |
40264 | Are you or are you not going to back me up? |
40264 | Are you so afraid of being bored? |
40264 | Are you sure it rang?" |
40264 | Are you sure of your words?" |
40264 | Are you, Elsbeth? |
40264 | Are you?" |
40264 | Awfully sorry, of course, but why could n''t Alwynne''s dear Elsbeth go by herself? |
40264 | Beauties?" |
40264 | Bennett?" |
40264 | Better than shouting Constance.... What was it she had asked for? |
40264 | Blood? |
40264 | But Alwynne always understood.... That was the comfort of Alwynne, that she always understood.... Why did n''t she come? |
40264 | But Alwynne-- what had she ever done to Alwynne? |
40264 | But Clare before Roger? |
40264 | But Clare knew all about girls, and what did she, Alwynne, know? |
40264 | But He had n''t...."God helps?" |
40264 | But Louise?" |
40264 | But Roger? |
40264 | But do n''t you remember?" |
40264 | But does n''t all this dreadful business show you? |
40264 | But having a Cinderella on the premises-- eh?" |
40264 | But how can she affect Alwynne and me? |
40264 | But how? |
40264 | But if Clare were in to- day''s humour still? |
40264 | But if I didn''t-- if the poor baby was overtired and overworked-- is it your fault? |
40264 | But if she had not returned? |
40264 | But keep Alwynne till I come to- morrow, wo n''t you?" |
40264 | But not afterwards? |
40264 | But she drank the tea, and cheered up so when I told her Clare was pleased with her acting----""Was she?" |
40264 | But suppose, one day-- you dreamt it while you were awake----?" |
40264 | But the point is, if he could n''t, with all his faith-- could the apostles? |
40264 | But this place is so dark, she might think it was night here, do n''t you think?" |
40264 | But to herself,"Why am I losing my temper over these silly trifles?" |
40264 | But to return to Napoleon and the Lower Third----""You do n''t think she''s hurt herself?" |
40264 | But us?--girls? |
40264 | But what am I to do? |
40264 | But what are they, Alwynne? |
40264 | But what can I do? |
40264 | But what has he to do with Alwynne?" |
40264 | But what''s that got to do with Alwynne''s caring for me, if I am lucky enough to make her? |
40264 | But when, again, had that suppressed and self- effacing personality shown interest in any living thing save Alwynne herself? |
40264 | But when? |
40264 | But which of them had knowledge of the true Clare, who shall say? |
40264 | But why? |
40264 | But with Roger-- what was the use of pretending to Roger? |
40264 | But would not Miss Loveday take another cup of tea? |
40264 | But you say that does n''t matter-- it''s just Old Testament? |
40264 | But you''ve shown it to me and I''ve told you that you''ve learned to work well, so it has fulfilled its purpose, has n''t it? |
40264 | But, you know, Cousin Elsbeth-- to be henpecked by Alwynne-- don''t you think it will be quite pleasant?" |
40264 | But-- how does she talk of me, Elsbeth, if she does at all, that is?" |
40264 | But_ I_ know----""What do you know?" |
40264 | Ca n''t I read you like a book? |
40264 | Ca n''t I? |
40264 | Ca n''t I?" |
40264 | Ca n''t you conceive that in so doing you did assume a burden, a very real one? |
40264 | Ca n''t you give God credit for a little common humanity? |
40264 | Ca n''t you see her, Roger-- with children? |
40264 | Ca n''t you see? |
40264 | Ca n''t you see?" |
40264 | Ca n''t you trust me to understand my girls? |
40264 | Ca n''t you understand? |
40264 | Can Authority, as a matter of cold common- sense, see any use in bothering over cupboards for just three months or so? |
40264 | Can it be that Authority expects her to keep her old bureau tidy, when she''s had a maid all her life? |
40264 | Can you imagine what that is after these months? |
40264 | China, is n''t it? |
40264 | Clare must be out.... Gone to the post? |
40264 | Clare pacified her; then, as she left the kitchen,"Miss Durand?" |
40264 | Clare safe and Roger drowning? |
40264 | Clare would be pleased, would n''t she? |
40264 | Content? |
40264 | Could n''t Young America just mark off the whole concern and be done with it? |
40264 | Could n''t she see how tired Alwynne was, how badly in need of soap and water and a brush and comb, let alone a prettier frock? |
40264 | Could n''t that be got over? |
40264 | Could n''t we ask some one to spend the day with us?" |
40264 | Could n''t you stop being angry?" |
40264 | Could you indicate exactly how my blighting effect is produced? |
40264 | Cover it up? |
40264 | D''you hear? |
40264 | D''you know, that was what first made me like you, Roger-- your voice? |
40264 | D''you think I am going to stand this sort of thing? |
40264 | Darwin says, we just grew-- doesn''t he? |
40264 | Denny?" |
40264 | Did I push myself forward?" |
40264 | Did an arm pick up the legs and head, or how? |
40264 | Did n''t Elsbeth always have Alwynne? |
40264 | Did n''t she tell you?" |
40264 | Did n''t you get that impression? |
40264 | Did n''t you wake up?" |
40264 | Did she tell you? |
40264 | Did they really think her weak and enslaved? |
40264 | Did you get in a row about the rehearsal?" |
40264 | Did you get in a row?" |
40264 | Did you see that?" |
40264 | Did you think her manner strained? |
40264 | Do I make a habit of keeping So- and- so in? |
40264 | Do I remember that Dolly Brown had measles three terms ago? |
40264 | Do I sound an awful prig? |
40264 | Do children really take their religion so seriously?... |
40264 | Do n''t forget to turn the light off, will you, when you''ve finished?" |
40264 | Do n''t you believe in God?" |
40264 | Do n''t you coach her for the grammar? |
40264 | Do n''t you control the time- table? |
40264 | Do n''t you ever give plays at your school?" |
40264 | Do n''t you realise your enormous responsibility? |
40264 | Do n''t you really know?" |
40264 | Do n''t you remember? |
40264 | Do n''t you remember?" |
40264 | Do n''t you see?" |
40264 | Do n''t you think she will be pleased?" |
40264 | Do n''t you think so, Roger?" |
40264 | Do n''t you think that her fears, her terrors, may have haunted you as well as your own? |
40264 | Do n''t you want any tea?" |
40264 | Do n''t you want to hear the new Masefield before you go home?" |
40264 | Do n''t you, darling?" |
40264 | Do you believe in fairies, Miss Hartill?" |
40264 | Do you believe that a something really physical sat that night in the king''s seat? |
40264 | Do you flatter yourself that you understand Alwynne? |
40264 | Do you know I''ve been away seven weeks? |
40264 | Do you know it''s only half- past three?" |
40264 | Do you know the feeling, when you ache to give people things? |
40264 | Do you know the time? |
40264 | Do you know what I mean? |
40264 | Do you know what I think, Miss Hartill?" |
40264 | Do you know what an egoist is, Louise?" |
40264 | Do you know you''re a very naughty child to take advantage of the confusion?" |
40264 | Do you know, my dear, you''re looking rather grubby?" |
40264 | Do you know, she almost began to think it was her fault, not to have seen what was going on? |
40264 | Do you know?" |
40264 | Do you mean that she did n''t want to leave? |
40264 | Do you mean that she had to?" |
40264 | Do you mean to say you did n''t hear? |
40264 | Do you mind?" |
40264 | Do you realise that we''ve only another three months?" |
40264 | Do you realise what you are doing, Miss Durand? |
40264 | Do you really care-- so much?" |
40264 | Do you really mind?" |
40264 | Do you remember Macbeth and Banquo? |
40264 | Do you remember...?" |
40264 | Do you remember? |
40264 | Do you sincerely say so? |
40264 | Do you think I care what becomes of it? |
40264 | Do you think I do n''t know your effect on the children at the school? |
40264 | Do you think I''m mad? |
40264 | Do you think I''m not to be trusted? |
40264 | Do you think I''m such a failure? |
40264 | Do you think it was the man from his grave? |
40264 | Do you think she looks well?" |
40264 | Do you understand? |
40264 | Do you want the house a foot deep in dust? |
40264 | Does Alwynne_ know_ she''s engaged to you?" |
40264 | Does anything make you think it was not an accident?" |
40264 | Does it-- did it hurt him, do you think, the falling?" |
40264 | Does n''t anybody ever teach them to do their hair?" |
40264 | Does n''t it want to tell lies, then?" |
40264 | Does n''t she, Miss Hartill?" |
40264 | Does n''t the night smell delicious?" |
40264 | During a lull in the hubbub Marion called to her down the table--"How many pages?" |
40264 | Eh? |
40264 | Either she went mad-- which I do n''t believe, do you?" |
40264 | Either you''re indulging in morbid imaginings-- or you''ve something to go on?" |
40264 | Elsbeth wanted Alwynne? |
40264 | Elsbeth, darling Elsbeth-- but a little limited, perhaps? |
40264 | Even The Dears are only very distant cousins, are n''t they? |
40264 | Everlastingly spying and hinting----""Hinting what?" |
40264 | Evidently a scorching afternoon with that delightful friend of hers, to start with----""Ah?" |
40264 | Fairyland must be somewhere, must n''t it? |
40264 | Fifty quid, eh? |
40264 | For the first time her attitude to Clare struck her as contemptible.... What had Roger said? |
40264 | For, but for you, Who''d look At My Book? |
40264 | Girls or boys?" |
40264 | Go visiting and leave the housekeeping to Alwynne''s tender mercies? |
40264 | Great on bulbs and roses, I believe.__ By the way_ is_ he a relation? |
40264 | Had Alwynne enjoyed herself? |
40264 | Had Clare never got into a row for untidiness in her own young days? |
40264 | Had he just? |
40264 | Had she been to blame? |
40264 | Had that adroit change of subject been accidental? |
40264 | Has it never occurred to you that you''ll marry some day?" |
40264 | Has n''t Elsbeth----?" |
40264 | Has n''t she just been here? |
40264 | Has she worried herself to death? |
40264 | Have a candy? |
40264 | Have a candy?" |
40264 | Have a candy?" |
40264 | Have a candy?" |
40264 | Have n''t I asked you-- haven''t I begged you to come out with me one day? |
40264 | Have n''t I given it? |
40264 | Have n''t you any work?" |
40264 | Have n''t you been bullying me since I came on account of yesterday?" |
40264 | Have sent her, perhaps, a postcard? |
40264 | Have you a time- table?" |
40264 | Have you any objection?" |
40264 | Have you ever seen a Lower Fifth French lesson? |
40264 | Have you ever seen a spider smile?" |
40264 | Have you ever seen her sidling out of a room when she thought she was n''t wanted? |
40264 | Have you ever seen larches in bud? |
40264 | Have you forgotten Louise? |
40264 | Have you got too much to do?" |
40264 | Have you noticed it?" |
40264 | Have you quite finished? |
40264 | He considered her ingenuous countenance--"If it''s not a delicate question-- how many do you know?" |
40264 | He did n''t rise? |
40264 | He felt oddly responsible for the girl; wished that he had some one to consult about her.... His aunts? |
40264 | He had a wife, had n''t he? |
40264 | He just said''How do you do?'' |
40264 | He was an odd sort of a man.... She wondered what Clare would think of him? |
40264 | Headaches? |
40264 | Hear that? |
40264 | Helen? |
40264 | Henrietta countered coldly--"I am sorry that I shall be obliged to undeceive her; that is, unless you apologise----""To Miss Hartill? |
40264 | Her mother has telephoned----Where is the class? |
40264 | Her own babies?" |
40264 | Her work is as good as usual?" |
40264 | Here, under me?" |
40264 | Honestly? |
40264 | How can you weigh the most intimate, the most ideal friendship against the chance of getting married?" |
40264 | How could I care for her so, if she were what you and Elsbeth think?" |
40264 | How could I go when she wants me-- when she''s so good to me?" |
40264 | How dare you speak of Clare? |
40264 | How dare you speak of my friends like that? |
40264 | How dare you speak to me at all?" |
40264 | How did you find it out?" |
40264 | How did you find it out?" |
40264 | How is her extra work getting on, by the way? |
40264 | How long have you been with me, Henrietta? |
40264 | How long was he staying? |
40264 | How many men do you know, in real life, well enough to discuss the suffrage with?" |
40264 | How quick he had been-- and how kind.... Or had he noticed nothing? |
40264 | How shall we ever get through it?" |
40264 | How should I know? |
40264 | How were The Dears and how did Dene spare him? |
40264 | How, just now?" |
40264 | Hurt? |
40264 | Hypnotism, maybe? |
40264 | I could be sure she was asleep-- dead-- like last year''s leaves----""But why should God complicate matters?" |
40264 | I did n''t altogether, either-- you do believe that?" |
40264 | I did n''t know you and Mademoiselle Charette were such intimates?" |
40264 | I did when I was a schoolgirl even, did n''t you?" |
40264 | I do n''t mind it for myself so much-- but for a baby that ca n''t understand why----It is n''t possible, is it?" |
40264 | I have n''t spoken to her yet, but the children approve, do n''t they?" |
40264 | I hope you were a good girl-- did as she told you?" |
40264 | I like her, but----""But what?" |
40264 | I like the sisters-- you know--''Fine Shades and Nice Feeling''----""Why?" |
40264 | I must ask you to punish her severely.... Keep her in? |
40264 | I only thought----""That I took more notice of Louise than was wise?" |
40264 | I only thought----""That Louise-- your precious Louise----""She''s trying so awfully hard----""Yes?" |
40264 | I owe her-- all my mind----""And your peace?" |
40264 | I say, she can act, ca n''t she? |
40264 | I suppose one must bandage it?" |
40264 | I suppose you heard that there was a midnight feast last night?" |
40264 | I told you what she said to me? |
40264 | I tried to make her see----Oh,"she cried passionately,"why did n''t I try harder? |
40264 | I want all your thoughts now----There were signs----?" |
40264 | I was thinking----""Two hours on end? |
40264 | I wonder how much of my coaching in this act she''ll condescend to leave in?" |
40264 | I''d like to know what you''re talking about, Roger, if you do n''t mind?" |
40264 | I''m somewhat worried about Alwynne----""Again?" |
40264 | I''ve been reading----""Ah?" |
40264 | I''ve made an awful hash-- didn''t you?" |
40264 | If Cynthia were going away to Paris, America, never to be seen again, what harm in talking-- in saying for once what she felt? |
40264 | If Elsbeth chooses to complain----What affair is it of yours anyhow? |
40264 | If I do think you mad, it just does n''t matter, does it? |
40264 | If I may criticise-- acting is not my department-- but the Prince Arthur? |
40264 | If any one stands about and watches-- you know what I mean----""Are you proposing to cook my lunch?" |
40264 | If it were possible, that Mother-- not Mamma, cheery, obtuse Mamma of nursery and parlour-- but Mother, the shadow of the attic-- had come back? |
40264 | If only she need not go to school.... Why-- why had God cheated her? |
40264 | If she was to be so tender of the feelings of all the silly girls who sentimentalised over her, where would it end, at all? |
40264 | If she went quietly away, and said nothing about it? |
40264 | If you are to blame, how much more I? |
40264 | If you do-- what about me?" |
40264 | If you insist on running the entire show----""Then you did think that?" |
40264 | In a new world, begin a new life.... Why not? |
40264 | In a thousand years? |
40264 | In any way feasible?" |
40264 | In the next five seconds? |
40264 | Is all my star- dust gone?" |
40264 | Is all that food to be wasted?" |
40264 | Is it possible? |
40264 | Is it probable? |
40264 | Is n''t it cool and quiet? |
40264 | Is n''t it disgraceful? |
40264 | Is n''t it inexplicable? |
40264 | Is n''t she a dear, Roger, for all her little ways?" |
40264 | Is n''t she? |
40264 | Is n''t that virtue?" |
40264 | Is n''t there a road?" |
40264 | Is n''t this a ridiculous conversation? |
40264 | Is that the idea?" |
40264 | Is that the velveteen boy in the big album?" |
40264 | Is that what you mean?" |
40264 | Is the room too warm for you? |
40264 | It danced before her; its grin spanned the horizon; it inhabited her mind; it was reversible like a Liberty satin; it ticked like a clock:"What next? |
40264 | It is most kind of Miss Loveday; but-- wasn''t it chiefly your doing, Alwynne? |
40264 | It made Alwynne look such a fool.... How was she to know that Elsbeth would have this whim? |
40264 | It reminds me-- do you remember that performance of hers last autumn with_ Childe Roland_? |
40264 | It sounds harsh, does n''t it? |
40264 | It was Clare''s birthday... and Clare liked her to be fine.... She wondered, with a little skip of excitement, if Clare had got her parcel yet? |
40264 | It was a pity.... She wondered if he wanted to read, or if she ought to go on talking? |
40264 | It was dullish last year, was n''t it?" |
40264 | It was funny that people could be afraid to die.... She wondered if ghosts snored, and if you heard them, if your grave were very close? |
40264 | It was her place.... She always stood there.... Or did she? |
40264 | It was n''t a large wood.... Perhaps he had better go and see... and warn her off the lawn coming back? |
40264 | It was queer that being so happy should make her want to cry; it was comical, was n''t it? |
40264 | It was too bad of Louise.... And what had Alwynne been thinking of? |
40264 | It was, was n''t it? |
40264 | It would not be rude? |
40264 | It''s a fairy tale to you, is n''t it?" |
40264 | It''s all cranks and simple lifers and socialists though, is n''t it?" |
40264 | It''s no use calling?" |
40264 | It''s queer that I have n''t been homesick, is n''t it?" |
40264 | Just for a little while, Mother? |
40264 | Just then? |
40264 | Keep Alwynne for me, wo n''t you?" |
40264 | Kings? |
40264 | Let me see-- who takes them before you?" |
40264 | Let''s go, Louise? |
40264 | Like a house on fire, I suppose?" |
40264 | Louise is a dear child, but hardly suitable, eh?" |
40264 | Mademoiselle? |
40264 | May I get vases? |
40264 | May I go now, please?" |
40264 | May I go now?" |
40264 | May I take these, perhaps?" |
40264 | May I? |
40264 | Might Clare order a cup of Indian tea to be made for Miss Loveday? |
40264 | Mind?" |
40264 | Miss Durand-- I suppose there''s no news?" |
40264 | Miss Durand-- do you think she''s angry? |
40264 | Miss Hartill, did you ever see a Good Person?" |
40264 | Miss Marsham engaged her without consulting me-- or you either, I suppose? |
40264 | Miss Marsham must excuse her; she had her position.... One house? |
40264 | Miss Marsham was looking out for a successor.... She herself had been sounded.... Should she? |
40264 | Miss Marsham, will you believe me? |
40264 | Muffins?" |
40264 | Must I eat lobster salad every night?" |
40264 | Must one be in love like a book?" |
40264 | Must you go on writing? |
40264 | My dear, what has Clare-- oh, yes, she''s your dearest friend-- but what has any friend, any woman, got to say to us two? |
40264 | My tenants leave in June, did you know? |
40264 | Nevertheless, why must Elsbeth show Roger the kitchen? |
40264 | Nevertheless-- where''s the time- table?" |
40264 | Next what? |
40264 | Next what? |
40264 | Next what?" |
40264 | No two girls are quite the same, are they?" |
40264 | No, who was-- who was-- The Other was not Mother-- but if not, who?--who?--who?-- A chorus of angels took up the chant: Who? |
40264 | Not a sign of Clare? |
40264 | Not only to- day, but always? |
40264 | Not pretending, because he was afraid? |
40264 | Not the attics?" |
40264 | Nothing against them... dearest women alive... but hardly capable of understanding Alwynne, were they? |
40264 | Now an American girl----""How do you mean?" |
40264 | Now and then, Roger?" |
40264 | Now do you believe me?'' |
40264 | Now, are n''t you? |
40264 | Now, were you satisfied? |
40264 | Oh, Elsbeth, why ca n''t we live in the country? |
40264 | Oh, Miss Hartill, what does it all mean? |
40264 | Oh, Roger, what can I do?" |
40264 | Oh, ca n''t you hear? |
40264 | Oh, do n''t you see?" |
40264 | Oh, how can you let her touch it?" |
40264 | Oh, she must come for Saturday, and what would Elsbeth say to that? |
40264 | Oh, what shall I do?" |
40264 | Oh, what was it? |
40264 | Oh, wo n''t you understand?" |
40264 | Oh, you dear, worried woman,"he cried, laughing at her intent face,"do you think I want to go away from Alwynne? |
40264 | Oh-- those cousins of yours?" |
40264 | On the fourth step Clare hesitated, and turned--"Alwynne-- come to me for Christmas?" |
40264 | One does n''t exactly enjoy making a fool of oneself, does one, Miss Hartill? |
40264 | Or could Young America hire a girl-- like she did in Paris? |
40264 | Or do n''t you believe----?" |
40264 | Or overdoing that? |
40264 | Or secret influences of the most sinister? |
40264 | Ought she not to have foreseen the danger and guarded against it? |
40264 | Ought we to be going home?" |
40264 | Outsiders? |
40264 | Perhaps a hint----? |
40264 | Perhaps it was money-- half the school in her pay? |
40264 | Perhaps there is n''t God?" |
40264 | Perhaps there is n''t an afterwards? |
40264 | Please, Mother?" |
40264 | Possibly-- probably-- oh, she conceded the"probably"--Clare had missed Alwynne badly.... Had not Elsbeth, too, missed Alwynne? |
40264 | Quite? |
40264 | Ready?" |
40264 | Roger thought it would be rather fun to live there, tennis or no tennis-- didn''t the tulips think so? |
40264 | Sentimental, perhaps? |
40264 | Shall I call for you? |
40264 | Shall I never be frightened again? |
40264 | Shall she never break away? |
40264 | Shall she oscillate indefinitely between you and me, spend her whole youth in sustaining two old maids? |
40264 | She did not suggest that Miss Marsham could be serious-- that was impossible.... Miss Marsham was serious? |
40264 | She had always despised poor Jeanne du Barrie: but Miss Hartill raging would be harder to face than a mob...."What have they done?" |
40264 | She had come as a lover... she had left as a stranger... what in any god''s name, had she guessed? |
40264 | She had hardly listened, she was absorbed in her thoughts; but she caught at his last words----"In this life? |
40264 | She has refused him, and you now wish for my help in coercing her into an apparently distasteful engagement?" |
40264 | She heard the voice of a prefect--"Who is it in there? |
40264 | She knew what I felt at the time-- why not have told me?" |
40264 | She laughed at the idea as she looked for the path-- what were flowers for, but picking? |
40264 | She smiled, with a touch of irritation-- did Alwynne ever forget any one, she wondered? |
40264 | She spoke again--"Mother, I know it''s all spoiled here, but could n''t you come? |
40264 | She supposed Clare Hartill realised how young Louise was, was right in allowing her to work so hard? |
40264 | She supposed Prince Arthur was really fond of Hubert? |
40264 | She wants friendship-- can''t I give it? |
40264 | She was crazy-- don''t you think?" |
40264 | She went on--"People never come back when they''re dead, do they?" |
40264 | She wondered how they collected themselves afterwards? |
40264 | She wondered idly if this was how soldiers felt, when a shell had blown them to pieces? |
40264 | She wondered if Lady Hamilton had minded his only having one eye and one arm? |
40264 | She wondered if the girl were working too hard.... Could that be at the root of the matter? |
40264 | She would speak to Elsbeth.... Perhaps the child needed a tonic? |
40264 | She''s been half living there, have n''t you, Alwynne?" |
40264 | She''s too keen, I think----""Yes?" |
40264 | She, who was responsible for all the household arrangements? |
40264 | Shelley? |
40264 | Should she have had bars put up to those old- fashioned windows? |
40264 | Shy? |
40264 | So pleased that, who knew, she might yet forgive the crime of the examination? |
40264 | So that is Mademoiselle Charette, is it? |
40264 | So you can just ease off on me-- d''you see? |
40264 | So you did n''t like him?" |
40264 | Suppose Miss Hartill had only one eye and one arm? |
40264 | Surely Elsbeth would enjoy having Clare to dinner? |
40264 | Surely you see the difference? |
40264 | Tell me what the matter is?" |
40264 | That I was a brute to Louise, I suppose?" |
40264 | That is all true, Miss Hartill?" |
40264 | That looks as if you thought me loyal and a good friend, does n''t it? |
40264 | That would be Friday-- a completed fortnight-- and Saturday was Clare''s birthday-- had Clare forgotten? |
40264 | The Swains want us to go to lunch, Jean, only we have n''t a day before Sunday, have we? |
40264 | The bazaar was barely over-- had Alwynne any idea of the clearing up there would be to do? |
40264 | The child in the green coat, in that scene-- ah, you remember? |
40264 | The fantastic qualities the mother had bequeathed, recreated her in the mind of her child, bringing vague comfort( who knows?) |
40264 | The miracles are just only a tale, perhaps?" |
40264 | The old women or the young men?" |
40264 | The thoughts came thicker-- thoughts of her mother still, of the dream presence that she would not feel again.... Never again? |
40264 | The verdict? |
40264 | The very man for Alwynne? |
40264 | The voice was surely his? |
40264 | Then there was nothing to upset the child?" |
40264 | Then, calmly,"Here-- put your finger here, will you?" |
40264 | Then, distractedly,"But why, Clare, why? |
40264 | Then, fiercely,"Well?" |
40264 | Then, suddenly:"What has Elsbeth been saying? |
40264 | Then, the formula off her tongue:"Miss Hartill, I do hope your head''s better?" |
40264 | Then, to the maid,"How on earth did you do it? |
40264 | Then, with a direct glance,"Has Miss Vigers got another post?" |
40264 | Then, with a frown--"Have you finished-- already?" |
40264 | Then, with a twinkle:"Reform''s an excellent thing, of course-- but why annex my class to experiment with?" |
40264 | There was Mother-- and the Other-- one was shape and one was shadow-- but which was real? |
40264 | There was Mother-- and the Other-- who was Mother? |
40264 | There was that bright girl who had faced her to- day with the little child in her arms... what was her name? |
40264 | There was wry pleasure in it, and, oh, what harm? |
40264 | There''s no need for you to dull your imagination on melodrama like-- what was it?" |
40264 | They would talk it over to- morrow... to- night... as soon as Alwynne came.... Was that thunder or a knocking? |
40264 | Think of to- day?" |
40264 | Thirteen? |
40264 | This the Miss Hartill of a hundred legends? |
40264 | This the Olympian to whom three- fourths of the school said its prayers? |
40264 | Twelve years ago, eh? |
40264 | Uncanny, is n''t it? |
40264 | Unless you want to get me into another row?" |
40264 | Very busy?" |
40264 | Was it as you wanted it?" |
40264 | Was it awfully expensive?" |
40264 | Was it not Clare who gave the school its latter- day reputation? |
40264 | Was it possible? |
40264 | Was it stage fright?" |
40264 | Was n''t it Mother? |
40264 | Was n''t it lucky? |
40264 | Was n''t it? |
40264 | Was n''t it? |
40264 | Was n''t there an echo of a step far down the street? |
40264 | Was she Gorgon to bring that look into their faces? |
40264 | Was she ambitious?" |
40264 | Was she being mean? |
40264 | Was she to know better than Clare? |
40264 | Was that why she had not said good- night to her? |
40264 | Was there not some one else? |
40264 | We wo n''t have incubators, will we?" |
40264 | We''ll eat muffins----""And read acres of books----""May I smoke?" |
40264 | Well-- and what do you think? |
40264 | Well-- think what you like-- what do I care?" |
40264 | Well-- what do you think of him? |
40264 | Were n''t you called? |
40264 | Were you having a bet?" |
40264 | Were you pleased? |
40264 | Were you scared? |
40264 | What a fool she was.... What a weak fool.... An instant''s courage-- one little second-- and peace for ever after.... Was n''t it worth while? |
40264 | What am I to do? |
40264 | What are the names of all these flowers? |
40264 | What are we elder folk for? |
40264 | What are you driving at?" |
40264 | What can I do? |
40264 | What could she do? |
40264 | What could she do? |
40264 | What could surprise one on this miraculous day? |
40264 | What did her foster people do?" |
40264 | What did it matter? |
40264 | What did she mean by keeping her waiting? |
40264 | What did you have for breakfast?" |
40264 | What do you bet me, Alwynne?" |
40264 | What do you know of what food costs?" |
40264 | What do you think of it?" |
40264 | What does it matter if you want her?" |
40264 | What does it matter telling some one a secret when you''ll never see them again? |
40264 | What does she mean? |
40264 | What frightened you in the wood? |
40264 | What had Alwynne heard? |
40264 | What had Clare done or left undone? |
40264 | What had Miss Hartill been about to allow it? |
40264 | What had happened? |
40264 | What had she done? |
40264 | What had she to do with a husband, and housewifery, and the bearing of children? |
40264 | What has made her so kind? |
40264 | What has she done?" |
40264 | What has she to say to you? |
40264 | What have I done? |
40264 | What have I done?" |
40264 | What have I done?" |
40264 | What have you been saying to Elsbeth?" |
40264 | What have you read?" |
40264 | What in the world is that disgraceful noise?" |
40264 | What is it that the country does to one''s mind? |
40264 | What is it? |
40264 | What is it? |
40264 | What is it?" |
40264 | What is one to do? |
40264 | What is one to do? |
40264 | What is the matter with you nowadays? |
40264 | What is the particular attraction there, by the way? |
40264 | What is there to be shy about? |
40264 | What is this mad idea you''ve got? |
40264 | What more can she want? |
40264 | What more can your man offer? |
40264 | What next? |
40264 | What next? |
40264 | What next?... |
40264 | What on earth has happened?" |
40264 | What possessed you?" |
40264 | What sort of a holiday had it been, if Alwynne could come back so thin, and tired, and colourless under her tan? |
40264 | What was Roger saying? |
40264 | What was he saying to her out there? |
40264 | What was it?" |
40264 | What was she like?" |
40264 | What was she? |
40264 | What was that? |
40264 | What was the matter with Elsbeth? |
40264 | What was wrong?" |
40264 | What will you do when your glamour''s gone? |
40264 | What would Roger think of them? |
40264 | What would he think of her? |
40264 | What would poor Louise think if she heard? |
40264 | What would she do with me, for a whole day?" |
40264 | What would you have done?" |
40264 | What''s she driving at?" |
40264 | What''s the matter?" |
40264 | What''s the matter?" |
40264 | What''s wrong with getting married, Alwynne?" |
40264 | What, if you please, is an old lady to do? |
40264 | What? |
40264 | What? |
40264 | Whatever did you find to say?" |
40264 | Whatever would your aunt say?" |
40264 | When Marion showed us the things she was making for her sister''s trousseau? |
40264 | When did you dream those faces? |
40264 | When had he arrived? |
40264 | Where did they begin? |
40264 | Where did you discover her?" |
40264 | Where did you pick it up? |
40264 | Where have you been?" |
40264 | Where''s Elsbeth?" |
40264 | Where''s Parker? |
40264 | Where''s the----?" |
40264 | Where?" |
40264 | Which is your favourite stone?" |
40264 | Who are you, to set Miss Hartill''s conscience itching? |
40264 | Who had split the staff into an enthusiastic majority and a minority that concealed its dislike? |
40264 | Who was she before she was turned into that?" |
40264 | Who would n''t be?" |
40264 | Who''s been worrying you? |
40264 | Who''s that?" |
40264 | Who''s the problem? |
40264 | Who? |
40264 | Why are n''t you content to be friends, as we were at Dene? |
40264 | Why are you always saying unkind things?" |
40264 | Why are you grown so different? |
40264 | Why are you running away? |
40264 | Why ca n''t cook have the other attic? |
40264 | Why ca n''t you be nice to me always?" |
40264 | Why ca n''t you believe it, if every one else does?" |
40264 | Why could n''t Elsbeth go alone? |
40264 | Why did you disappear? |
40264 | Why did you send me this, Alwynne?" |
40264 | Why do n''t you leave her to herself? |
40264 | Why do you hate her so?" |
40264 | Why do you? |
40264 | Why ever not?" |
40264 | Why had he come? |
40264 | Why has n''t Parker brought the biscuits? |
40264 | Why have n''t you ever been to see them, Elsbeth?" |
40264 | Why is Winifred Hawkins allowed to sit with the light in her eyes? |
40264 | Why is he going?" |
40264 | Why not have Clare to tea one day? |
40264 | Why not have come to me for advice as you used to? |
40264 | Why not, Miss Le Creevy? |
40264 | Why not? |
40264 | Why on earth do n''t you leave her alone?" |
40264 | Why on earth had none of them appealed to the head mistress? |
40264 | Why should she?" |
40264 | Why will you always be so sure of yourself? |
40264 | Why wo n''t you talk? |
40264 | Why, she coached Louise, did n''t she?" |
40264 | Why, with the books you''ve read----Haven''t you read the Bible ever?" |
40264 | Why? |
40264 | Why?" |
40264 | Why?" |
40264 | Why?" |
40264 | Will nobody send for a doctor?" |
40264 | Will you come and see me off? |
40264 | Will you come to supper?" |
40264 | Will you let me get to my desk, please, Miss Vigers? |
40264 | Will you never be good to me again as you used to be?" |
40264 | Will you remember?" |
40264 | Will you take off your furs? |
40264 | Will you take this chair? |
40264 | Will you undertake to remind me? |
40264 | With you?" |
40264 | Wo n''t you go home now?" |
40264 | Wo n''t you please sit down? |
40264 | Wo n''t you pour out?" |
40264 | Wo n''t you sit down and smell your lilacs and let me talk to you comfortably?" |
40264 | Wo n''t you sit down while I get my things on?" |
40264 | Would Miss Hartill have remembered? |
40264 | Would any girl-- any English girl-- conceivably behave as she has? |
40264 | Would it be fair? |
40264 | Would n''t you be-- if you could make people happy?" |
40264 | Would n''t you just try it?" |
40264 | Would n''t you like a bunch?" |
40264 | Would n''t you rather know about the life of Buddha than the war of Jenkins''s ear? |
40264 | Would n''t you?" |
40264 | Would she say her prayers on her way to bed still, or had Clare''s little, calculated shrug stopped that sort of thing for many a long day? |
40264 | Would you care at all?" |
40264 | Would you like me to, really? |
40264 | Would you like some tea? |
40264 | Would you like to come and spend the rest of the day with me?" |
40264 | Would you like to know? |
40264 | Would, in her place, Authority be able to keep tally? |
40264 | Yes, Martha might put her to bed.... Why not? |
40264 | Yes, it had made her cry-- the pure happiness.... Was n''t it silly? |
40264 | Yet Alwynne had promised many things.... What had she done to Alwynne? |
40264 | Yet how could she suggest it? |
40264 | Yet should she suggest it? |
40264 | Yet surely it was Miss Hartill''s voice in the form- room? |
40264 | Yet that curious whim the other day-- what had it meant? |
40264 | Yet was n''t it true? |
40264 | Yet who so pleasant as Alwynne when she was with him? |
40264 | You ca n''t mistake it, can you? |
40264 | You could n''t talk like that if----""If what?" |
40264 | You did expect me to tea?" |
40264 | You do n''t mind, do you?" |
40264 | You do n''t think it was a bad cut, though?" |
40264 | You do n''t, do you?" |
40264 | You gave my message to the Fifths?" |
40264 | You know you explained the fourth dimension to us the other day?" |
40264 | You know you''d think me a pig if I did, now would n''t you?" |
40264 | You like her, do n''t you?" |
40264 | You must have some one to cook your supper for you, must n''t you?" |
40264 | You ought to-- you''re fourteen-- it''s absurd-- not knowing about things-- shall I tell you?" |
40264 | You said you believed in God?" |
40264 | You see-- You wo n''t tell, Clare?" |
40264 | You spoke to her about the change of class?" |
40264 | You stay to lunch to- day, do n''t you?" |
40264 | You take the Lower Third from twelve- fifteen, do n''t you?" |
40264 | You teach, do n''t you? |
40264 | You understand that, of course? |
40264 | You understand? |
40264 | You were very glad to see me-- now were n''t you?" |
40264 | You will be judicious?" |
40264 | You would like that, Alwynne, eh?" |
40264 | You would n''t ever get really tired of me, would you?" |
40264 | You would n''t talk me over?" |
40264 | You''re none the wiser, are you? |
40264 | You''re not an egoist? |
40264 | You''re not cross, Elsbeth? |
40264 | You''re not sacred, are you?" |
40264 | You''re rather glum to- day, are n''t you?" |
40264 | You''ve enjoyed yourself, have n''t you?" |
40264 | You''ve quite made up your mind?" |
40264 | You?" |
40264 | Young America will worry along somehow, but it seemed kind of foolish, did n''t it? |
40264 | Your aunt said that, did she?" |
40264 | Your handwriting----?" |
40264 | _ You have chosen your fault well, I really can not laugh at it._ Do you remember? |
40264 | after controlling the entire school''s economy? |
40264 | and if so, why so? |
40264 | she cried desperately,"wo n''t you even talk to me?" |
40264 | she said; and then:"You''ve gone away, have n''t you? |
40264 | the wife is ill-- and the husband, who cures people by praying-- he ca n''t cure her----""Well?" |
40264 | very like her... with eyes... and a smile... whom Louise knew so well? |
40264 | who? |
40264 | who? |
40264 | who? |
40264 | who? |
9468 | ''Did not I hope the same?'' |
9468 | ''Is it possible?'' |
9468 | ''What was it that disturbed me? |
9468 | --He stabbed me to the heart, Louisa!--Can he do this?--Then what can he not do? |
9468 | --I once more hesitated, and asked if Mr. Mac Fane were coming to pay me another visit? |
9468 | --Is it not, Frank? |
9468 | --The emotions I felt communicated themselves, and he looked sorrowfully up in my face, and asked--''Why, are not you mad, sir?'' |
9468 | --was repeated several times with great anxiety, and was answered in the affirmative by a man''s voice--''Do you hear him stir?'' |
9468 | A blow--? |
9468 | A fine cock and a bull story has been dinned in your ears? |
9468 | A hannot I a known her from the hour of her birth? |
9468 | A right? |
9468 | A what is money good for but to make money? |
9468 | A who can gain say it? |
9468 | A why not? |
9468 | A why not? |
9468 | ABIMELECH HENLEY LETTER LXVI_ Abimelech Henley to Frank Henley__ Wenbourne- Hill_ Why what be all a this here? |
9468 | After all I have written, your faith wanted the seal of such a lunatic? |
9468 | Ah, dear a me, what have I a bin talkin to your most gracious onnur? |
9468 | Am I a to be hufft and snufft o''this here manner, by a sir jimmee jingle brains of my own feedin and breedin? |
9468 | Am I certain I am guilty of no injustice to him? |
9468 | Am I not armed by principle and truth? |
9468 | Am I not convinced it is an inevitable duty? |
9468 | Am I so easily to be moved? |
9468 | Am I to be ramshaklt out of the super nakullums in spite o''my teeth? |
9468 | And a what is to be done then? |
9468 | And a whose fault is that? |
9468 | And am I not convinced there ought to be no impediment to our union? |
9468 | And am I not? |
9468 | And are you indeed as determined as you seem to be? |
9468 | And ask yourself whether I ought to marry a man who can not discover that I merit his confidence? |
9468 | And ast for a man''s a growin of poor, why a what had I to do, thof so be that some be wise and some be otherwise? |
9468 | And ast for a threatening about foreclosures, why what have I to say to a gentleman, if a will not redeem his mortgages when the time be? |
9468 | And ast to thwartin and knatterin and crossin the kindly sweet virginal soul, ever blessed as she is, in love, for what truly? |
9468 | And be laughed at? |
9468 | And can I not convince her that to act according to a bad system, when there is a better, were to descend to the ways of the vulgar? |
9468 | And can she approve, can she second his injustice?--Surely not!--Yet does she not dedicate her smiles to him, her conversation, her time? |
9468 | And can there be a more worthy? |
9468 | And can you swallow this tale of a tub? |
9468 | And did that say nothing? |
9468 | And did you serve out your apprenticeship? |
9468 | And do I not know her? |
9468 | And do not the ties of blood doubly enforce such wishes, in a brother''s behalf? |
9468 | And does not truth command us to consider beings exactly as they are, without any respect to this relationship, this self? |
9468 | And for what, truly? |
9468 | And how long have you been out of place? |
9468 | And how were they received? |
9468 | And how--? |
9468 | And if I were blind to his virtues, for whose safety he has been so often and so ardently active, who should do him justice? |
9468 | And if not is not that the way to ruin all? |
9468 | And if not they, what else? |
9468 | And if not, what have I done? |
9468 | And if so, is there any virtue of which she is incapable? |
9468 | And if the advice I give be good, what need you care whom it comes from? |
9468 | And in what year of the world was the discovery of truth to be made? |
9468 | And is he not now Mufti to the mules? |
9468 | And is it so certain that for me to love her is error, is weakness, is vice? |
9468 | And is not concealment an indirect falsehood? |
9468 | And is not despair itself preferable to that worst of fiends, suspense? |
9468 | And is not silence indirect falsehood? |
9468 | And is not that woman Anna St. Ives? |
9468 | And is she to be dazzled then by this glare? |
9468 | And must I alarm my friend, by sending this before I know the result of so dangerous an affair? |
9468 | And must I submit? |
9468 | And must those attentions cease, madam? |
9468 | And now that your onnur is a thinkin of a more of lovin kindness and mercies, to me and mine, why a what should I say now? |
9468 | And now what is to be done? |
9468 | And now what shall I say to my Louisa? |
9468 | And now, Oliver, how ought I to act? |
9468 | And now, Oliver, what am I to think? |
9468 | And now, after reviewing what has passed, tell me, Louisa, ought I to recede? |
9468 | And of him you have some doubts? |
9468 | And ought danger to deter me? |
9468 | And ought my name to be cited? |
9468 | And send in your aunt''s name? |
9468 | And shall I not rise equal to the bright example which she has set me? |
9468 | And shall I permit the authors of it to live undisturbed in their insult and triumph over me? |
9468 | And shall I, pretending as I do to love so pure, shall I become her accuser? |
9468 | And shall conscience insolently pretend to contradict the decree? |
9468 | And shall hope be thus cowed and killed, without my daring to exert the first and most unalienable of the rights of man, freedom of thought? |
9468 | And shall we do less for mind, eternal omnipotent mind? |
9468 | And so squire my lord Timothy Doodle has a bin flib gibberd, and queerumd, after all? |
9468 | And so you really think you have some morality on hand, a little stale or so but still sound, which you can bestow with advantage upon me? |
9468 | And then again what did I say to ee about missee? |
9468 | And then we shall see who will be a better gentleman, as your onnurable onnur wus most graciously pleased to kappaishus him? |
9468 | And then, pardn me your onnur, but for what, and for why, and for wherefore? |
9468 | And those you have made away with? |
9468 | And what Mac Fane''s? |
9468 | And what am I now? |
9468 | And what am I, or who, that I should do him this violence? |
9468 | And what am I? |
9468 | And what diddee ever do for me? |
9468 | And what indeed can we learn? |
9468 | And what is impracticable, where the will is resolved? |
9468 | And what is that to me? |
9468 | And what is your opinion of Mr. Henley? |
9468 | And what may you be an you please? |
9468 | And what must we do in return for this well- meant kindness? |
9468 | And what should I be if this person were my father? |
9468 | And what should he write, supposing he had paper? |
9468 | And when its powers are equal to those of Coke Clifton, ought we to wonder at its bold and rapid flights? |
9468 | And when, madam, may I now presume to hope? |
9468 | And where now might Timothy Tipkin sifflicate that it may behappen to be for to come from? |
9468 | And who can say but the wildurness might a begin to flourish? |
9468 | And who does he expect to propose? |
9468 | And who is it inspires that dread? |
9468 | And who is she? |
9468 | And who is so capable of being my judge, or who so anxious I should not err, as my dear Louisa, my friend, my sister? |
9468 | And who knows but I may teach him, yet, to do his office as he ought? |
9468 | And who was Mr. Aby Henley? |
9468 | And who was ever less partial, or more severe to himself? |
9468 | And why have I this propensity?--I know not!--Confound the fellow, why does he make himself so great a favourite? |
9468 | And why ought I not to be as just to him as to any other being on earth? |
9468 | And why should I tag regret to my sum of wretchedness? |
9468 | And why, have I constantly asked myself, should I repress or conceal sensations that are the dues of merit? |
9468 | And why? |
9468 | And why? |
9468 | And why? |
9468 | And will you really reflect, seriously, deeply, on the subject in question? |
9468 | And wish me to live? |
9468 | And would I have given her time to rally? |
9468 | And would exclaim against the bad example-- What ought to be done? |
9468 | And would you then upon principle, madam, marry a man whom you must despise? |
9468 | And yet what right have I to conclude that he reasons erroneously? |
9468 | And, affection out of the question, having such high duties to perform, must I fly from such an occasion, afflicting though it be? |
9468 | And, after injuring her, shall I hesitate at trampling upon them? |
9468 | And, if I have, will she not listen? |
9468 | And, if true, are we not desirous of making him our intimate? |
9468 | And, instead of the road, with the Gloucestershire hills and lessening clouds in perspective, have we not the cedar quincunx? |
9468 | And, the task being so very difficult, will it not be benevolent in me to lend her my assistance? |
9468 | And_ shall persist to the end of time?_ To the end of time. |
9468 | Announce him my rival? |
9468 | Answer, is she not? |
9468 | Appoint him her head- usher over me? |
9468 | Are not even the most tragical consequences to be feared from an opposition to Clifton? |
9468 | Are not my hopes well founded? |
9468 | Are not they the same thing? |
9468 | Are there two opinions concerning him? |
9468 | Are they just? |
9468 | Are they not now pulling me, weighing me, sinking me? |
9468 | Are you a duellist, Frank? |
9468 | Are you a man? |
9468 | Are you aware, Anna, of the state of your own affections? |
9468 | Are you certain of the truth of what you say? |
9468 | Are you determined to make a rascal like me admire, and love, and give place to all the fine affections of the heart? |
9468 | Are you so very determined? |
9468 | Art thou among the living? |
9468 | As soon as I could get dressed, I hastened away; and, arriving at the hotel, enquired for the knight? |
9468 | As we were going, I enquired if this keeper were an Irishman? |
9468 | At last I enquired if he could write and read? |
9468 | Ay!--What? |
9468 | Ay!--Which is that? |
9468 | Ay, why not? |
9468 | Be sincere: your mind revolts at it? |
9468 | But am I not reminded of the oppressive gift every time he dares to contradict me? |
9468 | But could I exist and forbear giving intimations? |
9468 | But did she not know it was impossible she should prevail? |
9468 | But do I not know you? |
9468 | But do they themselves complain? |
9468 | But how came you to leave him? |
9468 | But if dissimulation can be productive of this, is truth less powerful? |
9468 | But is it not too late? |
9468 | But is there not peril in her plan? |
9468 | But not a Mr. Henley? |
9468 | But still I ask what proof he has of being more in the right than other people? |
9468 | But still and once again, say you, what trap? |
9468 | But the houses!--They were differently built!--Could that be right? |
9468 | But then are they not capable of great harm? |
9468 | But then, having made your conditions, you now grant me your consent? |
9468 | But what can be done? |
9468 | But what do I wish? |
9468 | But what have I to do with truth, in a world from which I learned so much error that it was impossible for me to exist in it? |
9468 | But what is death? |
9468 | But what is to be done? |
9468 | But what know such hell- hounds of tenderness? |
9468 | But what of this?--Why these fears? |
9468 | But what sort of a preference? |
9468 | But what then? |
9468 | But what were my resolutions? |
9468 | But what were these? |
9468 | But what will not the touch of such unconsecrated rascals defile? |
9468 | But what will you do for ink, sir? |
9468 | But where is the mortal that can look and not love? |
9468 | But where is the remedy? |
9468 | But who are they? |
9468 | But why describe sensations to thee, Oliver, with which thou art so intimately acquainted? |
9468 | But why did her looks never till now speak her meaning as intelligibly as they do at present? |
9468 | But why should he be more certain that what he says is truth than other people? |
9468 | But why, Louisa, should you suppose it necessary to justify the conduct of Mrs. Clifton to me? |
9468 | But you will not be horsewhipped? |
9468 | But, while the lovely zealot thus descanted on splendid and half incomprehensible themes, what did I? |
9468 | By what effort, what artifice? |
9468 | By what fatal influence am I become her foe? |
9468 | By what right did I deny admission to the young lady''s woman, to inform her he was come to pay her his respects? |
9468 | By what strange necromancy am I thus metamorphosed, thus tamed? |
9468 | Calm?--Never, while this degraded being shall continue, shall such a moment come!--I calm? |
9468 | Can I command myself deaf when she sings, dead when she speaks, or rush into idiotism to avoid her enchantments? |
9468 | Can I not teach her how superior she is to the pretty misses who conform to such mistaken laws? |
9468 | Can I--? |
9468 | Can a desire to call forth all the best affections of the heart be misconstrued into something too degrading for expression? |
9468 | Can a general, thinkest thou, if he be really a fit person to be a general, feel otherwise in the heat of battle? |
9468 | Can any thing be more reasonable, more generous? |
9468 | Can conscience pretend to palliate conduct like this? |
9468 | Can guile so perfectly assume the garb of sincerity? |
9468 | Can her attention be caught by person, attracted by wit? |
9468 | Can hypocrisy be virtue? |
9468 | Can hypocrisy wear so impenetrable a mask? |
9468 | Can it be denied? |
9468 | Can it be? |
9468 | Can it fail? |
9468 | Can man do more? |
9468 | Can no sufferings move, no wrongs provoke, no taunts stir him to resentment? |
9468 | Can not Goliah crack a walnut? |
9468 | Can set forms and ceremonies unite mind to mind? |
9468 | Can the world be better warned by a body in gibbets, than by the active virtues of a once misguided but now enlightened understanding? |
9468 | Can there be any doubt? |
9468 | Can they coalesce? |
9468 | Can we be too careful not to deceive ourselves? |
9468 | Can we do less? |
9468 | Can we work miracles? |
9468 | Can you conjecture when, Fairfax? |
9468 | Can you find me better? |
9468 | Can you not perceive it is a word without a meaning? |
9468 | Can you speak thus of the present?--You know you cannot!--And wherefore unjustly insist on the past? |
9468 | Can you swim? |
9468 | Can you tell me his address-- where he lives? |
9468 | Can you write and read? |
9468 | Chastised? |
9468 | Clifton addressed himself to me-- What say you to this doctrine, madam? |
9468 | Clifton after an apology asked-- Does it relate to me? |
9468 | Clifton perceived the feelings of the company turn upon him with suspicion; but his art, must I add? |
9468 | Could I?--Durst I--? |
9468 | Could he get me a pen? |
9468 | Could lovers like these suspect each other? |
9468 | Could she, Fairfax, have a more convenient hypothesis? |
9468 | Could they basely do the wrong to ask for bond or pledge? |
9468 | Could you think it possible? |
9468 | Could you think it, Louisa? |
9468 | Courage? |
9468 | Dare I think myself wise? |
9468 | Dare I? |
9468 | Dare you look the world''s unjust contumelies stedfastly in the face? |
9468 | Dare you receive a blow, or suffer yourself falsely to be called liar, or coward, without seeking revenge, or what honour calls satisfaction? |
9468 | Dare you think the servant that cleans your shoes is your equal, unless not so wise or good a man; and your superior, if wiser and better? |
9468 | Did I not spurn it from me, the moment I was insulted by the offer? |
9468 | Did I or did I not do right, in shewing him how truly I admire and love his virtues? |
9468 | Did he write? |
9468 | Did n''t I always tellee you must catch''n by the ear? |
9468 | Did n''t I as good as tellee witch way she cast a sheepz i? |
9468 | Did n''t I tellee y''ad a more then one foot i''the stirrup? |
9468 | Did not her own lips pronounce the sentence? |
9468 | Did she despise me? |
9468 | Did they ever deviate? |
9468 | Did they not labour hourly, incessantly, with the purity of saints and the ardour of angels, to do you good? |
9468 | Did they not return urbanity for arrogance, kindness for contempt, and life for blows?--Can you, Clifton, dare you be thus wicked? |
9468 | Did you ever think of that before, Aby? |
9468 | Did you never behold the sun burst forth from behind the riding clouds? |
9468 | Did you never observe, Fairfax, how these fellows of obscure birth labour to pull down rank, and reduce all to their own level? |
9468 | Diddee ever addle half an ounce in your life without being well ribb rostit? |
9468 | Didn''tee run about as ragged as any colt o''the common, and a did n''t I find duddz for ee? |
9468 | Dishonest? |
9468 | Do I love? |
9468 | Do I not know that I am her abhorrence? |
9468 | Do I not tell you it is decreed? |
9468 | Do I seek to depreciate? |
9468 | Do I seem to speak with bitterness of heart? |
9468 | Do I? |
9468 | Do not her virtues and her wisdom communicate themselves to all around her? |
9468 | Do they need soothing? |
9468 | Do we not all admire and seek after excellence? |
9468 | Do you imagine, madam, I can not fast for a day? |
9468 | Do you include all the passions? |
9468 | Do you mind me? |
9468 | Do you mind me? |
9468 | Do you not feel it, now; possessing you, emanating, flaming, bursting to spread itself? |
9468 | Do you not perceive its fecundity? |
9468 | Do you not see this fellow, Fairfax? |
9468 | Do you say that from your conscience, sir? |
9468 | Do you take me now? |
9468 | Does he go to view it, thinkest thou, or does he shun the fight? |
9468 | Does it imply superiority of mind? |
9468 | Does it not shock, does it not terrify you? |
9468 | Does not Louisa honour me with the title of friend, and shall I prove unworthy of her friendship? |
9468 | Does not the gamester plead the unconquerableness of his passion? |
9468 | Does not the temper of your letters tell me you will applaud my just anger, and fixed revenge? |
9468 | Does she not feel herself in the ravisher''s arms? |
9468 | Does she not shun me, discountenance me, and reprove me, by her silence and her averted eyes? |
9468 | Does she, can she, ought she to think of me?--And why not? |
9468 | Does the joult head think I coin? |
9468 | Does the savage, the monster exist, that could look upon her and do her injury? |
9468 | Duty fool, indeed? |
9468 | Endeavoured to seduce you? |
9468 | Every way miserable, why am I obliged to think and speak of my father with so little respect? |
9468 | F. HENLEY LETTER XII_ Anna Wenbourne St. Ives to Louisa Clifton__ London, Grosvenor- Street_ Must I be silent? |
9468 | False? |
9468 | Fear is beneath me, and what have I to hope? |
9468 | For as I wus a sayin, your onnur, when a man has a got the super nakullums, who shall take it from him? |
9468 | For his daughter? |
9468 | For how can that be finished which is never begun? |
9468 | For is not the power of discrimination lost, when the passions are indulged? |
9468 | For me? |
9468 | For what and for why and for wherefore? |
9468 | For what have I been labouring? |
9468 | For who have you to thank for it? |
9468 | For why, as aforesaid, a who can gain say it? |
9468 | For why, your noble onnur? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For why? |
9468 | For, I have often heard you say, what is a man but what he is worth? |
9468 | For, as he put the case to me, how should I like, to have my estate seized on, by some insolent prince or duke? |
9468 | From my conscience? |
9468 | Had he a pen- knife? |
9468 | Had he got the money? |
9468 | Had you forgotten that the time was when I would have married her? |
9468 | Has he not a mind worthy of such an effort? |
9468 | Has she escaped me? |
9468 | Have I been too presuming? |
9468 | Have I not thoughtlessly betrayed him into a belief that I mean to favour a passion which I should think it criminal to encourage? |
9468 | Have I sufficiently examined? |
9468 | Have I the temerity so much as to suspect I love?--Who am I? |
9468 | Have n''t I a told ee often and often, that a glib tongue, smooth and softly, always with the grain, is worth a kink''s kinkddum? |
9468 | Have not I promised you shall go? |
9468 | Have not the greatest and the wisest of mankind been cursed by ignorance? |
9468 | Have not we both spent our lives in contriving? |
9468 | Have the titled earned their dignities by any proofs of exalted virtue? |
9468 | Have you not held the mirror up to me, and shewn me my own hatefulness? |
9468 | He answered he feared not, but called a boy, and said to him--''Did not I see you with some writing paper the other day?'' |
9468 | He enquired for my father? |
9468 | He looked with intelligent surprise-- Where did they come from? |
9468 | He took offence, and retorted--''What did I mane by an Irishman? |
9468 | He was in his own room; and how to draw him out? |
9468 | He will legislate, dictate, dogmatize; for who so infallible? |
9468 | He!--Having a letter from Sir Arthur, inviting him thither!--Were such orders to be countermanded by me? |
9468 | How are thy wretched thoughts employed? |
9468 | How came I to forget the beauteous sorceress with whom I found him leagued? |
9468 | How came you here? |
9468 | How can Clifton be wilfully blind to such courage, rectitude of heart, understanding and genius? |
9468 | How can we enjoy equal pleasure to that of thus conversing in despite of distance, and though separated by seas and mountains? |
9468 | How could I? |
9468 | How did you like the subject? |
9468 | How do I know but thus influenced he may become the first of mankind? |
9468 | How long will you suffer this petty slavery? |
9468 | How shall I begin? |
9468 | How shall I sooth the feelings of my friend? |
9468 | How shall we distinguish? |
9468 | How should we spend the evening? |
9468 | How so, sir? |
9468 | How so? |
9468 | How so? |
9468 | How so? |
9468 | How? |
9468 | I am dissatisfied, Oliver: what surer token can there be that I am wrong? |
9468 | I am on the brink, and they must down with me!--Have they not placed me there? |
9468 | I am the scape- goat!--I!--Be it so!--Should she be caught in her own springe, who can say I am to blame? |
9468 | I am; and I hope, sir, my determination is not offensive to you? |
9468 | I asked first if it were possible to get a coach; and he enquired where I came from? |
9468 | I asked her if she thought a man could climb it? |
9468 | I asked him why he did not keep one to write to his mother? |
9468 | I believe he is quite serious in his declaration: and if so, what does he want with an estate of eight hundred a- year? |
9468 | I can say but little from so short an acquaintance; except that I am convinced his virtues, or his errors, if he have any,[ And who is without?] |
9468 | I do not very well understand them, but give me leave to ask-- Are you still of the same opinion? |
9468 | I feel it incumbent on me to write; yet what can I say? |
9468 | I give you my word you shall go; and so let''s have no more of it.--Do you hear, Anna? |
9468 | I have not said what is not; and who better knows than you how much it is beneath us to refrain from saying what is? |
9468 | I hesitated some time: at last I ventured to ask... Are you hurt, madam? |
9468 | I knew before which way her heart went; and can I suppose, now she has got a fair excuse, that she will not profit by it? |
9468 | I mean it''s all_ our_ own-- Do you mind me? |
9468 | I owned I was not quite so cheerful as I could wish to be; and[ wouldst thou think it?] |
9468 | I pardon hypocrisy, treachery, blows, bruises, prisons, chains, poison, rape and murder? |
9468 | I repeated my question--''Are you sure you are not hurt; not wounded?'' |
9468 | I say who knows? |
9468 | I talk of sufferings? |
9468 | I then asked if he continued to practise his learning? |
9468 | I thought you deemed it prudent to keep out of the way, on account of that affair? |
9468 | I told you so!--Should the lordly lettered man submit to have his principles questioned, by an untutored woman? |
9468 | I waited till the ball was extracted, and[ Would you believe it?] |
9468 | Ide a handled the kole!--I''ve a feathered my nest as it is; and what would I a done then thinkee? |
9468 | If I knew nothing of the affair how could I write to you? |
9468 | If I wus the onnurable father of sitch ever mercifool affability, would a not I be fain to give her gems and rubies, and carbuncles, if I had''em? |
9468 | If my cares can prolong a life so precious but half an hour, is it not an age? |
9468 | If my conclusions have been false, and if his asserted claims be true, how shall I answer those which I have brought upon myself? |
9468 | If so, shall I listen only to my fears; shrink into self; and shun that which duty bids me encounter? |
9468 | If such a mind may by these means be gained which would otherwise be lost, shall it be extinguished by me? |
9468 | If the mind of Clifton should be such, shall I cowardly decline what I believe it to be incumbent on me to perform? |
9468 | If they be thus determined to brand me, can they suppose that my vengeance shall not outstrip theirs? |
9468 | Impeded in my course; and by what? |
9468 | In many countries, and even in my own, among the class in which I was born, the stigma is none, or trifling-- Stigma? |
9468 | In opposition to the whole world, its prepossessions, reproofs, revilings, persecutions, and contempt? |
9468 | In this misery? |
9468 | In what does it consist? |
9468 | Indeed!--And what say you to--_This is my wife?_--Can appropriation more than for the minute the hour or the day exist? |
9468 | Inform me of the deep hold he has taken of her heart? |
9468 | Is he God, or is he man? |
9468 | Is he not now before your eyes? |
9468 | Is he not the man who, for all the reasons formerly given, truly merits preference? |
9468 | Is he not the most consummate--? |
9468 | Is it all together you mane, or one after another? |
9468 | Is it most probable that by opposing I should correct or increase the world''s mistakes? |
9468 | Is it my intention or my desire to make her wretched? |
9468 | Is it not cursed odd that I can not be angry? |
9468 | Is it not dishonourable to my understanding? |
9468 | Is it not miraculous that such a father should have such a son? |
9468 | Is it not ominous? |
9468 | Is it not possible to prove that marriage is a mere prejudice? |
9468 | Is it not ridiculous? |
9468 | Is it not worthy of the sapient Doctor Clifton? |
9468 | Is it out of nature? |
9468 | Is it prejudice, is it vanity, or is it a short and imperfect view; a want of discrimination? |
9468 | Is it purposely to shew me how much she is at her ease with me; and how impossible it is that any thing but civility should exist between us? |
9468 | Is it, can it be forgotten by you? |
9468 | Is marriage your plan? |
9468 | Is murder your intent?--While I have life I fear you not!--And think you that brutality can taint the dead? |
9468 | Is n''t she, as I may say, the very firmament of the power and glory of praise? |
9468 | Is not happiness, madam, the universal pursuit? |
9468 | Is not that the ca nt? |
9468 | Is not that the very phrase, Anna; the_ friendship of marriage_? |
9468 | Is not that tolerable Worcestershire morality? |
9468 | Is not the project an excellent one? |
9468 | Is not the task I have proposed to myself a worthy and a high one? |
9468 | Is not this Sir Arthur''s handwriting? |
9468 | Is not this a sad thing, Aby? |
9468 | Is not this an unjustifiable, a cruel accusation? |
9468 | Is she not a heroine? |
9468 | Is she not here? |
9468 | Is that really your opinion, madam? |
9468 | Is that your opinion, sir? |
9468 | Is there a certainty that our thoughts are in no danger of changing? |
9468 | Is there rebellion in my heart? |
9468 | Is this the finest country in the whole world? |
9468 | Is this the reward of their uncommon virtues? |
9468 | Is this their famous France? |
9468 | It is his by right; and why should not I do right even to him, once in my life? |
9468 | It''s all a won to I. Thos and I gives all this here good advice for nothink at all, what do I get by it? |
9468 | Ives?--Where is my friend? |
9468 | Kingdoms shall not tempt me!--Why is this timidity? |
9468 | LETTER CVIII_ Anna Wenbourne St. Ives to Louisa Clifton__ London, Grosvenor- Street_ Have I been unjust to the brother of my friend? |
9468 | LETTER XI_ Frank Henley to Oliver Trenchard__ London, Grosvenor- Street_ Oliver, what are we? |
9468 | Let us both consider what has passed this morning, and provided no new accident should intervene-- Another leap from a rock? |
9468 | Lord Fitz- Allen answered-- What tell you me of Turnham- Green, Sir Arthur? |
9468 | Louisa, what are we?--What are our affections, what our resolves? |
9468 | May be so-- And you do not find any of these bad qualities in the son? |
9468 | May she not be won? |
9468 | Meet my eye unabashed and affirm him to be my superior? |
9468 | Mischief is meant me, or why am I here? |
9468 | Mr. Clifton, madam--? |
9468 | Must I not tell my Louisa how infinitely her candor and justice delight me? |
9468 | Must it not, ought it not to be? |
9468 | Must not the reiteration of truth make its due impression, upon a mind like Clifton''s? |
9468 | Must we then never dare to counteract mistake? |
9468 | My father has a got the rhino-- A do n''t forget to tell her that-- Smug and snug and all go snacks-- Do you mind me? |
9468 | Nay can you find any other? |
9468 | Nay more, if he be not a prodigy of even a still more extraordinary kind, is not that man Coke Clifton? |
9468 | Nay, as a I may say, afore her blessed peepers a twinkled the glory of everlastin of infinit mercifool commiseration and sunshine? |
9468 | Nay, had I been so wholly devil as to have joined in murder, what would have followed? |
9468 | Nay, if his mind be what his words and behaviour speak, would not opposition be unjust? |
9468 | Need I say how much I disapprove my father''s views, and the mode by which he would have them accomplished? |
9468 | Need she have told me this, Fairfax? |
9468 | Neither man nor woman in such a state can have any thing peculiar: the whole must be for the use and benefit of the whole? |
9468 | Never did I feel such raptures as since I have received this fortunate, this happy wound!--Yet why?--Is not her heart exactly what it was? |
9468 | No disgrace, madam? |
9468 | No, no-- not phantoms; real existences; the palpable beings of reason!--Beside what influence have I in the world, except over my friends and family? |
9468 | Now have you sincerely so much vanity, Louisa? |
9468 | Of what have you been guilty? |
9468 | Of which_ children_ are to judge? |
9468 | Often do I say--''Why is my friend not with us? |
9468 | Oliver, is it wrong to feel what I feel, at the remembrance? |
9468 | On some Welsh mountain, or the pike of Teneriffe? |
9468 | On what proud eminence can he be found? |
9468 | Once again prithee tell me, Oliver, what am I to think? |
9468 | Once more she seemed to repeat--_She would love me if I would let her._ Tell me, then-- Have I not reason on my side? |
9468 | Openly and absolutely hate me!--And could I wish her to love? |
9468 | Or art thou still allowed to think? |
9468 | Or does he wait the arrival of the next comet, to make the tour of the universe? |
9468 | Or does she doubt with me whether grief can in any possible case be a virtue? |
9468 | Or is it truly as kind as it seems? |
9468 | Or is there any other superiority?--Am I not a man?--And who is more? |
9468 | Or rather, for that is the true question, could it produce any other effect than that which I intended? |
9468 | Or standing a partaker of the danger of Julia on the dreadful precipice? |
9468 | Or, if it have a meaning, that he who is the best man is the most a gentleman? |
9468 | Or, if they wanted the virtue to charm, could they still more basely ask rewards they did not merit? |
9468 | Ought I to forget the influence of example? |
9468 | Ought I to set an example that might be pernicious? |
9468 | Ought I to sneak and submit to this? |
9468 | Ought he not to be told of it, and suffered to judge for himself? |
9468 | Ought he not to command it; to say it is mine; truth and justice dare not deny it to me? |
9468 | Ought my father and my family to be offended? |
9468 | Ought not you and I, in particular, to be circumspect? |
9468 | Ought such a mind to be neglected? |
9468 | Ought they to be encouraged by any act of mine? |
9468 | Ought we not minutely to examine our hopes and expectations? |
9468 | Ought you not to avoid such a book, Frank; at least for the present? |
9468 | Own she kissed him? |
9468 | PHELIM MAC FANE Is it not a pity, Louisa, that so much courage and ability should be perverted to such vile ends? |
9468 | Permit me to ask, is it person--? |
9468 | Pray has my son told you what sum he expects? |
9468 | Pure? |
9468 | Recover a mind so perverted? |
9468 | Rob me? |
9468 | Seduce you!--Then you have entirely given up all thoughts of him? |
9468 | Shall I admire yet not imitate? |
9468 | Shall I champ upon the bit, and prance, and curvet, and shew off to advantage? |
9468 | Shall I doubt of victory, fighting under the banners of truth? |
9468 | Shall I let the lock rustee for a want of a little oilin? |
9468 | Shall I lose reputation, think you, by carrying it into effect? |
9468 | Shall I not examine what these high distinctions truly are, of which the bearers are so vain? |
9468 | Shall I shrink from an act of duty? |
9468 | Shall I tattle to him the scandal of the village, were I mistress of it? |
9468 | Shall I witness the fortitude of Frank, and be myself so easily discomfited? |
9468 | Shall she want the courage and the generosity to set the first good example? |
9468 | Shall the fortitude which safety feels vanish at the approach of danger? |
9468 | Shall the pure mind shake in the presence of evil? |
9468 | Shall they mount the dunghill of their vanity, clap their wings, and exult, as if they too had conquered a Clifton? |
9468 | Shall we cast away a good that never can return; and seek for pain, which is itself in so much haste to seek for us? |
9468 | Shall we exist but for a few years, and of those shall there be but a few hours as it were of youth, joy, and pleasure, and shall we let them slip? |
9468 | She dare not openly profess herself my enemy? |
9468 | She has magnanimity-- But what have those cyphers of beings who call themselves her relations? |
9468 | She herself has banished it, from my breast and from her own: at least the mercy I would ask-- For could it be--? |
9468 | She is going-- Thursday morning is the time fixed-- And what is that to me?--Madman that I am!--Who am I? |
9468 | She kindly asked-- was I not well? |
9468 | She says truly: conquest over her, by any but brutal means, is impossible-- Shall I be brutal?--And more brutal even than my own ruffian agents? |
9468 | She whose mind is so penetrating and whose thoughts are so grand?'' |
9468 | Should I neglect to warn her, or rather to guard and preserve her from harm, where shall I find consolation? |
9468 | Should I, the leader the captain of the band, be the first to fly my colours? |
9468 | Should Mac Fane have taken it up furtively, as I suppose such thieves are always on the watch--? |
9468 | Should he fail, phrensy, despair, he knew not what, be something fearful would indubitably follow-- Again, what was it?-- Might he hope? |
9468 | Should ill happen to her, from an undertaking the motive of which is so worthy, so dignified, what should I say? |
9468 | Should misfortune come, how could I excuse myself, for having neglected to dissuade, and to urge such reasons as have appeared to me the strongest? |
9468 | Should they be so, what will become of my brother? |
9468 | Should we have a dance? |
9468 | Sink before unruly passion? |
9468 | Sir? |
9468 | Sleeping or waking, I at peace? |
9468 | So you never meddle with any body who does not meddle with you? |
9468 | Spare both yourself and me the violence you forebode? |
9468 | Stand in awe of vice? |
9468 | Steward and gardener? |
9468 | Surely nothing can be attempted against his life? |
9468 | Surely this hussy sleeps? |
9468 | Surely, Louisa, I may do him justice?--Surely to esteem the virtuous can not merit the imputation of guilt?--Who can praise him as he deserves? |
9468 | Taken at unguarded moments, agitated, hurried away by passion, how seldom have we for a day together reason to be satisfied with our conduct? |
9468 | Tell me, Aby, is not the project a grand one[1]? |
9468 | Tell me, Anna: What are your thoughts of Mr. Clifton? |
9468 | Tell me, Clifton, of her amorous debates with such a fellow? |
9468 | Tell me, Fairfax, may they not? |
9468 | Tell me, Oliver, wouldst not thou wish so too? |
9468 | Tell me, will not the court of honour hoot me out of its precincts? |
9468 | That I would lament, or shun the world, or walk in open day oppressed by shame I did not merit? |
9468 | The Count is preparing for England? |
9468 | The Hibernian replied--''All? |
9468 | The drunkard, the man of anger, the revengeful, the envious, the covetous, the jealous, have they not all the same plea? |
9468 | The enterprises of virtue itself may have their romance-- I know not-- This to me at least is fatal-- Could I--? |
9468 | The hero, the legislator, the great leader of this little world? |
9468 | The most rigid, the most painful of all abstinence was demanded from me; but should I shrink from a duty because I pity or because I love myself? |
9468 | The passion of love? |
9468 | The path before me is direct and plain; ought I to deviate? |
9468 | The slave of fear? |
9468 | The smiles too which she bestows on the brother of Louisa, and the haughty airs of triumph which he assumes, what can these be? |
9468 | The son of a gardener a gentleman? |
9468 | The union of marriage demands reciprocal, unequivocal, and unbounded confidence; for how can we pretend to love those whom we can not trust? |
9468 | The world may think meanly of me, for the want of what I myself hold in contempt: but surely you can not join in the world''s injustice? |
9468 | Then the kiss, Louisa? |
9468 | Then were you to hear her sing, and play-- But why the devil does she treat me thus? |
9468 | Then you are among the rocks of Meillerie? |
9468 | Then you think that some stipulation or bargain between the sexes must take place, in the most virtuous ages? |
9468 | Then you would not fight a duel? |
9468 | Then, madam, where is the impossibility? |
9468 | Then, sir, you coolly and deliberately deny all knowledge of the letter in question? |
9468 | There was a marked significance in his manner, and I asked him why? |
9468 | They too could recommend a broker, a very honest fellow-- By what strange gradations, Oliver, can the heart of man become thus corrupt? |
9468 | They were the ebullitions of virtue? |
9468 | They were well meant? |
9468 | Thirty pounds? |
9468 | Thus ended this painful interview-- Tell me, what ought I to think? |
9468 | To what can this be attributed? |
9468 | To what will not error and the abandonment of the passions submit? |
9468 | To whom didst thou ever do a wilful wrong? |
9468 | To whom? |
9468 | Under what circumstances may a man take money from another? |
9468 | Unwilling?--Oh no!--It was your unwillingness that led me almost to despair-- But are you in earnest?--Truly and sincerely in earnest? |
9468 | Upon my word!--Was ever the like of this heard?--Don''t I tell you, you shall go? |
9468 | Very true: but, instead of the parish steeple, have we not steeples of our own in every direction? |
9468 | Want to pick my pocket? |
9468 | Was I or was I not guilty of any crime, when, in the very acme of the passions, I so totally disregarded the customs of the world? |
9468 | Was it all a vision when I thought I heard you pronounce the ecstatic sentence--_You could love me if I would let you?_ No; it was real. |
9468 | Was it not my duty? |
9468 | Was it not their sole employment; their first duty, and their dearest hope? |
9468 | Was not he the ass that brayed to Balaam? |
9468 | Was not her brother in danger? |
9468 | Was there a pen and ink in the house? |
9468 | Was there ever so foolish, so wrong, so romantic a wish? |
9468 | We each think well of the other: but do we think sufficiently well? |
9468 | We shall find she has been sent out of the way by Mr. Clifton: and what further information will that afford? |
9468 | We shall see-- Why ay to be sure!--But what shall we see? |
9468 | Well but--_This is my child?_ Neither can he do that: they will be the children of the state. |
9468 | Well then, I must have satisfaction of Monsieur Calif-- Morbleu!--What is the gentleman''s name? |
9468 | Well then, a very wise young man-- You think him so; do you not, Anna? |
9468 | Well, sir? |
9468 | Well, what then? |
9468 | Were not these dignities things of accident, in which the owners had no share, and of which they are generally unworthy? |
9468 | Were there not a Henley--? |
9468 | Were you not the author of that letter? |
9468 | Wert thou ever at the mercy of a mob? |
9468 | What am I? |
9468 | What answer can conscience give to that? |
9468 | What are their petty corvà © es, by which these straight roads have been patched up, and their everlasting elms planted? |
9468 | What are they? |
9468 | What are they? |
9468 | What are they? |
9468 | What are your reasons for thinking so exceedingly well of Mr. Henley? |
9468 | What are_ meum_ and_ tuum_? |
9468 | What behaviour? |
9468 | What but community of sentiments, similarity of principles, reciprocal sympathies, and an equal ardour for and love of truth? |
9468 | What but such as I wished? |
9468 | What can I be, compared to what you may become? |
9468 | What can I do but hope, ardently hope, Frank Henley is in an error, and that he himself may make the discovery? |
9468 | What can I do? |
9468 | What can I say to my brother? |
9468 | What can I say? |
9468 | What can be done? |
9468 | What can be the purport of a conduct so very wrong? |
9468 | What can have occasioned you, sir, to change your opinion so suddenly? |
9468 | What can it be, sir? |
9468 | What can this be? |
9468 | What can this sudden and unaccountable removal of these two people mean? |
9468 | What can those who, mature in reason, are superior to prejudice suffer? |
9468 | What cause? |
9468 | What concern is it of mine? |
9468 | What could I answer? |
9468 | What could I do? |
9468 | What could I say, but repeat the diffidence of my mind, the want of full and satisfactory conviction, and the fear of mistake? |
9468 | What could be more generous? |
9468 | What could be more reasonable? |
9468 | What did I say? |
9468 | What do I fear? |
9468 | What do I hope? |
9468 | What do I mean by despair? |
9468 | What do I mean? |
9468 | What do I talk?--Read?--Can I forget them? |
9468 | What do you mane by that, sir? |
9468 | What do you say to me now? |
9468 | What does it mean? |
9468 | What does n''t I know witch way the wind sets when I sees the chimblee smoke? |
9468 | What does she mean? |
9468 | What doubts?--Do I not tell you the words are Mr. Henley''s? |
9468 | What guide have we? |
9468 | What had I to communicate? |
9468 | What have I done? |
9468 | What have I suffered? |
9468 | What have I to do with the world, be it wrong or right, wise or foolish? |
9468 | What have you heard? |
9468 | What have you heard? |
9468 | What if he should? |
9468 | What if she meant no more than that commerce of grateful kindness, which knits together human society, and renders it delightful? |
9468 | What is it that a be about, dolt? |
9468 | What is it to me that they mean me well? |
9468 | What is it, madam, that I dare not do? |
9468 | What is it? |
9468 | What is ivory and alablaster a parallel to her? |
9468 | What is man? |
9468 | What is relation, what is brother, what is self, if relation, brother, or self be at war with truth? |
9468 | What is the magnitude of the evil which would result from such a union; and what the good? |
9468 | What is the opinion of the world; what are its prejudices, in the presence of truth? |
9468 | What is the subject of your meditations? |
9468 | What is the thing called property? |
9468 | What is there here to be compared to my temples, and my groves, and my glades? |
9468 | What is there precious but mind? |
9468 | What is there to fear? |
9468 | What is there, my dear, in the human mind, that induces us to think every thing which is unusual is little less than absurd? |
9468 | What is virtue? |
9468 | What is your trade? |
9468 | What know I of the base engines he may employ, or the wicked arts to which he may have recourse? |
9468 | What latent inconsistency is there, Louisa, in my conduct, which can incite the alarms to which I feel myself subject? |
9468 | What power shall I have when they imagine I have disgraced both myself and them? |
9468 | What right has any pedant, because he thinks proper to vex and entangle his own brain with doubts, to force his gloomy dogmas upon me? |
9468 | What right have you to intrude into her apartments? |
9468 | What say you to it, honest Aby? |
9468 | What say you, Fairfax? |
9468 | What shall I do? |
9468 | What shall I say? |
9468 | What shall I say? |
9468 | What should I a bin, an I ad had your settins out? |
9468 | What should I have been, had I neglected such an opportunity? |
9468 | What subject, madam? |
9468 | What then may not be hoped from a mind like his? |
9468 | What then?--What do I want? |
9468 | What think you could her answers to all these questions be? |
9468 | What think you of this proposal, Anna? |
9468 | What think you, Fairfax; shall I bear my slavish trappings proudly? |
9468 | What think you? |
9468 | What validity have these arguments of rank, relationship, and the world''s opprobrium? |
9468 | What was I, I pray you? |
9468 | What was to become of her?'' |
9468 | What will it do, should I make him my tool, when he finds to what good purpose he has been an abettor? |
9468 | What will not men imagine, when their passions are afloat and reason is flown? |
9468 | What worse can happen than despair? |
9468 | What would I have? |
9468 | What, a did n''t I give ee all your pees and cues? |
9468 | What, a did n''t I put words into your mouth, as good as a ready butterd, as I may say? |
9468 | What, but that I was delighted with the rapid change perceptible in his sentiments, and with the ardour with which his enquiries were continued? |
9468 | What, indeed, has relationship to do with truth? |
9468 | What, madam, said your brother, recovering himself, and with some pleasantry, is he for a voyage to the moon? |
9468 | What, shall I not enjoy the free air, the glorious sun, the flowers, the fruits, the viands, the whole stores of nature? |
9468 | What, sir, has he told? |
9468 | What, sir, in this place, said he? |
9468 | What, your most gracious onnur, a hannot I had the glory and the magnifisunce to dangle her in my arms, before she was a three months old? |
9468 | When then may I hope? |
9468 | When was I posted for a vapouring Hector? |
9468 | When was that? |
9468 | When we are told such a person is a man of genius, do we not wish to enquire into the fact? |
9468 | When will men cease to think that vice and virtue ought to meet on equal terms; and that injury can be atoned by blood? |
9468 | When will the world learn that the unlimited utterance of all thoughts would be virtuous? |
9468 | When you are dead, of what should they be afraid? |
9468 | Whence it results that marriage, as a civil institution, must ever be an evil? |
9468 | Where are all my esquires? |
9468 | Where art thou? |
9468 | Where can you be so happy? |
9468 | Where did you run to? |
9468 | Where do you come from? |
9468 | Where is he?'' |
9468 | Where is the charity of that? |
9468 | Where is your aunt? |
9468 | Where was your courage when you decoyed my defender from me? |
9468 | Where would you go? |
9468 | Where, but out of my pouche, Gaby? |
9468 | Whereof if a man do don his hat on his head, an a see good cause, why not? |
9468 | Which of your good qualities was ever forgotten by her? |
9468 | Whither then would my wishes wander? |
9468 | Who are you? |
9468 | Who begottee and sentee into the world but I? |
9468 | Who better than you can appreciate the falsehood and the force of the prejudices of opinion? |
9468 | Who can forbear wishing him success? |
9468 | Who can gain say it? |
9468 | Who can say? |
9468 | Who can sufficiently cherish fortitude; and by anticipating defy misfortune? |
9468 | Who can tell how far off the moment is when it may be too late? |
9468 | Who ever giv''d me thirty pounds? |
9468 | Who ever saw those treated with esteem who are themselves supposed to be the slaves of passion? |
9468 | Who found ee in bub and grub but I? |
9468 | Who has a right to control me? |
9468 | Who is he? |
9468 | Who knows but Wenbourne- Hill itself may be one day all our own? |
9468 | Who shall impede, who shall dare disturb the banquet? |
9468 | Who should gain say me? |
9468 | Who so perfectly understand the luxury of indolence as the Lazaroni of Naples? |
9468 | Who then shall affirm changes still more extraordinary have not happened? |
9468 | Who told you so? |
9468 | Who was I? |
9468 | Who was Mr. Frank? |
9468 | Who will dare to laugh? |
9468 | Who would be braved by bats and beetles, buzzing in his ears? |
9468 | Who would be more just to me? |
9468 | Who would be more tender, more faithful, more affectionate? |
9468 | Who? |
9468 | Wholly? |
9468 | Whose slave am I? |
9468 | Why am I thus steeped in gloom? |
9468 | Why are not you here, Fairfax? |
9468 | Why could she not have bestowed all this affection upon me? |
9468 | Why could she not? |
9468 | Why delay, when I offer? |
9468 | Why did I quarrel with her? |
9468 | Why did not you return to England, when you received your wages? |
9468 | Why did not you tell me your opinion sooner? |
9468 | Why did she sigh? |
9468 | Why did this heroic woman ever injure me? |
9468 | Why did you prevent me? |
9468 | Why do I delay? |
9468 | Why do I dread him? |
9468 | Why do I indulge a thought so unhuman, so impossible? |
9468 | Why do I misapply my time on beings so imbecile? |
9468 | Why do I say would make? |
9468 | Why do I seem to recollect this with a kind of agitation? |
9468 | Why do I suffer my mind thus to be pervaded by melancholy? |
9468 | Why do I talk of mischief, and his power to inflict? |
9468 | Why do I think thus of him? |
9468 | Why do I worry myself about her? |
9468 | Why do they rise quivering to my lips, and there panting expire, painfully struggling for birth, but in vain? |
9468 | Why do you not participate my pleasures, catch with me the rising ideas, and enjoy the raptures of novelty? |
9468 | Why does he not contrive to be hated a little? |
9468 | Why does he not rather seek to surpass them, than to envy their virtues? |
9468 | Why does my heart faint within me? |
9468 | Why does my heart palpitate? |
9468 | Why does my heart rebel so sternly, at what virtue so positively approves? |
9468 | Why does she not come and bear her part in discussion? |
9468 | Why does she not hate me? |
9468 | Why else am I here? |
9468 | Why feel indignant? |
9468 | Why have I this keen this jealous sensibility? |
9468 | Why is my heart so inclined to think ill of him? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why not? |
9468 | Why should I doubt of convincing her? |
9468 | Why should I not be all she has described? |
9468 | Why should I not, sir? |
9468 | Why should I not? |
9468 | Why should you doubt of all the affection which virtue can bestow? |
9468 | Why shun a declaration of thoughts that are founded in right; or tremble like a coward that doubted of his cause? |
9468 | Why so, sir? |
9468 | Why so? |
9468 | Why that were delectable!--And can it not be?... |
9468 | Why what the devil is the English of all this, say you, Clifton? |
9468 | Why whom do you pretend yourself to be, sir? |
9468 | Why with inward whispers do I murmur thoughts which I dare not speak aloud? |
9468 | Why would I hide it from myself? |
9468 | Why!--What!--What do you mean?--Where is your aunt? |
9468 | Why, if he should--? |
9468 | Why, man, what would you do? |
9468 | Why, my Louisa, my friend, my sister, ah, why are not you with me? |
9468 | Why, till now, has she seemed to regard me with that sweet amenity which was so flattering to hope? |
9468 | Why, would I be so very vile a thing? |
9468 | Will not the very footmen point after me, with a''There goes the gentleman that miss had upon liking?'' |
9468 | Will not you give me your assistance? |
9468 | Will she grieve more for him than she would for any other, who should be equally unfortunate in error? |
9468 | Will she recede? |
9468 | Will you do me the favour to accompany me? |
9468 | Will you favour me so far, madam, as to grant me half an hour''s hearing? |
9468 | Will you never shake off this bondage? |
9468 | Witch if so be as it be not to be helpt, why a what be to be done, your onnur? |
9468 | Without exception? |
9468 | Would I willingly give her heart a pang? |
9468 | Would I, being rejected, desert my duty, sink into self, and poorly linger in wretchedness; or basely put an end to existence? |
9468 | Would I, if I could? |
9468 | Would he have me go on the highway? |
9468 | Would it grieve me to find another man of virtue and genius, because it is possible my personal interest might be affected by the discovery? |
9468 | Would it swerve from the severe dictates of duty? |
9468 | Would not all the world wish the same? |
9468 | Would not an assassination like this outweigh thousands of common murders? |
9468 | Would not any one imagine, Oliver, that this were poetry? |
9468 | Would not his powers highly honour truth and virtue? |
9468 | Would not she command them, regulate them, harmonize them? |
9468 | Would not you? |
9468 | Would the plea remove the load of affliction with which I should overwhelm those who love me best? |
9468 | Would you believe it, Louisa? |
9468 | Would you have thought, Fairfax, I should have been so very ready with a tender of this my pleasant person, and my dear freedom? |
9468 | Would you kill a mind so mighty? |
9468 | Would you think it possible for any body to be acquainted with Wenbourne- Hill and do any thing but admire? |
9468 | Would you think it, Aby? |
9468 | Wouldst thou think a highwayman could be so foolish a coxcomb as to rob in a bright scarlet coat, and to ride a light grey horse? |
9468 | Yes-- You-- you-- I have not seen Mr. Clifton? |
9468 | Yes: but are they, would they be capable of harm with her? |
9468 | Yet are you sure, madam, that even you are superior to them all? |
9468 | Yet does it not likewise prove him to be in earnest? |
9468 | Yet how? |
9468 | Yet she sleeps in the same chamber with me; and ought I not to beware of inspiring perfidy with projects? |
9468 | Yet this encroaching spirit that I told thee of!--But then, what is the strength of him, compared to hers? |
9468 | Yet what am I to do? |
9468 | Yet what is the life of such a brother, to that of Frank Henley? |
9468 | Yet what should I fear? |
9468 | Yet what, who can harm her? |
9468 | Yet which of them dare look me in the face, and call himself my enemy? |
9468 | Yet who but he could have gratified the unabating burning passion of my heart? |
9468 | Yet who ever saw it hasty in its progress? |
9468 | Yet who knows what accidents may occur in life? |
9468 | Yet who shall benumb the understanding, chain up the fancy, and freeze sensation? |
9468 | Yet why do I say elder? |
9468 | Yet you suppose me to be in danger? |
9468 | Yet, where there are qualities so high, and powers so uncommon, shall I despair? |
9468 | Yet, why torment myself with imaginary terrors? |
9468 | You a lurcher? |
9468 | You are an English lad, you say? |
9468 | You do, sir? |
9468 | You have a very high opinion of him? |
9468 | You have nobody to give you a character, have you? |
9468 | You have seen much, must have learned much, and why may I not suppose you are become all that a sister''s heart can desire? |
9468 | You imagine you can tell me something I never heard before? |
9468 | You peery? |
9468 | You say Mr. Henley has no equal? |
9468 | You the jennyalogy of my own body and loins? |
9468 | You think--? |
9468 | You think? |
9468 | You will not go, madam, and leave me thus? |
9468 | You would be glad to know if any thing have passed between us, and what? |
9468 | You''ll hit the bird''s eye flying? |
9468 | [ Didst thou ever hear such honeyed flattery, Oliver?] |
9468 | [ It is in vain, Oliver, to endeavour to conceal the truth from myself; my folly incurred its own punishment-- I repeat] Chastised? |
9468 | _ Comment, Monsieur? |
9468 | _ Gardez- vous bien, Messieurs les Anglois_[1]!--Where is Monsieur Calif--? |
9468 | _ My faculties were always lively?_ And_ I must pardon you if you expect too much?_--Upon my soul, this is highly comic! |
46791 | [ 5] Are those your authors? 46791 ''Slid, a mighty slaughter; But did he stand upon eleven at once? 46791 ''Snigs, how many fell? 46791 ''Tis but the waiting of an old man''s death, Who can not long outlive me: will you do''t? 46791 ''Tis fit that I die too; but by what means? 46791 ''Tis not broke out In any place? 46791 ''Tis not ill- done; but does he not speak to her? 46791 ''Tis true, they come; But what is that to me, if Thyrsis come not? 46791 ''Twas basely done, and like a covetous wretch, I''ll tell him to his face: what care I for him? 46791 ''st!--good friend, d''y''hear? 46791 --What, talking with a priest, Lord Chamberlain? |
46791 | ----_For taste most meet._ Very good; and there he tickled it? |
46791 | ... nunc non e manibus illis, Nunc non e tumulo fortunataque favilla Nascentur violæ?" |
46791 | 1--"What_ well- appointed_ leader fronts us here?" |
46791 | 6:"Cry you mercy, sir; will you buy a_ fiddle_ to fill up_ your noise_?" |
46791 | A fine devotion, is it not? |
46791 | A jail, a prison, a tomb of men lock''d up, Alive and buried? |
46791 | A richer gift Than any monarch of the world can give: Bless''d happiness? |
46791 | A sergeant? |
46791 | A story is''t or fable that, stern Mars, Thy weight did Romulus''sleepy mother press? |
46791 | A woman, in whose breast I''d thought had liv''d The very quintessence of discretion: And who is''t, think you? |
46791 | A wonder, Master Sheriff? |
46791 | A word, my fair Zenocrates; do you see, sir, here be those that have gone a- fishing, and can give you a gudgeon? |
46791 | A- wooing, sweet, for what? |
46791 | And am I not so still? |
46791 | And art thou come, my dearest Eugeny? |
46791 | And came it to the Lord Lysicles? |
46791 | And can I live to speak it? |
46791 | And dares proud Cæsar back our untam''d surges? |
46791 | And did you so? |
46791 | And do you think there is anything fitter to call down affection than submission? |
46791 | And have you found out so much worth In him already? |
46791 | And how did you answer him? |
46791 | And how do I look now? |
46791 | And how does your uncle, Master Foster? |
46791 | And how? |
46791 | And may they not be read? |
46791 | And must I then be call''d to life again, To see my life expire before my face? |
46791 | And must I, When she is gone, whose sun- like eyes did cherish An everlasting summer in my life, Feel any spring of joy to comfort me? |
46791 | And must we part? |
46791 | And now thou hast[246] bargained with thy whey- faced wench, what hast thou gained by the project? |
46791 | And now what beauty can there be to live, When she is lost that did all beauty give? |
46791 | And pray, what did it look like? |
46791 | And shall I, In reckoning them, my sad griefs multiply? |
46791 | And to what purpose serves Faith and religious secrecy, When magic mocks and frustrates all our vows? |
46791 | And were it not more cruel to turn out Poor naked souls stripp''d of warm flesh( like land- lords), Bidding them wander? |
46791 | And what are the particulars? |
46791 | And what have you discover''d? |
46791 | And what must now be done? |
46791 | And what says your father yet, coz? |
46791 | And what shall Be done with all those locks of hair you have? |
46791 | And what success? |
46791 | And where''s that? |
46791 | And why not you as well by their example? |
46791 | And why should you, at such an age as this, Dream of a marriage? |
46791 | And will they not o''ertake you? |
46791 | And will you Assume the patronage of envious fortune, By adding torments unto her affliction? |
46791 | And will you marry now? |
46791 | And you, sir? |
46791 | And your priz''d liberty-- What shall become of that? |
46791 | Andrew the Great Turk? |
46791 | Another Heliogabalus thou wouldst be, Hadst thou his power; but by what conjuration can You bring me to think it? |
46791 | Any old pots or kettles to mend? |
46791 | Any proclamations that they must forfeit all their toes that have no corns, or that they must never eat good victuals that have not the toothache? |
46791 | Any reversions yet? |
46791 | Are gods dim- sighted grown, or do they sleep The morning, and carouse the afternoon, That mortal motions tumble thus by chance? |
46791 | Are my misfortunes of that horrid shape That the mere speculation doth affright Those whose compassion only it concerns? |
46791 | Are not you Milesia? |
46791 | Are our accounts made even? |
46791 | Are red mufflers and slashed shoes come into fashion? |
46791 | Are the gods pleas''d to work to ease affliction? |
46791 | Are the same things Seen in this new world as they are in th''other? |
46791 | Are the wares ready? |
46791 | Are then my miseries grown infectious too? |
46791 | Are there not pains to punish perjur''d men? |
46791 | Are these the hopes You fed upon? |
46791 | Are these the thanks I have for that rich jewel Which I bestow''d on thee, ungrateful man? |
46791 | Are those disguises ready, Which I bespoke? |
46791 | Are ye the men, who never fought in vain? |
46791 | Are you content that I should show your poetry? |
46791 | Are you dead too, as well as I? |
46791 | Are you my husband? |
46791 | Are you taken with her? |
46791 | Are you wild Or mad? |
46791 | Art thou frighted, man? |
46791 | Art thou the thief too? |
46791 | As he was doing his doleful office, a rich widow of London hearing his complaint, enquired of him what would release him? |
46791 | As how? |
46791 | As you from Troy, so we our pedigree do claim: Why should the branches fight when as the root''s the same? |
46791 | At thee, Hirildas, slain in furious mood, By whose help only I enjoy''d my love? |
46791 | At whose suit, I pray? |
46791 | Ay, I am well recompens''d to complain to you? |
46791 | Ay, ay; but what makes you so pale, Budget? |
46791 | Ay, but your course, uncle? |
46791 | Ay, sir,''tis wonderful: but is it well? |
46791 | Ay, the Coranti; what doth that say? |
46791 | Be they vendible, sir, I am your chapman: What are they, Master Foster? |
46791 | Belinus, have you muster''d up our forces? |
46791 | Betwixt Sir Argent and the Lady Covet? |
46791 | Bundle of charcoal, furred crock, dost think I''ll hang in thy pot- hook arm? |
46791 | But I hope You do not think I am in love with him? |
46791 | But are you sure''tis hereabouts he lives? |
46791 | But can''st thou help me, now that I have open''d My wound unto thee? |
46791 | But can''st thou hope for such a strong illusion To mock my sense? |
46791 | But come, sir, will you walk into the garden? |
46791 | But could Your ladyship be pleas''d with such a husband? |
46791 | But could you practise tricks on those you love? |
46791 | But did the queen know this? |
46791 | But do you remember where you are to meet with Phormio? |
46791 | But dost thou think this gallant Lady Whimsey Will marry me? |
46791 | But for your cousin, sir? |
46791 | But has he learning? |
46791 | But how are you ascertain''d that he did This horrid act? |
46791 | But how dar''st thou walk abroad before owl- light? |
46791 | But how knew he our loves? |
46791 | But how proceeds our preparation? |
46791 | But how, kind cousin, does your father use you? |
46791 | But is not my lady a strange woman to weep thus for one servant, when she has another in his place? |
46791 | But is she, think''st thou? |
46791 | But is there no way to persuade her to live still a woman? |
46791 | But is this serious, Daphnis? |
46791 | But is''t not strange, nay, most unnatural-- And I may say ridiculous, for those years To marry, and abuse the ordinance? |
46791 | But one suitor yet? |
46791 | But pray resolve me, master alderman, Why makes the king this visitation? |
46791 | But pray, sir, tell How came you hither, noble Euphues? |
46791 | But prythee, stay a little; What meadow- ground''s there? |
46791 | But prythee, tell me, love, How dost thou spend thy melancholy time? |
46791 | But prythee, tell what mistress you adore? |
46791 | But say, Cleander, what fate guided thee To this discovery? |
46791 | But shallow, sir? |
46791 | But stay, had I not better burn it, to bake the toasts and warm the ale? |
46791 | But stay, who''s here? |
46791 | But tell me one thing I apprehend not: why didst lay thy cap upon the sword''s point? |
46791 | But tell me, Daphnis, in what place am I? |
46791 | But tell me, Daphnis, was not I once dead? |
46791 | But to our business that more concerns us: Is the deed ready- written that my lady Must seal to- day? |
46791 | But to th''purpose-- what rivals? |
46791 | But true, Dorinda; will you spit upon me? |
46791 | But what did then become of the young prince? |
46791 | But what entertainment Would old rich Earthworm give us, do you think? |
46791 | But what firm signs of faith, what faithful aid, What furtherance, can you give at our arrival? |
46791 | But what hopes have you of your mistress? |
46791 | But what is she you love? |
46791 | But what is true? |
46791 | But what need millions, when some thousand serve? |
46791 | But what of that? |
46791 | But what said my Nancy? |
46791 | But what, no customers yet? |
46791 | But what, this love-- has it transformed us all? |
46791 | But when thou hast, what wilt thou say to him? |
46791 | But where is Thyrsis? |
46791 | But where is he? |
46791 | But where should I find her? |
46791 | But where''s the answer which her idol gave? |
46791 | But where''s this happiness I fain would dream of? |
46791 | But whilst we talk thus, see, the flame has caught you; Your beauteous flame, Nerina, is at hand, Dorinda with her: dare you stay th''encounter? |
46791 | But whilst you mourn thus, who looks to your flock? |
46791 | But who are these? |
46791 | But who comes to thee to supply thy wants? |
46791 | But who is this I see here? |
46791 | But who''s here? |
46791 | But why do I thus wander in my thoughts? |
46791 | But why so wrinkled? |
46791 | But will Our laws permit a ravisher to live? |
46791 | But will it surely be a match? |
46791 | But will you not declare how I came hither? |
46791 | But will you stand both at my disposing? |
46791 | But will you swear To let me know of it before he die? |
46791 | But yet their fortune is not? |
46791 | But yet, sir, with your favour, might you not Have made inquiry after him? |
46791 | But you can suffer yourself to be beloved? |
46791 | But you have seen your mistress, Master Dotterel? |
46791 | But you were even with him? |
46791 | But, Rollano, hark; What words, what looks did give my letter welcome? |
46791 | But, bounteous sir, How do you call your buildings? |
46791 | But, madam, what did poor[365] Hermione deserve, That you should hide yourself from her? |
46791 | But, prythee, Euphues, What is the reason sweet Artemia, Thy cousin, is not here? |
46791 | But, prythee, Euphues, tell me plainly now, What thou dost think of me? |
46791 | But, shepherd, what disease is''t that so soon Could spend his force upon her? |
46791 | By love, who is''t? |
46791 | By this deed They have convey''d it hither, where it ought Of right to be: are you content with this? |
46791 | By this judge how miserable I am? |
46791 | By violence? |
46791 | By what strange means, Nerina? |
46791 | Came you from heaven, where my Sylvia is, And must I thither? |
46791 | Can Daphnis do this? |
46791 | Can I hear this and live? |
46791 | Can I lie hid nowhere securely from The throng and press of men? |
46791 | Can he read son there? |
46791 | Can it be? |
46791 | Can light dawn, and none see the way to my house for a morning''s draught? |
46791 | Can my heart e''er consent my tongue should say, I am for any other but Eugenio? |
46791 | Can not This miracle of my reassuming A mortal shape persuade thee there are gods To punish falsehood, that thou still persistest In thy dissembling? |
46791 | Can not the picture of my misery Be drawn, and hung out to the eyes of men, But thou must come to scorn and laugh at it? |
46791 | Can shepherds then Despise that deity which we adore? |
46791 | Can sounds affright you, Which yet you know not whether they do bring Or joys or sorrows? |
46791 | Can such a caitiff wretch, Hated and curs''d by all, have such a son? |
46791 | Can there be such a miscreant in nature? |
46791 | Can this be he? |
46791 | Can you be constant unto me, as I Can be to you? |
46791 | Can you deny but that you have attempted The faith of my Hermione? |
46791 | Can you doubt it? |
46791 | Can you expound the sense? |
46791 | Can you obtain but so much respite from Your other sovereign''s service, as to keep Your eye from gazing on her for awhile? |
46791 | Can you sing your ballad yet? |
46791 | Can''st thou abuse me thus, that first of all Did''st counsel me to do it? |
46791 | Can''st thou look on this, This piece, Cleander, and not blush to boast Thy follies thus, seeking to take away From his full virtue? |
46791 | Canst thou devise to lay them half on me? |
46791 | Canst thou hope either from my injur''d patience, Vex''d by thy folly into rage and madness? |
46791 | Canst thou remember this, and yet not blush? |
46791 | Cleander, is it thou? |
46791 | Cleon, hast thou seen him with his mistress? |
46791 | Cleon, whither slip you? |
46791 | Cleon, you can tell who''tis he thus admires? |
46791 | Cold meat will do it, will''t not? |
46791 | Com''st thou to stitch his wounds that seeks to cut My throat? |
46791 | Come hither: Whither do you steal now? |
46791 | Come, Andrew, tell me, How cam''st thou hither? |
46791 | Come, Master Barnet, Shall we go see the party? |
46791 | Come, Roger, will you go? |
46791 | Come, are you perfect? |
46791 | Come, buy my pearmains, curious John apples, dainty pippins; come, who buys? |
46791 | Come, my good vulture, speak; what prey? |
46791 | Come, servant, Shall we go in? |
46791 | Come, shall we join together? |
46791 | Come, shall we turn knight- errants? |
46791 | Come, sir, I yield myself your prisoner: You are the keeper of this Ludgate? |
46791 | Come, thou perceiv''st it well enough; What else should make her court thee, and bestow Her favours openly? |
46791 | Come, to be short, answer me, and directly; Are you content to marry Daphnis, say? |
46791 | Come, what''s the matter? |
46791 | Come, where''s Master Foster? |
46791 | Come, will ye forsake your ensign, and fall off? |
46791 | Come, will you walk, sir? |
46791 | Confess, confess: where are your other comrades? |
46791 | Could I but repair this old decay''d tenement of mine with some new plaister; for, alas, what can a man do in such a case as this? |
46791 | Could I e''er have thought A miracle could have restor''d thee to my eyes, That[364] they should, see the joys of heaven in thee? |
46791 | Could you take one for her that''s nothing like her? |
46791 | Cousin, what make you here, I pray? |
46791 | Coz, shall I tell thee the truth? |
46791 | D''y''hear Ought of the Turk''s designs? |
46791 | D''y''see? |
46791 | D''y''think I would undo myself by twitting? |
46791 | D''y''think that I Would call him so when he is in your suit? |
46791 | D''ye think that there are such faces in Elysium? |
46791 | D''ye think your tears shall cost me so many tears as they have done her? |
46791 | D''you think I have no more manners than so? |
46791 | D''you think that all the names of virtue shrink Into the sound of constancy? |
46791 | Daphnis, am not I Worthy to have a share in your salute? |
46791 | Daphnis, my, love, Whither so fast? |
46791 | Daphnis, you''re welcome, very welcome to me, And to my daughter: what is that you have there? |
46791 | Dares not death shut those eyes, where love Hath enter''d once, or am I in the shades Assisted with the ghost of my dear Lysicles? |
46791 | Darest thou in despite Relieve this dotard? |
46791 | Depriv''d thy father of a child, thyself Of thine own sister, whom but now thou knew''st? |
46791 | Did I for this love virtue, Pursued her rugged paths, when danger made Her horrid to the valiant to be ruin''d By him that is most virtuous? |
46791 | Did I from riot take him to waste my goods, And he strives to augment it? |
46791 | Did I not see her dead? |
46791 | Did I not tickle her there, old lad? |
46791 | Did I so easily digest her death, That I want pity, and am thought unworthy Of all succeeding love? |
46791 | Did all my mad lads go sober to bed last night? |
46791 | Did he buy them, or found them without a father, and has adopted them for his own? |
46791 | Did he not say he''d beg for you? |
46791 | Did he woo you with posnets and skillets, and promise you a kettle next Bartholomew fair? |
46791 | Did not I tell you so? |
46791 | Did she hear it? |
46791 | Did she smile, and say that all her denials were maiden''s nays? |
46791 | Did the letter work so strangely on her, are you sure? |
46791 | Did there e''er flow Poison and health together in one tide? |
46791 | Did you give him cause to draw upon you in th''garrison? |
46791 | Did you ne''er meet one Theodore at Venice? |
46791 | Did you not lose your wedding- ring the other day? |
46791 | Did you receive wounds on condition? |
46791 | Did you say, Fly, brass, the devil''s a tinker? |
46791 | Did you suspect her, that you conceal''d this from her? |
46791 | Didst thou mistrust thy spectacles? |
46791 | Do I live here whilst she is dying there? |
46791 | Do I look young enough? |
46791 | Do I swear or kick for asking, if I want money? |
46791 | Do but consider that every sow has a ring, and will not you have one? |
46791 | Do n''t you see December in her face? |
46791 | Do not I know Thy heart is swoll''n with vows thou hast laid up For thy Hermione? |
46791 | Do not tell me of vows: I''ll have her marry, And marry Daphnis: is he not rich and handsome? |
46791 | Do not the dangers which Environ you call for a good conclusion? |
46791 | Do not you know him? |
46791 | Do they still haunt me? |
46791 | Do they want corn- cutters or tooth- drawers? |
46791 | Do y''think We''ll eat this? |
46791 | Do you believe she''ll seal it? |
46791 | Do you believe what Phillida say''th is the voice of all your friends? |
46791 | Do you depart to- night? |
46791 | Do you hear my cousin, madam? |
46791 | Do you long for a man? |
46791 | Do you make mouths, you rascal, thus at me? |
46791 | Do you not hear her guts already squeak Like kit- strings? |
46791 | Do you not hear him, uncle? |
46791 | Do you not smell Poultry ware, Sir Godfrey? |
46791 | Do you not think he has done my cousin a simple favour, comparing of her voice to that of heaven? |
46791 | Do you observe, sir, he will not know you now? |
46791 | Do you think I will betray myself or you, whom I Esteem above myself? |
46791 | Do you think so? |
46791 | Do you think''tis money I esteem? |
46791 | Does Eugenio know you love him? |
46791 | Does he not so? |
46791 | Does he not weep, Or do my flattering hopes deceive my sight? |
46791 | Does he think I''ll be his trull, and that he shall smutch my face thus with his charcoal nose? |
46791 | Does he? |
46791 | Does it concern me aught? |
46791 | Does she say anything that''s out of reason? |
46791 | Does your glass Tell you I flatter, madam? |
46791 | Does''t not? |
46791 | Dost believe thou can''st swagger them out of their loves? |
46791 | Dost not thou know the reason of that? |
46791 | Dost think there''s no birds stirring still that will spy out these feathers? |
46791 | Dost thou doubt that? |
46791 | Dost thou know Caster''s farm? |
46791 | Dost thou know no enchanted castle, no golden ladies in distress or imprisoned by some old giant usurer? |
46791 | Dost thou make me a smith, thou rogue? |
46791 | Dost thou not see I''m sober? |
46791 | Dost thou not see how soon the Lady Whimsey Is caught in love with thee? |
46791 | Dost thou not see that all the fire is out of the coal? |
46791 | Dost thou think I''ll offer''t? |
46791 | Dost thou want money? |
46791 | Dost want coin? |
46791 | Dost wisp me, thou tatterdemalion? |
46791 | Doth Allia yet run clear? |
46791 | Doth he think so? |
46791 | Doth it so? |
46791 | Down, stubborn heart, Wilt thou not break yet? |
46791 | Dreads he not our sea- monsters, whose wild shapes Their theatres ne''er yet in picture saw? |
46791 | Durst thou descend through those close- winding stairs With treacherous intent? |
46791 | Durst thou presume to pass that coral porch? |
46791 | Enough of this; wert thou with Ergasto? |
46791 | Ergasto, my Lord Ergasto, what, have you left your tongue with your heart? |
46791 | Ergasto, wilt thou be happy? |
46791 | Eubulus, this is he; Montanus, is it not? |
46791 | Ey save you both; for dern love sayen soothly Where is thylk amebly franklin, cleped Meanwell? |
46791 | False- hearted Gaul, dar''st thou persuade e''en me For to betray my people to the sword? |
46791 | False? |
46791 | Fame of a constant lover will eternise it More than a numerous issue; would you hear Herself express her sorrow? |
46791 | Fool that I was, could I Not all this while perceive''twas thee? |
46791 | For a thief, I''ll warrant you; who''ll you have next? |
46791 | For what serve sart and engines, mounds and trenches, But to correct the nature of a plain? |
46791 | For what, I prythee? |
46791 | For when your heir I first adopted was, charity was there: How errs your judgment then? |
46791 | From what part of the town came this fair day in a cloud, that makes you look so cheerfully? |
46791 | Gentlemen, you may see how quickly a man may be shuffled into a wedding; we liked at first sight, and why should we then defer our joys any longer? |
46791 | Gentlemen? |
46791 | George, you observe this? |
46791 | Get thee from my sight, Thou devil in red: com''st thou in scarlet pride To tread on thy poor brother in a jail? |
46791 | Given to his wife? |
46791 | Gods, could that man have liv''d that dar''d to say Eugenio did suspect his Lysicles? |
46791 | Good lieutenant, How dost thou? |
46791 | Good master alderman, I think that string Will still offend mine ear; you mean the jarring''Twixt me and my brother? |
46791 | Good sweet lieutenant, Give me but leave to ask one question of you: Art thou entire and sound in all thy limbs? |
46791 | Grass, you mean? |
46791 | Ha, a course? |
46791 | Ha? |
46791 | Ha? |
46791 | Had he so, slave? |
46791 | Had you an ague, then? |
46791 | Hand? |
46791 | Hang her, what should women do with money, or anything that''s good? |
46791 | Hapless Dorinda, why should he despise thee? |
46791 | Hark, coz, where''s your uncle''s money? |
46791 | Has Cupid played the joiner with you, then? |
46791 | Has he pierced you, ha? |
46791 | Has he told you how? |
46791 | Has she a father living? |
46791 | Has she found me out, For all I sought to hide myself? |
46791 | Has thy true love broke through so many hazards To visit me? |
46791 | Has''t any way To make my sword fetch blood? |
46791 | Hast thou no wit, now thy money''s gone? |
46791 | Have I Plotted to take you off from these, to match you In better sort, and am us''d thus? |
46791 | Have I been false for this to all my friends? |
46791 | Have I deserv''d such dealing at your hands? |
46791 | Have I deserved this? |
46791 | Have I liv''d all this while to be o''er- reach''d And cheated by a woman? |
46791 | Have I suffer''d you Thus long i''my house, and ne''er demanded yet One penny rent for this? |
46791 | Have the gods Shut up their oracles as well as mercy? |
46791 | Have there been any new storms since I went? |
46791 | Have you Not lately lost a lady that did love you dearly? |
46791 | Have you any corns upon your feet or toes? |
46791 | Have you any work for a tinker? |
46791 | Have you never a one called_ The honest Fresh Cheese and Cream Woman_? |
46791 | Have you no rivals? |
46791 | Have you sent for the Egyptian lady? |
46791 | Have you sought By all the means you can to sift the cause Of her departure? |
46791 | Have you such skill in perspective? |
46791 | Have you suits to us? |
46791 | Have you the pox, sir? |
46791 | Have you the_ Ballad of the Unfortunate Lover_? |
46791 | Have you the_ Coy Maid_? |
46791 | Have your quick eyes found out his worth already? |
46791 | He ask''d you, If that you were content? |
46791 | He could not be so cruel to intend it? |
46791 | He gave you life; How can you better spend it, than to wreak His death and slaughter? |
46791 | He says well, i''faith: why should a man trust to executors? |
46791 | He whose cheap thirst the springs and brooks can quench, How many cares is he exempted from? |
46791 | He''d bite me, sure? |
46791 | He''s laid already, and( I fear) asleep; I''ll stay until he wake; but then suppose That anybody come, and take me here, What will they think of me? |
46791 | Here, here, make haste with it; but, ere thou goest, Tell me, is it a pretty thing? |
46791 | Here, take thy glass again: what ails my head? |
46791 | Hermione, Irene, is Lysicles yet come? |
46791 | How cam''st thou hither? |
46791 | How came I hither then? |
46791 | How came you To sing beneath the window? |
46791 | How came you out of prison, sirrah? |
46791 | How can I choose? |
46791 | How can I give thee part of that, whereof I have no share myself? |
46791 | How can I help it, if your destiny Lead you to love where you may not obtain? |
46791 | How can I help it, if your destiny Lead you to love where you may not obtain? |
46791 | How can I know what med''cines to apply, If that you tell me not where lies your grief? |
46791 | How can I, sweetest, when my heart is with you? |
46791 | How can they but o''erwhelm me? |
46791 | How can this stranger have offended him? |
46791 | How can your sorrows increase from him? |
46791 | How could I choose, Being thou wert not here? |
46791 | How could the queen take this So sad a story? |
46791 | How could thy venom Seize on her, and not( sweeten''d) lose his virtue, Or rather vicious quality? |
46791 | How could you hope that without my consent? |
46791 | How dare you maintain that, sir? |
46791 | How did he meet that unexpected kindness? |
46791 | How did she look? |
46791 | How did you then? |
46791 | How died she? |
46791 | How differ they in nature? |
46791 | How do you esteem him? |
46791 | How do you find her? |
46791 | How do you like this, madam? |
46791 | How do you, love? |
46791 | How does my lady, sir? |
46791 | How dost thou like this music, Theodore? |
46791 | How dost thou, coz? |
46791 | How fare ye, gentlemen? |
46791 | How fare you, brother? |
46791 | How from this? |
46791 | How go the squares? |
46791 | How grow your hopes? |
46791 | How is it, dearest cousin? |
46791 | How long is''t you have undertaken to be your own disposer? |
46791 | How low is this in you? |
46791 | How may I trust your faith? |
46791 | How now, Budget? |
46791 | How now, Eubulus, Are my presages true? |
46791 | How now, good friend? |
46791 | How now, keeper? |
46791 | How now, my fine trundletails;[66] my wooden cosmographers; my bowling- alley in an uproar? |
46791 | How now, my lord? |
46791 | How now, sweet wife, what art thou musing on? |
46791 | How now, sweetheart? |
46791 | How now, wife, art vex''d yet? |
46791 | How now, woman? |
46791 | How now? |
46791 | How now? |
46791 | How now? |
46791 | How then? |
46791 | How think you then, is not this a wonder? |
46791 | How think you? |
46791 | How think''st now? |
46791 | How''s this? |
46791 | How''s this? |
46791 | How''s this? |
46791 | How''s this? |
46791 | How, man? |
46791 | How, married? |
46791 | How, my dear friend? |
46791 | How, your cloak? |
46791 | How? |
46791 | How? |
46791 | How? |
46791 | Hylas, come help me; see''st thou not that Daphnis Will ravish me? |
46791 | I am no king, unless of scorn and woe; Why kneel''st thou, then? |
46791 | I am sorry I came not soon enough: but prythee, cousin, What are the ways have taken thee so soon? |
46791 | I betray you? |
46791 | I can not believe thy wit''s more than thy money-- a fellow so well- limbed, so able to do good service, and want? |
46791 | I could prevent[37] you: is''t not my unthrifty brother? |
46791 | I do not ask thee about these diseases: My question is, whether thou''st all thy parts? |
46791 | I had thought you had been in Ludgate, sir? |
46791 | I have taken him so before you, sir: will you be quiet? |
46791 | I know not what you mean: Can you change death into a sleep? |
46791 | I like that resolution well; but how comes it then that thy wit leaves thy body unfurnished? |
46791 | I like this well; yet, if I should prove false To my old master for my young master''s sake, Who can accuse me? |
46791 | I prythee, Barnet, how hast thou screw''d up This fool to such a monstrous confidence? |
46791 | I prythee, bar me of no privilege Due to a free citizen: thou knowest me well? |
46791 | I shall have so much Upon your word, sir? |
46791 | I spoil her good nature? |
46791 | I thank ye, sir: then tell me, gentlemen, What present money can you pay? |
46791 | I thank you, sir, and so much a loser? |
46791 | I understand you: Grease him i''th''fist, you mean? |
46791 | I wept you dead, the virgins did entomb you: Were we then or no deceiv''d? |
46791 | I wrote a letter for thee To Earthworm''s son: has the young ten- i''-th''-hundred Been here? |
46791 | I''ll undertake it; but how shall I know him Without inquiring, which must breed suspicion? |
46791 | I''m going, sir, unto him; do you know Where I may find him? |
46791 | I''m very well: what mean you, brother? |
46791 | I, sir? |
46791 | I, that must stand the strokes then, what defence Shall I prepare against them? |
46791 | I? |
46791 | If I do, why then Was I here buried amongst these flowers? |
46791 | If in my favour You''ll sit warm, then bury all love to him, Nay, duty; hear you, sir? |
46791 | If it be a joy, Why should you envy it your dearest friend? |
46791 | If she be honest, your arts can not alter her; and if otherwise, had I not rather adopt a son of thine than a stranger''s? |
46791 | If to yourself unkind, be kind to me; For my sake stay at home; why will you fly? |
46791 | If worst should fall, my love( which heaven forfend), How could I choose but suffer? |
46791 | If you do perform The cure by that time, twenty pieces, sir: You are content? |
46791 | If your love were considerable, what an obligation had your cousin to your stars? |
46791 | If''twere good To take from a father for an uncle''s food In laws of love and nature, how much rather Might I abridge an uncle for a father? |
46791 | Ill news? |
46791 | In good time: and what trade was your father, sir? |
46791 | In the dicing- house? |
46791 | In the name of darkness, d''ye think I am not in earnest, that you coy it thus? |
46791 | In verse or prose? |
46791 | Indeed I do not often sleep: ha, who are you? |
46791 | Indeed now? |
46791 | Is Lysicles less worthy than his rival? |
46791 | Is Lysicles unworthy? |
46791 | Is Orlando up in arms? |
46791 | Is death An ease or torment? |
46791 | Is he become expression? |
46791 | Is he not somewhat startled at the report of thy debauchery? |
46791 | Is hell afraid my constancy should conquer The mischiefs that are rais''d to swallow me, That it invents new plagues to batter me? |
46791 | Is it not Hylas? |
46791 | Is it not strange? |
46791 | Is it to make your will, or to get you a new husband? |
46791 | Is no nook safe from Rome? |
46791 | Is not this strange? |
46791 | Is not this your ring? |
46791 | Is she alive? |
46791 | Is she dead? |
46791 | Is she dead? |
46791 | Is she gone? |
46791 | Is she not glad to come unto our presence? |
46791 | Is she not so, Charinus? |
46791 | Is she not strangely fair? |
46791 | Is she softened, and will she now let me taste her strawberry lips willingly? |
46791 | Is she? |
46791 | Is such a marriage lawful? |
46791 | Is that Sir Argent Scrape in the chair yonder? |
46791 | Is that match come about? |
46791 | Is that the way? |
46791 | Is that word yet on earth? |
46791 | Is there a wish beyond this happiness, When I embrace thee thus? |
46791 | Is there but one small conduit- pipe that runs Cold water to my comfort, and wouldst thou Cut off that, thou cruel man? |
46791 | Is there no danger of drowning? |
46791 | Is there no other room empty? |
46791 | Is this Your filthy rendezvous? |
46791 | Is this a punishment for adoring her Equal with you, you made so equal to ye? |
46791 | Is this a vision, A mere fantastic show, or do I see Scudmore himself alive? |
46791 | Is this that Northern rout, the scourge of kingdoms, Whose names, till now unknown, we judged Gauls-- Their tongue and manners not unlike? |
46791 | Is this the cure I should perform? |
46791 | Is this the guerdon[290] of my loving care? |
46791 | Is this to me, kinsman, you speak? |
46791 | Is your coxcomb cut? |
46791 | Is your gristle sound? |
46791 | Is your name found again within his books? |
46791 | Is''t an eve, say you? |
46791 | Is''t possible, Irene, do you love Ergasto? |
46791 | Is''t possible? |
46791 | Is''t possible? |
46791 | Is''t so, i''faith? |
46791 | Joan Potluck, spinster? |
46791 | Jove rules the spheres, Rome all the world beside; And shall this little corner be denied? |
46791 | LADY C. As what? |
46791 | LADY C. But is that lawful, to convey away All my estate, before I marry him? |
46791 | LADY C. But what hopes have you to gain it shortly? |
46791 | LADY C. How can you wish me health, that have so labour''d To ruin me in all things? |
46791 | LADY C. How do you, sir? |
46791 | LADY C. How''s this? |
46791 | LADY C. How''s this? |
46791 | LADY C. I grant''tis true: but will it not seem strange That I should serve him so? |
46791 | LADY C. Tell me, Trusty, what say the feoffees? |
46791 | LADY C. Will''t please you to draw near? |
46791 | LADY C. Yes, have you it? |
46791 | LADY W. Because( you''ll say) he''s covetous? |
46791 | LADY W. Can not he teach her that? |
46791 | LADY W. Do you hear, servant? |
46791 | LADY W. For me, sir? |
46791 | LADY W. Has he a son, I prythee? |
46791 | LADY W. How does your ladyship? |
46791 | LADY W. In what? |
46791 | LADY W. Mistress Artemia, as I suppose, I may pronounce as much to you? |
46791 | LADY W. Of what, I prythee? |
46791 | LADY W. Say you so, Master Dotterel? |
46791 | LADY W. Servant, can you discover What this should mean? |
46791 | LADY W. Servant, could you find in your heart to marry Such an old bride? |
46791 | LADY W. Shall I presume to call you servant, then? |
46791 | LADY W. Shall we go in? |
46791 | LADY W. She uses praying then, it seems? |
46791 | LADY W. What age would you desire To choose your wife of? |
46791 | LADY W. Who could not well be pleas''d with such a fortune? |
46791 | LADY W. Why, prythee? |
46791 | LADY W. You would love a wife, it seems, that loves not you? |
46791 | Lady, will you eat a piece of gingerbread? |
46791 | Landora, the Trinobantic lady? |
46791 | Lieutenant, has''t Bethought thyself as yet? |
46791 | Like one that was begotten under a butcher''s stall, I warrant, and born in a slaughter- house? |
46791 | Look you, sir, know you this duty? |
46791 | Lore me o''thing mere Alouten: what time''gan she brendle thus? |
46791 | Madam, has not the Court more pleasure in it Than the dull country, which can represent Nothing but what does taste of solitude? |
46791 | Madam, what would you expect from him you had redeemed from captivity? |
46791 | Madam, will you honour me and this gentleman with a sight of that which doth enrich the world? |
46791 | Maids, did I say? |
46791 | Mak''st thou a doubt of that? |
46791 | May I Demand your business? |
46791 | May I believe all advantageous words, Or may I doubt them, seeing they come from you, Who are all truth? |
46791 | May I not know the reason? |
46791 | May not I Bestow her where I please? |
46791 | Methinks you contradict yourself: how can you Be wholly mine, and yet my servant''s servant? |
46791 | More provocation yet? |
46791 | Mother? |
46791 | Mount Palatine, thou throne of Jove, and ye, Whose lesser turrets pinnacle Rome''s head, Are all your deities fled? |
46791 | Must I be miserable in losing you, Because the gods thought me unworthy her? |
46791 | Must I be stickler, then? |
46791 | Must I be strong again? |
46791 | Must I return from banishment to find My hopes are banish''d? |
46791 | Must every place Become a theatre, where I seek shelter, And solitudes become markets,''cause I''m there? |
46791 | Must my sheets lie smooth till I am wrinkled? |
46791 | Must poor tradesmen be brought out, And nobody clapp''d up? |
46791 | Must that be added? |
46791 | Must that be argument of cruelty, Which should be cause of pity? |
46791 | Must then nature change, And will not fortune cease to persecute? |
46791 | Must they in this new world, As they have chang''d their lives, so change their loves? |
46791 | Must this Make you forget the debt that you do owe Unto your father, friends, and to yourself; Their house''s honour and your happiness? |
46791 | My Lady Covet, Are you sad still? |
46791 | My charity being thus Abus''d, and quit with injury, what could I then But, as his father erst, so I again Might throw him from my love? |
46791 | My credit I have crack''d To buy a venture, which the sea has soak''d; What worse can woe report? |
46791 | My friend, how couldst thou keep conceal''d so long From me? |
46791 | My lord, have you not seen a face like this? |
46791 | My meaning is, Whether that something is not wanting that Should write thee husband? |
46791 | My neighbour Earthworm? |
46791 | Nay, I am fully satisfied; but canst thou want money whilst thou hast fingers to tell it? |
46791 | Nay, bailiff, But one word more, and I have done: what place Is there to dry wet linen in? |
46791 | Nay, nay, abuse not your poor friends; but tell me, What dost thou think of young Artemia now? |
46791 | Nay, then you underrate your own value much: will you make it thirty? |
46791 | Nay, villain him no villains; is it so, Or not? |
46791 | Nay, will you see a present proof of it? |
46791 | Ne''er fear that, my wench: Dost think the king would send me to the wars Without I had my weapons? |
46791 | Never hire Any to tempt me? |
46791 | Never? |
46791 | No gleanings, James? |
46791 | No groats due? |
46791 | No trencher- analects? |
46791 | No, gentle Hylas? |
46791 | No, nor yet An ache in your bones? |
46791 | No, sir? |
46791 | No, sir? |
46791 | No? |
46791 | No? |
46791 | Nor get your wench With child, I warrant? |
46791 | Nor mark On whom I laugh? |
46791 | Nor suspect my smiles, My nods, my winks? |
46791 | Nor yet keep count From any gallant''s visit? |
46791 | Not dead? |
46791 | Not yet, Ditty; but is''t to the tune o''th''_ Bleeding Heart_, do you say? |
46791 | Not yet, sir; but here they come like honest gentlemen To take some order for it: good sweetheart, Shall it be put to me? |
46791 | Not yet? |
46791 | Not your master, sir? |
46791 | Nothing transmiss''d? |
46791 | Now we are met, what shall we do to keep us together? |
46791 | Now you''re at peace, I hope? |
46791 | Now, George? |
46791 | Now, Master Foster, are Your father and yourself yet reconcil''d? |
46791 | Now, Who''d have thought it? |
46791 | Now, coz, where''s your uncle? |
46791 | Now, daughter, where are your lusty suitors? |
46791 | Now, love, deliver me; And must you come to trouble me? |
46791 | Now, my kind partner, have we good news? |
46791 | Now, sir, Are all my words with you so light esteem''d, That they can take no hold upon your duty? |
46791 | Now, sir, what make you here So near the prison? |
46791 | Now, sir, your business? |
46791 | O Gum, have we found you out? |
46791 | O disproportion''d love and duty, how Do you distract me? |
46791 | O father, do you think that I am dead? |
46791 | O friend and gossip, where are you? |
46791 | O gentlemen, you''re both welcome; Have you paid this money on your bonds yet? |
46791 | O my dear lady, hast thou slain thyself? |
46791 | O my heart; gossip, do you see this? |
46791 | O, at what crevice, then, hath comfort, Like a sunbeam, crept in? |
46791 | O, can there grow A rose upon a bramble? |
46791 | O, this discourse to a despairing lover What comfort does it bring? |
46791 | O, what hopes Am I fall''n from; who would believe these false Deceitful creatures? |
46791 | O, why dost thou complain? |
46791 | One of my lord major''s spaniels? |
46791 | One question more: What dangers shall I pass? |
46791 | Or are you the Milesia that was pleas''d To call me friend? |
46791 | Or at my country''s wreck, whose surface torn Doth for my vengeance importune the pole? |
46791 | Or at myself? |
46791 | Or breach of faith d''you fear? |
46791 | Or can the hazard Of ten such lives as mine is countervail One glance of favour from thy beauteous eyes? |
46791 | Or can three hundred summers slake their fear? |
46791 | Or do we basely faint? |
46791 | Or have some tattling gossips or the maids Told her, perchance, that he''s a conjuror? |
46791 | Or if he come, how shall he know me his, Or I enjoy his company? |
46791 | Or in a long trance? |
46791 | Or in the grave do men see waters, trees, As I do now, and all things, as I liv''d? |
46791 | Or is my present Worthy the thanks you give me? |
46791 | Or is our might Answer''d with like, since Troy''gainst Troy doth fight? |
46791 | Or is the passage which my soul should make, Shut up with sorrow? |
46791 | Or made to judge by any square or rule, As if you came not to a stage, but school? |
46791 | Or more mildly tell him you could not settle your affections on him? |
46791 | Or thee, Landora, dying for his sake, And in thy death including mine? |
46791 | Our Dotterel, then, is caught? |
46791 | Out, raggamuffin? |
46791 | Pallas, Apollo, what may this portend? |
46791 | Pasture in proportion? |
46791 | Pay, what else? |
46791 | Phormio, what do you think of this? |
46791 | Pray ye, gentlemen, May I request your names? |
46791 | Pray, Montanus, tell me---- For you have known the several ways of wooing, Which is the best and safest? |
46791 | Pray, let me question you: You lost a husband-- was it no grief to you? |
46791 | Prythee, digest thy troubled thoughts, and tell me What prince is this thou mean''st? |
46791 | Renown''d Cassibelane, might my counsel speak? |
46791 | Report? |
46791 | Richard, have you any further news yet from our shipping? |
46791 | Right; but does this usage show it? |
46791 | Rise, your duty''s done; your petitions Shall need no knees, so your intents be honest: Does none here know them? |
46791 | Roger, where''s your master? |
46791 | SIR T. Can she suggest yet any good, that is So expert grown in this flesh- brokery? |
46791 | SIR T. I hope You do mean your partners my good friends? |
46791 | Saw you your sad father? |
46791 | Say, sir, are ye content? |
46791 | See we not beasts conceive, as they do fancy The present colours plac''d before their eyes? |
46791 | Seeing your empire''s great, why should it not suffice? |
46791 | Set you merry, my merry, merry lads; what, do the cans dance nimbly? |
46791 | Shall I bid your venture at a venture? |
46791 | Shall I dare To speak my thoughts, and so discharge my soul Of one load yet? |
46791 | Shall I deceive, when she remains so true? |
46791 | Shall I entreat you To carry me to old Sir Argent Scrape, My kinsman? |
46791 | Shall I meet you half- way? |
46791 | Shall I not live to breathe a quiet hour? |
46791 | Shall ensigns be display''d, and nations rage About so vile a wretch? |
46791 | Shall justice and just Libra ne''er forsake Th''embroider''d belt? |
46791 | Shall not? |
46791 | Shall we have wine good store? |
46791 | Shall we resolve to live thus, till we gaze Our eyes out first, and then lose all our senses In their succession? |
46791 | Shall we strive to leave Our souls breath''d forth upon each other''s lips? |
46791 | She that disputes love into nothing-- or, what''s worse, a friendship with a woman? |
46791 | She thinks of Hylas still: what shall I do? |
46791 | She was not here? |
46791 | She would not hear him; and as it is, how much does he oblige her? |
46791 | She''s dead, and do I live? |
46791 | Should I guess-- I know not what to think; she may have heard That he''s a proper man, and so desire To satisfy herself? |
46791 | Since we, thy brood degenerous, stand at gaze, Charm''d in the circle of a foaming flood, And trail our dastard pikes? |
46791 | Sir, I hope Lord Lysicles is not yet Retir''d? |
46791 | Sir, are you content? |
46791 | Sir, have we your consent? |
46791 | Sir, will you now take horse? |
46791 | Sirrah, when saw you my son Robert? |
46791 | Sirrah, will the churchman come I sent you for? |
46791 | Sirrah, you''ll begone? |
46791 | Sirs, dare you believe it? |
46791 | Slaughter- calf do you say my name shall be? |
46791 | So melancholy, sweet? |
46791 | So mote[161] I gone, This goeth aright: how highteth[162] she, say you? |
46791 | So you sacrifice the hog to get the bristles? |
46791 | So, sir; suppose it be for marriage? |
46791 | Son, son, she shall be yours: why, am not I Her father, she my daughter? |
46791 | Sort''em yourselves: either passage, Novem, or mumchance? |
46791 | Speak, prythee; how long is''t since thou couldst grope the tap out? |
46791 | Speak, sweet mistress, am I the youth in a basket? |
46791 | Speak, tutor, do I use To quarrel? |
46791 | Speak, what art thou? |
46791 | Spend her estate? |
46791 | Stain of thy kindred''s honour, he exclaims, Was there no other man to ease your lust But he that was our greatest enemy? |
46791 | Stay, Montanus, Did the king send for you? |
46791 | Stay, shepherd, whither would you have me go? |
46791 | Suitors call you''em? |
46791 | Suppose to make my will, how then? |
46791 | Sure, I have slept myself into an owl, and mistake night for day? |
46791 | Sweetest of things, was''t thou? |
46791 | Take me for a bee, to knit at the sound of a brass kettle or frying- pan? |
46791 | Talking to graves at night, and making love i''th''day? |
46791 | Tapster, where are you? |
46791 | Tell me first, what is she you love? |
46791 | Tell me, are you so, Hylas? |
46791 | That I protest it shall not be; but, tell me, Shall I express my love to her in verse Or prose? |
46791 | That you should think I can be so to you? |
46791 | That''s but the third part indeed: but goes he no further? |
46791 | The city''s beauty? |
46791 | The gentlest youth that ever play''d on pipe, But see, who''s here? |
46791 | The masquers, Hylas; these are they must trip it Before the king: dost like their properties? |
46791 | The third part of a knave? |
46791 | The time is come: Thou''lt be as good unto me as thy word? |
46791 | The two last of all? |
46791 | Then he dissembled when he made love to me? |
46791 | Then help to lift this stone; see where she lies-- The same Nerina? |
46791 | Then let me die, take me into thy arms, Sweet love, you''ll see my coffin strew''d with flowers, And you, Dorinda, will you make a garland? |
46791 | Then shall I tell my cousin that you are A younger brother, Master Dotterel? |
46791 | Then they''ve lost the day? |
46791 | Then thou dost know it? |
46791 | Then thou hast yet a year of happiness: but why, I prythee? |
46791 | Then would you keep''t alone? |
46791 | Then you do wrong, sir; for you take money for''em: what woman can have a husband, but you must have custom for him? |
46791 | Then you have bargain''d, George? |
46791 | Then you know Crispianus? |
46791 | These things may be; but why should she make me To be her instrument? |
46791 | Think ye the smoky mist Of sun- boil''d seas can stop the eagle''s eye? |
46791 | Think you a stepdame soil gives sweeter sap? |
46791 | This Moor then was confederate with your uncle''s passion? |
46791 | This is a riddle: Pray let me know what you do mean by it? |
46791 | This may help happily to make all peace: But how, have you parley''d with my daughter, sir? |
46791 | This meant to me? |
46791 | This riband and this hair you see me wear, Are they not ensigns of a lover? |
46791 | Those things may well be done: Else what were money good for? |
46791 | Thou art in love, I warrant, art thou not? |
46791 | Thou art very poor? |
46791 | Thou hitt''st it right: but canst thou be content With my poor diet too? |
46791 | Thou long''st to see thy mistress? |
46791 | Three strings to thy bow at once? |
46791 | To what purpose Did you do this? |
46791 | To what strange laws does heaven confine itself, That it will suffer them that dare be damn''d To have power over those it has selected? |
46791 | Twenty thousand pounds? |
46791 | Uncle, is this the reformation that you promised me? |
46791 | Villain, dost abuse me In unbaptized language? |
46791 | Villain, know''st thou not me? |
46791 | Waes- heal, thou gentle knight? |
46791 | Was ever Woman thus abus''d? |
46791 | Was ever woman Thus burden''d with unhappy happiness? |
46791 | Was he a butcher, say you? |
46791 | Was he a suitor? |
46791 | Was it no more? |
46791 | Was not her death affliction enough, But you must make me be the murderer? |
46791 | Was she pliable? |
46791 | Was''t that Scudmore, sir, Whom Eugeny, Sir Argent Scrape''s young kinsman, Unfortunately kill''d? |
46791 | We both have had satiety of that: But can you bring no comfort? |
46791 | We have hunted well, mistress; do you not see the hare''s in sight? |
46791 | We won the day, and all our foes are fled? |
46791 | Welcome still, my merchants of_ bona Speranza_; what''s your traffic, bullies? |
46791 | Welcome, Eugenio, welcome, worthy friend; How long are you arrived? |
46791 | Welcome, my lords, do you know this lady? |
46791 | Well, daughter, well; say a third trouble come; say in the person of young Master Foster here came a third suitor: how then? |
46791 | Well, sir, well, let not all this trouble you; see, he''s come: will you begone? |
46791 | Well, sir, what if I do? |
46791 | Well, sir, you love me, then? |
46791 | Well, what will you infer on this? |
46791 | Well- returned, Androgeus: Have you obtain''d, or is your suit denied? |
46791 | Well- said, wag; are there sparks kindled? |
46791 | Were all your vows then made but to abuse me? |
46791 | Were not her lips sufficient antidote? |
46791 | Were these by compact? |
46791 | What God adore you? |
46791 | What Lemnian chain shackles our mounting eagle? |
46791 | What a sad accent had each word he uttered? |
46791 | What a sight were this, To meet her father? |
46791 | What a still shade Hath she found out to live securely in, From the attempts of men? |
46791 | What a strange kind of pageant have we seen? |
46791 | What advantage, my delicate sweet lady? |
46791 | What age can parallel so great a mischief? |
46791 | What ail''st thou? |
46791 | What ails you, woman? |
46791 | What are these petitioners? |
46791 | What are they? |
46791 | What are they? |
46791 | What are you, sir? |
46791 | What are you? |
46791 | What art thou? |
46791 | What becomes of our_ roaring boys_ then,_ that stab healths one to another_?" |
46791 | What boots the former happiness I had, But to increase my sorrow? |
46791 | What business have you with the churchman? |
46791 | What can not love do? |
46791 | What can not women''s words and flatteries Effect with simple lovers? |
46791 | What can so baleful be, as thou wouldst seem To make by this sad prologue? |
46791 | What colour now to cover disobedience? |
46791 | What comfort like to this can riches give? |
46791 | What confidence Had he, that he would never marry any, But such, forsooth, as must first fall in love With him, not knowing of his wealth at all? |
46791 | What could you get by that? |
46791 | What course will you take to redeem your fault? |
46791 | What cruel fate, Angry with men, that gave us hearts alike And fortunes so asunder? |
46791 | What did you then? |
46791 | What did you with my brother? |
46791 | What do you intend? |
46791 | What do you think of me to make a bridegroom? |
46791 | What dost thou mean? |
46791 | What dost thou see? |
46791 | What else, my jolly wench? |
46791 | What else? |
46791 | What fires, what seas, must your Eugenio pass, To make him worthy you? |
46791 | What fish is there, sirrah? |
46791 | What god is it That has the power to return my soul From the Elysian fields? |
46791 | What god, that heard our vows, Hath told it you? |
46791 | What has called up this choler in my sweet cousin? |
46791 | What has my poor boy done, that you have made So much blood rise in''s cheeks? |
46791 | What has my present state To do with comfort? |
46791 | What have I deserved of you, good Cleon, that you should make me read his verses in his own presence? |
46791 | What have I done? |
46791 | What have I done? |
46791 | What have I wrong''d you now? |
46791 | What have you said that is not? |
46791 | What have you there, Cleon? |
46791 | What idol kneels that heretic to? |
46791 | What if I am he? |
46791 | What income, my dear holiness? |
46791 | What is a man? |
46791 | What is a paltry cloak to a man of worth? |
46791 | What is his business with the aldermen? |
46791 | What is his name? |
46791 | What is it, sir? |
46791 | What is she? |
46791 | What is the business? |
46791 | What is your pleasure, father? |
46791 | What is your pleasure, sir? |
46791 | What is''t that troubles you? |
46791 | What is''t you fear? |
46791 | What is''t, I prythee? |
46791 | What is''t, I prythee? |
46791 | What is''t, That can be worth the breaking of our sports? |
46791 | What is''t? |
46791 | What is''t? |
46791 | What is''t? |
46791 | What is''t? |
46791 | What is''t? |
46791 | What joy can be so great, as to be able To feed the hungry, clothe the naked man? |
46791 | What language speak they? |
46791 | What light is this I see? |
46791 | What loves- ongs have you? |
46791 | What luck is this? |
46791 | What made she here? |
46791 | What makes the peasant grovel in his muck, Humbling his crooked soul, but that he eats Bread just in colour like it? |
46791 | What man could have a heart for such a deed, And see his face? |
46791 | What may I call your name, most reverend sir? |
46791 | What may not come to pass, When Earthworm is a foe to avarice? |
46791 | What may the monstrous cause be? |
46791 | What mean these sad expressions of sorrow? |
46791 | What mean you, madam? |
46791 | What means my friend? |
46791 | What means my lord to be pleas''d with this Sad news? |
46791 | What means that woe? |
46791 | What metal is she made of, that you can not hammer her? |
46791 | What miracle can raise a tempest here, where so much beauty reigns? |
46791 | What more could you Desire to hear? |
46791 | What most compendious way to happiness? |
46791 | What mountain have you pierc''d, That hath sent forth this wind, since I left you? |
46791 | What need consulting where the cause is plain? |
46791 | What need he hands or brains, That may command the lawyer''s subtlety, The soldier''s valour, the best poet''s wit, Or any writer''s skill? |
46791 | What news from Brussels or the Hague? |
46791 | What news, Rollano, that thy feet so strive To have precedence of each other? |
46791 | What news, good Atrius? |
46791 | What news- books, Ditty? |
46791 | What noise is this? |
46791 | What of her? |
46791 | What of him? |
46791 | What officer''s that fancy- man, lieutenant? |
46791 | What paper''s that? |
46791 | What place is this? |
46791 | What pleasure can there be in highest state, Which is so cross''d in love-- the greatest good The gods can tell how to bestow on men? |
46791 | What plot is this? |
46791 | What pranks comes he to play now? |
46791 | What punishment Can there be greater than for me to see The beauty I have lost by my own fault? |
46791 | What reason then Can she allege to him? |
46791 | What riddle have we here? |
46791 | What said the oracle? |
46791 | What said the stranger, Phillida? |
46791 | What sayest thou to myself? |
46791 | What secret sin calls down this punishment? |
46791 | What servile oar must I be tied to here, Slave- like to tug within this Christian galley? |
46791 | What shall I do? |
46791 | What shall I say? |
46791 | What shall we have at our wedding dinner? |
46791 | What shepherd''s that lies on the ground? |
46791 | What should I do? |
46791 | What should he do with it? |
46791 | What should the Great Turk''s father do with wealth? |
46791 | What skin between my brows? |
46791 | What skin, thou knave? |
46791 | What skin? |
46791 | What taking do you mean? |
46791 | What then benumbs our spirits? |
46791 | What then shall hinder to destroy their name? |
46791 | What then shall we do? |
46791 | What then? |
46791 | What think you of this, Phormio? |
46791 | What unexpected mischiefs circle me, What arts hath malice, arm''d with fortune, found To make me wretched? |
46791 | What ware deal you in?--cards, dice, bowls, or pigeon- holes? |
46791 | What was that? |
46791 | What was''t, Irene? |
46791 | What was''t? |
46791 | What were his looks? |
46791 | What will he do? |
46791 | What wonder''s this, Whom thou describ''st? |
46791 | What would I have? |
46791 | What would she say If she should know me truly, that thus loves, And thinks I am but a poor younger brother? |
46791 | What would you Have her to do? |
46791 | What would you have? |
46791 | What wouldst thou have me do? |
46791 | What''s a piece Of dirty earth to me? |
46791 | What''s all this? |
46791 | What''s he that at the grate there begg''d even now? |
46791 | What''s he? |
46791 | What''s here? |
46791 | What''s my religion? |
46791 | What''s night? |
46791 | What''s that can vex me now? |
46791 | What''s that to you? |
46791 | What''s that? |
46791 | What''s the first pearl? |
46791 | What''s the moon? |
46791 | What''s your meaning, sir? |
46791 | What''s your pleasure, sir? |
46791 | What''s your reason? |
46791 | What''s yours, Richard? |
46791 | What, Meanwell, why so lumpish? |
46791 | What, Paris and OEnone-- the old story? |
46791 | What, all your ordnance lost? |
46791 | What, and lead apes in hell? |
46791 | What, are the square stones and timber brought, as I appointed? |
46791 | What, are they dead? |
46791 | What, before your father was married? |
46791 | What, did she melt easily? |
46791 | What, dost jingle? |
46791 | What, furniture for a whole fair upon thy back at once? |
46791 | What, if the prince should be your rival? |
46791 | What, if within It keep a dog of prey, would they be safe? |
46791 | What, in the name of doubt? |
46791 | What, in the name of miracle, is this? |
46791 | What, lost your cloak and suit? |
46791 | What, no man yet march by? |
46791 | What, not dead, I hope? |
46791 | What, prythee, cousin? |
46791 | What, prythee? |
46791 | What, tapster? |
46791 | What, the ladies? |
46791 | What, then? |
46791 | What, will you leave her thus? |
46791 | What,''s he fox''d too? |
46791 | What? |
46791 | What? |
46791 | When I Level my larger thoughts unto the basis Of thy deep shallowness, am I profane? |
46791 | When did you Feel the first grudging on''t? |
46791 | When freedom, life and kingdom lie at stake? |
46791 | When go you, sirrah? |
46791 | When parted this Your confessor? |
46791 | When will your costiveness have done, good madam? |
46791 | When, powerful fortune, will thy anger cease? |
46791 | Whence then proceeds your hate? |
46791 | Whence then these armed bands? |
46791 | Where are all the poor? |
46791 | Where are all these covetous rogues, Who spoil the rich for gain, and kill the poor For glory? |
46791 | Where are the poor? |
46791 | Where can not virtue dwell? |
46791 | Where could this mischief fall? |
46791 | Where do you feel You[r] grief most trouble you? |
46791 | Where dost thou live? |
46791 | Where is Andrew? |
46791 | Where is false Cæsar''s sword, call''d Crocea Mors,[309] Which never hurt but kill''d? |
46791 | Where is he? |
46791 | Where is he? |
46791 | Where is his cellarage? |
46791 | Where is my son? |
46791 | Where is thy master? |
46791 | Where lives she, sir? |
46791 | Where lives this lovely maid? |
46791 | Where must that lie? |
46791 | Where shall I first begin my last complaint, Which must be measur''d by my glass of life? |
46791 | Where shall we run? |
46791 | Where you pretend, who can? |
46791 | Where''s Prince Lysicles? |
46791 | Where''s Prince Lysicles? |
46791 | Where''s Prince Lysicles? |
46791 | Where''s Prince Lysicles? |
46791 | Where''s my factor? |
46791 | Where''s the keeper? |
46791 | Where''s this Ungrateful child whom the just gods have curs''d So much, they will not let her take the blessings they Do offer? |
46791 | Where''s your cloak? |
46791 | Where''s your dwelling? |
46791 | Wherefore look you sadly At such a joyful time? |
46791 | Wherefore, gentle maiden, Do you neglect them? |
46791 | Who are these? |
46791 | Who are they which they''re enamoured so with? |
46791 | Who calls? |
46791 | Who can hear this, and not be turn''d to marble? |
46791 | Who dares conceive against the female sex But one base thought? |
46791 | Who envies me this small repose? |
46791 | Who ever had a misery like mine? |
46791 | Who goes there? |
46791 | Who is this trough that he is about to run away with? |
46791 | Who is''t for? |
46791 | Who is''t he has fastened to your heart with that nail? |
46791 | Who is''t that calls? |
46791 | Who makes this outcry? |
46791 | Who should bestow the daughter but the father? |
46791 | Who then is injur''d if I kill myself? |
46791 | Who wear Bellona''s favours in your scars? |
46791 | Who would you speak with, sir? |
46791 | Who''s in the bowling- alley, mine host? |
46791 | Who''s that that useth you So lovingly? |
46791 | Who''s that? |
46791 | Who''s this? |
46791 | Who''s this? |
46791 | Who, Sir Argent and his lady? |
46791 | Who, she that''s gone? |
46791 | Who-- I? |
46791 | Who? |
46791 | Who? |
46791 | Who? |
46791 | Whose? |
46791 | Why are you fair? |
46791 | Why did You not declare yourself when you came hither? |
46791 | Why did not fate give me So large a field to exercise my faith? |
46791 | Why didst thou Defer my joy thus long by suffering me To stand i''th''cloud? |
46791 | Why do ye stare, ye grisly powers of night? |
46791 | Why do you ask? |
46791 | Why do you gaze upon me so? |
46791 | Why do you kneel to me? |
46791 | Why do you not ask who this concerns? |
46791 | Why do you not perform it? |
46791 | Why do you not reply In those same words to me, malicious Echo? |
46791 | Why do you question me? |
46791 | Why does Androgeus, kindly- cruel, keep Me from their sentence? |
46791 | Why does he doubt it? |
46791 | Why dost not answer? |
46791 | Why dost not speak? |
46791 | Why dost thou look so sadly? |
46791 | Why dost thou mock me so? |
46791 | Why dost thou use that language to a heart, Which is thy captive, Eugeny, and lives, In nothing happy but in thee? |
46791 | Why from Ludgate do you remove[ the] prisoners? |
46791 | Why have they brought him hither? |
46791 | Why hop''d Artemia so? |
46791 | Why laugh you every dele? |
46791 | Why poor? |
46791 | Why sent she for him, then? |
46791 | Why should I Dare to behold, and yet not dare to rescue? |
46791 | Why should I doubt, or fear to go with her? |
46791 | Why should a man of worth, though but a shepherd, Despair to get the love of a king''s daughter? |
46791 | Why should all the people Come running hither so to quench the fire? |
46791 | Why should he not, good sir? |
46791 | Why should not we desire to use men so, As they would us? |
46791 | Why should she wish or hope for anything, But what I''d have her wish or hope for only? |
46791 | Why should that charity be show''d to me? |
46791 | Why should the people come to quench my fire? |
46791 | Why should they do so? |
46791 | Why should you die? |
46791 | Why should you doubt it? |
46791 | Why should you fear? |
46791 | Why should you hinder your repose and mine? |
46791 | Why should you labour your disquiet, cousin? |
46791 | Why should your grief make me repent the joys I ever begg''d of heaven-- the knowledge Of your love? |
46791 | Why stand you dumb? |
46791 | Why then it seems You do not love me? |
46791 | Why was I made so patient as to view, And not so strong as to redeem? |
46791 | Why were ye dumb, ye idols? |
46791 | Why, I beseech you? |
46791 | Why, I prythee? |
46791 | Why, Ursa Major, I say, what, in Capite Draconis? |
46791 | Why, do not you love him as much as I? |
46791 | Why, dost thou think I ever shall forget her? |
46791 | Why, how now, Pris.? |
46791 | Why, is there any can deserve you more? |
46791 | Why, madam, this intemperance? |
46791 | Why, madam? |
46791 | Why, man? |
46791 | Why, prythee, Barnet? |
46791 | Why, prythee? |
46791 | Why, sir, all is his, and at his dispose; Who shall dare to thwart him? |
46791 | Why, sir, how should I minister remedy And know not the cause? |
46791 | Why, sir, what would you do? |
46791 | Why, then, What privilege hath this place? |
46791 | Why, what is love, say you, if mine be not? |
46791 | Why, what said he? |
46791 | Why, what''s the matter, woman? |
46791 | Why, what''s the matter? |
46791 | Why, where are you, sir? |
46791 | Why, who can say Mirtillus does not love? |
46791 | Why, wouldst have''um made of loadstones, to draw all that comes nigh''em? |
46791 | Will the tide never turn? |
46791 | Will you be merciful, And end me quickly? |
46791 | Will you be pleas''d to enter here? |
46791 | Will you believe your sense? |
46791 | Will you buy my ballads? |
46791 | Will you die now? |
46791 | Will you forgive me, father, that I have not Paid so much duty to you as I ow''d you? |
46791 | Will you give me leave to speak with your scholar? |
46791 | Will you go, gossip? |
46791 | Will you please To walk along? |
46791 | Will you seal it now? |
46791 | Will you see me ravish''d Before your face? |
46791 | Will you then slight my love because''tis offer''d? |
46791 | Will you then slight my love because''tis offer''d? |
46791 | Will you yet, sir, after your needless trouble? |
46791 | Will''t please you to admit me? |
46791 | Will''t so? |
46791 | Wilt thou be revenged on thy proud mistress? |
46791 | Wilt thou be sure to father wise children? |
46791 | With me would you talk, gentlewoman? |
46791 | With me, sir? |
46791 | With me? |
46791 | With what disturbed mind Should I have look''d on you my heart ador''d, And love made miserable? |
46791 | With whom? |
46791 | Words did I call them? |
46791 | Would any woman,''less to spite herself, So much profane the sacred name of wedlock: A dove to couple with a stork, or a lamb a viper? |
46791 | Would she Betray the secrets of her heart so far, But that love plays the tyrant in her breast, And forces her? |
46791 | Would you fight fair, or conquer by a spell? |
46791 | Would you kill a man lying at your feet? |
46791 | Wouldst have me kiss him that would kill me? |
46791 | Wouldst lie with her, and not kiss her? |
46791 | Wouldst thou be content to lie with a statue, that will never confess more of love than suffering the effects of thine? |
46791 | Wouldst thou not see me then? |
46791 | Wouldst thou strike? |
46791 | Wrecked in the haven of felicity? |
46791 | Ye gods, Was envy, malice, fortune impotent To injure me, but you must raise up virtue to suppress Me? |
46791 | Ye gods, where am I now? |
46791 | Yes, and told him that my lady sent for him: but to what intent did you make me lie? |
46791 | Yes, many, that I could tell how to love Rather than him: for why should I love him, Whilst Hylas lives, and languishes for me? |
46791 | Yes, what of it? |
46791 | Yes, you mean Cleander, Son to Eubulus, who is now your keeper: What star directed him to find you out? |
46791 | Yes; can you deny it? |
46791 | Yet how Borrow can I his shape, or use mine own? |
46791 | Yet is his heart so hard, or are my parts Rather unequal to his high deserts? |
46791 | You are but merrily dispos''d? |
46791 | You are yet living? |
46791 | You brave lords( say''th he) that were present, did my sword Parley? |
46791 | You did receive the hundred that I sent you To th''race this morning by your man, my bailiff? |
46791 | You did, but what of that? |
46791 | You do not hear, It seems, but what you list; I ask you once Again, if you will marry Daphnis? |
46791 | You do not mock me, do you? |
46791 | You fall betwixt two pillars, sir; is''t not so? |
46791 | You fear no danger there as yet, sir, do you? |
46791 | You have courted all; who is it that Mirtillus Has not profess''d to love? |
46791 | You have vex''d her now, sir: how do you answer that? |
46791 | You love me both, you say? |
46791 | You make some doubts of me in this, sir: Did you not say that women are forgetful? |
46791 | You mean for beauty? |
46791 | You never yet Did kill your man, then? |
46791 | You see this salmon? |
46791 | You sent for me, gentlewoman? |
46791 | You then did send The poison with the present I receiv''d? |
46791 | You think''tis impossible for all men, what you can not attain to; what arts have you used to gain her? |
46791 | You told her my conditions, and my oath Of silence, and that only you be used? |
46791 | You will not kill me then? |
46791 | You would be gone together, would you not? |
46791 | You would not suffer it? |
46791 | You''ll find enou''to do it: is the Moor still with my lady? |
46791 | You''ll let me dispose of myself, I hope? |
46791 | You''ll not betray me with love- powder? |
46791 | You''ll promise all your aid? |
46791 | You''ll promise me you''ll not be jealous of me? |
46791 | You''ll take me Both wind and limb at th''venture, will you not? |
46791 | You''re a company of coneycatching rascals: is this a suit to walk without a cloak in? |
46791 | You''re sure this news is true? |
46791 | Your daughter too? |
46791 | Your father calls you; was not that my daughter That made away so fast? |
46791 | Your father, Mistress Jane? |
46791 | Yours, Daphnis? |
46791 | Yourself, gentlewoman? |
46791 | [ 192] Is his fate The period of ill- wishes? |
46791 | [ 333] Doth she move retrograde, and hoist us up, That we may fall at height? |
46791 | [ 335] In what now lies their hope? |
46791 | [ 362] Turn not your face away; would you revenge? |
46791 | [ 50] Coz, canst lend me forty shillings? |
46791 | [ 61] Say, my brave bursemen, what''s your recreation? |
46791 | [ O,] would you could; with what great willingness Should I embrace a share of what afflicts you? |
46791 | [_ Aside._ I have collected, cousin, and have at you? |
46791 | [_ Aside._ LADY C. My counsel can inform you that I kept it, And did enjoy possession while he liv''d; And now he''s dead, who should recover it? |
46791 | [_ Aside._ LADY C. Will you go in again? |
46791 | [_ Aside._ What are those thou hast brought along with thee? |
46791 | [_ Aside._] Do you sigh, madam? |
46791 | [_ Aside._] Why somebody else, good brother? |
46791 | [_ Aside._] You rascal, cheat your master? |
46791 | [_ To other customers._] By and by; what do you want, sirs? |
46791 | _ Can I be sav''d no cheaper? |
46791 | _ Indeed- and truly- verily- good brother!_ How could these milksop words e''er get him company That could procure the pox? |
46791 | _ My fellow?_ You lousy companion, I scorn thee. |
46791 | _ Shall no more shepherds in the shade__ Sit whistling without care?__ Shall never spear be made a spade,__ And sword a ploughing- share?_ 4. |
46791 | _ Shall no more shepherds in the shade__ Sit whistling without care?__ Shall never spear be made a spade,__ And sword a ploughing- share?_ 4. |
46791 | _ Tell me what you think on earth__ The greatest bliss?_ A. |
46791 | _ The Famous History of Tom Thumb_ and_ Unfortunate Jack_,[239]_ A Hundred Godly Lessons_, and_ Alas, poor Scholar, whither wilt thou go? |
46791 | _ What''s honour worth or high descent?__ Or ample wealth,__ If cares do breed us discontent,__ Or want of health?_ A. |
46791 | _ What''s honour worth or high descent?__ Or ample wealth,__ If cares do breed us discontent,__ Or want of health?_ A. |
46791 | _ Wo n''t fifty pounds__ Wipe off my score?_ If doubled,''t may do something. |
46791 | a Tubal? |
46791 | a confessor? |
46791 | and must we so? |
46791 | and would you offer T''undo a widow- woman so? |
46791 | and yet like me? |
46791 | any teeth to draw? |
46791 | are their ruin''d fanes, demolish''d walls, So soon forgot? |
46791 | are you a striker? |
46791 | are you grown so stout already? |
46791 | as great a misery As to be beggar''d? |
46791 | both, my lord? |
46791 | but, madam, though in that disguise, How could you hope( a stranger) to be lov''d Of him you held so dear? |
46791 | ca''st not sing but thou must cry too? |
46791 | cast away? |
46791 | coming? |
46791 | did thy coward fate Not dare to strike thee, till thou turn''dst thy back? |
46791 | do you begin To blush already? |
46791 | do you know us, sir? |
46791 | does that news hold his own still, that our ships are so near return, as laden on the Downs with such a wealthy fraughtage? |
46791 | dost think I''ll couple with a negro, to bring forth magpies, half white and half black? |
46791 | dost thou talk? |
46791 | doth he play for cloaks still? |
46791 | gentlemen? |
46791 | good gentleman,''tis the first time he ever thought on''t; what frequent thunders should I hear, if''twere as he would have it? |
46791 | hast lost thy tongue? |
46791 | hath she no mortal name? |
46791 | have I found you? |
46791 | have not I threaten''d him With disinheritance for this disorder? |
46791 | have they Palladium got? |
46791 | have we or they The Phrygian powers? |
46791 | have you the answer? |
46791 | her chaplain, Euphues? |
46791 | his son? |
46791 | how came she to know it? |
46791 | how could any fire come there But by thy negligence? |
46791 | how does Calligone? |
46791 | how now, Master Credulous? |
46791 | how shall I''scape? |
46791 | how think you, sir, Is not this above wonder? |
46791 | how unmanly''s this? |
46791 | how, for heaven''s love? |
46791 | i.--"Non_ levior cippus nunc imprimit ossa_? |
46791 | is it you? |
46791 | is nature quite forgot? |
46791 | is not that nymph Dorinda Which keeps them company? |
46791 | is not this Ludgate? |
46791 | is the king''s will obey''d? |
46791 | is there no hope to reclaim you? |
46791 | is''t come to this? |
46791 | is''t possible? |
46791 | is''t so? |
46791 | let''s show ourselves gallants or gallymawfries:[97] shall we be outbraved by a cockney? |
46791 | mine host, where are our cloaks? |
46791 | my roaring Tamberlain? |
46791 | no sign of them on earth? |
46791 | oatmeal face and tallow- chops, how came you hither with a pox, trow? |
46791 | or have you any corns on your feet- toes? |
46791 | or is she buried By Pallas''temple? |
46791 | or was I bold To outgo nature, and our empire stretch Beyond her limits? |
46791 | or why has my stars enforced me to love nothing else? |
46791 | or your knowledge, Does it pierce farther than the eyes of all Into Eugenie''s virtues? |
46791 | pray, what holiday is to- morrow? |
46791 | shall I never live in quiet for you? |
46791 | shall foreign hoofs Kick up our trembling dust, and must a Cæsar Redeem my folly with a kingdom''s fall? |
46791 | she bestow herself without my leave? |
46791 | shedd''st thou tears For him that had no care to see thy heart Drop blood? |
46791 | sing that you might eat? |
46791 | so merry? |
46791 | some rich widow? |
46791 | take heed, the Soldan comes: and''twere not for profit, who would live amongst such bears? |
46791 | their epitaph? |
46791 | then I do not wonder I can not die, when my best soul comes to me: Shall we live ever thus? |
46791 | then I''m betray''d The second time; but must thy fortune make thee The instrument of my undoing still? |
46791 | thou rash, inhumane boy? |
46791 | thy will? |
46791 | too young? |
46791 | tutor Meanwell? |
46791 | was e''er the like Heard of before? |
46791 | was she not buried? |
46791 | was''t not shrill, my girl? |
46791 | what ails him? |
46791 | what art thou? |
46791 | what book must I read over now? |
46791 | what can their arsenals spawn so fast? |
46791 | what cheer, sir knight? |
46791 | what dire fate Troubles thy rest, that thou shouldst trouble mine? |
46791 | what do I hear? |
46791 | what fate hath taken you from yourself? |
46791 | what hast thou there? |
46791 | what hopes? |
46791 | what is a gentleman''s time? |
46791 | what is that to you? |
46791 | what is this?__ If love be banished the heart,__ The joy of Nature, not of Art?_ 2. |
46791 | what is this?__ If love be banished the heart,__ The joy of Nature, not of Art?_ 2. |
46791 | what is''t? |
46791 | what mak''st thou here, thou caitiff? |
46791 | what mak''st thou here? |
46791 | what means are left to help it now? |
46791 | what means that word? |
46791 | what means thy wonder? |
46791 | what metal is her breast? |
46791 | what mirth? |
46791 | what ravishing sound is that? |
46791 | what seem''d their number? |
46791 | what sport? |
46791 | what thief? |
46791 | what thing''s that? |
46791 | what''s that? |
46791 | what''s that? |
46791 | what''s the matter? |
46791 | what, Not yet? |
46791 | what, at stand? |
46791 | when as so plainly These attributes describe her? |
46791 | where are you? |
46791 | where''s Putney, then, I pray you? |
46791 | where? |
46791 | who art? |
46791 | who bid thee hasten to the ruin Of thy poor father and thy family? |
46791 | who buys? |
46791 | who is that? |
46791 | who this night stood Before my eyes, and grimly furious spake: Shall Britain stoop to Roman rods and hatchets, And servile tribute? |
46791 | who''d be That vile, scorn''d name, that stuffs all court- gate bills? |
46791 | who''s that? |
46791 | why do you now Fly from me thus? |
46791 | why doth Camillus Each night torment my sleep, and cry revenge? |
46791 | why, in the name of wonder, Should it be her desire to speak with him? |
46791 | why, sirrah, do I look like a gentleman? |
46791 | why,''twas to save my belly: dost thou think I am so mad to cast myself away for e''er a woman of''em all? |
46791 | will she not let thee sleep? |
46791 | will ye so defame Your ancestors, and your successors wrong, Heirs but of slavery? |
46791 | will''t not be as well? |
46791 | would I could ever sleep But when thou com''st, for in myself I find No drop of comfort? |
46791 | you grow too bold; my experience now hath found you: you were once a tattered fellow, your name is Foster; have you such gold to give? |
46791 | you went along with him; Where did you leave him? |
55841 | ''Are not my ideas like other people''s?'' 55841 ''Are you certain of it?'' |
55841 | ''But do n''t you know that I adore you? 55841 ''Eva, are you ill, my darling, or unhappy? |
55841 | ''Have you nothing to say, Bellini?'' 55841 ''Monsieur de Béranger, are you acquainted with that new air composed for your_ Vieux Caporal_?'' |
55841 | ''Nothing,''said my husband,''but the heat is too great; will you come home, Eva?'' 55841 ''Perhaps he is unhappy,''I said simply;''is he married?'' |
55841 | ''Very well, then; why is your light not placed as it is in nature? 55841 ''What do you want?'' |
55841 | ''What is your name?'' 55841 ''Why not wait the short time?'' |
55841 | ''Why, why, Eva, did you not tell me this before? 55841 ''Why?'' |
55841 | ''Yes; but why this haste?'' 55841 ''You Couture? |
55841 | ''You never saw such a flower- seller, did you? 55841 ''You think so; did you look at your model very attentively?'' |
55841 | And can you deliver her? 55841 And did Jesus give his flesh and blood, as he said he would?" |
55841 | And did he deceive you? 55841 And do you promise never to leave me till I die? |
55841 | And does the fool think making a good singer was not doing something great-- eh? |
55841 | And how came you with Magas again? |
55841 | And in what can I serve my honored patron? |
55841 | And is he expected soon? |
55841 | And is his name unknown? |
55841 | And it is Chione who is this famous Leontium, who has made so great a sensation in the eastern cities? |
55841 | And must this one example of vengeance work on for ever? 55841 And this letter, mother-- may I see it?" |
55841 | And what is that? |
55841 | And what will our families think when they learn this disaster? |
55841 | And why not? |
55841 | And yet you are not happy? |
55841 | And you have seen her? 55841 And you think she knows how?" |
55841 | And you will keep the secret to all the rest of the world? |
55841 | And you-- you will always think of me; you will not love another? |
55841 | Anxiety? |
55841 | Archdeacon Jolly observed, without rising from his seat--''What say you to the Archbishop of Canterbury?'' 55841 Archdeacon Jolly: Well, then, her Majesty the Queen, whom the church admits to be''supreme''in all causes, spiritual as well as temporal? |
55841 | Archdeacon Jolly:''How about the Privy Council? 55841 Archdeacon Jolly:''Might it be permitted to suggest the formularies?'' |
55841 | Archdeacon Jolly:''Will you accept convocation as your authority?'' 55841 Are there any for me?" |
55841 | Are they not recoverable then? |
55841 | Are they so very hard? |
55841 | Are you a Catholic? |
55841 | Are you also touched with this mania? |
55841 | Are you speaking,cried the young Frenchman,"of the creator of_ Armida_, of_ Orpheus_, of_ Iphigenia?_""Ahem! |
55841 | As the Roman keeps his foot on ours, eh, Magas? 55841 At what theatres has he appeared?" |
55841 | Ay, by what right, base slave? |
55841 | But do n''t eat his flesh nor drink his blood? |
55841 | But how is this to be effected for ourselves? |
55841 | But not his handwriting? |
55841 | But what could take our boy- organist in that out- of- the- way direction at such an hour, and in such haste? 55841 But what good will it do them?" |
55841 | But what remedy does she propose? |
55841 | But what will we do? |
55841 | But where can we get it to eat and drink? |
55841 | But where will I get my soup? |
55841 | But, Mr. Billups, is it all true? |
55841 | But, then,asked Ally, pushing the difficulty,"do n''t we eat and drink what we_ believe_ we eat and drink?" |
55841 | But, yourself considered, may you not be placed among the most favored? |
55841 | But,she concluded, with an air of infantile_ naiveté_,"it would n''t have been anything but a great frog, would it?" |
55841 | By what right dare you to interfere with the fairest muse of earth''s bright temple? 55841 By what right?" |
55841 | Can he have imagined he does not know the true religion? 55841 Can not we hear music and see candles without getting out of bed for the purpose at such unearthly hours? |
55841 | Can you believe that I will ever leave you again? |
55841 | Chione, my niece; nay, my daughter in Jesus Christ, tell me, for pity''s sake, why do I find you here? |
55841 | Cremato the husband of your daughter? |
55841 | Did she? |
55841 | Did you ever hear anything like this rustic? |
55841 | Did you heed the words of the last hymn? |
55841 | Did you see anything of her? |
55841 | Did you see him, Joseph? |
55841 | Did you see? |
55841 | Died of heart- disease? |
55841 | Do I not remember how the news of that marriage affected Vincenzo? |
55841 | Do me good? 55841 Do n''t you see?" |
55841 | Do people take bitters with their dinner? |
55841 | Do we want an armistice, after having beaten those Prussians and Russians three times? 55841 Do you know I pity the editor of that paper? |
55841 | Do you really think so? |
55841 | Do you remember what he said? |
55841 | Do you see that tall, thin fellow? |
55841 | Do you think it is very prudent, sir? |
55841 | Do you think so, sergeant? |
55841 | Do you think, Monsieur Goulden,I asked, in great trouble,"that they will take the lame?" |
55841 | Do you want anything, miss? |
55841 | Do you wish some March beer? |
55841 | Dost eat at this hour on the sixth feria? |
55841 | Even on the threshold of the grave, could not that last insult have been spared? |
55841 | Even to Magas? |
55841 | For what earthly purpose? |
55841 | Front rank, kneel? 55841 Froude, you say, puts the number at 10,000?" |
55841 | Hallo, conductor, how long do you remain here? |
55841 | Has he? 55841 Has not the graceless boy been robbing his majesty, who was pleased to place him in the conservatorio after his father''s death?" |
55841 | Has she ever been to Athens? |
55841 | Has she given no rule? |
55841 | Have I found thee at last? |
55841 | Have you not taught me early, beloved mother, that renunciation and offering is our destiny? |
55841 | Have you nothing,at length he said,"to ask for yourself? |
55841 | Have you spoken to any one in an uncharitable manner? |
55841 | How can a man be at his ease,said the fat merchant, with a certain pride,"if he ca n''t eat the best of everything? |
55841 | How can you wonder that a man who learns such nonsense in his childhood should say foolish things when he grows up? 55841 How does Froude stand in this matter of the rejoicings at Rome?" |
55841 | How long ago was that? |
55841 | How many wounded? |
55841 | How should I know? 55841 How was it, doctor, that you first thought about it?" |
55841 | How, my lord,cried he,"is it possible that you believe that these monks can forward your plans? |
55841 | How,answered he,"how can you contradict yourselves in this way? |
55841 | I am not an unwelcome guest, I hope? |
55841 | I can easily believe you,said Monsieur Tardieu;"you want a pass to the city?" |
55841 | I looked then,says Bunyan,"and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,''Wherefore dost thou cry?'' |
55841 | I must hear her, Lydon; can not you smuggle me into her presence? |
55841 | I would give something to know what the Jewish fellow did say; do you remember? |
55841 | Indeed? 55841 Is he dead?" |
55841 | Is it not as I said? |
55841 | Is it not their trade? 55841 Is it? |
55841 | Is my uncle at home? |
55841 | Is she indeed dying? 55841 Is she really so beautiful as they say?" |
55841 | Is that you, Joseph? |
55841 | Is there any opening,I cried,"in the tower roof?" |
55841 | Is this a challenge? |
55841 | Is this the great philosopher? |
55841 | Is this the way you go off without waiting for the passengers? |
55841 | It shows their villainy,replied my aunt, and, growing more and more excited, she cried,"Will a revolution never come again? |
55841 | Louis-- what? |
55841 | Madam,said he,"will your majesty pray for your illustrious brother, especially for his soul?" |
55841 | Madame Malibran, too? |
55841 | May I ask,he began,"if a lady who some time since obtained shelter at the hospital, is still here? |
55841 | May it please the Reverend Father Prior to grant me a short interview? |
55841 | Merion, do you remember the Jew preacher? |
55841 | Mr. Andrew,she said,"what should put me in mind of the frog that tried to swell to the size of an ox?" |
55841 | Mr. Billups,said I,"do you know that Ally Button is ill?" |
55841 | Must death resign the booty long due him in order to torment me? 55841 Must pictures of a miserable past swing for ever before me?" |
55841 | My dear, de- ar child,cried Mr. Billups, quite distractedly,"what_ can_ you have been reading to put this in your head?" |
55841 | My dear, what are you talking about? |
55841 | My lord, may I venture to ask of you, do you believe, as some do, that Chione is in possession of a truth she dare not declare? 55841 My uncle?" |
55841 | Nay, surely the divine Euterpe, aided by the equally divine Erato,said Pierus;"who but a muse could thus conceal herself?" |
55841 | No? 55841 Not if you learn that he is concerned in hatching a conspiracy against the state?" |
55841 | Notwithstanding the fog? |
55841 | Often? |
55841 | One word,said Magas, springing forward so as to prevent the old man from departing;"one word Is it yourself?" |
55841 | Or him who dares foment sedition among them? |
55841 | Plays the organ, sir? 55841 Say''st so? |
55841 | See, Duchêne; you have only to go down the street, opposite that well, do you see? |
55841 | Sentiments,said Magas;"what business have slaves with sentiments?" |
55841 | Shall Ellen sing before you, Master Handel? |
55841 | Shall I remind you of Voltaire, the inventor of the title_ The Infamous_, by which he designated the church? 55841 So the sacrifice of Mr. Basher did not consist in popping the question?" |
55841 | Stop,said Magas;"where did you find that written?" |
55841 | The Christian bishop? |
55841 | The dreadful Cremato,continued she,"has he kept his word? |
55841 | The future, father,she said--"the future without_ her?_""Courage, dear child,"answered he. |
55841 | The subject of the picture? |
55841 | The voice was heavenly,said Critias,"and the music faultless; but who could be the player, who the singer?" |
55841 | Then we can apply the torture? |
55841 | Then why have you spoken as if it were attainable? 55841 Then why is he not proclaimed? |
55841 | Then will you say some short prayers, while I go and visit my other patients? |
55841 | They are Christians? |
55841 | They do not seek to emulate man;and when all is said, what is it, that M. de Maistre calls"emulating man"? |
55841 | Thou dost not enquire whither? |
55841 | To dry one''s self? |
55841 | True? |
55841 | We shall be able to save them all, father, shall we not? |
55841 | Well, my child,said the curé,"are your labors over?" |
55841 | Well, see here, Tom; when I was out of my head, did I talk much? |
55841 | Well, what have you discovered? |
55841 | Well, what next? |
55841 | Well, young man,said he.,"will you have some, too? |
55841 | Well,he said, smiling,"is it not true?" |
55841 | Well,rejoined Critias,"and what did he say?" |
55841 | Well,said he,"well; how goes our young man?" |
55841 | Well? |
55841 | What are the most ancient vestiges of man''s existence? 55841 What became of Ally?" |
55841 | What book have you there? |
55841 | What can we say of St. Catharine of Siena, who shares the glory of the great writers? |
55841 | What can you expect? 55841 What can_ what_ mean, Magas, that you are here talking to yourself, and flinging yourself about like a madman?" |
55841 | What could possibly take our organist away during church time? 55841 What did you do with it after having dried it?" |
55841 | What did you hear at Ephesus that has so unnerved you? |
55841 | What do you here, Miss Ellen, in this young man''s study? |
55841 | What do you want? |
55841 | What does that signify, for men? |
55841 | What does the Captain say? |
55841 | What does''oo say? |
55841 | What fool can have made such a lock? |
55841 | What harm, rather? 55841 What has happened?" |
55841 | What have we to do with wars? 55841 What have you to wish for? |
55841 | What is her doctrine? |
55841 | What is n''t true, my dear? |
55841 | What is that you are saying, you flatterer? |
55841 | What is the matter? |
55841 | What is this I hear of thee, my poor child? |
55841 | What is to be done in order to draw well? 55841 What is your name, young man?" |
55841 | What is your name? |
55841 | What is your name? |
55841 | What is? |
55841 | What man? 55841 What may all this mean?" |
55841 | What must we do? 55841 What number did you draw, Joseph?" |
55841 | What possible fault can you find with the Lady Damaris? |
55841 | What regiment? |
55841 | What regiment? |
55841 | What said Vincenzo to this? |
55841 | What shall I do? |
55841 | What sort of men are these? |
55841 | What sudden caprice is this? 55841 What truth can he mean?" |
55841 | What use are they? |
55841 | What vinegar? |
55841 | What was it like, Ally dear? |
55841 | What will Cremato here? |
55841 | What wish you, Messire? |
55841 | Whence these wonderfully entrancing tones of home? |
55841 | Where do you stop, sir? |
55841 | Who are you? |
55841 | Who is dead? |
55841 | Who is her master now? |
55841 | Who is there,he exclaimed,"who, at moments when the state of his own country saddens him, has not turned his eyes toward the republic of Washington? |
55841 | Who is this_ Word_ of whom Chione speaks? |
55841 | Why did you baptize that Iroquois? |
55841 | Why have you slandered the noble chevalier, and striven to bring down his works and his character to your own level? 55841 Why not? |
55841 | Why should he have sent this to me? |
55841 | Why should they say it is n''t true, then? |
55841 | Will the Lady Damaris consent? |
55841 | Will you call at my house? 55841 Will you hear her?" |
55841 | Wo n''t we have a feast? |
55841 | Would John Sharon never move? 55841 Would to- morrow, think you, do, doctor?" |
55841 | Would you believe it,he wrote in 1824,"I am every day growing more and more a Christian? |
55841 | Yes, do you know him? |
55841 | Yes, miss,responded Basher,"it is both beautiful and-- ah--"a look at Rosina--"and-- ah--""Very red, you would say, Mr. Basher, would you not? |
55841 | You are much sinned against, Eva; but tell me how could Lord Montford marry you when he knew his first wife was living? |
55841 | You can not read? |
55841 | You can say that so calmly? |
55841 | You did not weigh that speech then; did not observe its tendencies? |
55841 | You find me very stout? |
55841 | You have company, Mademoiselle Louise? |
55841 | You have decided it shall remain where it is? |
55841 | You know all, my darling? |
55841 | _ Is it?_asked the composer, looking in the king''s face, and well pleased. |
55841 | ''Do you know her?--are you ill?--what is the matter, Percy?'' |
55841 | ''Mid the grasses green, Or those dim boughs that mix above? |
55841 | ''Tis ability and courage, and not blood and rank, you depend upon? |
55841 | ''What do you think that the brute dared to propose to me? |
55841 | ''What will Malibran say to it?'' |
55841 | ''Will you watch with me tonight, Arnold?'' |
55841 | ''With whom did you study in Germany?'' |
55841 | -------- The Old Religion; Or, How Shall We Find Primitive Christianity? |
55841 | --------{ 403} What shall we do with the Indians? |
55841 | ... And who will raise this building? |
55841 | ...''Are we, then, to give up literature?'' |
55841 | 9, Know ye not that the unrighteous shall inherit the kingdom of God?" |
55841 | A brother asked him:"What does this mean?" |
55841 | A game of ball he especially recommends,( who knows but there may have been base- ball clubs in Egypt?) |
55841 | A word, and nothing more? |
55841 | Abbot Marcus said to Abbot Arsenius:"Why do you avoid us?" |
55841 | Above stood a sentinel, who, with his musket raised, cried out:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | After a consultation of human laws, after a calculation of probabilities, did not Christianity appear doomed? |
55841 | After a moment''s silence, he said:"Have we permission to go outside our quarters, old fellows?" |
55841 | Again I should like to know what reasons Miss Edwards has for styling Claret''s work,_ La Clave de Oro_, a_ coarse_ work? |
55841 | Again, When and how shall the books be distributed? |
55841 | All this being so, and being one great ground of objection against the church, why is her system so_ subjective_, all the while, in other departments? |
55841 | Am I mistaken, gentlemen; is there not a school between the family and the workshop, the primary school first and the professional school afterward? |
55841 | Am I not Magas?" |
55841 | Am I right in this?" |
55841 | And I repeat, if the standard of conversation could be raised a little, drawn out of the monotonous circle in which it moves, where would be the harm? |
55841 | And after all, with the truest aim and best powder-- who is hit? |
55841 | And as the globe is large, why need we wrangle for a small spot of it? |
55841 | And does_ The Churchman_ pretend that any man in the interest of science or any other interest has the right voluntarily to do that? |
55841 | And he, hearing these words, was astonished and said: The field is thine, Father, and dost thou ask me? |
55841 | And he, what name did he give himself? |
55841 | And if so, does she present it as her own will, or as a will above herself? |
55841 | And if they had it, who would obey it? |
55841 | And if this is the cause of a"_ reformed_ religion,"what need has any honest man of any further arguments to convince him of its error? |
55841 | And now where was the exile to go? |
55841 | And of what use is it all? |
55841 | And then the father replied,"Why, then, do you desire to take away what you have not placed there?" |
55841 | And this Italy dares to demand that the gate of the papacy should be intrusted to her safe- keeping? |
55841 | And up yonder, do you see? |
55841 | And what did Tom mean by saying that"we two knew best?" |
55841 | And what name did he bear? |
55841 | And what other could she hope for? |
55841 | And what was the origin of this institution? |
55841 | And what was there below? |
55841 | And when there is a corrupt understanding between the trader and the agent, what chance has the poor Indian for justice? |
55841 | And when they had entered his cell, he said:"What hast thou done, brother, for I no longer see the grace of God in thee as heretofore?" |
55841 | And who can read the following without emotion? |
55841 | And why? |
55841 | And you-- Bellini-- talk thus? |
55841 | And you?" |
55841 | Another soldier, seated near a pot, turned his head, saying:"It is you, Joseph, is it? |
55841 | Are Oxford and Cambridge silent? |
55841 | Are all Episcopalians feeling their way to something settled in faith and worship? |
55841 | Are not women who have serious tastes obliged to hide them or make excuses for them by every means in their power, as if they were concealing a fault? |
55841 | Are such friendships possible outside of revealed religion? |
55841 | Are the Thirty- nine Articles, to which every minister effectually subscribes, no rule of faith whatever? |
55841 | Are they superior to nature, or inferior? |
55841 | Are thoughts of liberty foreign and unknown to Christianity? |
55841 | Are we so much better than the gluttons of Egypt? |
55841 | Are we who work by grace and merit the reward the same_ we_ that prior to regeneration sinned and were under wrath? |
55841 | Are you a Frenchman, then?" |
55841 | Are you a man? |
55841 | Are you a young man? |
55841 | Are you an artist? |
55841 | Are you going to Quatre- Vents in that little coat? |
55841 | Are you no longer Chione? |
55841 | Are you not already as free as is safe for you? |
55841 | Are you not ashamed of such pitiful behavior? |
55841 | Are you not so still? |
55841 | Are you satisfied?" |
55841 | At the time of the French Revolution the nobility were corrupt enough, but were they more so than the people who warred against them? |
55841 | At what point of the voyage did the pope''s supremacy begin to dawn upon him? |
55841 | Aunt Grédel asked:"But what is this painted upon the face?" |
55841 | Be it so, what then? |
55841 | Be it so; but do these differences prove diversity of species, or, at most, only a distinct variety in the same species? |
55841 | Because she sinks with the art that ministers to your pleasure, is it impossible for her to rise with noble, true, serious art? |
55841 | Because you have never seen God at the end of your telescope, can you logically conclude that there is no God? |
55841 | Besides, are you able to say what changes of land and water have taken place since men first appeared on the face of the earth? |
55841 | Besides, could I not help him? |
55841 | But God answers you, Where, then, is your faith? |
55841 | But Hernando Cortez never besought the royal bounty; why, then, should Fonseca persecute him? |
55841 | But all this while may not he be bawling the blessed truth, and I slinking behind the shutters? |
55841 | But can not the clergy be appealed to as authorized interpreters? |
55841 | But come, where shall I place myself? |
55841 | But come: have we any more weeds to look at?" |
55841 | But do n''t you think, now, Mr. Ned, that I ought to be very proud of Our Baby after that? |
55841 | But does education as it is bestowed to- day often accomplish great things? |
55841 | But does it follow that opinion has espoused the opposing cause, and that hostility and warfare against modern laws and ideas are generally favored? |
55841 | But first, how many grains do you expect to find in this cattle- merchant before us?" |
55841 | But for the Protestant, what apology can be offered? |
55841 | But have we reached that point? |
55841 | But have you, geologists, really proved what you pretend? |
55841 | But how am I to get one?" |
55841 | But how are they to secure their triumph? |
55841 | But how are we to do this? |
55841 | But how can there be psychology without ontology? |
55841 | But how do they pass from being to existences, from the necessary to the contingent, from God to creation? |
55841 | But how is it to be put down? |
55841 | But how is the library to be supported and enlarged? |
55841 | But how was I to get the thirty francs? |
55841 | But is intelligence measured out to them in the same exact proportions and with the same limitations as physical strength? |
55841 | But now, cease this dallying and confess the truth: was not thy song for me?" |
55841 | But on page 166 we find the following:"Will the martyrs, who sowed the seed of the church in their blood, have no part in the final harvest? |
55841 | But out of what was the"dust of the ground"or"the ordinary elements of nature"formed? |
55841 | But suppose you have proved the antiquity of the earth and of man on it to be as you pretend, what then? |
55841 | But the body of the church is a society of individuals; and is it meant that all individuals in the communion of the church are infallible? |
55841 | But these laws, whence come they? |
55841 | But to come to practical results, what are the faculties to be cultivated in women? |
55841 | But what avail the best reasons, were they given by angels, when we have wilfully yielded ourselves up to the tyrannical mastery of passion? |
55841 | But what could the vulgar habit of the colonel have to do with such a sacrifice on the part of Mr. Basher? |
55841 | But what do I hear? |
55841 | But what has the author proposed to himself in treating them? |
55841 | But what if this same power is malevolent? |
55841 | But what is a congregation or society of the faithful under Christ its head? |
55841 | But what is a well- planned and well- organized workshop? |
55841 | But what is saving faith? |
55841 | But what is the sense of sticking a chaplet of roses on the top of your head where you can neither see it nor smell it? |
55841 | But what means were there through which the will could operate when nothing besides itself existed? |
55841 | But what reason has it to complain? |
55841 | But when I first received a furlough and reached home, what did I hear? |
55841 | But when the brake is old and shattered, how replace it? |
55841 | But where can we find the beautiful realized with more vividness, more simplicity, more nature and grandeur? |
55841 | But while I stood thus, the door of the kitchen opened, and Mademoiselle Louise, their servant, putting out her head, asked:"Who is there?" |
55841 | But why can I not investigate the truth I do not doubt or deny? |
55841 | But why seek so far that which is near at hand? |
55841 | But, I''d like to know, if_ they_ did not lift these stones into their places, who did do it? |
55841 | But, does nature when she presents the designs, the ideas, intentions, present the will whose they are? |
55841 | But, have they any right, on this account, to favor unjust and unlawful attempts to wrest from him his temporal sovereignty? |
55841 | But, here, I am smoking all the cigars; do n''t you smoke?" |
55841 | But, in spite of these good and solid reasons for battling on, some are frequently tempted to ask,"Is the struggle to go on for ever? |
55841 | But, on further consideration, will not this be found especially fit and serviceable? |
55841 | But, speaking of this, can we not stop again before we come to Anse?" |
55841 | But,_ à propos_, do you know it was a most happy coincidence that I obliged you to tell me your name, that you did not want to give me? |
55841 | By argument, by moral means, in a just manner, or by violence and injustice? |
55841 | By the way, who is it plays the organ so beautifully in Meadowbrook church? |
55841 | By what power did that girl sometimes divine the thoughts which he had not yet owned to himself? |
55841 | By what process? |
55841 | By whom? |
55841 | Béranger?'' |
55841 | Ca n''t I see you laughing behind your handkerchief? |
55841 | Can it be possible that you have no parish library? |
55841 | Can it become to each of us the personal and intimate thing, which may converse with us as a friend while we submit to it as an authoritative guide? |
55841 | Can not our Catholic publishers wake up to the importance of correcting their proofs properly? |
55841 | Can not the millions of Catholics do to- day what twelve fishermen of Galilee did? |
55841 | Can our friend name anything more that can be an object of knowledge with Sir William Hamilton and his school? |
55841 | Can reason operate freely without principles, without data, without light, without any support, or anything on which to rest? |
55841 | Can the laws of science be denounced as forgeries? |
55841 | Can the succession of several races, and their traits, be discovered, especially in Western Europe?" |
55841 | Can we doubt that Father Sainte Foi experienced that charity, like mercy,"is twice blessed,""It blesseth him that gives, and him that takes"? |
55841 | Can you believe, Raoul, that I will accept your sacrifice? |
55841 | Can you imagine any use to which such information could be turned by the church? |
55841 | Can you imagine anything more childish than listening to Bridget''s and Mary Ann''s reports of the daily life of their master and mistress? |
55841 | Can you wonder that I craved to die, and hide my shame and misery?" |
55841 | Can you write? |
55841 | Catharine did not leave me; she sat by me and said, pressing my arm:"You will return?" |
55841 | Connell?" |
55841 | Could aught have been more dissimilar and contradictory? |
55841 | Could military mechanism have accomplished such results? |
55841 | Could military mechanism, when it was no more, possess a renovating influence? |
55841 | Could there not, indeed, be hope for the soul of him whose first thought on receiving the death- blow was to say,"Pardon my murderer"? |
55841 | Could they not put me in the cavalry?" |
55841 | Could you?" |
55841 | Critias laughed, and said,"Slaves have sentiment, and memory, and reflection; by whose permission I do not know; but how are you to get rid of it? |
55841 | Developed from what? |
55841 | Did Cremato leave relatives to whom I can return the price of this masterpiece?" |
55841 | Did I promise you anything else than from the height of my cross I baptized you in my blood? |
55841 | Did Monsieur the Mayor and the hospital surgeon say nothing?" |
55841 | Did he leave Dover an Anglican, and disembark at Calais a Roman Catholic? |
55841 | Did he think that the world would regard his compilations as a faithful reflector of ancient minds and ancient life? |
55841 | Did he write to instruct the student, or amuse the indolent, or delight the world, or add to the lore of the learned? |
55841 | Did it comprehend how much this was to be preferred, for the cause of religion and for its own sake, to former courtly favors? |
55841 | Did it not share the ideas, principles, and even the good fortune and greatness of royalty? |
55841 | Did it not submit to it with a good will? |
55841 | Did it offer any opposition to the change? |
55841 | Did not Christ say to his Apostles,"I send you forth as sheep among wolves"? |
55841 | Did not Molière himself write this beautiful line? |
55841 | Did not the Duke of Anhalt-- swear she was ravishing in beauty as in acting, with eyes like diamonds, and a figure majestic as Juno''s?" |
55841 | Did the monks effect nothing for the good of humanity? |
55841 | Did we not carry the battery at Fleuries?" |
55841 | Did you become a Christian in order to enjoy here below all temporal prosperity? |
55841 | Did you come out here with Leontium? |
55841 | Did you remark anything in the city?" |
55841 | Do faith without reasoning and pure instinct comfort us? |
55841 | Do n''t you remember what Hallam says about it? |
55841 | Do not duties, tastes, affections often appear to contradict each other? |
55841 | Do not we see this every day? |
55841 | Do the secular and regular clergy, the parliament, the laymen of every condition of life, all acquiesce? |
55841 | Do these men, whose minds are so enlightened, not see that they are in the presence of an administration of supernatural power? |
55841 | Do they not suspect the strength of the church militant ranged about its chief, and praying with him for the assistance of the church triumphant? |
55841 | Do they not witness the pious eagerness of the people to venerate, to invoke, and to imitate the new patrons which are given them? |
55841 | Do we depreciate the military mechanism of Rome? |
55841 | Do we not feel a little ashamed at reading this? |
55841 | Do you come and tell me that you are no creature? |
55841 | Do you deny it, and say there is no God? |
55841 | Do you hear me, Bellini?'' |
55841 | Do you hear, conscript?" |
55841 | Do you know they could not? |
55841 | Do you not recognize your old acquaintance-- the runaway Louis?" |
55841 | Do you not see whole families, hitherto all but ignorant of the blessings of faith, almost transformed by a new baptism? |
55841 | Do you promise me?" |
55841 | Do you say ethnology can not trace all the kindreds and nations of men back to a common origin? |
55841 | Do you take me for a fool?" |
55841 | Do you think I do not know where the shoe pinches?'' |
55841 | Do you think of devoting yourself to dramatic composition?" |
55841 | Do you think that such tall fellows as you and I were born to die in a hospital? |
55841 | Do you wish to give me pain?" |
55841 | Do you wish to have the proof of this? |
55841 | Does a single bishop protest? |
55841 | Does faith, of its own nature, produce charity? |
55841 | Does he mean to assert that their intellectual efforts have been, and that they always will be, sterile? |
55841 | Does it cost anything to speak? |
55841 | Does nature will or act from will? |
55841 | Does not Sallust assert the superiority of the Gauls to the Romans in war? |
55841 | Does not a map surpass all language in communicating geographical knowledge? |
55841 | Does not man himself, when bowed down by great affliction, feel that a woman''s heart is being born and awakening within him? |
55841 | Does not the bird build its nest in the soft moss, under the shelter of the hedge and among the branches of the tree? |
55841 | Does not the secret of living lie in the reconciliation of apparent difficulties? |
55841 | Does social hierarchy, entirely prostrated before the force of numbers, constitute the grandeur of intelligence and virtue? |
55841 | Does the century intend to belong to liberty and its severe duties, to the caprices of demagogues, or would it be fired by the military spirit? |
55841 | Does the color make any difference in the warmth of the robe? |
55841 | Does the end justify the means? |
55841 | Does the pretence that the glory and advantage of Italy require it to have Rome as a political capital justify its forcible annexation? |
55841 | Does there exist a more overwhelming proof of the poverty of our intellect? |
55841 | Dyed garments are silly and extravagant; and are they not, after all, offences against truth? |
55841 | Elsewhere, he asked, is the situation more favorable? |
55841 | Epicurean that you are, will you never see harm till you hear the house is on fire? |
55841 | Even for the young, who knows what its length maybe?" |
55841 | Every time one of us moved, he would try to talk and say:"Well, conscript?" |
55841 | Father Féral?" |
55841 | Fifth question:"What are, in the different countries of Europe, the chief characteristics of the first epoch of iron? |
55841 | Flower of the forest, that, unseen, With sweetness fill''st the vernal grove, Where hid''st thou? |
55841 | Fonseca could not be just; how much less could he be generous? |
55841 | Fonseca was never in the right; for what opponent of their idols could have any reason or justice on his side? |
55841 | For a long while we watched their labor, while again and again we heard the sentry''s"_ Qui vive?_"It was the regiments of the third corps arriving. |
55841 | For example: Has a child been angry with his companion? |
55841 | For instance, can it be brought about that most women''s hearts will not yield to the necessity of praying and believing? |
55841 | For on whom does the priest lay his hand? |
55841 | Franklin?" |
55841 | From nothing? |
55841 | From the wind that sighs over Eva''s grave, comes there, my dear young reader, no warning to you? |
55841 | From whom did they receive it? |
55841 | Gentlemen, is all this what they call liberalism? |
55841 | Gentlemen, what do the radiant looks of this assembly, this clapping of hands, these outbursts of enthusiasm, express? |
55841 | Glory and misfortune have attended him through life; but what_ we_ call glory-- has it any merit in thy eyes? |
55841 | Got your wits again, have you?" |
55841 | Granted that Catholicity is objective in its essence, is it subjective in any of its qualities or manifestations? |
55841 | Had he any settled dwelling- place? |
55841 | Had they been traitorously ensnared and were they now languishing in some Moorish dungeon? |
55841 | Had they fallen in the last bloody encounter? |
55841 | Has Christianity never acted in accordance with them? |
55841 | Has a pontificate ever shown this divine spectacle of the struggle of spiritual forces with the powers of materialism better than that of Pius IX.? |
55841 | Has he any special bugaboo to- day?" |
55841 | Has he eaten out of meals? |
55841 | Has he eaten to excess and in an unbecoming manner? |
55841 | Has it persevered in burning incense before God only, in adoring none but him? |
55841 | Has it since guarded against the temptations which have surrounded it? |
55841 | Has not Providence implanted this instinct in the heart of all his creation, even in the species inferior to ours? |
55841 | Has not that system of elections, discussion, and censure which honors our modern spirit come forth from the very womb of the church? |
55841 | Has she fine teeth? |
55841 | Has she not her Franciscans and her Dominicans, her Benedictines and her Seculars, her Jesuits, and I know not who besides? |
55841 | Has she told me the truth?'' |
55841 | Has she_ no flanks? |
55841 | Have Episcopalians no settled forms of worship, and no fixed creed? |
55841 | Have I not just said she is immaculate, faultless? |
55841 | Have not more earthly and apparently less disinterested bursts of enthusiasm caused it to lose a goodly portion of the conquered ground? |
55841 | Have not the Catholics of the world a right to sustain the papal jurisdiction as a part of their religion? |
55841 | Have not those thoughts watched, rather, over the cradle of religion? |
55841 | Have nothing to do with Pompey Simpson, my dear,"again addressing Ally,"or who knows you might be led away to become a Romanist?" |
55841 | Have we not more need than ever of intercessors in heaven, and models of religious virtue in the world?" |
55841 | Have we not more need than ever of intercessors in heaven, and models of religious virtue in the world?" |
55841 | Have women the time to devote to intellectual pursuits? |
55841 | Have you a ready pen? |
55841 | Have you brought with you the picture of which the count has spoken?" |
55841 | Have you no women aboard, conductor?" |
55841 | Have you the means, or have you not?" |
55841 | He flings at once into your face the terrible Antoninus with the cry,"Who shall change the opinion of these people?" |
55841 | He glared with his little eyes like a wolf, and repeated,"Who goes there?" |
55841 | He saluted us, and then said to the master of the house, in German:"These are recruits?" |
55841 | He turned fiercely upon Merion:"Where is the girl flown to? |
55841 | He went up to the hussar and asked:"What is that you say?" |
55841 | Heaven and earth have abandoned me; why need you care for me?" |
55841 | Here was a pleasant scene to open one''s eyes upon; but where was I? |
55841 | Here; what for you send me the pay before you get the picture?" |
55841 | Hers? |
55841 | His last work? |
55841 | Hold up our eyes in holy horror, but let our hands hang unemployed by our side? |
55841 | How act upon them? |
55841 | How are they to know whether we are all swindlers alike, or are only in the habit of appointing swindlers to positions of trust and responsibility? |
55841 | How can Malibran survive him? |
55841 | How can he be accounted virtuous, if at times he is vicious? |
55841 | How can he be received as good, when he has advised what is bad? |
55841 | How can one love a position which is to be abandoned on such or such a day in accordance with a caprice? |
55841 | How can they be applied? |
55841 | How can we be astonished, therefore, that a youth like Görres should have been carried away with the spirit of the age? |
55841 | How can we denounce injustice from the pulpit if we exhibit an example of it in our own persons? |
55841 | How can we effect this? |
55841 | How can we hope to find earnest mothers of families among those whose youth has been spent in balls,_ fetes_, and morning visits? |
55841 | How comes it, then, that, despite so many causes of alarm, in the depth of our soul we are calm, and our fears are mingled with so much hope? |
55841 | How could I help it? |
55841 | How could he better prove his devout obedience to the Holy Father than by seating himself at the very foot of the papal throne? |
55841 | How could he help it? |
55841 | How could she err? |
55841 | How could that society be brought to respect the just rights of the church? |
55841 | How did you come into this room, Frau von Albo?" |
55841 | How does he do it? |
55841 | How from any possible number of fallibles get an infallible? |
55841 | How long has the unholy gift been in your hands? |
55841 | How many gods are there in the''best society''? |
55841 | How many of these debts do our readers suppose are just? |
55841 | How often had I eaten bread and drank white wine with Zunnier there at the Golden Sheaf when the sun shone brightly and the leaves were green around? |
55841 | How shall the books be selected? |
55841 | How should I? |
55841 | How should they when they rate the spiritual no higher than, if not below, the intellectual? |
55841 | How then can he assert the universal reign of law? |
55841 | How then do we enter that order? |
55841 | How then, can she be not infallible? |
55841 | How would American Catholics like to have King Victor Emmanuel and Ratazzi or Ricasoli dictating the affairs of the church in this country? |
55841 | How, that is, from what physical causes, does that order come to be? |
55841 | How, then, conclude that what in thought seems to be object is really anything distinguishable from myself? |
55841 | I am cursed? |
55841 | I am the child''s mother, am I not? |
55841 | I ask, are such dwellings tolerable for the free citizens of France or Belgium; for men redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ? |
55841 | I called out in the alley:"Is any one here?" |
55841 | I cried,''it is then here that thou art awaiting me? |
55841 | I cried;"have you no ladders?" |
55841 | I had never seen him so sad, and I asked:"Are you not well, Monsieur Goulden?" |
55841 | I have just been to see your mother--"{ 157}"And how did you find her? |
55841 | I have sinned and suffered-- will you hear me?" |
55841 | I have traced her here; can I be allowed to see her?" |
55841 | I ran on thus some twenty minutes, scarcely daring to breathe, when a drunken voice called out:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | I should not wonder,"he replied,"if they had hit the right nail on the head there; I must read that article-- how is it headed?" |
55841 | I still think they will exempt you, but who can tell? |
55841 | I study military tactics?_ Yes, infantry tactics, you rogue, under Mrs. |
55841 | I tell you there is harm; he preaches''equality''to slaves, and what good can come of that?" |
55841 | I thought myself saved, when Monsieur the Sous- Préfet asked:"You are really Joseph Bertha?" |
55841 | If facts, then, of the first magnitude are Overlooked in the new world, how many more will be overlooked in the old? |
55841 | If he doubted the being of God, how could he expect to find such a principle or such a first truth? |
55841 | If in their view we had become so corrupt, why have they taken for themselves the ritual which the doctor says is essentially modified by later ideas? |
55841 | If inferior, how can they govern her operations? |
55841 | If it be the ultimate judge of doctrine, must it not be the authority for which you are seeking?'' |
55841 | If not, what is Christianity, and what fate have you in store for it? |
55841 | If religion is to wage war upon civil liberty, ought it not to be authorized to allude to beneficial freedom? |
55841 | If she will not yield one jot or tittle of doctrine, why allow so large an oscillation in forms of devotion? |
55841 | If so, at what particular spot in the Channel did he drop the Anglican articles and take up the Roman missal? |
55841 | If so, how have they become distributed over the several continents of the earth and the islands of the ocean? |
55841 | If the grace itself, how can it be said that we are rewarded? |
55841 | If the senses are channels for communicating thought, why decry the legitimate use of any one of them performing its own function? |
55841 | If the translators knew English but imperfectly, whose fault was it? |
55841 | If they do these things in the green tree at Boston, what shall be done by a Dryasdust in London? |
55841 | If they had a hankering after eel pot- pies, pray, is the taste unknown to ourselves? |
55841 | If you open to woman the most dangerous and frivolous of all the arts, why close to her the others? |
55841 | If you pierce your ears, he says, why not have rings in your noses also? |
55841 | In a few moments a lucid interval occurred, and, noticing me, he said:"Doctor, why ca n''t we have Mass in our church? |
55841 | In the meantime, gentlemen, what shall we do? |
55841 | In the present paper Carlyle has used to perfection(?) |
55841 | In what respect does the church restrain freedom of thought? |
55841 | In what respect were the principles of the evangels and those of a free government incompatible with each other? |
55841 | In whose name has the first stone been laid? |
55841 | Instead of this, what are they? |
55841 | Intelligence can speak only to intelligence, and no mind absolutely unintelligent can ever be taught or ever come to know anything? |
55841 | Is Chione bewitched?" |
55841 | Is The Charge In History Against Him Sustained? |
55841 | Is it God, the living, personal God, who redeems, inspires, regenerates, sanctifies, and glorifies humanity, or is it not? |
55841 | Is it any wonder that a shade was cast over the rest of her life, and that she was never among the light- hearted or the gay? |
55841 | Is it because a secret conviction of her infallibility lurks in the minds of all who are Catholic by their reminiscences? |
55841 | Is it by its will fire melts wax, the winds propel the ship at sea, or the lightning rends the oak? |
55841 | Is it desiring to do all that he does? |
55841 | Is it here that we are to receive them?" |
55841 | Is it illness or magic that has worked this mental derangement? |
55841 | Is it lawful to do evil that good may come? |
55841 | Is it made saving by its quality of supernaturalness, or as proceeding from the grace of the Holy Spirit? |
55841 | Is it mischief?" |
55841 | Is it not possible that, had she been questioned at a later day, in other terms and under other circumstances, her reply might have been different? |
55841 | Is it not quite certain that they will side with the antichristians? |
55841 | Is it not so? |
55841 | Is it possible?--Why not? |
55841 | Is it radical revolution? |
55841 | Is it really so, that the voice of the bishops is of no weight, that it neither declares the sense nor speaks the authority of the Episcopal Church? |
55841 | Is it the brutal level which passes over all things to crush and to lower? |
55841 | Is it the chronology of the Bible or chronology as arranged by learned men that you have disproved? |
55841 | Is it to be supposed that we assert that Christianity has ever lacked enemies, and enemies acting in concert in their attacks? |
55841 | Is it true of one race alone, referable to one and the same epoch?" |
55841 | Is it we who by the aid of grace merit the reward, or is it the grace in us? |
55841 | Is its cause obscure, badly defined, ill- defended? |
55841 | Is man by divine right the sole proprietor of the domain of intelligence? |
55841 | Is n''t it, mother?" |
55841 | Is not intellectual ability a talent, and was not the servant of the gospel condemned for returning his to his lord unimproved? |
55841 | Is not one king the supreme head of the church? |
55841 | Is not science truth? |
55841 | Is not the party under a better guidance than in earlier days? |
55841 | Is not this horrible?" |
55841 | Is she short? |
55841 | Is she still in Meadowbrook?" |
55841 | Is she tall? |
55841 | Is the Book of Common Prayer no established rule for the order of divine worship? |
55841 | Is the work to be accomplished by practices of high piety and by productions intended for the edification of skilled believers? |
55841 | Is there a new conspiracy to denounce? |
55841 | Is there any danger here?" |
55841 | Is this a work that Catholics can prudently neglect? |
55841 | Is this all the light that we can gather from this source? |
55841 | Is this epoch anterior to the historical period?" |
55841 | Is this for want of intelligence or aptitude? |
55841 | Is this really the case? |
55841 | Is this the unspoken word that Chione might not utter? |
55841 | Is this what the Romanists call the Bible in the vulgar tongue?'' |
55841 | It believes and hopes in us; ought we to discourage it? |
55841 | It says to every accredited opinion, Have you any right to exist? |
55841 | It was Pilate''s question to our Lord:"What is truth?" |
55841 | Know it? |
55841 | Know you the true cause of alarm, the true peril? |
55841 | Ladies and gentlemen, will you be quiet?" |
55841 | Leger lay stretched out in his great coat, his feet to the fire, asleep, when the sentinel cried:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | Liberty is a right, but, if there is no right, how can you defend liberty as a right? |
55841 | Look at our generals who are married, do they fight as they used to?" |
55841 | Look at this;"and I gave her my crucifix--"does not this teach you to love and hope?" |
55841 | Many sects discussed and disputed: but truth? |
55841 | May they not all be owing to accidental causes? |
55841 | May we not advance the direct contrary? |
55841 | May we not rather say, it was pre- Adamite? |
55841 | Miss Madeleine, why should you say that prayer is better than sleep? |
55841 | Moreover, is it lawful, even provisionally, in the interest of science, to doubt, that is, to deny, the being of God? |
55841 | Moreover, what are we to do?--to what other party can we attach ourselves? |
55841 | Mr. Morton put out two of his fingers with an icy,"How are you?" |
55841 | Must they study the exact sciences, politics, the secret of government, military art? |
55841 | My mother, could I leave her thus? |
55841 | My name is Sister Magdalen; what shall I call_ you?_"She looked up with a sad face, and replied,"My name is Eva." |
55841 | Nay, was he not one of that pestiferous brood which De la Mennais had hatched in the woods of La Chesnaie, and which the Pope had solemnly condemned? |
55841 | Next question:"Has the dwelling of the primitive man in caverns been general? |
55841 | No; not absolutely, perhaps; but how can you prove they could and have? |
55841 | No? |
55841 | No? |
55841 | No? |
55841 | Nor for mine, perhaps?" |
55841 | Nothing? |
55841 | Now tell me truly, did you not recognize me and address yourself to me?" |
55841 | Now, do not be frightened; but I have decided to leave Paris by the midnight train: it is now ten o''clock; will you be ready?'' |
55841 | Now, tell me, sister, was not my punishment bitter? |
55841 | Now, tell me, what induced you to act in this dishonorable manner toward your benefactor?" |
55841 | Now, what can this be?" |
55841 | Now, whose fault is this? |
55841 | Of what account are they? |
55841 | On the other hand, what place is to be found in true religion for the_ subjective_ principle? |
55841 | On thy death- bed, hast thou after so many years kept thy pledge and made the shade of the murdered one at home in my court? |
55841 | Ought it not to be encouraged to speak of it in kindly terms, to place it in the brightest light, to make us understand and cherish it? |
55841 | Our Basher? |
55841 | Our secret will be safe with you, of course?" |
55841 | Percy,''I cried,''tell me, is this true? |
55841 | Raoul, Raoul, do you know me so little? |
55841 | Sardian, olive, rose- colored, green, scarlet, and ten thousand other dyes-- pray, of what use are they? |
55841 | Say what has caused your absence?" |
55841 | Say, Eva, shall this be? |
55841 | Say, will you stay with me?" |
55841 | Science borrows its remedies from the sap of venomous plants; why, then, may we not from passion, misfortune, or inequality draw much that is good? |
55841 | See that hair; it is like velvet, and the shadows of the head, how transparent and strong; it reminds one of Titian; do you not think so? |
55841 | Shall I ever make a tragic actor?" |
55841 | Shall I have joy if thou dispense Thy bounty on their need, And if thou pardonest their offence Feel not the loving deed? |
55841 | Shall I live to see true French art born into this world? |
55841 | Shall I remind you of Voltaire, who invented the name wretch, by which he designated the church? |
55841 | Shall blood flow again? |
55841 | Shall the innocent again wander in misery? |
55841 | Shall they pray in vain?" |
55841 | Shall those wretches always be our masters?" |
55841 | Shall we pass the woods of Orrigt? |
55841 | She gave a quick start, and said,"Who are you?" |
55841 | She was an old Alsatian, round and chubby, and, when I asked for the_ Capougner- Strasse_, she replied:"What will you pay for?" |
55841 | Should you be satisfied to send her there?" |
55841 | Since our Lord has declared that it is the''_ poor_ who are blessed,''and he himself asks,''How can ye believe, ye who receive honor one of another?'' |
55841 | Slowly, however, they are beginning to ask themselves the question which they should have asked in the beginning,"How shall it grow without a root?" |
55841 | Sometimes I imagined she would cry out,"O Joseph what are you thinking of? |
55841 | Spain groans beneath the yoke of the Saracen: would you not rather choose to be the deliverers of a great nation than the ruin of this fair country?" |
55841 | Speaking of Dolickem reminds me of Basher and his heroic sacrifice, about which I was speaking, was I not? |
55841 | Success must therefore follow our efforts; for if God is for us, who can withstand us? |
55841 | Such authors as M. Quinet find material here for their eloquence,(?) |
55841 | Suddenly she turned upon him with the question:{ 814}"And is Jesus Christ an inspired man, or is he God?" |
55841 | Taking this view, what is nature? |
55841 | Tell me, can I help you-- can I do anything for you? |
55841 | That is nothing to the purpose; can it say they can not have had a common origin? |
55841 | That one slave, as you see, has got that and more by heart; do you think it has no effect on him?" |
55841 | That will is the will of the creator: and does the author mean to assert that the distinction between the creator and the creature is unreal? |
55841 | The answer to the question, how? |
55841 | The beautiful hymn of St. Thomas,"Adoro Te devotè,"is added:"Devoutly I adore thee, Deity unseen, Why thy glory hidest''neath these shadows mean? |
55841 | The children then go to college or to a convent, and what becomes the mother''s chief care? |
55841 | The crown had resolved to check the atrocity; but how could it be accomplished? |
55841 | The fault of the writers? |
55841 | The first series referred to the very essence of the Christian religion; what is the subject of the second? |
55841 | The fourth was:"Is brass the product of indigenous industry, the result of a violent conquest, or the effect of new commercial relations?" |
55841 | The guards at the French gate raised the drawbridge, and the old watchmaker said:"You have seen him?" |
55841 | The ideas must be real, and therefore being; and what is perfect, universal, immutable, eternal, real and necessary being but God? |
55841 | The impetus once given, one must reach the goal; otherwise, who can say how low one may fall?" |
55841 | The men seeing me approach, looked distrustfully at me, as if to say:"Does_ he_ want some of our beef? |
55841 | The night was clear, and as we approached the bivouac, the sentry challenged:"Who goes there?" |
55841 | The old man asked:"You are rejoining your corps?" |
55841 | The old man looked at him in astonishment, and asked,"Didst thou place them there?" |
55841 | The old man, in a moment, continued his train of questions:"You were wounded?" |
55841 | The princess was so struck by it that she went up to her, and said by impulse,"Madam, were you not a religious?" |
55841 | The question put to us a few years since, with a smile of mixed incredulity and pity,"Do_ you_ believe that this country will ever become Catholic?" |
55841 | The question was, did Las Casas, in 1517, recommend the importation of negroes? |
55841 | The question, therefore, as between Christians, narrows itself to the simple issue, Which is the old religion, and what was primitive Christianity? |
55841 | The same as in men? |
55841 | The sergeant gazed at me and, seeing that I was yet so young, said kindly:"What is the matter with you, conscript?" |
55841 | The surgeon unwound the bandage, and asked:"Have you the cross?" |
55841 | The world demands liberty, but what avails a false and impracticable liberty? |
55841 | The writer will be told, You forsake us; you are a Catholic in spirit and intention, why not be wholly a Catholic? |
55841 | Their heroes are never wrong; for what hero in biography or romance can ever be wrong? |
55841 | Then I said:"Do you think, Aunt Grédel, that I would be capable of giving a gilt watch to one whom I love better than my own life? |
55841 | Then it is nothing, is unreal, a nullity, and how then can it ever be a force, or even an instrument of force? |
55841 | Then still again, what are you who make the denial? |
55841 | Then the story was true?" |
55841 | Then they would ask themselves, What motive can these Catholics have to wish us so fervently to become as they are? |
55841 | Then we may suppose her rhapsodies referred to the new sect?" |
55841 | Then what excuse could she frame for intruding? |
55841 | Then who will do the work?" |
55841 | Then, as if awakening from a horrible dream, I cried:"But shall I not see Catharine again?" |
55841 | There was the church, too, with its altars and flowers; who would tend them? |
55841 | They replied at once, Eh, Monsieur Goulden, the young man is lame; why speak of him? |
55841 | Think you that at once you will change them into thoroughly faithful Christians? |
55841 | Think you that there is on earth another place so blessed and joyful as this? |
55841 | Third question:"What relations are there between the men to whom we owe the megalithic monuments, and those who formed the lake dwellings?" |
55841 | This miserable existence, so full of pain and suffering? |
55841 | This sight roused the quartermaster''s indignation, and he cried:{ 741}"On what authority do you commit this pillage?" |
55841 | To attack the vices, meannesses, and misdeeds of the time, must they not know them, and by their own knowledge? |
55841 | To please the libertines? |
55841 | To what end? |
55841 | To whom are we to look for the realization of the good Abbé''s plan in our country? |
55841 | Turning his eyes suddenly upon? |
55841 | Two or three of the soldiers rose and left the room, and the fat landlord said:"You do not perhaps know that the large hall is on the Rue de Tilly?" |
55841 | Undeniably she violates the holiest of obligations; but have you not yourselves been blind and guilty? |
55841 | Undoubtedly, every man has the right to interrogate"every accredited_ opinion_"and to demand of it,"Have you any right to exist? |
55841 | Was England, then, in error? |
55841 | Was he afraid of ridicule or was he really convinced in making this concession? |
55841 | Was he not a liberal in politics, a friend of liberty, an admirer of American republicanism? |
55841 | Was it aware of the cause of this unusual kindliness of feeling? |
55841 | Was it his precipitancy of action in the measure? |
55841 | Was it marked by a buoy? |
55841 | Was it not Miriam, the sister of Moses, who taught music and sacred canticles to the young Israelites? |
55841 | Was it not most opportune, then, to enlighten still more and at once a public whose_ furore_ had but just died away? |
55841 | Was it not possible to bridge across that chasm? |
55841 | Was it not rather the traditions of Charlemagne it proposed to conform with, and was it not to prove a veritable Eldorado for Christian beliefs? |
55841 | Was it not she who inspired his wondrous creations with their irresistible charm? |
55841 | Was it not the mother of Samuel who proclaimed God the Lord of knowledge and the Giver of understanding? |
55841 | Was it pre- Lutheran? |
55841 | Was it quicker or slower in a heavy sea? |
55841 | Was it to follow the example set by its predecessor, and was the world to behold for the second time the papacy closely guarded by_ gens d''armes_? |
55841 | Was n''t it an excellent pun? |
55841 | Was not the government of the church, in the early ages, the result of the free choice of the faithful? |
55841 | Was not this enough? |
55841 | Was she not his soul of all other performers in the operas? |
55841 | Was the Median pea- fowl, we wonder, a more costly luxury than woodcock, or the Sicilian lamprey worse than Spanish mackerel? |
55841 | Was the archdeacon quite sure that low- churchmen were the real or sole offenders? |
55841 | Was this the real aim of the Paris Congress? |
55841 | We complain of the vanity of women, of their luxury and coquetry; but for what else do we prepare them, what else do we inculcate in their education? |
55841 | We hear it sometimes asked,"Why does the Catholic Church have so many canonizations, jubilees, and religious displays?" |
55841 | We may have some great trials together-- who knows? |
55841 | We wonder what learned and sincere Protestants, such as M. Guizot, think in their hearts of these bloody pages of their ancestors? |
55841 | Well, are you God? |
55841 | Well, what has geology done? |
55841 | Were all the monks in pursuit of a purely contemplative life? |
55841 | Were not respect for human liberty, love of justice, and opposition to tyranny and barbarity, the glory and actual essence of Christian belief? |
55841 | Were there no founders of cities, no evangelizers of savages? |
55841 | Were there no teachers, no benefactors of the poor, no cultivators of deserts, and woods, and wildernesses amongst them? |
55841 | Were they to sacrifice to their religious faith that political faith just born within them? |
55841 | What answer will the two hundred millions of Roman Catholics return? |
55841 | What are the facts in their established order? |
55841 | What are the friends of religion to do, when its enemies are so active? |
55841 | What are the thrones of the universe compared to that last place?" |
55841 | What are the words with which the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries achieved their success? |
55841 | What are we thinking of? |
55841 | What are you, then, I ask once more? |
55841 | What are you, then? |
55841 | What better could he do than seek refuge from detraction in the very bosom of the church? |
55841 | What better spot for a convent of_ expiation_ than that consecrated by such memories-- that in which such innocent victims had suffered? |
55841 | What can have made him think that our Episcopal Church is not true? |
55841 | What can he mean?" |
55841 | What can it mean?" |
55841 | What can make a book more attractive than fine engravings? |
55841 | What care I for the seasons now? |
55841 | What contradiction and surprise but can be looked for nowadays? |
55841 | What could the colonel do? |
55841 | What defects does she blame? |
55841 | What did Las Casas admit? |
55841 | What did it mean? |
55841 | What did it originally mean, and what does it mean now? |
55841 | What did these fervent and sincere Christians, animated by a firm resolve, propose to do? |
55841 | What directions are given for dress? |
55841 | What do I say? |
55841 | What do we gain by rejecting this definition, and defining it to be the word in a sentence that asserts? |
55841 | What do we see before us but ruin? |
55841 | What do we see in the first? |
55841 | What do you say to that? |
55841 | What do you say? |
55841 | What do you take me for, sir?" |
55841 | What do you think of that as a specimen of argument? |
55841 | What does it mean now? |
55841 | What facts has it observed and analyzed that warrant this conclusion against the Adamic origin of all men? |
55841 | What general view of religion or of science does he seek to bring out, illustrate, or establish? |
55841 | What harm, then, does the church do us when she presents us infallibly that truth which the mind needs for its support? |
55841 | What has taken place in this dark workshop, in this hell, precocious but not the less hopeless? |
55841 | What has the eighteenth century done? |
55841 | What have they on the other? |
55841 | What have you been doing since?" |
55841 | What have you proved yourself? |
55841 | What have you to do with who raised them or who destroyed them?" |
55841 | What if you are hungry? |
55841 | What is a well- appointed workshop? |
55841 | What is approaching? |
55841 | What is demanded of it not for its good, or that is not demanded by the very law of life itself? |
55841 | What is gained by calling adjectives and adverbs_ modifiers_, a name appropriate to adverbs only? |
55841 | What is here that does more than_ carry_, so to say, the great mystery round which they cluster? |
55841 | What is it in itself, apart from its application, or the manner of its use? |
55841 | What is it that is to come hereafter that makes us shudder at the mere thought of death? |
55841 | What is passing here? |
55841 | What is that Word Chione has offended? |
55841 | What is that something? |
55841 | What is that sound of hymns coming down the street? |
55841 | What is that you are saying to relieve your mind? |
55841 | What is that you say? |
55841 | What is the character of the life born of this communion in God? |
55841 | What is the chief end of one aspiring to be a queen in American society? |
55841 | What is the effect, then, of this false estimate of men and things? |
55841 | What is the meaning of this altered tone? |
55841 | What is the mind without truth, or intelligence in which nothing real is grasped? |
55841 | What is the natural consequence of this state of things? |
55841 | What is the_ differentia_ of that faith which really justifies? |
55841 | What is there to substitute in its stead? |
55841 | What is this but the absolute egoism of Fichte? |
55841 | What is this life to which we attach so great a price? |
55841 | What is your name?" |
55841 | What more do you want, Josephel?" |
55841 | What more was desired? |
55841 | What need was there to smash it? |
55841 | What parish would miss fifty dollars? |
55841 | What pleasure will you find in such reading? |
55841 | What possessed you to come out here to a city of the past? |
55841 | What priest or people begrudge it for so good a purpose? |
55841 | What relation do they bear to purpose, to the fulfilment of intention, to the discharge of function?" |
55841 | What right has the Italian kingdom to the Roman territory? |
55841 | What science brings so much out of so little? |
55841 | What sense can be given them? |
55841 | What should I do? |
55841 | What sort of man can he be who will persuade his fellow- creatures to enter into an engagement of this kind? |
55841 | What thence? |
55841 | What think you? |
55841 | What thinks the world of the high Anglican position at the present day? |
55841 | What was that probation? |
55841 | What was that?" |
55841 | What was the first thing you did with it?" |
55841 | What was to prevent them from being both Catholic and liberals? |
55841 | What were they? |
55841 | What will happen when the boundaries are broken through? |
55841 | What would appear on the other side? |
55841 | What would he have said of the female writers of our own day? |
55841 | What would you have them do? |
55841 | What, in fact, is a nation but a great community of sufferings, miseries, weaknesses, and maladies of mind and body? |
55841 | What, then, does he to whom belongs the wisdom and the power think on this subject? |
55841 | What, then, does it lack? |
55841 | What? |
55841 | Whatever has turned his head to Papacy? |
55841 | When I had knelt above an hour, she turned fiercely round, and said"Are you still there? |
55841 | When I remember all my days, And note what blessings each displays, What words can speak my grateful praise? |
55841 | When did it arise? |
55841 | When he had departed to do so, she turned to Lotis, and said earnestly:{ 812}"Lotis, when you return to Athens, will you do me a favor?" |
55841 | When or where did a Catholic ever"understand"the works of a Protestant in a Catholic sense? |
55841 | When people ask_ me_ for anything, do you know, I do not even dare to refuse them? |
55841 | When will I obtain the strength to look at thy earnest work? |
55841 | Whence came the idea of inducing any one to sign this infernal compact? |
55841 | Where and how begin life again under a new aspect? |
55841 | Where are they to- day for the people of our great cities? |
55841 | Where did Dr. Lord learn that patricians and nobles are synonymous terms? |
55841 | Where do you see peace, order, or prosperity? |
55841 | Where does she live?" |
55841 | Where has he lived, and how, until now?" |
55841 | Where has science done this? |
55841 | Where in the world are you taking us, conductor? |
55841 | Where shall a woman find consolation? |
55841 | Where shall we find them and how shall we recognize them? |
55841 | Where should she rest her weary head? |
55841 | Where was I? |
55841 | Where, then, is the evil, and in what consists the damage done to our nature by original sin? |
55841 | Where, then, will you find the fire of charity?" |
55841 | Where? |
55841 | Which are they? |
55841 | Which is to gain the day, science or the soul? |
55841 | Which is yours? |
55841 | Which shall win the victory? |
55841 | Who believes, or has believed, that Demosthenes''Philippics are more brilliant than his De Corona? |
55841 | Who brought those flowers?" |
55841 | Who can read these spoken thoughts, spoken rather to God than to man, and doubt him still? |
55841 | Who do you think it was?" |
55841 | Who does not know that Elpicia( the wife of Boëthius) composed hymns adopted by the Roman liturgy? |
55841 | Who does not see that we verge on socialism at present? |
55841 | Who else could have lifted these immense stones? |
55841 | Who ever said it did?" |
55841 | Who has not, in fancy, at least, sat down to rest under the shadow of her forests and her laws? |
55841 | Who is the painter who executed the picture of which you have spoken?" |
55841 | Who knows? |
55841 | Who objects to give it? |
55841 | Who raised these walls, Magas?" |
55841 | Who wanted it? |
55841 | Who was its author? |
55841 | Who will offer to her intelligence the rightful satisfaction it demands, and prevent her from feeling that she is a mere domestic drudge? |
55841 | Who will trouble themselves about them?" |
55841 | Who would complain of such a change? |
55841 | Whom can it terrify by its temerity? |
55841 | Whom does he bless? |
55841 | Whom shall we have to work for us, when the slave thinks himself as good as his master?" |
55841 | Why are there so many corrupt publications? |
55841 | Why are you here alone, and miserable?'' |
55841 | Why attempt to wrest from the Catholic Church the rights to which she lays claim? |
55841 | Why be so dishonest to yourselves as to refuse to see that which is quite evident to every one else? |
55841 | Why beset her with invidious questions and excite captious quarrels? |
55841 | Why cling to that fiction? |
55841 | Why did Magas turn pale as he said so? |
55841 | Why did her thoughts perpetually dwell on Magas as the only one who understood her, the sole being on earth who could appreciate her? |
55841 | Why did you leave without telling me you were going?" |
55841 | Why do n''t they make soldiers go on foot?" |
55841 | Why do n''t you answer me, conductor? |
55841 | Why do we so cling to it, and fear more to lose it than aught else in the world? |
55841 | Why does not Mr. Alger ask himself the reason of this increasing immorality, and the diminution of the number of marriages? |
55841 | Why else did she send me to you?" |
55841 | Why have those causes been so combined? |
55841 | Why have you called the human soul the divine image, if it is not capable of happiness?" |
55841 | Why have you fired all hearts, in speaking to them of an indwelling God, who is to restore all things to more than primitive order and happiness? |
55841 | Why instruct through the ear and not through the eye? |
55841 | Why is this? |
55841 | Why not write a tract, or a good article for a Catholic paper? |
55841 | Why not, then, conclude that all the languages of mankind, extinct or extant, have sprung from one common original? |
55841 | Why overtly batter its walls? |
55841 | Why seek to change that which has always been? |
55841 | Why shall the terrible accuser, who has the misery of thousands on his soul, return?" |
55841 | Why should a reconciliation be at present peculiarly difficult and embarrassing? |
55841 | Why should the church not be so? |
55841 | Why then should we not leave to these missionaries the task in which they have made such satisfactory progress? |
55841 | Why these onslaughts on Christianity? |
55841 | Why thus retard our journey? |
55841 | Why was it given to them? |
55841 | Why wonder at all I have implied? |
55841 | Why, he asks, should the church be so unswerving under one aspect, yet so pliant under another? |
55841 | Why, if the deliverer is here, is he not announced?" |
55841 | Why, then, did she hover around her destruction, as a moth hovers around the candle? |
55841 | Why? |
55841 | Why? |
55841 | Will he say this is all philosophy can give? |
55841 | Will it do for us to sit down and express our longings for the good old times when there were no printed books? |
55841 | Will you let me put this around you?" |
55841 | Will you lose the prize fame holds out? |
55841 | Will you sacrifice my love, my hope, my happiness, for a scruple?'' |
55841 | Will you spend your life whining out loverlike complaints, like some silly Damon of his cruel Doris or Phillis? |
55841 | Will you take some tea, ma''am? |
55841 | Wilt thou now forsake him, to follow thy own passion?" |
55841 | With a curious mixture of hardness, astonishment, and anger, he finally broke out into the words:"Whom do I see here? |
55841 | Without religion, and above all, without Christianity, where is the remedy for all these evils, the consolation for all these misfortunes? |
55841 | Would Magas give it her? |
55841 | Would not intellectual progress pave the way for moral progress? |
55841 | Would the old endeavors to form an alliance between the throne and the altar now recommence? |
55841 | Would they give us an armistice if they had beaten us? |
55841 | Would they not exercise a new and salutary influence at home and in the world? |
55841 | Would you be kind enough to send me some?'' |
55841 | Would you be_ so_ cruel? |
55841 | Would you master that task? |
55841 | Would your learned critics change Gluck''s_ Armida_ into a nun''s hymn, or have his wild motets of_ Tauris_ sung in the style of Palestrina?" |
55841 | Yes, you would, would n''t you, you dear old fellow? |
55841 | Yet can any honest man say that he does not know what they mean to attack, or that he can not explain what"ritualism"is? |
55841 | Yet have they gained any? |
55841 | Yet why should I detain him? |
55841 | You can sit there twiddling your thumbs as if you did not agree with me; but I do n''t mind you; for what do you know about babies? |
55841 | You defend seven sacraments: how so when there are only two?" |
55841 | You do not believe me? |
55841 | You hate and slander him, then, because he honestly advised you to desist from useless efforts?" |
55841 | You have brought it with you?" |
55841 | You have loved her well, my poor Aimée; will you not give her up to His keeping who hath loved her best of all?" |
55841 | You here again, old fellow?" |
55841 | You know that pretty spot at the end of the lane, how smooth the sward is, and how gently the ground slopes down to the sudden brink of the Palisades? |
55841 | You know the Lady Damaris?" |
55841 | You recollect that hot Thursday in July? |
55841 | You say he comes again? |
55841 | You see very clearly that it is found on the chest, and you put it on the knee; why not on the heel? |
55841 | You still disbelieve me? |
55841 | You think my heart was beating fast? |
55841 | You would not part with it now, Mr. Basher, would you, even for a lady''s smile?" |
55841 | You, sir; perhaps his son?" |
55841 | Your whole inner life claims expansion and sympathy? |
55841 | Zunnier was wild with wrath, and wished to pursue him to Counewitz; but how could we find him among four or five hundred houses? |
55841 | [ Footnote 18] Liberty for whom and liberty for what? |
55841 | [ Footnote 22: Is it possible that_ waterfalls_ were worn in those days?] |
55841 | [ Footnote 43] Did it disappear, this city of God, which was to be placed on the mountain and seen by all people? |
55841 | [ Footnote 4][ Footnote 4: Does the reader believe these warnings uncalled for in American society? |
55841 | _ Amico mio!_ will you be checked midway in your glorious career? |
55841 | _ Did I agree with him?_ Of course I did. |
55841 | _ Fact_ is something done, and implies a doer; what or who, then, is the doer? |
55841 | _ Good gracious?_ Well, I do n''t mind your saying it now, after what I have told you. |
55841 | _ Have I a black woman for a wet- nurse?_ No, I have''nt a black woman for a wet- nurse, nor a white woman either. |
55841 | _ I am malicious?_ Not I; but a poor, dear baby that can not protect itself must not be abused with impunity. |
55841 | _ I sprang up and ran after him? |
55841 | _ Num quid Christianus factus es ut in hoc saeculo floreres?_"Let us look more closely into this great question. |
55841 | _ Ought to be very careful of him?_ The idea! |
55841 | _ People have wet- nurses?_ Yes, just as they have the cholera or the typhoid fever, I suppose, because they can not help it. |
55841 | _ Si Deus pro nob is, quis contra nos?_"The necessity of a Sunday- school library no one disputes. |
55841 | _ The divinity of truth and good is their bond._"What is this"divinity of truth and good"? |
55841 | _ Which of course, I''m jealous of?_ Not the least. |
55841 | _ You wo n''t laugh any more?_ Very well; then do n''t. |
55841 | _ can_ you care for me; can you give me your heart for mine?" |
55841 | _ you are very glad we can not?_ Pray, what do you mean by that? |
55841 | _ you are very glad we can not?_ Pray, what do you mean by that? |
55841 | a monster, the Duke d''Alba an executioner, and that they are solely responsible for all the blood shed in the Low Countries? |
55841 | a soul without being? |
55841 | and Marie Antoinette superior to them in either public or private virtue? |
55841 | and a priest too, perhaps, who knows? |
55841 | and do the chosen few themselves always set generous examples only? |
55841 | and have you destroyed it?" |
55841 | and is that tear for me?" |
55841 | and what is the republic, but the natural government of a society that has lost all its former anchors and traditions?'' |
55841 | are we no longer veterans of the army of the Sambre and Meuse?" |
55841 | are you a reality or a sham? |
55841 | are you a reality or a sham?" |
55841 | are you a reality or a sham?" |
55841 | as witness this unmaidenly step of visiting these glades alone and unprotected? |
55841 | asked the queen, with wondering eyes;"does the hero, my husband, know the possibility of fear?" |
55841 | can I, dare I hope for it?" |
55841 | can it be possible that my liege lord has forgotten the duties of a valiant knight?" |
55841 | can it be possible? |
55841 | cried Ally, appealing to me,"is n''t it true? |
55841 | cried Mademoiselle de Locherais, who had just awakened with a start;"would monsieur by any chance ask any one to come in here?" |
55841 | cried Pinto indignantly,"will you be good enough to put back that pipe? |
55841 | cried the impresario, wringing his hands,"without a Geronimo or a Falerio?" |
55841 | do I consent to sit? |
55841 | do n''t you know that it is one of the dreams of my old age to have my portrait by you? |
55841 | do you say you are not God? |
55841 | exclaimed Ally,"what makes you afraid?" |
55841 | five years ago, and you repeat it now, word for word like a task,"said Magas;"did you hear it more than once?" |
55841 | for everybody?" |
55841 | had repented of his wicked attack upon the church, what would he have been obliged to do to reconcile himself with Rome? |
55841 | have I not promised you freedom if you but return my love? |
55841 | have you heard such an one tell you so to live, as that death might only remove you to a place where there is no dying? |
55841 | he said,"and how many have returned?" |
55841 | how can I smoke and talk? |
55841 | how did she offend? |
55841 | how gain mastery over them? |
55841 | how move their hearts? |
55841 | how? |
55841 | is he coming in here? |
55841 | is it possible? |
55841 | is n''t it?" |
55841 | is not mine so to you?" |
55841 | is not the Lady Damaris more a mother than a mistress to you? |
55841 | is now,"How soon do you think it will come to pass?" |
55841 | is thy justice? |
55841 | may I never, never love thee again? |
55841 | not forgotten that yet?" |
55841 | or buy it and give to your infidel or Protestant neighbors? |
55841 | or did an oracle speak? |
55841 | or did sea- sickness in any way affect its development? |
55841 | or science of the soul without science of being, that is, without ontology? |
55841 | or was the transformation a gradual process, like the changes of temperature? |
55841 | or, if she aims at accommodating and condescending in the latter, why remain inflexible in the former? |
55841 | said Lepré, who had asked the cattle- merchant, in his inventory,"my friend, what_ is_ your name?" |
55841 | said he,"Monsieur Goulden is not coming, then?" |
55841 | that is, all that can be known or proved by natural reason? |
55841 | that some divine hand is pressing down within her the word that is panting for expression? |
55841 | that you will instantly inspire them with a holy fervor? |
55841 | then why dally with the tempter? |
55841 | thought she;"the new Sappho, the Aspasia of the age? |
55841 | was it advising the importation of Africans, some of whom might have been captured in an unjust war, which incensed the Deity? |
55841 | was it not most important not to adjourn, even by a brief delay, a decisive refutation? |
55841 | was it philosophy? |
55841 | was it poetry? |
55841 | was so perfect, why did not the"cautiously conservative"movement stop with"that most perfect specimen of a_ reformed_ Catholic liturgy"? |
55841 | were you a dream of madness, or the voice of the living God?" |
55841 | were you good or evil angels? |
55841 | were you spirits of darkness? |
55841 | were you the envoys of the Lord? |
55841 | what are those which are in the present day so much abused? |
55841 | what are you doing?" |
55841 | what can we say to him? |
55841 | what did he say?" |
55841 | what do you think of her, father?" |
55841 | what do you want, old joker? |
55841 | what else could it be?" |
55841 | what if it has fallen into the hands of our enemies?" |
55841 | what matter, when a brilliant star appears in heaven above us, If the lamp burn dimly? |
55841 | what meets the eye and ear? |
55841 | what must she do to appease the divine wrath?" |
55841 | what shall we do? |
55841 | what was that? |
55841 | what was that?" |
55841 | where will we sup, then?" |
55841 | who will give a legitimate impulse to her sometimes over- excited imagination? |
55841 | whose gains are the most genuine? |
55841 | why are the poor Calvinists to be blamed for following their own consciences, and for asking for a revision of the liturgy? |
55841 | why seek again what thou hast once abjured? |
55841 | why so gloomy?" |
55841 | will you plead for the unfortunates who are hidden by Hergereita in the forest, and wait for a gleam of hope? |
55841 | would not one suffice? |
55841 | would you check the expansion of that fairest of divine works, a soul where God has implanted a germ of ideal life? |
55841 | you understand?" |
55841 | { 13} The whole question between Rome and the world, turn it as we will, comes back always to this: Is man God, or the creature of God? |
55841 | { 16} Society needs law, and how does the church harm it by teaching the law of God, without which it can not subsist? |
55841 | { 229}_ First thought always about baby?_ To be sure, bless his little heart, and the last too! |
55841 | { 230}_ Simply because Dan loves them?_ Simply because Dan loves them; and if that is not good enough reason, I do n''t know what is. |
55841 | { 283} Has not this manner of war, they say, ever raged between the lay spirit and the religious spirit? |
55841 | { 30} If all these names have been the names of saints whose aim and supreme inspiration was religion, why wonder? |
55841 | { 322} At last we gained the street, and Father Brainstein said:"You have heard of the great Russian disaster, Monsieur Joseph?" |
55841 | { 356}"She is not hurt, then?" |
55841 | { 363} Do you not observe, also, how many men mingle with the women? |
55841 | { 364} What were the intentions of the new empire? |
55841 | { 406} Is there any reason to expect improvement? |
55841 | { 420}"Why, that is your name?" |
55841 | { 435} The grace being given, constituting its subjects in the state of justice and sanctity, what was it? |
55841 | { 488}"''Why should we adjourn till another day what can be so well ended now?'' |
55841 | { 588} What has Protestantism done? |
55841 | { 613}"And what do we gain by it?" |
55841 | { 648}"To take care of Cremato''s daughters shall be my work, but perhaps his student has found his way to the heart of one of them?" |
55841 | { 655}"You have read my book, they tell me?" |
55841 | { 677}"What harm is there in sunning myself on the river- banks awhile?" |
55841 | { 679}"Is it possible to remove her from the path of that Magas?" |
55841 | { 717} Have you heard such an one, in bidding you farewell, whisper that it was not for ever? |
55841 | { 735}"Yes, yes,"said the surgeon kindly;"and now what is the matter with you?" |
55841 | { 756} Where has he learned that the Virgin has been made the object of absolute worship? |
55841 | { 787} Did I tell you, sister, that the first thing I heard when I came to England was that my mother was dead? |
55841 | { 809}"And what religion was that?" |
55841 | { 843} Besides this, why should the bishop feel remorse for what was done ignorantly, when engaged in the holy work to promote the salvation of souls? |
55841 | { 854} Why is it less womanly to prescribe as a physician than to tend as a nurse? |
59553 | !_ Was that_ style_? |
59553 | ''Shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil,''my father? 59553 ''Who led the first company?'' |
59553 | ''_ Menial capacity?_''echoed the other member. |
59553 | ''_ Menial capacity?_''said one member of Congress. |
59553 | A party? 59553 Ah Kate,"said Tony,"you know how long and how ardently I have loved you; may I not, one day, drop that epithet of Cousin?" |
59553 | Ai nt it? 59553 Am I in fairy land?--or tell me, pray, To what love lighted bower I''ve found my way? |
59553 | Am I in fairy land?--or tell me, pray, To what love- lighted bower I''ve found my way? 59553 And Spuræna, and Caius Mutius, who wrote three epics in a year-- could Horace do that, or Virgil either?" |
59553 | And are there no_ Doctors_( perhaps you exclaim) Distinguished by talents and virtues and merit? |
59553 | And did you dance after supper? |
59553 | And do you ever go without him? |
59553 | And do you think these are the people who write to me? 59553 And does Monsieur travel then alone?" |
59553 | And dost thou not despair? |
59553 | And for no longer? 59553 And has it kissed you back, my dear?" |
59553 | And how do you rate its value so high? |
59553 | And on the piano and the guitar, Madame? |
59553 | And so, my dear Mrs. Lawrence, you have not been five miles from L----, since my journey to Boston last August? |
59553 | And this will go the round of the whole kingdom? |
59553 | And were none of his friendsI inquired,"at his side during his last illness?" |
59553 | And what is that? |
59553 | And what is the name of this beautiful stream, that flows between us, and the highlands? |
59553 | And what reward has he for my friend and ally? |
59553 | And when was that? |
59553 | And where did you get this, Nichols? |
59553 | And who,said I,"remains to give consolation to the poor and forlorn Mary?" |
59553 | And why, Lucille? |
59553 | And you have heard nothing of a caricature? |
59553 | And you really have not heard? |
59553 | Any thing more? |
59553 | Any thing more? |
59553 | Are there no quarrels or strifes among you? |
59553 | Are they in truth so delicious? |
59553 | Are you a native of this town? |
59553 | Are you acquainted with any of the gentlemen of the press? |
59553 | Are you the sister,I inquired,"of Mr. Henry Pilton, now at William and Mary?" |
59553 | Art thou afraid, Alderete? |
59553 | Betty,said she,"are they all broke?" |
59553 | But come with me to yonder village? 59553 But now,"said she,"suppose we were both to fall into the sea, which should you first try to save?" |
59553 | But the children? |
59553 | But what can we do for them, my dear husband? 59553 But what missiles shall we use?--have you thought of that,_ Mon Général_?" |
59553 | But why not purchase the sheepskin, now that you_ have_ added the moments together? |
59553 | But you have parents,I replied,"who will take you to their home, and gladly receive you in their arms?" |
59553 | But, mother, suppose I should think of courting some young body? |
59553 | Can Mr. Wilberforce forgive and forget one who has injured him much? 59553 Can that be one of my cousins?" |
59553 | Can they deceive us? 59553 Can we not see her?" |
59553 | Cleaveland,said I,"will you join me in a scheme which I have been revolving since we left that infernal barber''s?" |
59553 | Cousin Kate,said Tony,"Did you ever feel as if you would choke when you attempted to speak?" |
59553 | Did I not read the proof of it in the public papers? |
59553 | Did I? |
59553 | Did Miss---- accompany her, or did she remain? |
59553 | Did n''t I see you on it just now? |
59553 | Did not her own letter assure me of it? |
59553 | Did not intend to assert--"_ My_ soul is-- hiccup!--peculiarly qualified for-- hiccup!--a"--"What, sir?" |
59553 | Did you desire to have the old house painted, Tim? 59553 Did you ever hear of any body that did not?" |
59553 | Did you hear Mr. Wilberforce was courting? |
59553 | Did you never see him again? |
59553 | Did you say she was Athenian? |
59553 | Do they, Sir Fop? |
59553 | Do you not also know Gregory Griffith? |
59553 | Do you think you would know him again, if you were to see him? |
59553 | Early, do you call it? 59553 Eh?" |
59553 | For what should we contend? 59553 For what, dearest? |
59553 | Had we not better go in? |
59553 | Have you entirely given up the practice of the law? |
59553 | Have you never seen Jones since? |
59553 | Have you the audacity,said I,"to demand such a sum for a daub like this?" |
59553 | Have you, sir, considered the risk in taking a wife in this strange way? 59553 Hear me?" |
59553 | Hey dey,said he, as we made our appearance--"what mischief is in the wind now?" |
59553 | Hiccup!--e- h? |
59553 | His father, his_ mother_,she added, with an emphasis on the last word,"are they not with him?" |
59553 | How came you to break them? |
59553 | How happened that? 59553 How has the affair between Leger and Allan terminated?" |
59553 | How mean you, Sallust? |
59553 | How so? |
59553 | How? 59553 How_ can_ you?--how--_can_--you?" |
59553 | I do not know that you are? |
59553 | I have been thinking whether it would not be better to have our old house painted? |
59553 | I hear carriage- wheels; who can be passing this way? 59553 I know it, Horace, yet how can I help it? |
59553 | I must go, sir,said the servant;"what message to my mistress?" |
59553 | In the name of common sense,said the old lady,"good people what do you mean?" |
59553 | Is it true? |
59553 | Is it? |
59553 | Is not the tomb still standing? |
59553 | Is that all? 59553 Is there no way in which this nuisance can be prevented? |
59553 | It is all right? |
59553 | It may with propriety be inquired, if Willis could not select a more extended field of fame? 59553 Just five, dear Eugene shall I read to you? |
59553 | Love those that love you--is not that the rule? |
59553 | Mary,said I,"do you not know me? |
59553 | Miss Mary? 59553 My dear Horace,"said the greatly agitated Mrs. Lawrence,"what will Alpheus and Anna do?--what_ can_ they do?" |
59553 | My dear son,said she,"what in the world has got into you? |
59553 | No, not I; what should I do there? 59553 Nurse Bevey has promised to come and take care of them during our absence?" |
59553 | O, my dear friend, how can I ever be sufficiently grateful for your kindness? 59553 Of us? |
59553 | Oh ho, is that the project? 59553 Oh, why do you weep? |
59553 | On what account? |
59553 | One request more-- O Rosalie, reflect that my life depends upon your acquiescence-- should I succeed, will you marry me in spite of your uncle? |
59553 | Pray how does she look, and what did she say? 59553 Pray, Master Pertinax,"said Fenella,"how have you employed your time since I last saw you? |
59553 | Pray, Mr. Heywood, are you acquainted with Mr.----, and do you consider yourself employed by him or me? |
59553 | Quid rides? 59553 Shall we find our brother? |
59553 | Should I not contradict it? |
59553 | Sir,said he, in the silver tones of a lackey,"will you allow me to inquire your name?" |
59553 | Teach a dog what you may,rejoined his friend,"can you alter his nature, so that the brute shall not predominate?" |
59553 | Tell us if he did get in, and how he contrived to? |
59553 | The young lord of the manor''s,answered the driver,"Did you see the lady in it?" |
59553 | Then why would not you have me brood over mine? |
59553 | Then-- hic- cup!--pray-- sir-- what-- what is it? |
59553 | To woman what does nature give? 59553 To- day was the first of the sitting of the superior court for this term, I believe, Heywood; were you there?" |
59553 | Undoubtedly you can; but why not pay some attention to fashion and elegance, both about your house and dress? 59553 Very true!--what is very true?--how came you here?" |
59553 | Was Miss Wilford there? |
59553 | Was Miss Wilford within? |
59553 | Was he any thing like me? |
59553 | Well, sir, and how are you to conduct the negotiation with your native bashfulness? 59553 Well, uncle Harry, what do you want?" |
59553 | Well, what_ is_ the matter then? |
59553 | Were you ever at Rome? |
59553 | What aileth thee, old man? |
59553 | What can be better than these? |
59553 | What can be the meaning of this? |
59553 | What can be worse policy,said Clodius, sententiously,"than to interfere with the manly amusements of the people?" |
59553 | What difference between one room and another can there be to me? 59553 What do I think of_ whom_?" |
59553 | What do you mean? |
59553 | What do you think of Epicurus?--what do you think of-- hiccup!--Epicurus? |
59553 | What do you think of a-- hiccup!--physician? |
59553 | What do you think of it? |
59553 | What has been the course of your moral and religious instruction? 59553 What is Julie to me?" |
59553 | What is it child? |
59553 | What is it you are disputing about? |
59553 | What is the design? |
59553 | What of that? |
59553 | What says the king of Castile? 59553 What stronger proof do we want,"says the journalist,"of that confusion of thought and mysticism with which he has been charged?" |
59553 | What think you of this new sect, which I am told has even a few proselytes in Pompeii, these followers of the Hebrew God-- Christus? |
59553 | What words are they? 59553 What, my son?" |
59553 | What, my young friend? |
59553 | What, not breakfasted yet? |
59553 | What,said Tim to himself, as he walked to the candle,"does my Mary want?" |
59553 | What? |
59553 | When is our next wild- beast fight? |
59553 | When would she return? |
59553 | Whence is it that we so frequently see this pernicious physical treatment, and its natural fruits? 59553 Where is he? |
59553 | Where? |
59553 | Wherefore do the wicked live, become old-- yea, are mighty in power? 59553 Whither so_ fast_, my good lad?" |
59553 | Who calleth thee, my darling boy? 59553 Who was that letter from, Tim?" |
59553 | Who was that? |
59553 | Who''s at the door, my son? |
59553 | Who''s here? |
59553 | Whom shall we get for him to eat? |
59553 | Whose is that? |
59553 | Why do n''t you join yonder group,asked Hope,"and partake in their gaiety, my pretty little girl?" |
59553 | Why do you know who it is, my dear, that is coming to see us at this late hour? |
59553 | Why that soft languish,--why that drawling tone? 59553 Why will you thus grieve, my dear Ellen?" |
59553 | Why, Mass Ned, what mek you all let them Demmy Cats sarve you so? 59553 Why, yes,"said Grayson,"did not you bet at loo, father?" |
59553 | Why,exclaimed Theodore,"why do not letters enlarge the soul, while they expand the mind? |
59553 | Why? |
59553 | Why? |
59553 | Why_ affectation_,--why this mock grimace? 59553 Will it succeed?" |
59553 | Will you answer me when I write to you? |
59553 | Will you keep your hand for me for a year? |
59553 | Will you marry me? |
59553 | Will you not be avenged on your ill- fortune of yesterday? 59553 Will you receive me?" |
59553 | Will you remember me, Rosalie? |
59553 | Will you take the trouble, my dear friend,said Mr. North,"to look in occasionally upon nurse, and see that she neglects not her duty?" |
59553 | Will you tell me what that resolution is? |
59553 | Without you, what would have become to them, and this now free, brave and happy nation? 59553 You have perhaps heard,"said her comforter,"of the fair Jane of Naples, who was taken prisoner and strangled?" |
59553 | You know I am a woman now,rejoined Rosalie, hanging her head,"and-- and-- will you lead off the next dance with me?" |
59553 | You will bet? |
59553 | You would know, sir,he exclaimed, eyeing fiercely the hero of the British capital,"what is gouging? |
59553 | Your cook is of course from Sicily? |
59553 | _ Must we sacrifice home and comfort, and real enjoyment, in order to_ sacrifice_ also to this heathen block[4] which sits upon the top of the dome? 59553 _ Your_ soul, Monsieur Bon- Bon?" |
59553 | & c."''Vous n''avez pas lu le Solitaire?'' |
59553 | ''"Is this possible? |
59553 | ''A thousand pounds?'' |
59553 | ''And can you tell me''--he asked--''what is the meaning of a nose?'' |
59553 | ''And what, Thomas''--he continued--''is Nosology?'' |
59553 | ''Are you resolved on this?'' |
59553 | ''Betty,''says he,''what has been gaun on the day-- a''s right, I houp?'' |
59553 | ''But what,''said she, disfiguring the muslin folds with her awkward fingers,''what is the use of all these fandangles of lace? |
59553 | ''Here then is a card''--she said--''shall I say you will be there?'' |
59553 | ''I want for nothing,''said I;''why does not Bathmendi present himself?'' |
59553 | ''Mary, must I go alone?'' |
59553 | ''Mother,''said she, in faltering accents,''are you here?'' |
59553 | ''My son''--said he--''what is the chief end of your existence?'' |
59553 | ''Nose and all?'' |
59553 | ''Oh George, George,''she murmured, clasping my neck with her arms, and sobbing bitterly,''how could you jest so cruelly with me? |
59553 | ''Oh, who would blame me?'' |
59553 | ''Tis to him that these honors are paid, And his dust must be guarded-- from whom? |
59553 | ''Verra weel, sir,''says I. Sae what could I do, but gang up stairs to the rest of the company, an''sit doun among them? |
59553 | ''Verra weel, sir,''says I; for what cou''d I say? |
59553 | ''Verra weel, sir,''says I; for what could I do? |
59553 | ''What does my father mean?'' |
59553 | ''What will you take for it?'' |
59553 | ''Who can paint like nature?'' |
59553 | ''Will you go to Almacks, pretty creature?'' |
59553 | ''Yes, child: are you better?'' |
59553 | ''_ What_ can he be?'' |
59553 | ''_ Where_ can he be?'' |
59553 | ''_ Who_ can he be?'' |
59553 | ( A sort of man- woman,) and how did she look? |
59553 | *****"Well, sir, what do you think of our daffodils?" |
59553 | *****"Where are the poets of this land? |
59553 | -- Would not the above paragraph read equally as well thus:"Will no lapse of time wear away this abhorred image from your memory? |
59553 | --"You were saying, Timothy, that you were about to tell me something?" |
59553 | --And what were the subjects of these several species of poetry? |
59553 | 1834. Who reads an American book? |
59553 | A little finger look lonely when in company with three fingers and a thumb? |
59553 | A plain story, told just as we should have told it ourselves? |
59553 | A shorter one conveys the same idea, in eloquent language:"I acted like a wretch, of course; how could I do otherwise? |
59553 | A volunteer, bolder than the rest, went so far as to ask the captain,"If he had forgot what they had heard from the Declaration?" |
59553 | Again,"which do you like best, M. de Talleyrand,"said a lady,"Madame de---- or myself?" |
59553 | Age is a sad destroyer of good looks, is it not? |
59553 | All thy labor unrequited? |
59553 | Am not I the man?" |
59553 | Among all the young ladies in the city, residents or visiters, Miss---- was the only one who could at all manage a steed-- but what of that? |
59553 | Among such is one victory an assured pledge of future and_ bloodless_ victory to the end of time? |
59553 | Among the advocates of phrenology, have not some names, remarkable for ability and inquiry, been numbered? |
59553 | Amy broke the seal mechanically, blushed deeply, and bent her eyes on the ground.--"Amy,"said Hugh,"why do you not read my mother''s letter?" |
59553 | An hour passed on;--what cry was that, Which thrilled that city so? |
59553 | And amid their busy struggles, did they ever recur to the friend who was absent, with the same deep feeling that dwelt in his heart for them? |
59553 | And are the guardians of public education alone''halting between two opinions?'' |
59553 | And can it be? |
59553 | And did she love? |
59553 | And does it not class emulations with"idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envyings,"& c.? |
59553 | And has not his_ own_ experience taught him the advantage which a questionable title, or the folly of a ruler may give his subjects? |
59553 | And have we not reason to believe that here as in other cases, custom renders one indifferent to that which at first would make him miserable? |
59553 | And how can this be between two tribes of nearly equal force? |
59553 | And how does my aunt like all this? |
59553 | And if I grant, also, that the slave is happier than the free laborer, does it follow that his master may lawfully hold him as such? |
59553 | And if slavery, then, was unlawful in its origin, must it not be so now, and continue to be so forever? |
59553 | And is it for this, I exclaimed within myself, that hundreds and thousands toil up craggy precipices and swelter under August suns? |
59553 | And is it_ here_ that the Hero lies, Whose name has shaken the earth with dread? |
59553 | And is not literary immortality-- the mind set forth in visible, enchanting, and enduring forms-- far more desirable, than political? |
59553 | And is there a feeling more desolate still? |
59553 | And is there any thing so very ridiculous in this? |
59553 | And is there aught beneath the sun Can wean my constant heart from thee, Thou lovely and beloved one? |
59553 | And is there no cause to mitigate our anger when contemplating such scenes? |
59553 | And is there nothing-- nothing at all-- to which it may be properly applied? |
59553 | And is_ this_ all that the earth supplies? |
59553 | And mounting in blood on the steps of a throne-- Had he murdered his thousands to aggrandize one? |
59553 | And must not that, then, which is against this law in one age, be equally against it in another, and in every succeeding age, to the end of time? |
59553 | And now, I ask, whence may we draw richer supplies of this than from the pages of ancient writers? |
59553 | And shall each betray that they have been practised but to deceive? |
59553 | And that a light, more beautiful than ours, Lends richer glories to expiring day? |
59553 | And the echoes of the chamber answered me"what was it?" |
59553 | And thou shalt mark his farewell beams O''er lov''d familiar objects play; But will they rouse the fairy dreams That once endear''d the close of day? |
59553 | And was not this much? |
59553 | And was she not happy that_ he_ wanted so constant an attendance? |
59553 | And was thine own, thy native land, less dear? |
59553 | And what are the great, the ultimate purposes to be achieved after reaching these higher schools-- the colleges and universities of the land? |
59553 | And what is it that gives weight to counsel, if it be not the adviser''s learning and reputation? |
59553 | And what is there, then, that is so very"dangerous"in the Governor''s reasoning? |
59553 | And what matters it under what part of that vast tablet, every where emblazoned with his glory, his bones repose? |
59553 | And what of that? |
59553 | And what shall be said of that which is not even middling? |
59553 | And what, think you, was her employment? |
59553 | And when humanity with fettered hands Uplifted cries, who now will nerve the arm? |
59553 | And when shall we proceed to business?" |
59553 | And when, days afterward, humbly and sadly he re- urged a former suit, did Lucille shut her heart to its prayer? |
59553 | And whence the mighty change? |
59553 | And where does he get this idea from again? |
59553 | And where was I? |
59553 | And which from the artist came?" |
59553 | And who is she that has the art To chain my sympathies? |
59553 | And who was this tender, kind, consoling wife, in the hour of death? |
59553 | And who will deny that nature hath not a voice and eloquence that rightly speak to the bosoms of men? |
59553 | And who would deny but the south has genius which would do honor to the_ whole_ country in any walk? |
59553 | And whose kind, unwearied hand smoothed my lonely pillow, and held my aching brow? |
59553 | And why does he attempt this? |
59553 | And why should I fly? |
59553 | And why? |
59553 | And wilt thou sometimes think of me, When thy thoughts from this stormy world are free? |
59553 | And with a sweeter, more entrancing tone, The thrilling strains of love and glory swell? |
59553 | And, by the way, do you know that I go to Boston, with Alpheus, in a fortnight? |
59553 | Anne, my foolish fancy''s o''er, And I can not love you more-- Nay, sweet girl, why knit your brow? |
59553 | Are gorgeous eloquence and nature fit comates? |
59553 | Are not the affections the offerings that please him best? |
59553 | Are not these feelings impressed in the bosom of every human being? |
59553 | Are not these suppositions effectually silenced by an appeal to the well- determined moral and intellectual qualities of those advocates? |
59553 | Are not these the sources of most of the''wars and fightings''among mankind? |
59553 | Are the people mad here, as well as on the road? |
59553 | Are the poor girls to blame for all this? |
59553 | Are the terrified nations afraid Lest he yet should arise from the curse of his doom, And bursting its cerements, escape from the tomb? |
59553 | Are these the limits of glory''s reign? |
59553 | Are they appreciated? |
59553 | Are they favorable or not to domestic happiness? |
59553 | Are they forever silent? |
59553 | Are they not written in the record of the Most High? |
59553 | Are they to be supposed to have but_ one_ mind among them, as the Sirens had but one tooth? |
59553 | Are those times passed forever? |
59553 | Are we to doubt the truth of this illustration? |
59553 | Are you forever to love that man?" |
59553 | Are you madly bent on bringing down misery on your head? |
59553 | Art sick? |
59553 | As an historical novel, in excellent keeping, written with great fluency and richness of diction, we know of( nothing?) |
59553 | At last he went to his mother and said:"Mamma, wo n''t you teach me to do like papa? |
59553 | Autumn, how should that languid air That smoothed thy brow erewhile, Be( though a frown thou dost not wear) Mistaken for a smile? |
59553 | Because he was able to sustain the violated rights of property, would he have been also able to destroy them? |
59553 | Believ''st thou Nature smiled at such beginning? |
59553 | Besides, the savage that runs upon four legs is so inferior in performance to him that walks upon two? |
59553 | Besides, what can a woman gain by her opposition or her differences? |
59553 | Besides-- has he not had his full share of the blessings of mortality? |
59553 | Breathes not the soul of mystery in this?" |
59553 | Bryant?" |
59553 | But Simon, how is cousin Mary? |
59553 | But Thou who didst on Calvary die, Flows not thy mercy wide and free? |
59553 | But are food and raiment the wages to which labor is every where stinted? |
59553 | But are there not various modes of manifesting, more or less appropriately, the inward emotions of our hearts? |
59553 | But can we, then, plead a defect of theirs which is the consequence of our own act, to justify that act, in this way? |
59553 | But can_ any_ principles, I ask, do this? |
59553 | But for this labor, does not the mother receive a rich reward? |
59553 | But hath Columbia no gratitude? |
59553 | But how can the literary mind be thus stimulated, when the general feeling of society is diametrically opposite to its interests? |
59553 | But how is this most dangerous of evils to be guarded against? |
59553 | But how meanwhile had that year passed for Lucille? |
59553 | But how shall I make known the persons of whom I wish to speak? |
59553 | But how stands the fact? |
59553 | But how, you may ask, did she manage to answer his letters, when she was unable to write? |
59553 | But if the net- work was separated from the hoop to admit this passage, what was to sustain the car in the meantime? |
59553 | But is it the less crushing, because it is enforced by one from whose power there is no escape? |
59553 | But is this a fair representation of the Governor''s reasoning? |
59553 | But may not we, the sovereign citizens of these states, abuse power too? |
59553 | But say that it is not so; and grant, if you please, for the sake of argument, that it is all"a specious fallacy"indeed; what then? |
59553 | But she will not turn us out supperless, I hope, such a night as this? |
59553 | But the little boy, my dear Anna!--Are you not anxious to see him?" |
59553 | But what are the objects which now fill men''s minds with admiration and astonishment? |
59553 | But what could we do, when our heart was full of the very sentiment which Scott has expressed so much better than we could? |
59553 | But what do they do? |
59553 | But what heightened or adequate terms of censure can be found for the New York rule, which displaces every judge at sixty? |
59553 | But what is its true use? |
59553 | But what is that? |
59553 | But what is the fact? |
59553 | But what is the general character of this branch of the press? |
59553 | But what need had Hercules of Homer? |
59553 | But what reason have we for supposing this interference with the freedom of election? |
59553 | But what shall I say in reply to your request to write something for its columns? |
59553 | But what shall we say of the contents of the present number?--shall we say nothing, least peradventure we may say too much? |
59553 | But what should we say to a Gospel after the manner of Mr. Adams, or even of Mr. Everett? |
59553 | But what was easier than a recommendation which it would be perhaps best to conform to? |
59553 | But when she ceas''d, with serious air The other made reply,"Shall he not also be my care? |
59553 | But when will it be otherwise than important and profitable to study the process by which Washington became what he was? |
59553 | But whence arises this actual superiority? |
59553 | But where is the check on such abuse of power? |
59553 | But who compose this working class? |
59553 | But who is Ione?" |
59553 | But who reads it? |
59553 | But who shall describe the varied and terrific music of the steam engine? |
59553 | But who, with energy divine, May tread that undiscover''d maze, Where Nature, in her curtain''d shrine, The strange and new- born Thought arrays? |
59553 | But why amplify our illustrations? |
59553 | But why descend to particulars which intercept the thread of our narrative? |
59553 | But why does it not even settle the question? |
59553 | But why enumerate-- why speak of her varied and almost numberless acquirements? |
59553 | But why may we not be content to witness this delineation of national characteristics upon our theatrical boards? |
59553 | But why not he as well as another? |
59553 | But would they come? |
59553 | But you are not laboring for Virginia alone: it is for the south-- the_ whole_ south; and might I not add, for the whole country? |
59553 | But you inquire,--is she who breathes such fragrance around, forever to be immured in this sequestered{ 82} valley? |
59553 | But you may ask what Mr. Simson has to do with the loves of George and Isabella? |
59553 | But"who ever thought of blaming La Fayette?" |
59553 | But, alas my child, what hope is there for me?'' |
59553 | But, because this is most evidently the case, are we to think of blaming Mrs. Sigourney? |
59553 | By what other term can we characterize the usual school appliances, to the chief of which I beg leave to invite your special attention? |
59553 | By what_ bizzarrerie_ does it happen that Sardanapalus is discovered in Greek literature under the name of Tenos Concoleros? |
59553 | Ca n''t I do as you did with them? |
59553 | Came there a group past mem''ry''s straining eye To teach the_ brave_ how hard it was to die? |
59553 | Can Mr. Blackstone tell us which of the savage African chiefs began the game?] |
59553 | Can a discerning public withhold encouragement, especially when the benefits will be mutual? |
59553 | Can he wonder that his reader will not consent to be so led? |
59553 | Can it be possible that Marian Lindsay''s_ load- stars_ failed in attraction?" |
59553 | Can it exist under a despotism? |
59553 | Can it not sooth the heart to rest As it hath done before? |
59553 | Can not something like this be done in Virginia? |
59553 | Can such a cast of mind do otherwise than open new fields for high action? |
59553 | Can such an influence develope the real beauty and sublimity of mind? |
59553 | Can such mum''ries move? |
59553 | Can the paltry consideration of a few thousand dollars expense, outweigh the magnificent advantages which are likely to result? |
59553 | Can they be proved? |
59553 | Can we be favored by our correspondent"C"with another copy? |
59553 | Can we believe, in the face of these facts, that the loyalty of Virginia ever wavered? |
59553 | Can we not continue friends? |
59553 | Can you forbear smiling my friend? |
59553 | Can you object to the practice of law? |
59553 | Can you wonder that your neighbor(_ contemporary_ I believe is the word in fashion,) thought his letter but"_ so so_?" |
59553 | Can, then, our colleges maintain their high, original standing? |
59553 | Canst thou deny it? |
59553 | Canst thou forget, amidst the gay and heartless, One far away whom thou hast vowed to love? |
59553 | Child!--in tender weakness turning To thy heaven- appointed guide, Doth a lava- poison burning, Tinge with gall, affection''s tide? |
59553 | Cold, cold in death are the hearts which throbb''d To view thy rising glory-- Are we their sons, who have basely robb''d What Time had left so hoary? |
59553 | Come, Patrick, clear up the storm on your brow, You were kind to me once,--will you frown on me now? |
59553 | Comest thou to warn me from this life of pain? |
59553 | Corrupt the source, and what will be the effect of its streams? |
59553 | Could F----''s throbbing bosom beat Victims on victims to ensnare: Point to the lovers at her feet, And proudly count the captives there? |
59553 | Could I ask a keener reproach? |
59553 | Could I demand a better proof of the purity and delicacy of his affection? |
59553 | Could she be happy and I feel miserable? |
59553 | Could the spirit which tumbled his son from the throne, have prepared itself for explosion during her vigilant and energetic reign? |
59553 | Could_ they_, without dishonor, have been hearty in favor of the new order of things? |
59553 | Country!--on thy sons depending, Strong in manhood, bright in bloom, Hast thou seen thy pride descending Shrouded,--to th''unhonor''d tomb? |
59553 | Cui flavam religas comam, Simplex munditiis? |
59553 | D''ye take me for a fool? |
59553 | Did AUSTRIA shed no remorseful tear, When ENGLAND''S FAITH, and thine HONOR, FRANCE, And thy FRIENDSHIP, RUSSIA, were blasted_ here_? |
59553 | Did I feel the sacredness of the obligation he revealed? |
59553 | Did I venerate the sanctity of his motives, and admit their authority? |
59553 | Did PRUSSIA cast no repentant glance? |
59553 | Did any one ever dream that Kentucky had given cause of offence to her sister States, by erecting an asylum for the poor mutes? |
59553 | Did not good wife Keech, the butcher''s wife, come in then, and call me gossip Quickly? |
59553 | Did not her own name uttered by that voice, seem to her even sweeter than the music? |
59553 | Did not you know it was wrong to bet?" |
59553 | Did she talk like a book? |
59553 | Did they arouse the mind of Homer, the immortal bard of antiquity? |
59553 | Did they grow to their full power and greatness under the influence of{ 392} monarchical institutions? |
59553 | Did you not expect it?" |
59553 | Did_ each_ beauty but tarry the while We met-- love, by moonlight alone? |
59553 | Didst thou regret that her resplendent skies Should smile on men as slaves content to live? |
59553 | Didst thou, when straying in her cities fair, Or in her groves of bloom, regret that here No perfumes mingle with the passing air? |
59553 | Discarding nature, and not sufficiently wedded to art,--what becomes of her witchery? |
59553 | Do actors generally exercise their profession to please themselves and gratify their own especial delight in self- exhibition? |
59553 | Do audiences, on the other hand, use to come in crowds to play- houses to see indifferent performers? |
59553 | Do n''t this prove what I said in my extompere address,''_ that their heads can not work without you_?''" |
59553 | Do not these inconsistent objections neutralize each other, like opposite quantities in Algebra, or opposite simples in Chemistry? |
59553 | Do such minds as Johnson and Addison, spread beauty and interest through their columns? |
59553 | Do these facts explain the cause of the difference above alluded to? |
59553 | Do they acknowledge the_ authority_ of parliament or protector? |
59553 | Do they awaken the fancy? |
59553 | Do they clothe human thoughts in radiant and brilliant robes? |
59553 | Do they create pure and soaring eloquence? |
59553 | Do they encourage the universal growth of mind? |
59553 | Do they hold out a common inducement to eloquent and lofty effort? |
59553 | Do they not know that the odious tyranny, the folly, the weakness, and the cowardice of John gave birth to_ magna charta_? |
59553 | Do they promote mental research? |
59553 | Do they think that in fact, and for practical purposes, the truth of christianity is still a debateable question? |
59553 | Do we ask why, in this temper, they gained so little from William? |
59553 | Do we behold such an aspect under despotic institutions? |
59553 | Do we desire a glorious immortality? |
59553 | Do we not all know that there is something much more devotional in the love of woman than man-- a something much more nearly allied to religion? |
59553 | Do we not know that this same weakness and consequent dependence, makes woman more confiding, more trusting, more submissive than man? |
59553 | Do we really hope to improve by it, those qualities, moral, intellectual or physical, with which the bounty of nature has distinctively gifted us? |
59553 | Do you further inquire what is the secret of their happiness? |
59553 | Do you know that for a month past, I have been dreading the approach of this week?" |
59553 | Do you know the D''Israeli in America?" |
59553 | Do you mean to ruin yourself, Tim?" |
59553 | Do you not carry your scrupulosity too far?" |
59553 | Do you not dread the mystery of that number, which made your grandfather a premature dotard? |
59553 | Do you not now perceive what a folly I should have been guilty of, had I suffered you to dangle, as you wished, at my apron string?" |
59553 | Do you not see? |
59553 | Do you not_ see_ the figure which EVERY_ one_ of you cuts?! |
59553 | Do you take a gentleman of my size and respectability into a room not larger than a closet? |
59553 | Do you then wonder at the pain I have suffered from this malignant endeavor of Mc----''s to render me ridiculous?" |
59553 | Do you think I am worthy of you? |
59553 | Do you think that beings superior to the laws of humanity have ever appeared to mortals or conversed with them?" |
59553 | Do you think this requiring too much? |
59553 | Do you think to marry my niece?" |
59553 | Does any man doubt such truths? |
59553 | Does any one doubt this fact? |
59553 | Does he believe that the revolution so"cheering and refreshing"to his spirit, would have taken place, had Henri IV occupied the throne of Louis XVI? |
59553 | Does he mean that a larger proportion could not be obtained if the public expense were proffered for their education and subsistence? |
59553 | Does he mean, at page six, to intimate that the"boldness of truth"was ONLY"_ not_ WHOLLY_ uncongenial_"to the character of La Fayette? |
59553 | Does he see no beauty, no merit, no poetry, in the"Song of the Seasons?" |
59553 | Does he think the reform now going on in England would have commenced under Elizabeth or her grandfather Henry VII? |
59553 | Does he, when you are housekeeper, invite company without informing you of it, or bring home with him a friend? |
59553 | Does it consist in that sort of declamation which is meant to"split the ears of the groundlings?" |
59553 | Does it follow that slavery_ as it exists in our state_, was just and lawful_ in its origin_? |
59553 | Does it thereby sustain any loss? |
59553 | Does music there, with power to us unknown, Breathe o''er the heart a far diviner spell? |
59553 | Does not Mary look beautiful? |
59553 | Does not the eye pass from an unpleasant object to a pleasant in a very moment?" |
59553 | Does not this conduct of the assembly show that they anticipated the restoration of one whose right they had always maintained? |
59553 | Does she need_ but one_ firm principle of action? |
59553 | Does she remember him whose follies and vices removed him from her and happiness? |
59553 | Does she still remember my wild pranks?" |
59553 | Does that which would be unjust as the act of ninety- nine, become just, as being the act of an hundred? |
59553 | Does the Christian love his cross? |
59553 | Does the Miser love his dross? |
59553 | Does the question of right depend simply, or at all, upon the degree of happiness which the laborer enjoys? |
59553 | Does the tuft of long hair by which Houri hands are to draw the faithful into Paradise, differ from the unshorn locks of those around him? |
59553 | Does this look like a recognition of Cromwell and his parliament, or the reverse? |
59553 | Dost thou forget, or do thy blue eyes brighten Only with thoughts of his return to thee? |
59553 | Dost thou remember the boy we met when we first set out together, who was weeping on his way to school, and sighing to be a man?" |
59553 | Dost thou the pains of absence seek to lighten, In scenes like this of mirth and revelry? |
59553 | Doth not the virtuous soul still find in both a friend?" |
59553 | Dryden says,"why should we imagine the soul of man more heavy than his senses? |
59553 | Enable whom? |
59553 | Even at Naples, even in this all- lovely land,''fit haunt for gods,''has it not been with me as it has been elsewhere? |
59553 | Even my aunt''s coolness was a grateful tribute to my self- love-- for was it not occasioned by my transcendency over her less gifted daughters? |
59553 | Even so my dear, for what is there on the face of the earth( that depends not on_ soil_ or_ climate_) which may not be found in this bustling capital? |
59553 | Every body knew it; their parents knew it, and sanctioned it-- and why should they not? |
59553 | Every few moments the interrogatory,"How far are we now?" |
59553 | Every glorious promise lost? |
59553 | Father, were they yours? |
59553 | Father, what was you doing? |
59553 | Feeling so doubly lone, Tim would again seek a partner to sympathize in his sorrows, and to whom could he go? |
59553 | Fixing his eye on the others, he said, with an energy of tone which we thought had forsaken him,--_"Will ye thus be divided, at the last day? |
59553 | For if it be asked, how long should this state of things be kept up? |
59553 | For want of gratitude? |
59553 | For want of love? |
59553 | For what is it that she would challenge the affections? |
59553 | For who doubts but that the Messenger is destined to call into active exertion the genius of the south? |
59553 | For who, let me ask, ever heard of a balloon entirely manufactured of dirty newspapers? |
59553 | Forget? |
59553 | Forget? |
59553 | Friendship? |
59553 | From a nation, one of whose causes of quarrel with those masters, is their refusal to deal any more in that inhuman traffic? |
59553 | God of heaven!--is it possible? |
59553 | Good heavens, said I internally-- what can this mean? |
59553 | Goodnews?" |
59553 | Granted, but what is_ dignity_? |
59553 | Grayson said:"And an''t you religious too, papa?" |
59553 | Ha''e ye ony objection to be a wife, Betty?'' |
59553 | Had Heywood fulfilled the promise of his early youth, and climbed with vigorous step"The hill, where fame''s proud temple shines afar?" |
59553 | Had her son perished? |
59553 | Had not this been extorted from him, could it have been wrung from the stern grasp of the first or third Edward? |
59553 | Had the perseverance of Drayton won for him wealth and respectability in his profession? |
59553 | Hang all the world thought Tim-- shall I never have an opportunity of telling the old lady? |
59553 | Has he disappointed you in something you expected, whether of ornament, or furniture, or of any conveniency? |
59553 | Has he the tender sensibility, the warm hearted sympathy that is ever alive in a female''s bosom? |
59553 | Has it been both by precept and example, or by the first only; and what rank have your teachers assigned to such studies, in the scale of importance?" |
59553 | Has it one single attribute of true poetry? |
59553 | Has not Omnipotence itself the pow''r To bring repentance in the final hour? |
59553 | Has she no art to foil him, And turn his scythe aside? |
59553 | Has she no attendant, John?" |
59553 | Has the Governor written any thing which fairly suggests such a singular query? |
59553 | Has the grim savage rushed again from the distant wilderness? |
59553 | Has the heat of these waters any connection with volcanic phenomena? |
59553 | Has your husband staid out longer than you expected? |
59553 | Hast read the Poem, Ma''am? |
59553 | Hate? |
59553 | Have not the Romans sworn never to obey a king? |
59553 | Have oceans of blood and an age of strife, A thousand battles, been all in vain? |
59553 | Have these glorious scenes poured no inspirings into hearts worthy to behold and praise their beauty? |
59553 | Have these things been lost on Mr. Adams himself? |
59553 | Have you ever seen a lady setting her cap for a beau? |
59553 | He binds up the broken heart; will he not then console ours?" |
59553 | He clothes the lilies of the field, and will he not clothe us? |
59553 | He the hors- pleader? |
59553 | He who heard the guilty, may he not hear the guiltless? |
59553 | He would not go in"the way to the pit"the night previous-- and now could he go to hell? |
59553 | He''hears the young ravens when they cry,''and will he not give his children food? |
59553 | His biographer thus described his first interview with Washington:"''What do you seek here?'' |
59553 | Honor? |
59553 | How awful I felt while a spectator of the solemn scene; and how strange, is it not? |
59553 | How can she shun his power? |
59553 | How can thy Destiny but happy be? |
59553 | How can we reconcile these matters? |
59553 | How could it be otherwise, when all that is beautiful in the heart, and sunshine in the intellect, is debased and destroyed? |
59553 | How could it happen that contumely and disrespect were cast upon us from parties who were strangers, having no connexion with each other? |
59553 | How has the greatness and grandeur of all antiquity, been perpetuated? |
59553 | How is he to be drawn over to her side? |
59553 | How is it that from Beauty I have derived a type of unloveliness?--from the covenant of Peace a simile of sorrow? |
59553 | How is it to be effected? |
59553 | How many breasts shall wildly throb for thee? |
59553 | How many ever think of the necessity of entitling their pleadings? |
59553 | How many have been urged to the extremity of human depravity by the too rigid decree of a father''s or a guardian''s justice? |
59553 | How many know how to take advantage of this defect, even when it occurs to them? |
59553 | How many noble, ardent and ambitious youths, have thus been driven to the night of woe and mental desolation? |
59553 | How many of those who witnessed it, went home with hearts oppressed by a consciousness of something wrong? |
59553 | How many times a week or month have you received lessons on them? |
59553 | How many wives and maidens was he represented as seducing by the most unfair means? |
59553 | How many, for example, will remember where to stop the defence, in drawing a plea in abatement, or to the jurisdiction of the court? |
59553 | How often was the speaker of the house of commons so chosen in England? |
59553 | How shall our love continue to pursue, and cling to that, of whose very form and essence we have no abiding assurance? |
59553 | How should he? |
59553 | How should he? |
59553 | How very liable you may be to gross imposition? |
59553 | How ward his withering blow? |
59553 | How? |
59553 | Husband!--o''er thy hope a mourner, Of thy chosen friend asham''d, Hast thou to her burial borne her, Unrepentant,--unreclaimed? |
59553 | I blush for public crimes and rage; For brothers too: what have we, hardened age, Eschewed? |
59553 | I dreamed-- I speak my dream; and canst thou read it me? |
59553 | I exclaimed aloud,"that Heywood?" |
59553 | I exclaimed,"was there no man present whose humanity prompted him to interpose for the prevention of so murderous a deed?" |
59553 | I had done a deed-- what was it? |
59553 | I inquired, is Devotion never encumbered, or impeded by the splendor that surrounds her? |
59553 | I languish here-- Where is my own sweet friend? |
59553 | I met a friend on the_ pave_ last week, who said,"Will you come to our party to- morrow night?" |
59553 | I met thee by moonlight alone, My heart trusting wholly to thee: Was it prudent? |
59553 | I miss those social_ winter_ hours With her I used to spend, Now cheerless are my_ summer bowers_-- Where is my own lov''d friend? |
59553 | I replied fiercely,"do you take me for a strolling mendicant? |
59553 | I shall be wretched-- I shall deserve to be so; for shall I not think, Julie, that I have imbittered our life with your ill- fated love? |
59553 | I wonder what the_ wind_ did in the meantime? |
59553 | If I went to sleep as I proposed, how could the atmosphere in the chamber be regenerated in the interim? |
59553 | If any doubt it, let them inquire as impartially as they can, what manner of men those are in general who constitute the educated class? |
59553 | If any one gives my husband the common salutation of how d''ye do? |
59553 | If nothing has been read specially on these all- important topics, what has been the manner in which they have been recommended to your attention? |
59553 | If the birds delight the grove, Can I hear thee, and not love? |
59553 | If the doctrines be untrue, how are these results ascertained by them to be accounted for? |
59553 | If the monstrous increase be not checked, what purse can buy, what head can read( much less remember,) nay what room can hold them, a century hence? |
59553 | If you wish it, my son"--"madam?" |
59553 | In displaying anxiety for the breath of which he was at present so willing to get rid, might I not lay myself open to the exactions of his avarice? |
59553 | In the heart of Venice could I have erected a better? |
59553 | In the name of all that is singular, said he, who can that be, and whither is he posting with such rapidity? |
59553 | In the name of all the vrows and devils in Rotterdam, what could it possibly portend? |
59553 | In the race for political or professional distinction, who is influenced by such timid suggestions? |
59553 | In what part of the Report? |
59553 | In what way, let us ask, is this annual appropriation which the Governor recommends, to be expended? |
59553 | Involuntarily, my heart said,--_"Shall not this be a family in Heaven? |
59553 | Is any monument to Washington so appropriate as that reared by his genius, his toils and his virtues,--HIS COUNTRY? |
59553 | Is he a legislator? |
59553 | Is he not the God of love? |
59553 | Is it a fountain from which flows the pure streams of knowledge? |
59553 | Is it a friend to literature, or the efforts of original and powerful mind? |
59553 | Is it a messenger of eloquent and exalted thoughts? |
59553 | Is it asked why scientific individuals have not universally ranged themselves under the banners of this science? |
59553 | Is it for want of reverence for his memory? |
59553 | Is it in the power of numbers to alter the nature of things, and to justify oppression, though it should fall on the head of only one victim? |
59553 | Is it less interesting because the prompting impulse of the hero is virtuous, not criminal? |
59553 | Is it made up of"gun, drum, trumpet, blunderbuss and thunder,"and images placed by the speaker''s side to be apostrophized? |
59553 | Is it my brain that reels-- or was it indeed the finger of the enshrouded dead that stirred in the white cerement that bound it? |
59553 | Is it not rather a gross caricature of it? |
59553 | Is it not so? |
59553 | Is it not the very reverse? |
59553 | Is it possible to acquire this wonderful talent? |
59553 | Is it possible, cried I, that so small a stick can be worth so much? |
59553 | Is it the moon---- That comes more near to us than she was wo nt, And makes men mad? |
59553 | Is it the result of nature? |
59553 | Is it true? |
59553 | Is it wonderful that despotic governments never attain a high degree of intellectual eminence? |
59553 | Is it wonderful that its literature is unequalled? |
59553 | Is it_ stage effect_? |
59553 | Is moral and religious acquirement ever made a pre- requisite? |
59553 | Is moral and religious conduct always rendered indispensable? |
59553 | Is not Berkeley in of his old commission? |
59553 | Is not here an_ hiatus valde deflendus_? |
59553 | Is not his letter a specimen of"the carpings of illiberal and puerile criticism?" |
59553 | Is not such silence the most expressive praise; the silence imposed by a common sentiment, which all are conscious is felt by all? |
59553 | Is not the law of nature, like its author, immutable, and eternal? |
59553 | Is not the_ capitol itself_ too small? |
59553 | Is not the_ thing itself_ worthier than the symbol? |
59553 | Is not this at once evading and altering, as it were, the counsel of the Creator of all? |
59553 | Is not this the reason why legislative encroachment so much disposes men to acquiesce in executive usurpation? |
59553 | Is such the moral of human life? |
59553 | Is the capacity of man naturally greater than that of woman? |
59553 | Is the principle of both laws the same, or entirely different? |
59553 | Is the tale of him, who sleeps in that grave still known?" |
59553 | Is there any human production which can be said to be perfect? |
59553 | Is there any thing wonderful in that? |
59553 | Is there no reward for the righteous? |
59553 | Is there not something, besides politics, worth living for? |
59553 | Is there not such proof in this instance? |
59553 | Is there nothing similar to the preceding quotation in this? |
59553 | Is there nothing which the Legislature ought not to meddle with? |
59553 | Is this a fair inference? |
59553 | Is this a relative-- a brother of the"forgotten genius,"who has at last come to pay a tribute to his long neglected memory? |
59553 | Is this an assertion of the supremacy of the assembly? |
59553 | Is this your friendship?" |
59553 | Is thy pure spirit to thy Maker flown? |
59553 | Is virtue then, nought but a name? |
59553 | Is''nt this horrible? |
59553 | Is_ he_ not in possession of all his faculties, mental and corporeal? |
59553 | It may acquire me fame as well as fortune; and then I may marry Rosalie?" |
59553 | It was against orders, but I never had shot at an Indian, and how could I stand it? |
59553 | It was but yesterday I happened to say, my dear how is the pain in your back? |
59553 | It was twelve months from the time I took out license, that I was touched on the arm by a stranger, who asked me if I was not Owen the lawyer? |
59553 | Its place of rest is not within this aching breast;-- Where does it dwell? |
59553 | John hesitated and grinned.--"What the devil is the fellow laughing at? |
59553 | July 24, 1834._ And you will positively"excommunicate"me if I do not send you"some_ first impressions_"of Yankee- land? |
59553 | Kindheart?" |
59553 | Know what? |
59553 | Lawrence?" |
59553 | Let me ask too, whether, should neither of the fatal effects ensue, you would like me better in my mangled or mutilated condition, than you do now? |
59553 | Little rambling, coaxing sprite, Tenant and comrade of this clay, Into what distant regions say Pale, naked, cold, wingst thou thy flight? |
59553 | Mamma, what are the papers with the hearts on?" |
59553 | Man of God, will you come to him?" |
59553 | May I have some? |
59553 | May I never forget the deep debt of gratitude I owe to my Father in heaven?" |
59553 | May I not correctly show to others a way, which it is not convenient or agreeable for me to travel myself? |
59553 | May not I his pleasures share? |
59553 | May not this very extent be prejudicial to the cause of American letters? |
59553 | May we not expect a continuance of their favors? |
59553 | May we not hope then, young gentlemen, when so much is trusted to your magnanimity, that the dependence will not fail us? |
59553 | Might not this be the case with Mr. Windenough? |
59553 | Might you not take a hint from this consideration? |
59553 | More dreary and heart- breaking even than this? |
59553 | Mr. Wilberforce, you must forget me; and oh, can you not attribute my strange conduct to my youth? |
59553 | Must I proceed? |
59553 | Must she, who conquers others, To him yield up her pride? |
59553 | Must we be altogether silent, in order that our patrons may judge for themselves, unbiassed by our own humble opinion? |
59553 | My brother-- does a hope thy breast inflame, To clasp those dear loved objects to thy heart? |
59553 | My brother-- does thy heart in transport hear The name of friends, of country, and of home? |
59553 | My brother-- does thy soul these things revere, As once in early days untaught to roam? |
59553 | My good friend, were you in such a situation, what would you do? |
59553 | N''est il pas juste qu''elle cultive l''un et l''autre?" |
59553 | Nay for a whole night, whom have I danced with, but you? |
59553 | Nay, Julie, nay-- why that look? |
59553 | Need Memory e''er with Hope contend? |
59553 | No fire either to warm my limbs in the chilly night air of these mountains? |
59553 | No want of food, for beast or man, There met his eager gaze; Find better bacon!--greens!--who can? |
59553 | Nor let pleasures of the table in this intellectual age be despised? |
59553 | North?" |
59553 | Now this seems to me to be pretty good logic; and how then does the Annotator answer it? |
59553 | Now this, too, I have heretofore taken for very sound logic; and why is it not perfectly so? |
59553 | Now what does it all amount to in the end? |
59553 | Now what says the reader to the following extract from a memorial on behalf of the trade of Virginia, laid before Cromwell in 1656? |
59553 | Now where is this MORE AMPLE DECLARATION, concerning their idea of such a commission as they might DUTIFULLY submit to? |
59553 | Now, Bon- Bon, do you behold the thoughts-- the thoughts, I say-- the ideas-- the reflections-- engendering in her pericranium? |
59553 | O''er the fam''d seat of science and of arms, What dire disaster spreads such wild alarms? |
59553 | Of a blood loving tyrant-- ferocious-- whose sway Was supported by rapine, while earth was his prey? |
59553 | Of all the Chieftains whose thrones he reared, Were there none whom kindness or faith could bind? |
59553 | Of all the Monarchs whose crowns he spared, Had none one spark of his Roman mind? |
59553 | Of what complexion could the other seven have been? |
59553 | Of whom may we seek succor but of thee, Oh Lord!--who for our sins art justly displeased? |
59553 | Oh, is there not a sympathy of all- controling power The mother and her brood between-- old earth, weak man, frail flower? |
59553 | Oh, what doth he ask in return for this, The light of his love, and such draughts of bliss? |
59553 | Oh, what was the life of the first, That in death they have left him thus lone?-- Was the crown of the Tyrant his thirst? |
59553 | On what authority? |
59553 | Once again I breathed with perfect freedom and ease-- and indeed why should I not? |
59553 | Or didst thou turn where proudly in the breeze America''s star- spangled flag was flying? |
59553 | Or do we hope by"an artificial show, an elaborate appearance, a false pretence,"to obtain credit with others for attributes which do not belong to us? |
59553 | Or does her eye more eloquently speak, Or with a softer grace her form expand? |
59553 | Or the eloquence and moral sublimity of Cicero? |
59553 | Or the unrivalled philosophy of Socrates? |
59553 | Or was the Reviewer himself dreaming when he wrote? |
59553 | Or was the lion quiet in his heart? |
59553 | Or what right can your assignee have to hold the prisoner under your assignment, one moment after your right itself has run out? |
59553 | Or where''s the Æolian song thou wouldst wake When some sporting zephyr''s breath would shake Thy rustling leaves? |
59553 | Or, can the mere lapse of time make it lawful? |
59553 | Or, is the maxim itself utterly and absolutely false, to all intents and purposes whatever? |
59553 | Our fathers did the same before us, and"be we wiser or better than they?" |
59553 | Our fathers spirit boils along Impetuous through our veins; We ask to know, where are the strong, To bind us in their chains? |
59553 | Our sweetest joys, like flowers may rise, And all their fragrance lend, Yet my sick heart within me dies-- Where is my own sweet friend? |
59553 | Pardon me,"said Mrs. North,"but can domestic concerns_ ever_ be interesting?" |
59553 | Perhaps you''d laugh at me? |
59553 | Poison the fountain, and who can drink of its waters without death-- death, both in a figurative and literal sense? |
59553 | Pray, sir, what is the soul?" |
59553 | Publicanes? |
59553 | Quid brevi fortes jaculamur oevo Multa? |
59553 | Quis multâ gracilis te puer in rosâ Perfusus liquidis urget odoribus Grato, Pyrrha, sub antro? |
59553 | Quo nunc abibis in loco Pallidula, rigida, nudula? |
59553 | Reader, dost thou expect me to give thee in black and white my hero''s courtship? |
59553 | Relaxed in body and in mind? |
59553 | Say is it true, in green unfading bowers, That there the wild bird sings her sweetest lay? |
59553 | Say, fellow citizens, what dreadful thought now swells your heaving bosoms? |
59553 | Say, is McCarthy dead?" |
59553 | Say, little caged flutterer, say, Why mournful waves thy drooping wing? |
59553 | Say, shall that wreath, with its sunny bloom, E''er fade like thee? |
59553 | Say, where''s that gush of melody Thy sylvan minstrels pour''d for thee In thy summer bowers? |
59553 | Say, wouldst thou build a lasting seat, Secure from Fortune''s rage; A quiet and a safe retreat, To rest thy weary age? |
59553 | Says Hal,"This Miss A----''s a charming young_ belle_, But has she a_ beau_, my dear Will, can you tell?" |
59553 | Secondly, may not these advantages be gained by researches into our own literature? |
59553 | See ye not, that while she is suffered to approach them, there is no salvation for either mother or children? |
59553 | Shall I be forgiven for such minuteness of detail? |
59553 | Shall I tell you? |
59553 | Shall I then say that I long''d with an earnest and consuming desire for the moment of Morella''s decease? |
59553 | Shall Time''s chill mildew on it light, Or sorrow breathe its_ autumn_ blight Upon its flowers? |
59553 | Shall he attempt again to mend his broken fortunes and rise once more in the world''s thought? |
59553 | Shall he turn to those whom the world once called his friends? |
59553 | Shall it be said that the empire of literature has no geographical boundaries, and that local jealousies ought not to disturb its harmony? |
59553 | Shall she hope to engage interest for the subject of her conversation, when full not of it but of herself? |
59553 | Shall she hope to speak to the heart in tones which come not from the heart? |
59553 | Shall the present generation fold its arms in supineness, and leave every thing to be done by posterity? |
59553 | Shall the storm settle_ here_, when it from Heaven departs, And the cold from without find the way to our hearts? |
59553 | Shall we turn for example to the boasted polytheistical religion of Greece and Rome? |
59553 | She asked the carpenter what he was about? |
59553 | She asked the painter what he meant by all this preparation? |
59553 | She did''nt ask Tim, who he was to marry? |
59553 | She inquired of the bricklayer what he was doing? |
59553 | Sister of Rome!--old mistress of a world-- Wilt thou from thy high state be hurled? |
59553 | So far as regards the unfortunate mute, the only inquiry is, where can he be best taught? |
59553 | So soon as he could get his father''s attention, he said:"O father, what were those pretty things you had in your hand last night? |
59553 | So_ you''re changing your colors_, I see, master White, But say now d''ye think it is perfectly right? |
59553 | Some readers will say,"what difference would it make if aunt Tabby was present?" |
59553 | Speak out!--but what? |
59553 | Stevens, the Puck of commentators, asks"What has truth or nature to do with sonnets?" |
59553 | Still that orphan- burden bearing, Darker than the grave can show, Dost thou bow thee down despairing, To a heritage of woe? |
59553 | Stuart once asked a painter, who had met with a painter''s difficulties,"how he got on in the world?" |
59553 | Such was the_ person_ of Lavinia: but who can paint the endowments of her heart and mind? |
59553 | Take for example, these lines in Comus:"Was I deceived, or did a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night? |
59553 | Tell me if thou in thought didst dearer prize Thy home, than all that Italy could give? |
59553 | Tell me, said I, how is my uncle? |
59553 | Tell the old lady the whole matter? |
59553 | Tell{ 358} me, for old acquaintance sake, how much will the party cost?" |
59553 | That it might agonize and bleed At every suffering pore, The soft affections why decreed To centre in its core? |
59553 | That mans his breast in danger''s fearful path? |
59553 | That nerves his arm to grasp the gory steel, Despising toil and hardship, wounds and death? |
59553 | That orators his fame have spoke, That bards his deeds have sung? |
59553 | That over Moscow''s battlements, His flag- folds he shook out-- That e''en the lofty pyramids Rang with his charging shout? |
59553 | That was not the horse that ran away with you when a boy? |
59553 | The Commodore replied by asking what were the Pasha''s views in declaring war, and on what principles he expected to make peace? |
59553 | The Moon-- were her silver rays gone? |
59553 | The Roman Catholic takes out four, And no man asks him, why? |
59553 | The answer is simply, he_ loved!_ and would not love inspire him with stronger and more powerful motives for exertion and success? |
59553 | The attorney has but to ask himself,"how shall I frame the declaration or plea?" |
59553 | The first was, whether he should pay a debt of$ 60 incurred in gambling? |
59553 | The great transition who can tell? |
59553 | The hapless bard who sings her praise, Now worships at the shrine of Anna? |
59553 | The horses here stopped and drew back, when the Indian cried in an angry tone,"why do n''t you ride in?" |
59553 | The moment he reached his hostess, she demanded, with a look of indescribable indignation,"how he dared to insult a lady in her house?" |
59553 | The mother''s deep felt agony was there: My only hope, Louisa, art thou gone? |
59553 | The next question was, what should he do respecting the$ 9,000, which he found by estimate he had lost at different times? |
59553 | The only inquiry of the benevolent ought to be, where can he be so taught at the least cost? |
59553 | The parliament''s? |
59553 | The protector''s? |
59553 | The ridiculous prints, eh? |
59553 | The second question is, what are the means to be employed in order to succeed in speaking extempore? |
59553 | The soul that once inhabited there, that looked through those mild eyes, the heart that beat beneath that modest vest; are they fled and cold? |
59553 | The spirit of the departed is in_ high communion_[ does this mean_ high mass_?] |
59553 | The winding brooks, like distant lute, Their murmuring whispers send; The echoes of my soul are mute-- Where is my own dear_ friend_? |
59553 | The women look''d so passing fair, How shall their charms be told? |
59553 | Their names are unknown to a majority of the various classes of society? |
59553 | Then how can it be so overwhelming and convincing? |
59553 | Then how is he feeble in ornament? |
59553 | Then wherefore not? |
59553 | Then, is he to select the part which he is to act? |
59553 | Then, what was to be done? |
59553 | They are not studied; and who, without studying, can master the real, pure meaning of a fine thought? |
59553 | They come to us in pomp of war-- The tyrant in his gold; Our arms are few-- they''re stronger far, But who will say as bold? |
59553 | This engraving was taken from these lines in this poem: The bird that sings in lady''s bower, To- morrow will she think of him? |
59553 | This fact is worthy of remark, when it is recollected that the taunting query,"Who reads an American book?" |
59553 | This is better than fashion-- is it not? |
59553 | This, his condition, is compulsory and inevitable; and compulsory toil for food and raiment,--what is it but slavery? |
59553 | Tho''fickle fortune frown, And wealth withhold her store, What is a jewelled crown? |
59553 | Thou''dst ask me, why this quiet shade Which late a paradise I deem''d, Though still in verdant sweets array''d, A melancholy prison seemed? |
59553 | Thou, who didst rend of_ death_ the tie, Is_ Nature''s_ seal too strong for thee? |
59553 | Three thousand six hundred dollars thought Griffith-- and"how much had he to begin with?" |
59553 | Through the mask of this assumed garb what eye can detect the original Mussulman? |
59553 | Through this door also, my entrance was at last effected; for what obstacle may not perseverance overcome? |
59553 | Thus he asks,"did any one ever dream that Kentucky had given cause of offence to her sister states by erecting an asylum for the poor deaf mutes? |
59553 | Tim asked his mother if she was dissatisfied with the match? |
59553 | Tim had seen his mother watching his countenance while he was reading: so putting on a smile,"Is that all? |
59553 | Tim indeed could cry out in the agony of woe,"Have I not had my brain sear''d, heart riven, Hopes sapp''d, name blighted, life''s life lied away?" |
59553 | To bid me hope we soon shall meet again? |
59553 | To make this plainer still to your understandings, which is very good,--suppose a man was to abuse you and call you hard names? |
59553 | To see the eye, once so brilliant, sunken, heavy, and dull; and the lips, once so ruby, now thin and pallid? |
59553 | To the tread of the devouring foe!-- But ere thou art laid low, Shall not one last avenging blow Be struck? |
59553 | To whom did I play the suitor from that day? |
59553 | To witness the being so beloved, so cherished, the victim of slow, but unerring disease, not constitutional, but brought on by neglect, by fashion? |
59553 | To wreck the peace of half mankind, Who let thy arts ensnare them? |
59553 | Touch us with pity, or inspire with love? |
59553 | Up sprung the lover then, and said,"Will you be Mrs. Popkins-- Miss Julia Jane Amelia Ann Matilda Polly Hopkins? |
59553 | Virginia roused herself one day And took her picture down; And as she gazed, was heard to say-- Am I thus hideous grown? |
59553 | WHERE IS MY HEART? |
59553 | WHERE SHALL THE STUDENT REST? |
59553 | Walking directly up to them, he calmly asked, which of them had thus addressed him? |
59553 | Was ever woman so beset? |
59553 | Was he ignorant? |
59553 | Was it a dream? |
59553 | Was it not Socrates who said that the statuary_ found his statue in the block of marble_? |
59553 | Was it not because our local situation removed us far from war, and the entanglements of foreign politics? |
59553 | Was it not probable that these symptoms would increase indefinitely, or at least until terminated by death itself? |
59553 | Was it proper even to glance at such a martial topic in the amicable columns of the_ Literary_ Messenger? |
59553 | Was it without his mighty Maker''s will? |
59553 | Was she grave as a judge? |
59553 | Was she not happy in gazing on a face to whose melancholy aspect her voice instantly summoned the smile? |
59553 | Was she not happy when the music ceased, and St. Amand called"Lucille?" |
59553 | Was the judge prejudiced_ against you_? |
59553 | We approve of the moral, as a matter of course-- who will not? |
59553 | We must afford them all the assistance and consolation in our power?" |
59553 | We pause to inquire why these primeval fragments of the world have remained so long unnoticed? |
59553 | We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons? |
59553 | We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons? |
59553 | We would ask, do they cause a full development of the mental powers? |
59553 | We would ask, if there is no necessity of a change? |
59553 | Well what then is the remedy? |
59553 | Well, well, said I, interrupting him, Simon let us be off; what have you brought for me to ride? |
59553 | Well-- what of that? |
59553 | Were these men imposed on by the fallacies of the science, or did they wish to impose a fallacy upon the credulity of others? |
59553 | Were they still among the living? |
59553 | Wert thou ever upon Hoecake Ridge? |
59553 | What am I? |
59553 | What aphoristic dogs have had their day, And of their hopes been suddenly despoiled? |
59553 | What are his reasons? |
59553 | What are the means to be employed in order to succeed in speaking extemporaneously? |
59553 | What are the preliminary acquirements of a good_ improvvisatore_? |
59553 | What are they? |
59553 | What better spot could there be for the education of genius? |
59553 | What books have you read, or have been read to you on these subjects? |
59553 | What boots it now to know? |
59553 | What boots it that his own proud name In foreign lands has rung? |
59553 | What boots it that the hills of Spain Shook''neath his lordly tread-- That with the blood of her best sons, Her vallies''streams ran red? |
59553 | What can be expected from eulogy in such a case? |
59553 | What care we for ragouts and fricassee''s, and olla podrida''s, and all the foreign flummery that fashion and folly have brought into use? |
59553 | What charm can sooth-- or what a balm impart? |
59553 | What contingency could happen? |
59553 | What could come of all this; what did come of it, but failure? |
59553 | What could it be? |
59553 | What could the breath of man add to his glory? |
59553 | What did Theodore think of fortune now? |
59553 | What do I not owe to Lucille? |
59553 | What do you know of the principles of Ethics and Christianity? |
59553 | What do you say, Miss Neville, do you like the titled Bard?" |
59553 | What do you think of her being passed fifty, and yet not appearing as old as twenty- five? |
59553 | What elevated Milton, he would ask, to an equality with the gods? |
59553 | What exile from his native home Has left himself behind? |
59553 | What gave to Newton a comprehension of the mysteries of the universe, and to Franklin a power over the elements? |
59553 | What hand was so rashly daring? |
59553 | What has most deeply interested the American mind? |
59553 | What if some of his finest romances have been criticised? |
59553 | What intelligent Virginian is there who does not feel inclined to co- operate in the attainment of so much good? |
59553 | What is man worth in sorrow? |
59553 | What is that infant to become? |
59553 | What is the aptitude of the means to the great purposes which parents should aim to accomplish? |
59553 | What is the cause? |
59553 | What is the fair inference from such facts? |
59553 | What is the freeman''s equivalent? |
59553 | What is the gross sum that I owe thee? |
59553 | What is the history of eloquence? |
59553 | What is the matter?" |
59553 | What is the nature of free institutions? |
59553 | What is the reason? |
59553 | What is the thought that prompts his studious zeal? |
59553 | What is there in the history of human nature, so grand, so majestic, so elevating to the heart and hopes of man? |
59553 | What is this world? |
59553 | What is to be his destiny? |
59553 | What is to become of them? |
59553 | What is_ effect_? |
59553 | What leaves were these so rudely torn away? |
59553 | What matters it at this day, whether we believe that Cæsar killed Brutus, or Brutus Cæsar? |
59553 | What means the white rose in my hair? |
59553 | What monstrous perversion can prompt us to turn the latter out of doors, and hug to our bosoms so vile an intruder? |
59553 | What more could Providence bestow To yield CONTENT an added blessing? |
59553 | What more do we? |
59553 | What more do we? |
59553 | What need has La Fayette that one should tell his fellow of him? |
59553 | What new trick is to be played now? |
59553 | What occasion could that give for philosophy? |
59553 | What periods in the history of mankind, are most distinguished for mental superiority? |
59553 | What preserves, in its original strength and grandeur, the rich and massy arch of German literature? |
59553 | What prompted me then to disturb the memory of the buried dead? |
59553 | What requiem sad is chanted o''er that bier? |
59553 | What right have we to worry other people thus with our maladies? |
59553 | What roused the madman from his trance, and left His heart a waste-- of love-- of joy bereft? |
59553 | What say you?" |
59553 | What says the king of Castile_ now_?" |
59553 | What scene is here? |
59553 | What security that they will be content with these? |
59553 | What shall I call her? |
59553 | What she was like? |
59553 | What singular emotions fill Their bosoms who have been induced to roam, With fluttering doubts if all be well or ill?" |
59553 | What the rôle which he is to play in the great drama of life? |
59553 | What then is her resource? |
59553 | What then is the difference in physical organization? |
59553 | What then shall we take as the highest effort of Dutch genius? |
59553 | What then? |
59553 | What think you"--said he, turning abruptly as he spoke--"what think you of this Madonna della Pietà?" |
59553 | What think you, for instance, of the game at football? |
59553 | What thinks Philoclea of the pristine Earth? |
59553 | What voice is in thine ear?" |
59553 | What was I to do? |
59553 | What was I to do? |
59553 | What was I to do? |
59553 | What was the subject which it doomed to Fame? |
59553 | What will it be, when it becomes"a living landscape of groves and corn- fields, and the abodes of men?" |
59553 | What will it concern posterity whether the glory of the field of Waterloo belongs to Wellington or Blucher? |
59553 | What woke the foolish one?--unmanned his heart? |
59553 | What would be her confusion? |
59553 | What would be her grief? |
59553 | What would have been the transmutation for which the alchemist of former days consumed so many anxious days and sleepless nights, compared with these? |
59553 | What would our college mates say to it? |
59553 | What would she say, if she knew what passes in me? |
59553 | What would you have done? |
59553 | What you call''em? |
59553 | What''s come of the rest of the fry?" |
59553 | What, but the most inordinate selfishness and vanity can be the fruit of such training? |
59553 | What, for instance, do you mean by all that humbug about the soul? |
59553 | What, in a just man''s practice, so softens down to our feelings all necessary roughnesses, as a secret veneration for himself? |
59553 | What, said I, is he at that still? |
59553 | What_ does_ the world say to it? |
59553 | Whatever the sacrifice,_ must_ I not render it? |
59553 | Whatever you might have thought_ then_, can you believe_ now_, that it was merely a playful child that could so have engrossed me? |
59553 | What{ 589} commission? |
59553 | When did Grecian literature assume its brightest charms? |
59553 | When have our youth restrained Their hands through fear of Heav''n? |
59553 | When in their household circle, he seemed visibly more at ease; but did his eyes fasten upon her who had opened them to the day? |
59553 | When men are numerous and"strong enough to set their duties at defiance, do they cease to be duties any longer?" |
59553 | When there were parties there, whom did I sit beside, but you? |
59553 | When we are told that it is"the system of rules of civil conduct, which the state has ordained for itself,"the first inquiry is,"what is the state?" |
59553 | When will the great of Virginia deign this magnanimous descent? |
59553 | Whence comes this tendency among them to imbibe this simple and saving faith, unless it be from the peculiarities of their education? |
59553 | Whence drew I being? |
59553 | Whence the wild wail of agonizing woe That heaves each breast, and bids each eye o''erflow? |
59553 | Whence, my vet''ran Colonel, Comes it, that you, whose scarred body bears The outward proofs of inward loyalty, Do entertain for rebels such regard? |
59553 | Where are the poets of this land? |
59553 | Where are they now? |
59553 | Where are ye now? |
59553 | Where can it be but in the enlightened sense of justice and right in the constituent body? |
59553 | Where gone the grief that with o''erwhelming load Press''d down the heart and crush''d it on its road? |
59553 | Where is its matchless excellence inapplicable? |
59553 | Where is my friend? |
59553 | Where is my heart? |
59553 | Where is my heart? |
59553 | Where is my heart? |
59553 | Where is my heart? |
59553 | Where is the balm to Israel blest, That Gilead gave of yore? |
59553 | Where is the man who could not be eloquent, were his mind provided with expressions worthy of his thoughts? |
59553 | Where now the cold and soul revolting gloom That hung its shadows o''er the yawning tomb? |
59553 | Where shall the student rest Whom the fates destine Old law- books to digest, That baffle all digesting? |
59553 | Where shall the_ lawyer_ rest? |
59553 | Where the young lady lived? |
59553 | Where then is the security that such things will not be done? |
59553 | Where was she? |
59553 | Where was the oath which thy soldiers swore? |
59553 | Where was the passion of his words? |
59553 | Where would you place the monument? |
59553 | Where? |
59553 | Wherein then was the innovation? |
59553 | Whether she had a fortune or not? |
59553 | Which of these is the main impelling cause with woman? |
59553 | Which of us opening a letter book, which should exhibit his whole correspondence, would not be tempted to leave out something? |
59553 | Which of us, commencing a diary, would feel sure that he might not do something to- morrow that he would not choose to set down? |
59553 | Whither should they fly?" |
59553 | Who are delighted with the brilliant imagery, and chaste conceptions of_ Cooper_ and_ Irving_? |
59553 | Who are the new comers? |
59553 | Who break the silken bands of pleasure, spurn Ancestral pride, the pomp of courts, and sweet Domestic love, and bare his bosom in The generous strife? |
59553 | Who can be insensible to the fact, that our universal mind has already assumed a political character? |
59553 | Who can conceive any thing more thrilling and overwhelming than his orations against Cataline? |
59553 | Who can count the sighs of anguish which{ 472} these moments of joy now repayed? |
59553 | Who can measure the depth of his joy? |
59553 | Who do you think could have thus intruded and taken such a liberty, other than cousin Tony? |
59553 | Who ever heard of infanticide by a slave? |
59553 | Who feels it necessary to answer it? |
59553 | Who feels it necessary to utter his praise, even in this simple question? |
59553 | Who had inhabited the edifices I trampled under my feet? |
59553 | Who has not felt that the thought of a month''s separation from one we love, though conscious of its short duration, sickens the heart? |
59553 | Who has not heard of the astonishing oratorical powers of Mirabeau, Maury, Barnave and Vergniaud the pride of the Gironde? |
59553 | Who has not lamented over the severe fate of modern genius? |
59553 | Who has written more quaintly and obscurely than Ben Johnson or Cowley; or to come nearer to our own time, than Wordsworth or Coleridge? |
59553 | Who indeed would think of compassionating a shadow? |
59553 | Who is a Yankee poet that he should be honoured? |
59553 | Who may tell the gladness of her heart, when the infant cherub first articulates her name? |
59553 | Who now, when suffering justice pleads, will hear? |
59553 | Who prepared it, think you? |
59553 | Who read the classic and eloquent orations of Webster and Everett, full of deep principles and splendid thoughts? |
59553 | Who reads not this in every day''s experience? |
59553 | Who reasons more wittily? |
59553 | Who shall fill his place? |
59553 | Who then shall call thy conduct into question? |
59553 | Who was it asked me would I not look upon the corpse? |
59553 | Who will compare the action of the mind thus stimulated with that of the mind, whose only stimulus is present selfish enjoyment? |
59553 | Who will compare the fame of Homer, the mirror- mind of the ancient world, with the most distinguished politician of antiquity? |
59553 | Who will deny, that this political spirit is now, in many instances, the great stimulus of the American student? |
59553 | Who would have dreamed a few years since, that a vein of precious gold, which, for two centuries, had escaped observation, actually enriched our soil? |
59553 | Who would have thought it? |
59553 | Who writes a keener epigram? |
59553 | Who, in that undecipher''d scroll The mystic characters may see, Save Him who reads the secret soul, And holds of life and death the key? |
59553 | Whom are we to blame in this particular, the author, or the printer? |
59553 | Whom did I stand behind at the piano forte, but you? |
59553 | Whom do we know like old Ormond and his wife? |
59553 | Whom like his noble son and his charming countess? |
59553 | Whom or what does man rebuke? |
59553 | Whose immortality thus roughly foiled? |
59553 | Whose knife or scissors did that doom reverse? |
59553 | Whose leaf was this? |
59553 | Whose? |
59553 | Why are you passing the house?" |
59553 | Why bid me live, since riper years must pay Their long arrears to that lamented day? |
59553 | Why cheer my drooping and unsheltered head, When to the skies her gentle spirit fled? |
59553 | Why daring aim beyond our span, Through distant years at many a plan When life so brief we find? |
59553 | Why did I weep? |
59553 | Why did our fathers hope that the experiment of free government might succeed with us, though it had failed every where else? |
59553 | Why do they not make men generous and honest? |
59553 | Why do we see so many over- fed, gormandizing, ill- humored, selfish and self- willed children? |
59553 | Why does he not at once take rank with the HALLECKS, the BRYANTS and PERCIVALS, of a colder clime? |
59553 | Why does he not seize the lyre at once, and pour forth a song which shall add to his country''s honor, and insure for himself a chaplet of renown? |
59553 | Why does it come to us, sweetened with the language of panegyric, from those who love us not, and who habitually scoff at and deride us? |
59553 | Why does not the writer prove the plagiarism?" |
59553 | Why droop the ensigns of our sister state, As though they mourn''d a fallen nation''s fate? |
59553 | Why else is the eloquence of a lovely woman so persuasive? |
59553 | Why hast thou deserted me?" |
59553 | Why have Ohio and Kentucky been guilty of the similar folly of founding institutions themselves? |
59553 | Why is it that men are so easily awakened to the liveliest interest in distant objects, and yet neglect those which are nearer and more accessible? |
59553 | Why is none erected? |
59553 | Why is not every literary man an illustration of Juvenal''s axiom?" |
59553 | Why is the brimming cup of bliss dashed down just as it touches the opening lips? |
59553 | Why is''nt there A----, now, whom you know as well as I? |
59553 | Why long''neath other suns to roam? |
59553 | Why look for rest on earth? |
59553 | Why proclaim to the world what all the world already knows? |
59553 | Why should mysterious Heaven bestow A warm and feeling heart-- Yet doom it naught but pain to know, And rankle in its smart? |
59553 | Why should they? |
59553 | Why should we take them from their appropriate sphere, and introduce them to the frivolous and undignified imitation of the polite and refined? |
59553 | Why silent sit, the live- long day? |
59553 | Why streams the silent, sympathetic tear? |
59553 | Why tell posterity what posterity can never forget, until man has lost the records of the history of man? |
59553 | Why then do we so rarely meet with any narrative of facts which engages our feelings so deeply as a well wrought fiction? |
59553 | Why then does he ask the question? |
59553 | Why then should we doubt their success among ourselves? |
59553 | Why then, may it not be equally true in relation to the mind? |
59553 | Why was it that the most eloquent of Grecians struggled for years to remove the defects of a faulty bearing, if no valuable end was to be attained? |
59553 | Why waste those powers, by heav''n design''d To win true hearts and wear them? |
59553 | Why will they not have resolution enough to discard these seducing and destructive allurements; why not enjoy life soberly, discreetly, prudently? |
59553 | Why, man of morals, tell me why?" |
59553 | Why, my friends, why let me most earnestly demand of you, should not we Virginians,"go and do likewise?" |
59553 | Why? |
59553 | Why? |
59553 | Why_ should_ that lady blush? |
59553 | Wife!--with agony unspoken, Shrinking from affliction''s rod, Is thy prop,--thine idol broken,-- Fondly trusted,--next to God? |
59553 | Will any one deny the happy consequences of an urbane and modest deportment, in man''s intercourse with his fellows? |
59553 | Will it be,"_ live and let live_,"or"_ live for self alone_?" |
59553 | Will it compensate for the lowering of that proud self- esteem, which is the bright reward of truth, and the best security of virtue? |
59553 | Will not all such things rather be insupportably irksome, if not actually disgusting? |
59553 | Will that satisfy your squeamishness?" |
59553 | Will the mind whose only stimulant are the smiles and pecuniary emoluments of kings, exhibit its native strength and grandeur? |
59553 | Will this practice be guided by the social or the selfish principle? |
59553 | Will you ask me what is that preparation? |
59553 | Will you give me your heart?" |
59553 | Will you give yourself to me? |
59553 | Will you marry me, Rosalie?" |
59553 | Will you marry me? |
59553 | Will you promise me this?" |
59553 | Will you sit upon my knee again, and let me call you wife?" |
59553 | Wilt thou see me perish without pity, O son of my people? |
59553 | With such a being, every thing becomes a matter of calculation, down even to the responses to the ordinary questions of"how do you do?" |
59553 | With tremulous lips, Mrs. North returned the kiss, and emphatically whispered--"O dear friend, may I{ 295} never forget the impressions of this hour? |
59553 | With what bribes does she corrupt the loyalty of her fair advocates? |
59553 | With what store of"quips and quirks, and wreathed smiles?" |
59553 | Without fuel, of what use would be to us the metallic ores? |
59553 | Wooed by Italian airs, does woman''s cheek With purer color glow, than in our land? |
59553 | Would she flourish in the empire of the heart, that bright dominion of her sex? |
59553 | Would she, by her look, manner and words, inspire respect, confidence and love? |
59553 | Would the Annotator think it exactly right to have such a principle carried home to himself? |
59553 | Would you degrade the seat to which you aspire? |
59553 | Would you dim the lustre of that honor, which is to be the brightest reward of a life spent in the labors of your profession? |
59553 | Would''nt you tell him, certain, and thankee to boot, sir? |
59553 | Yet CHRISTIAN!--come nearer and read, For conjecture hath led us astray-- Hast thou heard of one, false to his creed? |
59553 | Yet I own, on reflection, it is not so wrong, And the reason, I think, is sufficiently strong: Give it up? |
59553 | Yet he asks,"Does he mean that a larger number could not be obtained if the public expense were proffered for their education and subsistence?" |
59553 | Yet how, let me ask, are these momentous duties generally fulfilled, even by the best scholars, unless they are also moral and religious men? |
59553 | Yet mayst thou not, in mimic lay, Such lofty arts of verse essay? |
59553 | Yet why do I talk of Demosthenes? |
59553 | You are not disposed, I presume, to be an humble imitator of any man? |
59553 | You ask me B----ty, why I mourn, Yet dry''st the tearful eye? |
59553 | You ask me why I look with scorn, And check the heaving sigh? |
59553 | You understand me?" |
59553 | You who pretend to fathom the profundity of human motives and to ascribe proper causes for every action, will you unriddle this enigma? |
59553 | You will receive them here when they arrive? |
59553 | You''member my four greys? |
59553 | You''re a foe to all slavery, Harriet, you say; Then why do you talk in so charming a way? |
59553 | You''re vowed to CHLORIS-- a''nt it true? |
59553 | [ 1] Love? |
59553 | [ Footnote 1: Since this sentence was penned, we have noticed the advertisement of a new( satirical?) |
59553 | _ In_ the capitol? |
59553 | _ Is it worth eight dollars per week to partake of this"villainous compound? |
59553 | _ They_ who, had they remained, would have fought and fallen with Montrose? |
59553 | _ They_ whose principles had driven them into exile? |
59553 | again at your pen Leontine?" |
59553 | and didst thou not kiss me, and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? |
59553 | and does it not give a dreamy melancholy-- an incoherent imagining to thy young, thy cold, thy uncorrupted heart?" |
59553 | and dropt a few natural tears-- tears of weakness, rather than of grief: for what do I leave behind me worthy one emotion of regret? |
59553 | and even now as it arrests your gaze, does it not tell thee of futurity? |
59553 | and what the bay- wreath''d name Which here its glowing fancies did rehearse? |
59553 | and what though the child''s mediator was his mother, can even a mother love her child more tenderly than I love Eugene? |
59553 | and when the wisdom or the passions of maturity I found hourly gleaming from its full and speculative eye? |
59553 | and where will he not come? |
59553 | and whether she who has been so eagerly sought through the wide world, has chosen this for her favorite residence? |
59553 | and why? |
59553 | and"how have you been?" |
59553 | art sleepy? |
59553 | at midnight hours Wilt thou not smile upon those things that bloom All wild, all heedlessly above my tomb? |
59553 | because our monarch is elective, not hereditary; a man and not a child? |
59553 | but to whom is the English Bulwer unknown? |
59553 | can I dream otherwise? |
59553 | can this work be thine, Or are these sounds, these forms, indeed, divine? |
59553 | can you tell, Gazing in the crystal well, Who it is that madly dreams Of thine eye''s bewildering beams? |
59553 | cicatricum et sceleris pudet, Fratrumque: quid nos dura refugimus Ætas? |
59553 | could I act otherwise? |
59553 | dear Rosalie!--will you never let me take you on my knee and call you wife again?" |
59553 | did I not see a sly wink? |
59553 | did the sky cease to smile? |
59553 | did they not wander at every interval with a too eloquent admiration to the blushing and radiant face of the exulting Julie? |
59553 | do n''t you see that the buffalo have already got the scent of you and have started?" |
59553 | do you mean to say_ I_ would commit a fraud, sir?" |
59553 | do you not know E----, the friend of your brother?" |
59553 | does the Bee Love the rose''s purity? |
59553 | does the boy Kiss his sister''s cheek with joy When they meet in after years, Having parted once in tears? |
59553 | does the sky Seem all beauteous to thine eye, When the stars with silver rays Brightly beam before thy gaze? |
59553 | does the tar Love to dream of scenes afar, When the mildly sighing gale Fills the proudly swelling sail? |
59553 | exclaimed Theodore;"we seem to be moving, and yet do not advance an inch?" |
59553 | here?" |
59553 | how could I forget Its causes were around me yet? |
59553 | how could it be redeemed? |
59553 | how knowest thou this?'' |
59553 | how produced, and for what end? |
59553 | how_ do_ you manage?" |
59553 | in what way? |
59553 | is inanimate nature, alone, here''telling the glories of God?'' |
59553 | is the bird, In the spring, with pleasure heard, When the melody of song{ 668} Leaps the listening boughs among? |
59553 | is there no God that judgeth in the earth?" |
59553 | is there no punishment for the workers of iniquity? |
59553 | it were too sweet to die With mind so richly fraught: And who is she for whom my heart, My feelings, harmonize? |
59553 | let me see, it is only six o''clock, only six, you are sure?" |
59553 | love, why"With cypress branches hast thou wreathed thy bowers?" |
59553 | may I take a glass of wine with you, sir?" |
59553 | mother, whither do they lead This wretched form, this drooping frame? |
59553 | my mother? |
59553 | no-- but with all your nose?'' |
59553 | obeys the warning? |
59553 | of Aboulfakir the camel, having a taste for solitude and snorting at the sight of a dwelling, and Cafour''s predilection for pestilence? |
59553 | of Milton, with that of Cromwell? |
59553 | or are they born with equal natural endowments in this respect? |
59553 | or insure to superior genius an enduring fame? |
59553 | or is it the result of education in that enlarged sense which I have already explained in my first number? |
59553 | or produce other than wonderful and glorious results? |
59553 | or tune the lyre of poesy to notes celestial? |
59553 | or will the Muse that sings to please the whims and caprices of a court, soar on eagle wings and to mountain heights? |
59553 | patriæ quis exul Se quoque fugit? |
59553 | quibus Pepercit aris? |
59553 | quid intactum nefasti Liquimus? |
59553 | quid terras alio calentes Sole mutamus? |
59553 | replied Ormond,"what could your lordship dream of me?" |
59553 | said Bekir,"is genius thus rewarded?" |
59553 | said Mr. Neville, pointing to them exultingly,"are they not enough to inspire a poet?" |
59553 | said Mr. Neville,"but who have we here?" |
59553 | said he;"what mad freak could induce her to go alone?" |
59553 | said one;"Did you know Miss Catherine was engaged?" |
59553 | said the stranger,"I thank thee for thy sympathy: but tell me? |
59553 | shall we be less free than your ancestors? |
59553 | she exclaimed;"is he dead? |
59553 | tell me why? |
59553 | the boast, the charm of Englishwomen? |
59553 | the destroyer came and went, and the victim-- where was she? |
59553 | then where is truth?" |
59553 | then, since this is Nature''s style, Still changing from her birth, Why trust her false, deceitful smile? |
59553 | thought she;"is not God still in heaven? |
59553 | thundered the monk:"will ye suffer the woman to steal two precious souls from heaven? |
59553 | to live a wretched wanderer, with the brand of Cain on my forehead, and a character stamped with infamy?'' |
59553 | to man-- cold calculating man? |
59553 | to what period tend? |
59553 | two members from our community? |
59553 | unde manum juventus Metu Deorum continuit? |
59553 | vous? |
59553 | was I not always with you? |
59553 | was he dull? |
59553 | was he inattentive? |
59553 | was it weal to leave me? |
59553 | was it weal to leave me? |
59553 | was it weal to leave me? |
59553 | was she not happy that she was ever of use? |
59553 | was the salutation which Theodore received when he entered the parlor;"and pray what brings you here?" |
59553 | was this the glorious hymn that Shakspeare hallowed to your praise? |
59553 | what a morning? |
59553 | what also more probable in the course of events? |
59553 | what altars spared? |
59553 | what delicacy hast thou in store for us now, my Glaucus?" |
59553 | what did I not suffer-- what have I not suffered, from this one source? |
59553 | what do you mean?" |
59553 | what in the devil does she mean?" |
59553 | what vice untried disdained? |
59553 | what were they? |
59553 | what''s the matter?" |
59553 | when, shall darkness flee, From the rosy Isles of the sunny sea? |
59553 | where that play and light of countenance which her step,_ her_ voice could formerly call forth? |
59553 | where the ardor of his tone? |
59553 | where the scene of love and harmony he has not attempted to break up and destroy? |
59553 | where?" |
59553 | who of all that surrounded her, could deem she had a_ heart_ to_ break_? |
59553 | why not? |
59553 | will you be afraid to take a turn with me in the garden?" |
59553 | will you let me act towards you as one friend should act towards another?" |
59553 | would nothing but a scripture name satisfy thee? |
59553 | { 14} What is the gaudy casket, when The priceless jewel''s gone? |
59553 | { 590} If then Bennett was, as we conjecture, recommended to the assembly by the parliamentary commissioners, what induced them to choose him? |
59553 | { 667} Heardst thou that shriek? |
59553 | |Swear to love those that love you!--a''nt it just? |
3252 | ''How mosh does he bay you by der veeks?'' 3252 ''Might not some other cause,''said I,''produce this concurrence? |
3252 | ''On which side?'' 3252 A bit of the wing, Roxy, or of the-- under limb?" |
3252 | A good many books, has n''t he? |
3252 | A long ride to- day? |
3252 | A young person,he said to himself,--"why a young person? |
3252 | About what? |
3252 | Afraid of them? |
3252 | Afraid? 3252 Ah, Mr. Gridley,"he said,"you are not studying the civil law, are you?" |
3252 | An''to be sure ai n''t I tellin''you, Mr. Gridley, jist as fast as my breath will let me? 3252 And Silas Peckham?" |
3252 | And do you take real pleasure in the din of all those screeching and banging and growling instruments? |
3252 | And how does Mr. Dudley Veneer take all this? |
3252 | And how have you all been at the mansion house? |
3252 | And now,he said,"what do you think of her companion?" |
3252 | And so you advise me to make love to the English girl, do you? |
3252 | And this is what you have been working at so long,--is it, Clement? |
3252 | And what are your pursuits, Jack? 3252 And what becomes of all those that he drops into the basket?" |
3252 | And what do you say to these others? |
3252 | And what have you found, my dear? |
3252 | And what was that? |
3252 | And who and what is that,he said,--"sitting a little apart there,--that strange, wild- looking girl?" |
3252 | And who was that, pray? |
3252 | And why not your English maiden? |
3252 | And why the New Portfolio, I would ask? |
3252 | And worth a great deal of money? |
3252 | And you did not speak to her? |
3252 | Anything ketchin''about it? |
3252 | Anything new in the city? |
3252 | Are a dozen additional spasms worth living for? |
3252 | Are there not some special inconveniences connected with what is called celebrity? 3252 Are we dead?" |
3252 | Are we like to be alone and undisturbed? |
3252 | Are you crazy? |
3252 | Are you going to open a correspondence with Mr. Maurice Kirkwood, Lurida? 3252 Are you not a little overstating his peculiarity? |
3252 | Are you sure you can depend on Kitty? |
3252 | Are you the literary critic of that well- known journal, or do you manage the political column? |
3252 | Believe it, Euthymia? 3252 Board and lodging for ten days, Mr. Peckham,--whose board and lodging, pray?" |
3252 | Busy, grandpapa? |
3252 | But is there nothing in thy track To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day? |
3252 | But surely, Sophy, you a''n''t afraid to have Dick marry her, if she would have him for any reason, are you? 3252 But what if it were a case of''How happy could I be with either''? |
3252 | But when we come to inquire Whence is matter? 3252 But, as I said above, what could I do? |
3252 | But,said be,"suppose that I had been offered such a place; do you think I ought to accept it and leave Arrowhead Village? |
3252 | By the way, Doctor, have you seen anything of a little plaid- pattern match- box? |
3252 | Ca n''t find out anything about him, you said, did n-''t you? 3252 Can he answer these questions? |
3252 | Can you repeat it to us? |
3252 | Canst thou by searching find out God? 3252 Children of the natural method[ his own method of classification of skin diseases,] are you all here?" |
3252 | Cynthia Badlam Fund Hopkins,said the good woman triumphantly,--"is that what you mean?" |
3252 | DO YOU WANT TO BE REMEMBERED AFTER THE CONTINENTS HAVE GONE UNDER, AND COME UP AGAIN, AND DRIED, AND BRED NEW RACES? 3252 Dead, is he? |
3252 | Dear mother,cried the boy,"why wo n''t you listen to reason? |
3252 | Did Number Five go to meet you in your laboratory, as she talked of doing? |
3252 | Did any of you notice any remarkable sounds last night,he said,--"or this morning? |
3252 | Did ever passion heat words to incandescence as it did those of Sappho? |
3252 | Did he talk with you on the way? |
3252 | Did n''t he say to Cain,''Where is Abel, thy brother?'' |
3252 | Did n''t you tell me once, Clement, that you were attempting a bust of Innocence? 3252 Did she look at you?" |
3252 | Did the party give you possession of these documents without making any effort to retain them? |
3252 | Did y''bring home somethin''from the party? 3252 Did you ever see a genuine Yankee?" |
3252 | Did you happen to notice anything about it, Kitty? |
3252 | Did you remark Elsie''s ways this forenoon? |
3252 | Did you see the paper that he showed her before he fastened it up with the others, Kitty? |
3252 | Did you talk about books at all with the old man? |
3252 | Did you write the letter from Rome, published a few weeks ago? |
3252 | Did, you ever see a case of epilepsy cured by nitrate of silver? |
3252 | Do n''t you know who he was nor what he was? |
3252 | Do n''t you speak about my client? 3252 Do n''t you think he worries himself about the souls of young women rather more than for those of old ones, Myrtle?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think she''s vuiry good- lookin''? |
3252 | Do not dull people bore you? |
3252 | Do you go to those musical hullabaloos? |
3252 | Do you know anything of Captain H. of the Massachusetts Twentieth? |
3252 | Do you know much about the Veneer family? |
3252 | Do you know what I think? |
3252 | Do you mean to say that every man is not absolutely free to choose his beliefs? |
3252 | Do you notice how many people you meet with their mouths stretched wide open? |
3252 | Do you really think Dick means mischief to anybody, that he has such dangerous- looking things? |
3252 | Do you really think of studying medicine? |
3252 | Do you recollect giving some of them to Mr. Bradshaw to look over? |
3252 | Do you see that? |
3252 | Do you seriously think of becoming a practitioner of medicine? |
3252 | Do you suppose I am going to answer such questions as you are putting me because you repeat them over, Mr. Gridley? 3252 Do you think her father has treated her judiciously?" |
3252 | Do you understand it? 3252 Do you want money?" |
3252 | Do? |
3252 | Doctor,the physician began, as from a sudden suggestion,"you wo n''t quarrel with me, if I tell you some of my real thoughts, will you?" |
3252 | Does Mr. Clement Lindsay live here? |
3252 | Does Mr. William Murray Bradshaw know anything about any papers, such as I am referring to, that may have been sent to the office? |
3252 | Dolus an virtus quis in hoste requirat? |
3252 | Elsie there? 3252 FISH AND DANDIES ONLY KEEP ON ICE.--Who will take? |
3252 | Far off his coming--shall I say"shone,"and finish the Miltonic phrase, or leave the verb to the happy conjectures of my audience? |
3252 | For whom this gift? |
3252 | Four hands all round? |
3252 | Greatly interested in the souls of his people, is n''t he? |
3252 | Had n''t you better let me write it for you, dear? |
3252 | Has n''t he some curiosities,--old figures, old jewelry, old coins, or things of that sort? |
3252 | Has she left no letter,--no explanation of her leaving in this way? |
3252 | Has that young gentleman ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping? |
3252 | Has there not been some understanding between you that he should become the approved suitor of Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Have some of these shell- oysters? |
3252 | Have they a billiard- room in the upper story? |
3252 | Have you ever talked with her about studying medicine? |
3252 | Have you found it well furnished with the books you most want? |
3252 | Have you heard anything against him? |
3252 | Have you heerd anything yet, Kitty Fagan? |
3252 | Have you kept your eye on her steadily? |
3252 | Have you received any papers from any of the family since the settlement of the estate? |
3252 | Have you seen his room? 3252 Have you stay, my friend?" |
3252 | Have you watched him pretty close for the last few days? |
3252 | He does look warm, does n''t he? |
3252 | He? 3252 How are you, Boy?" |
3252 | How are you, Dad? |
3252 | How are you, my fortunate friend? |
3252 | How can he be reached? |
3252 | How can the man who has learned but one art procure all the conveniences of life honestly? 3252 How can we manage to get an impartial judgment?" |
3252 | How can you ask that, Mr. Gridley? 3252 How do I know, Jeff?" |
3252 | How do you like the books I see you reading? |
3252 | How do you like the look of these oranges? |
3252 | How is Mr. Kirkwood, to- day? |
3252 | How is this? |
3252 | How long ago did her mother die? |
3252 | How long since your return to this country, may I ask? |
3252 | How long were you gone? |
3252 | How many horses does your papa keep? |
3252 | How many times,I kept saying to myself,"is that wicked old moon coming up to stare at me?" |
3252 | How many words do you think I shall want? |
3252 | How many? |
3252 | How much do you pay for your winter- strained? |
3252 | How much is it now? |
3252 | How much should you call about right for the picter an''figgerin''? |
3252 | How much, should you say? |
3252 | How much? |
3252 | How old is Elsie? |
3252 | I could n''t help comin'',said Nurse Byloe,"we do so love our babies,--how can we help it, Miss Badlam?" |
3252 | I hope I should be equal to that emergency,answered the young Doctor;"but I trust you are not suffering from any such accident?" |
3252 | I wonder if he would examine some old coins of mine? |
3252 | I wonder if the old man reads other novelists.--Do tell me, Deacon, if you have read Thackeray''s last story? |
3252 | If any of those papers were of importance, should you think your junior partner ought to keep them from your knowledge? |
3252 | If this is not genuine pathos, where will you find it, I should like to know? 3252 In what literary occupation have you been engaged, if you will pardon my inquiry? |
3252 | Is Helen come? |
3252 | Is Miss Badlam in? |
3252 | Is all this from real life? |
3252 | Is it as I thought? |
3252 | Is it probable that time and circumstances will alter a habit of nervous interactions so long established? 3252 Is n''t it a leetle rash to give him the use of his hands? |
3252 | Is n''t it so? 3252 Is not poetry the natural language of lovers?" |
3252 | Is she a good scholar? |
3252 | Is she violent in her delirium? |
3252 | Is the boy still awake? |
3252 | Is the last word to be spelt with one or two s''s? |
3252 | Is the person you are seeking a niece or other relative of yours? |
3252 | Is there a young person here, a stranger? |
3252 | Is there nobody that I can trust, or is everybody hunting me like a bird? |
3252 | Is there nobody that will venture his life to save a brother like that? |
3252 | Is this only your own suggestion? |
3252 | Is this the mighty ocean?--is this all? |
3252 | Is this very rare and valuable? 3252 Is your appetite as good as usual?" |
3252 | It''s apoplexy,--I told you so,--don''t you see how red he is in the face? |
3252 | Jawin''abaout? 3252 Judge, will you take Mrs. Sprowle in to supper?" |
3252 | Just out of the village,--that''s all.--There''s a kink in her mane,--pull it out, will you? |
3252 | Keep what, Kitty? 3252 Know of what, Cyprian?" |
3252 | Knows how to shut a fellow up pretty well for a young one, does n''t he? |
3252 | Lecture to students of your sex? 3252 Let Ol''Sophy set at''th''foot o''th''bed, if th''young missis sets by th''piller,--won''y'', darlin''? |
3252 | Lived in Rome once? |
3252 | Madam, do you remember you have your party tonight? |
3252 | Marry a man because she hates him, Sophy? 3252 May I ask how long you lived in Rome?" |
3252 | May I ask when, where, and of whom you obtained these papers, Miss Badlam? |
3252 | May I ask where you picked up the coin you are showing me? |
3252 | May I ask who the person or persons may be on whose account you wish to look at papers belonging to my late relative, Malachi Withers? |
3252 | May I not be Clement, dearest? 3252 Miss Hazard, will you allow me to present to you my friend, Mr. Clement Lindsay?" |
3252 | Mr. Gridley? 3252 My return? |
3252 | Myrtle is very lovely,Bathsheba answered,"but is n''t she a little too-- flighty-- for one like your brother? |
3252 | Naow get up, will ye? |
3252 | Nervous? 3252 Never observed it? |
3252 | Nothing very serious, I hope? |
3252 | Nuss Byloe, is that you? 3252 O Mr. Gridley, you are too bad,--what do I care for governors and presidents? |
3252 | Odd, is n''t it, father, the old man''s asking me to come and see him? 3252 Oh!--And the pink one, three seats from her? |
3252 | Oh, Doctor dear, what I''m thinkin''of a''n''t true, is it? |
3252 | Oh, how''s your haalth, Miss Darley? |
3252 | Oh, is n''t''Pickwick''nice? |
3252 | Oh, what is Heaven but the fellowship Of minds that each can stand against the world By its own meek and incorruptible will? |
3252 | One more gallop, Juan? |
3252 | Physician art thou, one all eyes; Philosopher, a fingering slave, One that would peep and botanize Upon his mother''s grave? |
3252 | Places you have been to, and people you have known? |
3252 | Quite warm, is n''t it, this evening? |
3252 | Rip Van Myrtle, you call that handsome girl, do you, Miss Clara? 3252 Scorn trifles"comes from Aunt Mary Moody Emerson, and reappears in her nephew, Ralph Waldo.--"What right have you, Sir, to your virtue? |
3252 | Sell you them things to make a colation out of? |
3252 | Shall I read you some of the rhymed pieces first, or some of the blank- verse poems, sir? |
3252 | Shall I seek a deeper slumber at the bottom of the lake I love than I have ever found when drifting idly over its surface? 3252 Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar? |
3252 | Shall I try the other publishers? |
3252 | Shall we judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? 3252 Sick, my child?" |
3252 | Signor? 3252 So Mr. Clement Lindsay has been saving a life, has he, and got some hard knocks doing it, hey, Susan Posey? |
3252 | So you admire conceited people, do you? |
3252 | Sounds like Coleridge, hey? 3252 Surely you are not afraid?" |
3252 | Susan Posey, child, what is your trouble? |
3252 | THE SUPREME SELF- INDULGENCE IS TO SURRENDER THE WILL TO A SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR.--Protestantism gave up a great luxury.--Did it though? 3252 Tell me, Sophy,"she said,"was Elsie always as shy as she seems to be now, in talking with those to whom she is friendly?" |
3252 | Tell me, darlin'',--don''you love somebody?--don''you love? 3252 Tell me, my dear, would you be willing to give up meeting this man alone, and gratify my friend, and avoid all occasion of reproach?" |
3252 | Tell me,said Gifted,"what are these papers, and who is he that looks upon them and drops them into the basket?" |
3252 | Thackeray''s story? 3252 The first thing? |
3252 | The regular correspondent from where? |
3252 | Them? |
3252 | Think about it? |
3252 | Think well of him? 3252 To be sure you are,"answered the Tutor,"and what of it? |
3252 | To be, or not to be: that is the question Whether''t is nobl----"William, shall we have pudding to- day, or flapjacks?" |
3252 | W''at''s in a name? |
3252 | WHY DO YOU COMPLAIN OF YOUR ORGANIZATION? 3252 Was that all that happened?" |
3252 | Was there ever anything like it? |
3252 | Was there ever such a senseless, stupid creature as I am? 3252 Was"--? |
3252 | Well, Doctor,the Counsellor began,"how are stocks in the measles market about these times? |
3252 | Well, Kitty, how are things going on up at The Poplars? 3252 Well, Stebbins,"said Mr. Dudley Veneer,"have you brought any special message from the Doctor?" |
3252 | Well, how has Elsie seemed of late? |
3252 | Well, if you say so; but why that P., Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 Well, then, Mrs. Hopkins, what shall be the boy''s name?" |
3252 | Well, there is some truth in that; but did you think the old- fashioned family doctor was extinct, a fossil like the megatherium? |
3252 | Well, what does she say to it? |
3252 | Well, what has been the trouble, Nurse? |
3252 | Well? |
3252 | Well? |
3252 | Whar he''s gone? 3252 What I''seen''bout Dick Veneer?" |
3252 | What I''ve got? 3252 What State do you come from?" |
3252 | What are their amusements? |
3252 | What are your favorites among his writings, Deacon? 3252 What building is that?" |
3252 | What can I do better,he said to himself,"than have a dance with Rosa Milburn?" |
3252 | What can I do with such a creature as this? |
3252 | What can have brought Dudley out to- night? |
3252 | What color was your mantle? |
3252 | What did you do before you became a soldier? |
3252 | What did you tell me, Miss Vincent, was this fellow''s particular antipathy? |
3252 | What disposition had you thought of making of them? |
3252 | What do you mean by asking me these questions, Mr. Gridley? 3252 What do you mean to do when you get back?" |
3252 | What do you say to my taking your question as the subject of a paper to be read before the Society? 3252 What do you say to the love poetry of women?" |
3252 | What do you say, uncle? |
3252 | What do you think of the young man over there at the Veneers''? |
3252 | What do you want of me, Elsie Venner? |
3252 | What do you want to know? |
3252 | What does all this mean? 3252 What has the public to do with my private affairs?" |
3252 | What if we change Isosceles to Theodore, Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 What is it, Doctor? |
3252 | What is it, Helen? 3252 What is it?" |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is like to be the further history of the case? 3252 What is that you have seen about Mr. Richard Veneer that gives you such a spite against him, Sophy?" |
3252 | What is the first book you would put in a student''s hands, doctor? |
3252 | What is the first thing you would do? |
3252 | What is the matter, Cousin Elsie? 3252 What is the matter, my darling?" |
3252 | What is the meaning of all this? 3252 What is the meaning of all this?" |
3252 | What is the remedy? 3252 What is this great stone pillar here for?" |
3252 | What made you ask me about him? 3252 What makes you think I care more for her than for her American friend?" |
3252 | What may her figure be? |
3252 | What now, Susan Posey, my dear? |
3252 | What o''clock is it? |
3252 | What paper has had anything about it, Lurida? 3252 What part of Georgia?" |
3252 | What shall we sing this evening? |
3252 | What the d--- is the reason I ca n''t see Myrtle, Cynthia? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What thinkest thou, Luke, of the maid we have been visiting? |
3252 | What time is''t? |
3252 | What were you whispering? |
3252 | What would Amanda think of a suitor who courted her with a rhyming dictionary in his pocket to help him make love? |
3252 | What would I do about it? 3252 What''r''you jawin''abaout?" |
3252 | What''s fetched y''daown here so all- fired airly? |
3252 | What''s the matter with Elsie Venner? |
3252 | What''s the matter with your shoulder, Venner? |
3252 | What''s the matter, do you suppose? 3252 What''s the meaning of all this, Cynthia? |
3252 | What''s the meaning of that, Kitty? 3252 What, Mr. Gridley? |
3252 | What,he answered,"the man that paddles a birch canoe, and rides all the wild horses of the neighborhood? |
3252 | What? |
3252 | When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? |
3252 | When a fellah goes out huntin''and shoots a squirrel, do you think he''s go''n''to let another fellah pick him up and kerry him off? 3252 Where am I? |
3252 | Where are our broomsticks? |
3252 | Where did our friends pick up all these fine ecstatic airs? |
3252 | Where did you get that flower, Elsie? |
3252 | Where did you go to church when you were at home? |
3252 | Where did you go? |
3252 | Where did you meet her? |
3252 | Where is the boat I was in? |
3252 | Where is the first volume of this Medical Cyclopaedia? |
3252 | Where is the light to come from that is to do as much for our poor human lives? |
3252 | Where is your uneasiness, Myrtle? |
3252 | Where shall I send your trunk after you from your uncle''s? |
3252 | Where''s all the oranges gone to? |
3252 | Which is the image of your protector, Myrtle? 3252 Which of the men do you wish would take himself off?" |
3252 | Which one shall it be? |
3252 | Who are those? |
3252 | Who are you, giants, whence and why? |
3252 | Who are you? |
3252 | Who can doubt that in this passage of his story he is picturing his own visions, one of the fairest of which was destined to become reality? 3252 Who do you think is coming, Mr. Gridley? |
3252 | Who fought? |
3252 | Who gave this cup? |
3252 | Who has a part with**** at this next exhibition? |
3252 | Who is she, I should like to know? |
3252 | Who is that girl in ringlets,--the fourth in the third row on the right? |
3252 | Who is that in the canoe over there? |
3252 | Who is that pretty girl my young doctor has got there? |
3252 | Who is that? |
3252 | Who is this Clement Lindsay, Bathsheba? |
3252 | Who might that favored person be? |
3252 | Who tol''you Elsie was a woman, Doctor? |
3252 | Who was at the wedding? |
3252 | Who was the general on the American side? |
3252 | Who was the person you sentenced? |
3252 | Who''s hurt? 3252 Who''s took care o''them things that was on the hoss?" |
3252 | Who''shurt? 3252 Why call him_ the Post_?" |
3252 | Why did n''t we all have a chance to help erect that statue? |
3252 | Why did not Miss Darley go to the party last evening? |
3252 | Why did you ask me for myself, when you could have claimed me? |
3252 | Why do n''t they take her away from the school, if she is in such a strange, excitable state? |
3252 | Why do n''t you tell the man he is wasting that water? 3252 Why does he keep out of sight as he does?" |
3252 | Why is it,she said,"that there is so common and so intense a desire for poetical reputation? |
3252 | Why should n''t you go to see a brother as well as a sister, I should like to know? 3252 Why strikest not? |
3252 | Why then goest thou as some Boswell or literary worshipper to this saint or to that? 3252 Why, Cynthy Badlam, what do y''mean?" |
3252 | Why, Kitty,he said,"what mischief do you think is going on, and who is to be harmed?" |
3252 | Why, Mr. Peckham,she said,"do you mean this? |
3252 | Why, bless me, is that my young friend Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Why, have n''t I met you walking with her, and did n''t you both seem greatly interested in the subject you were discussing? 3252 Why, how do you know without tasting them?" |
3252 | Why, my dear friend, how can you think of such a thing? 3252 Why, my dear little soul,"said Mr. Bernard,"what are you worried about? |
3252 | Why, sister, do n''t you know that Myrtle Hazard is missing,--gone!--gone nobody knows where, and that we are looking in all directions to find her? |
3252 | Why, then, Master, didst thou give her of thy medicine, seeing that her ail is unto death? |
3252 | Why, what is there to be interviewed in him? 3252 Why, what''s the matter, my dear?" |
3252 | Why,said the Doctor, sharply,--"have you ever seen him with any such weapon about him?" |
3252 | Why? |
3252 | Wicked to live, my dear? 3252 Will you allow me to take that envelope containing papers, Miss Badlam?" |
3252 | Will you go with me to the doctor''s, and let him read it in our presence? 3252 Will you state, if you please-- I beg your pardon-- may I ask who is your own favorite author?" |
3252 | Will you tell me,she said,"where you have found any account of the bands and lines in the spectrum of dream- nitrogen? |
3252 | Will you walk towards my home with me today? |
3252 | Winter- strained? |
3252 | Would you kindly write your autograph in my note- book, with that pen? 3252 Y''do n''t think anything dreadful has come o''that child''s wild nater, do ye?" |
3252 | Y''ha''n''t heerd nothin''abaout it, Squire, d''ye mean t''say? |
3252 | Yes; but you surely would not consider it inspiration of the same kind as that of the writers of the Old Testament? |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | You do n''t know the notion that people commonly have about that tree, Sophy? |
3252 | You do n''t know? 3252 You do n''t mean that she has any mark about her, except-- you know-- under the necklace?" |
3252 | You find great changes in London, of course, I suppose? |
3252 | You have heard the news, Mr. Gridley, I suppose? |
3252 | You know Sir Walter Raleigh''s''History of the World,''of course? |
3252 | You know all about it, Olive? |
3252 | You know nothing about her, then? |
3252 | You know something about that nephew of yours, during these last years, I suppose? |
3252 | You made the pulse about ninety,--a little hard,--did n''t you; as I did? 3252 You never noticed the colors and patterns of her dresses? |
3252 | You read this lecture, do n''t you, Professor? |
3252 | You receive a good many volumes of verse, do you not? |
3252 | You remember my son, Cortland Saunders, whom I brought to see you once in Boston? |
3252 | You say she has had some of her old nervous whims,--has the doctor been to see her? |
3252 | You spoke of Newspapers,she said, without any change of tone or manner:"do you not frequently write for them yourself?" |
3252 | You want to get out of the new church into the old one, do n''t you? |
3252 | You would n''t act so, if you were dancing with Mr. Langdon,--would you, Elsie? |
3252 | You would n''t trust a woman even if she was dead, hey, Nurse? |
3252 | Your partner must have known about it yesterday? |
3252 | Your whole quarter''s allowance, I bullieve,--ain''t it? |
3252 | _ It is easy enough to get up if you are dragged up, but how will it be to come down such a declivity? 3252 ''How long?'' 3252 ''Some things can be done as well as others,''can they? 3252 ''Then why not invent them?'' 3252 ''What is this truth you seek? 3252 ''What personalities?'' 3252 ''What will you do, then?'' 3252 ''Why, that is a kind of title of nobility, is n''t it? 3252 ''sseventy exclusive cases as he from the three cases in the ward of the Dublin Hospital? |
3252 | ( 3) Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,--And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men? |
3252 | ( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--"Gambrel?--Gambrel?" |
3252 | ( Why did not she ask if the girl was his daughter? |
3252 | ( commonly pronounced haalth)--instead of, How do you do? |
3252 | ***** What was the errand on which he visited our earth,--the message with which he came commissioned from the Infinite source of all life? |
3252 | *****"Let us then ponder his words:--''Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach and sunsets show? |
3252 | --"About those conditions?" |
3252 | --"And is there nothing yet unsaid Before the change appears? |
3252 | --"Guess he''s been through the mill,--don''t look so green, anyhow, hey? |
3252 | --And how did the Lady receive these valuable and useful gifts? |
3252 | --And the Evening Transcript? |
3252 | --And the calipers said I.--What are the calipers? |
3252 | --And this is all the friend you have to love? |
3252 | --And thou? |
3252 | --And whence thy sadness in a world of bliss Where never parting comes, nor mourner''s tear? |
3252 | --And where is my cat? |
3252 | --Anything you like,--he answered,--what difference does it make how you christen a foundling? |
3252 | --Bonfire?--shrieked the little man.--The bonfire when Robert Calef''s book was burned? |
3252 | --Can a man love his own soul too well? |
3252 | --Did I not say to you a little while ago that the universe swam in an ocean of similitudes and analogies? |
3252 | --Do I remember Byron''s line about"striking the electric chain"? |
3252 | --Do men fly yet? |
3252 | --Do you mean to say the pun- question is not clearly settled in your minds? |
3252 | --Do you mean you can always see the sources from which a man fills his mind,--his feeders, as you call them? |
3252 | --Do you receive many visitors,--I mean vertebrates, not articulates? |
3252 | --Do you think they mean business? |
3252 | --Do you want an image of the human will, or the self- determining principle, as compared with its prearranged and impassable restrictions? |
3252 | --Funny, wasn''it? |
3252 | --Has the planet met with any accident of importance? |
3252 | --Has the universal language come into use? |
3252 | --Have I ever acted in private theatricals? |
3252 | --He said, as I returned it to him, You have heard military men say that such a person had an eye for country, have n''t you? |
3252 | --How can a man help writing poetry in such a place? |
3252 | --How do I know that? |
3252 | --How does she go to work to help you? |
3252 | --How general is the republican form of government? |
3252 | --I am afraid I did,--I said,--but was n''t I colored myself so as to look ridiculous? |
3252 | --I wonder if anybody ever finds fault with anything I say at this table when it is repeated? |
3252 | --I wonder if you know the TERRIBLE SMILE? |
3252 | --If Iris does not love this Little Gentleman, what does love look like when one sees it? |
3252 | --If a fellow attacked my opinions in print would I reply? |
3252 | --Is that the same piece of money as the other one? |
3252 | --Is the Daily Advertiser still published? |
3252 | --Is the euthanasia a recognized branch of medical science? |
3252 | --Is the oldest inhabitant still living? |
3252 | --Is there a new fuel since the English coal- mines have given out? |
3252 | --May I venture to ask,--I said, a little awed by his statement and manner,--what is your special province of study? |
3252 | --Next month!--said I.---Why, what election do you mean? |
3252 | --No doubt, no doubt, if you meet him once; but what are you going to do with him if you meet him every day? |
3252 | --Of these three questions, What is matter? |
3252 | --Oh, indeed,--said I,--and may I venture to ask on what particular point you are engaged just at present? |
3252 | --Oh, you could n''t mistake those dried leaves for an insect, hey? |
3252 | --Should you like to hear what moderate wishes life brings one to at last? |
3252 | --The Doctor put his hand to his forehead and drew a long breath.--"What is there you notice out of the way about Elsie Venner?" |
3252 | --The divinity- student wished to know what I thought of affinities, as well as of antipathies; did I believe in love at first sight? |
3252 | --Then to the Doctor,--"Anybody get sick at Sprowles''s? |
3252 | --Well, then, how did the little beast which is peculiar to that special complaint intrude himself into the Order of Things? |
3252 | --What are the great faults of conversation? |
3252 | --What do you think I question everything for, the Master replied,--if I never get any answers? |
3252 | --What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around? |
3252 | --What do you think, Sir,--said the divinity- student,--opens the souls of poets most fully? |
3252 | --What if, instead of talking this morning, I should read you a copy of verses, with critical remarks by the author? |
3252 | --What in the world can have become of That Boy and his popgun while all this somewhat extended sermonizing was going on? |
3252 | --What is the prevalent religious creed of civilization? |
3252 | --What is the saddle of a thought? |
3252 | --What should decide one, in choosing a summer residence? |
3252 | --When the Lord sends out a batch of human beings, say a hundred-- Did you ever read my book, the new edition of it, I mean? |
3252 | --Where have I been for the last three or four days? |
3252 | --Where is the election held? |
3252 | --Who knows it not,--this dead recoil Of weary fibres stretched with toil, The pulse that flutters faint and low When Summer''s seething breezes blow? |
3252 | --Who was that person that was so abused some time since for saying that in the conflict of two races our sympathies naturally go with the higher? |
3252 | --Will you read them very good- naturedly? |
3252 | --Would I be so good as to specify any particular example?--Oh,--an example? |
3252 | --Yes,--said I,--but why should n''t we always set a man talking about the thing he knows best? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what I mean by the GREEN STATE? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what I mean, indignant and not unintelligent country- practitioner? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what plague has fallen on the practitioners of theology? |
3252 | --You do n''t know what your thoughts are going to be beforehand? |
3252 | --You do n''t mean to say you have studied insects as well as solar systems and the order of things generally? |
3252 | --You do n''t suppose that my remarks made at this table are like so many postage- stamps, do you,--each to be only once uttered? |
3252 | --You have a laugh together sometimes, do you? |
3252 | --You have n''t heard about my friend the Professor''s first experiment in the use of anaesthetics, have you? |
3252 | --You remember the old story of the tender- hearted man, who placed a frozen viper in his bosom, and was stung by it when it became thawed? |
3252 | --said I.--Have you seen the Declaration of Independence photographed in a surface that a fly''s foot would cover? |
3252 | -And how is your father and your mother? |
3252 | -Oh, the Governor and the Head Centre? |
3252 | -Terrible fact? |
3252 | -Wouldn''t do?--said I,--why not? |
3252 | -Yes, yes; did you ever see how they will poke those wonderful little fingers of theirs into every fold and crack and crevice they can get at? |
3252 | .............. What have I rescued from the shelf? |
3252 | ..._ But will they come when you do call for them?_"The most formidable thing about a London party is getting away from it. |
3252 | 1.--Whether a lady was ever known to write a letter covering only a single page? |
3252 | 16 correctly the first time?) |
3252 | 2.--What constitutes a man a gentleman? |
3252 | 3.--Whether face or figure is most attractive in the female sex? |
3252 | A PERSON at table asked me whether I"went in for rum as a steady drink?" |
3252 | A Prologue? |
3252 | A West Minkville?] |
3252 | A fellow is n''t all battery, is he? |
3252 | A hundred and forty?" |
3252 | A little while afterwards he asked of his fellow- traveller, Professor Thayer,"How much did I weigh? |
3252 | A man that had been saying all his fine things to Miss Susan Posey, too, had he, before he had bestowed his attentions on her? |
3252 | A return of the natural instincts of girlhood with returning health? |
3252 | A temple such as Athens might have been proud to rear upon her Acropolis? |
3252 | A visitor, indigenous to the region, looking pensively at the figure, asked the lady of the house"if that was a statoo of her deceased infant?" |
3252 | A voice whispers, What next? |
3252 | A work of art, is it, Miss Myrtle Hazard?" |
3252 | A young girl''s caprice? |
3252 | A''n''t it fun to hear him blow off his steam? |
3252 | A''n''t much of a loser, I guess, by acceptin''his propositions?" |
3252 | Advertise for a bronzed living horse-- Lyceum invitations and engagements-- bronze versus brass.---What''s the use in being frightened? |
3252 | After all, what was your Chevy Chace to stir blood with like a trumpet? |
3252 | After reading what Emerson says about"the masses,"one is tempted to ask whether a philosopher can ever have"a constituency"and be elected to Congress? |
3252 | Again, what was the influence this girl had seemingly exerted, under which the venomous creature had collapsed in such a sudden way? |
3252 | Ah, Lord of life, though spectres pale Fill with their threats the shadowy vale, With Thee my faltering steps to aid, How can I dare to be afraid? |
3252 | Ah, said I to myself; does that young girl understand French? |
3252 | Ah, wilt thou yet return, Bearing thy rose- hued torch, and bid thine altar burn? |
3252 | Ahead? |
3252 | Ai n''t they nice children? |
3252 | Ai n''t you telling me stories? |
3252 | All at once he jumped up and said,-- Do n''t you want to hear what I just read to the boys? |
3252 | All here, then, perhaps; all where, now? |
3252 | All these have left their work and not their names, Why should I murmur at a fate like theirs? |
3252 | All up for a year or more,--hey?" |
3252 | All your wisdom is to him like the lady''s virtue in Raleigh''s song:"If she seem not chaste to me, What care I how chaste she be?" |
3252 | Alumin.(?) |
3252 | Am I not gentle? |
3252 | Am I not harmless? |
3252 | Am I not kind? |
3252 | Am I not mirrored in those eyes of yours? |
3252 | Amid our slender group we see; With him we still remained"The Class,"without his presence what are we? |
3252 | An effect of an influx from another sphere of being? |
3252 | An impression produced by her dream? |
3252 | An obelisk such as Thebes might have pointed out with pride to the strangers who found admission through her hundred gates? |
3252 | An old campaigner came up.--"Can these fellows get well?" |
3252 | An''she ha''n''got the same kind o''feelin''s as other women.--Do you know that young gen''l''m''n up at the school, Doctor?" |
3252 | And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong,"What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done? |
3252 | And Number Five and her young friend the Tutor,--have they kept on in their dangerous intimacy? |
3252 | And are you, and is your husband, and Paolo,--good Paolo,--are you all as well and happy as you have been and as you ought to be? |
3252 | And can we smile when thou art dead? |
3252 | And can you tell me why you like candy? |
3252 | And did n''t I grin when I saw the pieces fly? |
3252 | And having a chance every day, too, how could you expect her to stand it?" |
3252 | And how could prose go on all- fours more unmetrically than this? |
3252 | And how did you like his looks?" |
3252 | And how does our young lady seem to be of late?" |
3252 | And how does the law apply to this? |
3252 | And if boys may have this additional ornament to their vertebral columns, why not men? |
3252 | And if men, why not giants? |
3252 | And if once the blacks had leave to run, how many whites would have to stay at home to guard their dissolving property? |
3252 | And in the first place, will you allow me to ask what led you to this particular place? |
3252 | And in the same person, do n''t you know the same two shades in different parts of the character that you find in the wing and thigh of a partridge? |
3252 | And is it not appalling to think of the''large constitution of this man,''when you reflect on the acres of canvas which he has covered? |
3252 | And is not the sky that covers us one roof, which makes us all one family? |
3252 | And is this the pen you write with? |
3252 | And of deception too-- do you see how nearly those dried leaves resemble an insect? |
3252 | And so it was all as plain sailing for Number Five and the young Tutor as it had been for Delilah and the young Doctor, was it? |
3252 | And so of the people you know; ca n''t you pick out the full- flavored, coarse- fibred characters from the delicate, fine- fibred ones? |
3252 | And so you think you would like to become an octogenarian? |
3252 | And wants you to come and talk religion with him in his study, Susan Posey, does he? |
3252 | And was he noted in his day? |
3252 | And what brings my young friend out in such good season this morning? |
3252 | And what is your whole human family but a parenthesis in a single page of my history? |
3252 | And what more natural than that one should be inquiring about what another has accepted and ceased to have any doubts concerning? |
3252 | And what shall we do with Pope''s"Essay on Man,"which has furnished more familiar lines than"Paradise Lost"and"Paradise Regained"both together? |
3252 | And what would literature or art be without such associations? |
3252 | And who is the new- comer? |
3252 | And who might he be, forsooth? |
3252 | And whom do you know so well as your friends? |
3252 | And will you agree to abide by his opinion, if it coincides with mine?" |
3252 | And will you believe it? |
3252 | And will you stop in England, and bring home the author of"Counterparts"with you? |
3252 | And your family, are they as discreet as yourself?" |
3252 | And-- and-- my son, do you remember Major Gideon Withers?" |
3252 | Any corner in bronchitis? |
3252 | Any strange cases among the scholars?" |
3252 | Any syndicate in the vaccination business?" |
3252 | Any young men teach in the school?" |
3252 | Anybody tell you he sick?" |
3252 | Are angels more true? |
3252 | Are horses subject to the Morbus Addisonii? |
3252 | Are ministers composed of finer clay than the rest of mankind, that entitles them to this preeminence? |
3252 | Are my friends bent on killing me with kindness? |
3252 | Are not Erard and Broadwood and Chickering the true humanizers of our time? |
3252 | Are not almost all brains a little wanting in bilateral symmetry? |
3252 | Are not most of us a little crazy, doctor,--just a little? |
3252 | Are the English taller, stouter, lustier, ruddier, healthier, than our New England people? |
3252 | Are the laity an inferior order of beings, fit only to be slaves and to be governed? |
3252 | Are there never any worms in the leaves after they get old and yellow, Miss Cynthia?" |
3252 | Are there not fruits, which, while unripe, are not to be tasted or endured, which mature into the richest taste and fragrance? |
3252 | Are there not moods in which it seems to you that they are disposed to see all things out of plumb and in false relations with each other? |
3252 | Are there not rough buds that open into sweet flowers? |
3252 | Are there not some subjects in looking at which it seems to you impossible that they should ever see straight? |
3252 | Are we any wiser than those great men? |
3252 | Are we less earthly than the chosen race? |
3252 | Are we not fresh and blooming? |
3252 | Are we not glad that the responsibility of the decision did not rest on us? |
3252 | Are we not the centre of something? |
3252 | Are we not there ourselves? |
3252 | Are we not whole years short of that interesting period of life when Mr. Balzac says that a man, etc., etc., etc.? |
3252 | Are we not young? |
3252 | Are we to spend twelve hundred millions, and raise six hundred thousand soldiers, in order to protect slavery? |
3252 | Are you in the tune for pork? |
3252 | Are you not ready to recognize in me a friend, an equal, a sister, who can speak to you as if she had been reared under the same roof? |
3252 | Are you quite sure that you wish to live to be threescore and twenty years old? |
3252 | Are you true to me, dearest Clement,--true as when we promised each other that we would love while life lasted? |
3252 | Are you willing to give it to me? |
3252 | Art thou, too, dreaming of a mortal''s kiss Amid the seraphs of the heavenly sphere? |
3252 | As for his wound, how could it do otherwise than well under such hands? |
3252 | At five or ten or fifteen years old they put their hands up to their foreheads and ask, What are they strapping down my brains in this way for? |
3252 | At last I got out the question,--Will you take the long path with me? |
3252 | At last the Scarabee creaked out very slowly,"Did I understand you to ask the following question, to wit?" |
3252 | At last: Do you know the story of Andromeda? |
3252 | At twoscore, threescore, is he then full grown? |
3252 | Author writing, jacks?" |
3252 | Ay, said a doubting bystander, but how many made vows of gifts and were shipwrecked notwithstanding? |
3252 | Because Cleopatra swallowed a pearl?" |
3252 | Because bread is good and wholesome and necessary and nourishing, shall you thrust a crumb into my windpipe while I am talking? |
3252 | Because if they are not, what could hinder a witch from crossing the line that separates Wilmington from Andover, I should like to know? |
3252 | Because time softens its outlines and rounds the sharp angles of its cornices, shall a fellow take a pickaxe to help time? |
3252 | Besides, what business has a mere boarder to be talking about such things at a breakfast- table? |
3252 | Born in Injy,--that''s it, ai n''t it? |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Bradshaw?" |
3252 | Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal? |
3252 | Bridshaw?" |
3252 | Burn up? |
3252 | But after all, what could I do? |
3252 | But am I not glad, for my own sake, that I went? |
3252 | But are there any trustworthy friends to the Union among the slaveholders? |
3252 | But can it be astronomy alone that does it? |
3252 | But come, now, why should not a giant have a tail as well as a dragon? |
3252 | But confound the make- believe women we have turned loose in our streets!--where do they come from? |
3252 | But did n''t it make you nervous, reading about so many people possessed with such strange notions?" |
3252 | But do you think that I can forget them? |
3252 | But how could any conceivable antipathy be so comprehensive as to keep a young man aloof from all the world, and make a hermit of him? |
3252 | But how do you think practice would be? |
3252 | But how in respect of those who were not asked? |
3252 | But how long would it take to turn that circle into a polygon, unless some mighty counteracting force should prevent it? |
3252 | But how to let one''s self down from the high level of such a character to one''s own poor standard? |
3252 | But how was it in Salem, according to Mr. Upham''s own statement? |
3252 | But if not, was the baptismal name Francis or Franklin? |
3252 | But in the first place, what do we mean by an antipathy? |
3252 | But is n''t there some truth in it, Doctor? |
3252 | But is there not something of rest, of calm, in the thought of gently and gradually fading away out of human remembrance? |
3252 | But there must be others,--I am afraid many others,--who will exclaim:"He has had his day, and why ca n''t he be content? |
3252 | But what are you going to do when you find John Keats an apprentice to a surgeon or apothecary? |
3252 | But what could she do? |
3252 | But what if I should lay down the rule, Be cheerful; take all the troubles and trials of life with perfect equanimity and a smiling countenance? |
3252 | But what if one does say the same things,--of course in a little different form each time,--over her? |
3252 | But what if the joy of the summer is past, And winter''s wild herald is blowing his blast? |
3252 | But what if this so- called antipathy were only a fear, a terror, which borrowed the less unmanly name? |
3252 | But what if your oldest boy had been stolen from his cradle and bred in a North- Street cellar? |
3252 | But what is half a century to a place like Stonehenge? |
3252 | But what is the gift of a mourning ring to the bequest of a perpetual annuity? |
3252 | But what is this? |
3252 | But what right have I to say it can not be so? |
3252 | But what shall I do now? |
3252 | But what shall we say to the"Ars Poetica"of Horace? |
3252 | But what should I do with Number Five? |
3252 | But what was the use of a young man''s pretending to know anything in the presence of an old owl? |
3252 | But what was this new light which seemed to have kindled in her eyes? |
3252 | But what would youth be without its extravagances,--its preterpluperfect in the shape of adjectives, its unmeasured and unstinted admiration? |
3252 | But what''s the use of good looks if they scare away folks? |
3252 | But what, even then, could she have done? |
3252 | But where are those contemporaries? |
3252 | But where did them black eyes come from? |
3252 | But where to look for what I wanted? |
3252 | But who else was there? |
3252 | But who is that other one that has been lengthening his stride from the first, and now shows close up to the front? |
3252 | But who shall tune the pitch- pipe? |
3252 | But why does n''t he come to our meetings? |
3252 | But why should I illustrate further what it seems almost a breach of confidence to speak of? |
3252 | By and by, perhaps, we can work you into our series of poets; but the best pears ripen slowly, and so with genius.--Where shall I send the volumes?" |
3252 | By digging in calomel freely about their roots? |
3252 | By watering them with Fowler''s solution? |
3252 | Ca n''t you get your friends to unite with you in committing those odious instruments of debauchery to the flames in which you have consumed your own? |
3252 | Ca n''t you lend it to me for a while? |
3252 | Came from where? |
3252 | Can I bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? |
3252 | Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women? |
3252 | Can I help you, my brother''? |
3252 | Can I see this young person?" |
3252 | Can Number Five be masquerading in verse? |
3252 | Can any ear reconcile itself to the last of these three lines of Emerson''s? |
3252 | Can any of you tell what those two words are? |
3252 | Can he dispose of them? |
3252 | Can he have furnished the model I saw at the sculptor''s? |
3252 | Can it be possible that her prediction is not far from its realization? |
3252 | Can it be that the curse is passing away, and my daughter is to be restored to me,--such as her mother would have had her,--such as her mother was?" |
3252 | Can it be that this imparts a religious character to the article? |
3252 | Can she tell me anything? |
3252 | Can such peculiarities-- be transmitted by inheritance? |
3252 | Can that ever be? |
3252 | Can thy servant taste what I eat or what I drink? |
3252 | Can we find any trace of this idea elsewhere? |
3252 | Can we make a safe and honorable peace as the quarrel now stands? |
3252 | Can you describe in intelligible language the smell of a rose as compared with that of a violet? |
3252 | Can you find no lesson in this? |
3252 | Can you help any soul_? |
3252 | Can you help me to get sight of any of these papers not to be found at the Registry of Deeds or the Probate Office?" |
3252 | Can you not imagine the tones in which those words,''Peace, be still,''were spoken? |
3252 | Can you obtain what you wish? |
3252 | Can you see tendency in your life? |
3252 | Can you suggest what should be done to dispel the existing prejudice?" |
3252 | Can you tell how much money there is in a safe, which also has thick double walls, by kneading its knobs with your fingers? |
3252 | Can you tell me just how high they are? |
3252 | Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" |
3252 | Casts and drawings of A. are multiplied, and the bump does not lose in the act of copying.--I did not say it gained.--What do you look so for? |
3252 | Cognati, queis te salvo est opus? |
3252 | Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grand- children-- where were they? |
3252 | Come here, Youngster, will you? |
3252 | Come to go to bed, little dears? |
3252 | Come, now,--he said,--what''s the use of these comparisons? |
3252 | Consulting daily with Cynthia Badlam, was he? |
3252 | Could I make an appointment with you for either of those days? |
3252 | Could a brother of this young lady have written it? |
3252 | Could he not confer that immortality so dear to the human heart? |
3252 | Could it be so? |
3252 | Could it be that--? |
3252 | Could it be the roar of the thousand wheels and the ten thousand footsteps jarring and trampling along the stones of the neighboring city? |
3252 | Could n''t be anything in such a violent supposition as that, and yet such a crafty fellow as that Bradshaw,--what trick was he not up to? |
3252 | Could she be an heiress in disguise? |
3252 | Could she call him at will by looking at him? |
3252 | Could she have stayed to meet the schoolmaster? |
3252 | Could that be a copy of"Thoughts on the Universe"? |
3252 | Could that have anything to do with his pursuit of Myrtle Hazard today?" |
3252 | Could the cures have been real ones, produced by the principle of ANIMAL MAGNETISM? |
3252 | Could they help recalling Romeo and Juliet? |
3252 | Cuprum,(?) |
3252 | Curious entities, or non- entities, space and tithe? |
3252 | Cyprian Eveleth was the one she thought most of; but Cyprian was as true as his sister Olive, and who else was there? |
3252 | D''d y''ever see Ed''in Forrest play Metamora? |
3252 | D''you remember how handsome she looked in the tableau, when the fair was held for the Dorcas Society? |
3252 | DO YOU MEAN TO SAY JEAN CHAUVIN, THAT''HEAVEN LIES ABOUT US IN OUR INFANCY''? |
3252 | Darwinii( we can keep A. D. you see) 1872? |
3252 | Did I not see his eyes turn toward her as the silvery notes rippled from her throat? |
3252 | Did Sir Isaac think what he was saying when he made HIS speech about the ocean,--the child and the pebbles, you know? |
3252 | Did he ever see the Siamese twins, or any pair like them? |
3252 | Did he mean to speak slightingly of a pebble? |
3252 | Did he possess a hitherto unexercised personal power, which put the key of this young girl''s nervous system into his hands? |
3252 | Did he tell her he loved her? |
3252 | Did he think she hated every kind of goodness and loved every kind of evil? |
3252 | Did he think she was hateful to the Being who made her? |
3252 | Did it not seem as if Death had spared them for Love, and that Love should lead them together through life''s long journey to the gates of Death? |
3252 | Did it occur to you that he could not see you clearly enough to know you from any other son or daughter of Adam? |
3252 | Did n''t I hear this gentleman saying, the other day, that every American owns all America? |
3252 | Did n''t one of my teachers split a Gunter''s scale into three pieces over the palm of my hand? |
3252 | Did n''t somebody say he was very handsome? |
3252 | Did n''t you ever think she would have to give in to Murray Bradshaw at last? |
3252 | Did n''t you have to finish it, Deacon, after you had once begun?" |
3252 | Did not C. buy nuts and gingerbread, when a boy, with the money he stole? |
3252 | Did not my own consciousness migrate, or seem, at least, to transfer itself into this brilliant life history, as I traced its glowing record? |
3252 | Did not worthy Mr. Higginson say that a breath of New England''s air is better than a sup of Old England''s ale? |
3252 | Did she go only to get out of his, her cousin''s, reach? |
3252 | Did she not remember the difference of their position? |
3252 | Did the tenants of the fatal ledge recognize some mysterious affinity which made them tributary to the cold glitter of her diamond eyes? |
3252 | Did they ever die? |
3252 | Did they not follow her in her movements, as she turned her tread this or that way? |
3252 | Did we talk of graveyards and epitaphs? |
3252 | Did y''ever look at those eyes of his, M''randy? |
3252 | Did y''ever mind that cut over his left eyebrow?" |
3252 | Did y''ever watch her at meetin''playing with posies and looking round all the time of the long prayer? |
3252 | Did you ever happen to see that most soft- spoken and velvet- handed steam- engine at the Mint? |
3252 | Did you ever hear Olive play''Songs without Words''? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of a man''s growing lean by the reading of"Romeo and Juliet,"or blowing his brains out because Desdemona was maligned? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of a poet who did not talk about them? |
3252 | Did you ever hear of the Capsulae, Suprarenales? |
3252 | Did you ever read old Daddy Gilpin? |
3252 | Did you ever read the oldest of medical documents,--the Oath of Hippocrates?" |
3252 | Did you ever see a bear- trap? |
3252 | Did you ever see a case of catalepsy? |
3252 | Did you ever see an oyster opened? |
3252 | Did you ever see her before?" |
3252 | Did you ever see one of those Japanese figures with the points for acupuncture marked upon it? |
3252 | Did you ever think of that? |
3252 | Did you ever watch a baby''s fingers? |
3252 | Did you get them together by accident or according to some preconceived plan? |
3252 | Did you happen to remember that though he does not allow that he is deaf, he will not deny that he does not hear quite so well as he used to? |
3252 | Did you pull me out of the water?" |
3252 | Did you think I did n''t know anything about the human body?" |
3252 | Didst thou not mark that he stayed his roaring when I did press hard over the lesser bowels? |
3252 | Do I see her afar in the distance? |
3252 | Do I understand that you are an author?" |
3252 | Do all the women have bad noses and bad mouths? |
3252 | Do n''t keep that boy waiting,--how do we know what messages he has got to carry? |
3252 | Do n''t spiders have their mates as well as other folks? |
3252 | Do n''t they say that Theophrastus lived to his hundred and seventh year, and did n''t he complain of the shortness of life? |
3252 | Do n''t you ever feel a longing to send your thoughts forth in verse, Cyprian?" |
3252 | Do n''t you hate me, dying as I am?" |
3252 | Do n''t you know how hard it is for some people to get out of a room after their visit is really over? |
3252 | Do n''t you know that he''ll have you and all of us in his paper? |
3252 | Do n''t you know that nothing is safe where one of those fellows gets in with his note- book and pencil? |
3252 | Do n''t you perceive the sonorousness of these old dead Latin phrases? |
3252 | Do n''t you remember the quiet brown colt ASTEROID, with the star in his forehead? |
3252 | Do n''t you see how small Conscientiousness is? |
3252 | Do n''t you see that a student in his library is a caddice- worm in his case? |
3252 | Do n''t you see that all this is just as true of a poem? |
3252 | Do n''t you see why? |
3252 | Do n''t you see why? |
3252 | Do n''t you think I shall ever learn to know what is nice from what is n''t? |
3252 | Do n''t you think he would find another to make him happy? |
3252 | Do n''t you think it will be safer-- for the women- folks-- jest to wait till mornin'', afore you put that j''int into the socket?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think the''inspiration of the Almighty''gave Newton and Cuvier''understanding''?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think they would like to hear it?" |
3252 | Do n''t you think you and I should be apt to do just so, if we were in the critical line? |
3252 | Do n''t you think you can say which is the dark- meat and which is the white- meat poet? |
3252 | Do n''t you think, on the whole, you have pretty good reason to trust me? |
3252 | Do n''t you want some more items of village news? |
3252 | Do n''t you want to wait here, jest a little while, till I come back? |
3252 | Do n''t your clients call you their lawyer? |
3252 | Do not these muscles of mine represent a hundred loaves of bread? |
3252 | Do not you all wonder and admire to see and behold and hear? |
3252 | Do these young folks suppose that all vanity dies out of the natures of old men and old women? |
3252 | Do they not name their children after you very frequently? |
3252 | Do they really think those little thin legs can do anything in such a slashing sweepstakes as is coming off in these next forty years? |
3252 | Do they see what this amounts to? |
3252 | Do we not use more emphatic words than these in our self- depreciation? |
3252 | Do we understand the intricate machinery of the Universe? |
3252 | Do you care to know about the Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, that shall be King hereafter of Mexico( if L. N. has his way)? |
3252 | Do you come with any authority to make inquiries?" |
3252 | Do you cry at those great musical smashes? |
3252 | Do you eat a cheese before you buy it?" |
3252 | Do you feel the rocks tremble as my huge billows crash against them? |
3252 | Do you find it an easy and pleasant exercise to make rhymes?" |
3252 | Do you find yourself disposed to take a special interest in Elsie,--to fall in love with her, in a word? |
3252 | Do you forget Helen, and the fair women who made mischief and set nations by the ears before Helen was born? |
3252 | Do you forget the angels who lost heaven for the daughters of men? |
3252 | Do you go armed?" |
3252 | Do you know a good article of brown sagas when you see it?" |
3252 | Do you know anything about him, Bathsheba? |
3252 | Do you know anything particular about him?" |
3252 | Do you know how Art brings all ages together? |
3252 | Do you know how important good jockeying is to authors? |
3252 | Do you know how people hate to have their names misspelled? |
3252 | Do you know that I met him this morning, and had a good look at him, full in the face?" |
3252 | Do you know that every man has a religious belief peculiar to himself? |
3252 | Do you know that you feel a little superior to every man who makes you laugh, whether by making faces or verses? |
3252 | Do you know the charm of melancholy? |
3252 | Do you know two native trees called pitch pine and white pine respectively? |
3252 | Do you know what his name is? |
3252 | Do you know what it all means?" |
3252 | Do you know what to do about it? |
3252 | Do you know what would have happened if that liquid had been clouded, and we had found life in the sealed flask? |
3252 | Do you know, I believe I could solve the riddle of the''Arrowhead Village Sphinx,''as the paper called him, if he would only stay here long enough?" |
3252 | Do you know, I can make her laugh and cry, reading my poor stories? |
3252 | Do you know, my dear, I think there is a blank at the Sheriff''s office, with a place for his name in it?" |
3252 | Do you know, too, that the majority of men look upon all who challenge their attention,--for a while, at least,--as beggars, and nuisances? |
3252 | Do you mean to say that the upper Me, the Me of the true thinking- marrow, the convolutions of the brain, does not know better? |
3252 | Do you not find in persons whom you love, whom you esteem, and even admire, some marks of obliquity in mental vision? |
3252 | Do you not remember soliloquies something like this? |
3252 | Do you not think there may be a crime which is not a sin? |
3252 | Do you notice how, while everything else has gone to smash, that wheel remains sound and fit for service? |
3252 | Do you really want to know"whether oatmeal is preferable to pie as an American national food"? |
3252 | Do you recognize the fact that we are living in a new time? |
3252 | Do you remember about that woman in Scriptur''out of whom the Lord cast seven devils? |
3252 | Do you remember how the angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph and told him to flee into Egypt? |
3252 | Do you remember that chap the sheriff come and took away when we kep''tahvern? |
3252 | Do you remember what I used to say in my lectures?--or were you asleep just then, or cutting your initials on the rail? |
3252 | Do you say that old age is unfeeling? |
3252 | Do you see any cloudiness in it? |
3252 | Do you see equally well with both eyes, and hear equally well with both ears? |
3252 | Do you see my foaming lips? |
3252 | Do you see that Hedericus? |
3252 | Do you suppose he does n''t enjoy the quiet of that resting- place? |
3252 | Do you suppose if there is anything in the evil eye it would go through glass? |
3252 | Do you suppose our dear didascalos over there ever read Poli Synopsis, or consulted Castelli Lexicon, while he was growing up to their stature? |
3252 | Do you suppose she left that poison to rankle in the tender soul of her darling? |
3252 | Do you suppose that I shall cease to follow the love( or the loves; which do you think is the true word, the singular or the plural?) |
3252 | Do you take any idea from it? |
3252 | Do you think I do n''t understand what my friend, the Professor, long ago called THE HYDROSTATIC PARADOX OF CONTROVERSY? |
3252 | Do you think I was necessarily a greater fool and coward than another? |
3252 | Do you think blue eye- glasses would be better than common ones? |
3252 | Do you think he would be willing to let this friend of mine share in the privileges of spiritual intercourse which you enjoy?" |
3252 | Do you think it really the larva of meloe? |
3252 | Do you think it would be wrong in me to do it? |
3252 | Do you think men of true genius are apt to indulge in the use of inebriating fluids? |
3252 | Do you think she did not see the ridiculous element in a silly speech, or the absurdity of an outrageously extravagant assertion? |
3252 | Do you think she has any special fancy for anybody else in the school besides Miss Darley?" |
3252 | Do you think so? |
3252 | Do you think there is anything so very odd about this idea? |
3252 | Do you think you can make your heroes and heroines,--nay, even your scrappy supernumeraries,--out of refuse material, as you made your scarecrow? |
3252 | Do you want me to describe more branches of the sciatic and crural nerves? |
3252 | Do you want to know what I think he is? |
3252 | Do you want to know why that name is given to the men who do most for the world''s progress? |
3252 | Do you want to make him kill me? |
3252 | Do you wonder that my thoughts took the poetical form, in the contemplation of these changes and their melancholy consequences? |
3252 | Do? |
3252 | Does God hate me so?" |
3252 | Does Hahnemann himself represent Homoeopathy as it now exists? |
3252 | Does He behold with smile serene The shows of that unending scene, Where sleepless, hopeless anguish lies, And, ever dying, never dies? |
3252 | Does a license to preach transform a man into a higher order of beings and endow him with a natural quality to govern? |
3252 | Does all this seem strange and incredible to the reader of my manuscript? |
3252 | Does he become unconscious, too? |
3252 | Does he hope to secure a hearing from those who have come into the reading world since his coevals? |
3252 | Does he really believe that everybody remembers all of his, writer''s, words he may happen to have read? |
3252 | Does he suppose we want to be known and talked about in public as"Teacups"? |
3252 | Does he write and publish for those of his own time of life? |
3252 | Does it please their thin ghosts thus to be dragged to the light of day? |
3252 | Does n''t Cyprian want some more every- day kind of girl to keep him straight? |
3252 | Does n''t Elsie look savage? |
3252 | Does n''t Sydney Smith say that a public man in England never gets over a false quantity uttered in early life? |
3252 | Does n''t he look handsome, though?" |
3252 | Does n''t it seem as if there was a kind of Injin look to''em? |
3252 | Does n''t it seem as if there was a vein of satire as well as of fun that ran through the solemn manifestations of creative wisdom? |
3252 | Does n''t she carry a lump of opium in her pocket? |
3252 | Does n''t your baker, does n''t your butcher, speak of the families he supplies as his families?" |
3252 | Does not Mr. Bryant say, that Truth gets well if she is run over by a locomotive, while Error dies of lockjaw if she scratches her finger? |
3252 | Does not Myrtle look more in her place by the side of Murray Bradshaw than she would with Gifted hitched on her arm?" |
3252 | Does not a single star seem very lonely to you up there? |
3252 | Does not her face recall to you one that you remember, as never before?" |
3252 | Does not your heart throb, in the presence of budding or blooming womanhood, sometimes as if it"were ready to crack"with its own excess of strain? |
3252 | Does she ever listen about to hear what people are saying?" |
3252 | Does she remind you of him?" |
3252 | Does she tell you all her plans and projects?" |
3252 | Does the Bunker- Hill Monument bend in the blast like a blade of grass? |
3252 | Does the bird know why its feathers grow more brilliant and its voice becomes musical in the pairing season? |
3252 | Does the ocean share your grief? |
3252 | Does the river listen to your sighs? |
3252 | Does the simpleton really think that everybody has read all he has written? |
3252 | Does this girl like to have her own way pretty well, like the rest of the family?" |
3252 | Does this sound wild and extravagant? |
3252 | Doubt it, do you? |
3252 | Down at the Island, deer- shooting.--How many did I bag? |
3252 | Down flat,--five,--six,--how many? |
3252 | Dr. Kittredge, is there any ketchin''complaint goin''about in the village?" |
3252 | Dropped? |
3252 | Earn his money, hey, Master Gridley?" |
3252 | Endless doubt and unrest here below; wondering, admiring, adoring certainty above.--Am I not right? |
3252 | Errors excepted.--Did I hear some gentleman say,"Doubted?" |
3252 | Est- elle bien gentille, cette petite? |
3252 | Euthymia said,"or has some one been putting the idea into your head?" |
3252 | Everything else being equal, which is best for an American to marry, an American or an English girl? |
3252 | Everything right? |
3252 | Festive,--hey? |
3252 | Fish''s way of reproducing the expression without the insinuation which called it forth is a practical misstatement which does Mr. Motley great wrong? |
3252 | Folks had read letters laid ag''in''the pits o''their stomachs,''n''why should n''t they see out o''the backs o''their heads? |
3252 | For art thou not the Palladium of our Troy? |
3252 | For talking at its best being an inspiration, it wants a corresponding divine quality of receptiveness; and where will you find this but in woman? |
3252 | For what do we understand by that word? |
3252 | From what cliff was it broken? |
3252 | Genius has given you the freedom of the universe, why then come within any walls? |
3252 | Gifted Hopkins? |
3252 | Got his witch grandmother mummied in it? |
3252 | Great on Paul''s Epistles,--don''t you think so?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Gridley?" |
3252 | Habet?] |
3252 | Had I ever perused McFingal? |
3252 | Had a message for him,--could she see him in his study? |
3252 | Had any young fellow been on the train within a day or two, who had attracted his notice? |
3252 | Had he not discovered a, new tabanus? |
3252 | Had he sense and spirit enough to deal with such people? |
3252 | Had not he as good right to ask questions as Abraham? |
3252 | Had she never worn that painted robe before? |
3252 | Had she some such love- token on her neck as the old Don''s revolver had left on his? |
3252 | Had she, after all, some human tenderness in her heart? |
3252 | Haow''s your haalth?" |
3252 | Has Mr. Bradshaw been following after her lately? |
3252 | Has Mr. William Murray Bradshaw ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping?" |
3252 | Has anybody a brandy flask about him?" |
3252 | Has anybody counted the spoons? |
3252 | Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of men? |
3252 | Has n''t he got any sisters or nieces or anybody to see to his things, if he should be took away? |
3252 | Has nobody got thirteen cents? |
3252 | Has not a man a right to ask this question in the here or in the hereafter,--in this world or in any world in which he may find himself? |
3252 | Has she not exhausted this lean soil of the elements her growing nature requires? |
3252 | Has the young Doctor''s crown yet received the seal which is Nature''s warrant of wisdom and proof of professional competency? |
3252 | Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys? |
3252 | Has your aunt Silence promised to bear your expenses while you are in the city? |
3252 | Has"Stultus"forgiven the indignity of being thus characterized? |
3252 | Have n''t I found the true story of this strange visitor? |
3252 | Have n''t I guessed right, now, tell me, my dear?" |
3252 | Have n''t I solved the riddle of the Sphinx? |
3252 | Have n''t any of you seen the wonderful fat man exhibitin''down in Hanover Street? |
3252 | Have they any of those uneasy people called reformers?" |
3252 | Have they fired cannon? |
3252 | Have they looked in the woods everywhere? |
3252 | Have you a grief that gnaws at your heart- strings? |
3252 | Have you any commands for the city?" |
3252 | Have you any personal experience as to the power of fascination said to be exercised by certain animals? |
3252 | Have you ever heard the Lady-- the one that I sit next to at the table-- say anything about me? |
3252 | Have you ever met with any cases which admitted of a solution like that which I have mentioned? |
3252 | Have you ever read Spenser''s Faery Queen?" |
3252 | Have you ever read the little book called"The Stars and the Earth?" |
3252 | Have you eyes to find the five Which five hundred did survive?" |
3252 | Have you got any handsome pictures in your house?" |
3252 | Have you read Sampson Reed''s"Growth of the Mind"? |
3252 | Have you seen how large it is? |
3252 | Have you seen them galloping about together? |
3252 | Have you the means to pay for your journey and your stay at a city hotel?" |
3252 | Hawthorne says in a letter to Longfellow,"Why do n''t you come over, being now a man of leisure and with nothing to keep you in America? |
3252 | Hazard? |
3252 | Hazard? |
3252 | He began, after an awkward pause,"You would not have me stay in a communion which I feel to be alien to the true church, would you?" |
3252 | He cut you dead, you say? |
3252 | He had been a widower long enough,"--nigh twenty year, wa''n''t it? |
3252 | He knows forty times as much about heaven as that Stoker man does, or ever''s like to,--why do n''t they run after him, I should like to know? |
3252 | He looked at it for a moment, and put his hands to his eyes as if moved.--I was thinking,--he said indistinctly----How? |
3252 | He made a figure, it is true, in Dryden''s great Ode, but what kind of a figure? |
3252 | He may perhaps be a widower before a great while.--Does he know that you are working those slippers for him?" |
3252 | He must live for this child''s sake, at any rate; and yet,--oh, yet, who could tell with what thoughts he looked upon her? |
3252 | He never looked so happy,--could anything fill his cup fuller? |
3252 | He said he was very glad to hear it, did he, when you told him that your beloved grandmother had just deceased? |
3252 | He saw she was in suffering, and said presently,"You have pain somewhere; where is it?" |
3252 | He took as his text,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" |
3252 | He was a serviceable kind of body on occasion, after all, was he not, hey, Mr. Byles Gridley? |
3252 | He was silent,--and sat looking at his handsome left hand with the red stone ring upon it.--Is he going to fall in love with Iris? |
3252 | He was under the effect of opiates,--why not( if his case was desperate, as it seemed to be considered) stop his sufferings with chloroform? |
3252 | Helen''s eyes glistened as she interrupted him,--"What do you mean? |
3252 | Her father, I believe, is sensible enough;--what sort of a woman was her mother, Doctor?--I suppose, of course, you remember all about her?" |
3252 | Here are the mills that grind food for its hunger, and"is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?" |
3252 | Here is another chance for you,--I said.--What do you want nicer than such a young lady as Iris? |
3252 | His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it;-- This little speck the British Isles? |
3252 | His tired old eyes glistened as he asked about them,--could it be that their little romance recalled some early vision of his own? |
3252 | Hope the Squire treated you hahnsomely,--liberal pecooniary compensation,--hey? |
3252 | Hope you do.-- Born there? |
3252 | Hoped his uncle was well, and his charming cousin,--was she as original as ever? |
3252 | Hopkins? |
3252 | Hopkins?" |
3252 | Hopkins?" |
3252 | How about the miserable Indians? |
3252 | How can I do what all these letters ask me to? |
3252 | How can he tell the exhaustion produced by his evacuants from the collapse belonging to the disease they were meant to remove? |
3252 | How can it be made grand and dignified enough to be equal to the office assigned it? |
3252 | How can one explain its significance to those whose musical faculties are in a rudimentary state of development, or who have never had them trained? |
3252 | How can one tell the story of the finish in cold- blooded preterites? |
3252 | How can we give it the distinction we demand for it? |
3252 | How can you cry when you do n''t know what it is all about? |
3252 | How can you expect anything interesting from such a human cocoon? |
3252 | How can you fail to see the resemblance? |
3252 | How can you tell that anything is poetry, I should like to know, if there is neither a regular line with just so many syllables, nor a rhyme? |
3252 | How could I ever judge Margaret fairly after such a crushing discovery of her superiority? |
3252 | How could I look at the Bodleian Library, or wander beneath its roof, without recalling the lines from"The Vanity of Human Wishes"? |
3252 | How could he ever come to fancy such a quadroon- looking thing as that, she should like to know? |
3252 | How could he help admiring Byron and falling into more or less unconscious imitation of his moods if not of his special affectations? |
3252 | How could he resist the dictate of humanity which called him to make his visits more frequent, that her intervals of rest might be more numerous? |
3252 | How could he resist the temptation? |
3252 | How could it be otherwise? |
3252 | How could it be otherwise?--Did you speak, Madam? |
3252 | How could one be otherwise?" |
3252 | How could the man in whose thought such a meteoric expression suddenly announced itself fail to recognize it as divine? |
3252 | How could they expire if they did n''t breathe? |
3252 | How could they have got on together? |
3252 | How d''ye do? |
3252 | How d''ye do? |
3252 | How d''ye know she has n''t fell into the river? |
3252 | How did Dr. Jackson gain the position which all conceded to him? |
3252 | How did they get their model of the pyramid? |
3252 | How did you get me into dry clothes so quick?" |
3252 | How do I know that I shall feel like opening it? |
3252 | How do I know that I shall have a chance to open it again? |
3252 | How do I know that anybody will want it to be opened a second time? |
3252 | How do we know that a rapid pulse is not a normal adjustment of nature to the condition it accompanies? |
3252 | How do you feel now you are awake?" |
3252 | How do you know that he will not send it to one of the gossiping journals like the''Household Inquisitor''? |
3252 | How do you know that posterity may not resuscitate these seemingly dead poems, and give their author the immortality for which he longed and labored? |
3252 | How do you know that this stranger will not show your letter to anybody or everybody? |
3252 | How do you know there''s anything to find? |
3252 | How do you suppose this change was brought about? |
3252 | How does Dr. Meigs know that the patients he bled in puerperal fever would not have all got well if he had not bled them? |
3252 | How does a footpath across a field establish itself? |
3252 | How does your knowledge stand to- day? |
3252 | How far did that atmosphere extend, and through what channel did it act? |
3252 | How have I managed to keep so long out of the idiot asylum? |
3252 | How have you been since our correspondence on Fascination and other curious scientific questions?" |
3252 | How is a physician to distinguish the irritation produced by his blister from that caused by the inflammation it was meant to cure? |
3252 | How is it possible that I can keep up my freedom of intercourse with you all if you insist on bellowing my"asides"through a speaking- trumpet? |
3252 | How long is Mr. William Murray Bradshaw like to be away?" |
3252 | How long will school- keeping take to kill you? |
3252 | How long would it have taken small doses of calomel and rhubarb to save as many children? |
3252 | How many more generations will pass before Milton''s alarming prophecy will find itself realized in the belief of civilized mankind?" |
3252 | How many of us ever read or ever will read Drayton''s"Poly- Olbion?" |
3252 | How many of you who are before me are familiarly acquainted with the name of Broussais, or even with that of Andral? |
3252 | How many would find it out if one should say over in the same words that which he said in the last decade? |
3252 | How much do you weigh?" |
3252 | How much dress and how much light can a woman bear? |
3252 | How much nearer have we come to the secret of force than Lully and Geber and the whole crew of juggling alchemists? |
3252 | How much snow could you melt in an hour, if you were planted in a hogshead of it? |
3252 | How often is he mentioned except as a warning? |
3252 | How old was Floyer when he died, Fordyce? |
3252 | How old was I, The Dictator, once known by another equally audacious title,--I, the recipient of all these favors and honors? |
3252 | How pleasant do you think it is to have an arm offered to you when you are walking on a level surface, where there is no chance to trip? |
3252 | How safe would anybody feel to live with her? |
3252 | How shall I describe the conflicts of those dreamy, bewildering, dreadful years? |
3252 | How shall we characterize the doctrine of endless torture as the destiny of most of those who have lived, and are living, on this planet? |
3252 | How should he ever live through the long months of November and December? |
3252 | How should she forget it? |
3252 | How was it likely she would look on such an extraordinary proposition? |
3252 | How would you like being called up to ride ten miles in a midnight snow- storm, just when one of your raging headaches was racking you?" |
3252 | How''s the Deacon, Miss Withers?" |
3252 | How''s your folks?" |
3252 | How''s your haalth, Colonel Sprowle?" |
3252 | How, then, did nitrate of silver come to be given for epilepsy? |
3252 | How, then, is he to blame mankind for inheriting"sinfulness"from their first parents? |
3252 | Hullo, You- sir, joo know th''wuz gon- to be a race to- morrah? |
3252 | Hush,--said I,--what will the divinity- student say? |
3252 | I am fair to the poets,--don''t you agree that I am? |
3252 | I am in the power of a dreadful man--""You mean Mr. William Murray Bradshaw?" |
3252 | I appropriated it to my own use; what can one do better than this, when one has a friend that tells him anything worth remembering? |
3252 | I asked the first of those two old New- Yorkers the following question:"Who, on the whole, seemed to you the most considerable person you ever met?" |
3252 | I began abruptly:--Do you know that you are a rich young person? |
3252 | I brought home one buck shot.--The Island is where? |
3252 | I did not say that you and I do n''t know, but how many people do know anything about it? |
3252 | I do n''t believe you have exercised enough;--don''t you think it''s confinement in the school has made you nervous?" |
3252 | I do n''t know what there is about Elsie''s,--but do you know, my dear, I find myself curiously influenced by them? |
3252 | I do n''t think anything of such objects, you know; but what should he have it in his chamber for? |
3252 | I do n''t want to speak too slightingly of these verbal critics;--how can I, who am so fond of talking about errors and vulgarisms of speech? |
3252 | I from my clinging babe was rudely torn; His tender lips a loveless bosom pressed Can I forget him in my life new born? |
3252 | I hear that a newspaper correspondent has visited him so as to make a report to his paper,--do you know what he found out?" |
3252 | I heard him distinctly whispering to the young fellow who brought him to dinner, SHALL I TELL IT? |
3252 | I hope he will carry that faculty of an honest laugh with him wherever he goes,--why should n''t he? |
3252 | I hope you are invited to Miss Eveleth''s to- morrow evening?" |
3252 | I know my danger,--does not Lord Byron say,"I have even been accused of writing puffs for Warren''s blacking"? |
3252 | I never saw or heard of anything like it, in prose at least;--do you remember much of Coleridge''s Poems, Doctor?" |
3252 | I no like his looks these las''days.--Is that a very pooty gen''l''m''n up at the schoolhouse, Doctor?" |
3252 | I reasoned with myself: Why should I not have outgrown that idle apprehension which had been the nightmare of my earlier years? |
3252 | I recollect his regretting the splendid guardsmen of the old Empire,--for what? |
3252 | I said nothing, but looked the question, What are you laughing at? |
3252 | I said to myself, Why should not I overcome this dread of woman as Peter the Great fought down his dread of wheels rolling over a bridge? |
3252 | I said,''Did you begin, Dear Queen?'' |
3252 | I say,"Boys, who was this man Shakespeare, people talk so much about?" |
3252 | I should like to know if all story- tellers do not do this? |
3252 | I suppose all of you have had the pocket- book fever when you were little?--What do I mean? |
3252 | I suppose you do a little of what we teachers used to call"cramming"now and then? |
3252 | I suppose you do n''t care about going, Elsie?" |
3252 | I suppose you will have some fine horses, and who would n''t be glad to? |
3252 | I was there, of course? |
3252 | I wonder if anybody will be curious enough to look further along to find out what it was before she reads the next paragraph? |
3252 | I wonder if she remembers how very lovely and agreeable she was? |
3252 | I wonder if you ever thought of the single mark of supremacy which distinguishes this tree from all our other forest- trees? |
3252 | IV What is a country village without its mysterious personage? |
3252 | If I like Broadway better than Washington Street, what then? |
3252 | If I were Florence Smythe, I''d try it, and begin now,--eh, Clara?" |
3252 | If a man picks your pocket, do you not consider him thereby disqualified to pronounce any authoritative opinion on matters of ethics? |
3252 | If a person who is born with it looks at you, you die, or something happens-- awful-- is n''t it? |
3252 | If all she did was hateful to God, what was the meaning of the approving or else the disapproving conscience, when she had done"right"or"wrong"? |
3252 | If any of you really believe in a working Utopia, why not join the Shakers, and convert the world to this mode of life? |
3252 | If any, born of kindlier blood, Should ask, What maiden lies below? |
3252 | If he has not seen so much of women, where could he study all that is best in womanhood as he can in his own wife? |
3252 | If he is not authority on the subject of his own doctrines, who is? |
3252 | If he writes the same word twice in succession, by accident, he always erases the one that stands second; has not the first- comer the prior right? |
3252 | If my little sister comes to Boston next June, will you let me bring her to see you? |
3252 | If neither of those days should suit you, could you kindly suggest another day? |
3252 | If so, when does he come to his consciousness? |
3252 | If that ai n''t what y''mean, what do y''mean? |
3252 | If the girl had only inherited that property-- whew? |
3252 | If the magnolia can bloom in northern New England, why should not a poet or a painter come to his full growth here just as well? |
3252 | If the men were so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them? |
3252 | If the son of that boy''s father could not be trusted, what boy in Christendom could? |
3252 | If this is to be a child, what is it to be a woman? |
3252 | If we ca n''t understand them, because we have n''t taken a medical degree, what the Father of Lies do they ask us to sign them for? |
3252 | If we could make a peace without dishonor, could we make one that would be safe and lasting? |
3252 | If we understand them, why ca n''t we discuss them? |
3252 | If what my Rabbi tells me is the truth, Why did the choir of angels sing for joy? |
3252 | If you have really got more brains in Boston than other folks, as you seem to think, who hates you for it, except a pack of scribbling fools? |
3252 | If your ship springs a leak, what would you do? |
3252 | In love, Philip? |
3252 | In one of these, after looking round as usual, I asked aloud,"Any Massachusetts men here?" |
3252 | In that case, where would he, Dick, be? |
3252 | Inspector general?" |
3252 | Interpellandi locus hic erat; Est tibi mater? |
3252 | Is a young man in the habit of writing verses? |
3252 | Is anybody trying it softly? |
3252 | Is he in the house now?" |
3252 | Is he known to have changed his opinion as to the approaching disastrous event? |
3252 | Is he not a POET that painted us? |
3252 | Is it frut- cake? |
3252 | Is it good policy for mankind to subject themselves to such degrading vassalage and abject submission? |
3252 | Is it impossible for an archangel to smile? |
3252 | Is it likely that some other attraction may come into disturb the existing relation? |
3252 | Is it not a relief that I am abstaining from description of what everybody has heard described? |
3252 | Is it not evident that Lord Clarendon suggested the idea which Mr. Motley repelled as implying an insidious mode of action? |
3252 | Is it not true that the young man of average ability will find it as much as he can do to fit himself for these simple duties? |
3252 | Is it nuts and oranges and apples? |
3252 | Is it possible that the books which have been for me what Morhof was for Dr. Johnson can look like that to the student of the year 1990? |
3252 | Is it possible the poor thing works with her needle, too? |
3252 | Is it so? |
3252 | Is it taking too great a liberty to ask how early you began to write in verse? |
3252 | Is it the God that walked in Eden''s grove In the cool hour to seek our guilty sire? |
3252 | Is it too late now? |
3252 | Is n''t he a fust- rate- lookin''watch- dog, an''a rig''ler rat- hound?" |
3252 | Is n''t her cologne- bottle replenished oftener than its legitimate use would require? |
3252 | Is n''t it a giant putting his tongue out? |
3252 | Is n''t it a pretty thought? |
3252 | Is n''t that a picture of the poet''s hungry and hurried feast at the banquet of life? |
3252 | Is n''t that high enough? |
3252 | Is n''t there an odd sort of fascination about her? |
3252 | Is n''t there any old whisper which will tarnish that wearisome aureole of saintly perfection? |
3252 | Is n''t this book enough to scare any of you? |
3252 | Is not a Creator bound to guard his children against the ruin which inherited ignorance might entail on them? |
3252 | Is not freethinker a term of reproach in England? |
3252 | Is not the inaudible, inward laughter of Emerson more refreshing than the explosions of our noisiest humorists? |
3252 | Is not this a manifest case of insanity, in the form known as melancholia? |
3252 | Is not this a pleasing programme? |
3252 | Is not this to make vain the gift of God? |
3252 | Is not this to turn back the hand on the dial?" |
3252 | Is such a phenomenon as a laugh never heard except in our little sinful corner of the universe? |
3252 | Is that a stem or a straw? |
3252 | Is that done?" |
3252 | Is that fellow making love to Myrtle?" |
3252 | Is the door fast? |
3252 | Is the sick man moved? |
3252 | Is there a world of blank despair, And dwells the Omnipresent there? |
3252 | Is there an inner apartment that I have not seen? |
3252 | Is there any book you would like to have out of my library? |
3252 | Is there any ketchin''fevers-- bilious, or nervous, or typus, or whatever you call''em-- now goin''round this village? |
3252 | Is there any story of crime, or anything else to spice a column or so, or even a few paragraphs, with? |
3252 | Is there any trick that love and their own fancies do not play them? |
3252 | Is there anything to countenance the stories, long and widely current, about the"evil eye"? |
3252 | Is there method in your consciousness? |
3252 | Is there no progress, then, but do we return to the same beliefs and practices which our forefathers wore out and threw away? |
3252 | Is there no such thing, then, as hydrophobia? |
3252 | Is there not danger in introducing discussions or allusions relating to matters of religion into common discourse? |
3252 | Is there not in this as great an exception to all the hitherto received laws of nature as in the miracle of the loaves and fishes? |
3252 | Is this prejudice not due largely to the religious instruction that is given by the church acid Sunday- school? |
3252 | Is this the condition of affairs between Number Five and the Tutor? |
3252 | Is this the desk at which you write? |
3252 | Is this the way that genius is welcomed to the world of letters?" |
3252 | Is this typical of the creative force on the two sides of the ocean, or not? |
3252 | Is venesection done with forever? |
3252 | Is virtue piecemeal? |
3252 | Is''t not like That devil- spider that devours her mate Scarce freed from her embraces?" |
3252 | It is an honorable term,--I replied.--But why Little Boston, in a place where most are Bostonians? |
3252 | It is so much less known to the public at large than many other resorts that we naturally ask, What brings this or that new visitor among us? |
3252 | It is true that my waters exhale and are renewed from one season to another; but are your features the same, absolutely the same, from year to year? |
3252 | It is,--said I.--But would you have the kindness to tell me if you know anything about this deformed person? |
3252 | It shows a little more distinctly than in the first photograph, does n''t it?'' |
3252 | It was n''t nice a bit, was it? |
3252 | It was, Do you, Miss So and So, take this GENTLEMAN? |
3252 | It wo n''t be my fault if one visit is not enough.--You do n''t suppose Myrtle is in love with this fellow?" |
3252 | It would be a very interesting question, what was the intellectual character of those persons most conspicuous in behalf of the Perkinistic delusion? |
3252 | It''s the young Missis, Doctor,--it''s our Elsie,--it''s the baby, as we use''t''call her,--don''you remember, Doctor? |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker and his young proselyte, Miss Myrtle Hazard?" |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker has called upon you, Susan Posey, has he? |
3252 | Joseph Bellamy Stoker?" |
3252 | Just clear up these two children for me, will you, my dear? |
3252 | K.?" |
3252 | Ketched ye''ith a slippernoose, hey? |
3252 | Kindness? |
3252 | Kirkwood?" |
3252 | Kitty departed, communing with herself in this wise:--"Ockipied, is it? |
3252 | Know old Cambridge? |
3252 | Langdon?" |
3252 | Leduc? |
3252 | Leduc? |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Lindsay?" |
3252 | Listen to him; he is reading aloud in impassioned tones: And have I coined my soul in words for naught? |
3252 | Listen to poor old Barzillai, and hear him piping:"I am this day fourscore years old; and can I discern between good and evil? |
3252 | Liver- complaint one of''em? |
3252 | Liver- tissue brings sugar out of the blood, or out of its own substance;--why? |
3252 | Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you, Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations? |
3252 | Look here,--you young philosopher over there,--do you like candy? |
3252 | Look!--said he,--is it clear or cloudy? |
3252 | Looks bright; anything in her?" |
3252 | Lord, what are we, and what are our children, but a Generation of Vipers?" |
3252 | MADNESS? |
3252 | MR. BRADSHAW CALLS ON MISS BADLAM"Is Miss Hazard in, Kitty?" |
3252 | Mahser Maurice asleep an''all this racket going on? |
3252 | May I ask why you do not try the experiment yourself? |
3252 | May I take the liberty to ask your-- profession?" |
3252 | May I venture to contrast youth and experience in medical practice, something in the way the man painted the lion, that is, the lion under? |
3252 | May not the serpent have bitten Eve before the birth of Cain, her first- born? |
3252 | May we not hope for your presence at the meeting, which is to take place next Wednesday evening? |
3252 | Mr. Bernard heard the answer, but presently stared about and asked again,"Who''s hurt? |
3252 | Mr. Bradshaw asked, in a rather excited way,"Is it possible, Miss Withers, that your niece has quitted you to go to a city school?" |
3252 | Mr. Gridley, is that you? |
3252 | Mr. Langdon, has anything happened to you?" |
3252 | Mr. Peckham, would you be so polite as to pass me a glass of srub?" |
3252 | Mr. Stoker''s sermon had touched her hard heart? |
3252 | Mr. Stoker; and when the women run after a minister or a doctor, what do the men signify? |
3252 | Mulier, Latin for woman; why apply that name to one of the gentle but occasionally obstinate sex? |
3252 | My beauty have anything ugly? |
3252 | My reader might be a little puzzled when he read that Number Five did or said such or such a thing, and ask,"Whom do you mean by that title? |
3252 | Myrtle ought, according to the common rules of conversation, to have asked, What other? |
3252 | Myrtle turned to Master Byles Gridley, and said,"You have been my friend and protector so far, will you continue to be so hereafter?" |
3252 | Nay, what was that which obscured its outline, in shape like a human figure? |
3252 | Never heard of her? |
3252 | Never? |
3252 | Never? |
3252 | Ninety- odd, was n''t it? |
3252 | No leading hotel kept by any Hazard, was there? |
3252 | No newspaper of note edited by anybody called Hazard, was there? |
3252 | No second self to say her evening prayer for? |
3252 | No sleep since twelve o''clock last night, you say?" |
3252 | Nobody sick up at the school, I hope?" |
3252 | Noisy little good- for- nothing tike,--ain''t you, Fret?" |
3252 | None of the boats missing? |
3252 | Nothing going wrong up at our ancient mansion, The Poplars, I trust?" |
3252 | Nothing? |
3252 | Now what have we come to in our own day? |
3252 | Now, said the Professor, you do n''t mean to tell me that I have got to that yet? |
3252 | Now, what did I expect when I began these papers, and what is it that has begun to frighten me? |
3252 | Of course the Algonquin kept gaining, but could it possibly gain enough? |
3252 | Of course the Professor acquires his information solely through his cranial inspections and manipulations.--What are you laughing at? |
3252 | Of what use is he going to be in my record of what I have seen and heard at the breakfast- table? |
3252 | Of what use was it to offer books like the"Saint''s Rest"to a child whose idea of happiness was in perpetual activity? |
3252 | Of what use were they to me without general indexes? |
3252 | Oh, you never read his Naufragium, or"Shipwreck,"did you? |
3252 | Old Sophy would say,--"don''you hear th''crackin''''n''th''snappin''up in Th''Mountain,''n''th''rollin''o''th''big stones? |
3252 | Old fellow?--said I,--whom do you mean? |
3252 | On what beach rolled by the waves of what ocean? |
3252 | One was tempted to ask:"What forlorn hope have you led? |
3252 | Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the status bred in Crosses flint- solution? |
3252 | Or did these girls lay their heads together, and send the poem we had at our last sitting to puzzle the company? |
3252 | Or did----write the novels and send them to London, as I fancied when I read them? |
3252 | Or have you forgotten one who will never cease to remember that she was once your own Susan?" |
3252 | Or is he a mythus,--ancient word for"humbug,"--Such as Livy told about the wolf that wet- nursed Romulus and Remus? |
3252 | Or is it a passion? |
3252 | Or is it that the explosion would derange her costume? |
3252 | Or is one of the two Annexes the make believe lover? |
3252 | Or to that of which Addison and Steele formed the centre, and which gave us the Spectator? |
3252 | Or to that where Johnson, and Goldsmith, and Burke, and Reynolds, and Beauclerk, and Boswell, most admiring among all admirers, met together? |
3252 | Or was he one of those men who are always making blunders for other people to correct? |
3252 | Or, to mention one out of many questionable remedies, shall you give Veratrum Viride in fevers and inflammations? |
3252 | Others might have wealth and beauty, he thought to himself, but what were these to the gift of genius? |
3252 | Ought I not to regret having undertaken to report the doings and sayings of the members of the circle which you have known as The Teacups? |
3252 | Ought I not to tell him so? |
3252 | Peckham?" |
3252 | Penhallow?" |
3252 | Penhallow?" |
3252 | Perhaps I shall deliver the lecture in your city: you will come and hear it, and bring him, wo n''t you, dearest? |
3252 | Perhaps he does not receive six hundred letters every day, but if he gets anything like half that number daily, what can he do with them? |
3252 | Perhaps you have been there yourself?" |
3252 | Perhaps you would be good enough to tell me what it is you like about them? |
3252 | Philip, do you know the pathos there is in the eyes of unsought women, oppressed with the burden of an inner life unshared? |
3252 | Please tell me, who taught her to play with it? |
3252 | Possibilities, Sir?--said the divinity- student; ca n''t a man who says Haow? |
3252 | Pray, do you happen to remember Wordsworth''s"Boy of Windermere"? |
3252 | Pray, what part of Maryland did you come from, and how shall I call you? |
3252 | Pray, what set you to asking me this? |
3252 | Predestined, I venture my guess, to one or the other, but to which? |
3252 | Presently the young man asked his pupil:--Do you know what the constellation directly over our heads is? |
3252 | Presently,"Why, Bernard, my dear friend, my brother, it can not be that you are in danger? |
3252 | Presently,-- Do you,--Beloved, I am afraid you are not old enough,--but do you remember the days of the tin tinder- box, the flint, and steel? |
3252 | Professor Byles Gridley,--author of''Thoughts on the Universe''?" |
3252 | Professor come home this very blessed morning with a story of one of her old black women? |
3252 | Professor,--said he, one day,--don''t you think your brain will run dry before a year''s out, if you do n''t get the pump to help the cow? |
3252 | Professor.--Do you mean to say that you have known me so long as that? |
3252 | Professor.--What message do people generally send back when you first call on them? |
3252 | Professor.--Where? |
3252 | Published by the American Tract Society?" |
3252 | Put it well, did n''t she? |
3252 | Qu''est ce qu''il a fait? |
3252 | Query, a bump? |
3252 | Questioning all things: Why her Lord had sent her? |
3252 | Read, flattered, honored? |
3252 | Rest, and low diet for a day or two, and all will be right, wo n''t it?" |
3252 | Robinson?" |
3252 | Roe replied by asking, When charity was like a top? |
3252 | Say, does He hear the sufferer''s groan, And is that child of wrath his own? |
3252 | Says"Yes?" |
3252 | Self- determining he may be, if you will, but who determines the self which is the proximate source of the determination? |
3252 | Seventeen year ago,''n''her poor mother cryin''for her,--''Where is she? |
3252 | Sha''n''t I write him a letter this very day and tell him all? |
3252 | Shall I call on you this evening and tell you about them?" |
3252 | Shall I die forgiven? |
3252 | Shall I ever meet any one of them again, in these pages or in any other? |
3252 | Shall I go instead of you?" |
3252 | Shall I read you the poems referred to in the one you have just heard, sir?" |
3252 | Shall I say anything of Austria,--what can I say that would interest you? |
3252 | Shall I tell you some things the Professor said the other day? |
3252 | Shall I tell you what that experience was?" |
3252 | Shall a man who in his younger days has written poetry, or what passed for it, continue to attempt it in his later years? |
3252 | Shall mouldering page or fading scroll Outface the charter of the soul? |
3252 | Shall priesthood''s palsied arm protect The wrong our human hearts reject, And smite the lips whose shuddering cry Proclaims a cruel creed a lie? |
3252 | Shall the minister be given to understand that you will see him hereafter in her company?" |
3252 | Shall there be no more dew on those leaves thereafter? |
3252 | Shall they ever live again in the memory of those who loved them here below? |
3252 | Shall they give expression to this secondary mental state, or not? |
3252 | Shall we always be youthful and laughing and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away? |
3252 | Shall we not bid him come, and be Poet and Teacher of a most scattered flock wanting a shepherd? |
3252 | Shall we rank Emerson among the great poets or not? |
3252 | Shall we walk down the street together? |
3252 | She blushed as she thought of the comments that might be made; but what were such considerations in a matter of life and death? |
3252 | She certainly looks innocent enough; but what does a blush prove, and what does its absence prove, on one of these innocent faces? |
3252 | She does not seem to be a safe neighbor to very inflammable bodies?" |
3252 | She grew still paler, as she asked,"Is he dead?" |
3252 | She had been so lonely since he was away? |
3252 | She has a woman''s heart; and what talent of mine is to be named by the love a true woman can offer in exchange for these divided and cold affections? |
3252 | She is getting a strange influence over my fellow- teacher, a young lady,--you know Miss Helen Darley, perhaps? |
3252 | She is the best of friends, they say, but can she love anybody, as so many other women do, or seem to? |
3252 | She knows that as well as we do; and her first question after you have been talking your soul into her consciousness is, Did I please? |
3252 | She longed, and knew not wherefore Had the world nothing she might live to care for? |
3252 | She saw Mr. Gridley yesterday, I know; why wo n''t she see me to- day?" |
3252 | She told the whole story;-shall I repeat it? |
3252 | She was genteel enough for him, and-- let''s see, haow old was she? |
3252 | Shoot him? |
3252 | Should I send this poem to the publishers, or not? |
3252 | Should he challenge her lover? |
3252 | Should he fly? |
3252 | Should we lose many Kentuckians and Virginians who are now with us, if we boldly confiscated the slaves of all rebels? |
3252 | Should you expect him to turn out a Mozart or a Beethoven? |
3252 | Should you feel afraid to have him look at you? |
3252 | Should you like to hear them? |
3252 | Some explanation must take place between them, and how was it possible that it should be without emotion? |
3252 | Somebody must have''em,--why should n''t you? |
3252 | Somebody.--Who is it? |
3252 | Something like this, was n''t it? |
3252 | Something was hanging from it,--an old garment, was it? |
3252 | Sometimes a sunlit sphere comes rolling by, And then we softly whisper,--can it be? |
3252 | Speak I not truly, Master, that she will be well speedily?" |
3252 | Sprowle?" |
3252 | Such a simple thing? |
3252 | Sulphur, Mang.(?) |
3252 | Suppose I should try what I can do by visiting Miss Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | Suppose a minister were to undertake to express opinions on medical subjects, for instance, would you not think he was going beyond his province? |
3252 | Suppose he had never been trephined, when would his consciousness have returned? |
3252 | Suppose the blow is hard enough to spoil the brain and stop the play of the organs, what happens them? |
3252 | Suppose the youth were Maurice; what then? |
3252 | Suppose, for instance, I wanted to use the double star to illustrate anything, say the relation of two human souls to each other, what would I-- do? |
3252 | Supposing it came to the worst, what could be done then? |
3252 | Symbol? |
3252 | THERE ARE PATIENT SPIRITS THAT HAVE WAITED FROM ETERNITY, AND NEVER FOUND PARENTS FIT TO BE BORN OF.--How do you know anything about all that? |
3252 | Talk about your megatherium and your megalosaurus,--what are these to the bacterium and the vibrio? |
3252 | Tell him the whole truth, and send him a ticket of admission to the Institution for Idiots and Feeble- minded Youth? |
3252 | Tell me now, you are not in earnest, are you, but only trying a little sentiment on me?" |
3252 | Tell me, Mr. Bradshaw, who is there that I shall meet if I go? |
3252 | Tell me, Sophy, what do you think would happen, if he should chance to fall in love with Elsie, and she with him, and he should marry her?" |
3252 | Tell me, oh, tell me, what is it? |
3252 | That buried passions wake and pass In beaded drops of fiery dew? |
3252 | That fellow''s the Speaker,( 3)--the one on the right; Mr. Mayor,( 4) my young one, how are you to- night? |
3252 | That is all, is n''t it? |
3252 | That is the reason people become so attached to these servants with Southern sunlight in their natures? |
3252 | That sounds like the nineteenth century, but what shall we say to this? |
3252 | That was it.--But what had he been doing to get his head into such a state?--had he really committed an excess? |
3252 | That was it; what else could it be? |
3252 | That will do for the Houyhnhnm Gazette.--Do you ever wonder why poets talk so much about flowers? |
3252 | That would be picturesque and pleasant, now, would n''t it? |
3252 | That would be pleasant, would n''t it? |
3252 | The God who dealt with Abraham as the sons Of that old patriarch deal with other men? |
3252 | The Man of Letters(?). |
3252 | The Tutor and Number Five were both quiet, thoughtful: he, evidently captivated; she, what was the meaning of her manner to him? |
3252 | The Widow knew everybody, of course: who was there in Rockland she did not know? |
3252 | The Young Astronomer shook his head, smiling a little at the question.--Was there any meet''n''-houses? |
3252 | The ancient Romans had theirs, the English and the French have theirs as well,--why should not we Americans have ours? |
3252 | The beauties of my recollections-- where are they? |
3252 | The brazen head of Roger Bacon is mute; but is not"Planchette"uttering her responses in a hundred houses of this city? |
3252 | The breeze says to us in its own language, How d''ye do? |
3252 | The cheering smile, the voice of mirth And laughter''s gay surprise That please the children born of earth, Why deem that Heaven denies? |
3252 | The clouds are rich and dark, the air serene,_ So like the soul of me, what if''t were me_?" |
3252 | The compliment was not ungrateful, and the Colonel acknowledged it by smiling and saying,"I should think the''was a trifle? |
3252 | The cries, if possible, were still louder and more persistent; they must have a speech and they would have a speech, and what could I do about it? |
3252 | The earth shook at your nativity, did it? |
3252 | The editor, who sells it to the public-- By the way, the papers have been very civil have n''t they?--to the-- the what d''ye call it? |
3252 | The eye does not bring landscapes into the world on its retina,--why should the brain bring thoughts? |
3252 | The following is an exact transcript of the lines he showed me, and which I took down on the spot:"Are you in the vein for cider? |
3252 | The jealous God of Moses, one who feels An image as an insult, and is wroth With him who made it and his child unborn? |
3252 | The magic of her new talisman? |
3252 | The man a''n''t hurt,--don''t you see him stirring? |
3252 | The minute draws near,--but her watch may go wrong; My heart will be asking, What keeps her so long? |
3252 | The modern version would be,"How came you at Mrs. Billion''s ball not having a dress on your back which came from Paris?" |
3252 | The native female turns her nose up at the idea of"living out;"does she think herself so much superior to the women of other nationalities? |
3252 | The old gentleman opposite all at once asked me if I ever read anything better than Pope''s"Essay on Man"? |
3252 | The only"chaffing"I heard was the question from one of the galleries,"Did he come in the One- Hoss Shay?" |
3252 | The paper you burned was not the original,--it was a copy substituted for it--""And did the old man outwit me after all?" |
3252 | The poems he drops into the basket are those rejected as of no account""But does he not read the poems before he rejects them?" |
3252 | The question is distinctly proposed to us, Shall Slavery die, or the great Republic? |
3252 | The question is: Who manages her, and how can you get at that person or those persons? |
3252 | The sky grows dark,--Was that the roll of thunder? |
3252 | The translations excited me much, and who can estimate the value of a good thought? |
3252 | The trees look down from the hill- sides and ask each other, as they stand on tiptoe,--"What are these people about?" |
3252 | The village people have the strangest stories about her; you know what they call her?" |
3252 | The working of Master Byles Gridley''s emphatic warning? |
3252 | The"Rhodora,"another brief poem, finds itself foreshadowed in the inquiry,"What is Beauty?" |
3252 | Then he asked,"Were you dressed as you are now?" |
3252 | Then she whispered, almost inaudibly,--for her voice appeared to fail her,"What did her mother die of, Sophy?" |
3252 | Then she would let me see the inside of it? |
3252 | Theodore Parker, is it?" |
3252 | There are a good many other strange things about her: did you ever notice how she dresses?" |
3252 | There is another question which must force itself on the thoughts of many among you:"How am I to obtain patients and to keep their confidence?" |
3252 | There may be some among those whom I address who are disposed to ask the question, What course are we to follow in relation to this matter? |
3252 | There seemed to be remarks and questionings going on, which he supposed to be something like the following:-- Which is it? |
3252 | There was a book of hymns; it had her name in it, and looked as if it might have been often read;--what the diablo had Elsie to do with hymns? |
3252 | There''s no harm in that, is there? |
3252 | These two questions are like those famous household puzzles,--Where do the flies come from? |
3252 | They all urged upon Dudley Veneer to go with them: if there was danger, why should he remain to risk it, when he sent away the others? |
3252 | They did n''t mean to shoot Myrtle Hazard, did they? |
3252 | They go only by the bumps.--What do you keep laughing so for? |
3252 | They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--But stay Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day? |
3252 | They said the doctors would want my skeleton when I was dead.--You are my friend, if you are a doctor,--a''n''t you? |
3252 | They seemed to me to betray the richest invention, so rich as almost to say, why draw any line since you can draw all? |
3252 | They tell me there is something in my eyes that draws people to me and makes them faint: Look into them, will you?" |
3252 | They were perfectly fair game; what better use could I put them to? |
3252 | Think the lines you mention are by far the best I ever wrote, hey? |
3252 | This immaculate woman,--why could n''t she have a fault or two? |
3252 | This or That, take this LADY?! |
3252 | This, that is rhyming, must have been found out very early,"''Where are you, Adam?'' |
3252 | Thomas Scott, author of the Commentary?" |
3252 | Though I never owned a horse, have I not been the proprietor of six equine females, of which one was the prettiest little"Morgin"that ever stepped? |
3252 | Thought not mortal, or not thought mortal,--which was it? |
3252 | Thus, at a marriage ceremony, once, of two very excellent persons who had been at service, instead of, Do you take this man, etc.? |
3252 | Thus,"How''s your health?" |
3252 | Thy name is at least once more spoken by living men;--is it a pleasure to thee? |
3252 | To be sure, their scales differ, but have they not the same freezing and the same boiling point? |
3252 | To look through plate- glass windows, and pity the brown soldiers,--or sneer at the black ones? |
3252 | To put gilt bands on coachmen''s hats? |
3252 | To sweep the foul sidewalks with the heaviest silks which the toiling artisans of France can send us? |
3252 | To whom should she go in her vague misery? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young for love? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Too young? |
3252 | Transcendentalism has its occasional vagaries( what school has not? |
3252 | Trust my poems, some of which are unpublished, to the post- office? |
3252 | Turned off by the girl they say he means to marry by and by? |
3252 | V What am I but the creature Thou hast made? |
3252 | Vain? |
3252 | Venerable figure- heads, what would our platforms be without you? |
3252 | Very good, Sir,--he answered.--When have there been most people killed and wounded in the course of this century? |
3252 | Very well; but are they separated by running water? |
3252 | Wan''to hear another? |
3252 | Want my autograph, do you? |
3252 | Was Number Five forgetful, too? |
3252 | Was Parson Young''s own heart such a hideous spectacle to himself? |
3252 | Was he a sound observer, who had made other observations and predictions which had proved accurate? |
3252 | Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty? |
3252 | Was he going to kneel to her? |
3252 | Was he thinking of his relations with Carlyle? |
3252 | Was it a dread of blue sky and open air, of the smell of flowers, or some electrical impression to which he was unnaturally sensitive? |
3252 | Was it a fortnight, as we now reckon duration, or only a week? |
3252 | Was it a graduate who had felt the"icy dagger,"or only a candidate for graduation who was afraid of it? |
3252 | Was it grief at parting from the place where her strange friendship had grown up with the Little Gentleman? |
3252 | Was it not an intoxicating vision of gold and glory? |
3252 | Was it not, on the contrary, invariably, under all conditions, in all companies, by the whole household, spoken of as the baby? |
3252 | Was it possible that he was going to take a fancy to her? |
3252 | Was it possible that my Captain could be lying on the straw in one of these places? |
3252 | Was it possible, in any way, to exasperate her irritable nature against him, and in this way to render her more accessible to his own advances? |
3252 | Was it snowing I spoke of? |
3252 | Was it strange that I felt a momentary pang? |
3252 | Was it the feeling of sympathy, or was it the pride of superior sagacity, that changed the look of the old man''s wrinkled features? |
3252 | Was it the first time that these strings of wampum had ever rattled upon her neck and arms? |
3252 | Was it the light reflected from the glossy leaves of the poison sumach which overhung the path that made his cheek look so pale? |
3252 | Was it wicked in me to live?" |
3252 | Was n''t that a pretty neck to slip a hangman''s noose over? |
3252 | Was she indeed writing to this unknown gentleman? |
3252 | Was she not rather becoming more and more involved in the toils of this plotting Yankee? |
3252 | Was that a hundred years ago?--But you''ve got some new pictures and things, have n''t you? |
3252 | Was the Scarabee crushed, as so many of his namesakes are crushed, under the heel of this trampling omniscient? |
3252 | Was the illness dangerous? |
3252 | Was there any great harm in the fact that the Irvings and Paulding wrote in company? |
3252 | Was there any live creatures to be seen on the moon? |
3252 | Was there any strange, mysterious affinity between the master and the dark girl who sat by herself? |
3252 | Was there enough capital of humanity in his somewhat limited nature to furnish sympathy and unshrinking service for his friends in an emergency? |
3252 | Was there ever any such water as that which we used to draw from the deep, cold well, in"the old oaken bucket"? |
3252 | Was there ever anything in Italy, I should like to know, like a Boston sunset? |
3252 | Was there ever anything more miraculous, so far as our common observation goes, than the coming and the going of these creatures? |
3252 | Was there ever anything more stinging, more concentrated, more vigorous, more just? |
3252 | Was there ever anything wholesome that was not poison to somebody? |
3252 | Was there ever such innocence in a creature so full of life? |
3252 | Was there nothing but this forbidding house- front to make the place alive with some breathing memory? |
3252 | We are naturally led to the question, What is the nature of force? |
3252 | We do n''t visit Papa Job quite so early as this without some special cause,--do we, Miss Keren- Happuch?" |
3252 | We do not want his fragments to be made wholes,--if we did, what hand could be found equal to the task? |
3252 | We had fast horses,--did not"Old Blue"trot a mile in three minutes? |
3252 | We have grown rich for what? |
3252 | We have learned a great deal about the how, what have we learned about the why? |
3252 | Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But ALL must be of buhl? |
3252 | Well, did these two ladies dance as if it was hard work to them? |
3252 | Well, how can you mistake that insect for dried leaves? |
3252 | Well, how do you suppose your lower limbs are held to your body? |
3252 | Well, should n''t you like to see me put my foot into one? |
3252 | Well, what then? |
3252 | Well, you have noticed how quietly and rapidly the cars kept on, just as if the locomotive were drawing them? |
3252 | Were not these good and sufficient reasons for her decision? |
3252 | Were schoolboys ever half so wild? |
3252 | Were they anything but planetary foundlings? |
3252 | Were they really christened by that name, any of these numerous Franks? |
3252 | Were we melancholy? |
3252 | Were we not too young to know each other''s hearts when we promised each other that we would love as long as we lived? |
3252 | Whar''s the man gone th''t brought the critter?" |
3252 | What a picture? |
3252 | What about Elsie?" |
3252 | What am I? |
3252 | What are Olympiads and Consulates to these neighboring systems of being? |
3252 | What are all the strongest epithets of our dictionary to us now? |
3252 | What are men to do when they get to heaven, after having exhausted their vocabulary of admiration on earth? |
3252 | What are the names of ministers''sons which most readily occur to our memory as illustrating these advantages? |
3252 | What are the questions we should ask him? |
3252 | What are we to do with them,--we who teach that the soul of a child is an unstained white tablet?" |
3252 | What better provision can be made for a mortal man than such as our own Boston can afford its wealthy children? |
3252 | What business had I to be trying experiments on this forlorn old soul? |
3252 | What business had Sarmatia to be fighting for liberty with a fifteen- foot pole between her and the breasts of her enemies? |
3252 | What business had he to be laying his hand on your shoulder? |
3252 | What business has he to die, I should like to know? |
3252 | What business was it of his? |
3252 | What can I do with him? |
3252 | What can I say to that? |
3252 | What can I say to you of cis- Atlantic things? |
3252 | What can justify one in addressing himself to the general public as if it were his private correspondent? |
3252 | What can promise more than an Essay by Emerson on"Immortality"? |
3252 | What can you do with chrome or loam or gnome or tome? |
3252 | What can you expect of children that come from heathens and savages? |
3252 | What cares a witch for a hangman''s noose? |
3252 | What color are your carriage- horses?" |
3252 | What could I do? |
3252 | What could account so entirely for his ways and actions as that strange poisoning which produces the state they call Tarantism? |
3252 | What could be broad enough to cover the facts of the case? |
3252 | What could be more natural than that love should find its way among the young people who helped to make up the circle gathered around the table? |
3252 | What could have been in her head when she worked out such a fantasy? |
3252 | What could he do about it? |
3252 | What could life be to her but a perpetual anguish, and to those about her but an ever- present terror? |
3252 | What could she do? |
3252 | What could the Hebrew expect when a Christian preacher could use such language about a petition breathing the very soul of humanity? |
3252 | What did he hide that paper for, a year ago and more? |
3252 | What did he mean by saying that his dream had become a vision? |
3252 | What did he mean? |
3252 | What did it mean? |
3252 | What did our two Annexes say to this unexpected turn of events? |
3252 | What did she always wear a necklace for? |
3252 | What did she do? |
3252 | What did that mean? |
3252 | What did you hand me that schoolbook for? |
3252 | What dignifies a province like a university? |
3252 | What do I care, if Dick Venner die? |
3252 | What do I mean by graduates? |
3252 | What do I say to smoking? |
3252 | What do YOU think of these verses my friends?--Is that piece an impromptu? |
3252 | What do the dear old things look like?" |
3252 | What do they know or care about this last revelation of the omnipresent spirit of the material universe? |
3252 | What do those mean? |
3252 | What do we do with ailing vegetables? |
3252 | What do we know of the mysteries of Nature? |
3252 | What do you care for O''m? |
3252 | What do you do when you build a house on a damp soil, and there are damp soils pretty much everywhere? |
3252 | What do you mean by calling certain families yours?" |
3252 | What do you mean in particular? |
3252 | What do you read such things for, my dear? |
3252 | What do you say to my voice now? |
3252 | What do you say to that? |
3252 | What do you say to that? |
3252 | What do you say to this copy of Joannes de Ketam, Venice, 1522? |
3252 | What do you say to this line of Homer as a piece of poetical full- band music? |
3252 | What do you say to this? |
3252 | What do you stop for?" |
3252 | What do you suppose are the sentiments entertained by the Thompsons with a p towards those who address them in writing as Thomson? |
3252 | What do you suppose is an interviewer''s business? |
3252 | What do you think an admiring friend said the other day to one that was talking good things,--good enough to print? |
3252 | What do you think he employs himself about? |
3252 | What do you think it was? |
3252 | What do you think of the Tarantula business? |
3252 | What do you think was kept under that lock? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you think? |
3252 | What do you? |
3252 | What doctrines and practice were these colonists likely to bring, with them? |
3252 | What does Byles Gridley want of you, did you say?" |
3252 | What does Rome know of rat and lizard? |
3252 | What does all this sudden concentration upon the girl mean? |
3252 | What does he believe? |
3252 | What does it know about miracles? |
3252 | What does man do in a similar case of need? |
3252 | What does she come to this school for? |
3252 | What does the reader suppose was the source of the most ominous thought which forced itself upon my mind, as I walked the decks of the mighty vessel? |
3252 | What else can it be? |
3252 | What envoy will ever dare to speak with vigor if he is not sustained by the government at home? |
3252 | What feeling have I for you? |
3252 | What glorifies a town like a cathedral? |
3252 | What great discovery have you made? |
3252 | What had happened? |
3252 | What had he to do with your lioness? |
3252 | What harm doth it?" |
3252 | What has Emerson to tell us of"Inspiration?" |
3252 | What has been going on here lately, Deacon?" |
3252 | What has he done? |
3252 | What has his antipathy to do with his staying away? |
3252 | What have I got to say about temperance, the use of animal food, and so forth? |
3252 | What have I save the blessings Thou hast lent? |
3252 | What have they full- dressed you, or rather half- dressed you for, do you think? |
3252 | What have you done? |
3252 | What have you gained as a permanent possession? |
3252 | What have you got there, Jake?" |
3252 | What heathenism has ever approached the horrors of this conception of human destiny? |
3252 | What heroic task of any kind have you performed?" |
3252 | What hope I but Thy mercy and Thy love? |
3252 | What if I should content myself with a single report of what was said and done over our teacups? |
3252 | What if I should sometimes write to please myself? |
3252 | What if I should tell my last, my very recent experience with the other sex? |
3252 | What if Number Five should take off the"rose"that sprinkles her affections on so many, and pour them all on one? |
3252 | What if he is?" |
3252 | What if instead of throbbing it should falter, flutter, and stop as if never to beat again? |
3252 | What if nature has lent him a master key? |
3252 | What if one shall go round and dry up with soft napkins all the dew that falls of a June evening on the leaves of his garden? |
3252 | What if this were the trouble with Maurice Kirkwood? |
3252 | What if you or I had inherited all the tendencies that were born with his cousin Elsie?" |
3252 | What illuminates a country like its scholarship, and what is the nest that hatches scholars but a library? |
3252 | What immortal book have you written? |
3252 | What is Beauty? |
3252 | What is a Prologue? |
3252 | What is a farm but a mute gospel?" |
3252 | What is it that makes common salt crystallize in the form of cubes, and saltpetre in the shape of six- sided prisms? |
3252 | What is it that makes the reputation of Sydenham, as the chief of English physicians? |
3252 | What is it that sets you laughing so? |
3252 | What is it to him that you can localize and name by some uncouth term the disease which you could not prevent and which you can not cure? |
3252 | What is it, Elixir Vitae or Aurum potabile? |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is it? |
3252 | What is love, Sophy?" |
3252 | What is that book he is holding? |
3252 | What is that look of paternity and of maternity which observing and experienced mothers and old nurses know so well in men and in women?) |
3252 | What is that old gentleman crying about? |
3252 | What is that saying of mine about I squinting brains?" |
3252 | What is that to the glorious self- renunciation of a martyr in pearls and diamonds? |
3252 | What is the condition of things in the growing intimacy of Number Five and the Tutor? |
3252 | What is the date of it? |
3252 | What is the definite belief of Emerson as expressed in this discourse,--what does it mean? |
3252 | What is the head of it, and where does it lie? |
3252 | What is the meaning of these perpetual changes and conflicts of medical opinion and practice, from an early antiquity to our own time? |
3252 | What is the meaning of this change which has come over her features, and her voice, her temper, her whole being? |
3252 | What is the meaning of this rush into rhyming of such a multitude of people, of all ages, from the infant phenomenon to the oldest inhabitant? |
3252 | What is the use of going about and setting up a flag of negation?''" |
3252 | What is the use of my saying what some of these opinions are? |
3252 | What is the use, I say? |
3252 | What is there that you can tell me to which I can not respond with sympathy? |
3252 | What is there that youth will not endure and triumph over? |
3252 | What is this beauty?'' |
3252 | What is this life without the poor accidents which made it our own, and by which we identify ourselves? |
3252 | What is this"genial atmosphere"but the very spirit of Christianity? |
3252 | What is to be the fate of Lurida? |
3252 | What is''t the chap''s been a- doin''on? |
3252 | What kills anybody quickest, Doctor?" |
3252 | What kind of a constituency is this which is to look to you as its authorized champions in the struggle of life against its numerous enemies? |
3252 | What line have we written that was on a level with our conceptions? |
3252 | What made Myrtle nervous and restless? |
3252 | What madness could impel So rum a flat to face so prime a swell?" |
3252 | What makes you think she''s in love with him? |
3252 | What man could speak more fitly, with more authority of"Character,"than Emerson? |
3252 | What man was he who would lay his hand familiarly upon his shoulder and call him Waldo? |
3252 | What more can be asked to prove their honesty and sincerity? |
3252 | What more could I ask to assure me of the Captain''s safety? |
3252 | What more could this poor, dear Helen say? |
3252 | What more natural than that it should be used again when the subject of appealing to chance came up in conversation? |
3252 | What must she do but buy a small copper breast- pin and put it under"Schoolma''am''s"plate that morning, at breakfast? |
3252 | What must you expect to forget? |
3252 | What noble principle, what deathless interest, was there at stake? |
3252 | What nobler tasks has the poet than to exalt the idea of manhood, and to make the world we live in more beautiful? |
3252 | What of all this shall I remember longest? |
3252 | What others could there be? |
3252 | What page of ours that does not betray some weakness we would fain have left unrecorded? |
3252 | What prospect have I of ever being rid of this long and deep- seated infirmity? |
3252 | What remains for you yet to learn? |
3252 | What reported conversation can stand a captious criticism like this? |
3252 | What saddest note in your spiritual dirges which will not find its chord in mine? |
3252 | What shall I do about it? |
3252 | What shall I do? |
3252 | What shall I do?" |
3252 | What shall I say in this presence of the duties of a Librarian? |
3252 | What shall I say of the personal habits you must form if you wish for success? |
3252 | What shall a man do, when a woman makes such a demand, involving such an avowal? |
3252 | What shall it be? |
3252 | What shall we say to the doctrine of the fall of man as the ground of inflicting endless misery on the human race? |
3252 | What should I be afraid of? |
3252 | What should he do about it, if it turned out so? |
3252 | What should he do? |
3252 | What should she do about it? |
3252 | What should you think of the probable musical genius of a young man who was particularly fond of jingling a set of sleigh- bells? |
3252 | What sort of a man do you find my old friend the Deacon?" |
3252 | What strange early impression was it which led a certain lady always to shriek aloud if she ventured to enter a church, as it is recorded? |
3252 | What the d''d''didos are y''abaout with them great huffs o''yourn?" |
3252 | What the deuse is that odd noise in his chamber? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What then? |
3252 | What though the rose leaves fall? |
3252 | What was I saying,--I, who would not for the world have pained our unfortunate little boarder by an allusion? |
3252 | What was coming next,--a declaration, or an accusation of murder? |
3252 | What was he going to tell us? |
3252 | What was he good for? |
3252 | What was it he wanted her to keep?" |
3252 | What was she crying for? |
3252 | What was that for? |
3252 | What was that medicine which so frequently occurs in the printed letters under the name of"rubila"? |
3252 | What was the end to be attained by accepting the gage of battle? |
3252 | What was the matter with her eyes, that they sucked your life out of you in that strange way? |
3252 | What was the meaning of this slip of paper coming to light at this time, after reposing undisturbed so long? |
3252 | What was the slight peculiarity of her enunciation, when she read? |
3252 | What was the use of trying to enforce social intercourse under such conditions? |
3252 | What was there to distract him or disturb him? |
3252 | What was this unexplained something which came between her soul and that of every other human being with whom she was in relations? |
3252 | What was this wonderful substance which so astonished kings, princes, dukes, knights, and doctors? |
3252 | What were cold conventionalities at such a moment? |
3252 | What were these torturing gifts, and wherefore lent her? |
3252 | What were they thinking of? |
3252 | What will happen, though, if he makes love to her? |
3252 | What will prevent that? |
3252 | What will your hatter say about the two sides of the head? |
3252 | What wizard fills the maddening glass What soil the enchanted clusters grew? |
3252 | What would a steam- engine be without a crank? |
3252 | What would a young girl be who never mingled her voice with the songs and prayers that rose all around her with every returning day of rest? |
3252 | What would be the consequence if all this property came into the possession of Silence Withers? |
3252 | What would be the state of the highways of life, if we did not drive our THOUGHT- SPRINKLERS through them with the valves open, sometimes? |
3252 | What would it avail to tell you anecdotes of a sweet and wonderful boy, such as we solace and sadden ourselves with at home every morning and evening? |
3252 | What would our civilization be without the piano? |
3252 | What would she do it for? |
3252 | What y''been dreamin''abaout? |
3252 | What you think she do,''f anybody else tech it?" |
3252 | What''n thunder''r''y''abaout, y''darned Portagee?" |
3252 | What''n thunder''s that''ere raoun''y''r neck? |
3252 | What''r''y''dreamin''abaout?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s happened?" |
3252 | What''s that''ere stickin''aout o''y''r boot?" |
3252 | What''s the name of the alley, and which bell?" |
3252 | What''s the use? |
3252 | When did you ever hear such tones? |
3252 | When gratitude is a bankrupt, love only can pay his debts; and if Maurice gave his heart to Euthymia, would not she receive it as payment in full? |
3252 | When he had got through, the Doctor looked him in the face steadily, as if he were saying, Is that all? |
3252 | When his breath ceased and his heart stopped beating? |
3252 | When we come to the application, in the same Essay, almost on the same page, what can we make of such discourse as this? |
3252 | When we look for them the next morning, do we not find them withered leaves?" |
3252 | When your friends give out, who is left for you? |
3252 | Whence is it? |
3252 | Where are the cemeteries of the dead ones, or do they die at all except when we kill them? |
3252 | Where are the cradles of the young flies? |
3252 | Where can that latch be that rattles so? |
3252 | Where can you find a happier child? |
3252 | Where could it have been? |
3252 | Where did he get those expressions"A 1"and"prime"and so on? |
3252 | Where did she learn French? |
3252 | Where did the anti- republican, anti- democratic passion for swelling names come from, and how long has it been naturalized among us? |
3252 | Where did this"frightful idea"come from? |
3252 | Where does all this ambition for names without realities come from? |
3252 | Where does she get those books she is reading so often? |
3252 | Where is my Beranger? |
3252 | Where is this monument? |
3252 | Where is your hat, doctor? |
3252 | Where now is the fame of Bouillaud, Professor and Deputy, the Sangrado of his time? |
3252 | Where shall it next flame at the head of the long procession? |
3252 | Where should we go next? |
3252 | Where then did Goethe find his lovers? |
3252 | Where to? |
3252 | Where was all his legacy of knowledge when Norfolk was decimated? |
3252 | Where will you find a sympathy like mine in your hours of sadness? |
3252 | Where would Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee,--saved, or looking to be saved, even as it is, as by fire,--have been in the day of trial? |
3252 | Where would she come from? |
3252 | Where''s the Doctor?--let the Doctor get to him, ca n''t ye?" |
3252 | Where''s the skins of''em? |
3252 | Where''s the young master? |
3252 | Wherefore, then, should thy servant be yet a burden unto my lord the king?" |
3252 | Wherever one looked taller and fuller than the rest, I asked myself,--"Is this it?" |
3252 | Whether a hundred or a thousand years old, who knows? |
3252 | Which has most to suffer, and which has most endurance and vitality? |
3252 | Which is it?--Why, that one, there,--that young fellow,--don''t you see?--What young fellow are you two looking at? |
3252 | Which of these did he most favor? |
3252 | Which of these two girls would be the safest choice for a young man? |
3252 | Which style do you like best? |
3252 | While in my simple gospel creed That"God is Love"so plain I read, Shall dreams of heathen birth affright My pathway through the coming night? |
3252 | Who among us has taught better than Nathan Smith, better than Elisha Bartlett? |
3252 | Who are the persons that use this argument? |
3252 | Who are the"quality,"--said the Model, etc., in a community like ours? |
3252 | Who are they that practice Homoeopathy, and say this of a man with the Materia Medica of Hahnemann lying before him? |
3252 | Who are you that build your palaces on my margin? |
3252 | Who blows out the gas instead of shutting it off? |
3252 | Who but myself shall cloud my soul with fear? |
3252 | Who can fail to see one common spirit in the radical ecclesiastic and the reforming court- physician? |
3252 | Who can give better counsels on"Culture"than Emerson? |
3252 | Who can tell what we owe to the Mutual Admiration Society of which Shakspeare, and Ben Jonson, and Beaumont and Fletcher were members? |
3252 | Who can this man be but the boy of that story? |
3252 | Who cares how many stamens or pistils that little brown flower, which comes out before the leaf, may have to classify it by? |
3252 | Who could blame her? |
3252 | Who could know all these things, except the few people of the household? |
3252 | Who could say? |
3252 | Who could say? |
3252 | Who did not do just the same thing, and does not often do it still, now that the first flush of the fever is over? |
3252 | Who did you say was sick and wanted to see me, Fordyce?" |
3252 | Who do you think is coming?" |
3252 | Who does not remember odious images that can never be washed out from the consciousness which they have stained? |
3252 | Who forged in roaring flames the ponderous stone, And shaped the moulded metal to his need? |
3252 | Who forgets the great muster- day, and the collision of the classic with the democratic forces? |
3252 | Who found the seeds of fire and made them shoot, Fed by his breath, in buds and flowers of flame? |
3252 | Who furnished your parlors?" |
3252 | Who gave the dragging car its rolling wheel, And tamed the steed that whirls its circling round? |
3252 | Who is ahead? |
3252 | Who is he, The one ye name and tell us that ye serve, Whom ye would call me from my lonely tower To worship with the many- headed throng? |
3252 | Who is he? |
3252 | Who is it? |
3252 | Who is the city correspondent of this place?" |
3252 | Who is the owner? |
3252 | Who is there here that I can have any true society with, but you? |
3252 | Who is there of English descent among us that does not feel with Cowper,"England, with all thy faults, I love thee still"? |
3252 | Who is this Number Five, so fascinating, so wise, so full of knowledge, and so ready to learn? |
3252 | Who knows And what shall I say if a wretch should propose? |
3252 | Who knows a woman''s wild caprice? |
3252 | Who knows? |
3252 | Who knows? |
3252 | Who or what set you to reading that, I should like to know?" |
3252 | Who puts the key in the desk and fastens it tight with the spring lock? |
3252 | Who said he was a man? |
3252 | Who says we are more? |
3252 | Who shall say? |
3252 | Who that has ever been at the old Anchor Tavern forgets Miranda''s"A little of this fricassee?-it is ver- y nice;"or"Some of these cakes? |
3252 | Who was she? |
3252 | Who will I tell him wants to ask him about old coin?" |
3252 | Who wishes to destroy the Union? |
3252 | Who would dare to marry Elsie? |
3252 | Who would have expected to meet my maternal uncle in the guise of a schoolboy? |
3252 | Who would have looked for it under the Italian word cantare? |
3252 | Who would have thought that the saucy question,"Does your mother know you''re out?" |
3252 | Who would it be? |
3252 | Who would not pray that my last gleam of light and hope may be that of dawn and not of departing day? |
3252 | Who would not rather wear his decorations beneath his uniform than on it? |
3252 | Who would not wish that he were wrong in such a suspicion? |
3252 | Who would not, will not, if he can, Bathe in the breezes of fair Cape Ann, Rest in the bowers her bays enfold, Loved by the sachems and squaws of old? |
3252 | Who wrote that"I Like You and I Love You,"which we found in the sugar- bowl the other day? |
3252 | Who''s gon- to run,''n''wher''s''t gon- to be? |
3252 | Who''s that you call old,--not Byles Gridley, hey? |
3252 | Who, on the whole, constitute the nobler class of human beings? |
3252 | Who?" |
3252 | Whom do we trust and serve? |
3252 | Whose hand protect me from myself but Thine? |
3252 | Whose works was I going to question him about, do you ask me? |
3252 | Why are we not all in love with Number Five? |
3252 | Why ca n''t somebody give us a list of things that everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list of things that everybody says and nobody thinks? |
3252 | Why ca n''t you go over to the shop and make''em trot her out?" |
3252 | Why ca n''t you make her acquaintance and be civil to her? |
3252 | Why ca n''t you pick me out a couple of what you think are the best of''em? |
3252 | Why could not she have done something to prevent it? |
3252 | Why did n''t I tell him he had nothing to do with it, yet awhile? |
3252 | Why did n''t I warn him about love and all that nonsense? |
3252 | Why did n''t Job ask where the flies come from and where they go to? |
3252 | Why did not you think of a railway- station, where the cars stop five minutes for refreshments? |
3252 | Why do n''t I describe her person? |
3252 | Why do n''t they now? |
3252 | Why do n''t they now? |
3252 | Why do n''t they wear a ring in it? |
3252 | Why do n''t those talking ladies take a spider as their emblem? |
3252 | Why do n''t you get that lady off from Battle Monument and plant a terrapin in her place? |
3252 | Why do n''t you interview this mysterious personage? |
3252 | Why do n''t you put a canvas- back- duck on the top of the Washington column? |
3252 | Why do n''t you send your manuscript by mail?" |
3252 | Why does iron rust, while gold remains untarnished, and gold amalgamate, while iron refuses the alliance of mercury? |
3252 | Why does n''t a man always strike out the first of the two words, to gratify his diabolical love of injustice? |
3252 | Why does not somebody come and carry off this noble woman, waiting here all ready to make a man happy? |
3252 | Why doubt for a moment? |
3252 | Why had she quitted the city so abruptly, and fled to her old home, leaving all the gayeties behind her which had so attracted and dazzled her? |
3252 | Why has she never been in love with any one of her suitors? |
3252 | Why has that excellent old phrase gone out of use? |
3252 | Why have you not told me that we thought alike? |
3252 | Why may not some one of the lady Teacups have played the part of a masculine lover? |
3252 | Why mourn that we, the favored few Whom grasping Time so long has spared Life''s sweet illusions to pursue, The common lot of age have shared? |
3252 | Why no, of course not; had not he made all proper inquiries about that when Susan came to town? |
3252 | Why not apply Mr. Galton''s process, and get thirty- eight stories all in one? |
3252 | Why not as well die in the attempt to break up a wretched servitude to a perverted nervous movement as in any other way? |
3252 | Why not say a boy, if it was a boy? |
3252 | Why not, I should like to know? |
3252 | Why not? |
3252 | Why not? |
3252 | Why question? |
3252 | Why should Hannah think herself so much better than Bridget? |
3252 | Why should I any longer be the slave of a foolish fancy that has grown into a half insane habit of mind? |
3252 | Why should I call her"poor little Helen"? |
3252 | Why should I consider it worth while to say that we went there at all? |
3252 | Why should I cumber myself with regrets that the receiver is not capacious? |
3252 | Why should I go mousing about the place? |
3252 | Why should I go over the old house again, having already described it more than ten years ago? |
3252 | Why should I hope or fear when I send out my book? |
3252 | Why should I provoke a catastrophe which appears inevitable if I invite it by exposing myself to its too well ascertained cause? |
3252 | Why should her fleeting day- dreams fade unspoken, Like daffodils that die with sheaths unbroken? |
3252 | Why should it be? |
3252 | Why should n''t he make up to the Jedge''s daughter? |
3252 | Why should n''t they, I should like to know? |
3252 | Why should n''t we get a romance out of all this, hey? |
3252 | Why should n''t you want to revisit your old home sometimes?" |
3252 | Why should not Maurice-- you both tell me to call him so-- take the diplomatic office which has been offered him? |
3252 | Why should not he be writing a novel? |
3252 | Why should not human nature be the same in Arrowhead Village as elsewhere? |
3252 | Why should not the Counsellor fall in love and write verses? |
3252 | Why should not the coming question announce itself by stirring in the pulses and thrilling in the nerves of the descendant of all these grandmothers? |
3252 | Why should not the rising tide of life have drowned out the feeble growths that infested the shallows of childhood? |
3252 | Why should not this happen, when we know that a sudden mental shock may be the cause of insanity? |
3252 | Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? |
3252 | Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of theirs?" |
3252 | Why should that be his real name? |
3252 | Why should we be more shy of repeating ourselves than the spring be tired of blossoms or the night of stars? |
3252 | Why should you renounce your right to traverse the starlit deserts of truth, for the premature comforts of an acre, house, and barn? |
3252 | Why the diavolo did n''t he break it off, then? |
3252 | Why tremble? |
3252 | Why two baths?" |
3252 | Why was it that no one of them had the look and bearing of that young man she had seen but a moment the other evening? |
3252 | Why was the A self like his good uncle in bodily aspect and mental and moral qualities, and the B self like the bad uncle in look and character? |
3252 | Why will you ask for other glories when you have soft crabs? |
3252 | Why you ask? |
3252 | Why you floor the cellar with cement, do n''t you? |
3252 | Why, did n''t President Wheelock say to a young man who consulted him, that some persons might be true Christians without suspecting it? |
3252 | Why, what did she do? |
3252 | Why, what did the great Richard Baxter say in his book on Infant Baptism? |
3252 | Why? |
3252 | Why?" |
3252 | Will Elsie be easily taken with such a fellow? |
3252 | Will he be duly grateful for the correction?] |
3252 | Will he die? |
3252 | Will it be enough?" |
3252 | Will no_ Angel_ body himself out of that; no stalwart Yankee_ man_, with color in the cheeks of him and a coat on his back?" |
3252 | Will nobody block those wheels, uncouple that pinion, cut the string that holds those weights, blow up the infernal machine with gunpowder? |
3252 | Will not the rays strike through to his brain at last, and send him to a narrower cell than this egg- shell dome which is his workshop and his prison? |
3252 | Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood? |
3252 | Will she come? |
3252 | Will she pass through it unharmed, or wander from her path, and fall over one of those fearful precipices which lie before her? |
3252 | Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood? |
3252 | Will the Man be of the Indian type, as President Samuel Stanhope Smith and others have supposed the transplanted European will become by and by? |
3252 | Will the needle swing back from the east or the west? |
3252 | Will the ring- dove return to her nest? |
3252 | Will you ask a portrait- painter how many of those who sit to hint have both sides of their faces exactly alike? |
3252 | Will you be so good as to come at once to the facts on which you found your suspicions, and which lead you to put these questions to me?" |
3252 | Will you believe that I saw Number Five, with a sweet, approving smile on her face all the time, brush her cheek with her hand- kerchief? |
3252 | Will you do this at once, or will you compel me to show you the absolute necessity of your doing it, at the expense of pain to both of us? |
3252 | Will you go over to his house with me at noon, when he comes back after his morning visits, and have a talk over the whole matter with him? |
3252 | Will you let me know what keeps you so busy when you ought to be asleep, or taking your ease and comfort in some way or other?" |
3252 | Will you look at the paper I hold?" |
3252 | Will you not indulge me in telling you something of my own story? |
3252 | Will you show me the double star you said I should see? |
3252 | Will you take the offered gift?" |
3252 | Will you take the trouble to ask your tailor how many persons have their two shoulders of the same height? |
3252 | Will you tell me how it is you seem to be acquainted with everybody you are introduced to, though he evidently considers you an entire stranger? |
3252 | Will you trust your life and happiness with one who can offer you so little beside his love? |
3252 | William-- writing once more-- after an exclamation in strong English of the older pattern,--"Whether''t is nobler-- nobler-- nobler--"To do what? |
3252 | Willing? |
3252 | Without thee, what were life? |
3252 | Wonder if angels breathe like mortals? |
3252 | Wordsworth''s"Ode"is a noble and beautiful dream; is it anything more? |
3252 | Would he not call at Hyacinth Cottage, and let her thank him again there? |
3252 | Would he or I be the listener, if we were side by side? |
3252 | Would it be a surprise to you, if he had carried his acuteness in some particular case like the one I am to mention beyond the prescribed limits?" |
3252 | Would it be fair for a parent to put into a child''s hands the title- deeds to all its future possessions, and a bunch of matches? |
3252 | Would it be one of the great Ex- Presidents whose names were known to, all the world? |
3252 | Would it be the silver- tongued orator of Kentucky or the"God- like"champion of the Constitution, our New- England Jupiter Capitolinus? |
3252 | Would it ever be bridged over? |
3252 | Would it wake her from her trance? |
3252 | Would n''t he forgive me for telling him he was free? |
3252 | Would n''t it be fun to look down at the bores and the duns? |
3252 | Would one take no especial precautions if his wife, about to become a mother, had been bitten by a rabid animal, because so many escape? |
3252 | Would you have any objection to showing your case to the Societies of Medical Improvement and Medical Observation? |
3252 | Would you lecture to us; if you were a professor in one of the great medical schools?" |
3252 | Would you venture to take charge of the case?" |
3252 | Would you, then, banish all allusions to matters of this nature from the society of people who come together habitually? |
3252 | Y''ha''n''t heerd noth''n''abaout it?" |
3252 | Yes, where are our cats?" |
3252 | Yes? |
3252 | Yet why with coward lips complain That this must lean and that must fall? |
3252 | You ai n''t such a fool as to think that is new,--are you? |
3252 | You are clear, I suppose, that the Omniscient spoke through Solomon, but that Shakespeare wrote without his help?" |
3252 | You are familiar with Vasari, of course?" |
3252 | You are in independent circumstances, perhaps? |
3252 | You are quite welcome to the lines"To the Rhodora;"but I think they need the superscription["Lines on being asked''Whence is the Flower?''"]. |
3252 | You are specialist enough to take care of a sprained ankle, I suppose, are you not?" |
3252 | You believe, do you not? |
3252 | You believe, do you not? |
3252 | You broke down in your great speech, did you? |
3252 | You did n''t think he was my''Literary Celebrity,''did you?" |
3252 | You do n''t believe in presentiments, do you?" |
3252 | You do n''t suppose Adam had the cutaneous unpleasantness politely called psora, do you? |
3252 | You do n''t suppose there was a special act of creation for the express purpose of bestowing that little wretch on humanity, do you? |
3252 | You do n''t think I should expect any woman to listen to such a sentence as that long one, without giving her a chance to put in a word? |
3252 | You do n''t think the idea adds to the sublimity and associations of the cataract? |
3252 | You do not know who she is, then?" |
3252 | You don''think I care for Dick? |
3252 | You found it accurate, I hope, in its descriptions?" |
3252 | You have heard of Alphonse Karr?'' |
3252 | You have not forgotten the double star,--the two that shone for each other and made a little world by themselves? |
3252 | You have sometimes been in a train on the railroad when the engine was detached a long way from the station you were approaching? |
3252 | You know about the caddice- worm? |
3252 | You know that young lady, doctor?" |
3252 | You know the Esquimaux kayak,( if that is the name of it,) do n''t you? |
3252 | You know who the Fire- hang- bird is, do n''t you? |
3252 | You know your Horace and Virgil well, I take it for granted?" |
3252 | You know, I suppose,--he said,--what is meant by complementary colors? |
3252 | You may call the story of Ulysses and the Sirens a fable, but what will you say to Mario and the poor lady who followed him? |
3252 | You may read in the parable,"Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment?" |
3252 | You mean she''s gone an''run off with some good- for- nothin''man or other? |
3252 | You modelled this piece on the style of a famous living English poet, did you not?" |
3252 | You never remarked anything curious about her ornaments? |
3252 | You never wrote in verse, did you, Cyprian?" |
3252 | You read your Bible, Doctor, do n''t you? |
3252 | You reject my offer unconditionally?" |
3252 | You remember Myrtle Hazard? |
3252 | You remember Rachel, my first wife,--don''t you, Fordyce?" |
3252 | You remember Thomas Prince''s"Chronological History of New England,"I suppose? |
3252 | You remember how she won us the boat- race?" |
3252 | You remember that dear friend of ours who left us not long since? |
3252 | You remember the boat- race? |
3252 | You remember those beautiful lines out of our newspaper I sent you? |
3252 | You remember, perhaps, in some papers published awhile ago, an odd poem written by an old Latin tutor? |
3252 | You settled the estate of the late Malachi Withers, did you not?" |
3252 | You smile,--I said.--Perhaps life seems to you a little bundle of great things? |
3252 | You will be indulgent to my mistakes and shortcomings,--and who can expect to avoid them? |
3252 | You wish to correct an error in my Broomstick poem, do you? |
3252 | You would not attack a church dogma-- say Total Depravity-- in a lyceum- lecture, for instance? |
3252 | You would not leave us for another school, would you?" |
3252 | You''ll confess to a rhyming dictionary anyhow, wo n''t you? |
3252 | You''ll see to it,--won''t you, Abel?" |
3252 | You''re equal to that, are n''t you?" |
3252 | You''re pious? |
3252 | You''ve heard about her going to school at that place,--the''Institoot,''as those people call it? |
3252 | You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL? |
3252 | You''ve seen a blind man with a stick, feeling his way along? |
3252 | ["Depind on Kitty, is it? |
3252 | [--Now is n''t this the drollest world to live in that one could imagine, short of being in a fit of delirium tremens? |
3252 | _ New England Reformers_.--Would any one venture to guess how Emerson would treat this subject? |
3252 | a thousand times, no!--Yet what is this which has been shaping itself in my soul?--Is it a thought?--is it a dream? |
3252 | against all human and divine authority? |
3252 | and Mrs. Hopkins, and Gifted, and Susan, and everybody? |
3252 | and President Buchanan? |
3252 | and Whereto? |
3252 | and in what do all emotions shared by a young man with such a young girl as this tend to find their last expression? |
3252 | and is not my thought the abstract of ten thousand of these crumbs of truth with which you would choke off my speech? |
3252 | and that the American eagle screams with delight to see three drachms of calomel given at a single mouthful? |
3252 | and the Boston State- House? |
3252 | and the financial question, WHO PAID FOR IT? |
3252 | and the old lady by him, and the three girls, what are they all covering their eyes for? |
3252 | and to what could it be owing, but to an innate organic tendency? |
3252 | and we have already taken our hats off and are answering it with our own How d''ye do? |
3252 | and what are the qualifications? |
3252 | and what''s all this noise about?" |
3252 | and would she see me in the flush of my stolen triumph, and hate and despise me ever after? |
3252 | and, Do you take this woman? |
3252 | and, Where do the pins go to? |
3252 | are the southern curtains drawn? |
3252 | arrive at distinction? |
3252 | as your Dr. Rabelais has it,--answers the iconoclast,--"what is that to me and my colic, to me and my strangury? |
3252 | cast away the flower I took in the bud because it does not show as I hoped it would when it opened? |
3252 | complimentary to our party? |
3252 | did you never read any novels?" |
3252 | do you ask me? |
3252 | do you hear anything now?" |
3252 | do you know what has got hold of you? |
3252 | do you think it''s safe to put that cold stuff into your stomick?" |
3252 | fill a fresh bumper,--for why should we go While the[ nectar][ logwood] still reddens our cups as they flow? |
3252 | ha''n''t I tol''y''a dozen times?" |
3252 | has he come yet? |
3252 | has my stove and pepper- pot a false bottom? |
3252 | he asked, curiously.--Why, the parenthesis, said I.--Parenthesis? |
3252 | he called out,"what have you got there? |
3252 | he said to himself;"what are you about making phrases, when you have got a piece of work like this in hand?" |
3252 | he said, talking to himself in his usual way,"is n''t that good? |
3252 | heard I not that ringing strain, That clear celestial tone? |
3252 | here?" |
3252 | how do you do? |
3252 | how do you think the officiating clergyman put the questions? |
3252 | how many remember anything they read but once, and so long ago as that? |
3252 | how-- do-- you-- do Johnny?! |
3252 | hush!--that whisper,-"Where is Mary''s boy?" |
3252 | it was too horrible, was that the face which had been so close to hers but yesterday? |
3252 | look at me, my child; do n''t you know your old friend Byles Gridley?" |
3252 | of Number Five and the young Tutor who is so constantly found in her company? |
3252 | or any unpardonable cabal in the literary union of Verplanck and Bryant and Sands, and as many more as they chose to associate with them? |
3252 | or do you want to make me kill myself?" |
3252 | or is he going to be late, with the other great folks?" |
3252 | or is it a mere fancy that such a power belongs to any human being? |
3252 | or"Come, naow, a''n''t ye''shamed?" |
3252 | or"Out of what great picture have these pieces been cut?" |
3252 | or, How are you? |
3252 | or, worse than any body, is----? |
3252 | presents!--said I.--What tickets, what presents has he had the impertinence to be offering to that young lady? |
3252 | said Miss Matilda,--"what''s that rumblin''?" |
3252 | said the Doctor, with a pleasant, friendly look,--"have you stay? |
3252 | said the Doctor,--"catching? |
3252 | said the fellow,--but softly, so that Saint Christopher should not hear him,--''do you think I''m in earnest? |
3252 | said the good minister,"is this you?" |
3252 | said the old Doctor, one morning,"after you''ve harnessed Caustic, come into the study a few minutes, will you?" |
3252 | should n''t she be real happy to see him? |
3252 | supper and all?" |
3252 | the old mystery remains, If I am I; thou, thou, or thou art I?" |
3252 | this is the game, is it? |
3252 | to color meerschaums? |
3252 | to dredge our maidens''hair with gold- dust? |
3252 | to flaunt in laces, and sparkle in diamonds? |
3252 | to float through life, the passive shuttlecocks of fashion, from the avenues to the beaches, and back again from the beaches to the avenues? |
3252 | to reduce the speed of trotting horses a second or two below its old minimum? |
3252 | was the very same that Horace addressed to the bore who attacked him in the Via Sacra? |
3252 | what is it? |
3252 | what is life while thou''rt away? |
3252 | what is this my frenzy hears? |
3252 | where is she? |
3252 | who cares? |
3252 | who teaches better than some of our living contemporaries who divide their time between city and country schools? |
3252 | who will be my pupils in a Course,--Poetry taught in twelve lessons? |
3252 | you know,--oh, tell me, darlin'', don''you love to see the gen''l''man that keeps up at the school where you go? |
28900 | ---- doth never prosper: what''s the reason? |
28900 | Also between the antonyms_ cast away_,_ decline_,_ dismiss_,_ refuse_,_ repudiate_? |
28900 | And the antonyms_ consequence_? |
28900 | And what is so---- as a day in June? |
28900 | Are all_ liquids__ fluids_? |
28900 | Are the people of one country while residing in their own land_ foreigners_ or_ aliens_ to the people of other lands? |
28900 | Are the words properly interchangeable? |
28900 | Are there any_ synonymous_ words in the strict sense of the term? |
28900 | Are these words applied to matters decidedly bad, foul, or evil? |
28900 | Are these words used in the favorable or the unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Are they ever used as equivalent, and how? |
28900 | Are_ blame_,_ censure_, and_ disapproval_ spoken or silent? |
28900 | Are_ comment_ and_ criticism_ favorable or unfavorable? |
28900 | Are_ comment_,_ criticism_,_ rebuke_,_ reflection_,_ reprehension_, and_ reproof_ expressed or not? |
28900 | Are_ gases_ ever_ liquids_? |
28900 | Are_ gases__ fluids_? |
28900 | Are_ lively_ and_ animated_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Are_ odd_ and_ singular_ precise equivalents? |
28900 | Are_ shout_ and_ scream_ more or less expressive than_ call_? |
28900 | As regards results what is the difference between_ include_,_ imply_, and_ involve_? |
28900 | As regards succession in time, what is the difference between_ follow_ and_ ensue_? |
28900 | As regards the use of words, what does_ language_ denote in the general and in the restricted sense? |
28900 | But what are these moral sermons[ of Seneca]? |
28900 | By how many is it given, and how is it expressed? |
28900 | By what authority is a_ requirement_ made? |
28900 | By what characteristics are the_ morose_ distinguished? |
28900 | By what class of persons is_ insurrection_ made? |
28900 | By what general name are they popularly known? |
28900 | By what is one_ frightened_? |
28900 | By what is_ complaining_ prompted? |
28900 | By what processes does one_ acquire_? |
28900 | By what qualities is_ awe_ inspired? |
28900 | By what special element does_ procure_ differ from_ obtain_? |
28900 | By what word is_ cultivation_ now largely superseded? |
28900 | By whom may one be said to be_ banished_? |
28900 | CAIUS.--Vere is mine host_ de Jarterre_? |
28900 | Can a modern building be_ antiquated_? |
28900 | Can a soul like mine, Unus''d to power, and form''d for humbler scenes,---- the splendid miseries of greatness? |
28900 | Can a_ prototype_ be equivalent to an_ archetype_? |
28900 | Can any one of a number of things of the same kind be_ unique_? |
28900 | Can anybody remember when the right sort of men and the right sort of women were----? |
28900 | Can it be_ antique_? |
28900 | Can one be_ amused_ or_ entertained_ who is not_ diverted_? |
28900 | Can one be_ daunted_ who is not_ abashed_? |
28900 | Can one who is_ preoccupied_ be said to be_ listless_ or_ thoughtless_? |
28900 | Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer''s cloud, Without our special----? |
28900 | Can that which is worthy or beautiful in itself ever be otherwise than_ becoming_ or_ suitable_? |
28900 | Can the same thing be both an_ emblem_ and a_ symbol_? |
28900 | Can the two words be used of the same person and the same act? |
28900 | Can there be_ order_ without_ regularity_ or_ regularity_ without_ order_, and how? |
28900 | Can we have an_ abbreviation_ of a book, paragraph, or sentence? |
28900 | Can we speak of the_ speech_ of animals? |
28900 | Can we_ give_ what is undesired? |
28900 | Can we_ give_ what we are paid for? |
28900 | Can you contrast_ calm_ and_ quiet_? |
28900 | Can you distinguish between_ modify_ and_ qualify_? |
28900 | Can you give more than one sense of_ cry_? |
28900 | Can you give some figurative uses of_ carry_? |
28900 | Can you give some instances of the use of_ circumstance_? |
28900 | Can you give some of the senses of_ care_? |
28900 | Can you give the distinction between a_ copy_ and a_ duplicate_? |
28900 | Can you state the similarity between_ artless_,_ guileless_,_ naive_,_ simple_, and_ unsophisticated_? |
28900 | Can_ beautiful_ be said of that which is harsh and ragged, however grand? |
28900 | Do all of these apply to conduct as well as to speech? |
28900 | Do large gatherings of people_ consult_, or_ meditate_, or_ deliberate_? |
28900 | Do the antonyms_ boisterous_,_ excited_,_ ruffled_,_ turbulent_, and_ wild_, also apply to the same? |
28900 | Do the distinctions of_ gender_ correspond to the distinctions of_ sex_? |
28900 | Do the three latter words apply to the living or the dead? |
28900 | Do they imply superiority on the part of commentator or critic? |
28900 | Do we apply_ doubt_,_ distrust_,_ surmise_, and_ suspect_ mostly to persons and things, or to motives and intentions? |
28900 | Do we ever apply_ bellow_ and_ roar_ to human sounds? |
28900 | Do we speak of associates in crime or wrong? |
28900 | Do we use_ compute_ or_ estimate_ of numbers exactly known? |
28900 | Do we use_ duty_ and_ right_ of civil things? |
28900 | Do we_ aid_ or_ help_ the helpless? |
28900 | Do we_ reflect_ on things past or things to come? |
28900 | Do you think it necessary to provide for every---- before taking the first step? |
28900 | Do_ misemploy_,_ misuse_, and_ pervert_ apply to persons or things? |
28900 | Do_ reflection_ and_ reprehension_ imply such superiority? |
28900 | Do_ truth_ and_ verity_ apply to thought and speech or to persons? |
28900 | Does a person always_ get_ what he_ earns_ or always_ earn_ what he_ gets_? |
28900 | Does a_ revolution_ necessarily involve war? |
28900 | Does an_ analysis_ of a treatise deal with what is expressed, or with what is implied? |
28900 | Does it apply chiefly to the past or the future? |
28900 | Does it apply to action or condition? |
28900 | Does it involve_ foreordination_ or_ predestination_? |
28900 | Does it necessarily denote the absence of all action? |
28900 | Does it now necessarily imply having or gaining superiority to another person, or securing anything at another''s expense? |
28900 | Does it refer to a state of mind or to some act or other object of thought? |
28900 | Does it require_ meter_? |
28900 | Does one person_ actuate_ or_ influence_ another? |
28900 | Does the good or the bad sense commonly attach to the words_ artifice_,_ contrivance_,_ ruse_,_ blind_,_ device_, and_ finesse_? |
28900 | Does the legal agree with the popular sense? |
28900 | Does this word imply authority or superiority? |
28900 | Does_ affection_ apply to persons or things? |
28900 | Does_ allot_ refer to time, place, or person? |
28900 | Does_ assume_ apply to that which is rightfully or wrongfully taken? |
28900 | Does_ coincidence_ necessarily involve_ resemblance_ or_ likeness_? |
28900 | Does_ conceal_ evince intention? |
28900 | Does_ conceit_ differ from_ self- conceit_, and how? |
28900 | Does_ danger_ or_ peril_ suggest the more immediate evil? |
28900 | Does_ help_ include_ aid_ or does_ aid_ include_ help_? |
28900 | Does_ misfortune_ suggest as serious a condition as any of the foregoing? |
28900 | Does_ orderly_ apply to persons or things, and in what sense? |
28900 | Does_ perplexity_ involve anxiety? |
28900 | Does_ poetry_ involve_ rime_? |
28900 | Does_ purpose_ suggest more power to execute than_ design_? |
28900 | Does_ responsibility_ imply connection with any other person or thing? |
28900 | Does_ select_ imply more care or judgment than_ choose_? |
28900 | Does_ terminate_ refer to reaching an arbitrary or an appropriate end? |
28900 | For what are those associated who constitute a_ company_? |
28900 | For what class of objects does one_ ask_? |
28900 | For what does he_ beg_? |
28900 | For what is a_ chase_ or_ pursuit_ conducted? |
28900 | For what is the_ proposition_ designed? |
28900 | For what is_ alert_ more properly a synonym? |
28900 | For what is_ salary_ paid? |
28900 | From what are_ rural_ and_ rustic_ alike derived? |
28900 | From what do_ eminence_ and_ distinction_ result? |
28900 | From what does_ amazement_ result? |
28900 | From what is the_ real_ distinguished? |
28900 | From what is_ adroitness_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ aptitude_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what is_ argue_ derived, and what does it mean? |
28900 | From what is_ buy_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ company_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ damage_ derived, and with what original sense? |
28900 | From what is_ durable_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ ephemeral_ derived, and with what sense? |
28900 | From what is_ fine_ derived, and what is its original meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ lunacy_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ marine_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ naval_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ parade_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ pernicious_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what is_ real_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ renounce_ derived, and in what sense used? |
28900 | From what is_ spirit_ used in special contradistinction? |
28900 | From what is_ state_ derived? |
28900 | From what is_ topic_ derived, and with what meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ utility_ derived, and what is its primary meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ venal_ derived, and with what meaning? |
28900 | From what is_ venial_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what land may one be_ banished_? |
28900 | From what language have_ adieu_ and_ congé_ been adopted into English? |
28900 | From what language is_ acute_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ astute_ derived, and what was its original meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ beginning_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ burden_ derived, and with what primary meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ dip_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ emblem_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ epithet_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ flat_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ home_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ hypocrite_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ idea_ derived, and what did it originally mean? |
28900 | From what language is_ idle_ derived, and what is its original meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ imminent_ derived and with what primary sense? |
28900 | From what language is_ infinite_ derived, and with what meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ injury_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ involve_ derived, and with what primary meaning? |
28900 | From what language is_ journey_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ keen_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ pretense_ derived, and what does it signify? |
28900 | From what language is_ purchase_ derived? |
28900 | From what language is_ wedlock_ derived? |
28900 | From what_ dexterity_? |
28900 | From what_ expatriated_ or_ exiled_? |
28900 | Has_ emulation_ a good side? |
28900 | Has_ partisan_ a good or a bad sense, and why? |
28900 | Have_ craft_ and_ cunning_ always a moral element? |
28900 | He''s gone, and who knows how he may report Thy words by adding fuel to the----? |
28900 | Hear you this Triton of the minnows? |
28900 | How are the terms_ dissenter_ and_ non- conformist_ usually applied? |
28900 | How are the words applied in special cases? |
28900 | How are the words_ cause_,_ condition_, and_ occasion_ illustrated by the fall of an avalanche? |
28900 | How are these four words discriminated the one from another? |
28900 | How are these two words discriminated? |
28900 | How are these words and the word_ spicy_ used in reference to literary products? |
28900 | How are these words illustrated in the case of a mountain? |
28900 | How are these words now commonly differentiated? |
28900 | How are these words used in the figurative senses? |
28900 | How are they discriminated in use? |
28900 | How are they distinguished from one another? |
28900 | How are they related to_ talent_? |
28900 | How are they used in a modified sense? |
28900 | How are_ accident_,_ misadventure_, and_ mishap_ distinguished? |
28900 | How are_ apprehension_,_ disquietude_,_ dread_, and_ misgiving_ related to the danger that excites them? |
28900 | How are_ crave_ and_ request_ distinguished? |
28900 | How are_ expediency_ and_ utility_ used as regards moral action? |
28900 | How are_ female_ and_ feminine_ discriminated? |
28900 | How are_ fount_,_ fountain_, and_ spring_ used in the figurative sense? |
28900 | How are_ hypocrite_ and_ dissembler_ contrasted with each other? |
28900 | How are_ idea_ and_ ideal_ contrasted? |
28900 | How are_ instrument_ and_ tool_ contrasted in figurative use? |
28900 | How are_ jeopardy_ and_ risk_ distinguished from_ danger_ and_ peril_? |
28900 | How are_ knowledge_ and_ learning_ related to_ education_? |
28900 | How are_ lucky_ and_ fortunate_ discriminated? |
28900 | How are_ mercenary_ and_ venal_ discriminated from_ hireling_? |
28900 | How are_ origin_ and_ source_ related to_ cause_? |
28900 | How are_ rhythm_ and_ meter_ produced? |
28900 | How are_ susceptibility_ and_ sensitiveness_ discriminated in physics? |
28900 | How are_ unity_ and_ union_ contrasted? |
28900 | How are_ womanly_ and_ womanish_ discriminated in use? |
28900 | How as to the completeness of the action? |
28900 | How as to the continuance of the object in or under the liquid? |
28900 | How can a_ loss_ be said to be partial? |
28900 | How can one residing in a_ foreign_ country cease to be an_ alien_ in that country? |
28900 | How caused, and with what intent? |
28900 | How close an approach to exactness and certainty does_ approximation_ imply? |
28900 | How could money be better spent than in erecting a---- building for the greatest library in the country? |
28900 | How do a_ heretic_ and a_ schismatic_ often differ in action? |
28900 | How do all these fall short of the meaning of_ fraud_? |
28900 | How do both the above words differ from_ ally_? |
28900 | How do both these words compare with_ associate_? |
28900 | How do both_ befall_ and_ betide_ differ from_ happen_ in grammatical construction? |
28900 | How do the above words compare with_ mention_ as to explicitness? |
28900 | How do the figurative uses of these words compare with the literal? |
28900 | How do the two compare with each other? |
28900 | How do the two words agree in general signification? |
28900 | How do the two words compare as now used? |
28900 | How do the two words compare in present use? |
28900 | How do the two words compare? |
28900 | How do the two words compare? |
28900 | How do the two words differ from each other? |
28900 | How do the two words differ in application and use? |
28900 | How do the two words differ in dignity? |
28900 | How do the two words differ? |
28900 | How do the two words differ? |
28900 | How do the words above mentioned compare with_ exalted_? |
28900 | How do these qualities compare with_ pride_? |
28900 | How do these two words agree and differ? |
28900 | How do these two words compare with each other? |
28900 | How do these two words differ from each other? |
28900 | How do these two words differ from one another? |
28900 | How do these two words differ? |
28900 | How do these two words differ? |
28900 | How do these two words differ? |
28900 | How do these words compare in actual use? |
28900 | How do these words compare in dignity with_ contention_,_ contest_,_ controversy_, and_ dissension_? |
28900 | How do these words compare with_ injury_? |
28900 | How do these words compare with_ mercy_? |
28900 | How do these words differ from_ charge_? |
28900 | How do these words differ from_ venturesome_? |
28900 | How do these words differ in meaning? |
28900 | How do they compare in interest and utility? |
28900 | How do they compare with each other? |
28900 | How do they compare with_ entertainment_ and_ recreation_? |
28900 | How do they differ as a class from the words above referred to? |
28900 | How do they differ from each other in use? |
28900 | How do they differ from each other? |
28900 | How do they differ from one another? |
28900 | How do they differ in the derived senses? |
28900 | How do they differ in the source of the power exerted? |
28900 | How do they differ, and to what are they applied? |
28900 | How do they differ? |
28900 | How do they differ? |
28900 | How do they respectively treat the material objects or images with which they deal? |
28900 | How do we discriminate between_ fulfil_,_ realize_,_ effect_, and_ execute_? |
28900 | How do you distinguish between_ chagrin_,_ disappointment_,_ humiliation_,_ mortification_, and_ shame_? |
28900 | How do you distinguish between_ character_ and_ reputation_? |
28900 | How do you distinguish between_ count_ and_ calculate_? |
28900 | How do_ abstracted_,_ absorbed_, and_ preoccupied_ differ from_ absent- minded_? |
28900 | How do_ accident_ and_ casualty_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ active_ and_ restless_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ advance_,_ better_, and_ improve_ differ from_ amend_? |
28900 | How do_ agreeable_,_ attractive_, and_ charming_ differ from_ amiable_? |
28900 | How do_ allow_ and_ permit_ compare with the words just mentioned? |
28900 | How do_ amusement_ and_ enjoyment_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ amusement_ and_ pastime_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ apparent_ and_ evident_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ argue_ and_ advocate_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ argument_ and_ argumentation_ compare with_ reasoning_ as regards logical form? |
28900 | How do_ arrogate_ and_ usurp_ differ from each other? |
28900 | How do_ assail_ and_ assault_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ avaricious_ and_ covetous_ differ from_ miserly_,_ niggardly_,_ parsimonious_, and_ penurious_? |
28900 | How do_ avenging_ and_ retribution_ differ from_ retaliation_,_ revenge_, and_ vengeance_? |
28900 | How do_ avouch_ and_ avow_ differ from_ aver_ in construction? |
28900 | How do_ behavior_ and_ conduct_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ bewilderment_ and_ confusion_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ bleach_ and_ blanch_ differ from_ whiten_? |
28900 | How do_ bodily_ and_ corporal_ differ from_ corporeal_? |
28900 | How do_ buy_ and_ purchase_ agree in meaning? |
28900 | How do_ buy_ and_ purchase_ differ in use? |
28900 | How do_ cloak_ and_ palliate_ agree in original meaning? |
28900 | How do_ command_ and_ control_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ concord_ and_ accord_ compare with_ harmony_ and with each other? |
28900 | How do_ concur_ and_ coincide_ differ in range of meaning? |
28900 | How do_ consent_ and_ concurrence_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ cooperate_ and_ assist_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ cost_ and_ price_ ordinarily differ? |
28900 | How do_ countless_,_ innumerable_, and_ numberless_ compare with_ infinite_? |
28900 | How do_ deduction_ and_ induction_ compare as to the certainty of the conclusion? |
28900 | How do_ discover_ and_ invent_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ doubtful_ and_ dubious_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ duration_ and_ succession_ compare with_ time_? |
28900 | How do_ each_ and_ every_ differ from_ all_? |
28900 | How do_ elevated_ and_ eminent_ compare in the literal sense? |
28900 | How do_ end_ and_ object_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ entreat_ and_ beseech_ compare with_ ask_? |
28900 | How do_ event_ and_ incident_ differ etymologically? |
28900 | How do_ falsehood_ and_ fabrication_ differ from the words above mentioned? |
28900 | How do_ folly_ and_ foolishness_ compare with_ idiocy_? |
28900 | How do_ foreign_ and_ alien_ differ in their figurative use? |
28900 | How do_ foresight_ and_ forethought_ compare with each other, and both with_ providence_? |
28900 | How do_ foresight_ and_ forethought_ go beyond the meaning of_ anticipation_? |
28900 | How do_ freedom_ and_ liberty_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ hint_ and_ insinuate_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ imminent_ and_ impending_ differ in present use? |
28900 | How do_ inevitable_ and_ unavoidable_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ mimicry_ and_ imitation_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ monstrous_ and_ preposterous_ compare with_ absurd_? |
28900 | How do_ motto_ and_ maxim_ differ from each other? |
28900 | How do_ native_ and_ indigenous_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ needed_ and_ needful_ compare with_ necessary_? |
28900 | How do_ novice_ and_ tyro_ differ from_ amateur_? |
28900 | How do_ obstinate_ and_ stubborn_ differ from each other? |
28900 | How do_ old_ and_ ancient_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ pardon_ and_ forgive_ differ in use in accordance with the difference in meaning? |
28900 | How do_ persecute_ and_ oppress_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ pledge_ and_ security_ differ from_ earnest_? |
28900 | How do_ presumable_ and_ probable_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ pride_ and_ vanity_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ put up with_ and_ tolerate_ compare with_ allow_ and_ permit_? |
28900 | How do_ resemblance_ and_ similarity_ differ from_ analogy_? |
28900 | How do_ resolution_ and_ endurance_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ result_ and_ issue_ compare? |
28900 | How do_ reverence_ and_ veneration_ differ from_ awe_ or_ dread_? |
28900 | How do_ risk_ and_ venture_ compare with_ chance_ and_ hazard_, and with each other? |
28900 | How do_ rule_ and_ govern_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ sacrament_ and_ ordinance_ differ? |
28900 | How do_ sample_ and_ specimen_ compare as indications of the quality of that which they respectively represent? |
28900 | How do_ self- respect_ and_ self- esteem_ compare with each other and with the other words of the group? |
28900 | How do_ sharpness_,_ acuteness_,_ penetration_, and_ insight_ compare with_ acumen_? |
28900 | How do_ slander_ and_ libel_ differ in legal signification from the other words? |
28900 | How do_ talkative_ and_ loquacious_ differ from_ garrulous_, and from each other? |
28900 | How do_ transactions_ differ from_ proceedings_? |
28900 | How do_ voluntary_ and_ involuntary_ compare with each other? |
28900 | How do_ yet_ and_ still_ compare with_ notwithstanding_? |
28900 | How does Archbishop Trench illustrate the difference between_ abhor_ and_ shun_? |
28900 | How does a mechanical_ drawing_ differ from a_ draft_? |
28900 | How does a_ class_ differ from a_ caste_? |
28900 | How does a_ conceit_ differ from a_ fancy_? |
28900 | How does a_ confederacy_ or_ federation_ differ from a_ union_? |
28900 | How does a_ deposition_ differ from an_ affidavit_? |
28900 | How does a_ fiction_ differ from a_ novel_? |
28900 | How does a_ fortress_ specifically differ from a_ fortification_? |
28900 | How does a_ mishap_ compare with a_ catastrophe_, a_ calamity_, or a_ disaster_? |
28900 | How does a_ myth_ differ from a_ legend_? |
28900 | How does a_ persuasion_ compare with an_ opinion_? |
28900 | How does a_ sign_ suggest something other than itself? |
28900 | How does a_ sketch_ in this sense compare with an_ outline_? |
28900 | How does a_ skilled_ compare with a_ skilful_ workman? |
28900 | How does an_ abomination_ differ from an_ offense_? |
28900 | How does an_ abridgment_ differ from an_ outline_ or a_ synopsis_? |
28900 | How does an_ abstract_ or_ digest_ differ from an_ outline_ or a_ synopsis_? |
28900 | How does an_ adherent_ differ from a_ supporter_? |
28900 | How does an_ answer_ to a charge, an argument, or the like, differ from a_ reply_ or_ rejoinder_? |
28900 | How does an_ apology_ differ from an_ excuse_? |
28900 | How does an_ associate_ compare in rank with a principal? |
28900 | How does an_ emotion_ differ from a_ sensation_? |
28900 | How does an_ explanation_ compare with an_ exposition_? |
28900 | How does an_ induction_ compare with an_ inference_? |
28900 | How does an_ order_ in the commercial sense become authoritative? |
28900 | How does each of the above words differ from_ bank_? |
28900 | How does it come into connection with the words of this group? |
28900 | How does it come into connection with_ clarified_,_ clear_,_ pure_,_ refined_? |
28900 | How does it compare in strength with_ evident_? |
28900 | How does it compare with an_ outline_ or_ sketch_? |
28900 | How does it compare with the_ ideal_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ aspiration_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ authority_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ boasting_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ chatter_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ conjecture_ or_ suppose_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ courage_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ diction_ or_ language_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ distress_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ evidence_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ fright_ and_ terror_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ frugality_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ guard_ or_ defend_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ hinder_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ holy_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ idiocy_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ level_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ liberty_ and_ freedom_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ load_ and_ burden_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ model_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ outline_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ patience_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ pleasant_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ righteous_,_ upright_, or_ virtuous_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ rule_? |
28900 | How does it compare with_ sensitiveness_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ clique_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ dialect_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ flaw_ or_ taint_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ motto_ or_ maxim_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ precedent_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ pretext_? |
28900 | How does it differ from a_ surname_? |
28900 | How does it differ from an_ oath_? |
28900 | How does it differ from an_ obstacle_ or_ obstruction_? |
28900 | How does it differ from the Saxon word_ unfeelingness_? |
28900 | How does it differ from the other words of the group? |
28900 | How does it differ from, and how does it agree with_ attitude_ and_ posture_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ acquit_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ adherence_ or_ adhesion_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ antipathy_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ applause_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ apprehension_,_ fear_,_ dread_, etc., in this regard? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ beggary_ and_ mendicancy_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ chance_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ consanguinity_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ control_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ deceit_ or_ deception_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ exercise_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ farming_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ fitting_ or_ befitting_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ generous_ as regards dealing with insults or injuries? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ idle_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ illegal_ or_ unlawful_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ indignation_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ indispensable_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ information_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ inherent_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ intellect_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ journey_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ long_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ mark_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ meddle_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ meter_,_ measure_, and_ rhythm_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ multiply_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ pardon_ as regards the person acquitted or pardoned? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ product_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ progress_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ repartee_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ self- conceit_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ self- confidence_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ soul_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ stubborn_? |
28900 | How does it differ from_ wages_? |
28900 | How does it differ in general from_ design_,_ endeavor_, or_ purpose_? |
28900 | How does it differ in usage from_ bound_ or_ bounds_? |
28900 | How does it differ in usage from_ chance_? |
28900 | How does it differ in use from_ associate_? |
28900 | How does it differ in use from_ odd_ or_ queer_? |
28900 | How does it exceed the meaning of_ drawing_? |
28900 | How does it happen that"To be frank,"or"To be candid"often precedes the utterance of something disagreeable? |
28900 | How does it relate events? |
28900 | How does market_ value_ differ from intrinsic_ value_? |
28900 | How does the adjective_ friendly_ compare in strength with the noun_ friend_? |
28900 | How does the popular term_ feeling_ compare with_ sensation_ and_ emotion_? |
28900 | How does the_ affidavit_ differ from the_ oath_? |
28900 | How does the_ impromptu_ remark often differ from the_ extemporaneous_? |
28900 | How does_ abase_ differ from_ debase_? |
28900 | How does_ abet_ differ from_ incite_ and_ instigate_ as to the time of the action? |
28900 | How does_ ability_ compare with_ power_? |
28900 | How does_ abomination_ differ from_ aversion_ or_ disgust_? |
28900 | How does_ abstinence_ differ from_ abstemiousness_? |
28900 | How does_ abstract_, when said of the mind, differ from_ divert_? |
28900 | How does_ abuse_ differ from_ harm_? |
28900 | How does_ accede_ compare with_ consent_? |
28900 | How does_ acerbity_ differ from_ asperity_? |
28900 | How does_ acquaintance_ differ from_ companionship_? |
28900 | How does_ active_ differ from_ busy_? |
28900 | How does_ admire_ compare with_ revere_? |
28900 | How does_ admonish_ compare with the other words in the group? |
28900 | How does_ adoration_ compare with_ veneration_? |
28900 | How does_ adorn_ differ from_ ornament_? |
28900 | How does_ adroitness_ differ in use from_ dexterity_? |
28900 | How does_ affectation_ compare with_ hypocrisy_? |
28900 | How does_ affront_ compare with_ insult_? |
28900 | How does_ agent_ in the philosophical sense compare with_ mover_ or_ doer_? |
28900 | How does_ air_ differ from_ appearance_? |
28900 | How does_ airy_ agree with and differ from_ aerial_? |
28900 | How does_ alert_ compare with_ nimble_? |
28900 | How does_ alien_ differ from_ foreign_? |
28900 | How does_ alike_ compare with_ similar_? |
28900 | How does_ allegory_ compare with_ simile_? |
28900 | How does_ alleviate_ compare with_ allay_? |
28900 | How does_ alleviate_ differ from_ relieve_? |
28900 | How does_ allure_ differ from_ attract_? |
28900 | How does_ ambition_ differ from_ aspiration_? |
28900 | How does_ animosity_ differ from_ enmity_? |
28900 | How does_ antagonism_ compare with the words above mentioned? |
28900 | How does_ anticipate_ differ from_ expect_? |
28900 | How does_ anticipation_ differ from_ presentiment_? |
28900 | How does_ anxiety_ differ from_ anguish_? |
28900 | How does_ anxious_ in this acceptation differ from both_ eager_ and_ earnest_? |
28900 | How does_ any_ differ from_ each_ and_ every_? |
28900 | How does_ appliance_ compare with_ tool_? |
28900 | How does_ application_ compare with_ assiduity_? |
28900 | How does_ apprehend_ differ in scope from_ perceive_? |
28900 | How does_ approbation_ differ from_ praise_? |
28900 | How does_ approximation_ differ from_ resemblance_ and_ similarity_? |
28900 | How does_ approximation_, as regards the class of objects to which it is applied, differ from_ nearness_,_ neighborhood_, or_ propinquity_? |
28900 | How does_ art_ compare with_ science_? |
28900 | How does_ assume_ differ from_ postulate_ as regards debate or reasoning of any kind? |
28900 | How does_ assurance_ compare with_ impudence_? |
28900 | How does_ attack_ differ from_ aggression_? |
28900 | How does_ attain_ differ from_ obtain_? |
28900 | How does_ attempt_ differ from_ effort_? |
28900 | How does_ attribute_ differ from_ refer_ and_ ascribe_? |
28900 | How does_ autocratic_ differ from_ arbitrary_? |
28900 | How does_ avenge_ differ from_ revenge_? |
28900 | How does_ avow_ compare with_ confess_? |
28900 | How does_ award_ differ from_ allot_,_ appoint_, and_ assign_? |
28900 | How does_ barbarous_ in general use differ from both the above words? |
28900 | How does_ be in possession_ compare with_ possess_? |
28900 | How does_ brave_ differ from_ courageous_? |
28900 | How does_ busy_ differ from_ industrious_? |
28900 | How does_ care_ compare with_ prudence_ and_ providence_? |
28900 | How does_ case_ fall short of the meaning of_ precedent_? |
28900 | How does_ cause_ differ from_ reason_ in the strict sense of each of the two words? |
28900 | How does_ celebrity_ compare with_ fame_? |
28900 | How does_ circumstance_ compare with_ incident_? |
28900 | How does_ cite_ differ from_ quote_? |
28900 | How does_ clear_ differ from_ transparent_ as regards a substance that may be a medium of vision? |
28900 | How does_ coax_ compare with_ persuade_? |
28900 | How does_ combat_ differ? |
28900 | How does_ comfort_ differ from_ enjoyment_? |
28900 | How does_ command_ compare with_ order_? |
28900 | How does_ commensurate_ specifically differ from the other two words? |
28900 | How does_ commiseration_ differ from_ compassion_? |
28900 | How does_ compassion_ compare with_ mercy_ and_ pity_? |
28900 | How does_ complex_ differ from_ compound_? |
28900 | How does_ complicated_ differ from_ intricate_? |
28900 | How does_ compliment_ compare with_ praise_? |
28900 | How does_ composed_ differ from_ calm_? |
28900 | How does_ comprehend_ compare with_ apprehend_? |
28900 | How does_ confession_ differ from_ apology_? |
28900 | How does_ confuse_ differ from_ abash_? |
28900 | How does_ conjecture_ differ from_ suppose_? |
28900 | How does_ consequence_ differ from_ effect_? |
28900 | How does_ constrain_ differ from_ restrain_? |
28900 | How does_ consume_ differ from_ absorb_? |
28900 | How does_ continuous_ differ from_ continual_? |
28900 | How does_ conversation_ differ from_ talk_? |
28900 | How does_ courteous_ compare with_ civil_? |
28900 | How does_ credence_ compare with_ belief_? |
28900 | How does_ damage_ compare with_ loss_? |
28900 | How does_ despondency_ especially differ from_ despair_? |
28900 | How does_ destine_ differ from_ appoint_? |
28900 | How does_ dexterous_ compare with_ skilful_? |
28900 | How does_ discernible_ compare with_ visible_? |
28900 | How does_ disinterested_ compare with_ generous_? |
28900 | How does_ distress_ rank as compared with_ pain_ and_ suffering_? |
28900 | How does_ each_ compare with_ every_? |
28900 | How does_ effrontery_ compare with these words? |
28900 | How does_ elongate_ differ from_ protract_? |
28900 | How does_ endless_ agree with and differ from_ everlasting_? |
28900 | How does_ enduring_ compare with_ durable_? |
28900 | How does_ engagement_ differ from_ battle_? |
28900 | How does_ ephemeral_ differ from_ transient_ or_ transitory_? |
28900 | How does_ erratic_ compare with_ eccentric_? |
28900 | How does_ essay_ differ from_ attempt_ and_ endeavor_ in its view of the results of the action? |
28900 | How does_ event_ differ from_ end_? |
28900 | How does_ example_ differ from_ sample_? |
28900 | How does_ excusable_ differ from the above words? |
28900 | How does_ exemplar_ agree with, and differ from_ example_? |
28900 | How does_ exercise_ in that sense differ from_ exertion_? |
28900 | How does_ extremity_ compare with_ end_? |
28900 | How does_ extremity_ differ in use from the two latter words? |
28900 | How does_ fate_ differ from_ predestination_? |
28900 | How does_ fellowship_ differ from_ friendship_? |
28900 | How does_ fine_ come to be a synonym for_ minute_,_ comminuted_? |
28900 | How does_ fine_ differ from_ comminuted_? |
28900 | How does_ foe_ compare with_ enemy_? |
28900 | How does_ follow_ compare with_ chase_ and_ pursue_? |
28900 | How does_ forbid_ compare with_ prohibit_? |
28900 | How does_ formidable_ differ from_ dangerous_? |
28900 | How does_ fortunate_ compare with_ successful_? |
28900 | How does_ friendship_ differ from_ love_? |
28900 | How does_ general_ compare with_ universal_? |
28900 | How does_ generous_ differ from_ liberal_? |
28900 | How does_ goodness_ differ from_ virtue_? |
28900 | How does_ grief_ compare with_ sorrow_? |
28900 | How does_ grotesque_ especially differ from the_ fanciful_ or_ fantastic_? |
28900 | How does_ hallucination_ differ from both? |
28900 | How does_ happiness_ compare with_ gratification_,_ satisfaction_,_ comfort_, and_ pleasure_? |
28900 | How does_ happiness_ differ from_ comfort_? |
28900 | How does_ harmony_ compare with_ agreement_? |
28900 | How does_ harvest_ compare with_ crop_? |
28900 | How does_ hatred_ compare with_ aversion_ as applied to persons? |
28900 | How does_ hazard_ compare with_ danger_? |
28900 | How does_ headstrong_ differ from_ obstinate_ and_ stubborn_? |
28900 | How does_ high_ compare with_ deep_? |
28900 | How does_ hinder_ compare with_ prevent_? |
28900 | How does_ hinder_ differ from_ delay_? |
28900 | How does_ hire_ compare with_ employ_? |
28900 | How does_ history_ differ from_ annals_ or_ chronicles_? |
28900 | How does_ hoard_ differ from_ store_? |
28900 | How does_ incident_ differ from both? |
28900 | How does_ indolent_ compare with_ slothful_? |
28900 | How does_ industry_ compare with_ diligence_? |
28900 | How does_ insanity_ differ from_ idiocy_ or_ imbecility_? |
28900 | How does_ instruct_ surpass_ teach_ in signification? |
28900 | How does_ instrument_ compare in meaning with_ tool_? |
28900 | How does_ intent_ specifically differ from_ purpose_? |
28900 | How does_ intercede_ differ from_ interpose_? |
28900 | How does_ involve_ compare with_ implicate_? |
28900 | How does_ keep_ compare with_ preserve_? |
28900 | How does_ kind_ compare with_ kin_? |
28900 | How does_ large_ compare with_ great_? |
28900 | How does_ love_ differ from_ affection_? |
28900 | How does_ maintain_ compare with_ support_ as to fulness and as to dignity? |
28900 | How does_ mangle_ compare with_ lacerate_? |
28900 | How does_ meeting_ agree with and differ from it? |
28900 | How does_ meter_ differ from_ rhythm_? |
28900 | How does_ mien_ differ from_ air_? |
28900 | How does_ miscellaneous_ differ from_ heterogeneous_? |
28900 | How does_ motion_ differ from_ movement_? |
28900 | How does_ necessity_ compare with_ need_? |
28900 | How does_ need_ compare with_ want_? |
28900 | How does_ negotiate_ compare with_ treat_? |
28900 | How does_ nice_ compare with_ neat_? |
28900 | How does_ notwithstanding_ as a preposition differ from_ despite_ or_ in spite of_? |
28900 | How does_ noxious_ compare with_ noisome_? |
28900 | How does_ obscure_ compare with_ complicated_? |
28900 | How does_ obstacle_ differ from_ obstruction_? |
28900 | How does_ obstruct_ compare with_ impede_? |
28900 | How does_ obtain_ differ from_ get_? |
28900 | How does_ obtain_ differ from_ procure_? |
28900 | How does_ ocean_, used adjectively, differ from_ oceanic_? |
28900 | How does_ order_ compare with_ direction_? |
28900 | How does_ ought_ compare with_ should_? |
28900 | How does_ own_ compare with_ possess_ or with_ be in possession_? |
28900 | How does_ parade_ compare with_ ostentation_? |
28900 | How does_ patience_ compare with_ submission_ and_ endurance_? |
28900 | How does_ pecuniary_ agree with and differ from_ monetary_? |
28900 | How does_ performance_ differ from_ execution_? |
28900 | How does_ permission_ compare with_ allowance_? |
28900 | How does_ pernicious_ compare with_ injurious_? |
28900 | How does_ piquant_ differ from_ pungent_? |
28900 | How does_ pitiful_ differ in use from_ pitiable_? |
28900 | How does_ pity_ differ from_ mercy_? |
28900 | How does_ pleasant_ compare with_ kind_? |
28900 | How does_ pleasure_ compare with_ comfort_ and_ enjoyment_? |
28900 | How does_ policy_ in such use compare with_ expediency_ and_ utility_? |
28900 | How does_ position_ as regards the human body differ from_ attitude_,_ posture_, or_ pose_? |
28900 | How does_ posture_ differ from_ attitude_? |
28900 | How does_ prattling_ differ from_ chatting_? |
28900 | How does_ preceding_ differ from_ antecedent_ and_ previous_? |
28900 | How does_ pretty_ compare with_ beautiful_? |
28900 | How does_ prohibit_ compare with_ prevent_? |
28900 | How does_ prohibit_ differ from_ abolish_? |
28900 | How does_ property_ differ from_ money_? |
28900 | How does_ property_ ordinarily differ from_ quality_? |
28900 | How does_ propose_ in its most frequent use differ from_ purpose_? |
28900 | How does_ protect_ surpass_ guard_ and_ defend_? |
28900 | How does_ providence_ differ from_ prudence_? |
28900 | How does_ pure_ compare with_ innocent_? |
28900 | How does_ purpose_ compare with_ intention_? |
28900 | How does_ quarrel_ compare in importance with the other words cited? |
28900 | How does_ ready_ differ from_ alert_? |
28900 | How does_ reasoning_ differ from both the above words in this respect? |
28900 | How does_ rebellion_ differ from_ revolution_? |
28900 | How does_ recent_ compare with_ new_? |
28900 | How does_ reliable_ compare with these words? |
28900 | How does_ renown_ compare with_ fame_? |
28900 | How does_ repentance_ surpass the meaning of_ penitence_,_ regret_,_ sorrow_, etc.? |
28900 | How does_ repose_ compare with_ rest_? |
28900 | How does_ repress_ compare with_ restrain_? |
28900 | How does_ requisite_ compare with_ essential_ and_ indispensable_? |
28900 | How does_ restrain_ differ from_ restrict_? |
28900 | How does_ retaliation_ compare with_ revenge_? |
28900 | How does_ revoke_ compare with_ recall_ in original meaning and in present use? |
28900 | How does_ rigorous_ compare with_ rigid_? |
28900 | How does_ salute_ differ from_ accost_ or_ greet_? |
28900 | How does_ science_ compare with_ knowledge_? |
28900 | How does_ secrete_ compare with_ conceal_? |
28900 | How does_ security_ differ from_ pledge_? |
28900 | How does_ seduce_ differ from_ tempt_? |
28900 | How does_ sensible_ compare with the above- mentioned words? |
28900 | How does_ shelter_ compare with_ cover_? |
28900 | How does_ skill_ differ from_ dexterity_? |
28900 | How does_ sleep_ compare with_ repose_ and_ rest_? |
28900 | How does_ solicit_ compare with the above words? |
28900 | How does_ stoicism_ differ from_ apathy_? |
28900 | How does_ sufficient_ compare with_ enough_? |
28900 | How does_ sullen_ differ from_ sulky_? |
28900 | How does_ superintendence_ compare with_ oversight_? |
28900 | How does_ surprise_ differ from_ astonishment_ and_ amazement_? |
28900 | How does_ sustain_ surpass_ support_ in meaning and force? |
28900 | How does_ sympathy_ in its exercise differ from_ pity_? |
28900 | How does_ term_ in ordinary use compare with_ word_,_ expression_, or_ phrase_? |
28900 | How does_ threatening_ differ from the two words above given? |
28900 | How does_ trade_ differ from_ commerce_? |
28900 | How does_ training_ differ from_ teaching_? |
28900 | How does_ transact_ differ from_ do_? |
28900 | How does_ transact_ differ from_ treat_ and_ negotiate_? |
28900 | How does_ transient_ differ in signification from_ transitory_? |
28900 | How does_ transparent_ differ from_ translucent_? |
28900 | How does_ try_ compare with the other words of the group? |
28900 | How does_ unlettered_ compare with_ illiterate_? |
28900 | How does_ unpremeditated_ compare with the words above mentioned? |
28900 | How does_ value_ differ from_ worth_? |
28900 | How does_ venial_ compare with_ pardonable_? |
28900 | How does_ visionary_ differ from_ fanciful_? |
28900 | How does_ wrong_ differ from_ injustice_ in legal use? |
28900 | How does_ zeal_ differ from_ enthusiasm_? |
28900 | How for_ filmy_,_ tenuous_? |
28900 | How in popular use? |
28900 | How inclusive a word is_ injury_? |
28900 | How is it chiefly used? |
28900 | How is it conceived of with reference to events? |
28900 | How is it connected with_ dainty_,_ delicate_, and_ exquisite_? |
28900 | How is it especially distinguished from_ beautiful_? |
28900 | How is it now used, and how does it differ from_ uncertain_? |
28900 | How is it now used? |
28900 | How is it ordinarily contrasted with_ science_? |
28900 | How is it technically used in educational work? |
28900 | How is one said to_ win_ a suit at law? |
28900 | How is one_ indicted_? |
28900 | How is_ acrimony_ distinguished from_ malignity_? |
28900 | How is_ act_ distinguished from_ action_? |
28900 | How is_ add_ related to_ increase_? |
28900 | How is_ amass_ distinguished from_ accumulate_? |
28900 | How is_ anterior_ commonly used? |
28900 | How is_ antipathy_ to be distinguished from_ dislike_? |
28900 | How is_ badinage_ distinguished from_ banter_? |
28900 | How is_ beautiful_ related to our powers of appreciation? |
28900 | How is_ belief_ discriminated from_ faith_ in the strict religious sense? |
28900 | How is_ belief_ often used in popular language as a precise equivalent of_ faith_? |
28900 | How is_ contrast_ related to_ compare_? |
28900 | How is_ convincing_ related to_ persuasion_? |
28900 | How is_ copious_ used? |
28900 | How is_ deceit_ distinguished from_ deception_? |
28900 | How is_ discourse_ related to_ conversation_? |
28900 | How is_ dissimulation_ distinguished from_ duplicity_? |
28900 | How is_ faint_ a synonym of_ feeble_ or_ purposeless_? |
28900 | How is_ fear_ contrasted with_ fright_ and_ terror_ in actual or possible effects? |
28900 | How is_ frugality_ related to_ prudence_? |
28900 | How is_ gain_ related to those words? |
28900 | How is_ get_ related to expectation or desire? |
28900 | How is_ give_ always understood when there is no limitation in the context? |
28900 | How is_ honesty_ used in a sense higher than the commercial? |
28900 | How is_ imagination_ defined? |
28900 | How is_ independence_ used in distinction from_ freedom_ and_ liberty_? |
28900 | How is_ instruction_ or_ teaching_ related to_ education_? |
28900 | How is_ make_ allied with_ compose_ or_ constitute_? |
28900 | How is_ make_ allied with_ create_? |
28900 | How is_ practise_ discriminated from such theory or profession? |
28900 | How is_ prevent_ at present used? |
28900 | How is_ primordial_ used? |
28900 | How is_ propose_ used so as to be nearly equivalent to_ purpose_? |
28900 | How is_ question_ used in a similar sense, and why? |
28900 | How is_ reason_ often used so as to be a partial equivalent of_ cause_? |
28900 | How is_ theology_ related to_ religion_? |
28900 | How is_ transgression_ discriminated from_ sin_ in the general sense? |
28900 | How is_ utility_ discriminated from_ use_ and_ usefulness_? |
28900 | How long did that usage prevail? |
28900 | How long may a_ battle_ last? |
28900 | How many of the preceding adjectives can be applied to water? |
28900 | How many parts are required for_ harmony_? |
28900 | How many persons are necessarily implied in_ consult_,_ confer_, and_ debate_ as commonly used? |
28900 | How may_ acid_,_ bitter_, and_ acrid_ be distinguished? |
28900 | How may_ exercise_ be brought up to the full meaning of_ exertion_? |
28900 | How may_ literature_ include_ science_? |
28900 | How might each be rendered? |
28900 | How much does one admit when he speaks of an_ alleged_ fact, document, signature, or the like? |
28900 | How much of certainty is implied in_ allege_? |
28900 | How of_ admonition_ and_ animadversion_? |
28900 | How related to_ artist_ and_ artisan_? |
28900 | How wide is its present meaning? |
28900 | How wide is its range of meaning? |
28900 | How wide is its range? |
28900 | How wide is the range of_ visible_? |
28900 | How widely are the words now applied? |
28900 | How widely inclusive a word is it? |
28900 | How will the merely_ honest_ and the truly_ honorable_ man differ in action? |
28900 | How with reference to expression in action? |
28900 | How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are? |
28900 | How, accordingly, do they rank among the lighter matters of life? |
28900 | How, from this primary meaning does_ fine_ become a synonym of_ excellent_ and_ beautiful_? |
28900 | How, in this sense, does it differ from_ honorable_? |
28900 | How? |
28900 | How_ arraigned_? |
28900 | Human law must---- many things that human administration of law can not absolutely----; is not this true also of the divine government? |
28900 | If so, why? |
28900 | In how general a sense is_ fasten_ used? |
28900 | In metaphorical use, how are_ harsh_ and_ bitter_ distinguished? |
28900 | In present use what does_ astute_ add to the meaning of_ acute_ or_ keen_? |
28900 | In the more limited sense, how does a_ name_ differ from an_ appellation_? |
28900 | In view of what class of dangers? |
28900 | In what are the_ spy_ and the_ scout_ alike? |
28900 | In what are_ all_ and_ both_ alike? |
28900 | In what connection can_ manly_ be used where_ manful_ could not be substituted? |
28900 | In what connection is_ armor_ used in modern warfare? |
28900 | In what connection is_ fiscal_ most commonly used? |
28900 | In what connection is_ rank_ used? |
28900 | In what connection is_ rive_ used, and in what sense? |
28900 | In what contrasted meanings is the word_ sense_ employed? |
28900 | In what derived sense is it often used? |
28900 | In what do the_ proverb_ and the_ adage_ agree? |
28900 | In what do they differ? |
28900 | In what do they differ? |
28900 | In what do_ anathema_,_ curse_,_ execration_, and_ imprecation_ agree? |
28900 | In what do_ axiom_ and_ truism_ agree? |
28900 | In what do_ convey_,_ transmit_, and_ transport_ agree? |
28900 | In what does a_ heretic_ differ from his church or religious body? |
28900 | In what does_ everlasting_ fall short of the meaning of_ eternal_? |
28900 | In what exceptional case may_ cost_ and_ price_ agree? |
28900 | In what favorable sense is it used? |
28900 | In what inferior senses are_ everlasting_ and_ interminable_ used? |
28900 | In what less opprobrious sense may_ barbarous_ and_ savage_ be used? |
28900 | In what lighter and more familiar sense may_ pray_ be used? |
28900 | In what mental actions is it manifested? |
28900 | In what one characteristic do_ swerve_ and_ veer_ differ from_ oscillate_,_ fluctuate_,_ undulate_, and_ waver_? |
28900 | In what one quality does it differ from_ affection_,_ attachment_,_ devotion_, and_ friendliness_? |
28900 | In what order might_ despair_,_ desperation_,_ discouragement_, and_ hopelessness_ follow, each as the result of the previous condition? |
28900 | In what other respects do_ imagination_ and_ fancy_ agree? |
28900 | In what other sense is it often used? |
28900 | In what realm does_ slothful_ belong, and what does it denote? |
28900 | In what respect has_ interpretation_ a wider meaning than_ translation_? |
28900 | In what respects do they differ? |
28900 | In what secondary sense is it often used? |
28900 | In what secondary sense is_ ought_ sometimes used? |
28900 | In what sense are material substances said to be_ pure_? |
28900 | In what sense are_ bluff_,_ frank_, and_ open_ used? |
28900 | In what sense are_ blunt_,_ brusk_,_ rough_, and_ rude_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense are_ cheat_,_ maneuver_, and_ imposture_ always used? |
28900 | In what sense are_ finish_ and_ complete_ used, and how are they discriminated from each other? |
28900 | In what sense are_ follower_,_ henchman_, and_ retainer_ used? |
28900 | In what sense are_ gray_,_ hoary_, and_ olden_ used of material objects? |
28900 | In what sense are_ lavish_ and_ profuse_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense do some hold a miracle to be_ supernatural_? |
28900 | In what sense is it now used? |
28900 | In what sense is the verb_ harbor_ commonly used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ benevolence_ now most commonly used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ consequent_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ divine_ loosely used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ elderly_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ homogeneous_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ host_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ innocent_ applied to inanimate substances? |
28900 | In what sense is_ jabber_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ move_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense is_ polished_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ prohibition_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ questionable_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ repudiate_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ requirement_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ salubrious_ used, and to what is it applied? |
28900 | In what sense is_ student_ employed? |
28900 | In what sense is_ suspicious_ used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ trick_ commonly used? |
28900 | In what sense is_ vacuous_ used? |
28900 | In what sense may a person be called_ faithful_? |
28900 | In what sense may one be called_ trusty_? |
28900 | In what sense may the earth be said to_ revolve_? |
28900 | In what sense was_ admire_ formerly used? |
28900 | In what sense was_ enthusiasm_ formerly used? |
28900 | In what special application is the word commonly used? |
28900 | In what special connection are_ draft_ and_ plan_ used? |
28900 | In what special connection is_ formula_ commonly used? |
28900 | In what special feature does the one differ from the other? |
28900 | In what special relations is the word used? |
28900 | In what special sense are the words_ affliction_,_ chastening_,_ trial_, and_ tribulation_ used? |
28900 | In what special sense, and with what reference are_ favored_ and_ prospered_ used? |
28900 | In what specific sense is the word also used? |
28900 | In what style and sense is_ bourn_ used? |
28900 | In what style of writing is it most commonly used? |
28900 | In what two applications may_ immaculate_,_ pure_, and_ sinless_ be used? |
28900 | In what two contrasted senses is_ oversight_ used? |
28900 | In what usage do_ property_ and_ quality_ become exact synonyms, and how are_ properties_ then distinguished? |
28900 | In what use does_ assume_ correspond with_ arrogate_ and_ usurp_? |
28900 | In what way does a_ suggestion_ bring a matter before the mind? |
28900 | In what way does_ proposition_ come to have nearly the sense of_ proposal_ in certain uses? |
28900 | In what way is_ happy_ a synonym of_ blessed_? |
28900 | In what ways may a discourse or treatise be_ amplified_? |
28900 | In what wider sense is the word often used? |
28900 | In what wider sense is_ answer_ used? |
28900 | In what wider significations is_ mercy_ used? |
28900 | In which sense does_ art_ transcend rule? |
28900 | In which sense is_ art_ a system of rules? |
28900 | Into what two classes may the words in this group of synonyms be divided, and what words will be found in each class? |
28900 | Into what two groups are the synonyms for_ also_ naturally divided? |
28900 | Into what two parts was_ imagination_ divided in the old psychology? |
28900 | Into what two sections are_ fluids_ divided? |
28900 | Is a draft- horse distinctively_ awkward_ or_ clumsy_? |
28900 | Is a_ catastrophe_ also necessarily a_ calamity_ or a_ disaster_? |
28900 | Is a_ contraction_ always an_ abbreviation_? |
28900 | Is a_ curse_ just or unjust? |
28900 | Is a_ difficulty_ within one or without? |
28900 | Is a_ foreigner_ by birth necessarily an_ alien_? |
28900 | Is a_ good- natured_ person necessarily_ agreeable_? |
28900 | Is a_ quarrel_ in word or act? |
28900 | Is a_ rare_ word necessarily_ obsolete_ or an_ obsolete_ word necessarily_ rare_? |
28900 | Is an innocent person ever pardoned? |
28900 | Is an object_ hidden_ by intention, or in what other way or ways, if any? |
28900 | Is an_ abbreviation_ always a_ contraction_? |
28900 | Is an_ army_ large or small? |
28900 | Is an_ envious_ spirit ever good? |
28900 | Is an_ extravaganza_ an_ exaggeration_? |
28900 | Is an_ ideal_ primal, or the result of development? |
28900 | Is an_ impediment_ what one finds or what he carries? |
28900 | Is an_ iniquitous_ act necessarily_ criminal_? |
28900 | Is an_ old_ or_ ancient_ word necessarily_ obsolete_? |
28900 | Is interest_ amassed_ or_ accumulated_? |
28900 | Is it a word of broader meaning than_ incident_? |
28900 | Is it attended with distinct thinking and willing? |
28900 | Is it attributed to men or brutes? |
28900 | Is it broader than_ business_? |
28900 | Is it commonly used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it conscious or unconscious? |
28900 | Is it correct to say"He_ gave_ it to me for nothing"? |
28900 | Is it correct to speak of a_ mutual_ friend? |
28900 | Is it correct to use_ hunt_ when_ search_ only is contemplated? |
28900 | Is it distinctively religious? |
28900 | Is it favorable or unfavorable in signification? |
28900 | Is it general or special? |
28900 | Is it good or bad, true or false? |
28900 | Is it in heav''n a crime to love too well? |
28900 | Is it mental or physical? |
28900 | Is it momentary or constant? |
28900 | Is it ordinarily good or evil? |
28900 | Is it physical or moral in its application? |
28900 | Is it possible to_ obliterate_ or_ efface_ that which has been previously_ canceled_ or_ erased_? |
28900 | Is it stronger or weaker than_ abolish_? |
28900 | Is it sudden or lingering? |
28900 | Is it true or false? |
28900 | Is it used in a favorable or an unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it used, in a favorable or an unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is it well to speak of a_ supporter_ as a_ backer_? |
28900 | Is it worthy or unworthy? |
28900 | Is its reference to the past or to the future? |
28900 | Is man an_ animal_? |
28900 | Is the difference between them a matter of time? |
28900 | Is the general_ subject_ or_ theme_ properly known as the_ topic_? |
28900 | Is the substance of the_ absorbing_ body changed by that which it_ absorbs_? |
28900 | Is the sufferer considered blameworthy for it? |
28900 | Is the thing one_ obtains_ an object of_ desire_? |
28900 | Is the thing_ acquired_ sought or desired, or not? |
28900 | Is their association temporary or permanent? |
28900 | Is this latter use now common? |
28900 | Is this meaning retained in the figurative uses of the word? |
28900 | Is_ abandon_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ able_ or_ capable_ the higher word? |
28900 | Is_ abolish_ used of persons or material objects? |
28900 | Is_ action_ or_ motion_ the more comprehensive word? |
28900 | Is_ alleviate_ used of persons? |
28900 | Is_ alternative_ always so severely restricted by leading writers? |
28900 | Is_ arbitrary_ ever used in a good sense? |
28900 | Is_ assistant_ or_ attendant_ the higher word? |
28900 | Is_ avow_ used in a good or a bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ awful_ always interchangeable with_ alarming_ or_ terrible_? |
28900 | Is_ charge_( in this connection) used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ companion_ used in a good or bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ concern_ as strong a term as_ anxiety_? |
28900 | Is_ continue_ favorable or unfavorable? |
28900 | Is_ deception_ ever innocent? |
28900 | Is_ detect_ often used in a favorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ dogma_ used favorably or unfavorably? |
28900 | Is_ embarrass_ or_ mortify_ the stronger word? |
28900 | Is_ esteem_ now used of concrete valuation? |
28900 | Is_ eternal_, in good speech or writing, ever brought down to such inferior use? |
28900 | Is_ extraordinary_ favorable or unfavorable in meaning? |
28900 | Is_ fabrication_ or_ falsehood_ the more odious term? |
28900 | Is_ facility_ active or passive? |
28900 | Is_ faithful_ commonly said of things as well as persons? |
28900 | Is_ freedom_ or_ liberty_ more freely used in a figurative sense? |
28900 | Is_ gift_ used in the good or the bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ harvest_ capable of figurative use, and in what sense? |
28900 | Is_ help_ or_ aid_ the stronger term? |
28900 | Is_ immediately_ losing anything of its force? |
28900 | Is_ innocent_ positive or negative? |
28900 | Is_ inquisitive_ ever used in a good sense? |
28900 | Is_ irony_ kindly or the reverse? |
28900 | Is_ irresponsible_ good or bad in its implication? |
28900 | Is_ jealous_ capable of being used in a good sense? |
28900 | Is_ law_ ever a synonym for these words, and in what way? |
28900 | Is_ mistrust_ used of persons or of things? |
28900 | Is_ nature_ a broader word than any of the preceding? |
28900 | Is_ power_ limited to intelligent agents, or how widely applied? |
28900 | Is_ protract_ ordinarily favorable or unfavorable in sense? |
28900 | Is_ remembrance_ voluntary or involuntary? |
28900 | Is_ reproach_ good or bad? |
28900 | Is_ retaliate_ used in the sense of_ avenge_ or of_ revenge_? |
28900 | Is_ ridicule_ or_ derision_ the stronger word? |
28900 | Is_ satisfactory_ a very high recommendation of any work? |
28900 | Is_ self- assertion_ ever a duty? |
28900 | Is_ surplus_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Is_ transpire_ correctly used in the sense of_ happen_? |
28900 | Is_ wile_ used in a good or a bad sense? |
28900 | Is_ win_ used in the favorable or unfavorable sense? |
28900 | Its derived meaning? |
28900 | Its meaning as an adverb of time? |
28900 | Its present meaning? |
28900 | O, to what purpose dost thou---- thy words, That thou return''st no greeting to thy friends? |
28900 | Of what is it ordinarily used? |
28900 | Of what is it used? |
28900 | Of what is it used? |
28900 | Of what is_ bevy_ used? |
28900 | Of what is_ former_ used? |
28900 | Of what is_ pack_ used? |
28900 | Of what kind of demands or impulses is_ appetite_ ordinarily used? |
28900 | Of what kind of value or property must an_ earnest_ consist? |
28900 | Of what material are all these restraining devices commonly composed? |
28900 | Of what matters are_ greedy_ and_ stingy_ used? |
28900 | Of what relations are_ honesty_ and_ probity_ used? |
28900 | Of what relations is_ treachery_ used? |
28900 | Of what things is one_ aware_? |
28900 | Of what words does_ abide_ combine the meanings? |
28900 | Of what words is_ oath_ a popular synonym? |
28900 | Of_ compute_,_ calculate_, and_ estimate_, which is used with especial reference to the future? |
28900 | On how many fields may one_ battle_ be fought? |
28900 | On what are_ prejudice_ and_ prepossession_ based? |
28900 | On what is it founded? |
28900 | On what plane are_ sports_? |
28900 | Prepositions: The business_ of_ a druggist; in business_ with_ his father; doing business_ for_ his father; have you business_ with_ me? |
28900 | Say, shall my little bark attendant sail,---- the triumph and partake the gale? |
28900 | Shall I not take mine---- in mine inn? |
28900 | Shall we, shall---- men, like---- trees, Strike deeper their vile root, and closer cling, Still more enamored of their wretched soil? |
28900 | Should it ever be used as the equivalent of_ language_ or_ diction_? |
28900 | Should we preferably use_ custom_ or_ habit_ of a society? |
28900 | Should we say one is_ stopping_ or_ staying_ at a hotel? |
28900 | Speaking of the honor paid to good men, is it not time to---- for a reform in the writing of biographies? |
28900 | Tell me where is---- bred; Or in the heart or in the head? |
28900 | The present meaning? |
28900 | Then how can any man be said To break an---- he never made? |
28900 | To bear too tender, or too---- a heart, To act a Lover''s or a Roman''s part? |
28900 | To how many dimensions does_ large_ apply? |
28900 | To persons or things, and in what way? |
28900 | To what additional matters does_ admission_ refer? |
28900 | To what are these words in such sense properly applied? |
28900 | To what are these words severally applied? |
28900 | To what are_ assassinate_,_ execute_, and_ murder_ restricted? |
28900 | To what are_ charge_ and_ expense_ ordinarily applied? |
28900 | To what are_ explicit_ and_ express_ alike opposed? |
28900 | To what are_ rend_ and_ tear_ usually applied? |
28900 | To what are_ submission_ and_ resignation_ ordinarily applied? |
28900 | To what are_ twinkle_ and_ twinkling_ applied? |
28900 | To what being, in that sense, may it be applied? |
28900 | To what beings only does_ sex_ apply? |
28900 | To what class are_ mercy_,_ forgiveness_, and_ pardon_ extended? |
28900 | To what class do most of the words in this group belong? |
28900 | To what class is_ grace_ shown? |
28900 | To what class of animals does_ brood_ apply? |
28900 | To what class of events does it apply? |
28900 | To what class of objects do we apply_ disbelief_? |
28900 | To what class of objects do_ transfer_,_ transmit_, and_ convey_ apply? |
28900 | To what class of objects does_ transport_ refer? |
28900 | To what class of persons is the latter word ordinarily applied? |
28900 | To what class of things do we apply_ aboveboard_? |
28900 | To what classes of objects or states of mind do we apply_ calm_? |
28900 | To what classes of persons are_ orders_ especially given? |
28900 | To what classes of things do we apply_ accompaniment_? |
28900 | To what do they apply? |
28900 | To what do_ abundant_,_ ample_,_ liberal_, and_ plentiful_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ adapted_,_ fit_,_ suitable_, and_ qualified_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ alert_,_ wide- awake_, and_ ready_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ bodily_,_ corporal_, and_ corporeal_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ butcher_ and_ slaughter_ primarily apply? |
28900 | To what do_ congenital_,_ innate_, and_ inborn_ apply as distinguished from_ inherent_ and_ intrinsic_? |
28900 | To what do_ decrepit_,_ gray_, and_ hoary_ apply, as said of human beings? |
28900 | To what do_ encourage_ and_ uphold_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ integrity_,_ rectitude_,_ right_,_ righteousness_, and_ virtue_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ labor_ and_ pains_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what do_ redundance_ and_ redundancy_ chiefly refer? |
28900 | To what do_ sequence_ and_ succession_ apply? |
28900 | To what do_ shine_ and_ sheen_ refer? |
28900 | To what do_ young_ and_ youthful_ distinctively apply? |
28900 | To what does it apply? |
28900 | To what does it apply? |
28900 | To what does_ abuse_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ admittance_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ ally_ generally apply? |
28900 | To what does_ amiable_ always apply? |
28900 | To what does_ amplify_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ antique_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ appoint_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ aspiration_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ carnage_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ civilization_ apply, and what does it denote? |
28900 | To what does_ entrance_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ expediency_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ ferocious_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ financial_ especially apply? |
28900 | To what does_ forgive_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ inconsistent_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ justness_ refer, and in what sense is it used? |
28900 | To what does_ love_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ lovely_ often apply? |
28900 | To what does_ manly_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ manner_ refer? |
28900 | To what does_ monetary_ directly refer? |
28900 | To what does_ nimble_ properly refer? |
28900 | To what does_ promote_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ racy_ in the first instance refer? |
28900 | To what does_ regularity_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ senile_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ swift_ apply? |
28900 | To what does_ uprightness_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ vacant_ especially refer? |
28900 | To what does_ veracity_ apply? |
28900 | To what faculty of the mind do both of these activities or powers belong? |
28900 | To what is that name more appropriately given? |
28900 | To what is the term_ infection_ applied? |
28900 | To what is the term_ uncertain_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ accomplice_ nearly equivalent? |
28900 | To what is_ actual_ opposed? |
28900 | To what is_ advertise_ chiefly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ aged_ chiefly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ caricature_ mostly confined? |
28900 | To what is_ contagion_ now limited by the best medical usage? |
28900 | To what is_ corporal_ now for the most part limited? |
28900 | To what is_ discordant_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ expertness_ limited? |
28900 | To what is_ fiction_ now most commonly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ have_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ herd_ limited? |
28900 | To what is_ luxuriant_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ male_ applied? |
28900 | To what is_ massacre_ limited? |
28900 | To what is_ obtrusive_ chiefly applied? |
28900 | To what is_ train_ commonly applied where_ educate_ could not well be used? |
28900 | To what kind of person is a_ rebuke_ administered? |
28900 | To what kind of person is_ reproof_ administered? |
28900 | To what kind of power does_ actuate_ refer? |
28900 | To what kind of proceedings do_ indict_ and_ arraign_ apply? |
28900 | To what kind of reasoning does_ demonstration_ in the strict sense apply? |
28900 | To what kind of things are both these words applied? |
28900 | To what kind of_ reasoning_ were_ argument_ and_ argumentation_ formerly restricted? |
28900 | To what language do_ farewell_ and_ good- by_ belong etymologically? |
28900 | To what matters do we apply the word_ creed_? |
28900 | To what matters should_ awful_ properly be restricted? |
28900 | To what may a_ brawl_ or_ broil_ be confined? |
28900 | To what may it be applied? |
28900 | To what objects may these words be severally applied? |
28900 | To what objects or classes of objects does_ abandon_ apply? |
28900 | To what order of mind does it belong? |
28900 | To what realm does_ salutary_ belong? |
28900 | To what realm of thought does_ immanent_ belong? |
28900 | To what sort of activity does_ officious_ refer? |
28900 | To what sort of exertion does_ endeavor_ especially apply? |
28900 | To what sort of objects do we apply_ bear_? |
28900 | To what sort of objects do we apply_ behold_,_ discern_,_ distinguish_,_ observe_, and_ see_? |
28900 | To what use is_ congregation_ restricted? |
28900 | To what was_ abomination_ originally applied? |
28900 | To what, therefore, does_ awkward_ primarily refer? |
28900 | To what_ masculine_? |
28900 | To which does_ abuse_ apply? |
28900 | To whom does one_ complain_, in the formal sense of the word? |
28900 | Try what---- can: what can it not? |
28900 | Under what general term are all these included? |
28900 | What added sense is often blended with this primary meaning? |
28900 | What are some chief antonyms for_ make_? |
28900 | What are some chief antonyms of_ absurd_? |
28900 | What are some chief antonyms of_ active_? |
28900 | What are some of the extended uses of_ roll_? |
28900 | What are the animals of a country or region collectively called? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of a_ civil_ person? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of a_ flame_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of a_ group_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of an_ inquisitive_ person? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of_ affright_,_ fright_, and_ terror_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of_ command_ and_ commandment_? |
28900 | What are the characteristics of_ wonder_? |
28900 | What are the chief antonyms of_ absolve_? |
28900 | What are the chief distinctions between_ deliberate_? |
28900 | What are the chief meanings of_ faint_? |
28900 | What are the chief synonyms of_ healthy_? |
28900 | What are the differences between_ overthrow_,_ suppress_, and_ subvert_? |
28900 | What are the dimensions of_ infinite_ space? |
28900 | What are the distinctions between_ allegory_,_ fable_, and_ parable_? |
28900 | What are the distinctions between_ irrational_,_ foolish_, and_ silly_? |
28900 | What are the distinctive senses of_ edge_ and_ brink_? |
28900 | What are the distinctive senses of_ employ_ and_ use_? |
28900 | What are the especial characteristics of_ anger_? |
28900 | What are the essentials of an_ army_? |
28900 | What are the prepositions chiefly used with_ make_, and how employed? |
28900 | What are the primary and derived meanings of_ remote_? |
28900 | What are the senses of_ plain_ and_ plane_? |
28900 | What are the shades of difference between_ choose_,_ cull_,_ elect_,_ pick_,_ prefer_, and_ select_? |
28900 | What are the special characteristics of_ insinuation_ and_ innuendo_? |
28900 | What are the special senses of_ dialogue_ and_ colloquy_? |
28900 | What are the special senses of_ differentiate_,_ discriminate_ and_ distinguish_? |
28900 | What are the special significations of_ abate_? |
28900 | What are the two common faults with reference to_ synonymous_ words or_ synonyms_? |
28900 | What are the two contrasted senses of_ anticipate_? |
28900 | What are the_ articles_ of a contract? |
28900 | What are the_ judges_ of the United States Supreme Court officially called? |
28900 | What are their respective rights in case of capture? |
28900 | What are_ bonds_ and of what material composed? |
28900 | What are_ breeding_ and_ nurture_, and how do they differ from each other? |
28900 | What are_ cargo_,_ freight_, and_ lading_? |
28900 | What are_ causality_ and_ causation_? |
28900 | What are_ confidence_ and_ reliance_? |
28900 | What are_ consternation_,_ dismay_, and_ terror_, and how are they related to the danger? |
28900 | What are_ dexterity_ and_ skill_? |
28900 | What are_ douse_ and_ duck_? |
28900 | What are_ fetters_ in the primary sense? |
28900 | What are_ frenzy_ and_ mania_? |
28900 | What are_ grudge_,_ resentment_, and_ revenge_, and how do they compare with one another? |
28900 | What are_ manacles_ and_ handcuffs_ designed to fasten or hold? |
28900 | What are_ reputation_ and_ repute_, and in which sense commonly used? |
28900 | What are_ returns_ or_ receipts_? |
28900 | What are_ shackles_ and what are they intended to fasten or hold? |
28900 | What are_ use_ and_ usage_, and how do they differ from each other? |
28900 | What are_ valediction_ and_ valedictory_? |
28900 | What are_ wages_? |
28900 | What can be_ abbreviated_? |
28900 | What change has_ presently_ undergone? |
28900 | What change of meaning has_ apology_ undergone? |
28900 | What class of things do we_ perceive_? |
28900 | What common term includes the other words of the group? |
28900 | What contrasted senses are derived from this primary meaning? |
28900 | What contrasted senses has_ old_? |
28900 | What contrasted uses has_ high_ in the figurative sense? |
28900 | What demands or tendencies are included in_ passion_? |
28900 | What descriptive term would others prefer? |
28900 | What did it originally imply? |
28900 | What did it originally signify? |
28900 | What did the Latin_ impedimenta_ signify? |
28900 | What did_ atonement_ originally denote? |
28900 | What did_ by and by_ formerly signify? |
28900 | What did_ directly_ formerly signify, and what does it now commonly mean? |
28900 | What did_ extemporaneous_ originally mean? |
28900 | What did_ idea_ signify in early philosophical use? |
28900 | What did_ precarious_ originally signify? |
28900 | What did_ vengeance_ formerly mean, and what does it now imply? |
28900 | What difference is noted between_ self- conceit_ and_ conceit_? |
28900 | What difference is there in the use of these words? |
28900 | What difference may be noted between_ avenging_ and_ retribution_? |
28900 | What difference of usage is recognized between the two words? |
28900 | What different sense has it in business usage? |
28900 | What distance is implied in_ near_? |
28900 | What distinction is there between the two words as to the purpose implied? |
28900 | What distinctive name is given to a mass of sand across the mouth of a river or harbor? |
28900 | What do all these include? |
28900 | What do the two latter words suggest, and how do they compare with_ pomp_? |
28900 | What do these two words respectively signify? |
28900 | What do we mean by"a_ distinction_ without a_ difference_"? |
28900 | What do we mean when we say that a person is_ envious_? |
28900 | What do we mean when we say that a person is_ mortified_? |
28900 | What do we suggest when we speak of"_ seeming_ innocence"? |
28900 | What do_ adequate_,_ commensurate_, and_ sufficient_ alike signify? |
28900 | What do_ admittance_ and_ admission_ add to the meaning of_ entrance_? |
28900 | What do_ affright_ and_ fright_ express? |
28900 | What do_ amazement_ and_ astonishment_ agree in expressing? |
28900 | What do_ arbitrate_ and_ mediate_ involve? |
28900 | What do_ argumentation_ and_ debate_ ordinarily imply? |
28900 | What do_ attainment_,_ proficiency_, and_ development_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ behold_ and_ distinguish_ suggest in addition to_ seeing_? |
28900 | What do_ beseech_,_ entreat_, and_ implore_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ burst_ and_ rupture_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ choice_,_ pick_,_ election_, and_ preference_ imply regarding one''s wishes? |
28900 | What do_ close_,_ complete_,_ conclude_, and_ finish_ signify as to expectation or appropriateness? |
28900 | What do_ component_,_ constituent_,_ ingredient_, and_ element_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ division_ and_ fraction_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ drive_ and_ compel_ imply, and how do these two words compare with each other? |
28900 | What do_ emigrate_ and_ immigrate_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ entertainment_ and_ recreation_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ fanaticism_ and_ bigotry_ commonly include? |
28900 | What do_ glimmer_,_ glitter_, and_ shimmer_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ gratification_ and_ satisfaction_ express? |
28900 | What do_ incite_ and_ instigate_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ kin_ and_ kindred_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ lucid_ and_ pellucid_ signify? |
28900 | What do_ need_ and_ want_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ performance_ and_ execution_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ prime_ and_ primary_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ prompt_ and_ stir_ imply? |
28900 | What do_ rebuke_ and_ reproof_ imply on the part of him who administers them? |
28900 | What do_ rectitude_ and_ righteousness_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ scan_,_ inspect_, and_ survey_ respectively express, and how are they distinguished from one another? |
28900 | What do_ support_ and_ sustain_ alike signify? |
28900 | What do_ trusty_ and_ trustworthy_ denote? |
28900 | What do_ urge_ and_ impel_ imply? |
28900 | What does a_ proposition_ set forth? |
28900 | What does an_ affray_ always involve? |
28900 | What does an_ apology_ now always imply? |
28900 | What does an_ offer_ or_ proposal_ do? |
28900 | What does an_ overture_ accomplish? |
28900 | What does it distinctively denote? |
28900 | What does it imply as to the observer''s action? |
28900 | What does it imply of others''probable feeling or action? |
28900 | What does it include? |
28900 | What does it mean? |
28900 | What does it mean? |
28900 | What does it now express? |
28900 | What does it now signify? |
28900 | What does it signify in common use? |
28900 | What does it signify in common use? |
28900 | What does it signify in ordinary use? |
28900 | What does it signify? |
28900 | What does it signify? |
28900 | What does one_ earn_? |
28900 | What does the verb_ speed_ signify? |
28900 | What does the word signify in accepted usage? |
28900 | What does the word_ govern_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ abandon_ commonly denote of previous relationship? |
28900 | What does_ abhor_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ absolute_ in the strict sense denote? |
28900 | What does_ accost_ always signify? |
28900 | What does_ acquaintance_ between persons imply? |
28900 | What does_ advantage_ originally signify? |
28900 | What does_ affirm_ signify in legal use, and how does it differ from_ swear_? |
28900 | What does_ agriculture_ include? |
28900 | What does_ annihilate_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ antecedent_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ approval_ add to the meaning of_ praise_? |
28900 | What does_ arrest_ signify in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What does_ assiduity_ signify as indicated by its etymology? |
28900 | What does_ associate_ imply, as used officially? |
28900 | What does_ astute_ imply regarding the ulterior purpose or object of the person who is credited with it? |
28900 | What does_ atom_ etymologically signify? |
28900 | What does_ attain_ add to the meaning of_ arrive_? |
28900 | What does_ attend_ add to the meaning of_ listen_? |
28900 | What does_ augment_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ austere_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ business_ add to the meaning of_ barter_? |
28900 | What does_ clean_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ clear_ originally signify? |
28900 | What does_ coax_ express? |
28900 | What does_ complete_ express? |
28900 | What does_ conceive_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ consciousness_ include? |
28900 | What does_ consent_ involve? |
28900 | What does_ constrain_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ convince_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ courtly_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ culture_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ curious_ signify, and how does it differ from_ inquisitive_? |
28900 | What does_ defend_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ demeanor_ include? |
28900 | What does_ detest_ express? |
28900 | What does_ diligent_ add to the meaning of_ industrious_? |
28900 | What does_ distinct_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ ease_ denote, in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What does_ ease_ imply, and to what may it be limited? |
28900 | What does_ either_ properly denote? |
28900 | What does_ endure_ add to the meaning of_ bear_? |
28900 | What does_ ephemeral_ suggest besides brevity of time? |
28900 | What does_ epithet_ signify in literary use? |
28900 | What does_ ethereal_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ execration_ express? |
28900 | What does_ expiation_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ facility_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ fair_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ fantastic_ add to the meaning of_ fanciful_? |
28900 | What does_ fierce_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ force_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ former_ always imply? |
28900 | What does_ friendly_ signify as applied to persons, or as applied to acts? |
28900 | What does_ gain_ add? |
28900 | What does_ garrulous_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ general_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ generous_ tell? |
28900 | What does_ good- natured_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ graceful_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ guard_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ happen_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ hear_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ heed_ further imply? |
28900 | What does_ horizontal_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ hunt_ ordinarily include? |
28900 | What does_ hurry_ suggest in addition to the meaning of_ hasten_? |
28900 | What does_ idle_ in present use properly denote? |
28900 | What does_ ignorant_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ impediment_ primarily signify? |
28900 | What does_ impertinence_ primarily denote? |
28900 | What does_ inbred_ add to the sense of_ innate_ or_ inborn_? |
28900 | What does_ incompatible_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ inert_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ inherent_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ innocent_ in the full sense signify? |
28900 | What does_ instruction_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ keep_ imply when used as a synonym of_ guard_ or_ defend_? |
28900 | What does_ lacerate_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ lazy_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ lift_ mean? |
28900 | What does_ listen_ add to the meaning of_ hear_? |
28900 | What does_ literature_, used absolutely, denote? |
28900 | What does_ loathe_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ material_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ matrimony_ specifically denote? |
28900 | What does_ method_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ munificent_ tell of the motive or spirit of the giver? |
28900 | What does_ music_ include? |
28900 | What does_ native_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ natural_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ necessity_ signify in the philosophical sense? |
28900 | What does_ next_ always imply? |
28900 | What does_ noisome_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ nurture_ signify, and how does it compare with_ educate_? |
28900 | What does_ obtain_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ old_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ operation_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ ought_ properly signify? |
28900 | What does_ pauperism_ properly signify? |
28900 | What does_ penitence_ add to_ regret_? |
28900 | What does_ petulant_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ pleasant_ add to the sense of_ pleasing_? |
28900 | What does_ population_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ possess_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ poverty_ strictly denote? |
28900 | What does_ price_ always imply? |
28900 | What does_ primitive_ suggest, as in the expressions, the_ primitive_ church,_ primitive_ simplicity? |
28900 | What does_ privation_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ prompt_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ pupil_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ pure_ denote in moral and religious use? |
28900 | What does_ pure_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ rebuke_ literally signify? |
28900 | What does_ rip_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ rudeness_ suggest? |
28900 | What does_ savage_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ sensible_ indicate regarding the emotions, that would not be expressed by_ conscious_? |
28900 | What does_ sensitiveness_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ shield_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ skilful_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ speech_ always involve? |
28900 | What does_ stop_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ strive_ suggest? |
28900 | What does_ submerge_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ superciliousness_ imply according to its etymology? |
28900 | What does_ think_ signify in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What does_ tidy_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ time_ denote? |
28900 | What does_ typical_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ use_ often imply as to materials_ used_? |
28900 | What does_ valiant_ tell of results? |
28900 | What does_ venerable_ express? |
28900 | What does_ vindicate_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ waste_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ weight_ signify? |
28900 | What does_ win_ imply? |
28900 | What does_ yield_ imply? |
28900 | What element does_ habit_ add to_ custom_ and_ routine_? |
28900 | What element does_ lofty_ add to the meaning of_ high_ or_ tall_? |
28900 | What element is always found in an_ austere_ character? |
28900 | What element is common to the_ cheat_ and the_ impostor_? |
28900 | What element is prominent in this word? |
28900 | What element is prominent in_ intention_? |
28900 | What element or elements does_ watch_ add to the meaning of_ look_? |
28900 | What elements are combined in_ faith_? |
28900 | What elements are present and what lacking in_ awe_? |
28900 | What examples are given in the text of the correct use of these words? |
28900 | What feelings are combined in_ chagrin_? |
28900 | What forms of existence does the word_ creature_ include? |
28900 | What has it now come to signify in common use? |
28900 | What has the effect to make one_ abashed_? |
28900 | What idea does_ physical_ add to that contained in_ material_? |
28900 | What idea of time is implied in_ deliberate_? |
28900 | What ideas are combined in_ heroic_? |
28900 | What illustrations of the differences are given in the text? |
28900 | What illustrations of the uses of these words are given in the text? |
28900 | What implication does it frequently convey? |
28900 | What implication does_ surmise_ ordinarily convey? |
28900 | What implication is conveyed in_ seeming_? |
28900 | What important difference appears in this latter use? |
28900 | What in more strictly scientific use? |
28900 | What in the intellectual and moral sense? |
28900 | What instances can you give of the use of these words, also of_ tolerate_ and_ submit_? |
28900 | What is Paley''s definition of_ instinct_? |
28900 | What is a lawyer''s_ brief_? |
28900 | What is a person said to_ get_? |
28900 | What is a religious_ service_ in the extended sense? |
28900 | What is a verbal_ answer_? |
28900 | What is a_ bar_? |
28900 | What is a_ bargain_ in the strict sense? |
28900 | What is a_ barrier_? |
28900 | What is a_ battle_? |
28900 | What is a_ beach_? |
28900 | What is a_ benefaction_? |
28900 | What is a_ bid_? |
28900 | What is a_ blemish_? |
28900 | What is a_ catastrophe_ or_ cataclysm_? |
28900 | What is a_ code_? |
28900 | What is a_ cognomen_? |
28900 | What is a_ colloquialism_? |
28900 | What is a_ community_? |
28900 | What is a_ conclave_? |
28900 | What is a_ condition_? |
28900 | What is a_ conflagration_? |
28900 | What is a_ contingency_? |
28900 | What is a_ coterie_? |
28900 | What is a_ defect_? |
28900 | What is a_ design_? |
28900 | What is a_ dialect_? |
28900 | What is a_ dictum_? |
28900 | What is a_ doctrine_? |
28900 | What is a_ drove_? |
28900 | What is a_ fastness_ or_ stronghold_? |
28900 | What is a_ fee_, and for what given? |
28900 | What is a_ feud_? |
28900 | What is a_ fiction_ in the most common modern meaning of the word? |
28900 | What is a_ flare_? |
28900 | What is a_ fluid_? |
28900 | What is a_ fort_? |
28900 | What is a_ fragment_? |
28900 | What is a_ franchise_? |
28900 | What is a_ fraud_? |
28900 | What is a_ fraud_? |
28900 | What is a_ gift_? |
28900 | What is a_ grant_, and by whom made? |
28900 | What is a_ gratuity_, and to whom given? |
28900 | What is a_ group_, and of what class of objects may it be composed? |
28900 | What is a_ guess_? |
28900 | What is a_ heretic_? |
28900 | What is a_ hindrance_? |
28900 | What is a_ hunt_? |
28900 | What is a_ hypothesis_? |
28900 | What is a_ judge_ in the legal sense? |
28900 | What is a_ liquid_? |
28900 | What is a_ machine_ in the most general sense? |
28900 | What is a_ mandate_? |
28900 | What is a_ mechanism_? |
28900 | What is a_ model_? |
28900 | What is a_ molecule_, and of what is it regarded as composed? |
28900 | What is a_ name_ in the most general sense? |
28900 | What is a_ part_? |
28900 | What is a_ particle_? |
28900 | What is a_ patois_? |
28900 | What is a_ pause_? |
28900 | What is a_ people_? |
28900 | What is a_ permit_? |
28900 | What is a_ portion_? |
28900 | What is a_ precedent_? |
28900 | What is a_ precept_? |
28900 | What is a_ present_, and to whom given? |
28900 | What is a_ presumption_? |
28900 | What is a_ pretense_? |
28900 | What is a_ privilege_? |
28900 | What is a_ referee_, and how appointed? |
28900 | What is a_ reply_? |
28900 | What is a_ requital_? |
28900 | What is a_ retort_? |
28900 | What is a_ right_? |
28900 | What is a_ rite_? |
28900 | What is a_ ruse_? |
28900 | What is a_ sacrament_? |
28900 | What is a_ sample_? |
28900 | What is a_ sensation_? |
28900 | What is a_ sense_? |
28900 | What is a_ sententious_ style? |
28900 | What is a_ share_? |
28900 | What is a_ similitude_? |
28900 | What is a_ sketch_? |
28900 | What is a_ state_? |
28900 | What is a_ story_? |
28900 | What is a_ story_? |
28900 | What is a_ struggle_? |
28900 | What is a_ subdivision_? |
28900 | What is a_ system_? |
28900 | What is a_ tempest_? |
28900 | What is a_ term_ in the logical sense? |
28900 | What is a_ terminus_? |
28900 | What is a_ theory_? |
28900 | What is a_ token_? |
28900 | What is a_ tool_? |
28900 | What is a_ transaction_? |
28900 | What is a_ trip_? |
28900 | What is a_ utensil_? |
28900 | What is a_ vernacular_? |
28900 | What is a_ verse_ in the strict sense? |
28900 | What is a_ vocation_? |
28900 | What is a_ vow_? |
28900 | What is a_ vulgarism_? |
28900 | What is an emotional or personal_ fancy_? |
28900 | What is an intellectual_ fancy_? |
28900 | What is an_ ache_? |
28900 | What is an_ adherent_? |
28900 | What is an_ adjuration_? |
28900 | What is an_ aim_? |
28900 | What is an_ alliance_? |
28900 | What is an_ allowance_? |
28900 | What is an_ anathema_? |
28900 | What is an_ anecdote_? |
28900 | What is an_ animal_? |
28900 | What is an_ antagonist_? |
28900 | What is an_ apothegm_? |
28900 | What is an_ apparatus_? |
28900 | What is an_ appliance_? |
28900 | What is an_ approximation_ in the mathematical sense? |
28900 | What is an_ archetype_? |
28900 | What is an_ art_ in the industrial sense? |
28900 | What is an_ artifice_? |
28900 | What is an_ artificer_? |
28900 | What is an_ artist_? |
28900 | What is an_ attribute_? |
28900 | What is an_ economy_? |
28900 | What is an_ effort_? |
28900 | What is an_ element_ in chemistry? |
28900 | What is an_ emissary_? |
28900 | What is an_ encumbrance_? |
28900 | What is an_ endeavor_, and how is it distinguished from_ effort_? |
28900 | What is an_ enemy_? |
28900 | What is an_ episode_? |
28900 | What is an_ essay_, and for what purpose is it made? |
28900 | What is an_ essential_? |
28900 | What is an_ exemplification_? |
28900 | What is an_ ideal_? |
28900 | What is an_ implement_? |
28900 | What is an_ intimation_? |
28900 | What is an_ oath_? |
28900 | What is an_ obiter dictum_? |
28900 | What is an_ observance_? |
28900 | What is an_ opinion_? |
28900 | What is an_ origin_? |
28900 | What is an_ original_? |
28900 | What is an_ outline_ in written composition? |
28900 | What is an_ outline_ of a sermon technically called? |
28900 | What is commonly implied in the use of_ preternatural_? |
28900 | What is especially denoted by_ fearless_ and_ intrepid_? |
28900 | What is especially implied in_ impart_? |
28900 | What is especially implied in_ secure_? |
28900 | What is imperatively required beyond_ verse_,_ rime_, or_ meter_ to constitute_ poetry_? |
28900 | What is implied by_ passions_ and_ appetites_ when used as contrasted terms? |
28900 | What is implied if we speak of any particular man as an_ animal_? |
28900 | What is implied in the use of the word_ severity_? |
28900 | What is implied in_ mourning_, in its most common acceptation? |
28900 | What is implied in_ profession_? |
28900 | What is implied in_ undertake_? |
28900 | What is implied when we speak of_ apparent_ kindness or_ apparent_ neglect? |
28900 | What is implied when we speak of_ granting_ a favor? |
28900 | What is it to_ accelerate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ affront_? |
28900 | What is it to_ allure_? |
28900 | What is it to_ amass_? |
28900 | What is it to_ amend_? |
28900 | What is it to_ announce_? |
28900 | What is it to_ apostrophize_? |
28900 | What is it to_ appropriate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ arrive_? |
28900 | What is it to_ asperse_? |
28900 | What is it to_ attempt_? |
28900 | What is it to_ avenge_? |
28900 | What is it to_ browbeat_ or_ cow_? |
28900 | What is it to_ cajole_? |
28900 | What is it to_ censure_? |
28900 | What is it to_ certify_? |
28900 | What is it to_ compel_? |
28900 | What is it to_ cover_? |
28900 | What is it to_ demonstrate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ despatch_? |
28900 | What is it to_ discard_? |
28900 | What is it to_ discipline_? |
28900 | What is it to_ encounter_? |
28900 | What is it to_ end_, and what reference does_ end_ have to intention or expectation? |
28900 | What is it to_ entertain_ mentally? |
28900 | What is it to_ excite_? |
28900 | What is it to_ extenuate_, and how does that word compare with_ palliate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ follow_? |
28900 | What is it to_ gaze_? |
28900 | What is it to_ hinder_? |
28900 | What is it to_ influence_? |
28900 | What is it to_ intermeddle_? |
28900 | What is it to_ interpose_? |
28900 | What is it to_ kill_? |
28900 | What is it to_ maintain_? |
28900 | What is it to_ manage_? |
28900 | What is it to_ obstruct_? |
28900 | What is it to_ paraphrase_? |
28900 | What is it to_ pardon_? |
28900 | What is it to_ persuade_? |
28900 | What is it to_ plead_ in the ordinary sense? |
28900 | What is it to_ pray_ in the religious sense? |
28900 | What is it to_ prohibit_? |
28900 | What is it to_ promote_? |
28900 | What is it to_ prop_? |
28900 | What is it to_ protract_? |
28900 | What is it to_ reach_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is it to_ reason_ about a matter? |
28900 | What is it to_ recreate_? |
28900 | What is it to_ remit_? |
28900 | What is it to_ reproach_? |
28900 | What is it to_ restrain_? |
28900 | What is it to_ scare_ or_ terrify_? |
28900 | What is it to_ slander_? |
28900 | What is it to_ slay_? |
28900 | What is it to_ suppose_? |
28900 | What is it to_ teach_? |
28900 | What is it to_ train_? |
28900 | What is its application? |
28900 | What is its chief present use? |
28900 | What is its common acceptation? |
28900 | What is its distinctive meaning? |
28900 | What is its distinctive sense? |
28900 | What is its meaning in popular use as said of persons? |
28900 | What is its meaning in present scientific use? |
28900 | What is its more appropriate sense? |
28900 | What is its original meaning? |
28900 | What is its present meaning? |
28900 | What is its present popular use, and with what words is it now synonymous? |
28900 | What is its present theological and popular sense? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its primary meaning? |
28900 | What is its special sense when used with reference to sins? |
28900 | What is its use in scientific investigation and study? |
28900 | What is meant by saying that a word is_ rare_? |
28900 | What is meant by saying that an author has a_ subjective_ or an_ objective_ style? |
28900 | What is meant by_ hostilities_ between nations? |
28900 | What is meant by_ synonymous_ words? |
28900 | What is necessary to constitute an object or a person_ beautiful_? |
28900 | What is now its prevalent and controlling meaning? |
28900 | What is religion? |
28900 | What is that which the breeze on the---- steep, As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses? |
28900 | What is the added significance of_ barbaric_? |
28900 | What is the central distinction between_ antecedent_ and_ cause_? |
28900 | What is the chief use? |
28900 | What is the conduct specially characteristic of a_ meddlesome_ person? |
28900 | What is the correct term in legal phrase? |
28900 | What is the definition of_ law_ in its ideal? |
28900 | What is the definition of_ prudence_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and distinctive meaning of_ alarm_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and distinctive sense of_ property_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and meaning of_ concise_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and meaning of_ fugitive_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and meaning of_ succinct_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and original meaning of_ awkward_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and primary meaning of_ expediency_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and primary meaning of_ symbol_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and signification of_ aboriginal_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and the distinctive meaning of_ abjure_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and the inherent meaning of_ quality_? |
28900 | What is the derivation and the original signification of_ equivocal_? |
28900 | What is the derivation of_ language_? |
28900 | What is the derivation of_ transient_ and_ transitory_? |
28900 | What is the derivation, and what is the original meaning of_ exterminate_? |
28900 | What is the design of an_ imposture_? |
28900 | What is the difference between a_ female_ voice and a_ feminine_ voice? |
28900 | What is the difference between an_ empty_ house and a_ vacant_ house? |
28900 | What is the difference between the statement that a man_ has_ reason, and the statement that he_ is in possession_ of his reason? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ absorb_ and_ emit_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ abstract_ and_ separate_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ absurd_ and_ paradoxical_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ accident_ and_ chance_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ adjacent_ and_ adjoining_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ allow_ and_ permit_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ amateur_ and_ connoisseur_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ amend_ and_ emend_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ arms_ and_ armor_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ assemblage_ and_ assembly_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ choice_ and_ alternative_ in the strict use of language? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ envious_ and_ jealous_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ esteem_ and_ estimate_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ expression_ and_ look_? |
28900 | What is the difference between_ listen for_ and_ listen to_? |
28900 | What is the difference in dignity between the two words? |
28900 | What is the difference in mental action between_ hesitate_ and_ waver_? |
28900 | What is the difference in method involved in the verbs_ cancel_,_ efface_,_ erase_,_ expunge_, and_ obliterate_? |
28900 | What is the difference in use between_ innate_ and_ inborn_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between the two? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ allay_ and_ alleviate_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ bring_ and_ carry_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ change_ and_ exchange_? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ eager_ and_ earnest_ in the nature of the feeling implied? |
28900 | What is the distinction between_ look_ and_ see_? |
28900 | What is the distinction often made between_ equal_ and_ equivalent_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ barter_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ betide_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ call_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ caricature_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ citadel_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ criminal_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ danger_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ design_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ detect_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ edge_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ education_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ evanescent_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ extremity_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ hallucination_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ magnanimous_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ migrate_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ superstition_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ temporary_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive meaning of_ wo nt_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ allude_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ attitude_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ aver_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ bind_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ convey_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ divert_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ emulation_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ irony_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ munificent_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ noxious_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ pack_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ pose_? |
28900 | What is the distinctive sense of_ strand_? |
28900 | What is the duration of_ infinite_ time? |
28900 | What is the especial element common to the_ ludicrous_, the_ ridiculous_, and the_ nonsensical_? |
28900 | What is the especial implication in_ unreasonable_? |
28900 | What is the especial significance of_ coerce_? |
28900 | What is the essential difference between_ decay_ and_ decompose_? |
28900 | What is the essential difference between_ illusion_ and_ delusion_? |
28900 | What is the essential fact underlying the visible phenomena which we call_ fire_? |
28900 | What is the essential idea of_ make_? |
28900 | What is the essential idea of_ revolution_? |
28900 | What is the essential meaning of_ conversation_? |
28900 | What is the essential meaning of_ storm_? |
28900 | What is the etymological meaning of_ example_? |
28900 | What is the etymological meaning of_ horror_? |
28900 | What is the etymological meaning of_ perverse_? |
28900 | What is the figurative use of_ entrance_? |
28900 | What is the force and use of_ bear_ in this connection? |
28900 | What is the force of_ expostulate_ and_ remonstrate_? |
28900 | What is the force of_ summary_? |
28900 | What is the force of_ tho_ and_ altho_? |
28900 | What is the full meaning of_ educate_? |
28900 | What is the general meaning of_ conflict_? |
28900 | What is the general meaning of_ keep_? |
28900 | What is the general sense of_ abode_,_ dwelling_, and_ habitation_? |
28900 | What is the generic term of this group? |
28900 | What is the implication if we say one is_ industrious_ just now? |
28900 | What is the import of_ honor_? |
28900 | What is the legal distinction between_ abettor_ and_ accessory_? |
28900 | What is the legal phrase for a punishable_ omission_ of duty? |
28900 | What is the limit upon the meaning of this word? |
28900 | What is the literal meaning of_ obstruct_? |
28900 | What is the literal meaning of_ term_? |
28900 | What is the meaning and common use of_ passage_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ awe_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ barbarian_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ bear_ as applied to care, pain, grief, and the like? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ becoming_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ clever_ as used in England? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ comity_ and_ amity_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ common_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ eccentric_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ empty_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ enigmatical_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ essential_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ eternal_ in the fullest sense? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ execute_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ exercise_ apart from all qualifying words? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ fanciful_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ fit_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ fluctuate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ formidable_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ happy_ in its most frequent present use? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ hazard_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ healthy_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ honest_ in ordinary use? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ honorable_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ illiterate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ incommensurable_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ law_ in such an expression as"the_ laws_ of nature?" |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ minute_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ neat_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ new_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ novel_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ obdurate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ obviate_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ odd_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ outlay_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ pastoral_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ proceeds_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ refractory_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ retard_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ sacred_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ short_ or_ brief_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ sojourn_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ subjective_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ superhuman_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ supervene_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ surly_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ termination_, and of what is it chiefly used? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ tip_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ unique_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ value_? |
28900 | What is the meaning of_ wedding_? |
28900 | What is the more exact term for the proper course regarding evil indulgences? |
28900 | What is the most comprehensive word of this group? |
28900 | What is the most general word of this group? |
28900 | What is the motive of_ economy_? |
28900 | What is the motive of_ parsimony_? |
28900 | What is the objection to the latter use? |
28900 | What is the one great distinction between them? |
28900 | What is the original distinction between_ benevolence_ and_ beneficence_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ happy_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ harvest_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ impromptu_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ pilgrimage_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ prevent_? |
28900 | What is the original meaning of_ supernatural_? |
28900 | What is the original sense of_ absolve_? |
28900 | What is the original sense of_ boundary_? |
28900 | What is the original sense of_ piety_? |
28900 | What is the popular sense of_ umpire_? |
28900 | What is the present meaning of_ reign_? |
28900 | What is the present restriction upon the use of these words in England? |
28900 | What is the present use of_ arbiter_? |
28900 | What is the prevalent usage in the United States? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ cultivation_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ generous_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ give_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ immediately_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ iniquitous_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ occurrence_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ peculiar_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ queer_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ radical_? |
28900 | What is the primary meaning of_ rare_? |
28900 | What is the primary sense of_ scholar_? |
28900 | What is the prominent idea in_ virtue_? |
28900 | What is the proof of an_ induction_? |
28900 | What is the relative force of_ affirm_ and_ assert_? |
28900 | What is the secondary meaning of_ alert_? |
28900 | What is the sense and use of_ largess_? |
28900 | What is the sense of each when so used? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ analogous_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ bearing_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ brook_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ glare_ and_ glow_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ mannish_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ obvious_? |
28900 | What is the sense of_ palpable_ and_ tangible_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ assert_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ defer_ and_ delay_, and how do these words differ in usage from_ protract_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ dispense_ in the transitive use? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ peer_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ quaint_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ quaint_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ spruce_? |
28900 | What is the significance of_ void_ and_ devoid_? |
28900 | What is the signification of_ however_ as a conjunction? |
28900 | What is the special application of_ verbose_? |
28900 | What is the special characteristic of_ acumen_? |
28900 | What is the special characteristic of_ prudence_ and_ providence_? |
28900 | What is the special difference between_ care_ and_ anxiety_? |
28900 | What is the special difference between_ parody_ and_ travesty_? |
28900 | What is the special difference of meaning between the two words? |
28900 | What is the special force of_ limpid_? |
28900 | What is the special force of_ olden_? |
28900 | What is the special meaning of_ accessible_? |
28900 | What is the special meaning of_ harvest- home_? |
28900 | What is the special meaning of_ tie_? |
28900 | What is the special quality of a_ response_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ adventurous_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ afford_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ boon_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ carriage_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ implore_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ manifest_? |
28900 | What is the special sense of_ motion_ in a deliberative assembly? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ apportion_ by which it is distinguished from_ allot_,_ assign_,_ distribute_, or_ divide_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ blab_ and_ blurt_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ caustic_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ congé_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ fortune_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ non- homogeneous_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ sway_? |
28900 | What is the special significance of_ tall_? |
28900 | What is the specific meaning of_ analogy_? |
28900 | What is the specific meaning of_ dementia_? |
28900 | What is the specific meaning of_ murder_? |
28900 | What is the true meaning of_ verbiage_? |
28900 | What is the use of_ boundless_,_ illimitable_,_ limitless_,_ measureless_, and_ unlimited_? |
28900 | What is the_ cost_ of an article? |
28900 | What is the_ end_? |
28900 | What is the_ soul_? |
28900 | What is the_ standard_? |
28900 | What is thy---- compared with an Alexander''s, a Mahomet''s, a Napoleon''s? |
28900 | What is to be said of the controversy regarding the formation and use of the word_ reliable_? |
28900 | What is to be said of the use of_ smart_ and_ sharp_? |
28900 | What is to_ confer_? |
28900 | What is to_ grant_? |
28900 | What is to_ hold_? |
28900 | What is----? |
28900 | What is_ aberration_? |
28900 | What is_ absolute_ in the fullest sense? |
28900 | What is_ acclamation_? |
28900 | What is_ acquittal_? |
28900 | What is_ address_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ advance_? |
28900 | What is_ affection_? |
28900 | What is_ affinity_? |
28900 | What is_ affinity_? |
28900 | What is_ agony_? |
28900 | What is_ air_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ ample_? |
28900 | What is_ anarchy_? |
28900 | What is_ animadversion_? |
28900 | What is_ anxiety_ in the primary sense? |
28900 | What is_ apathy_? |
28900 | What is_ applause_? |
28900 | What is_ assurance_ in the bad sense? |
28900 | What is_ assurance_ in the good sense? |
28900 | What is_ attachment_? |
28900 | What is_ audacity_? |
28900 | What is_ authority_? |
28900 | What is_ bail_? |
28900 | What is_ banter_? |
28900 | What is_ barter_? |
28900 | What is_ bashfulness_? |
28900 | What is_ belief_? |
28900 | What is_ bitterness_? |
28900 | What is_ boldness_? |
28900 | What is_ bullion_? |
28900 | What is_ ca nt_ in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ ca nt_? |
28900 | What is_ calamity_? |
28900 | What is_ capacity_, and how related to_ power_ and to_ ability_? |
28900 | What is_ change_ or_ exchange_? |
28900 | What is_ chat_? |
28900 | What is_ circumspection_? |
28900 | What is_ clemency_? |
28900 | What is_ combustion_? |
28900 | What is_ communism_? |
28900 | What is_ competency_? |
28900 | What is_ compunction_? |
28900 | What is_ conformity_? |
28900 | What is_ consistency_? |
28900 | What is_ constancy_? |
28900 | What is_ conviction_? |
28900 | What is_ cost_? |
28900 | What is_ credulity_? |
28900 | What is_ crime_? |
28900 | What is_ custom_? |
28900 | What is_ deduction_? |
28900 | What is_ delight_? |
28900 | What is_ derangement_? |
28900 | What is_ design_? |
28900 | What is_ discipline_? |
28900 | What is_ dishonesty_? |
28900 | What is_ dismay_? |
28900 | What is_ dread_ and by what aroused? |
28900 | What is_ drill_? |
28900 | What is_ ease_? |
28900 | What is_ economy_? |
28900 | What is_ efficacy_? |
28900 | What is_ egoism_ and how does it differ from_ egotism_? |
28900 | What is_ endurance_? |
28900 | What is_ enmity_? |
28900 | What is_ euphony_? |
28900 | What is_ evidence_? |
28900 | What is_ evil_, and with what frequent suggestion? |
28900 | What is_ excess_? |
28900 | What is_ exorbitance_? |
28900 | What is_ experience_, and how does it differ from_ intuition_? |
28900 | What is_ extravagance_? |
28900 | What is_ fame_? |
28900 | What is_ fanaticism_? |
28900 | What is_ fancy_ as a faculty of the mind? |
28900 | What is_ fantasy_ in ordinary usage? |
28900 | What is_ fantasy_ or_ phantasy_? |
28900 | What is_ fashion_? |
28900 | What is_ fatuity_? |
28900 | What is_ fear_? |
28900 | What is_ felonious_? |
28900 | What is_ flattery_? |
28900 | What is_ forbearance_? |
28900 | What is_ foreknowledge_? |
28900 | What is_ fortitude_? |
28900 | What is_ freedom_? |
28900 | What is_ friendship_? |
28900 | What is_ frugality_? |
28900 | What is_ gain_? |
28900 | What is_ gardening_? |
28900 | What is_ gender_? |
28900 | What is_ genius_? |
28900 | What is_ gleam_? |
28900 | What is_ gratification_? |
28900 | What is_ grief_? |
28900 | What is_ happiness_? |
28900 | What is_ harm_? |
28900 | What is_ harmony_? |
28900 | What is_ harmony_? |
28900 | What is_ heterogeneous_? |
28900 | What is_ hire_? |
28900 | What is_ history_? |
28900 | What is_ honest_ in the highest and fullest sense? |
28900 | What is_ honor_? |
28900 | What is_ hostility_? |
28900 | What is_ hypocrisy_? |
28900 | What is_ idiocy_? |
28900 | What is_ illumination_? |
28900 | What is_ imbecility_? |
28900 | What is_ impudence_? |
28900 | What is_ impudence_? |
28900 | What is_ indigence_? |
28900 | What is_ industry_? |
28900 | What is_ ingrained_? |
28900 | What is_ iniquity_ in the legal sense? |
28900 | What is_ injustice_? |
28900 | What is_ insanity_ in the widest sense? |
28900 | What is_ intolerance_? |
28900 | What is_ intuition_? |
28900 | What is_ justice_ in governmental relations? |
28900 | What is_ knowledge_? |
28900 | What is_ learning_? |
28900 | What is_ liberty_ in the primary sense? |
28900 | What is_ license_? |
28900 | What is_ license_? |
28900 | What is_ light_? |
28900 | What is_ literature_ in the most general sense? |
28900 | What is_ madness_? |
28900 | What is_ malice_? |
28900 | What is_ manner_? |
28900 | What is_ massacre_? |
28900 | What is_ memory_ in the special and in the general sense? |
28900 | What is_ mercy_ in the strictest sense? |
28900 | What is_ mind_? |
28900 | What is_ mischief_? |
28900 | What is_ miserliness_? |
28900 | What is_ misfortune_? |
28900 | What is_ modesty_ in the general sense? |
28900 | What is_ money_? |
28900 | What is_ monomania_? |
28900 | What is_ morality_? |
28900 | What is_ motion_? |
28900 | What is_ necessity_? |
28900 | What is_ neglect_? |
28900 | What is_ notoriety_? |
28900 | What is_ oblivion_? |
28900 | What is_ obscure_? |
28900 | What is_ occupation_? |
28900 | What is_ officiousness_? |
28900 | What is_ order_, in the sense here considered? |
28900 | What is_ ostentation_? |
28900 | What is_ pain_? |
28900 | What is_ panic_? |
28900 | What is_ parity_ of_ reasoning_? |
28900 | What is_ parsimony_? |
28900 | What is_ patience_? |
28900 | What is_ pay_? |
28900 | What is_ perception_? |
28900 | What is_ perfect_ in the fullest and highest sense? |
28900 | What is_ perfect_ in the limited sense, and in popular language? |
28900 | What is_ permanent_, and in what connections used? |
28900 | What is_ permission_? |
28900 | What is_ perplexity_? |
28900 | What is_ persistence_? |
28900 | What is_ perspicacity_? |
28900 | What is_ pietism_? |
28900 | What is_ pity_? |
28900 | What is_ plain_? |
28900 | What is_ poetry_? |
28900 | What is_ pomp_? |
28900 | What is_ power_? |
28900 | What is_ practise_? |
28900 | What is_ practise_? |
28900 | What is_ praise_? |
28900 | What is_ predestination_? |
28900 | What is_ pride_? |
28900 | What is_ pristine_? |
28900 | What is_ produce_? |
28900 | What is_ profit_ in the commercial sense? |
28900 | What is_ progress_? |
28900 | What is_ purity_? |
28900 | What is_ recollection_, and what does it involve? |
28900 | What is_ recreation_, and how is it related to_ rest_? |
28900 | What is_ refinement_? |
28900 | What is_ regret_? |
28900 | What is_ religion_? |
28900 | What is_ remembrance_, and how distinguished from_ memory_? |
28900 | What is_ reminiscence_? |
28900 | What is_ remorse_, and how does it compare with_ repentance_? |
28900 | What is_ repose_ in the primary, and what in the derived, sense? |
28900 | What is_ repugnance_? |
28900 | What is_ revenge_? |
28900 | What is_ sagacity_? |
28900 | What is_ scintillation_? |
28900 | What is_ self- assertion_? |
28900 | What is_ self- confidence_? |
28900 | What is_ self- esteem_? |
28900 | What is_ sensibility_ in the philosophical sense? |
28900 | What is_ severe_? |
28900 | What is_ sex_? |
28900 | What is_ shrewdness_? |
28900 | What is_ sin_? |
28900 | What is_ slang_ in the primary and ordinary sense? |
28900 | What is_ socialism_? |
28900 | What is_ spite_? |
28900 | What is_ style_ considered as a synonym of_ name_? |
28900 | What is_ style_? |
28900 | What is_ susceptibility_? |
28900 | What is_ tact_? |
28900 | What is_ talent_? |
28900 | What is_ temperance_ regarding things lawful and worthy? |
28900 | What is_ testimony_? |
28900 | What is_ thought_? |
28900 | What is_ timidity_? |
28900 | What is_ towering_ in the literal, and in the figurative sense? |
28900 | What is_ trade_ in the broad and in the limited sense? |
28900 | What is_ travel_? |
28900 | What is_ triumph_? |
28900 | What is_ trust_? |
28900 | What is_ unanimity_? |
28900 | What is_ uncongeniality_? |
28900 | What is_ union_? |
28900 | What is_ unison_? |
28900 | What is_ unity_? |
28900 | What is_ utility_? |
28900 | What is_ vanity_? |
28900 | What is_ virtuousness_? |
28900 | What is_ work_? |
28900 | What is_ worry_? |
28900 | What is_ worship_? |
28900 | What kind of a term is_ enough_, and what does it mean? |
28900 | What kind of a term is_ high_? |
28900 | What kind of a term is_ surveillance_, and what does it imply? |
28900 | What kind of a word is_ attain_, and to what does it point? |
28900 | What kind of a word is_ turn_, and what is its meaning? |
28900 | What kind of possibility does_ anxiety_ always suggest? |
28900 | What kind of_ asking_ is implied in_ demand_? |
28900 | What kind of_ excess_ do_ overplus_ and_ superabundance_ denote? |
28900 | What kinds of force or power do we indicate by_ convey_,_ lift_,_ transmit_, and_ transport_? |
28900 | What limit of time is expressed by_ abide_? |
28900 | What matters are purely_ objective_? |
28900 | What matters are purely_ subjective_? |
28900 | What may be given as a brief definition of_ love_? |
28900 | What meaning does_ event_ often have when applied to the future? |
28900 | What meaning has_ skepticism_ as applied to religious matters? |
28900 | What meaning may_ reliable_ convey that_ trusty_ and_ trustworthy_ would not? |
28900 | What more is found in one who is_ polite_? |
28900 | What must a_ definition_ include, and what must it exclude? |
28900 | What must a_ description_ include? |
28900 | What name is now preferably given to the so- called_ Reproductive Imagination_ by President Porter and others? |
28900 | What of the numbers affected by it? |
28900 | What of_ humanity_? |
28900 | What other senses has the word_ judge_ in common use? |
28900 | What other words of this class are especially referred to? |
28900 | What other words of this group are preferable to_ clever_ in many of its uses? |
28900 | What part of speech is an_ epithet_? |
28900 | What process is ordinarily followed in what is known as scientific_ induction_? |
28900 | What qualities are included in_ address_? |
28900 | What reference is implied in_ extremity_? |
28900 | What secondary meaning has_ administer_? |
28900 | What secondary sense has_ instruct_? |
28900 | What senses has_ negligence_ that_ neglect_ has not? |
28900 | What shades of difference may be pointed out between the four words_ actual_,_ real_,_ developed_, and_ positive_? |
28900 | What single definition would answer for either? |
28900 | What sort of a_ copy_ is a_ transcript_? |
28900 | What sort of things_ decay_? |
28900 | What special element does_ effrontery_ add to the meaning of_ audacity_ and_ hardihood_? |
28900 | What special element is commonly implied in_ savage_? |
28900 | What special element is involved in the meaning of_ attack_? |
28900 | What special element is involved in_ foretaste_? |
28900 | What special sense does this word always retain? |
28900 | What special sense has_ dip_ which the other words do not share? |
28900 | What special sense has_ primary_ as in reference to a school? |
28900 | What special_ tools_ are ordinarily called_ instruments_? |
28900 | What specially distinctive sense has_ finish_? |
28900 | What specific meaning has the word in modern travel? |
28900 | What substance is at once a_ liquid_ and a_ fluid_ at the ordinary temperature and pressure? |
28900 | What suggestion is often involved in_ attribute_? |
28900 | What synonymous word is always used in the evil sense? |
28900 | What term do many of its advocates prefer? |
28900 | What term is preferable to_ love_ as applying to articles of food and the like? |
28900 | What term would be applied to a_ multitude_ of armed men without order or organization? |
28900 | What terms are applied to an account extended to_ minute_ particulars? |
28900 | What terms do we use for doing away with_ laws_, and how do those terms differ among themselves? |
28900 | What then? |
28900 | What two chief senses has_ affliction_? |
28900 | What two contradictory meanings does_ example_ derive from this primary sense? |
28900 | What two contrasted senses arise from the root meaning of_ apparent_? |
28900 | What two contrasted senses has_ lawfulness_? |
28900 | What two senses has_ ambition_? |
28900 | What two senses has_ marriage_? |
28900 | What two senses of_ art_ must be discriminated from each other? |
28900 | What very different word is sometimes confounded with_ venial_? |
28900 | What was its original signification? |
28900 | What was the early New England usage? |
28900 | What was the early and general meaning of_ sick_ and_ sickness_ in English? |
28900 | What was the early and what is the present sense of_ piteous_? |
28900 | What was the former meaning of_ voyage_? |
28900 | What was the original meaning of_ pitiful_? |
28900 | What was the original sense of_ charity_? |
28900 | What when used in popular language? |
28900 | What word do we especially use of putting an end to a nuisance? |
28900 | What word is now commonly used in that sense? |
28900 | What words are commonly used for_ benevolence_ in the original sense? |
28900 | What words are preferred in such connection? |
28900 | What words are there commonly substituted? |
28900 | What words are used as synonyms of_ excess_ in the moral sense? |
28900 | What words do we apply to the_ unyielding_ character or conduct that we approve? |
28900 | What words may we use to express a condensed view of a subject, whether derived from a previous publication or not? |
28900 | What words now seem more emphatic? |
28900 | What words of this group are distinctly hostile? |
28900 | What words of this group are used in a bad sense? |
28900 | What( in the strict sense) is an_ avocation_? |
28900 | What, in that sense, is ordinarily preferred? |
28900 | What, in the full sense, is_ integrity_? |
28900 | When are substances_ heterogeneous_ as regards each other? |
28900 | When are things said to be_ incompatible_? |
28900 | When are things said to be_ incongruous_? |
28900 | When is a body said to_ roll_? |
28900 | When is a fluid said to be_ absorbed_? |
28900 | When is a mixture, as cement, said to be_ heterogeneous_? |
28900 | When is a steam- boiler said to be_ ruptured_? |
28900 | When is a thing called_ strange_? |
28900 | When is a thing properly said to be_ necessary_? |
28900 | When is a thing said to be_ comminuted_? |
28900 | When is a word_ archaic_? |
28900 | When is a word_ obsolete_? |
28900 | When is anything properly said to be_ spontaneous_? |
28900 | When is anything said to be_ covered_? |
28900 | When is it equivalent to_ libel_? |
28900 | When is_ defame_ equivalent to_ slander_? |
28900 | When may an event be properly said to_ transpire_? |
28900 | When may_ unity_ be predicated of that which is made up of parts? |
28900 | When the Siberian Pacific Railway is finished, what is there to---- Russia from annexing nearly the whole of China? |
28900 | Where is that chastity of---- that felt a stain like a wound? |
28900 | Wherein does_ care_ differ from_ caution_? |
28900 | Which admits of freedom or idealization? |
28900 | Which are indifferently either good or bad? |
28900 | Which can and which can not be communicated? |
28900 | Which distinctly imply that what is added is like that to which it is added? |
28900 | Which finds outward expression, and which is limited to the mental act? |
28900 | Which implies the seconding of another''s exertions? |
28900 | Which includes the other? |
28900 | Which involves a sense of having done wrong? |
28900 | Which is applied to the Divine Being? |
28900 | Which is commonly applied to the inferior animals and to inanimate things? |
28900 | Which is commonly used in reference to the mind? |
28900 | Which is now the more common? |
28900 | Which is positive? |
28900 | Which is the greater and more important? |
28900 | Which is the higher quality? |
28900 | Which is the higher word? |
28900 | Which is the inferior word in such use? |
28900 | Which is the more comprehensive word,_ diction_,_ language_, or_ phraseology_? |
28900 | Which is the more comprehensive? |
28900 | Which is the more dependent upon training? |
28900 | Which is the more exact, a_ definition_ or a_ description_? |
28900 | Which is the more inclusive word? |
28900 | Which is the more mechanical? |
28900 | Which is the most emphatic word of the group and what does it signify? |
28900 | Which is the most general term of this group, and what does it signify? |
28900 | Which is the most general word of this group? |
28900 | Which is the predominant sense of the latter words? |
28900 | Which is the preferred legal term? |
28900 | Which is the primary and which the secondary word,_ allege_ or_ adduce_? |
28900 | Which is the stronger term? |
28900 | Which is the stronger word,_ abhor_ or_ despise_? |
28900 | Which is the stronger word? |
28900 | Which is the stronger word? |
28900 | Which is used in excitement or emergency? |
28900 | Which is used mostly with regard to future probabilities? |
28900 | Which may be wholly mental? |
28900 | Which of the above three words is used in a figurative sense? |
28900 | Which of the above words expresses what necessarily belongs to the subject of which it is said to be an_ attribute_ or_ quality_? |
28900 | Which of the above- mentioned words apply to persons? |
28900 | Which of the three words apply to persons and which to actions? |
28900 | Which of the two words may be used in a passive sense? |
28900 | Which of the words in this group are necessarily and which ordinarily applied to articulate utterance? |
28900 | Which of the words in this group necessarily imply an external effect? |
28900 | Which of these words are used in the metaphorical sense? |
28900 | Which of these words can be used of the destruction of life in open and honorable warfare? |
28900 | Which of these words denote transient moods and which denote enduring states or disposition? |
28900 | Which of these words have figurative use? |
28900 | Which of these words is of widest import? |
28900 | Which of these words may refer to the future? |
28900 | Which of these words most commonly implies an unfavorable meaning? |
28900 | Which pertain mostly to realities, and which are matters of judgment--_difference_,_ disparity_,_ distinction_, or_ inconsistency_? |
28900 | Which power finds use in philosophy, science, and mechanical invention, and how? |
28900 | Which rarely, if ever, so used? |
28900 | Which suggest the most complete removal of all trace of a writing? |
28900 | Which term do we apply directly to God? |
28900 | Which term do we use with reference to the Divine Being? |
28900 | Which term is really the stronger? |
28900 | Which use is the more frequent? |
28900 | Which word carries a natural implication of superficialness? |
28900 | Which word has the broader meaning,_ disaster_ or_ calamity_? |
28900 | Which word implies a partial removal of the cause of suffering, or an actual_ lightening_ of the burden? |
28900 | Which word is applied to metals, and in what sense? |
28900 | Which word is ordinarily applied to objects of great extent? |
28900 | Which word is preferably used as to the rite of baptism? |
28900 | Which word is used especially of objects of sight? |
28900 | Which word would be used of an act of God? |
28900 | Which words of the group apply to open attack in one''s presence, and which to attack in his absence? |
28900 | Which words of this group are naturally applied to reputation, and which to character? |
28900 | Which words of this group are used in a good, and which in a bad sense? |
28900 | Which words of this group refer exclusively to one''s own knowledge or action? |
28900 | Which words simply add a fact or thought? |
28900 | Who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open----? |
28900 | Why are they so called? |
28900 | Why could not the words be interchanged? |
28900 | Why? |
28900 | Why? |
28900 | Why? |
28900 | With reference to what is a thing said to be_ requisite_? |
28900 | With what implication is it always used in the metaphorical sense? |
28900 | With what implication is it now commonly used? |
28900 | With what limited sense is_ innocent_ used of moral beings? |
28900 | With what meaning is_ clear_ used of an object apprehended by the senses, as an object of sight or hearing? |
28900 | With what special meaning is it used? |
28900 | With what special reference does_ congenital_ occur in medical and legal use? |
28900 | With what special reference is_ control_ used? |
28900 | With what two sets of words is_ active_ allied? |
28900 | With what words is it allied in this sense? |
28900 | With what words is_ alleviate_ especially to be grouped? |
28900 | With what words of the group does it agree? |
28900 | With which of the above words are we to class_ appease_,_ pacify_,_ soothe_, and the like? |
28900 | With whom does one_ remonstrate_? |
28900 | Would a mountain range be termed a_ bar_ or a_ barrier_? |
28900 | _ Abet_,_ incite_,_ instigate_: which of these words are used in a good and which in a bad sense? |
28900 | _ Simile_ with_ metaphor_? |
28900 | _ abdicate_? |
28900 | _ absolution_? |
28900 | _ absorb_ and_ radiate_? |
28900 | _ accomplish_ and_ complete_? |
28900 | _ accuse_? |
28900 | _ acquaintance_ from_ friendship_? |
28900 | _ acrimony_? |
28900 | _ action_? |
28900 | _ address_? |
28900 | _ admonition_? |
28900 | _ adore_? |
28900 | _ affluent_? |
28900 | _ alternative_? |
28900 | _ amnesty_? |
28900 | _ anarchism_? |
28900 | _ anguish_? |
28900 | _ annoy_? |
28900 | _ antiquated_? |
28900 | _ any_,_ each_, and_ every_? |
28900 | _ apprehension_? |
28900 | _ arbitrary_? |
28900 | _ arrogance_? |
28900 | _ asperity_ from_ acrimony_? |
28900 | _ assassinate_? |
28900 | _ asseverate_? |
28900 | _ assign_? |
28900 | _ assuage_? |
28900 | _ assurance_? |
28900 | _ assure_? |
28900 | _ authoritative_? |
28900 | _ autochthonic_? |
28900 | _ aver_? |
28900 | _ aversion_? |
28900 | _ badinage_? |
28900 | _ banter_? |
28900 | _ benefit_? |
28900 | _ bigotry_? |
28900 | _ blessedness_? |
28900 | _ bliss_? |
28900 | _ butchery_? |
28900 | _ candid_? |
28900 | _ capital_? |
28900 | _ carriage_? |
28900 | _ carry_? |
28900 | _ cash_? |
28900 | _ caustic_? |
28900 | _ cede_? |
28900 | _ censure_? |
28900 | _ chattering_? |
28900 | _ circumstance_? |
28900 | _ cognizance_? |
28900 | _ coincidence_? |
28900 | _ colleague_? |
28900 | _ collected_? |
28900 | _ comely_? |
28900 | _ commencement_? |
28900 | _ common_? |
28900 | _ compensation_? |
28900 | _ complaisant_? |
28900 | _ compute_,_ reckon_ and_ estimate_? |
28900 | _ comrade_? |
28900 | _ concomitant_? |
28900 | _ confusion_? |
28900 | _ conglomerate_? |
28900 | _ congruity_? |
28900 | _ consider_? |
28900 | _ consort_? |
28900 | _ conspicuous_? |
28900 | _ constitution_ and_ disposition_? |
28900 | _ consult_? |
28900 | _ contention_? |
28900 | _ conterminous_? |
28900 | _ contest_? |
28900 | _ contiguous_? |
28900 | _ contrition_? |
28900 | _ contumacious_? |
28900 | _ coyness_? |
28900 | _ dapper_? |
28900 | _ degrade_ from_ disgrace_? |
28900 | _ delirium_? |
28900 | _ demeanor_? |
28900 | _ depravity_? |
28900 | _ desert_ favorable or unfavorable? |
28900 | _ despotic_ from_ tyrannical_? |
28900 | _ destitution_? |
28900 | _ detriment_? |
28900 | _ devotion_? |
28900 | _ diffidence_? |
28900 | _ diligence_? |
28900 | _ direction_? |
28900 | _ disaster_? |
28900 | _ discover_? |
28900 | _ disdain_? |
28900 | _ display_? |
28900 | _ doctrine_? |
28900 | _ dogma_? |
28900 | _ doubt_? |
28900 | _ duty_? |
28900 | _ earnings_? |
28900 | _ ecstasy_? |
28900 | _ effect_? |
28900 | _ efficiency_? |
28900 | _ emolument_? |
28900 | _ eradicate_? |
28900 | _ erudition_? |
28900 | _ event_? |
28900 | _ exasperation_? |
28900 | _ execute_? |
28900 | _ expense_? |
28900 | _ expiration_? |
28900 | _ extirpate_? |
28900 | _ fact_? |
28900 | _ faculty_? |
28900 | _ fair_? |
28900 | _ fancy_? |
28900 | _ fight_? |
28900 | _ finesse_? |
28900 | _ flagitious_? |
28900 | _ flock_? |
28900 | _ floriculture_? |
28900 | _ forgive_? |
28900 | _ formalism_? |
28900 | _ forsake_? |
28900 | _ forsake_? |
28900 | _ frank_? |
28900 | _ fraud_? |
28900 | _ fretfulness_? |
28900 | _ fulfil_? |
28900 | _ gage_? |
28900 | _ generosity_? |
28900 | _ genteel_? |
28900 | _ glistening_? |
28900 | _ godliness_? |
28900 | _ greet_? |
28900 | _ grotesque_? |
28900 | _ guilt_? |
28900 | _ gyves_? |
28900 | _ hail_? |
28900 | _ handsome_? |
28900 | _ hardihood_? |
28900 | _ harvest- tide_? |
28900 | _ harvest- time_? |
28900 | _ hasten_? |
28900 | _ haughtiness_? |
28900 | _ havoc_? |
28900 | _ heed_? |
28900 | _ hesitation_? |
28900 | _ hireling_? |
28900 | _ holiness_? |
28900 | _ honest_? |
28900 | _ horticulture_? |
28900 | _ humble_ from_ humiliate_? |
28900 | _ hurry_? |
28900 | _ hurt_? |
28900 | _ hypocrisy_? |
28900 | _ impending_? |
28900 | _ imperative_? |
28900 | _ imperious_? |
28900 | _ imprecation_? |
28900 | _ incandescence_? |
28900 | _ incessant_ from_ ceaseless_? |
28900 | _ incident_? |
28900 | _ induction_? |
28900 | _ inharmonious_? |
28900 | _ injunction_? |
28900 | _ insolence_? |
28900 | _ instruction_? |
28900 | _ insubordination_? |
28900 | _ intrusive_? |
28900 | _ invent_? |
28900 | _ involuntary_? |
28900 | _ ire_? |
28900 | _ jurisprudence_? |
28900 | _ justify_? |
28900 | _ lavishness_ and_ profusion_? |
28900 | _ legion_? |
28900 | _ legislation_? |
28900 | _ leniency_ or_ lenity_? |
28900 | _ liberality_? |
28900 | _ limit_? |
28900 | _ load_? |
28900 | _ lying_? |
28900 | _ maintain_? |
28900 | _ malignity_ from_ virulence_? |
28900 | _ malignity_? |
28900 | _ manful_? |
28900 | _ manners_? |
28900 | _ maritime_? |
28900 | _ meddlesome_? |
28900 | _ meditate_? |
28900 | _ melody_? |
28900 | _ mercenary_? |
28900 | _ misgiving_? |
28900 | _ mitigate_? |
28900 | _ moderate_? |
28900 | _ move_? |
28900 | _ murmuring_? |
28900 | _ mutiny_? |
28900 | _ mutual_? |
28900 | _ natal_? |
28900 | _ natural_? |
28900 | _ nautical_? |
28900 | _ negligence_? |
28900 | _ neighboring_? |
28900 | _ normal_? |
28900 | _ nuptials_? |
28900 | _ obstacle_? |
28900 | _ obstruction_? |
28900 | _ occurrence_? |
28900 | _ officious_? |
28900 | _ officious_? |
28900 | _ order_? |
28900 | _ order_? |
28900 | _ ordinance_? |
28900 | _ outgrowth_? |
28900 | _ pageant_ or_ pageantry_? |
28900 | _ pardon_? |
28900 | _ partner_? |
28900 | _ patience_? |
28900 | _ penury_? |
28900 | _ peremptory_? |
28900 | _ perform_ and_ accomplish_? |
28900 | _ perseverance_? |
28900 | _ pertinacious_? |
28900 | _ philanthropy_? |
28900 | _ picturesque_? |
28900 | _ placid_? |
28900 | _ plan_? |
28900 | _ plentiful_? |
28900 | _ point_? |
28900 | _ positive_? |
28900 | _ pray_ and_ petition_? |
28900 | _ precaution_? |
28900 | _ preclude_? |
28900 | _ primeval_? |
28900 | _ principle_? |
28900 | _ prior_? |
28900 | _ promulgate_? |
28900 | _ proof_? |
28900 | _ propitiation_? |
28900 | _ propound_? |
28900 | _ publish_? |
28900 | _ pungent_? |
28900 | _ pungent_? |
28900 | _ purpose_? |
28900 | _ pursuit_? |
28900 | _ putrefy_? |
28900 | _ quiet_? |
28900 | _ quiet_? |
28900 | _ quit_? |
28900 | _ rage_? |
28900 | _ raillery_ from both? |
28900 | _ rapture_? |
28900 | _ readiness_? |
28900 | _ readiness_? |
28900 | _ rebellion_? |
28900 | _ recant_? |
28900 | _ reciprocal_? |
28900 | _ recompense_? |
28900 | _ reflect_? |
28900 | _ regular_? |
28900 | _ remuneration_? |
28900 | _ repining_? |
28900 | _ reserve_? |
28900 | _ resign_? |
28900 | _ resources_? |
28900 | _ rest_? |
28900 | _ result_? |
28900 | _ result_? |
28900 | _ retract_? |
28900 | _ retrospection_? |
28900 | _ return_? |
28900 | _ revolt_? |
28900 | _ rigid_? |
28900 | _ rot_? |
28900 | _ routine_? |
28900 | _ rule_? |
28900 | _ sale_? |
28900 | _ sanctimoniousness_? |
28900 | _ satisfaction_? |
28900 | _ satisfaction_? |
28900 | _ sedition_? |
28900 | _ self- conceit_? |
28900 | _ self- conceit_? |
28900 | _ serene_? |
28900 | _ sham_? |
28900 | _ shamelessness_? |
28900 | _ show_? |
28900 | _ sincere_? |
28900 | _ singular_? |
28900 | _ situation_? |
28900 | _ skirmish_? |
28900 | _ slaughter_? |
28900 | _ sluggish_? |
28900 | _ solicitude_ from_ anxiety_? |
28900 | _ specie_? |
28900 | _ sprightly_? |
28900 | _ still_? |
28900 | _ strict_? |
28900 | _ strife_? |
28900 | _ stupidity_? |
28900 | _ succor_ and_ support_? |
28900 | _ suffering_? |
28900 | _ suppress_? |
28900 | _ supreme_? |
28900 | _ surrender_? |
28900 | _ suspicious_? |
28900 | _ sympathy_? |
28900 | _ system_? |
28900 | _ take_? |
28900 | _ talent_? |
28900 | _ teaching_? |
28900 | _ terrible_? |
28900 | _ tranquil_? |
28900 | _ transparent_? |
28900 | _ treason_? |
28900 | _ tremendous_? |
28900 | _ tribe_? |
28900 | _ trim_? |
28900 | _ truthfulness_? |
28900 | _ tuition_? |
28900 | _ urbane_? |
28900 | _ venerate_? |
28900 | _ virile_? |
28900 | _ voluntary_? |
28900 | _ watchfulness_ from_ wariness_? |
28900 | _ wayward_? |
28900 | _ wrath_? |
28900 | _ yield_? |
28900 | a_ barbarism_? |
28900 | a_ beast_? |
28900 | a_ beast_? |
28900 | a_ blaze_? |
28900 | a_ brute_? |
28900 | a_ brute_? |
28900 | a_ cheat_? |
28900 | a_ coast_? |
28900 | a_ commonwealth_? |
28900 | a_ competitor_? |
28900 | a_ conception_ from both? |
28900 | a_ conjecture_? |
28900 | a_ convention_? |
28900 | a_ convocation_? |
28900 | a_ craft_? |
28900 | a_ creed_? |
28900 | a_ device_? |
28900 | a_ donation_? |
28900 | a_ facsimile_, and an_ imitation_? |
28900 | a_ fault_? |
28900 | a_ figure_? |
28900 | a_ flash_? |
28900 | a_ gas_? |
28900 | a_ glitter_? |
28900 | a_ hint_? |
28900 | a_ narrative_ or_ narration_? |
28900 | a_ nation_? |
28900 | a_ paroxysm_? |
28900 | a_ particle_? |
28900 | a_ pattern_? |
28900 | a_ perception_? |
28900 | a_ piece_? |
28900 | a_ pithy_ utterance? |
28900 | a_ prerogative_? |
28900 | a_ prototype_? |
28900 | a_ race_? |
28900 | a_ rejoinder_? |
28900 | a_ rise_? |
28900 | a_ rival_? |
28900 | a_ saying_? |
28900 | a_ scheme_? |
28900 | a_ schismatic_? |
28900 | a_ schismatic_? |
28900 | a_ search_? |
28900 | a_ sign_ and a_ symbol_? |
28900 | a_ source_? |
28900 | a_ sparkle_? |
28900 | a_ specimen_? |
28900 | a_ speculation_? |
28900 | a_ statute_? |
28900 | a_ supposition_? |
28900 | a_ surmise_? |
28900 | a_ swindle_? |
28900 | a_ throe_? |
28900 | a_ title_? |
28900 | a_ tour_? |
28900 | a_ type_? |
28900 | an_ adversary_? |
28900 | an_ affidavit_? |
28900 | an_ amiable_ person? |
28900 | an_ aphorism_? |
28900 | an_ arbitrator_? |
28900 | an_ artisan_? |
28900 | an_ enactment_? |
28900 | an_ ensample_? |
28900 | an_ exemption_? |
28900 | an_ exertion_? |
28900 | an_ idiom_? |
28900 | an_ image_? |
28900 | an_ immunity_? |
28900 | an_ instalment_? |
28900 | an_ opponent_? |
28900 | an_ ordinance_? |
28900 | and by what kind of agent is it effected? |
28900 | and by what kind of agents are they effected? |
28900 | and how expressed? |
28900 | and in what sense to_ rotate_? |
28900 | and to what_ clumsy_? |
28900 | and what is its purpose? |
28900 | and what_ abridged_? |
28900 | and which negative? |
28900 | and why? |
28900 | as applied to things? |
28900 | between a_ permit_ and_ permission_? |
28900 | between both and_ burlesque_? |
28900 | between these words and_ behold_? |
28900 | between_ carry_ and_ bear_? |
28900 | between_ chaff_,_ jeering_, and_ mockery_? |
28900 | between_ connoisseur_ and_ critic_? |
28900 | between_ discriminate_ and_ distinguish_? |
28900 | between_ satire_ and_ sarcasm_? |
28900 | between_ vacillate_ and_ waver_? |
28900 | both from_ result_? |
28900 | both these words from_ despotic_? |
28900 | both with_ spontaneous_? |
28900 | by how many given? |
28900 | by what_ intimidated_? |
28900 | by whom_ expatriated_ or_ exiled_? |
28900 | by_ live_,_ dwell_,_ reside_? |
28900 | by_ lodge_? |
28900 | especially between the last two of those words? |
28900 | for_ keen_,_ sharp_? |
28900 | from a_ disciple_? |
28900 | from a_ fable_? |
28900 | from a_ myth_? |
28900 | from an_ abstract_ or_ digest_? |
28900 | from crime in general? |
28900 | from each other? |
28900 | from what_ immerse_? |
28900 | from_ achieve_? |
28900 | from_ affection_? |
28900 | from_ antagonism_? |
28900 | from_ apprehend_? |
28900 | from_ apprehension_? |
28900 | from_ approach_? |
28900 | from_ attempt_? |
28900 | from_ aversion_? |
28900 | from_ coalition_? |
28900 | from_ composite_? |
28900 | from_ deck_ or_ bedeck_? |
28900 | from_ decorate_? |
28900 | from_ deed_? |
28900 | from_ distract_? |
28900 | from_ foreboding_? |
28900 | from_ friendship_? |
28900 | from_ garnish_? |
28900 | from_ goal_? |
28900 | from_ guile_? |
28900 | from_ hope_? |
28900 | from_ inclination_? |
28900 | from_ indifference_? |
28900 | from_ industrious_? |
28900 | from_ insensibility_? |
28900 | from_ interfere_? |
28900 | from_ intimacy_? |
28900 | from_ involved_? |
28900 | from_ league_? |
28900 | from_ lure_? |
28900 | from_ prepared_? |
28900 | from_ pride_? |
28900 | from_ regard_? |
28900 | from_ remove_? |
28900 | from_ self- confidence_? |
28900 | from_ self- denial_? |
28900 | from_ unconcern_? |
28900 | g._)? |
28900 | how does it differ from_ partnership_? |
28900 | how does this word compare with_ attack_? |
28900 | how many for_ melody_? |
28900 | in its restricted use? |
28900 | in matters of reasoning or literary treatment? |
28900 | in more limited sense? |
28900 | in popular use? |
28900 | in social and personal relations? |
28900 | in special senses? |
28900 | in the common sense? |
28900 | in the figurative? |
28900 | in the legal sense? |
28900 | in the objects toward which it is directed? |
28900 | in the technical and common use? |
28900 | in the widest sense? |
28900 | in what two senses used? |
28900 | in_ bestow_? |
28900 | in_ deliberate_,_ consider_,_ ponder_,_ reflect_? |
28900 | in_ meditate_? |
28900 | in_ require_? |
28900 | is one_ influenced_ by external or internal force? |
28900 | is_ trusty_? |
28900 | its common meaning? |
28900 | its later meaning? |
28900 | its most common present sense? |
28900 | its present meaning? |
28900 | mark you His----''shall''? |
28900 | of an individual? |
28900 | of an_ edict_? |
28900 | of an_ intrusive_ person? |
28900 | of one who is_ obtrusive_? |
28900 | of their_ language_? |
28900 | of what is he_ conscious_? |
28900 | of_ administer_? |
28900 | of_ admiration_? |
28900 | of_ advert_? |
28900 | of_ ambiguous_? |
28900 | of_ avouch_? |
28900 | of_ avow_? |
28900 | of_ bearing_? |
28900 | of_ bold_? |
28900 | of_ bucolic_? |
28900 | of_ chivalrous_? |
28900 | of_ clumsy_? |
28900 | of_ companionable_ and_ sociable_? |
28900 | of_ compendious_? |
28900 | of_ condensed_? |
28900 | of_ cordial_ and_ genial_? |
28900 | of_ decent_? |
28900 | of_ dim_,_ faded_, or_ indistinct_? |
28900 | of_ enforce_? |
28900 | of_ fresh_? |
28900 | of_ glory_? |
28900 | of_ healthful_? |
28900 | of_ healthful_? |
28900 | of_ irresolute_ or_ timid_? |
28900 | of_ modern_? |
28900 | of_ mold_? |
28900 | of_ nevertheless_? |
28900 | of_ objective_? |
28900 | of_ outgo_? |
28900 | of_ preternatural_? |
28900 | of_ recent_? |
28900 | of_ refer_? |
28900 | of_ suitable_? |
28900 | of_ supplicate_? |
28900 | of_ terse_? |
28900 | of_ thrift_? |
28900 | of_ transit_? |
28900 | of_ vacant_? |
28900 | once more who would not be a boy? |
28900 | one who is_ absent- minded_? |
28900 | or, in which_ direction_? |
28900 | or_ business_ and_ obligation_ of moral things? |
28900 | regarding things vicious and injurious? |
28900 | the common meaning? |
28900 | the derived meaning? |
28900 | the derived sense? |
28900 | the derived sense? |
28900 | the legal sense? |
28900 | the present popular sense? |
28900 | the secondary meaning? |
28900 | the_ price_? |
28900 | the_ proposal_? |
28900 | the_ sullen_ and_ sulky_? |
28900 | the_ terms_ of a contract? |
28900 | to an examination similarly extended? |
28900 | to what class does_ litter_ apply? |
28900 | to what class of substances is it applied? |
28900 | to_ amuse_? |
28900 | to_ beguile_? |
28900 | to_ condone_? |
28900 | to_ decoy_? |
28900 | to_ defame_? |
28900 | to_ despatch_? |
28900 | to_ disparage_? |
28900 | to_ endeavor_? |
28900 | to_ excuse_? |
28900 | to_ glance_? |
28900 | to_ inveigle_? |
28900 | to_ libel_? |
28900 | to_ malign_? |
28900 | to_ occupy_? |
28900 | to_ plagiarize_? |
28900 | to_ prove_? |
28900 | to_ reprove_? |
28900 | to_ resist_? |
28900 | to_ revolve_? |
28900 | to_ rotate_? |
28900 | to_ screen_? |
28900 | to_ stare_? |
28900 | to_ traduce_? |
28900 | what does it imply? |
28900 | what is its distinctive use? |
28900 | what mighty magician can---- A woman''s envy? |
28900 | what rests? |
28900 | when_ homogeneous_? |
28900 | which to feelings? |
28900 | with_ abstruse_? |
28900 | with_ big_? |
28900 | with_ both_? |
28900 | with_ but_? |
28900 | with_ common_? |
28900 | with_ complex_? |
28900 | with_ conceive_? |
28900 | with_ delight_ and_ joy_? |
28900 | with_ disagreeable_ or_ annoying_? |
28900 | with_ effrontery_? |
28900 | with_ happiness_? |
28900 | with_ identical_? |
28900 | with_ melancholy_? |
28900 | with_ pattern_? |
28900 | with_ permanent_? |
28900 | with_ permission_? |
28900 | with_ profound_? |
28900 | with_ sadness_? |
28900 | with_ tease_? |
28900 | with_ virtuous_? |
3136 | ''But how am I to do it?'' 3136 ''Fear not,''said the student,''I have in my eye the very priest and damsel you describe; but how am I to regain admission to this tower? |
3136 | A career? |
3136 | A hanging garden on the roof? |
3136 | A place for McDonald? 3136 About her career?" |
3136 | About what? |
3136 | About what? |
3136 | Afraid of? |
3136 | Against it? 3136 Ah, did they send for me? |
3136 | Ah, do n''t you see it would be the same? 3136 Ah, so that is what you are sorry for?" |
3136 | Ai n''t you ashamed to have your granther turn the grindstone? |
3136 | Ai n''t your name Smith? |
3136 | An offer for me? |
3136 | And Evelyn? 3136 And Father Damon, is he as active as ever?" |
3136 | And Henderson? |
3136 | And I''ve been thinking that McDonald--"So you want to get rid of her? |
3136 | And Margaret? |
3136 | And McDonald? |
3136 | And Mr. Henderson? 3136 And Vicky?" |
3136 | And all the people who first invested lose their money, or the most of it? |
3136 | And busy? |
3136 | And do n''t you fear a little for our own girls, launching out that way? |
3136 | And do n''t you think American women adapt themselves happily to English life? |
3136 | And do n''t you want to see that life for yourself? 3136 And do you not wish to go?" |
3136 | And do you think it would be any better if all were poor alike? |
3136 | And does it seem a little difficult to do so? |
3136 | And give up education? |
3136 | And gold? |
3136 | And has n''t your wife some relations who are in business? |
3136 | And have you written to any one at home about my niece? |
3136 | And he did not say where he was going? |
3136 | And he will not return? 3136 And he, was he happy?" |
3136 | And here you only have to live up to mine? |
3136 | And how does it look to men? |
3136 | And how does the house get on? |
3136 | And how far do you think we could get, my dear, in the crusade you propose? |
3136 | And how goes it? |
3136 | And how many pairs can you finish in a day? |
3136 | And how much money do you want for this modest scheme of yours? |
3136 | And how was it with the Northern women who married South, as you say? |
3136 | And is n''t it a good piece of road? |
3136 | And leave Mr. Lyon without any protection here? |
3136 | And my account? |
3136 | And no such will has been found? |
3136 | And not for the sake of doing anything-- just winning? 3136 And nothing else, Margaret?" |
3136 | And now I do? |
3136 | And sell out at auction? |
3136 | And so I have your permission? |
3136 | And so you do not find it dull? |
3136 | And so you think the theatres have a moral influence? |
3136 | And so you were glad to land? |
3136 | And that daughter of his, about whom such a fuss was made, I suppose you never met her? |
3136 | And that is the reason you read here? |
3136 | And that is the use of brokers in grain and stocks? |
3136 | And the Missouri? |
3136 | And the city appears narrow and provincial? |
3136 | And the other one? |
3136 | And the story? 3136 And the teak?" |
3136 | And the vine said unto them,''Should I leave my wine, which cheereth God and man, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' 3136 And then?" |
3136 | And they are done here? |
3136 | And was your religion founded on Plymouth Rock? |
3136 | And we will put it off a year? |
3136 | And were you trying, Mr. Delancy, to persuade Miss Tavish into that sort of charity? |
3136 | And what do you do? |
3136 | And what do you want, Margaret? |
3136 | And what has changed it? |
3136 | And what time does he usually come home in the evening? |
3136 | And what will they do with him? |
3136 | And what would you do? |
3136 | And where? |
3136 | And which would have to yield? |
3136 | And who else? |
3136 | And why did n''t you come by Niagara? |
3136 | And why do n''t you writers do something about it? 3136 And why not? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why,Miss Tavish asked,"will the serpentine dances and the London topical songs do any more harm to women than to men?" |
3136 | And would n''t you help them? |
3136 | And you are going soon? 3136 And you did n''t buy an orange plantation, or a town?" |
3136 | And you do not belong to the Church? |
3136 | And you do not read much in the city? |
3136 | And you find they have no time to be agreeable? |
3136 | And you get it in Newport? |
3136 | And you have no acquaintances here? |
3136 | And you have not looked on the register? |
3136 | And you have nothing else to say, Rodney? |
3136 | And you have told her this? |
3136 | And you like it better than Newport? |
3136 | And you prefer to be that, a lawyer, rather than an author? |
3136 | And you remember Portia? |
3136 | And you think that fitted them for the seriousness of life? |
3136 | And you think that science is an aid to art? |
3136 | And you think this is different from a train out of New York? |
3136 | And you think this is enough, without any sort of religion-- that this East Side can go on without any spiritual life? |
3136 | And you think, child, that he does n''t know? 3136 And you think, therefore, that they should not have a scientific education?" |
3136 | And you want me to get a twist on old Blunt? |
3136 | And you want to endow him? |
3136 | And you were not? |
3136 | And you will ask, what now? 3136 And your husband has not come yet?" |
3136 | And your wife did n''t come? |
3136 | And( Margaret was moving as if to go)"did he say nothing-- nothing to you?" |
3136 | And, oh, ca n''t you come in to dinner tomorrow night-- just Carmen-- I think I can persuade her-- and nobody else? |
3136 | And--? |
3136 | Any more? |
3136 | Anybody else there? |
3136 | Anything else? |
3136 | Anything special turned up? |
3136 | Are n''t they beautiful? |
3136 | Are n''t they that now? |
3136 | Are n''t you lonesome-- and disgusted? |
3136 | Are not the people learning anything? |
3136 | Are the people on the border as bad as they are represented? |
3136 | Are there many people here? |
3136 | Are you afraid to speak to him? |
3136 | Are you asleep, pa? |
3136 | Are you going farther south? |
3136 | Are you going to stay here always? |
3136 | Are you interested in foundlings? |
3136 | Are you much tired, Miss Benson? |
3136 | Are you open to an offer? |
3136 | Are you quite sure you know your own mind? |
3136 | Are you real glad to see me, Phil? 3136 Are you sorry for what you have done?" |
3136 | Are you timid about the train? |
3136 | Are you? |
3136 | Arrange what? |
3136 | As New Yorkers go to Europe to get rid of their future? |
3136 | As bad as what? 3136 As for instance?" |
3136 | At the end of the season,she said,"and alone?" |
3136 | Atlantic City? 3136 Avez- vous la poussee?" |
3136 | Because the world is so big? |
3136 | Build? 3136 Burnett? |
3136 | But Henderson looks out for his friends? |
3136 | But I mean, you know, do they look to marriage as an end so much? |
3136 | But are n''t Mr. Morgan and Mr. Fairchild business men? |
3136 | But do n''t you know that the hardest thing to do is the obvious, the thing close to you? |
3136 | But do n''t you know, child,said Miss McDonald, laughing,"that we are required to love our enemies?" |
3136 | But do n''t you see that it is n''t safe for the Lamonts and Mrs. Farquhar to go there? |
3136 | But do n''t you see this affair upsets all our arrangements? 3136 But do n''t you think we are putting history and association into them pretty fast?" |
3136 | But how about the Lachine Rapids? 3136 But how did you live in those early days, way back there?" |
3136 | But how, when whatever I attempt is considered a condescension? 3136 But is n''t it a compromising distinction,"my wife asked,"to take his money without his name? |
3136 | But it is a lovely country? |
3136 | But suppose that does not interest me? |
3136 | But suppose you fall in love with a poor man? |
3136 | But the fig- tree said unto them,''Should I forsake my sweetness and my good fruit, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' 3136 But the olive- tree said unto them,''Should I leave my fatness wherewith by me they honor God and man, and go to be promoted over the trees?'' |
3136 | But was it generosity? 3136 But we are to understand that if we do not accept your terms, it''s a freeze- out?" |
3136 | But what do you care for money? |
3136 | But what does it matter about the bills if you enjoy yourself? |
3136 | But what has Congress to do with it? |
3136 | But what two have you in mind? |
3136 | But where does the news come from? |
3136 | But who caught it? |
3136 | But who wanted him to be your husband? |
3136 | But why did you think she expected me? |
3136 | But why do you want them? |
3136 | But would n''t it be a sneaking thing to take a man''s money, and refuse him the credit of his generosity? |
3136 | But you can not do away with distinctions? |
3136 | But you do n''t say you like that? 3136 But you seem, Major, to have preferred a single life?" |
3136 | But you think that mine is changed for you? |
3136 | But you wanted to comeback? |
3136 | But, dear, we do n''t pretend, do we? |
3136 | But, on Sunday? |
3136 | But,said Edith, with a flush of earnestness"but, Father Damon, is n''t human love the greatest power to save?" |
3136 | But,said Philip,"do n''t England and the Continent long for the presence of Americans in the season in the same way?" |
3136 | By- the- way, did I ever show you this? |
3136 | By- the- way,he said, after a silence,"is Henderson in town?" |
3136 | Ca n''t think? 3136 Ca n''t you stow me away anywhere? |
3136 | Celia Howard? 3136 Celia, do n''t you think it would be an ungentlemanly thing to take a social event like that?" |
3136 | Charities? 3136 Come round?" |
3136 | Confederate? |
3136 | Contest the will? |
3136 | Could n''t I,said the stranger, with the same deliberation--"wouldn''t you let me go to Charleston?" |
3136 | Could you do them any better, with all your cultivation? |
3136 | Could you take us where we would be likely to get any muskallonge? |
3136 | Critical? 3136 Diamonds or pearls?" |
3136 | Did I tell you I was in that? 3136 Did I tell you,"interposed Morgan--"it is almost in the line of your thought-- of a girl I met the other day on the train? |
3136 | Did I? 3136 Did he run?" |
3136 | Did he say anything? |
3136 | Did n''t you know they were Americans? |
3136 | Did n''t you say you knew her in Europe? |
3136 | Did she-- did Miss Benson say anything about Newport? |
3136 | Did the little pig know Jimmy? |
3136 | Did you come alone? |
3136 | Did you come in a cutter? |
3136 | Did you deny it? |
3136 | Did you ever see a work called''Evangeline''? |
3136 | Did you ever see him? |
3136 | Did you ever see so many pretty girls together before? 3136 Did you ever,"he went on,"commit the crime of using intoxicating drinks as a beverage?" |
3136 | Did you have any fighting? |
3136 | Did you read them? |
3136 | Did you recommend the president to take the money, if he could get it without using the gambler''s name? |
3136 | Did you report to the Associated Charities? |
3136 | Did you say, Mrs. Fairchild,he asked my wife,"that Miss Debree is a teacher? |
3136 | Did you see the porpoise? |
3136 | Did you see what one of the papers said about the use of wealth in adorning the city? 3136 Did you want to come to me for help?" |
3136 | Did you wish me for anything? |
3136 | Different from what? |
3136 | Disgusted? 3136 Do I? |
3136 | Do I? 3136 Do n''t remember? |
3136 | Do n''t you intend to go on with medicine? |
3136 | Do n''t you know, child, that there is society and society? 3136 Do n''t you see I am busy, child? |
3136 | Do n''t you see? 3136 Do n''t you think it better, Father Damon,"Dr. Leigh interposed,"that Gretchen should have fresh air and some recreation on Sunday?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it would be nice to have a?.... |
3136 | Do n''t you think we could sell some strawberries next year? |
3136 | Do n''t you think, dear,she said, puzzling over the drawings,"that it would better be all sandalwood? |
3136 | Do they sell the weather? |
3136 | Do what? |
3136 | Do you believe, Mr. Morgan, that any vast fortune was ever honestly come by? |
3136 | Do you happen to know whether he knows Bilbrick, the present Collector? |
3136 | Do you know, Rodney, I hated this house at five o''clock-- positively hated it? |
3136 | Do you live here? |
3136 | Do you live in Baddeck? |
3136 | Do you make a long stay? |
3136 | Do you mean to say that Henderson and Mavick and Mrs. Henderson would have thrown me over? |
3136 | Do you mean to say there are no distinctions? |
3136 | Do you mean to say,asked Mr. Lyon,"that in this country you have churches for the rich and other churches for the poor?" |
3136 | Do you mean, Mrs. Mavick, that-- you-- want-- that I am to leave Evelyn, and you? |
3136 | Do you really want me to go, dear? |
3136 | Do you remember when I got this, Carmen? 3136 Do you think I am going to be run, as you call it, by the newspapers? |
3136 | Do you think I''d ever do that for John the Lyon''s head on a charger? |
3136 | Do you think Mr. Henderson believes in people? |
3136 | Do you think all men who are what you call operating around are like that? |
3136 | Do you think he is good enough for her? |
3136 | Do you think he would have been the one to give in if they had gone to France? |
3136 | Do you think it is the worst in the country? |
3136 | Do you think she is able to stand alone? |
3136 | Do you think that if Raphael had known nothing of anatomy the world would have accepted his Sistine Madonna for the woman she is? |
3136 | Do you think there was anything between Miss Eschelle and Mr. Lyon? 3136 Do you think we would want to wreck our own property?" |
3136 | Do you think, Father,said the girl, looking up wistfully,"that I can--can be forgiven?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Mavick, that the decay of dancing is the reason our religion lacks seriousness? 3136 Do you think, Mr. Mavick, that will was ever executed?" |
3136 | Do you think,said Irene, a little anxiously, letting her hand rest a moment upon Stanhope''s,"that they will like poor little me? |
3136 | Do you trust him? |
3136 | Do you understand? 3136 Do you want me to put on my business or my evening expression?" |
3136 | Do you want to get out of it? 3136 Do you want to run right into the smallpox at Montreal?" |
3136 | Do you? 3136 Do you?" |
3136 | Do? 3136 Does Evelyn like him?" |
3136 | Does Father Damon join in this? |
3136 | Does any other stage go from here to- day anywhere else? |
3136 | Does he? |
3136 | Does she know anything of this absurd, this silly attempt? |
3136 | Does she know you are out? |
3136 | Does she know? 3136 Does the signor live near Mexico?" |
3136 | Does the world seem any larger here, Miss Debree? |
3136 | Domestication? 3136 Eh, what did he want?" |
3136 | Elevated''em, did n''t he? 3136 Executed?" |
3136 | Faith? 3136 Fish? |
3136 | Fleas? 3136 Get ready? |
3136 | Going for the government? |
3136 | Going to drop law, eh? |
3136 | Had she any friends? |
3136 | Has Mr. Lyon been here? |
3136 | Has anything gone wrong? 3136 Has anything gone wrong?" |
3136 | Have n''t I waited on you befo'', sah? 3136 Have the falls been taken in today?" |
3136 | Have to go, child? 3136 Have you answered Miss Tavish''s invitation?" |
3136 | Have you any explanations? |
3136 | Have you any memorandum of it? |
3136 | Have you any statistics on the subject? |
3136 | Have you been accustomed,he said, after a time, rather sadly,"to break the Sabbath?" |
3136 | Have you begun another? |
3136 | Have you done? |
3136 | Have you ever been dissipated, living riotously and keeping late hours? |
3136 | Have you had a good day, child? |
3136 | Have you had a worrying day? |
3136 | Have you repented of your sin? |
3136 | Have you seen him? |
3136 | Have you spoken to any of your friends? |
3136 | Have you,he went on,"ever stolen, or told any lie?" |
3136 | Have you? |
3136 | He was a--"Was he a philosopher?" |
3136 | Here? 3136 Here?" |
3136 | How about his staying quality, Stalker? |
3136 | How can you talk such nonsense? 3136 How could he help it?" |
3136 | How did it come about? |
3136 | How did little Jimmy know his pig from the other little pigs? |
3136 | How did you like it? |
3136 | How did you sleep, cap? |
3136 | How do we know what is necessary to any poor soul? 3136 How do you know that anybody is always to be unregenerate? |
3136 | How do you mean''finished''? |
3136 | How do you mean, before a magistrate? |
3136 | How does your experiment get on, Miss Tavish? |
3136 | How is it? |
3136 | How is that? |
3136 | How is this privileged person? |
3136 | How long has he been here? |
3136 | How long have they been there? |
3136 | How many are there in the coupe? |
3136 | How much for this? |
3136 | How much money was in it? |
3136 | How much of it is curiosity? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How square? |
3136 | How was that? 3136 How''s that?" |
3136 | How''s that? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | How? |
3136 | I do wonder where she came from? |
3136 | I have not seen much of your life,he said one night to Mr. Morgan;"but are n''t most American women a little restless, seeking an occupation?" |
3136 | I remember-- Hunt, Sharp& Tweedle; why did n''t you keep it? |
3136 | I say, Delancy, what''s this I hear? |
3136 | I see it is interesting,said Philip, shifting his ground again,"but what is the real good of all these botanical names and classifications?" |
3136 | I suppose it has been dreadfully hot in the city? |
3136 | I suppose there is fishing here in the season? |
3136 | I suppose you have pretty well seen the island? |
3136 | I suppose, Mr. Lyon,said Margaret, demurely,"that this sort of thing is unknown in England?" |
3136 | I thought all the churches here were organized on social affinities? |
3136 | I thought perhaps some other field, for a time? |
3136 | I thought you liked him? 3136 I wanted to ask you, Mavick, as a friend, do you think Henderson is square?" |
3136 | I wish he would,said Philip; and then, having moved so that he could see Celia''s face,"Do you like Murad Ault?" |
3136 | I wonder how Henderson came to do it? |
3136 | I wonder how he knows? |
3136 | I wonder,Mr. King was saying,"if these excursionists are representative of general American life?" |
3136 | I wonder,continued Mr. Sage,"if it was ever executed? |
3136 | I-- suppose,said the earl, rising,"we shall see you again on the other side?" |
3136 | I? 3136 I? |
3136 | I? 3136 I? |
3136 | If one do n''t, what''s the use of talk? |
3136 | If the country is so bad, why send any more unregenerates into it? |
3136 | In a boat? 3136 In my new story?" |
3136 | In order to snuff myself out? 3136 Is Jim poor?" |
3136 | Is Major Fairfax in? |
3136 | Is Mr. Delancy at home? |
3136 | Is Mr. Henderson in? |
3136 | Is Mr. Meigs in the lumber business? |
3136 | Is he dead, Dr. Leigh? 3136 Is he married?" |
3136 | Is he not sometimes at home in the daytime? |
3136 | Is he recognized by respectable people? |
3136 | Is he? 3136 Is it a true book, John?" |
3136 | Is it all true? |
3136 | Is it possible? 3136 Is it so bad as that?" |
3136 | Is it too late? |
3136 | Is it true that Lyon is''epris''there? |
3136 | Is it true, sir? |
3136 | Is it true? |
3136 | Is it your American idea, then, that a church ought to be formed only of people socially agreeable together? |
3136 | Is n''t it a shame that the tomatoes are all getting ripe at once? 3136 Is n''t it all very revolutionary?" |
3136 | Is n''t it becoming? |
3136 | Is n''t it funny,she wrote,"and is n''t it preposterous? |
3136 | Is n''t it natural,spoke up Mr. Lyon, who had hitherto been silent,"that you should drift into this condition without an established church?" |
3136 | Is n''t it safe? |
3136 | Is n''t it? 3136 Is n''t that enough?" |
3136 | Is n''t that occupation enough? 3136 Is n''t that the fault mostly of the writer, who vulgarizes his material?" |
3136 | Is n''t that,Edith exclaimed,"a surrender of individual rights and a great injustice to men not in the unions?" |
3136 | Is n''t the hall just as jammed when the clever attorney of Nothingism, Ham Saversoul, jokes about the mysteries of this life and the next? |
3136 | Is n''t this a nervous sort of a place? |
3136 | Is n''t your idea of painting rather anatomical? |
3136 | Is she pretty? |
3136 | Is she trustworthy? |
3136 | Is she very ill? |
3136 | Is that the pocket- book? |
3136 | Is there any protection, Mr. Morgan, for people who have invested their little property? |
3136 | Is there any stage for Baddeck? |
3136 | Is there anything that you want from town, auntie? |
3136 | Is there nothing like a court? 3136 Is this all of it?" |
3136 | Is this stage for Baddeck? |
3136 | It does seem hard and mean, does n''t it? 3136 It is n''t anything like wrecking, is it, dear?" |
3136 | Jump? |
3136 | Just a little? 3136 Law?" |
3136 | Left the pail? 3136 Let''s go round her,"said Jack;"eh, skipper?" |
3136 | Like her-- Miss Benson? 3136 Likely?" |
3136 | Little? |
3136 | Loss of what? |
3136 | Ma, are you asleep? |
3136 | Me? 3136 Me? |
3136 | Me? |
3136 | Me? |
3136 | Mr. Burnett? 3136 Mr. Meigs? |
3136 | Mr. Morgan,suddenly asked Margaret, who had been all the time an uneasy listener to the turn the talk had taken,"what is railroad wrecking?" |
3136 | My dear,she said,"why should n''t I renege? |
3136 | My permission, Mr. Lyon? 3136 No,"said Jerry, with a little reluctance;"might as well have it all out-- eh, Henderson?" |
3136 | No? 3136 No? |
3136 | No? 3136 No? |
3136 | No? 3136 Not classic, then?" |
3136 | Not intending always to teach? |
3136 | Nothing is said about the training- school? |
3136 | Now what is it? |
3136 | Now, wherever can he be going this morning in the very midst of getting in his hay? 3136 Now, why do n''t you do it?" |
3136 | Of course you all have the poems of Burns? |
3136 | Of myself? |
3136 | Oh, I did n''t know--"What is it, dear? |
3136 | Oh, can she? 3136 Oh, indeed, is that the place? |
3136 | Oh, is that all? |
3136 | Oh, literature? 3136 Oh, the ebony and gold? |
3136 | Ohio? 3136 Old Jerry? |
3136 | Old fellow, what do you say to going to Virginia? |
3136 | Pa, are you asleep? |
3136 | Pa, what is a phalanx? |
3136 | Papa, what does he mean? |
3136 | Pardon me,he persisted,"have you no sense of incompleteness in this life, in your own life? |
3136 | Perhaps I ought to tell her your plan for her? 3136 Perhaps your daughter would have preferred to furnish it herself?" |
3136 | Picked up what you could find, corn, bacon, horses? |
3136 | Plunder seems to have been the object? |
3136 | Portia,said Evelyn;"yes, but that is poetry; and, McDonald, was n''t it a kind of catch? |
3136 | Quite an admission, was n''t it, from an American? 3136 Quoted me? |
3136 | Recognized? |
3136 | Remember the joke he played on Prof. A., freshman year? |
3136 | Rights, what''s that? |
3136 | Rumor? |
3136 | Sell what? |
3136 | Shall I send it? |
3136 | She''s so bright, and-- and interesting, do n''t you think? 3136 Sir,"cried Mr. Irving, in a burst of indignation that overcame his habitual shyness,"do you seize upon such a disaster only for a sneer? |
3136 | Sleep? |
3136 | So Brandon was a little dull? |
3136 | So men only dropped the a pluribus unum method on account of the expense? |
3136 | So soon? |
3136 | So that is another thing I pretend? 3136 So the college is not open yet?" |
3136 | So you earn fifteen cents a day? |
3136 | So you have been at the White Sulphur? |
3136 | So you put your faith in an American millionaire? |
3136 | So you remember that? |
3136 | So you want things picked out like a photograph? |
3136 | So your friend''s an artist? 3136 Sorry for what?" |
3136 | Spades, did you say? |
3136 | Spanish or French? |
3136 | Surely you are not uninterested in what is now called psychical research? |
3136 | Tell Mrs. Van Cortlandt? 3136 That flame,"he says,"you have put out, but where has it gone?" |
3136 | The Mavicks? 3136 The publishers have n''t decided?" |
3136 | The reception? 3136 Then Carmen, as you call her, was n''t the first?" |
3136 | Then her influence on him is good? |
3136 | Then it is not money that determines social position in America? |
3136 | Then she does go there? |
3136 | Then what are you girding Mr. Henderson for about his university? |
3136 | Then you do n''t care for real life? |
3136 | Then you have some curiosity to see the story? |
3136 | Then you think international marriages are a mistake? |
3136 | Then you want a romance? |
3136 | Then you would call yourself a realist? |
3136 | This is a rotation of crops, is n''t it? |
3136 | To be with us? |
3136 | To bombard Alexandria? |
3136 | To vespers? |
3136 | Very well,said the Major, at the close of the last of their talks at the club;"what are you going to do?" |
3136 | Walked? 3136 Want whom to know?" |
3136 | Was Navisson a modern lawyer? |
3136 | Was he on the Union or Confederate side? |
3136 | Was it a great change from the first? |
3136 | Was it slippery? |
3136 | Was it very dull? |
3136 | Was it? 3136 Was n''t it the Margaret Fund?" |
3136 | Was n''t she interested? |
3136 | Was she a good woman? |
3136 | Was she? 3136 Was there a later will?" |
3136 | Was there a panic on board? |
3136 | Was there anything else? |
3136 | We? 3136 Well"( the girl only wanted an excuse to say something),"I only ast, is you?" |
3136 | Well, I declare; and you could''a looked right in? |
3136 | Well, do n''t you think it would pay best to be honest, and live with your family, out of jail? 3136 Well, honestly, Miss Eschelle, do you think the negroes are any better off?" |
3136 | Well, how''s things? 3136 Well, safe?" |
3136 | Well, sweet, keeping house alone? 3136 Well, what have you against Newport?" |
3136 | Well, what is the news today? |
3136 | Well, what is your idea? |
3136 | Well, what now? |
3136 | Well, what of it? |
3136 | Well, what of that? 3136 Well, where can I go?" |
3136 | Well, why should n''t we support the working- people of Paris and elsewhere? 3136 Well, young man,"said he, rising, with a queer grin on his face,"what are you sent here for? |
3136 | Well,he said, when she came to him in the vestry, with a drop from the rather austere manner in which he had spoken,"what can I do for you?" |
3136 | Well,said Edith, not to be diverted,"but, Mr. Henderson, what is it all for-- this conflict? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Well? |
3136 | Were the Pilgrims and the Puritans? |
3136 | Were you amused with the dancing-- this morning? |
3136 | Were you in any engagements? |
3136 | Were you trying to make Mr. Lyon comfortable by dragging in Bunker Hill? |
3136 | What are the business hours here? |
3136 | What are you going to do? 3136 What are you looking at, Jack?" |
3136 | What are you two plotting? |
3136 | What became of him? |
3136 | What can you do for me? |
3136 | What could you expect from such a sudden proposal to a young girl, almost a child, wholly unused to the world? 3136 What did Lycurgus do then?" |
3136 | What did Pericles do to the Greeks? |
3136 | What did he say? |
3136 | What did you do in Hugh White''s regiment? |
3136 | What did you do? |
3136 | What did you expect? 3136 What do I think of the Milky Way? |
3136 | What do people generally do? |
3136 | What do they do there, uncle? |
3136 | What do you mean, Carmen? |
3136 | What do you suppose I am here for? |
3136 | What do you think of Missouri? |
3136 | What do you want? |
3136 | What does anybody after a reception call for? |
3136 | What does he do? |
3136 | What does he say? |
3136 | What does it matter? |
3136 | What for? |
3136 | What good? |
3136 | What had it in it? |
3136 | What has come over you tonight, Carmen? |
3136 | What has come over you? 3136 What has she done?" |
3136 | What have I to do with it? 3136 What have you done, what have you done to me?" |
3136 | What have you heard, Major? |
3136 | What in the world, child, made you go on so tonight? |
3136 | What is all this about forgiveness? |
3136 | What is he doing? |
3136 | What is he like? |
3136 | What is it for? |
3136 | What is it, dear? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is it? |
3136 | What is that for? |
3136 | What is that? |
3136 | What is the Mountain Miller? |
3136 | What is the difference between that and getting possession of a bank and robbing it? |
3136 | What is the difference, Mr. Henderson,asked Margaret,"between the gossip in the boxes and the country gossip you spoke of?" |
3136 | What is the matter, Tom? |
3136 | What is the matter? |
3136 | What is the program for tomorrow? |
3136 | What is what, dear? |
3136 | What is your name? |
3136 | What is? |
3136 | What kind of a summer have you had? |
3136 | What made you snub Mr. Lyon so often? |
3136 | What more could I do for Miss Eschelle than to leave her in such company? |
3136 | What on earth do you suppose made those girls come up here in white dresses, blowing about in the wind, and already drabbled? 3136 What sort of a pocket- book was it?" |
3136 | What sort of repairs? |
3136 | What time does the sun rise? |
3136 | What was that, Phelps? |
3136 | What way? |
3136 | What were they talking about all night? |
3136 | What woman of spirit would n''t rather mate with an eagle, and quarrel half the time, than with a humdrum barn- yard fowl? |
3136 | What would you? |
3136 | What''s got into you to look so splendid? 3136 What''s over, child?" |
3136 | What''s that? 3136 What''s that?" |
3136 | What''s that? |
3136 | What''s that? |
3136 | What''s the Island, mamma? |
3136 | What''s the name o''the mon? |
3136 | What''s this? 3136 What''s your initials? |
3136 | What, all day? |
3136 | What, left the city, quit his work? 3136 What,"continued he, in tones still more serious,"has been your conduct with regard to the other sex?" |
3136 | What? 3136 What?" |
3136 | What? |
3136 | When was the first moment you began to love me, dear? |
3136 | Where be you from? |
3136 | Where does this go, and when? |
3136 | Where is he? |
3136 | Where''s the bear? |
3136 | Where''s your pail? |
3136 | Where,we said, as we came easily, and neither uphill nor downhill, into the pleasant harbor of St. John,---"where are the tides of our youth?" |
3136 | Which would you choose? |
3136 | Which would you rather live with? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Which? |
3136 | Who are you making that for? |
3136 | Who does? 3136 Who has died?" |
3136 | Who is good enough for whom? |
3136 | Who is he? |
3136 | Who is it? |
3136 | Who is that lovely creature? |
3136 | Who is that? |
3136 | Who is that? |
3136 | Who taught me? |
3136 | Who''s been talking? |
3136 | Who''s that? |
3136 | Who, Ault? |
3136 | Who? 3136 Who?" |
3136 | Whose trout is that? |
3136 | Why almost? |
3136 | Why did n''t he send it, then? 3136 Why did n''t you call me? |
3136 | Why do n''t he say what his business is? |
3136 | Why do n''t you applaud, child? |
3136 | Why do n''t you ask leave to read a paper, Forbes, on the relation of dress to education? |
3136 | Why do n''t you cut her? 3136 Why do n''t you go with a boy, then?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you put her into a novel? |
3136 | Why do n''t you take the other? |
3136 | Why do you smoke? |
3136 | Why insist on rash personal relations with your friend? |
3136 | Why is it called Pulpit Rock? |
3136 | Why is it that so few English women marry Americans? |
3136 | Why not? 3136 Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why pretend? |
3136 | Why should n''t she be? |
3136 | Why should n''t she believe in him? |
3136 | Why were you gone so long? |
3136 | Why, Polly, where is the camel''s- hair shawl? |
3136 | Why, dearest? |
3136 | Why, my dear Lord Montague, did you ever offer her anything? |
3136 | Why, my dear, do n''t you know? |
3136 | Why, the first moment, that day; did n''t you know it then? |
3136 | Why, what has come over you, old man? |
3136 | Why,I asked the bright and light- minded colored boy who sold papers on the morning train,"do n''t you stay in the city and see it?" |
3136 | Why,asked Irene, trembling at the thought of that danger so long ago--"why did n''t you go back down the ravine?" |
3136 | Why? 3136 Why? |
3136 | Why? |
3136 | Why? |
3136 | Will I? |
3136 | Will madame have the carriage? |
3136 | Will you be my teacher? |
3136 | Will you read that? |
3136 | Will you smoke? |
3136 | Will you take us to Baddeck to- day? |
3136 | Will you? 3136 Will you? |
3136 | With Congress, do you mean? |
3136 | With whom, mamma? |
3136 | Worse? 3136 Would I rather? |
3136 | Would n''t he be satisfied with an LL.D.? |
3136 | Would n''t it be prettier hung with silken arras figured with a chain of dancing- girls? 3136 Would n''t she have come with you? |
3136 | Would n''t that be nice? |
3136 | Would n''t the money do good-- as much good as any other hundred thousand dollars? |
3136 | Would n''t the torpedo station make up for it? |
3136 | Would n''t uncle like to take a drive this charming morning? |
3136 | Would the law pay you? |
3136 | Would the little pig let him? |
3136 | Would you buy stocks that way? |
3136 | Would you mind telling me what they are? |
3136 | Would you rather be there? |
3136 | Write? |
3136 | Yes, I know; and did you see that some of the scholars had red hair and blue eyes, quite in the present style? 3136 Yes, indeed,"said Edith, looking up brightly;"does n''t it you?" |
3136 | Yes, sir,says John,"is that all?" |
3136 | Yes, yes; but I wonder if it was worth while? |
3136 | Yes-- why not? |
3136 | Yes? 3136 Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yes? |
3136 | Yet you wish to be treated as a woman? |
3136 | You ai n''t got no cotton, is you? |
3136 | You are afraid they will get lost in that big house? |
3136 | You are not going to waste your ground on muskmelons? |
3136 | You are not offended? |
3136 | You are not offended? |
3136 | You are of the city, then? |
3136 | You could n''t lie along a hair? |
3136 | You did n''t tell her that I approved of all the French novels you read? |
3136 | You do n''t find it lively? |
3136 | You do n''t like trees? |
3136 | You do n''t mean that she refused you? |
3136 | You do n''t mean that you are tired of America? |
3136 | You do n''t mean, mamma, that she is going away for good? |
3136 | You do n''t tell me you''ve gone and refused him, Irene? |
3136 | You do n''t think I''d be seen going around with him? 3136 You got a living out of the farmers?" |
3136 | You got our circular? |
3136 | You have no business here: what are you after? |
3136 | You here? |
3136 | You know Mr. Henderson very well? |
3136 | You like Bar Harbor so well,he said,"that I suppose your father will be buying a cottage here?" |
3136 | You lived on the country? |
3136 | You mean for himself, for his own self? |
3136 | You mean gossiped about? |
3136 | You mean making Christianity practical? |
3136 | You mean she does not know what I offer her? |
3136 | You mean she will be sorry, whichever she chooses? |
3136 | You mean that I must go back to my labor in the city? |
3136 | You mean that young swell whose business it is to drive a four- in- hand to Yonkers and back, and toot on a horn? |
3136 | You mean to say,I asked,"that the lawyer takes what the operator leaves?" |
3136 | You promise me, dear, that you will put the whole thing out of your mind? |
3136 | You surely do not think human beings are created just for this miserable little experience here? |
3136 | You want to build a cathedral? |
3136 | You went? |
3136 | You will remain? |
3136 | You will solemnly promise me, solemnly, will you not, Stanhope, never to go there again-- never-- without me? |
3136 | You will write, dear, the moment you get there, will you not? 3136 You''d be willing to take your oath on it?" |
3136 | You''ve only recently come over, Lord Montague? |
3136 | You? 3136 Young man, did you ever use tobacco?" |
3136 | Your mother is pleased here? |
3136 | ''And you are not discouraged by the repeated failure of the predictions of the end of the world?'' |
3136 | ''And you?'' |
3136 | ''Are you afraid?'' |
3136 | ''Are you one?'' |
3136 | ''But how do you know?'' |
3136 | ''Oh, it is n''t the place?'' |
3136 | ''What was it?'' |
3136 | ''Where did they find transports?'' |
3136 | ''Why?'' |
3136 | ''Yes,''he continued, walking close up to it,''but what is it?'' |
3136 | ( I wonder what all this is about?) |
3136 | ( Suppose my squash had not come up, or my beans--as they threatened at one time-- had gone the wrong way: where would I have been?) |
3136 | ("Children, what is the meaning of''absorbed''?") |
3136 | ("Children,"asks the teacher,"what is the meaning of''twist''?") |
3136 | ), to fetch her shawl-- was there anything they could do? |
3136 | --"But what kind of perishable things?" |
3136 | A companion? |
3136 | A country? |
3136 | A forlorn fishing- station, a dreary hotel? |
3136 | A lady leaned from the carriage, and said:"What have you got, little boy?" |
3136 | A monument like your Pulpit Rock?" |
3136 | A more pertinent inquiry is, what sort of people have we become? |
3136 | A more recent letter:--"Do you remember Aunt Hepsy, who used to keep the little thread- and- needle and candy shop in Rivervale? |
3136 | A small, unpicturesque, wooden town, in the languor of a provincial summer; why should we pretend an interest in it which we did not feel? |
3136 | A white house,--a pleasant- looking house at a distance,--amiable, kindly people in it,--why should we have arrived there on its dirty day? |
3136 | A young man will catch the whole family with this flaming message, but where is that sentiment that once set the maiden heart in a flutter? |
3136 | About how do they run here as to size?" |
3136 | After a day of toil, what more natural, and what more probable for a Spaniard? |
3136 | After a few moments, in a recurring wave of strength, he looked up again, still bewildered, and said, faintly:"Where am I?" |
3136 | After all, King reflected, as the party were on their way to the Isles of Shoals, what was it that had most impressed him at Manchester? |
3136 | After all, what did it matter? |
3136 | After one campaign, must there not be time given to organize for another? |
3136 | Ai n''t that about so?" |
3136 | All our territory is mapped out as to its sanitary conditions; why not have it colored as to its effect upon the spirits and the enjoyment of life? |
3136 | All right down here?" |
3136 | Always does? |
3136 | Am I mistaken in supposing that this is owing to the discontinuance of big chimneys, with wide fireplaces in them? |
3136 | Am I to be sacrificed, broiled, roasted, for the sake of the increased vigor of a few vegetables? |
3136 | An angry voice,"What do you want?" |
3136 | And Ault? |
3136 | And Evelyn herself? |
3136 | And Father Damon, who was trying to save souls, was he accomplishing anything more than she? |
3136 | And Forbes replied:"Why did n''t you say so? |
3136 | And I can send that?" |
3136 | And I do not stick to anything? |
3136 | And I said, why not make her an intellectual woman? |
3136 | And Jack himself, happily married, with a comfortable income, why was life getting flat to him? |
3136 | And Jack, dear Jack, would he love her more? |
3136 | And Margaret, what view of the world did all this give her? |
3136 | And Miss Tavish; to whom did she fly in this peril? |
3136 | And a little''sadness''in them, was n''t there? |
3136 | And affectionate? |
3136 | And all this promenading and flirting and languishing and love- making, would it come to nothing- nothing more than usual? |
3136 | And could he guess what gown she would wear? |
3136 | And did you tell your aunt that?" |
3136 | And do n''t you think she is more beautiful than ever? |
3136 | And do n''t you think she''s a little too intellectual for society? |
3136 | And do we not all look about us in the pews, when he thus moralizes, to see who has prospered? |
3136 | And do you think we''d better have those life- size figures all round, mediaeval statues, with the incandescents? |
3136 | And had he noticed a little disposition to patronize on two or three occasions? |
3136 | And had she not reason to be? |
3136 | And have we forgotten the"murmuring pines and the hemlocks"? |
3136 | And he cries after his departing parent,"Say, father, ca n''t I go over to the farther pasture and salt the cattle?" |
3136 | And he? |
3136 | And how could he ever again stand before erring, sinful men and women and speak about that purity which he had violated? |
3136 | And how does he find out that? |
3136 | And how fares it with the intellectual man? |
3136 | And how in this generation is he equipping himself for the future? |
3136 | And how was it in the late war? |
3136 | And if it were true, why did n''t I go at once to the gate, and not lurk round there all night like another Clement? |
3136 | And if she did, what would become of her own ideals? |
3136 | And if the stage goes on in this materialistic way, how long will it be before it ceases to amuse intelligent, not to say intellectual people? |
3136 | And if this divorce is permanent, is it a good thing for literature or the stage? |
3136 | And if your story does not take the popular fancy, where will you be then?" |
3136 | And is it not pretty sport, to pull up two pence, six pence, and twelve pence as fast as you can hale and veere a line?... |
3136 | And is this because we do not like to be insulted with originality, or because in our experience it is only the commonly accepted which is true? |
3136 | And it gives specimens of this pleasant converse, as:"Comment va votre poussee?" |
3136 | And meantime what is being done for the young men who are expected to share in the high society of the future? |
3136 | And men go to work to do this, to get other people''s property, in cool blood?" |
3136 | And so far as I am concerned--""Then I have your permission?" |
3136 | And that handsome woman--Nashville?--Louisville? |
3136 | And that''s jest a make- believe? |
3136 | And the Eschelles-- do you know anything of the Eschelles?" |
3136 | And the hat? |
3136 | And the mission?" |
3136 | And then Carmen? |
3136 | And then he asked:"Is your work ended for the day? |
3136 | And then she added, more lightly,"Do n''t you know it is wrong to commit suicide?" |
3136 | And then she continued, partly to herself, partly to Miss McDonald:"He will come now, ca n''t he? |
3136 | And then suppose he should become famous-- well, not exactly famous, but an author who was talked about, and becoming known, and said to be promising? |
3136 | And then, after a moment, she asked,"Do you, Father Damon, see any sign of anything better here?" |
3136 | And then, how many would reach youth? |
3136 | And then, if one has sentiment, is there anywhere that it is more ministered to than in the city at the close of the year? |
3136 | And then, leaning forward,"Do you mean that about Mr. Henderson in the morning papers?" |
3136 | And then, not heeding the nervous start the girl gave in stepping backward,"And-- and, will you be my wife?" |
3136 | And then, quite inconsequently,"I suppose you have news from Rivervale?" |
3136 | And then, showing the drift of his thoughts,"I wonder what Carmen will do?" |
3136 | And then, to the mother:"Where is Gretchen? |
3136 | And then,''Do you bike, Miss Mavick?'' |
3136 | And to wait for what? |
3136 | And today, for the first time, he seemed to have seen the woman in her-- or was it the saint? |
3136 | And under such a tutelage and dependence, how in any event could she be able to take care of herself? |
3136 | And was Henderson a vanishing part of this pageant? |
3136 | And was Henderson unconscious of all this? |
3136 | And was it an unmanly trait that he evoked in men that sentiment of chivalry which is never wanting in the roughest community for a pure woman? |
3136 | And was she only a part of it? |
3136 | And was she serious in all her various occupations, or only experimenting? |
3136 | And was there not sometimes, not yet habitually, coming upon these faces, faces plain and faces attractive, the shade of renunciation? |
3136 | And what can a man like that want with scenery? |
3136 | And what do we gain by our present method? |
3136 | And what effect would this change in relations have upon men? |
3136 | And what is dramatic art as at present understood and practiced by the purveyors of plays for the public? |
3136 | And what is politics? |
3136 | And what of it? |
3136 | And what would become of us without Receptions? |
3136 | And what, pray, was there to appeal? |
3136 | And when it was done, and the whole thing had blown over, who cared? |
3136 | And when you came to that, why should n''t any American girl marry her equal? |
3136 | And where am I? |
3136 | And where are we to look for this if not in the youth, and especially in those to whom fortune and leisure give an opportunity of leadership? |
3136 | And where in the world are beauty, and gayety with a touch of daring, and a magnificent establishment better appreciated? |
3136 | And where is the money to come from?" |
3136 | And wherever is he going? |
3136 | And who are we?" |
3136 | And who can say that some time, in the waiting and working future, this new light might not change life altogether for this faithful soul? |
3136 | And who knows what we shall find if we get there? |
3136 | And why not, since it is absolutely necessary that the world should be amused? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why not? |
3136 | And why should n''t a man of family amuse himself? |
3136 | And why should she be expected to go back to that stage? |
3136 | And why should we presume to set up our standard of what is valuable in life, of what is a successful career? |
3136 | And why town? |
3136 | And why, so far as she was concerned, should she deny it? |
3136 | And would this change be of any injury to them in their necessary fight for existence in this pushing world? |
3136 | And yet if she had yielded to it? |
3136 | And yet might there not be an element of selfishness in this-- might not its sacrifice be a family duty? |
3136 | And yet she was but a girl; she was now practically alone, and could she resist the family and the social pressure? |
3136 | And yet suppose he should break his solemn vows and throw away his ideal, and marry Ruth Leigh, would he ever be happy? |
3136 | And yet why was it absurd? |
3136 | And you call this hypocrisy? |
3136 | And you did not see it?" |
3136 | And you do n''t object?" |
3136 | And you have not seen anybody?" |
3136 | And you made a direct proposal?" |
3136 | And you said Miss Debree was there?" |
3136 | And you wo n''t mind my repeating it-- I was a mite of a girl-- I said,''Is n''t that rather sophistical, papa?'' |
3136 | And you?" |
3136 | And, Phil, that great monster of a Mavick, who is eating up the country, is n''t he a client also?" |
3136 | And, besides, how did the vine know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to find what it wanted? |
3136 | And, if there is steadier diet needed than venison and bear, is the pig an expensive animal? |
3136 | And, indeed, if you see what a hopeless tangle our present situation is, where else can the mind logically go?" |
3136 | And, oh, wo n''t you ask Babcock to step round here?" |
3136 | And, then, a question I never will answer,"Ten? |
3136 | And-- I wonder if you will let me say it?" |
3136 | Any news here?" |
3136 | Anything wrong?" |
3136 | Are men always gentle and considerate, and women always even- tempered and consistent, simply by virtue of a few words said to the priest? |
3136 | Are men and women essentially changed, however? |
3136 | Are n''t they in a condition that binds them half the time to do what they do n''t wish to do?" |
3136 | Are n''t we having a good time up here?" |
3136 | Are n''t you tired?" |
3136 | Are the Enoch Ardens ever wanted? |
3136 | Are the majority of women likely to be whistlers? |
3136 | Are the people who, by reason of a competence or other accidents of good- fortune, have most leisure, becoming more agreeable? |
3136 | Are the proceeds of labor more evenly distributed? |
3136 | Are the women, or are they not, taking all the virility out of literature? |
3136 | Are their husbands brigands, and are they in wait for us in the chestnut- grove yonder? |
3136 | Are there any homesteads nowadays? |
3136 | Are there mice?" |
3136 | Are there more purity, more honest, fair dealing, genuine work, fear and honor of God? |
3136 | Are there no homes where the tempter does not live with the tempted in a mush of sentimental affinity? |
3136 | Are they adapting themselves to the new conditions? |
3136 | Are they altogether in the past? |
3136 | Are they electric affinities? |
3136 | Are they not for the most part the records of the misapprehensions of the misinformed? |
3136 | Are they so different, then, from other people? |
3136 | Are they so very high and mighty?" |
3136 | Are those who start and do n''t arrive any better than those who do arrive? |
3136 | Are we any better off for the privilege of following first one inclination and then another, which is called making a choice? |
3136 | Are we exaggerating this astonishing rise, development, and spread of the chrysanthemum? |
3136 | Are we not always trying to adjust ourselves to new relations, to get naturalized into a new family? |
3136 | Are you High- Church or evangelical?" |
3136 | Are you against me?" |
3136 | Are you all tired of civilization?" |
3136 | Are you engaged in anything?" |
3136 | Are you going in?" |
3136 | Are you going to make a race of men on feminine fodder? |
3136 | Are you interested in A. and B.?" |
3136 | Are you rested?" |
3136 | Are you shocked?" |
3136 | Art is good in its way; but what about a perfect figure? |
3136 | As I look at it, you might as well ask, Does a sunset pay? |
3136 | As long as he was in the world was it right that he should isolate himself from any of its sympathies and trials? |
3136 | As quick as a flash he said,"Why do n''t you call them''The Reverdy Johnson''?" |
3136 | As the lawyers say, is it a''vinculo'', or only a''mensa et thoro?'' |
3136 | As you recall it, what was it all about? |
3136 | Ask them to let me out? |
3136 | At Capon Springs? |
3136 | At length I said,--"Polly, do you know who planted that squash, or those squashes?" |
3136 | At length Newport''s ship was loaded with clapboards, pitch, tar, glass, frankincense(?) |
3136 | At length he asked, in a softened voice,"Is the mother a Christian?" |
3136 | At length he said, in his ordinary tone,"Well, what is it?" |
3136 | Ault?" |
3136 | Balls? |
3136 | Be unhappy because Henderson was prosperous, and she could indulge her tastes and not have to drudge in school? |
3136 | Because a man was married, was he to be shut up to one little narrow career, that of husband? |
3136 | Been up to fix the Legislature?" |
3136 | Before they rose from the table, Philip asked, speaking low,"Miss Mavick, wo n''t you give me a violet from your bunch in memory of this evening?" |
3136 | Benson?" |
3136 | Blunt?" |
3136 | Brown?" |
3136 | Bullets? |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | Burnett?" |
3136 | But I wonder what Boston could have done for the Jersey coast?" |
3136 | But about the crowbar? |
3136 | But by what mediation shall the culture that is now the possession of the few be made to leaven the world and to elevate and sweeten ordinary life? |
3136 | But did John like the color of her eyes? |
3136 | But do all the women like this method of spending hour after hour, day after day- indeed, a lifetime? |
3136 | But do we talk as well as our fathers and mothers did? |
3136 | But does the preacher in the pulpit, Sunday after Sunday, year after year, shrink from speaking of sin? |
3136 | But had it not been all along in the minds of the builders to ask all the world to see it, to share the delight of it? |
3136 | But has the whistling woman come to stay? |
3136 | But he almost immediately came back, and poked in his head with,--"Is you go by de diligence?" |
3136 | But how was I to know about Lyon, my dear? |
3136 | But if the fence were papered with fairy- tales, would he not stop to read them until it was too late for him to climb into the garden? |
3136 | But is it true that a woman is ever really naturalized? |
3136 | But is it well- founded, is there any more mystery about women-- than about men? |
3136 | But is n''t it singular how local and provincial society talk is everywhere? |
3136 | But is n''t this what I''m accused of doing-- shirking my duty of personal service by a contribution?" |
3136 | But is not the sunshine common, and the bloom of May? |
3136 | But is not this because he is then most opposed? |
3136 | But must not every one decide for herself what is right before God?" |
3136 | But suddenly Evelyn added:"Why do n''t you do it?" |
3136 | But the Blue Grotto? |
3136 | But the boat? |
3136 | But the inquiry has come from many cities, from many women,"Can not something be done to stop social screaming?" |
3136 | But the mind? |
3136 | But the professorship was to bear his name, and what would be the moral effect of that?" |
3136 | But then, what would become of Lenox? |
3136 | But was he well?" |
3136 | But was it not the ghost of a ship? |
3136 | But was the New England atmosphere a little cold? |
3136 | But were we not saying something about moving? |
3136 | But what avails his Conquest now he lyes Inter''d in earth a prey for Wormes& Flies? |
3136 | But what color, what charming turns of expression, what of herself, had the girl put into it, that gave him such a thrill of pleasure when he read it? |
3136 | But what could he conjure out of a register? |
3136 | But what could she do? |
3136 | But what do you do with the ebony?" |
3136 | But what had he to offer to evoke such a love? |
3136 | But what in the last analysis is the object of a government? |
3136 | But what is it in human nature that is apt to carry a man who may take a step in personal reform into so many extremes? |
3136 | But what is the relation of our general intellectual life to popular education? |
3136 | But what is the row now? |
3136 | But what procession was that moving along the southern terrace? |
3136 | But what right had he to expect that it would be favorably considered? |
3136 | But what security would there be for any calculations in life in a state of things in expectation of a revolution any moment? |
3136 | But what should he telegraph? |
3136 | But what was the good of that when one had passed beyond the reach of envy? |
3136 | But what was the other thing?" |
3136 | But what would she gain by that? |
3136 | But what, exactly, do you mean?" |
3136 | But where was Philip? |
3136 | But where,"she added, turning to King,"are the rest of your party?" |
3136 | But who can measure the inner change in her life? |
3136 | But who can say what is most effective? |
3136 | But who could it be? |
3136 | But who hoed them?" |
3136 | But who knows? |
3136 | But who was the man on the sorrel horse, and where had he gone? |
3136 | But who was to give me back my peas? |
3136 | But why do elderly people go there? |
3136 | But why not? |
3136 | But why should they disapprove of her? |
3136 | But why was it, he asked himself, that he had so many followers, his religion so few? |
3136 | But why was the separation desired? |
3136 | But will it be a rainy night? |
3136 | But would he not feel, even if no one else knew it, that he was the poet- laureate of a corporation? |
3136 | But would it be so? |
3136 | But you did n''t have any of that shirking feeling last night, did you?" |
3136 | But you know, do n''t you, dear?" |
3136 | But you went south from Fortress Monroe?" |
3136 | But you wo n''t mind? |
3136 | But, Celia, what is the matter with you? |
3136 | But, Mr. Lyon, how much good do you suppose condescending charity does?" |
3136 | But, dear, as a friend, ought n''t I to tell you?" |
3136 | But, lonely? |
3136 | But, style? |
3136 | By books? |
3136 | By land to the island of Cape Breton?'' |
3136 | By the diffusion of works of art? |
3136 | By the newspaper? |
3136 | By the way, did I tell you that Miss Lamont''s uncle came last night from Richmond? |
3136 | By what logic can I say that I should have a part in the conduct of this world and that my neighbor should not? |
3136 | By- the- way, Mr. Burnett, Hunt''s a Republican, is n''t he?" |
3136 | By- the- way, did Dr. Leigh say anything about Henderson?" |
3136 | By- the- way, what do you think of the escape suggested by the Spectrum, in the assertion that you and Evelyn had arranged to go to Europe? |
3136 | By- the- way, why not run out with me and spend the night, and we can talk the thing over?" |
3136 | CAN A HUSBAND OPEN HIS WIFE''S LETTERS? |
3136 | CAPRI"CAP, signor? |
3136 | Ca n''t it wait?" |
3136 | Ca n''t you suggest any?" |
3136 | Can I go?" |
3136 | Can I have them?" |
3136 | Can I raise all those beautiful varieties, each one of which is preferable to the other? |
3136 | Can a husband open his wife''s letters? |
3136 | Can any one deny that this blessed sentiment is extending in modern life? |
3136 | Can any one float in such scenes and be so contentedly idle anywhere in our happy land? |
3136 | Can it be that there is anything of more consequence in life than the great business in hand, which absorbs the vitality and genius of this age? |
3136 | Can it be used more than once? |
3136 | Can not one enjoy a rose without pulling it up by the roots? |
3136 | Can not one see it all from the citadel hill, and by walking down by the horticultural garden and the Roman Catholic cemetery? |
3136 | Can not you believe, Miss Benson, that I had some pride in having my friends see you and know you?" |
3136 | Can the lady act? |
3136 | Can there be any doubt that this lovely woman was orthodox? |
3136 | Can training give one an elegant form, and study command the services of a man milliner? |
3136 | Can we buy it with money quickly, or is it a grace that comes only with long civilization? |
3136 | Can we reform London and Paris and New York, which our own hands have made? |
3136 | Can women stop in such a career, even if they wish to stop? |
3136 | Can you get ready?" |
3136 | Can you have that without the social traditions,"she appealed to the earl,"such as you have in England?" |
3136 | Can you hear me?" |
3136 | Can you mention any class in this country whose interest it is to overturn the government? |
3136 | Can you poke it? |
3136 | Can you say how these things fed the imagination of the boy, who had few books and no contact with the great world? |
3136 | Christmas? |
3136 | Come, Henderson, speak up; what do you get out of it?" |
3136 | Could Baddeck be as attractive as this peaceful valley? |
3136 | Could any boy pass by those ripe berries? |
3136 | Could anything be more commonplace than such a parting? |
3136 | Could he go about in a long cloak and a slouch hat, curl up in doorways out of the blast, and be content in a feeling of his own picturesqueness? |
3136 | Could he help it if after the first hours of his return he felt the restraint of his home, and that the life seemed a little flat? |
3136 | Could he know what misery she was in, the daily witness of her father''s broken condition, of her mother''s uncertain temper? |
3136 | Could he say that he had become very much interested in studying a schoolteacher-- a very charming school- teacher? |
3136 | Could he sit all day on the stone pavement and hold out his chilblained hand for soldi? |
3136 | Could not the infinite possibilities of it fill the hunger of any soul? |
3136 | Could repentance, confession, penitence, wipe away this stain? |
3136 | Could she always be thinking of what they would think at Brandon? |
3136 | Could she be comparing the Londoner with the handsome American who sat by her side at the opera last night? |
3136 | Could she possibly make them her own? |
3136 | Could the girl throw herself away? |
3136 | Could there be any fitter resting- place for that most, weary, and gentle spirit? |
3136 | Could there be any happiness in life in any other course? |
3136 | Could these men have conquered the world? |
3136 | Could this be the Cape May about which hung so many traditions of summer romance? |
3136 | Could this interest any but us-- we who felt the loss because we still loved her? |
3136 | Could we say that life, after all, had not given her what she most desired? |
3136 | Cranks? |
3136 | D.W.]"Why not? |
3136 | DOES REFINEMENT KILL INDIVIDUALITY? |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Delancy?" |
3136 | Did Alice say so?" |
3136 | Did Carmen resent this? |
3136 | Did God require in His service the atrophy of the affections? |
3136 | Did Henderson believe? |
3136 | Did I love him? |
3136 | Did I make their investments? |
3136 | Did I never get caught? |
3136 | Did I see anything? |
3136 | Did I shirk any duty? |
3136 | Did Jack tell you about Henderson?" |
3136 | Did Mrs. Mavick understand what she was doing? |
3136 | Did Smith see Strachey''s manuscript before he published his Oxford tract, or did Strachey enlarge his own notes from Smith''s description? |
3136 | Did Their Pilgrimage end on these autumn heights? |
3136 | Did he comprehend? |
3136 | Did he distrust even her, as he did everybody else? |
3136 | Did he ever speak of that?" |
3136 | Did he frequent the theatre? |
3136 | Did he loaf in the coffee- houses, and spin the fine thread of his adventures to the idlers and gallants who resorted to them? |
3136 | Did he perhaps see Shakespeare himself at the Globe? |
3136 | Did he regret it? |
3136 | Did it occur to Mr. Froude to ask the man whether he would be contented with a good trade and the Ten Commandments? |
3136 | Did it rebuke the means by which the vast fortune of Henderson was accumulated, that it was defeated of any good use by the fraud of his wife? |
3136 | Did it seem like home at all? |
3136 | Did n''t I always tell you that I want to know? |
3136 | Did n''t I tell you that it is always darkest just before the dawn?" |
3136 | Did n''t I write you reams about my studies in psychology? |
3136 | Did n''t he elevate Pem?" |
3136 | Did n''t they tell you? |
3136 | Did n''t you notice that Redfern has an establishment on the Avenue? |
3136 | Did n''t you see, mother, that he was distrait the moment he espied that girl? |
3136 | Did not Mr. Tupper, that sweet, melodious shepherd of the undisputed, lead about vast flocks of sheep over the satisfying plain of mediocrity? |
3136 | Did not men always make all the money they had an opportunity to make? |
3136 | Did not the city offer her everything that she desired? |
3136 | Did she apologize, as if she had done anything to provoke it? |
3136 | Did she come in contact with any one who had not his price, who was not going or wanting to go in the general current? |
3136 | Did she get any strength, I wonder? |
3136 | Did she love him yet, as in the old happy days? |
3136 | Did she love these people? |
3136 | Did she think of him in surroundings so brilliant? |
3136 | Did she upbraid him for his manner? |
3136 | Did she wonder where I was?" |
3136 | Did she, was she beginning in any degree to return his passion? |
3136 | Did the Concord Grape ever come to more luscious perfection than this year? |
3136 | Did the public overpraise you at first? |
3136 | Did there ever come a moment of reflection as to the nature of this prosperity which was altogether so absorbing and agreeable? |
3136 | Did they not also once prefer the dance to hobbling to the spring, and the taste of ginger to sulphur? |
3136 | Did they not love flowers, and pets, and had they not a passion for children? |
3136 | Did you cut? |
3136 | Did you ever get into a diligence with a growling English- man who had n''t secured the place he wanted? |
3136 | Did you ever see Vanderbilt''s house? |
3136 | Did you ever see a female lobbyist? |
3136 | Did you ever see a woman refurnish a house? |
3136 | Did you ever see an English exquisite at the San Carlo, and hear him cry"Bwavo"? |
3136 | Did you ever see her again? |
3136 | Did you ever see her?" |
3136 | Did you ever see such a lot of cheap millinery? |
3136 | Did you fall in love with a Southern belle? |
3136 | Did you happen to hear where they have gone?" |
3136 | Did you never hear of the leading case of''repairs''of a government vessel here at Kittery? |
3136 | Did you say her eyes were gray? |
3136 | Did you see anything outdoors?" |
3136 | Did you see that wave? |
3136 | Did you sleep? |
3136 | Do n''t we all know we are trying to deceive each other and get the best of each other? |
3136 | Do n''t yer see, she''s a- slummin''?''" |
3136 | Do n''t you find it so, Mr. Henderson? |
3136 | Do n''t you get tired of that?" |
3136 | Do n''t you hate him?" |
3136 | Do n''t you know him? |
3136 | Do n''t you like Atlantic City?" |
3136 | Do n''t you see, I do n''t want to be bothered?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think Mr. Henderson would like a place here?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it would be a good investment?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think it''s more refined, and, do n''t you know, sort of cultivated, and subdued, and Boston? |
3136 | Do n''t you think it''s nicer not to have any deceptions?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think she is very hospitable, mamma?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think so, McDonald?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think so?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think that a bright, clever woman, especially if she were pretty, would have an advantage with judge and jury?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think that would be a novelty? |
3136 | Do n''t you think the Count of Monte Cristo is the elder brother of Rochester? |
3136 | Do n''t you think there is too much leniency toward crime and criminals, taking the place of justice, in these days? |
3136 | Do n''t you think there ought to be a public official whose duty it is to enforce the law gratis which I can not afford to enforce when I am wronged?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think these novels fairly represent a social condition of unrest and upheaval? |
3136 | Do n''t you think women ought to know life? |
3136 | Do n''t you think, McDonald, it is like Scotland?" |
3136 | Do n''t you think, dear, that we have had enough domestic notoriety for one year?" |
3136 | Do not men do the same? |
3136 | Do people hesitate to change houses any more than they do to change their clothes? |
3136 | Do the young men, to any extent, join in Browning clubs and Shakespeare clubs and Dante clubs? |
3136 | Do they bite?" |
3136 | Do they in concert dig in the encyclopaedias, and write papers about the correlation of forces, and about Savonarola, and about the Three Kings? |
3136 | Do they meet for the study of history, of authors, of literary periods, for reading, and discussing what they read? |
3136 | Do they need continually to justify themselves?" |
3136 | Do they not ape what is most prosperous and successful in American life? |
3136 | Do they want spiritual help?" |
3136 | Do two living streams hesitate when they come together? |
3136 | Do we build houses for ourselves or for others? |
3136 | Do we make great entertainments for our own comfort? |
3136 | Do we not like the books that raise us to the great level of the commonplace, whereon we move with a sense of power? |
3136 | Do we often stop to think what influence, direct or other, the scholar, the man of high culture, has today upon the great mass of our people? |
3136 | Do women ever? |
3136 | Do women never think of anything but mating people who happen to be thrown together? |
3136 | Do you adapt yourself and your surroundings to him, or insist that he shall adapt himself to you? |
3136 | Do you always give some charity to your friends? |
3136 | Do you believe in her education?" |
3136 | Do you expect the millennium to begin in New York? |
3136 | Do you happen to know what Socrates was called? |
3136 | Do you know his wife?" |
3136 | Do you know that the birds and other animals those beggars have been drawing, which we thought were caricatures, are the real thing? |
3136 | Do you know what it is to want what you do n''t want? |
3136 | Do you know what you are talking about?" |
3136 | Do you know, Margaret, that I think you are just a little bit sly?" |
3136 | Do you know, Phil, that I''m getting into the supernatural? |
3136 | Do you know,"she went on,"that I feel a great deal less worldly than I used to?" |
3136 | Do you like him?" |
3136 | Do you like it? |
3136 | Do you mean that one must be more daring, as you call it, in London than in New York?" |
3136 | Do you mean that people do not dare go ahead and do things?" |
3136 | Do you object to such innocent amusement? |
3136 | Do you read French?" |
3136 | Do you remember that ugly brown- stone statue of St. Antonio by the bridge in Sorrento? |
3136 | Do you remember what Mr. Morgan said last winter?" |
3136 | Do you see him often?" |
3136 | Do you think I am queer? |
3136 | Do you think I have time to attend to every poor duck? |
3136 | Do you think I want to banish romance out of the world?" |
3136 | Do you think I''d better offer my novel, when it is done, to Tweedle?" |
3136 | Do you think a cat would lie down before it? |
3136 | Do you think any city lad could have written"Thanatopsis"at eighteen? |
3136 | Do you think any one knows really anything more about the operation in the world of electricity than he does about the operation of the Holy Ghost? |
3136 | Do you think dipping is nice?" |
3136 | Do you think fasting strengthens you to go through your work night and day?" |
3136 | Do you think it was just sentiment?" |
3136 | Do you think that my-- my prospective position would be an objection to her?" |
3136 | Do you think that religion and education are benefited in the long- run by this? |
3136 | Do you think they care anything about Father Damon''s gospel?" |
3136 | Do you think you could live with such a man twenty- four hours, even if he had his crown on?" |
3136 | Do you think you have anything to say about the use of my money, scraped up in forty years in Ingy? |
3136 | Do you think, Jack,"asked Carmen, with a sudden change of manner,"that Mr. Henderson is really the richest man in the United States?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Burnett, that law would pay you?" |
3136 | Do you think, Mr. Henderson, we had better sell?" |
3136 | Do you understand poker, Mrs. Delancy? |
3136 | Do you understand why it is, Mr. Henderson, that one can enjoy the whole day and then be thoroughly dissatisfied with it?" |
3136 | Do you want me to help you any more than I am helping?" |
3136 | Do you want us to make our own clothes and starve the sewing- women? |
3136 | Do you, know if the exercises will open with prayer?" |
3136 | Does Strachey intend to say that Pocahontas was married to an Iniaan named Kocoum? |
3136 | Does anybody do anything well if his heart is not in it?" |
3136 | Does anybody regard it as anything but a sham and a burden? |
3136 | Does anything really take the place of that entire ease and confidence that one has in kin, or the inborn longing for their sympathy and society? |
3136 | Does gardening in a city pay? |
3136 | Does he examine the subject, and try to understand it? |
3136 | Does he paint? |
3136 | Does he read as much as she does? |
3136 | Does he study that bill? |
3136 | Does he take pains to inform himself by reading and conversation with experts upon its probable effect? |
3136 | Does he take portraits? |
3136 | Does it require nowadays, then, no special talent or gift to go on the stage? |
3136 | Does it take the place of duty, of conscience? |
3136 | Does literature pay?" |
3136 | Does n''t it depend?" |
3136 | Does n''t life spare anybody? |
3136 | Does n''t that depend upon whether the reform is large or petty? |
3136 | Does not each of them have to encounter misery enough without this? |
3136 | Does not the great public involuntarily respect the author rather for the sale of his books than for the books themselves? |
3136 | Does not the preacher say that? |
3136 | Does one ever do it entirely? |
3136 | Does our process too much eliminate the rough vigor, courage, stamina of the race? |
3136 | Does she dress for her lover as she dresses to receive her lawyer who has come to inform her that she is living beyond her income? |
3136 | Does she ever lose the instinct of it? |
3136 | Does she know?" |
3136 | Does she think I have no feeling? |
3136 | Does she think I would take from her as a charity what her husband knows is mine by right?" |
3136 | Does the college graduate know how to use his tools? |
3136 | Does the gate of divorce open more frequently from following the one theory than the other? |
3136 | Does the reader think these inferences not warranted by the facts? |
3136 | Does the time ever come when the distinction ceases between his family and hers? |
3136 | Does this seem to you a Lenten performance?" |
3136 | Dost thou desire fortune?'' |
3136 | Eh?" |
3136 | Else why do we take pleasure-- a pleasure so deep that it touches the heart like melancholy-- in the common drama of the opera? |
3136 | Evelyn? |
3136 | Even Father Damon--""Is he at work again? |
3136 | Even Henderson, the great Henderson, did the friends of his youth respect him? |
3136 | Even throw in goodness, a certain amount of altruism, gentleness, warm interest in unfortunate humanity-- is the situation much improved? |
3136 | Even with all her money at command, did she not know that her position was at the price of incessant effort? |
3136 | Even with these concessions, can England keep her great colonies? |
3136 | FASHION IN THE STREETS Was there ever elsewhere such a blue, transparent sky as this here in Munich? |
3136 | Fairchild?" |
3136 | Farquhar?" |
3136 | Fine Swiss wood- carving? |
3136 | Fletcher?" |
3136 | For Jack? |
3136 | For how long? |
3136 | For what does abandonment mean? |
3136 | For what had Mr. Mavick toiled? |
3136 | For what had Mrs. Mavick schemed all these years? |
3136 | For what other purpose are they set apart in elegant leisure? |
3136 | For what? |
3136 | For what?" |
3136 | For what?" |
3136 | For, as Plato says in the Phaedo,"whence come wars and fightings and factions? |
3136 | Forbes?" |
3136 | From Rivington Street?" |
3136 | GHENT AND ANTWERP What can one do in this Belgium but write down names, and let memory recall the past? |
3136 | Go? |
3136 | Granted that this miscellaneous hodge- podge is the cream of current literature, is it profitable to the reader? |
3136 | Granted that woman is the superior being; all the more, what chance is there for man if this sort of thing goes on? |
3136 | Had Evelyn reflected on the mortification that would fall upon her mother if she persisted in her unreasonable attitude? |
3136 | Had any hot fights? |
3136 | Had cohesion and gravitation given out? |
3136 | Had he a new sense to see all this? |
3136 | Had he any better opinion of men and women than her husband had? |
3136 | Had he any family? |
3136 | Had he been over the Gemmi? |
3136 | Had he not some of the beautiful auburn tresses of Cynthia Rudd in his skate, spruce- gum, and wintergreen box at home? |
3136 | Had he slept well? |
3136 | Had he, in fact, a longing to be in the streets where she had walked, among the scenes that had witnessed her beautiful devotion? |
3136 | Had his willingness to take up this work again been because it brought him nearer to her in spirit? |
3136 | Had n''t she been satisfied for almost twenty- four hours? |
3136 | Had not Miss Tavish danced for one of the guilds; and had not Carmen given Father Damon a handsome check in support of his mission? |
3136 | Had not the Hebrew prophets a vision of the punishment by prosperity? |
3136 | Had not women ceased to be romantic and ceased to indulge in vagaries of affection? |
3136 | Had she changed? |
3136 | Had she heard something? |
3136 | Had she not been coolly judging his conduct? |
3136 | Had she not come to know how success even in social life is sometimes attained--the meannesses, the jealousies, the cringing? |
3136 | Had she read the"Swiss Family Robinson"? |
3136 | Had she strength to swim it? |
3136 | Had she? |
3136 | Had that gay society danced itself off into the sea, and left not even a phantom of itself behind? |
3136 | Had the Old World anything to show more positive and uncompromising in all the elements of character than the Englishman? |
3136 | Had the hope that he should see her occasionally influenced him at all in his obedience to Father Monies? |
3136 | Had we not told everybody that we were going to Baddeck? |
3136 | Half an hour passes with only a languid exchange of family feeling, and then:"Pa?" |
3136 | Happiness, tragedy, anguish-- who can tell what is in store for her? |
3136 | Has Irene telegraphed you that she has got over her chill?" |
3136 | Has Miss Lamont said anything about going there?" |
3136 | Has a novelist the right to subject his creations to tortures that he would not dare to inflict upon his friends? |
3136 | Has any other coast town besides Plymouth had the good sense and taste to utilize such an elevation by the water- side as an esplanade? |
3136 | Has either he or the great politician or the great scholar cultivated the real sources of enjoyment? |
3136 | Has he changed? |
3136 | Has he expended or produced capital? |
3136 | Has he fled?" |
3136 | Has it come to that? |
3136 | Has that odious Ault turned up again?" |
3136 | Has the audience been creating a theatre to suit its taste, or have the managers been educating an audience? |
3136 | Has the divorce of literary art from the mimic art of the stage anything to do with this condition? |
3136 | Has uncle come home yet?" |
3136 | Have these questionings anything to do with the increasing Realism of women, and a consequent loss of ideals? |
3136 | Have they not the time? |
3136 | Have we all double natures, and do we simply conform to whatever surrounds us? |
3136 | Have we learned yet the simple art of easy enjoyment? |
3136 | Have women more time? |
3136 | Have you any idea how it got hold of the details?" |
3136 | Have you any idea how much ten millions are, or how much one million is?" |
3136 | Have you any right to enjoy yourself at all until the fag- end of the day, when you are tired and incapable of enjoying yourself? |
3136 | Have you any right to read, especially novels, until you have exhausted the best part of the day in some employment that is called practical? |
3136 | Have you discovered any material for such use?" |
3136 | Have you finished your novel?" |
3136 | Have you had a rise in the office? |
3136 | Have you heard any Street rumor?" |
3136 | Have you seen Evelyn?" |
3136 | Have you seen it?" |
3136 | Have you written to your uncle and to your aunt?" |
3136 | He added,"So you think our society is getting too sensitive and nervous, and inclined to make dangerous mental excursions?" |
3136 | He had a little money he wanted to invest--"''In our mission chapel?'' |
3136 | He had been in the war sixteen months, in Hugh White''s regiment,--reckon you''ve heerd of him? |
3136 | He has twenty- four hours''warning; but what can he do? |
3136 | He is great in his field, but is he leaving the intellectual province to woman? |
3136 | He shrugs his shoulders, raises his hands, and, with a sidewise shake of the head, and a look which says, How can you be so faithless? |
3136 | He spent that summer in the west of England, visiting"Bristol, Exeter, Bastable? |
3136 | Help from Carmen? |
3136 | Henceforth would she be less or more sensitive to the suggestion of love, to the allurements of ambition? |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Henderson?" |
3136 | Herbert, we can agree in one thing: old memories, reveries, friendships, center about that:--is n''t an open wood- fire good?" |
3136 | Herbert, what do you think women are good for? |
3136 | Here is the Gut of Canso, but where is Baddeck? |
3136 | Honest? |
3136 | Hopeless? |
3136 | Hopper?" |
3136 | How are they preparing to meet socially these young ladies who are cultivating their minds? |
3136 | How are they to take their place in the world unless they know life as men know it?" |
3136 | How are things down here?" |
3136 | How are we going to live when we are all educated, without knowing how to live? |
3136 | How are we to select the few capable men that are to rule all the rest? |
3136 | How can Johnny bring in wood when he is in that defile with Braddock, and the Indians are popping at him from behind every tree? |
3136 | How can a woman, without being misunderstood? |
3136 | How can people permit it? |
3136 | How can there be mint juleps( to go into details) without ice? |
3136 | How can they live in their narrow limits? |
3136 | How can you want it to go on?'' |
3136 | How cast away? |
3136 | How could he be?" |
3136 | How could he? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise than that our interests should diverge? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise, when all the promise of the girl was realized in the bloom and the exquisite susceptibility of the woman? |
3136 | How could it be otherwise? |
3136 | How could she have acted otherwise? |
3136 | How could she reach the high ceiling? |
3136 | How did she look? |
3136 | How did she what? |
3136 | How did the story get out? |
3136 | How do you account for the alleged personal regard for Socrates? |
3136 | How do you treat the stranger? |
3136 | How else can they be judged? |
3136 | How else should it be rated, when a very popular author, by whom Philip sat one day at luncheon, confessed that he never read books? |
3136 | How far is our popular education, which we have now enjoyed for two full generations, responsible for this state of mind? |
3136 | How is it about the war- path and all that? |
3136 | How is it gathered? |
3136 | How is she?" |
3136 | How is the lord?" |
3136 | How long did"The Country Parson"feed an eager world with rhetorical statements of that which it already knew? |
3136 | How long had Carmen waited on the social outskirts; and now she had come into her kingdom, was she anything but a tinsel queen? |
3136 | How long is it since a play has been written and accepted and played which has in it any so- called literary quality or is an addition to literature? |
3136 | How long would it take to fill the hole and drown out the woodchuck? |
3136 | How many New- Yorkers are there in New York? |
3136 | How many ages has it been so? |
3136 | How many are trying to save others-- others except the distant and foreign sinners?" |
3136 | How many hours, how many minutes, does one get of that pure content which is happiness? |
3136 | How many worlds are there, and does one ever, except by birth( in a republic), conquer them all? |
3136 | How much of our virtue do we owe to inherited habits? |
3136 | How much of privilege had been gathered and perpetuated in a century? |
3136 | How much time do we waste in futile experiment? |
3136 | How must the world look to a man in a basket, riding about on his wife''s head? |
3136 | How often do we deliberately weigh such a choice as we would that of another person, testing our inclination by solid reason? |
3136 | How should the department know that there were two places of the same name? |
3136 | How so? |
3136 | How was it possible to frame a message that should be commercial on its face, and yet convey the deepest agony and devotion of the sender''s heart? |
3136 | How was she to know that she had made a mistake, if mistake it was? |
3136 | How was she to know that this hour was a crisis in her life? |
3136 | How was she to tell? |
3136 | How were we to get out with him or without him? |
3136 | How would she receive him? |
3136 | How''ll you swap for that one o''yourn?" |
3136 | How, then, can he be expected to comprehend it when it is depicted to the life in books? |
3136 | I am sure it was no mere curiosity, but a desire to be of service, that led me to approach her and say,"Madam, where are you going?" |
3136 | I came to say good- by, and-- and--""Shall I call my aunt?" |
3136 | I could see it in her eyes, and then she turned red and confused, and at length said:"But would n''t you have rich men do good with their money?" |
3136 | I have seen the most promising paradox come to grief by a simple"Do you think so?" |
3136 | I heard one man say to another just now,''How long do you suppose Henderson will last?'' |
3136 | I hope she did n''t give you a turn?" |
3136 | I kept seeing that Spanish woman whirl around and contort, and-- do you mind my telling you? |
3136 | I lost a hundred thousand yesterday; did I whine about it? |
3136 | I mean, what are you going to do? |
3136 | I s''pose I can go round and look?'' |
3136 | I should like to stop here a week; would n''t you?" |
3136 | I suppose I can think my thoughts?" |
3136 | I suppose the girl is plain, too-- takes after her mother?" |
3136 | I suppose the topic will be Transcendentalism?" |
3136 | I suppose you go there too, being brought up a Congregationalist?" |
3136 | I suppose you have been up Green Mountain?" |
3136 | I thought you did n''t care-- didn''t care to belong to anything?" |
3136 | I wonder how she knew?" |
3136 | I wonder if I should grow worldly, seeing more of it?" |
3136 | I wonder if he belongs to Sotor, King and Co., of New York?" |
3136 | I wonder if in society they go about saying that? |
3136 | I wonder if men are as blind as they seem to be? |
3136 | I wonder if that was the time? |
3136 | I wonder what Jehoiakim did with the mealy- bug on his passion- vine, and if he had any way of removing the scale- bug from his African acacia? |
3136 | I wonder what he''s at?" |
3136 | I wonder what she was like?" |
3136 | I wonder what such people think? |
3136 | IS THERE ANY CONVERSATION Is there any such thing as conversation? |
3136 | If I want to buy anything in the market, have I got to look into every tuppenny interest concerned in it? |
3136 | If I were to lead her away, the question was, Where? |
3136 | If Margaret''s destiny had been united with such a man as John Lyon, what would have been her discernment in such a case as this? |
3136 | If a man present a smiling front to the world under extreme trial, is not that all that can be expected of him? |
3136 | If all the artificial round of calls and cards should tumble down, what valuable thing would be lost out of anybody''s life? |
3136 | If circumstances had altered, was she to blame? |
3136 | If he attempted any explanation, would it not involve the offensive supposition that his social rank was different from hers? |
3136 | If he can not be trusted in the matter of worsted- work, why should he have such distinctive liberty in the most important matter of his life? |
3136 | If he had been conscious of rectitude, would he not have relied upon his simple denial?" |
3136 | If he waited five minutes, who would believe my story of going to sleep and not hearing the drums? |
3136 | If he was coming, why did he not come? |
3136 | If he was not to blame for it, why did n''t he tell her-- why did n''t he explain? |
3136 | If it came, did it give any doubts and raise any of the old questions that used to be discussed at Brandon? |
3136 | If it has not encouraged it, has it done much to correct it? |
3136 | If it was intended to adorn the landscape, why was it ruined by piercing it irregularly with square windows like those of a factory? |
3136 | If it were pride only, how could she overcome it? |
3136 | If one of her dispensary comrades had said it, would she have been so moved? |
3136 | If she had fully realized that it was a step in that direction, would she have penned it with so little regret as she felt? |
3136 | If she was a coquette, what did it matter to him? |
3136 | If sleep did not come that night to her tired head on the pillow, what wonder? |
3136 | If the Casino is then so exclusive, why is it not more used as a rendezvous and lounging- place? |
3136 | If the working- men do not stand by each other, where are they to look for help? |
3136 | If there was a little talk about Jack''s intimacy elsewhere, was there anything uncommon in that? |
3136 | If these men had millions, could they get any more enjoyment out of life? |
3136 | If they traveled farther, were the railway carriages anything but refrigerators tempered by cans of cooling water? |
3136 | If they were rich, what more could they have? |
3136 | If they, in any case, came back, would there be any place for them? |
3136 | If this is true, why is it? |
3136 | If we can not, where is the difficulty? |
3136 | If you do not write a better novel this year, will not the public flout you and jeer you for a pretender? |
3136 | If you long to go to a place where you will have peace, why should you let what you call your reason stand in the way? |
3136 | In a word, if the world were actually all civilized, would n''t it be too weak even to ripen? |
3136 | In all this time why did he make no sign? |
3136 | In fact, what sort of a hand would the Three Kings suggest to them? |
3136 | In what other part of the world can that achievement in comfort and convenience be approached? |
3136 | In what rank? |
3136 | In what respect? |
3136 | In your experience of society, what is it that it pursues and desires? |
3136 | Indeed, what chance was there to win her at all? |
3136 | Instead, he took refuge in the usual commonplace, and asked,"Would n''t you like to have been a man?" |
3136 | Into what unknown dangers were we going? |
3136 | Invented? |
3136 | Is Christmas swelling away? |
3136 | Is a man happier, or improved in character, by the woful tale of a world''s distress and apprehension that greets him every morning at breakfast? |
3136 | Is affection as whimsically, as blindly distributed as wealth? |
3136 | Is any one deceived by it? |
3136 | Is anybody beginning to feel it a burden, this sweet festival of charity and good- will, and to look forward to it with apprehension? |
3136 | Is anything the matter?" |
3136 | Is anything wanting to this picture of the degradation of woman? |
3136 | Is education giving us this? |
3136 | Is he any better, doctor? |
3136 | Is he becoming anything but a newspaper- made person? |
3136 | Is he ever anything but a sort of tolerated, criticised, or admired alien? |
3136 | Is he ill? |
3136 | Is he late? |
3136 | Is he out?''" |
3136 | Is he well?" |
3136 | Is his mind getting to be like the newspaper? |
3136 | Is it a New York story?" |
3136 | Is it a hard lot, that of the fishermen and the mariners of the Adriatic? |
3136 | Is it a means of anything but superficial culture and fragmentary information? |
3136 | Is it a smile of anticipated, triumph, or of contempt? |
3136 | Is it a sufficient account of the genius of Cervantes and Scott that they combined in their romances a representation of the higher and lower classes? |
3136 | Is it because it is an excuse for doing what she longs to do? |
3136 | Is it better than anything else? |
3136 | Is it extravagant to speak of a tendency to make the author merely an adjunct of the publishing house? |
3136 | Is it full?" |
3136 | Is it going to rain? |
3136 | Is it in fact till we come to mediaeval times, and the chivalric age, that women are set up as being more incomprehensible than men? |
3136 | Is it in her nature to be? |
3136 | Is it invigorating, even restful? |
3136 | Is it made of India- rubber? |
3136 | Is it not agreeable to have sweet charity silver shod? |
3136 | Is it not as easy to make nothing out of what never yet existed as out of what has ceased to exist? |
3136 | Is it not necessary to have an authentic list of pasteboard acquaintances to invite to the receptions? |
3136 | Is it not necessary to keep up what is called society? |
3136 | Is it not of more importance how they represented them? |
3136 | Is it not time to look the facts squarely in the face, and conform to them in our efforts for social and political amelioration? |
3136 | Is it not time we tried, radically, a scientific, a disciplinary, a really humanitarian method? |
3136 | Is it only a legend? |
3136 | Is it only thoughtlessness? |
3136 | Is it possible that this pirate of the Street had a bit of sentiment at the bottom of his heart? |
3136 | Is it possible that we can have too many ruins? |
3136 | Is it so blue? |
3136 | Is it the Homeric story of Nausicaa? |
3136 | Is it the Princess of Paphlagonia?" |
3136 | Is it the novel?" |
3136 | Is it the smile of the daughter of Herodias, or the invitation of a''ghazeeyeh''? |
3136 | Is it things of the mind or things of the senses? |
3136 | Is it to affect me like a strain of music? |
3136 | Is it to produce the effect of a picture? |
3136 | Is it true that cultivation, what we call refinement, kills individuality? |
3136 | Is it true that in certain spiritual states, say of isolation or intense nervous alertness, we can see them as they can see each other? |
3136 | Is it true that the mental process in one sex is intuitive, and in the other logical, with every link necessary and visible? |
3136 | Is it well for woman to whistle? |
3136 | Is it worth while to repeat even its outlines? |
3136 | Is it"low"to dwell upon these things of the senses, when one is on a tour in search of the picturesque? |
3136 | Is it, then, such a discerner of right and wrong? |
3136 | Is its condition any better? |
3136 | Is n''t it Spanish?" |
3136 | Is n''t it beautiful everywhere? |
3136 | Is n''t it better that money, however acquired, should be used for a good purpose than a bad one?" |
3136 | Is n''t it indeed the golden era of letters? |
3136 | Is n''t it queer that the further we go into science the deeper we go into mystery? |
3136 | Is n''t it the highest charity to give them work? |
3136 | Is n''t it true, Mr. Burnett, that you must have a human element to make any country interesting?" |
3136 | Is n''t that a pretty story?" |
3136 | Is n''t the feeling of inequality intensified? |
3136 | Is not eternal vigilance the price of position? |
3136 | Is not life real and terrible enough, he asked himself, but that brides must cast this experience also into their honeymoon? |
3136 | Is not that something? |
3136 | Is not the popular liking for him somewhat independent of his writings? |
3136 | Is not this book pleasing because it is commonplace? |
3136 | Is not this the ideal of a watering- place life? |
3136 | Is not this, O brothers and sisters, an evil under the sun, this dinner as it is apt to be conducted? |
3136 | Is she pretty?" |
3136 | Is she sagging towards Realism or rising towards Idealism? |
3136 | Is she well this summer?" |
3136 | Is she well?" |
3136 | Is that a modern idea?" |
3136 | Is that ill- natured?" |
3136 | Is that the essence of Calvinism? |
3136 | Is the Atlantic shore the only coast where beauty may lounge and spread its net of enchantment? |
3136 | Is the New England man any better able to bear or deal with his extraordinary climate by the daily knowledge of the weather all over the globe? |
3136 | Is the book a window, through which I am to see life? |
3136 | Is the feminine nature any more difficult to understand than the masculine nature? |
3136 | Is the feminization of the world a desirable thing for a vigorous future? |
3136 | Is the oak less strong and tough because the mosses and weather- stains stick in all manner of grotesque sketches along its bark? |
3136 | Is the present condition of the stage a degeneration, as some say, or is it a natural evolution of an art independent of literature? |
3136 | Is the rage for this flower typical of this fast and flaring age? |
3136 | Is the time approaching when we shall want to get somebody to play it for us, like base- ball? |
3136 | Is there a barbaric force left in the world that we have been daintily trying to cover and apologize for and refine into gentle agreeableness? |
3136 | Is there a particular moment when we choose our path in life, when we take the right or the left? |
3136 | Is there any being quite so happy, quite so stupid, as a lover? |
3136 | Is there any difference in kind between the country worldliness and the city worldliness? |
3136 | Is there any law that a wrong must right a wrong? |
3136 | Is there any region or circumstance of life that the poet did not forecast and provide for? |
3136 | Is there any truth in it? |
3136 | Is there any way to tell a good book from a bad one? |
3136 | Is there anybody else here I know?" |
3136 | Is there anything I can do for you?" |
3136 | Is there anything in the State, or public opinion, or anywhere, that will protect your interests against clever swindling?" |
3136 | Is there no charm in social life-- no self- sacrifice, devotion, courage to stem materialistic conditions, and live above them? |
3136 | Is there no manliness left? |
3136 | Is there not something supernatural in such a love itself? |
3136 | Is there nothing outside of that envied circle which you make so brilliant? |
3136 | Is there nothing stimulating in the conflict of mind with mind? |
3136 | Is there nothing, then, in the exchange of ideas? |
3136 | Is there such a thing as a vacation in religion? |
3136 | Is this a divine gift? |
3136 | Is this a hopeless world? |
3136 | Is this a selfish spirit? |
3136 | Is this an accident, or is it a necessity of the refinement that we insist on calling civilization? |
3136 | Is this an exaggeration? |
3136 | Is this an intangible matter? |
3136 | Is this an old sermon? |
3136 | Is this philosopher contented with what life has brought him? |
3136 | Is this the brigand of whom I have read, and is he luring me to his haunt? |
3136 | Is your compact, graceful, orderly society liable to be monotonous in its gay repetition of the same thing week after week? |
3136 | It has been a terrible campaign; but where is the indemnity? |
3136 | It is quite English, is it not? |
3136 | It is right odd, is n''t it? |
3136 | It may be continued, together with word- learning, until the children are able to say( is it reading?) |
3136 | It may be that this treatment has excited the sympathy of the world, but is it legitimate? |
3136 | It said,"Why on earth does n''t that boy come home? |
3136 | It''s rather nice for a fellow, Mrs. Henderson, to have a lot of women keeping him straight, is n''t it?" |
3136 | Job had the right idea in his mind when he asked,"Is there any taste in the white of an egg?" |
3136 | Just a little more, would he have? |
3136 | King?" |
3136 | LITERATURE AND THE STAGE Is the divorce of Literature and the Stage complete, or is it still only partial? |
3136 | Let it be common, and what distinction will there be in it? |
3136 | Like to dance? |
3136 | Lord Montague stared at him as if to say,"Who the deuce are you?" |
3136 | Love and moonlight, and the soft lapse of the waves and singing? |
3136 | Love you not me?'' |
3136 | Lucky for me, was n''t it? |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Lyon?" |
3136 | Ma?" |
3136 | Major, do you happen to know a cheap lodging- house that is respectable?" |
3136 | Mamma, do n''t you think it would be only civil to ask Mr. Lyon to a quiet dinner before he goes?" |
3136 | Mandeville, why do n''t you get up a"centenary"of Socrates, and put up his statue in the Central Park? |
3136 | Marriage? |
3136 | Married? |
3136 | Mavick?" |
3136 | May I ask what corps you belong to?'' |
3136 | McDonald, what is society for?" |
3136 | Meantime, where is the agricultural fair and cattle- show? |
3136 | Mebbe you''re used to fording? |
3136 | Meigs?" |
3136 | Merely that she may become a sort of second- rate man?" |
3136 | Might he fire at a mark with an air- gun that makes no noise? |
3136 | Moral ideas? |
3136 | Morgan?" |
3136 | Mr. Henderson did not care to extend the conversation in this direction, and he asked, abruptly,"Are you finding New York agreeable, Miss Debree?" |
3136 | Mr. Lyon tried to adopt her tone, and added,"Would you like to see me an American citizen?" |
3136 | Mr. Mavick at length broke the silence with:"Did you have a good time, child?" |
3136 | Mr. Van Dusen wants to know why Maud S. is like a salamander?" |
3136 | Must I subscribe to all the magazines and weekly papers which offer premiums of the best vines? |
3136 | Must it always go on by spurts and relapses, alternate civilization and barbarism, and the barbarism being necessary to keep us employed and growing? |
3136 | Must the Congressman read it? |
3136 | Must we always have the old slow- coach merchants and planters thrown up to us? |
3136 | Must we be always either vapid or serious? |
3136 | Must we not all live our lives? |
3136 | Must you shut yourself up because you found you could n''t trust everybody? |
3136 | My dear Charmian, who wrote the successful novel of last year, do you not already repent your rash act? |
3136 | My lord, why not say to her what you feel, and make the offer you intend? |
3136 | NINTH STUDY I Can you have a backlog in July? |
3136 | Nay, what would the world be without her? |
3136 | No flaw about that, is there?" |
3136 | No? |
3136 | Nothing could be more unpleasant than a northeast wind? |
3136 | Notoriety? |
3136 | Now there''s Henderson--""What have you got against Henderson?" |
3136 | Now what is the object in life of this great, growing class that has money and leisure, what does it chiefly care for? |
3136 | Now, Evelyn, have n''t you any curiosity to see what this world we are talking about is like?" |
3136 | Now, did the summer Bostonians make this coast refined, or did this coast refine the Bostonians who summer here?" |
3136 | Now, is our present system deterrent? |
3136 | Now, what is the relation of our intellectual development to this physical improvement? |
3136 | Now, whoever is sick down there? |
3136 | Of the sympathy of Alice he was sure, but why inflict his selfish grief on her tender heart? |
3136 | Of what did they talk? |
3136 | Ohio is more like France, I suppose?" |
3136 | On the 17th he was brought ashore to answer the charge of Jehu[ John?] |
3136 | On the contrary, did she see in him what John felt himself to be? |
3136 | Once spent, does the world to each succeeding experimenter in it become old and stale? |
3136 | One day she surprised Miss McDonald by asking her if she did n''t think that rich people were the only ones not free to do as they pleased? |
3136 | One might venture into the infernal regions to rescue such a woman; but why take her there? |
3136 | One of the first questions asked by any camp- fire is,"Did ye ever see Horace?" |
3136 | One of them, to whom she had partially explained the situation, ended by asking her,"Are you going to contest the will?" |
3136 | Only, is n''t it odd, this personal dropping back into an old situation? |
3136 | Only-- well, how is that?" |
3136 | Opalescent?" |
3136 | Or a criminal? |
3136 | Or did she think that circumstances and not her own choice were responsible for her state of feeling? |
3136 | Or is it, in fact, more artistic to ignore all these, and paint only the feeble and the repulsive in our social state? |
3136 | Or is the interest of this class, for the most part, with some noble exceptions, rather in things grossly material, in what is called pleasure? |
3136 | Or is there some mistake about our ideal of civilization? |
3136 | Or the Washington manner? |
3136 | Or up this or that mountain? |
3136 | Or was he composing one of those important love- letters of state to Madame Blank which have since delighted the lovers of literature? |
3136 | Or was it merely that he had confidence in the winning character of his own qualities and was biding his time? |
3136 | Or will you make it what humanity has passionately longed for? |
3136 | Or, in other words, what effect is popular education having upon the general intellectual habit and taste? |
3136 | Or, worse than that even, that one loses his taste by over- cultivation? |
3136 | Ought the president to take the money, knowing how it was made?" |
3136 | PARIS AND LONDON SURFACE CONTRASTS OF PARIS AND LONDON I wonder if it is the Channel? |
3136 | Parson, wo n''t you please punch that fire, and give us more blaze? |
3136 | Perhaps Mrs. Cortlandt fancied his eyes were following a particular figure, for she responded,"And how did you like her?" |
3136 | Perhaps some of my youthful illusions have vanished, but should I have been happier if I had indulged them? |
3136 | Perhaps the man would like eleven commandments? |
3136 | Perhaps you are going to the Neighborhood Guild?" |
3136 | Perhaps you could n''t tell whether Miss Eschelle was a bull or a bear in this case?" |
3136 | Perhaps you saw some allusion to it in the newspapers?" |
3136 | Perhaps, however, you are fighting the devil?" |
3136 | Permit me,"and he raised her hand to his lips;"I salute-- is it not"( turning to Mrs. Mavick)--"ze princess of ze house?" |
3136 | Philip''s?" |
3136 | Philip, why do n''t you take the heroine of the Mavick ball? |
3136 | Ponsonby?" |
3136 | Presently Mr. King said to his friend, Mrs. Cortlandt,"Who is that clever- looking, graceful girl over there?" |
3136 | Presently he asked:"Do you think, Mrs. Delancy, that Dr. Leigh has any sympathy with the higher life, with spiritual things? |
3136 | Probably when the Great Assize is held one of the questions asked will be,"Did you, in America, ever write stories for children?" |
3136 | Query, Why should this have such a different effect from Porter''s? |
3136 | Recognition? |
3136 | Rumor is a big thing, especially in a panic, eh? |
3136 | SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | SIXTEENTH WEEK I do not hold myself bound to answer the question, Does gardening pay? |
3136 | Sage?" |
3136 | Shall I be so unnatural, as not to give bread to the hungrie, or uncharitable, as not to cover the naked?" |
3136 | Shall I carry your wreath?" |
3136 | Shall I describe the passage of the Tete Noire? |
3136 | Shall I tell Mrs. Van Cortlandt?" |
3136 | Shall I try all the kinds of grapes, and all the sorts of pears? |
3136 | Shall he not be excused for showing a little irritation at home when things go badly? |
3136 | Shall she surprise, or shock, or only please? |
3136 | Shall vulgarity be left just vulgar, and have no apotheosis and glorification? |
3136 | Shall we go on and brave a wetting, or ignominiously retreat? |
3136 | Shall we go to Capri? |
3136 | Shall we have, then, no refined characters on the stage? |
3136 | Shall we take a boat and sail over there, and so destroy forever another island of the imagination? |
3136 | She did n''t like it much, and asked,''What is anything for?'' |
3136 | She is such a hand to set things going, do n''t you know? |
3136 | She must know, she did know-- what was the use of writing? |
3136 | She told Jack afterwards that"Mrs. Henderson cares no more for the poor of New York than she does for--""Henderson?" |
3136 | She was watching him shrewdly, and saw the flush in his face as he hurriedly asked,"Did you ever see her?" |
3136 | She, on her part, was thinking, what could Miss Eschelle mean by saying that she was afraid of him? |
3136 | Should he risk the loss of her by timidity? |
3136 | Should he tell her that he did n''t mind if her parents were what Mrs. Bartlett Glow called"impossible"? |
3136 | Should one take a cynical view of mankind because he perceives this great power of the commonplace? |
3136 | Should she nestle under the great ledge, or sit on a projecting rock with her figure against the sky? |
3136 | Should they always end well in the novel? |
3136 | Should we dare return to the great Republic, and own that we had not been into the Blue Grotto? |
3136 | Should we find any inn on Cape Breton like this one? |
3136 | Since Mr. Henderson''s death--""What difference did Henderson''s death make over here?" |
3136 | Sit and dream in the Rent Tower under the lindens that grow in its top? |
3136 | Slavery? |
3136 | So American?" |
3136 | So he stood up and raised his hand, and said to the schoolma''am,"Please, ma''am, I''ve got the stomach- ache; may I go home?" |
3136 | So these are the little places where they sleep? |
3136 | So this impossible thing, this miracle, was explained? |
3136 | Some day I will make a hit, and everybody will ask,''Who is this daring, clever Olin Brad?'' |
3136 | Some one from the office, from her lawyer? |
3136 | Some one will ask, Why not? |
3136 | Somebody ought to get up before the dew is off( why do n''t the dew stay on till after a reasonable breakfast?) |
3136 | Soon, you think? |
3136 | Speaking generally of the mass of business men-- and the mass are business men in this country-- have they any habit of reading books? |
3136 | Sudden, was n''t it? |
3136 | Suppose I should give you that sort of sympathy in the projects you set your heart on?" |
3136 | Suppose it was left to you?" |
3136 | Suppose the proposal were made to women to exchange being mysterious for the ballot? |
3136 | Suppose we can not get on, and are forced to stay here? |
3136 | Suppose, Mrs. Fletcher, a wrecker should steal your money that way?" |
3136 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | THE DIRECTOIRE GOWN THE MYSTERY OF THE SEX THE CLOTHES OF FICTION THE BROAD A CHEWING GUM WOMEN IN CONGRESS SHALL WOMEN PROPOSE? |
3136 | THE INDETERMINATE SENTENCE-- WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH THE CRIMINAL CLASS? |
3136 | THE LOSS IN CIVILIZATION Have we yet hit upon the right idea of civilization? |
3136 | THE RELATION OF LITERATURE TO LIFE"EQUALITY"WHAT IS YOUR CULTURE TO ME? |
3136 | Talk? |
3136 | Taverns? |
3136 | Telegraph? |
3136 | Tell us, gentle driver, is there no other way? |
3136 | That her little girl? |
3136 | That is to say, are not barbarism and vast regions of uncultivated land a necessity of healthful life on this globe? |
3136 | That is, less logical, more whimsical, more uncertain in their mental processes? |
3136 | That it was the same as dragging a mother away from her child? |
3136 | That''s not the question; but what are women who write so large a proportion of the current stories bringing into literature? |
3136 | The Atlantic shore and Europe? |
3136 | The Directoire Gown The Mystery Of The Sex The Clothes Of Fiction The Broad A Chewing Gum Women In Congress Shall Women Propose? |
3136 | The Laocoon? |
3136 | The Relation Of Literature To Life"Equality"What Is Your Culture To Me? |
3136 | The Schuyler Blunts?" |
3136 | The arms moving? |
3136 | The citizen asks his neighbor,"Did you hear the frogs last night?" |
3136 | The common victual of the others was the entrails of horses and"ulgries"( goats?) |
3136 | The conscientious publisher asks two questions: Is the book good? |
3136 | The daughter said,"Mother, who was Washington?" |
3136 | The editorial comments frequently are able enough, but is it worth while keeping an expensive mill going to grind chaff? |
3136 | The expedition went up the river to a village called Patowomek, and thence rowed up a little River Quiyough( Acquia Creek?) |
3136 | The experiments fail, the experiments succeed-- at any rate, they end-- and what remains for transmission, for the sustenance of succeeding peoples? |
3136 | The fowls of the air have peas; but what has man? |
3136 | The girl opens her eyes with a startled look, and says, feebly:"Do you think he will come?" |
3136 | The greater must include the less; but how if the less leaks out? |
3136 | The lesson went on:"Who was Alcibiades? |
3136 | The man bustled away and found his late paper, and thrust it through the grating, with the inquiry,"Can you read?" |
3136 | The mystery is not their continuance, but how did they get a start? |
3136 | The next day the newspaper asks:"Where''s Blank? |
3136 | The next generation will be pretty much what they choose to make it; and what are they doing for the elevation of young men? |
3136 | The only information we obtained about it was from its porter at the station, who replied to the question,"Is it the best?" |
3136 | The only question is, is it true to human nature? |
3136 | The other ladies looked significantly at them, and one of them said,"Do n''t you think there''s something in it? |
3136 | The oval makes a pretty effect; but what are those signs between the letters?" |
3136 | The price? |
3136 | The publisher without a conscience asks only one question: Will the book sell? |
3136 | The question is,"Can not one easier change his creed than his pew?" |
3136 | The sea had the blue of Nice; why must we always go to the Mediterranean for an aqua marina, for poetic lines, for delicate shades? |
3136 | The social oyster being opened, there appears to be two shells and only one oyster; who shall have it? |
3136 | The stage can be amusing, but can it show life as it is without the aid of idealizing literary art? |
3136 | The subject is a delicate one, and should not be confused with the broader one, what is the purpose of the higher education? |
3136 | The writer was coming to Brandon; business, to be sure, was the excuse; but why should it have been necessary to announce to her a business visit? |
3136 | The"incitements"gave him courage, so that he exclaims:"Shall I be of so untoward a disposition, as to refuse to lead the blind into the right way? |
3136 | Then I shall step into the club a minute, and--""Be in at lunch? |
3136 | Then I suppose she has money?" |
3136 | Then he said, still as if reflecting:"Is n''t it queer? |
3136 | Then you think he would rather sell than buy?" |
3136 | Then you think the red man is a born gentleman of the highest breeding? |
3136 | Then, turning his eyes for a moment, and putting out his left hand to her, he said,"Well, what is it, dear?" |
3136 | There was a chorus of voices:"Where are your blackberries?" |
3136 | There were only two questions, and they are at the bottom of all creative literature-- could he see them, could he make others see them? |
3136 | There will probably be some orator for years and years to come, at every Fourth of July, who will go on asking, Where is Thebes? |
3136 | They are the influence that keeps life elevated and sweet-- are they not? |
3136 | They could float now, but where were they going? |
3136 | They have clubs, to be sure, but of what sort? |
3136 | They invent illegal modes of expenditure; and what do they or their wives care about the law? |
3136 | They might reject him-- no doubt he was a wholly unequal match for the heiress-- but could they, to the very end, be cruel to her? |
3136 | They must needs carry looking- glasses with them;"and good reason,"says Stubbes, savagely,"for else how could they see the devil in them? |
3136 | This insures a wider distribution, but what is its effect upon the quality of literature? |
3136 | This is not much about the Alps? |
3136 | This is true, but is it the last analysis of the subject? |
3136 | This was all as true before the Mavick failure as after; but, before, what was the use of effort? |
3136 | Though you know now that the embarrassing question that everybody has to answer is,''Have you been to Alaska?'' |
3136 | Through this delicious weather why should the steamboat hasten, in order to discharge its passengers into the sweeping unrest of continental travel? |
3136 | To be admired, to be deferred to-- was there any harm in that? |
3136 | To be sure, it was pleasant coming home into an atmosphere of sincerity, of worship-- was it not? |
3136 | To give her up? |
3136 | To go away? |
3136 | To go with them, not to care, to accept Jack''s idle, good- natured, easy philosophy of life and conduct, would not that have insured a peaceful life? |
3136 | To the cool and imperturbable Mavick, who was as strong and sinewy as he was cool? |
3136 | To the gallant Major? |
3136 | To what end? |
3136 | To what purpose? |
3136 | Turn her adrift after eighteen-- what is it, seventeen?--years of faithful service?" |
3136 | WHAT IS YOUR CULTURE TO ME? |
3136 | Was Berlin much out of the way in going from Vienna to Paris? |
3136 | Was I slow? |
3136 | Was Irene really enraptured by the dear little barnacles and the exquisite sea- weeds? |
3136 | Was Jack happy in the whirl he was in? |
3136 | Was Margaret content? |
3136 | Was Mr. Henderson the sort of man to whom such a woman would be attracted? |
3136 | Was Mrs. Mavick peevish and unreasonable? |
3136 | Was Scott, then, only a reporter? |
3136 | Was Smith an indulger in that new medicine for all ills, tobacco? |
3136 | Was ever any enjoyment so keen as that with which a boy rushes out of the schoolhouse door for the ten minutes of recess? |
3136 | Was ever produced so insipid a result? |
3136 | Was everybody grasping and selfish? |
3136 | Was everybody worldly and shallow? |
3136 | Was he a type or was he a freak? |
3136 | Was he about to make a fool of himself? |
3136 | Was he alone? |
3136 | Was he always to preach against sin, to strive to extirpate it, and yet always to make it easy for the sinner? |
3136 | Was he any more charitable than Uncle Jerry? |
3136 | Was he born on the wheels? |
3136 | Was he just a narrow- minded, bigoted priest? |
3136 | Was he really hers,"truly"? |
3136 | Was he still angry with her? |
3136 | Was her action punished by the same unscrupulous tactics of the Street that originally made the fortune? |
3136 | Was her husband capable of such conduct? |
3136 | Was his figure less distinct as the days went by? |
3136 | Was it a sin, she said, to be happy and prosperous? |
3136 | Was it all true? |
3136 | Was it altogether so melancholy as it might seem? |
3136 | Was it an earthquake, or another fire? |
3136 | Was it any better in divine Florence than on the chill Riviera? |
3136 | Was it any new thing for good men to do this? |
3136 | Was it because the atmosphere was more natural and genuine? |
3136 | Was it because they were children''s voices, and innocent? |
3136 | Was it gone, that life?--gone or going out of her heart? |
3136 | Was it hers? |
3136 | Was it not Madame de Sevigne who said she had loved several different women for several different qualities? |
3136 | Was it not a wife''s duty to stand by her husband? |
3136 | Was it not almost angelic there at the moment? |
3136 | Was it not an evening spent in a cottage amid the rocks, close by the water, in the company of charming people? |
3136 | Was it not an occasion that emphasized our republican democracy? |
3136 | Was it not enough to come down to breakfast and sit at the low, broad windows and watch the shifting panorama? |
3136 | Was it not enough to talk to each other, to see each other? |
3136 | Was it not natural that she should take Henderson''s view? |
3136 | Was it not proud of him? |
3136 | Was it not, then, a pretense? |
3136 | Was it only a matter of grouping and setting, or were these people different from all others the tourists had seen? |
3136 | Was it possible she thought he could go away without seeing her? |
3136 | Was it simply shame that kept him away, or had he ceased to love her? |
3136 | Was it that Philip was too irresolute to cut either law or literature, and go in, single- minded, for a fortune of some kind, and a place? |
3136 | Was it that he began to feel that he had established a personal relation with Evelyn because she had seen him? |
3136 | Was it the music or the poetic idea that held her? |
3136 | Was it the resurrection of the body? |
3136 | Was it the"Great Consummation"of the year 18-? |
3136 | Was it too sudden? |
3136 | Was it with pleasure? |
3136 | Was it written before or after the publication of Smith''s"Map and Description"at Oxford in 1612? |
3136 | Was it? |
3136 | Was life beginning, then, or ending? |
3136 | Was life like that? |
3136 | Was n''t it an impudent speech? |
3136 | Was n''t it strange?" |
3136 | Was n''t it the use that people made of money, after all, that was the real test? |
3136 | Was n''t the thrifty George Washington always adding to his plantations, and squeezing all he could out of his land and his slaves? |
3136 | Was n''t to be in deep trouble to be sorry? |
3136 | Was not all the village talking about the reputation he had conferred on it? |
3136 | Was not everything going on as usual in the Delancy house and in the little world of which it was a part? |
3136 | Was not his object, probably, to get a reputation which his whole life belied, and to get it by obliterating the distinction between right and wrong?" |
3136 | Was not the love of beauty and of goodness the same thing? |
3136 | Was not the world beautiful? |
3136 | Was she a fool in this, as so many women are about their separate property, or was she cheated? |
3136 | Was she a little less dependent on him, in this wide horizon, than in New York? |
3136 | Was she a person to run about with idle gossip? |
3136 | Was she absorbed in the life of the season? |
3136 | Was she any more serious about the german than about the mission school? |
3136 | Was she changing-- was she changed? |
3136 | Was she content in that great world in which she moved? |
3136 | Was she content? |
3136 | Was she his? |
3136 | Was she ill, perhaps? |
3136 | Was she on the shore of such a sea, and was this new world into which she was drifting only a dream? |
3136 | Was she thinking of her own marriage? |
3136 | Was she very sorry? |
3136 | Was she very worldly? |
3136 | Was she well? |
3136 | Was she, as a woman, any more likely to be reconciled to her fate when her mirror told her, with pitiless reflection, that she was an old woman? |
3136 | Was she, perhaps, unhappy and persecuted? |
3136 | Was she, then, such a monster of ingratitude? |
3136 | Was that thunder? |
3136 | Was the Central system or the Pennsylvania system contemplating another raid? |
3136 | Was the air oppressive? |
3136 | Was the mind in a vapid condition after an evening of it? |
3136 | Was there a place in Europe from Spain to Greece, where the American could once be warm--really warm without effort-- in or out of doors? |
3136 | Was there anything illegitimate in taking advantage of such an opportunity? |
3136 | Was there anything, then, that money could not do? |
3136 | Was there ever a greater exhibition of power, while it lasted? |
3136 | Was there ever a young man who could see any reasons against the possession of the woman he loved? |
3136 | Was there ever any love worth the name that could be controlled by calculations of expediency? |
3136 | Was there ever, he said, in the past, any figure more clearly cut and freshly minted than the Yankee? |
3136 | Was there no envy? |
3136 | Was there no way to break the barrier that the little brown girl had thrown around herself? |
3136 | Was there nothing said about the airs of a country school- ma''am, the aplomb of an adventurer? |
3136 | Was there nothing, nobody, that commercialism did not think for sale and to be trafficked in? |
3136 | Was there one who would have let her go back to her waiting- fawn? |
3136 | Was this a comforting hour, do you think, for Margaret in the cathedral? |
3136 | Was this a delusion? |
3136 | Was this also a part of the restlessness of American life? |
3136 | Was this an ideal married life? |
3136 | Was this expression on her mobile face merely that of amusement at seeing a country- boy? |
3136 | Was this intruding human element always to cross the purpose of his spiritual life? |
3136 | Was this little note a severance of her present from her old life? |
3136 | Was this the enthusiasm of humanity, of which he heard so much? |
3136 | Was this the railway wrecker, the insurance manipulator, the familiar of Uncle Jerry, the king of the lobby, the pride and the bugaboo of Wall Street? |
3136 | Was this the sort of woman whom Mr. Henderson fancied? |
3136 | Was this then the summit of her ambition? |
3136 | Was this, then, the meaning of her restlessness, of her charitable activities, of her unconfessed dreams of some career? |
3136 | We can afford it-- the Countess Jeremiah, eh?" |
3136 | We could n''t carry him out; could we find our own way out to get assistance? |
3136 | We knew that if we traveled southwestward far enough we must strike that trail, but how far? |
3136 | Well, Selina?" |
3136 | Well, from the time you were a little boy, did I ever give you but one sort of advice? |
3136 | Well, granting the distinction, why are both apt to be unpleasant people to live with? |
3136 | Well, why not? |
3136 | Were all women, then, alike in parrying and fencing? |
3136 | Were our thirty- six hours of sleepless staging to terminate in a night of misery and a Sunday of discomfort? |
3136 | Were the longing and the hunger it arouses ever satisfied with anything, money for instance, any more than with fame? |
3136 | Were the neighboring buildings all tumbling in upon us, or had a bomb fallen into the neighboring crockery- store? |
3136 | Were there no contractors who amassed fortunes then? |
3136 | Were there no criticisms afterwards as the guests rolled home in their carriages, surfeited and exhausted? |
3136 | Were these empty omnibuses and carriages that discharged ghostly passengers? |
3136 | Were these men anything but specimens in a Museum of Failures? |
3136 | Were these throngs the guests that were to come, or those that had been herein other seasons? |
3136 | Were these, then, shadows, or was he a spirit himself? |
3136 | Were they all patriots in the Revolutionary War? |
3136 | Were they all such agreeable people whom he had seen there in March, or has one girl the power to throw a charm over a whole watering- place? |
3136 | Were things any better because they were on a small scale? |
3136 | What are the negro traditions about it? |
3136 | What are the relations of culture to common life, of the scholar to the day- laborer? |
3136 | What are the symptoms of decay in England? |
3136 | What are the young men of the villages and the cities doing meantime? |
3136 | What are we intellectually and morally? |
3136 | What are you doing?" |
3136 | What are you going to do with such people? |
3136 | What are you going to do with the money?" |
3136 | What are you going to do, Phil, what are you going to be?" |
3136 | What became of his fallacious hope of waiting when events were driving on at this rate? |
3136 | What can I do?" |
3136 | What can be done with those who are described as"East- Londoners"? |
3136 | What can compare with the vase of yon alabaster fountain filled with crystal water? |
3136 | What can have happened? |
3136 | What can one do in such a spot, but swim in the lake, lie on the shore, and watch the passing steamers and the changing light on the mountains? |
3136 | What can one do with this new favorite? |
3136 | What can we do, what ought we to do, for his own good and for our peace and national welfare? |
3136 | What can you do?" |
3136 | What can you expect in a country where one knows not today what the weather will be tomorrow? |
3136 | What can you expect when the people are socialists and their leaders agnostics?" |
3136 | What chance had he in such a social current? |
3136 | What chance have I, anyway? |
3136 | What church does she go to?" |
3136 | What communion had supplied the place of our artificial breeding to this man? |
3136 | What could Jenks mean by intimating that she was plain? |
3136 | What could be the spring of her incessant devotion? |
3136 | What could he reply? |
3136 | What could he say? |
3136 | What could one woman do against the accepted demoralizations of her social life? |
3136 | What could she see in him? |
3136 | What could you do with such a husband? |
3136 | What devil was tempting him to break his vows and forsake his faith? |
3136 | What did Evelyn say?" |
3136 | What did it matter? |
3136 | What did she care at the moment what Carmen thought of Henderson? |
3136 | What did she say of my uncle and aunts?" |
3136 | What did she say?" |
3136 | What did we see? |
3136 | What did you do?" |
3136 | What did you make me come here for? |
3136 | What do they do it for?" |
3136 | What do we mean by the criminal class? |
3136 | What do you mean by worse?" |
3136 | What do you propose?" |
3136 | What do you say in the Street-- freeze? |
3136 | What do you want me to do? |
3136 | What does Henderson say?" |
3136 | What does Mr. Henderson say?" |
3136 | What does he get out of his occupation? |
3136 | What does it leave on land? |
3136 | What does the Parson say? |
3136 | What does the doctor say?" |
3136 | What for? |
3136 | What for?" |
3136 | What good would it do her to go to the mission now? |
3136 | What had happened? |
3136 | What had he done? |
3136 | What had he to offer her? |
3136 | What had she done that anybody should criticise her? |
3136 | What had she done? |
3136 | What had the land question to do with the salvation of man? |
3136 | What harm? |
3136 | What has the farmer to do with the"Rose Garden of Saadi"? |
3136 | What has this to do with New England? |
3136 | What have I done? |
3136 | What have the Christians of this city done?" |
3136 | What heroine of romance are you running after now?" |
3136 | What hold had this woman on him? |
3136 | What if she met him with a royal forgiveness, as if he were a returned prodigal? |
3136 | What induced the beardless young man to make this"investment"in"three- eighths"--who can tell? |
3136 | What is a garden for? |
3136 | What is a man? |
3136 | What is a woman to do? |
3136 | What is gained, he asks, by leaving cards with all these people and receiving their cards? |
3136 | What is he that he should absorb the sweets of the universe, that he should hold all the claims of humanity second to the perfecting of himself? |
3136 | What is her name?" |
3136 | What is history? |
3136 | What is it that an intelligent public should care to hear of and talk about? |
3136 | What is news? |
3136 | What is revolution? |
3136 | What is scholarship? |
3136 | What is that? |
3136 | What is the Bible? |
3136 | What is the Boston philosophy? |
3136 | What is the essential thing, without which even the glory of a nation passes into shame, and the vastness of empire becomes a mockery? |
3136 | What is the good of sending a man to Washington at the rate of a hundred miles an hour if we are uncertain of his electric state? |
3136 | What is the good of young men of leisure if they do n''t do anything for the country? |
3136 | What is the ideal of their country which these young men cherish? |
3136 | What is the justice of damning a meritorious novelist by comparing him with Dickens, and smothering him with thoughtless and good- natured eulogy? |
3136 | What is the matter, doctor?" |
3136 | What is the object of this noble tower? |
3136 | What is the price of these rooms? |
3136 | What is the relation of culture to it? |
3136 | What is the relation of the scholar to the present phase of this movement? |
3136 | What is the use of this powder? |
3136 | What is there illogical in these positions from the premise given? |
3136 | What is there in this sound that suggests the tenderness of spring, the despair of a summer night, the desolateness of young love? |
3136 | What is this London, the most civilized city ever known? |
3136 | What is this Low Pressure itself,--it? |
3136 | What is this New England? |
3136 | What is this drama and spectacle, that has been put forth as history, but a cover for petty intrigue, and deceit, and selfishness, and cruelty? |
3136 | What is this love, this divine passion, of which we hear so much? |
3136 | What is this naturalization, however, but a sort of parable of human life? |
3136 | What is this progress, and where does it come from? |
3136 | What is this quality of truthfulness which we all recognize when it exists in fiction? |
3136 | What is wrong about it?" |
3136 | What is your objection to Newport?" |
3136 | What makes a path of this sort so perilous to a woman''s heart? |
3136 | What makes you beat about the bush so? |
3136 | What man ever does, in fact? |
3136 | What more can a man do with it? |
3136 | What more pleasing spectacle than this in a world that has such a bad name for want and misery? |
3136 | What must London be? |
3136 | What nonsense do people so situated usually talk? |
3136 | What of the''modus vivendi''of the two races occupying the same soil? |
3136 | What place? |
3136 | What pleasure, I wonder, had she in her life, and what pleasure have any of these hard- favored women in this doleful region? |
3136 | What poet could now sing of the"awful chrysanthemum of dawn"? |
3136 | What relation had he to it? |
3136 | What right had she to sit there and mourn-- as she knew her aunt did-- and sigh over her career? |
3136 | What right had they to sit in judgment on her? |
3136 | What right have we to laugh? |
3136 | What sarcasm is coming now? |
3136 | What satisfaction has a man in it if he really gets to the end of his power to improve it? |
3136 | What secret influence had he over her that made her submit to such a foolish surrender? |
3136 | What secret power has a woman to make a common phrase so glow with her very self? |
3136 | What shall it be? |
3136 | What shall the art that is older than the pyramids do for these kneeling Christians? |
3136 | What shall we do? |
3136 | What should I do? |
3136 | What should he say? |
3136 | What should she do? |
3136 | What should we do in that lonesome solitude if the guide became disabled? |
3136 | What sort of a book would a member make out of"Chips from my Workshop"? |
3136 | What sort of a girl had this treatment during seventeen years produced? |
3136 | What sort of career was it that needed the aid of Carmen and the serpentine dancer? |
3136 | What sort of haven were we to reach after our heroic( with the reader''s permission) week of travel? |
3136 | What sort of leading- strings are these that I am getting into? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What then? |
3136 | What this should be would depend upon the length of life; and how should this be arrived at? |
3136 | What was English politics, what was Chisholm House, what was everybody in England compared to this noble girl? |
3136 | What was Mr. Morgan always hitting at? |
3136 | What was he in thought better than she? |
3136 | What was he noted for?" |
3136 | What was it that we saw in Washington on his knees at Valley Forge, or blazing with wrath at the cowardice on Monmouth? |
3136 | What was she, one woman with an aching heart, in the midst of it all? |
3136 | What was that you were telling about Charles Lamb, the other day, Mandeville? |
3136 | What was that? |
3136 | What was that? |
3136 | What was the flavor she missed in it all? |
3136 | What was the good of money if it did not bring social position? |
3136 | What was there in this to touch a woman of fashion, sitting there crying in her corner? |
3136 | What was there in this trivial incident that so magnified it in Philip''s mind, day after day? |
3136 | What was there to confide? |
3136 | What was there to say? |
3136 | What was this nitroglycerine, that exploded so dreadfully? |
3136 | What was this that had come to him to so shake his life? |
3136 | What was wanting to make this charming camaraderie perfect? |
3136 | What weapons had this heiress of a great fortune with which to defend herself? |
3136 | What went ye out for to see? |
3136 | What were all these paltry considerations to his love? |
3136 | What were all these to a woman''s soul? |
3136 | What were they saying? |
3136 | What were this couple talking about as they promenaded, basking in each other''s presence? |
3136 | What were you doing all day, papa?" |
3136 | What will you get out of it? |
3136 | What will you have? |
3136 | What woman would not feel a little thrill of triumph? |
3136 | What would be the condition of social life if women ceased to be anxious in this regard, and let loose the reins in an easy- going indifference? |
3136 | What would be the effect upon courtship if both the men and the women approached each other as wooers? |
3136 | What would be the effect upon the female character and disposition of a possible, though not probable, refusal, or of several refusals? |
3136 | What would the poor do without the rich? |
3136 | What would they have her do? |
3136 | What would you have? |
3136 | What would you say to this case? |
3136 | What would you see if you looked into a steam boiler? |
3136 | What you have?" |
3136 | What''s her name?" |
3136 | What''s in you, Forbes, to shy so at a good woman?" |
3136 | What''s the use of all this social nonsense? |
3136 | What''s the use of objecting? |
3136 | What, Murad Ault?" |
3136 | What, in fact, is the condition in those households where the wives do not care? |
3136 | What, in short, do the schools contribute to the creation of a taste for good literature? |
3136 | What, indeed, would one say of this little group on the hotel piazza, making its comments upon the excursionists? |
3136 | What, no, not going?" |
3136 | What, then, does the common school usually do for literary taste? |
3136 | What, then, is this thing we call conscience? |
3136 | What? |
3136 | What?" |
3136 | When Henderson came back to his box Carmen did not look up, but she said, indifferently:"What, so soon? |
3136 | When a woman makes her tedious rounds, why is she always relieved to find people not in? |
3136 | When did Alexander flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did he flourish?" |
3136 | When did you come? |
3136 | When he gets older, he wishes he had replied,"Ai n''t you ashamed to make either an old man or a little boy do such hard grinding work?" |
3136 | When he had finished, he said:"Well, my young friend, how did you get hold of this?" |
3136 | When it is completely subdued, what kind of weather have you? |
3136 | When one enters on the path of worldliness is there any resting- place? |
3136 | When shall we have it?" |
3136 | When she can count upon her ten fingers the people she wants to see, why should she pretend to want to see the others? |
3136 | When the two were seated in the carriage, Mrs. Mavick turned to Lord Montague:"Well?" |
3136 | When we were asked, Will you have some of the fruit? |
3136 | When will you begin?" |
3136 | When you men assume all the direction, what else is left to us? |
3136 | Whence did it come? |
3136 | Where are all"sass"and Lorraine? |
3136 | Where do these days come from in January? |
3136 | Where else do you go?" |
3136 | Where has he gone? |
3136 | Where is the office?" |
3136 | Where is the primeval, heroic force that made the joy of living in the rough old uncivilized days? |
3136 | Where now are your tree- toads, your young love, your early season? |
3136 | Where shall I go?" |
3136 | Where shall he draw the line? |
3136 | Where shall we looke to finde a Julius Caesar whose atchievments shine as cleare in his owne Commentaries, as they did in the field? |
3136 | Where was the cave? |
3136 | Where will he or she find it? |
3136 | Where will they spend their evenings? |
3136 | Where would a boy be likely to go the first thing? |
3136 | Where''s the rascal of an heir?" |
3136 | Which is different from the manner acquired by those who live a great deal in American hotels? |
3136 | Which one do you want me to make my enemy by telling him or her that the other is n''t good enough?" |
3136 | Which way? |
3136 | While you are about it-- I s''pose you''ll print it anyway?" |
3136 | Whither had it gone? |
3136 | Whither? |
3136 | Who are the kings of Wall Street, and who build the palaces up- town? |
3136 | Who are these young women to associate with? |
3136 | Who can define this charm, this difference? |
3136 | Who can do justice to a moonlight night in such a climate and such a place? |
3136 | Who can guess the thoughts of a woman at such a time? |
3136 | Who can say that other weeds, which we despise, may not be the favorite food of some remote people or tribe? |
3136 | Who can tell how much this notion of mystery in the sex stands in the way of its free advancement all along the line? |
3136 | Who could have dreamed that she understood?" |
3136 | Who did he make laws for?" |
3136 | Who does live on it, till he gets beyond the necessity of depending on it? |
3136 | Who does? |
3136 | Who has been able truly to read the thoughts of a shrinking maiden in the passing days of her youth and beauty? |
3136 | Who has fallen out, who are the new recruits, who are engaged, who will marry, who have separated, who has lost his money? |
3136 | Who has gone?" |
3136 | Who is the judge? |
3136 | Who is to decide what degree of intelligence shall fit a man for a share in the government? |
3136 | Who knows what is in a woman? |
3136 | Who publishes it?" |
3136 | Who said anything about fish?" |
3136 | Who says that a woman can not be as cruel as a man? |
3136 | Who says that the rich and the prosperous and the successful do not need pity? |
3136 | Who says that the world is not full of romance and pathos and regret as we go our daily way in it? |
3136 | Who was Grand, who was Well- Beloved, who was Desired, who was the Idol of the French, who was worthy to be called a King of the Citizens? |
3136 | Who was Pericles? |
3136 | Who was Solon?" |
3136 | Who was another great lawgiver?" |
3136 | Who was she?" |
3136 | Who was there?" |
3136 | Who were the Mavicks, anyway? |
3136 | Who would not be rich if he could? |
3136 | Who, for instance, could be sure that he would grow young gracefully? |
3136 | Whose wife is this?--and that pretty one near her, whose daughter is she?" |
3136 | Why add the pursuit of happiness to our other inalienable worries? |
3136 | Why are there no women architects? |
3136 | Why attempt it? |
3136 | Why attempt to civilize the race within our doors, while there are so many distant and alien races to whom we ought to turn our civilizing attention? |
3136 | Why can not we get a law regulating the profession which is of most vital interest to all of us, excluding ignorance and quackery? |
3136 | Why could n''t he have seen? |
3136 | Why could not the former"materialize"as well as the latter? |
3136 | Why did I not stick to teaching in that woman''s college? |
3136 | Why did he doubt now? |
3136 | Why did he say so much about Mrs. Mavick and the governess, and so little about the girl? |
3136 | Why did n''t the baroness go back to England, if she was so tired of Switzerland? |
3136 | Why did n''t the people who were sleepy go to bed? |
3136 | Why did n''t you tell me you were the child of such hopes? |
3136 | Why did you go to the hotel?" |
3136 | Why do n''t people look where they put their money?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you buy it for Henderson? |
3136 | Why do n''t you charter a Fifth Avenue stage and take your friends on a voyage to the Battery? |
3136 | Why do n''t you cut a hole in it, Miss Lamont, and let the air in?" |
3136 | Why do n''t you join Miss Tavish in this charity? |
3136 | Why do n''t you make it uncomfortable for her?" |
3136 | Why do they ask, what is the use of your learning and your art? |
3136 | Why do they depend so much upon the newspapers, when they all despise the newspapers? |
3136 | Why do we respect some vegetables and despise others, when all of them come to an equal honor or ignominy on the table? |
3136 | Why do women wear the present fascinating gowns, in which the lithe figure is suggested in all its womanly dignity? |
3136 | Why do you class reformers and philanthropists together? |
3136 | Why do you never come to see me but you bring me something? |
3136 | Why do you object to my going to see this dance?" |
3136 | Why does the lady intending suicide always throw on a waterproof when she steals out of the house to drown herself? |
3136 | Why encounter these difficulties? |
3136 | Why go on? |
3136 | Why had he been so curt with her when she went to him for help this afternoon? |
3136 | Why had he written to her? |
3136 | Why had she secretly been a little relieved from restraint when her Brandon visit ended in the spring? |
3136 | Why have n''t you been at the mission lately?" |
3136 | Why is England permitted to stretch along down our coast in this straggling and inquisitive manner? |
3136 | Why is his country recognized? |
3136 | Why is it that almost all philanthropists and reformers are disagreeable? |
3136 | Why is it that the heart hardens in prosperity? |
3136 | Why is it that to do the right thing is often to make the mistake of a life? |
3136 | Why not be a monk, and lie in the sun? |
3136 | Why not be content with his little success and buckle down to his profession? |
3136 | Why not follow his inclination, the dream of his boyhood? |
3136 | Why not go back to Moses? |
3136 | Why not in literature? |
3136 | Why not let things drift as they are? |
3136 | Why not put the whole system of criminal jurisprudence and procedure for the suppression of crime upon a sensible and scientific basis? |
3136 | Why not settle down upon the formula that to be platitudinous is to be happy? |
3136 | Why not stay here and be happy? |
3136 | Why not try it? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not? |
3136 | Why not?" |
3136 | Why protract the story of how Margaret was lost to us? |
3136 | Why should England care to keep India? |
3136 | Why should I come back to Dresden? |
3136 | Why should anybody be obliged to feed roving strangers? |
3136 | Why should artificial conventions defeat it? |
3136 | Why should he conceal a discovery which has transformed the world to him, a secret which explains all the mysteries of nature and human- ity? |
3136 | Why should he go away from that bright blaze, and the company that sat in its radiance, to the cold and solitude of his chamber? |
3136 | Why should he not be? |
3136 | Why should it not have been Carmen? |
3136 | Why should n''t beauty have a reputation? |
3136 | Why should n''t friends help each other? |
3136 | Why should n''t he write? |
3136 | Why should n''t he, she reflected, make money? |
3136 | Why should n''t men cheat at cards? |
3136 | Why should n''t she conform and float, and not mind? |
3136 | Why should n''t she live her life, and not be hampered everlastingly by comparisons? |
3136 | Why should n''t there be color on the exterior, gold and painting, like the Fugger palaces in Augsburg, only on a great scale? |
3136 | Why should nature be in a melting mood? |
3136 | Why should not women propose? |
3136 | Why should one be debarred the privilege of pitching his crude ideas into a conversation where they may have a chance of being precipitated? |
3136 | Why should one inquire in such a paradise if things do run smoothly? |
3136 | Why should she be so disturbed? |
3136 | Why should she not enjoy it? |
3136 | Why should she sacrifice herself, if he were willing to brave the opinion of the world for her sake? |
3136 | Why should she? |
3136 | Why should she? |
3136 | Why should the beggar to whom you toss a silver dollar from your carriage feel a little grudge against you? |
3136 | Why should the royal night be wasted in slumber? |
3136 | Why should the solid hill give way at this place, and swallow up a tree? |
3136 | Why should the unscientific traveler have a thing of this kind thrown in his way? |
3136 | Why should they be at a disadvantage in an affair which concerns the happiness of the whole life? |
3136 | Why should they not have some of those wandering and joyous fancies which solace my hours?" |
3136 | Why should this childish singing raise these contrasts, and put her at odds so with her own life? |
3136 | Why should we be? |
3136 | Why should we tolerate any longer a professional criminal class? |
3136 | Why so?" |
3136 | Why so?" |
3136 | Why struggle with these things in literature and in life? |
3136 | Why travel, then? |
3136 | Why was he waiting so long? |
3136 | Why was it not a higher life to enter into the common lot, and suffer, if need be, in the struggle to purify and ennoble all? |
3136 | Why was it that she had felt a little relief when her last Brandon visit was at an end, a certain freedom in Lenox and a greater freedom in Newport? |
3136 | Why was it that this peace of nature should bring up her image, and that they should seem in harmony? |
3136 | Why was n''t Thackeray ever inspired to create a noble woman? |
3136 | Why was not Edith his confidante? |
3136 | Why will people go so far to put themselves to such inconvenience? |
3136 | Why, Stanhope, you do n''t think of going there also?" |
3136 | Why, after a heavy shower, and in the midst of it, do such multitudes of toads, especially little ones, hop about on the gravel- walks? |
3136 | Why, as an illustration, are toads so plenty after a thunder- shower? |
3136 | Why, girls do, do n''t they? |
3136 | Why, then, was he reserved with her upon the absorbing interest of his life? |
3136 | Why, then, we ask, is she constituted a woman at all? |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Why?" |
3136 | Will Halifax rise up in judgment against us? |
3136 | Will culture aid a minister in a"protracted meeting"? |
3136 | Will not a few days''planting and scratching in the"open"yield potatoes and rye? |
3136 | Will not the wise novelist seek to encounter the least intellectual resistance? |
3136 | Will not the young women by- and- by find themselves in a lonesome place, cultivated away beyond their natural comrades? |
3136 | Will she press a chrysanthemum, and keep it till the faint perfume reminds her of the sweetest moment of her life? |
3136 | Will the ability to read Chaucer assist a shop- keeper? |
3136 | Will the politician add to the"sweetness and light"of his lovely career if he can read the"Battle of the Frogs and the Mice"in the original? |
3136 | Will the public next season wear its hose dotted or striped? |
3136 | Will woman ever learn to throw a stone? |
3136 | Will you get them?" |
3136 | Will you repeat the old experiment of a material success and a moral and spiritual failure? |
3136 | Will you take me to the spring? |
3136 | Will you tell me, Mr. Burnett, what nonsense you have got into your head?" |
3136 | Will you try it?" |
3136 | Will you?" |
3136 | Will you?" |
3136 | With this center of untruthfulness, what must the life in the family be? |
3136 | Without the necessity of putting forth this energy, a survival of the original force in man, how long would our civilization last? |
3136 | Wo n''t it seem rather good to get out and see your wife and family again?" |
3136 | Wo n''t you believe me? |
3136 | Wo n''t you look out for Mr. Delancy in this deal?" |
3136 | Would Evelyn be strong enough to stem it and to wait also? |
3136 | Would I like to go into the palace? |
3136 | Would Margaret not have felt it, if she also had not been growing hard, and accustomed to regard the world in his unbelieving way? |
3136 | Would a stronger pirate arise in time to despoil him, and so act as the Nemesis of all violation of the law of honest relations between men? |
3136 | Would he be in any condition to travel in the morning? |
3136 | Would he be more likely to win her by obeying the advice of Celia, or by trusting to Evelyn''s inexperienced discernment? |
3136 | Would he cease to love her for what she had done-- for what she must do? |
3136 | Would he exchange the sweetness of that for the fleeting reputation of the most brilliant lawyer? |
3136 | Would he love her if she were as unworldly as she once was? |
3136 | Would her heart be hardened or softened by the experience? |
3136 | Would her own sex be considerate, and give her a fair field if they saw she was paying attention to a young man, or an old one? |
3136 | Would it be asking too much to see her apartments? |
3136 | Would it help matters to be personally anxious and miserable? |
3136 | Would it never put out its lights, and cease its uproar, and leave me to my reflections? |
3136 | Would it not be possible for Dr. Leigh to draw from the fund on her own checks independent of him? |
3136 | Would it not render that sporadic shyness of which we have spoken epidemic? |
3136 | Would n''t it be natural, after our misfortune? |
3136 | Would not the lover be spared time and pain if he knew, as the novelist knows, whether the young lady is dressing for a rejection or an acceptance? |
3136 | Would not the one suffer because he could not see the ocean, and the other by reason of the revengeful state of his mind? |
3136 | Would our old friend survive the night? |
3136 | Would people grow young together even as harmoniously as they grow old together? |
3136 | Would she become embittered and desperate, and act as foolishly as men often do? |
3136 | Would she care for him or the career? |
3136 | Would she have admitted this? |
3136 | Would the hotel be like that at Plaster Cove? |
3136 | Would the public be injured? |
3136 | Would they do it? |
3136 | Would you advise me to make an enemy of Mr. Mavick, knowing all that he does know about Mr. Henderson''s affairs?" |
3136 | Would you have an art- gallery here, and high- priced New York and Paris shops lining the way? |
3136 | Would you like to marry, perhaps, a Greek statue? |
3136 | Would you mind my saying that Mr. Meigs is a very presentable man?" |
3136 | Would you put an American bank president in the Retreat who should so decorate his banking- house? |
3136 | Would you put that in charge of men?" |
3136 | Would you rather be that than to write?" |
3136 | Would you remove the odium of prison? |
3136 | Wounded? |
3136 | XIX Why should not Philip trust the future? |
3136 | XVII Shall we never have done with this carping at people who succeed? |
3136 | XX Did Miss McDonald tell Evelyn of her meeting with Philip in Central Park? |
3136 | XXVI Is justice done in this world only by a succession of injustices? |
3136 | Yes, highly educated? |
3136 | Yet how much superior is our comedy of to- day? |
3136 | You are not offended?" |
3136 | You believe? |
3136 | You can do without your grip? |
3136 | You can see all that as well elsewhere? |
3136 | You did n''t really see a bear?" |
3136 | You dined first?" |
3136 | You do n''t dance? |
3136 | You found the people hospitable?" |
3136 | You know Mavick?" |
3136 | You know Paris?" |
3136 | You know what an old bachelor is who never has had anybody to shake him out of his contemplation of his family?" |
3136 | You mean life seems a little thin, as the critics say?" |
3136 | You must have noticed that she likes to be accurate?" |
3136 | You must work for a living anyway; and why, now, should you unsettle your minds? |
3136 | You prefer it?" |
3136 | You presume upon my invitation to this house, in an underhand way, to-- What right have you?" |
3136 | You remember, Evelyn, how fascinating the Arizona desert was? |
3136 | You see her?" |
3136 | You see that little island yonder? |
3136 | You see that old beau there, the one smiling and bending towards her as he walks with the belle of Macon? |
3136 | You see that old lady in the corner? |
3136 | You see those under the trees yonder? |
3136 | You see what I mean? |
3136 | You studied philology in Germany? |
3136 | You take the idea?" |
3136 | You think Providence is expelled out of New England? |
3136 | You think so? |
3136 | You think this is a mood? |
3136 | You thought I never saw anything? |
3136 | You were with her at Bar Harbor, and I suppose she never mentioned to you that she was coming here?" |
3136 | You will have a private car, well stocked, a photographer will go along, and I think-- don''t you? |
3136 | You will not care to see any one who treated your mother in this way? |
3136 | You wo n''t mind it in such an old woman?" |
3136 | You''ve seen Coquelin? |
3136 | and Will it sell? |
3136 | and are they devoting themselves to the elevation of the social tone, or to the improvement of our literature? |
3136 | and human emotion, affection, love, were they alien to the Divine intention? |
3136 | and if the water had any connection with the lake, two hundred feet below and at some distance away, why did n''t the water run out? |
3136 | and if they have, why should they spend it in this Sisyphus task? |
3136 | and is not dressing an art? |
3136 | and what, on the other hand, was the good of social position if you could not use it to get money? |
3136 | and"Did I look as well as anybody?" |
3136 | and"What is the Origin of Inequality among Men, and is it Authorized by Natural Law?" |
3136 | and, if he is here, where is the Herbert that I knew? |
3136 | are you sure of that?'' |
3136 | asked he,"and from what place do you come?" |
3136 | bond on a road that has always paid its interest promptly, for a four and a half on a system that is manipulated nobody knows how? |
3136 | cried Evelyn;"and to practice?" |
3136 | cried Mrs. Mavick, looking with amazement at her daughter,"do n''t you understand that our life is all ruined?" |
3136 | did ever a man escape himself in a retreat? |
3136 | do n''t you think they are interested in each other?" |
3136 | do you see that Paris dress? |
3136 | fifteen? |
3136 | five? |
3136 | had he public esteem? |
3136 | have you a good room? |
3136 | how many moods in a quarter of an hour, and which is the characteristic one? |
3136 | in Lincoln entering Richmond with bowed head and infinite sorrow and yearning in his heart? |
3136 | inquired Jack;"all the four facades different?" |
3136 | is Cape Breton an island?'' |
3136 | is such vanity at the bottom of even a reasonable ambition? |
3136 | no inward consciousness of an undying personality?" |
3136 | or yield so abundantly? |
3136 | reconcile this state of things with not being married and being a Presbyterian? |
3136 | said he, good humoredly;''how can Campbell mistake the matter so much? |
3136 | shall I set a price upon the tender asparagus or the crisp lettuce, which made the sweet spring a reality? |
3136 | she asked, after a moment, turning to Margaret? |
3136 | to leave us?" |
3136 | twelve?" |
3136 | was he cradled in a Pullman? |
3136 | what have I done?" |
3136 | what was there in her to attract him? |
3136 | what would become of his life if he lost the only woman in the world? |
3136 | when we have learned it shall we not want to emigrate, as so many of the Italians do? |
3136 | whence but from the body and the lusts of the body? |
3136 | where is Margaret?" |
3136 | who knows a woman''s heart? |
3136 | why did n''t the company send it? |
3136 | will you send me back?" |
3136 | with whom are they to hold high converse? |
3136 | you here?" |
11615 | ''T is true, the ancients we may rob with ease; But who with that mean shift himself can please? |
11615 | ''_ Blue- eyed, strange- voiced, sharp- beaked, ill- omened_ fowl, What art thou?'' 11615 ''_ Wanderer_,| whither| wouldst thou| roam? |
11615 | A merchant at sea asked the skipper what death his father died? 11615 A_ mother''s accusing her son_,& c.,_ were circumstances_,"& c.? |
11615 | After what is said, will it be thought refining too much to suggest, that the different orders are qualified for different purposes? |
11615 | Against heaven''s endless mercies pour''d, how_ dar''st_ thou_ to_ rebel? |
11615 | Am I being instructed? |
11615 | Am I one chaste, one last embrace deny''d? 11615 Am I to set my life upon a throw, Because a bear is rude and surly? |
11615 | Am_ I_ not an_ apostle_? 11615 Among all Things in the Universe, direct your Worship to the Greatest; And which is that? |
11615 | An Interrogative Pronoun is one that is used in asking a question; as,''_ who_ is he, and_ what_ does he want?'' |
11615 | An adverb may be generally known, by its answering to the question, How? 11615 An interrogation(? |
11615 | And are not the countries so overflown still situate between the tropics? |
11615 | And canst thou expect to behold the resplendent glory of the Creator? 11615 And dost thou open thine eyes upon such an one, and bringest me into judgement with thee?" |
11615 | And every beast of their''s, be our''s? |
11615 | And i heard, but i understood not: then said i, o my Lord, what shall be the end of these things? |
11615 | And is it not a pity that the Quakers have no better authority to substantiate their principles than the testimony of them old Pharisees? |
11615 | And is it not a pity that the Quakers have no better authority to substantiate their principles, than the testimony of_ those_ old Pharisees? |
11615 | And is the ignorance of these peasants a reason for others to remain ignorant; or to render the subject a less becoming inquiry? |
11615 | And is there a heart of parent or of child, that does not beat and burn within them? |
11615 | And the governor asked him, saying, Art thou the King of the Jews? |
11615 | And there is something in your very strange story, that resembles-- Does Mr. Bevil know your history particularly? |
11615 | And they said,''What is_ that_[194][ matter] to us? 11615 And what can be better than him that made it?" |
11615 | And what is reason? 11615 And when I say, Two men_ walk_, is it not equally apparent, that_ walk_ is plural, because it expresses_ two_ actions?" |
11615 | And who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good? |
11615 | And who was Enoch''s Saviour, and the Prophets? |
11615 | And_ I_ heard, but_ I_ understood not; then said_ I, O_ my Lord, what shall be the end of these things? |
11615 | And_ what have become_ of my resolutions to return to God? |
11615 | Another man now would have given plump into this foolish story; but I? 11615 Are either the subject or the predicate in the second sentence modified?" |
11615 | Are not health and strength of body desirable for their own sakes? |
11615 | Are not these schools of the highest importance? 11615 Are some verbs used, both transitively and intransitively?" |
11615 | Are there any adjectives which form the degrees of comparison peculiar to themselves? |
11615 | Are there any nouns you can not see, hear, or feel, but only think of? 11615 Are these the houses you were speaking of? |
11615 | Are they men worthy of confidence and support? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the Chronicles of the kings of Israel? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the Chronicles of the_ Kings_ of Israel? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the acts of Solomon? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah? |
11615 | Are they not written in the book of the_ Acts_ of Solomon? |
11615 | Are we not lazy in our duties, or make a Christ of them? |
11615 | Are we to welcome the loathsome harlot, and introduce it to our children? |
11615 | Are you not ashamed to have no other thoughts than that of amassing wealth, and of acquiring glory, credit, and dignities? |
11615 | Art not thou and you ashamed to affirm, that the best works of the Spirit of Christ in his saints are as filthy rags? |
11615 | Art thou a penitent? 11615 Art thou proud yet? |
11615 | Art thou so bare and full of wretchedness, And fears to die? 11615 Art thou that art_ to comynge_, ether abiden we another?" |
11615 | Art thou the man of God that camest from Judah? |
11615 | Art_ not thou_ a seer? |
11615 | Art_ thou Elias_? |
11615 | Art_ thou_ a_ king_ then? |
11615 | Art_ thou_ that traitor_ angel_? 11615 As for Modesty and Good Faith, Truth and Justice, they have left this wicked World and retired to Heaven: And now what is it that can keep you here?" |
11615 | Asking questions with a principal verb-- as,_ Teach I? 11615 Be thou, or do thou be writing? |
11615 | But I say, again, What signifies words? |
11615 | But I would inquire at him, what an office is? |
11615 | But how can_ you_ a_ soul_, still either hunger or thirst? |
11615 | But if I say''Will_ a_ man be able to carry this burden?'' 11615 But if a solemn and familiar pronunciation really exists in our language, is it not the business of a grammarian to mark both?" |
11615 | But if you ca n''t help it, who do you complain of? |
11615 | But may it not be retorted, that its being a gratification is that which excites our resentment? |
11615 | But what has disease, deformity, and filth, upon which the thoughts can be allured to dwell? |
11615 | But what is to be said when presumption pushes itself into the front ranks of elocution, and thoughtless friends undertake to support it? 11615 But what saith the Scriptures as to respect of persons among Christians?" |
11615 | But what think ye? 11615 But where shall wisdom be found? |
11615 | But whom say ye that I am? |
11615 | But wil our sage writers on law forever think by tradition? |
11615 | But,_ admitting_ that two or three of these offend less in their morals than in their writings, must poverty make nonsense sacred? |
11615 | But_ some_ man will say, How are the dead raised up? 11615 But_ what!_ is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing?" |
11615 | Called_ Crotchets_by whom? |
11615 | Can I make men live, whether they will or no? |
11615 | Can a mere buckling on a military weapon infuse courage? |
11615 | Can any thing show your holiness how unworthy you treat mankind? |
11615 | Can honour set to a leg? 11615 Can our Solicitude alter the course, or unravel the intricacy, of human events?" |
11615 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? 11615 Can the fig- tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? |
11615 | Canst thou by searching find out_ God_? |
11615 | Canst thou grow sad, thou sayest, as earth grows bright? |
11615 | Canst thou, by searching, find out God; Canst thou find out the Almighty to perfection; It is high as heaven, what canst thou do? 11615 Canst thou, by searching, find out the Lord?" |
11615 | Cry, By your Priesthood tell me what you are? |
11615 | Dare he assume the name of a popular magistrate? |
11615 | Dare he deny but there are some of his fraternity guilty? |
11615 | Dare you speak lightly of the law, or move that, in a criminal trial, judges should advance one step beyond_ what_ it permits them_ to go_? |
11615 | Dear gentle youth, is''t none but thee? |
11615 | Did ever man struggle more earnestly in a cause where both his honour and life are concerned? |
11615 | Did ever_ Proteus, Merlin_, any_ witch_, Transform_ themselves_ so strangely as the rich? |
11615 | Did he not fear the Lord, and besought the Lord, and the Lord repented him of the evil which he had pronounced? |
11615 | Did n''t ye hear it? 11615 Did not great Julius bleed for justice sake?" |
11615 | Did not great Julius bleed for justice''s sake? |
11615 | Did not great Julius bleed for_ justice''_ sake? |
11615 | Did they ever bear a testimony against writing books? |
11615 | Did they not_ take hold of_ your fathers? |
11615 | Did you conceive( of) him to be me? |
11615 | Did you never bear false witness against thy neighbour? |
11615 | Did_ not Israel_ know? |
11615 | Do not the eyes discover humility, pride; cruelty, compassion; reflection, dissipation; kindness, resentment? |
11615 | Do not those same poor peasants use the Lever and the Wedge, and many other instruments? |
11615 | Do not those same poor peasants use the_ lever_, and the_ wedge_, and many other instruments? |
11615 | Do we for this the gods and conscience brave, That one may rule and make the rest a slave? |
11615 | Do you remember speaking on this subject in school? |
11615 | Do_ not they_ blaspheme that worthy name? |
11615 | Does Bridget paint still, Pompey? 11615 Does continuity and connexion create sympathy and relation in the parts of the body?" |
11615 | Does he mean that theism is capable of nothing else except being opposed to polytheism or atheism? |
11615 | Does not all proceed from the law, which regulates the whole departments of the state? |
11615 | Does not all proceed from the law, which regulates_ all the_ departments of the state? |
11615 | Does the Conjunction join Words together? 11615 Does the present accident hinder your being honest and brave?" |
11615 | Does_ not-- or,_ Do n''t_ your cousin intend to visit you? |
11615 | Dost_ thou_ mourn Philander''s fate? 11615 Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains, and seeketh that which is gone astray?" |
11615 | Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and_ go_ into the mountains, and_ seek_ that which is gone astray? |
11615 | Doth not the Scripture, which can not lie, give none of the saints this testimony? |
11615 | Doth_ the hawk_ fly by thy wisdom, and stretch_ her_ wings toward the south? 11615 Established use?" |
11615 | For between which two links could speech makers draw the division line? |
11615 | For instance, when we say''_ the house is building_,''the advocates of the new theory ask,''building_ what_?'' 11615 For is not this to set nature a work?" |
11615 | For what else is a_ red- hot_ iron than fire? 11615 For what had he_ to do to chide_ at me?" |
11615 | For where does beauty and high wit But in your constellation meet? |
11615 | Gentle and| lovely form, What didst| thou here, When the fierce| battle storm Bore down| the spear? 11615 Gentlemen: will you always speak as you mean?" |
11615 | God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? 11615 Grammatica quid est? |
11615 | Ha ha ha; some wine eh? |
11615 | Has he not taught,_ beseeched_, and shed abroad the Spirit unconfined? |
11615 | Has this word which represents an action an object after it, and on which it terminates? |
11615 | Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods? |
11615 | Hath the Lord said it, and shall he not do it? 11615 Have the greater men always been the most popular? |
11615 | Have they ascertained the person who gave the information? |
11615 | Have we not power to lead about a sister, a wife, as well as other apostles? |
11615 | Have you no more manners than to rail at Hocus, that has saved that clod- pated, numskull''d ninnyhammer of yours from ruin, and all his family? |
11615 | Have_ they not_ heard? |
11615 | He says he was glad that he had Baptized so few; And asks them, Were ye Baptised in the Name of Paul? |
11615 | He that chastiseth the heathen, shall not he correct? 11615 He that planted the ear, shall he not hear? |
11615 | Here,_ John_ is the actor; and is known to be the nominative, by its answering to the question,''Who struck Richard?'' |
11615 | How do you account for IN, OUT, ON, OFF, and AT? |
11615 | How do you know that_ love_ is the first person? 11615 How do you parse''letter''in the sentence,''James writes a_ letter''? |
11615 | How does this man''s definitions stand affected? |
11615 | How far do you call_ it_ to such a place? |
11615 | How his eyes languish? 11615 How is the agent of a passive, and the object of an active verb often left?" |
11615 | How is the gender and number of the relative known? |
11615 | How little reason to wonder, that a perfect and accomplished orator, should be one of the characters that is most rarely found? |
11615 | How long was you going? 11615 How many cases? |
11615 | How many numbers do nouns appear to have? 11615 How many numbers have pronouns? |
11615 | How many of your own church members were never heard pray? |
11615 | How many persons? 11615 How many right angles has an acute angled triangle?" |
11615 | How many_ Sorts_ of Participles are there? 11615 How many_ ss_ would goodness then end with? |
11615 | How many_ ss_ would goodness then end with? 11615 How much is seven times nine?" |
11615 | How shall I curse[_ him_ or_ them_] whom God hath not cursed? |
11615 | How shall the people know who to entrust with their property and their liberties? |
11615 | How shall we distinguish between the friends and enemies of the government? |
11615 | How therefore is it that they approach nearly to Non- Entity''s? |
11615 | How_ could_ he_ see to do_ them? |
11615 | I am their mother, who shall bar me from them? |
11615 | I hope, you have, upon no account, promoted sternutation by hellebore? |
11615 | I pr''ythee,_ whom_ doth he trot_ withal_? |
11615 | If David then call him Lord, how is he his son? |
11615 | If I_ will_ that he_ tarry_ till I_ come_, what is that to thee? 11615 If a Yearly Meeting should undertake to alter its fundamental doctrines, is there any power in the society to prevent their doing so?" |
11615 | If he dare not say they are, as I know he dare not, how must I then distinguish? |
11615 | If he_ cut_ off, and_ shut_ up, or_ gather_ together, then who can hinder him? |
11615 | If it be asked, why a pause should any more be necessary to emphasis than to an accent? 11615 If love| make me| forsworn,| how shall| I swear| to love? |
11615 | If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what is become of decency and virtue? |
11615 | If the crew rail at the master of the vessel, who will they mind? |
11615 | If the prophet had commanded thee to do some great thing, would you have refused? |
11615 | If the whole body_ were_ an eye, where_ were_ the hearing? |
11615 | If to accommodate man and beast, heaven and earth-- if this be beyond me,''tis not possible.--What consequence then follows? 11615 In life, can love be bought with gold? |
11615 | In the sentence,''this is the pen which John made,''what_ word_ do I say John made? |
11615 | In what other[ language,] consistent with reason and common sense, can you go about to explain it to him? |
11615 | Interrogation(? 11615 Is endless life and happiness despis''d? |
11615 | Is genius yours? 11615 Is it I or he whom you requested to go?" |
11615 | Is it lawful for_ us to give_ tribute to CÃ ¦ sar? |
11615 | Is it meant that theism is capable of nothing else besides being opposed to polytheism, or atheism? |
11615 | Is it not charging God foolishly, when we give these dark colourings to human nature? |
11615 | Is it such a fast that I have chosen, that a man should afflict his soul for a day, and to bow down his head like a bulrush? |
11615 | Is it_ her_ or_ his_ honour that is tarnished? 11615 Is not Mr. Murray''s octavo grammar more worthy the dignified title of a''Philosophical Grammar?''" |
11615 | Is not life a_ greater_ gift_ than_ food? |
11615 | Is not the bare fact of God being the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon? |
11615 | Is not this using one measure for our neighbours, and another for ourselves? |
11615 | Is that ornament in a good taste? |
11615 | Is there any Scripture speaks of the light''s being inward? |
11615 | Is there any Scripture_ which_ speaks of the_ light_ as being inward? |
11615 | Is there any other doctrine_ whose_ followers are punished? |
11615 | Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? 11615 Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? |
11615 | Is this he that I am seeking of, or no? |
11615 | Is this your son,_ who_ ye say_ was born_ blind? |
11615 | Is''t not drown''d i''the last rain? 11615 Is_ William''s_ a proper or common noun?" |
11615 | Is_ what_ ever used as three kinds of a pronoun? |
11615 | It has been often asked, what is Latin and Greek? |
11615 | It is choosing such letters to compose words,& c.--_Ibid._"What is Parsing? |
11615 | It should seem then the grand question was, What is good? |
11615 | King Agrippa,_ believest thou_ the prophets? |
11615 | Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel? |
11615 | Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates? |
11615 | Know ye not your_ own selves_, how that Jesus Christ is in you? |
11615 | Know ye not, that_ so many_ of us_ as_ were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death? |
11615 | Learned they their pieces perfectly? |
11615 | Learnest thou thy lesson? |
11615 | Look next on Greatness; say where Greatness lies: Where, but among the Heroes and the Wise? |
11615 | Love sounds| the alarm, And fear| is a- fly~ ing; When beau|-ty''s the prize, What mor|-tal fears dy|-~ing? 11615 Mark, and perform it: seest thou? |
11615 | Master,_ what_ shall we do? |
11615 | May I, unblam''d, express thee? 11615 May not four feet be as poetick as five; or fifteen feet, as poetick as fifty?" |
11615 | Meeting a friend the other day, he said to me,''Where are you going?'' |
11615 | N''avez vous pas des maisons pour manger et pour boire? |
11615 | Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? 11615 Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
11615 | Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? |
11615 | Nay, what evidence can be brought to show, that the Inflection of the Classic tongues were not originally formed out of obsolete auxiliary words? |
11615 | Never adventure on too near an approach to what is evil? |
11615 | Never| wedding,| ever| wooing, Still| lovelorn| heart pur|-suing, Read you| not the| wrong you''re| doing, In my| cheek''s pale| hue? 11615 Nor foes nor fortune_ take_ this power away; And is my Abelard less kind than_ they_?" |
11615 | Now who would dote upon things hurryed down the stream thus fast? |
11615 | Now, Who is not Discouraged, and Fears Want, when he has no money? |
11615 | Now, if it be an evil to do any thing out of strife; then such things that are seen so to be done, are they not to be avoided and forsaken? |
11615 | O gentle sleep, Nature''s soft nurse, how have I frighted thee? |
11615 | O,_ says I_, Jacky, are you at that work? |
11615 | O_ Death!_ where is thy sting? 11615 O_ thou sword_ of the Lord, how long will it be ere_ thou_ be quiet?" |
11615 | Of Godlike pow''r? 11615 Of whom hast thou been afraid or feared?" |
11615 | Of_ what number are_ the expressions_,''these boys,''''these pictures,''& c.? |
11615 | Oh let me escape thither,( is it not a little one?) 11615 Oh, let me escape thither,( is it not a little one?) |
11615 | Oh? 11615 Or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?" |
11615 | Or if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? |
11615 | Or if he was, was there no spiritual men then? |
11615 | Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? |
11615 | Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone? |
11615 | Or, if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? |
11615 | Or_ I_ only and_ Barnabas_, have not we power to forbear working? |
11615 | Or_ hear''st_ thou rather pure ethereal stream? |
11615 | Our fathers, where are they, and the prophets, do they live forever? |
11615 | Parthenia,_ rise_.--What voice alarms my ear? 11615 Permit that I share in thy woe, The privilege can you refuse?" |
11615 | Prepositions, you recollect, connect words as well as conjunctions: how, then, can you tell the one from the other? |
11615 | Que veut dire ce bruit de la ville qui est ainsi à © mue? |
11615 | Quomodo differunt grammaticus et grammatista? 11615 Rather than thus be overtopt, Would you not wish their laurels cropt?" |
11615 | Remember Handel? 11615 Richard of York, how_ fares_ our dearest_ brother_?" |
11615 | Say, dost thou know Tectidius?--Who, the wretch Whose lands beyond the Sabines largely stretch? |
11615 | Shall I hide from Abraham that thing_ which_ I do? |
11615 | Shall I hide from Abraham_ what_ I am going to do? |
11615 | Shall any_ teach God knowledge_? |
11615 | Shall he alone, whom rational we call, Be pleased with nothing if not blessed with all? |
11615 | Shall not myself be_ kindlier_ mov''d than thou art? |
11615 | Shall not their cattle, and their substance, and every beast of their''s be ours? |
11615 | Shall the intellect alone feel no pleasures in its energy, when we allow them to the grossest energies of appetite and sense? |
11615 | Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the Father of Spirits, and live? |
11615 | Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the father of spirits, and live? |
11615 | Shalt thou build me an house for me to dwell in? |
11615 | Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these? |
11615 | So after he had washed their feet, and had taken his garments, and was set down again, he said unto them, Know ye what I have done to you? |
11615 | So saucy with the hand of she here-- What''s her name? |
11615 | Spake_ I not_ also to thy messengers? |
11615 | St. Paul asked king Agrippa if he believed the prophets? 11615 Stay, my| charmer,| can you| leave me? |
11615 | Tell me, Alciphron, is not_ distance_ a_ line_ turned endwise to the eye? |
11615 | Tell me, if in any of these such an union can be found? |
11615 | The Indicative Mood simply indicates or declares a thing: as,''He_ loves_, he is_ loved_:''or it asks a question: as,''Does he love?'' 11615 The Indicative mood simply declares a thing; as, He_ loves_; He is_ loved_; Or, it asks a question; as,_ Lovest_ thou me?" |
11615 | The Interrogation Point(? 11615 The Panther smil''d at this; and when, said she, Were those first councils disallow''d by me?" |
11615 | The following is a note of Interrogation, or asking a question(?). |
11615 | The indicative mood sheweth or declareth; as,_ Ego amo_, I love: or else asketh a question; as,_ Amas tu_? 11615 The interrogator?" |
11615 | The point of Interrogation,? |
11615 | The question may then be put, What does he more than mean? |
11615 | The question might be put, what more does he than only mean? |
11615 | The whole must centre in the query, whether Tragedy or Comedy are hurtful and dangerous representations? |
11615 | The_ Productive System_teaches thus:"What does the word_ singular_ mean? |
11615 | They put their huge inarticulate question,''What do you mean to do with us?'' 11615 Thinkst thou that duty shall have dread to speak?" |
11615 | This An|-na so fair, So talk''d| of by fame, Why do nt| she appear? 11615 Thy nature, immortality, who knowest?" |
11615 | To be, or not to be? |
11615 | To reason how can we be said to rise? 11615 To what purpose_ cometh_ there to me incense from Sheba,_ and_ the sweet cane from a far country?" |
11615 | To who? 11615 Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land? |
11615 | Was any person besides the mercer present? 11615 Was it Mirabeau, Mr. President, or what other master of the human passions, who has told us that words are things? |
11615 | Was it thou that buildedst that house? |
11615 | Was it thou, or the wind, who shut the door? |
11615 | Wast_ thou born only for pleasure? 11615 Were Cain''s and Abel''s occupations the same?" |
11615 | Were either of these meetings ever acknowledged or recognized? |
11615 | Were you not affrighted, and mistook a spirit for a body? |
11615 | Were_ Cain_ and Abel''s occupations the same? |
11615 | Wert thou born only for pleasure? 11615 What Sort of a Noun is Man? |
11615 | What am I and from whence? 11615 What am I, and whence? |
11615 | What are become of so many productions? |
11615 | What are become of those ages of abundance and of life? |
11615 | What are thy rents? 11615 What are verbs? |
11615 | What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus range the camp alone? |
11615 | What avails the taking so much medicine, when you are so careless about taking cold? |
11615 | What better reason_ needs_ be given? |
11615 | What can be the cause of the_ parliament''s neglecting_ so important a business? |
11615 | What can be the reason of the_ committee''s having delayed_ this business? |
11615 | What can prevent this republick from soon raising a literary standard? |
11615 | What can we expect, who come_ a gleaning_, not after the first reapers, but after the_ very_ beggars? |
11615 | What cases are there in English? 11615 What do you call it? |
11615 | What do_ ye_ more than_ others_? |
11615 | What further need was there of an other priest rising? |
11615 | What gender is_ woman_, and why? |
11615 | What gender, then, is_ man_, and why? |
11615 | What is Language? 11615 What is Number? |
11615 | What is Rule III.? |
11615 | What is Spelling? 11615 What is a Noun Substantive? |
11615 | What is a noun? 11615 What is an Asserter? |
11615 | What is emphasis? 11615 What is meant by_ Gender?_ The different sexes." |
11615 | What is number? 11615 What is number? |
11615 | What is quantity, as it respects syllables or words? 11615 What is said respecting sentences being inverted?" |
11615 | What is spelling? 11615 What is the cause that nonsense so often escapes being detected, both by the writer and by the reader?" |
11615 | What is the cause that the former days were better than these? |
11615 | What is the gender, number, and person of those in the first? |
11615 | What is the import of that command to love such an one as ourselves? |
11615 | What is the meaning of the word_ to?_ Ans. 11615 What is the name of the river on which London stands? |
11615 | What is the putting vowels and consonants together called? |
11615 | What is the reason of our being often so frigid and unpersuasive in public discourse? |
11615 | What is the reason that our language is less refined than that of France? |
11615 | What is the reason that our language is less refined than that of Italy, Spain, or France? |
11615 | What is vice and wickedness? 11615 What is vocal language? |
11615 | What is vocal language? 11615 What is your opinion of truth, good- nature, and sobriety? |
11615 | What is''t to thee, if he neglect thy urn, Or without spices lets thy body burn? |
11615 | What is_ a verb_? 11615 What kind of Jesamine? |
11615 | What kind of a book is this? |
11615 | What kind of a noun is_ river_, and why? |
11615 | What kind of an article, then, shall we call_ the_? |
11615 | What may_ it_ be, the heavy_ sound_ That moans old Branksome''s turrets round? |
11615 | What method_ had he best take_? |
11615 | What need you be anxious about this event? |
11615 | What noun do they describe or tell the kind? |
11615 | What nouns are masculine gender? 11615 What nouns frequently succeed each other?" |
11615 | What nouns frequently_ stand together_? |
11615 | What number are these boys? 11615 What number is_ boy_? |
11615 | What other means are there to attract love and esteem so effectual as a virtuous course of life? 11615 What rules apply in parsing personal pronouns of the second and third person?" |
11615 | What rules apply in parsing personal pronouns of the second and third_ persons_? |
11615 | What say you to such as these? 11615 What shall we say of noctambulos?" |
11615 | What should we say of such an one? 11615 What sort of a charm do they possess?" |
11615 | What sort of a thing is it? |
11615 | What sounds have each of the vowels? |
11615 | What striking lesson are we taught by the tenor of this history? |
11615 | What tenses are formed on the perfect participle? |
11615 | What tenses are formed_ from_ the perfect participle? |
11615 | What thank have ye? 11615 What then can be more obviously true than that it should be made as just as we can?" |
11615 | What think ye of Christ? 11615 What think ye of Christ? |
11615 | What use can these words be, till their meaning is known? |
11615 | What went ye out_ for to_ see? |
11615 | What wilt thou_ have_ me_ to_ do? |
11615 | What word, then, may_ and_ be called? 11615 What_ art thou doing_?" |
11615 | What_ be_ these two olive branches? |
11615 | What_ means_ this restless stir and commotion of mind? |
11615 | What_ virtue_ or what mental_ grace_, But men unqualified and base Will boast_ it_ their possession? |
11615 | What_ would_ this man? 11615 When is a dipthong called a proper dipthong?" |
11615 | When the judge dare not act, where is the loser''s remedy? |
11615 | When the perfect participle of an active- intransitive verb is annexed to the neuter verb_ to be_? 11615 When was it that Rome attracted most strongly the admiration of mankind?" |
11615 | When will his ear delight in the sound of arms? 11615 When-- under what administration-- under what exigencies of war or peace-- did the Senate ever before deal with such a measure in such a manner? |
11615 | Whence comes all the powers and prerogatives of rational beings? |
11615 | Where is thy true treasure? 11615 Where now the rill melodious,[--] pure, and cool, And meads, with life, and mirth, and beauty crown''d?" |
11615 | Where should he have this gold? 11615 Where thy true treasure? |
11615 | Where thy true treasure? 11615 Where was you born? |
11615 | Where_ thinkst thou_ he is now? 11615 Where_ were_ you born? |
11615 | Whereto serves mercy, but_ to confront_ the visage of offence? |
11615 | Which of the two brothers are graduates? |
11615 | Which of these two kinds of vice are more criminal? |
11615 | Which of you convinceth me of sin? |
11615 | Which road takest thou here? |
11615 | Which tense is formed on the present? |
11615 | Whither art going, pretty Annette? 11615 Whither,_ O!_ whither shall_ I_ fly? |
11615 | Who bade the mud from Dives''wheel To spurn the rags of Lazarus? 11615 Who calls the council, states the certain day? |
11615 | Who can ever be easy, who is reproached with his own ill conduct? |
11615 | Who can unpitying see the flowery race, Shed by the morn, their new- flush''d bloom resign, Before th''unbating beam? 11615 Who can, either in opposition, or in the ministry, act alone?" |
11615 | Who dare, at the present day, avow himself equal to the task? |
11615 | Who do you dine with? |
11615 | Who do you think me to be? |
11615 | Who else can he be? |
11615 | Who finds the partridge in the puttock''s nest, But may imagine how the bird was dead? |
11615 | Who gave you that book which you prize so much? |
11615 | Who goeth_ a_ warfare any time at his own charges? |
11615 | Who is here so base, that would be a bondman? |
11615 | Who is here so rude, that would not be a Roman? |
11615 | Who is my mother, or my brethren? |
11615 | Who is she who comes clothed in a robe of green? |
11615 | Who is there? 11615 Who knows not, how the trembling judge beheld The peaceful court with arm''d legions fill''d?" |
11615 | Who knows what resources are in store, and what the power of God may do for thee? |
11615 | Who knows what resources are in store? 11615 Who was it from? |
11615 | Who was the agent, and whom the object struck or kissed? |
11615 | Who who has either sense or civility, does not perceive the vileness of profanity? |
11615 | Who would not guess there might be hopes, The fear of_ gallowses_ and ropes, Before their eyes, might reconcile Their animosities a while? |
11615 | Who would not say,''If it be_ I_,''rather than,''If it be_ me_? |
11615 | Who would not say,''If it be_ me_,''rather than, If it be_ I_? |
11615 | Who would not sing for Lycidas? 11615 Who, in the fullness of unequalled power, would not believe himself the favourite of heaven?" |
11615 | Who_ art thou_? |
11615 | Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am? |
11615 | Whom do they say it is? |
11615 | Whom hast thou then or_ what t''accuse_? |
11615 | Whose prerogative is it? 11615 Why are nouns divided into genders? |
11615 | Why are you vext, Lady? 11615 Why call ye me lord, lord, and do not the things which I say?" |
11615 | Why call ye me,_ Lord, Lord_, and do not the things which I say? |
11615 | Why did not the Greeks and Romans abound in auxiliary words as much as we? |
11615 | Why do lexicographers spell_ thinnish_ and_ mannish_ with two Ens, and_ dimish_ and_ ramish_ with one Em, each? |
11615 | Why do you keep_ teasing_ me? |
11615 | Why do you plead so much for it? 11615 Why does_ began_ change its ending; as, I began, Thou beganest?" |
11615 | Why dost thou then suggest to me distrust, Knowing who I am, as I know who thou art? |
11615 | Why is_ our language less refined than_ the French_? |
11615 | Why should we doubt of that, whereof our sense Finds demonstration from experience? 11615 Why so sagacious in your guesses? |
11615 | Why so sagacious in your guesses? 11615 Why then cite thou a Scripture which is so plain and clear for it?" |
11615 | Why_ satst_ thou like an enemy in wait? |
11615 | Will Henry call on me, while he shall be journeying south? |
11615 | Will John return to- morrow? |
11615 | Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? 11615 Will any able writer authorise other men to revise his works?" |
11615 | Will he esteem thy riches? 11615 Will he thence dare to say the apostle held another Christ than he that died?" |
11615 | Will it be urged, that the four gospels are as old_ as tradition, and even_ older? |
11615 | Will it not be receiv''d that they have done''t? 11615 Will martial flames forever fire thy mind, And never, never be to Heaven resign''d?" |
11615 | Will martial flames forever fire thy mind, And_ wilt thou_ never be to Heaven resign''d? |
11615 | Will not a look of disdain cast upon you, throw you into a foment? |
11615 | Will you let me alone, or no? |
11615 | Wilt thou condemn him that is_ most just_? |
11615 | Without you, what were man? 11615 Would it not be making the students judges of the professors?" |
11615 | Would you_ have_ them_ let go_ then? 11615 You inquire,''What is number?'' |
11615 | Young stranger, whither wand''rest thou? |
11615 | _ Are they_ Israelites? 11615 _ Can not I_ do with you as this potter?" |
11615 | _ Can_ there_ need to_ be argument to prove so plain a point? |
11615 | _ Canst thou thunder_ with a voice like him? |
11615 | _ Dare_ I_ to_ leave of humble prose the shore? |
11615 | _ Did_ he_ love_? |
11615 | _ Do_ I not yet_ grieve_? |
11615 | _ Do_ you_ dare to prosecute_ such a creature as Vaughan? |
11615 | _ Hath the Lord said it? 11615 _ Is_ the gospel or glad tidings of this salvation brought nigh unto all?" |
11615 | _ Know ye not_ that a little leaven_ leaveneth_ the whole lump? |
11615 | _ Needst_ thou--_need_ any one on earth-- despair? |
11615 | _ Oh me!_ all the horse have got over the river, what shall we do? |
11615 | _ Q._ What do you mean by_ Accent_? 11615 _ Q._ What is a tripthong? |
11615 | _ Q._ What is the_ Proportion_ between a long and a short Syllable? 11615 _ Return? |
11615 | _ Think ye_ that we excuse ourselves? |
11615 | _ Was_ not Demosthenes''s style, and his master Plato''s, perfectly Attic; and yet none more lofty? |
11615 | _ What!_ are you so ambitious of a man''s good word, who perhaps in an hour''s time shall curse himself to the pit of hell? |
11615 | _ What!_ know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God? |
11615 | _ What_ advantageth it me? |
11615 | _ What_ is_ truth_? |
11615 | _ What_ were we? |
11615 | _ Which_ of the prophets have not your fathers persecuted? |
11615 | _ Who_ art_ thou_? |
11615 | _ Who_ do men say that I, the Son of man, am? |
11615 | _ Who_ taught that heav''n- directed spire to rise? 11615 _ Who_ touched me? |
11615 | _ William_ is a noun.--why? 11615 _ Would_ its compiler_ dare to affront_ the Deity?" |
11615 | _Is this| a Fast,| to keep The lard|-er lean And clean From fat| of neats| and sheep? |
11615 | _--Your_ fathers_, where are they? |
11615 | and why not also of understanding and explaining? |
11615 | & c._? |
11615 | ''Burns he? |
11615 | ''Do you ride to town to- day?'' |
11615 | ''Do you think, sir, I may venture to alter it? |
11615 | ''Hast thou, spirit, perform''d_ to point_ the tempest?'' |
11615 | ''He hath not told his thought to the king?'' |
11615 | ''He hath not told his thought to the king?'' |
11615 | ''Is it possible he should know what he is, and be_ that_ he is?'' |
11615 | ''Oh? |
11615 | ''Sir,''asks the boy,''does not_ to run_ imply action, for it always makes me perspire?''" |
11615 | ''Tis the land| of the East-|''t is the clime| of the Sun-- Can he smile| on such deeds| as his chil|-dren have done? |
11615 | ''Well,''replies the merchant, and are not you afraid of being drowned too?''" |
11615 | ''Well,''replies the merchant,''and are not you afraid of being drowned too?''" |
11615 | ''What kind of stone?'' |
11615 | ''What kind of way?'' |
11615 | ''What_ has become_ of national liberty?'' |
11615 | ''Wheat sells well,''sells_ what_? |
11615 | ( could sleep do more?) |
11615 | );_ Interrogation_(? |
11615 | --"''Pat, how did you carry that quarter of beef?'' |
11615 | --"Am I not an apostle?" |
11615 | --"As 2_ is_ to 4, so_ is_ 6 to 12;"or,"As two_ are_ to four, so_ are_ six to twelve?" |
11615 | --"Do you say so,_ and_ can you prove it?" |
11615 | --"How many[_ kinds of_] substantives are there? |
11615 | --"Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods?" |
11615 | --"Seven times three_ make_, or_ makes_, twenty- one?" |
11615 | --"Three quarters of the men were discharged; and three quarters of the money_ was_, or_ were_, sent back?" |
11615 | --"Three times four_ is_, or_ are_, twelve?" |
11615 | --"Three times his age_ do_ not, or_ does_ not, equal mine?" |
11615 | --"Three times naught_ is_, or_ are_, naught?" |
11615 | --"Three times one_ is_, or_ are_, three?" |
11615 | --"Three times the quantity_ is_ not, or_ are_ not, sufficient?" |
11615 | --"Thrice one_ is_ or_ are_, three?" |
11615 | --"Thrice three_ is_, or_ are_, nine?" |
11615 | --"Twice two_ is_ four,"or,"Twice two_ are_ four?" |
11615 | --"Two times one_ is_ two,"or,"Two times one_ are_ two?" |
11615 | --"What has she done,_ except rock_ herself?" |
11615 | --"What_ is_ become of decency and virtue?" |
11615 | --"Where is he_ at? |
11615 | --"_Did_ she not_ die_?" |
11615 | --"_Do you not know_ that a little leaven_ leavens_ the whole lump?" |
11615 | --"_Do you think_ that we excuse ourselves?" |
11615 | --"_So justly as was never_,"is a positive degree that is not imaginable; and what is this but an absurdity? |
11615 | --"_Which_ man of you all?" |
11615 | --"_Who_ did you say_ it_ was?" |
11615 | --"_Whom_ did you suppose me to be?" |
11615 | --''Shall I come to you with a rod,_ or_ in love?'' |
11615 | --''What need was_ there_ of it?''" |
11615 | -----------------------------"Wilt thou fly With laughing Autumn to_ the Atlantic isles_, And range with him th''_ Hesperian field_?" |
11615 | --I know_ whom_? |
11615 | --SHAK:_ ib._"For what else is a redhot iron than fire? |
11615 | --_ Coar cor._"We say,''_ If it rain,''''Suppose it rain?'' |
11615 | --_ Lempriere''s Dict._"For who could be so hard- hearted to be severe?" |
11615 | --_Abbott cor._"But if you ca n''t help it,_ whom_ do you complain of?" |
11615 | --_Addison cor._"How_ do_ this man''s definitions stand affected?" |
11615 | --_Allen cor._"Shall not the_ Judge_ of all the earth do right?" |
11615 | --_Bacon cor._"Did ever man struggle more earnestly in a cause_ in which_ both his honour and_ his_ life_ were_ concerned?" |
11615 | --_Balbi cor._"Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the_ Father_ of spirits, and live?" |
11615 | --_Barclay cor._"How many of your own church members were never heard_ to_ pray?" |
11615 | --_Barclay cor._"Will he thence dare to say, the apostle held_ an other_ Christ than_ him_ that died?" |
11615 | --_Barnes cor._"And canst thou expect to behold the resplendent glow of the Creator? |
11615 | --_Barrett cor._"Where else can he go?" |
11615 | --_Barrett cor._"Will not John return to- morrow?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Are not health and strength of body desirable for their own_ sake_?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Art thou the man of God, that_ came_ from Judah?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"But_ who_ say ye that I am?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Did he not fear the Lord, and_ beseech_ the Lord, and_ did not_ the Lord_ repent_ of the evil which he had pronounced?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"If David then_ calleth_( or_ calls_) him Lord, how is he his son?" |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"What is vice,_ or_ wickedness? |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Who is my mother? |
11615 | --_Bible cor._"Why do you plead so much for it? |
11615 | --_Blair and L. Murray cor._"_ Jul._ Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? |
11615 | --_Blair cor._"What is''t to thee, if he_ neglect_ thy urn, Or without spices_ let_ thy body burn?" |
11615 | --_Blair cor._"What_ has_ become of so many productions?" |
11615 | --_Blair cor._"_ Dares_ he assume the name of a popular magistrate?" |
11615 | --_Brevard''s Digest._"Now what is become of thy former wit and humour?" |
11615 | --_Brownlee cor._"And is there a heart of parent or of child, that does not beat and burn within_ him_?" |
11615 | --_Buchanan cor._"Is_ what_ ever used as three kinds of_ pronoun_? |
11615 | --_Bucke cor._"Prepositions, you recollect, connect words,_ and so do_ conjunctions: how, then, can you tell_ a conjunction_ from_ a preposition_?" |
11615 | --_Bucke cor._"What sort of_ noun_ is_ man_? |
11615 | --_Bullions cor._"How do you know that love is_ of_ the first person? |
11615 | --_Bullions cor._"Why labours reason? |
11615 | --_Bullions, E. Gram._"Why labours reason? |
11615 | --_Burgh cor._"And who was Enoch''s Saviour, and the_ prophets''_?" |
11615 | --_Bush cor._"What further need was there_ that_ an other priest_ should rise_?" |
11615 | --_Byron cor._"Or saith he it altogether for our_ sake_?" |
11615 | --_Campbell cor._"Art thou so bare, and full of wretchedness, And_ fearst_ to die? |
11615 | --_Campbell cor._"Where lies the fault, that boys of eight or ten years_ of age_ are with great difficulty made to understand any of its principles?" |
11615 | --_Churchill cor._"But may it not be retorted, that_ this gratification itself_, is that which excites our resentment?" |
11615 | --_Clark cor._"Without you, what were man? |
11615 | --_Cobbeti cor._"What_ thanks_ have ye? |
11615 | --_Collier cor._"Whence_ come_ all the powers and prerogatives of rational beings?" |
11615 | --_Collier cor._"_ Whom_ was it from? |
11615 | --_Day cor._"Or, if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?" |
11615 | --_Day cor._"What kind of_ jessamine_? |
11615 | --_Dickens cor._"Dear gentle youth, is''t none but_ thou_?" |
11615 | --_Dorset cor._"Who do they say it is?" |
11615 | --_Drummond cor._"Who_ dares_, at the present day, avow himself equal to the task?" |
11615 | --_Editor of Waller cor._"Did they ever bear a testimony against_ the_ writing_ of_ books?" |
11615 | --_Farnum cor._"Can you tell me_ why_ his father_ made_ that remark?" |
11615 | --_Felton cor._"O who of man the story will unfold?" |
11615 | --_Felton cor._"Which of the two brothers_ is a graduate_?" |
11615 | --_Foster cor._"_ Has_ the legislature power to prohibit assemblies?" |
11615 | --_Gardiner cor._"_ Dares_ he deny_ that_ there are some of his fraternity guilty?" |
11615 | --_Gay cor._"Permit that I share in thy wo, The privilege_ canst thou_ refuse?" |
11615 | --_Goldsmith cor._"Are you not ashamed to have no other thoughts than_ those_ of amassing wealth, and of acquiring glory, credit, and dignities?" |
11615 | --_Gould cor._"Was any person_ present besides_ the mercer? |
11615 | --_Gratton cor._"And what can be better than_ he_ that made it?" |
11615 | --_Greenleaf cor._"What is language? |
11615 | --_Hall and Baker cor._"The following is a note of Interrogation, or_ of a_ question:(?)."--_Inf. |
11615 | --_Hallock cor._"How_ are_ the agent of a passive and the object of an active verb often left?" |
11615 | --_Hallock cor._"Those adverbs which answer to the question_ where_? |
11615 | --_Hart cor._"How is Rule III violated?" |
11615 | --_Hart''s E. Gram._, p. 40, Why say,"_ distinction_;"the numbers, or_ distinctions_, being two? |
11615 | --_Hiley cor._"What sort of charm do they possess?" |
11615 | --_Holmes''s Rhetoric?_, Part II, p. 14. |
11615 | --_Ib._ Better:"Who can act alone, either in opposition, or in the ministry?" |
11615 | --_Ib._ But how can any idiom be violated by a mode of parsing, which merely expounds its_ true meaning_? |
11615 | --_Ib._"Couldest not thou write without blotting thy book?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Do we sound_ gases_ and_ gaseous_ like_ cases_ and_ caseous?_ No: they are more like_ glasses_ and_ osseous_."--_G. |
11615 | --_Ib._"Doth not your cousin intend to visit you?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Of whom_ speaketh_ the prophet this?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"The child is lost; and me, whither shall I go?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"The child is lost; and_ I_, whither shall I go?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Thinkest thou not it will rain to- day?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it James, or thou, that didst let him in?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it James, or thou, that_ let_ him in?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it thou that spreadest the hay?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Was it thou that_ spread_ the hay?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"Were Cain and Abel''s occupation the same?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"What are the_ Jupiters_ and_ Junos_ of the heathens to such a God?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"What was Simon''s and Andrew''s employment?" |
11615 | --_Ib._"_ Understandest thou_ what thou readest?" |
11615 | --_Ib._, xvi, 15.--"Whom think ye that I am? |
11615 | --_Id., ib._"This priest has no pride in him?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And dost thou open thine eyes upon such_ a_ one, and_ bring_ me into judgement with thee?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And must I ravel out my_ weaved- up_ follies?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And the governor asked him, saying, Art thou the_ king_ of the Jews?" |
11615 | --_Id._"And when I say,''_ Two men walk_,''is it not equally apparent, that_ walk_ is plural because it_ agrees with men_?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Are not these schools of the highest importance? |
11615 | --_Id._"Are some verbs used both transitively and intransitively?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Are these the houses you were speaking of? |
11615 | --_Id._"But if I say,''Will_ a_ man be able to carry this burden?'' |
11615 | --_Id._"But what_ say_ the Scriptures as to respect of persons among Christians?" |
11615 | --_Id._"But_ will_ our sage writers on law forever think by tradition?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Canst thou by searching find out God? |
11615 | --_Id._"Do we sound gasses and_ gasseous_ like_ cases_ and_ caseous_? |
11615 | --_Id._"Do you remember_ to have spoken_ on this subject in school?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Does the present accident hinder_ you from_ being honest and brave?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Doth not the Scripture, which can not lie, give_ some_ of the saints this testimony?" |
11615 | --_Id._"For is not this, to set nature_ at_ work?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Have the_ greatest_ men always been the most popular? |
11615 | --_Id._"How can it choose but wither in a long and sharp winter?" |
11615 | --_Id._"How do you parse_ letter_ in the sentence,''James writes a letter?'' |
11615 | --_Id._"How long_ were_ you going? |
11615 | --_Id._"How many cases? |
11615 | --_Id._"How_ many_ are seven times nine?" |
11615 | --_Id._"I will say unto God my Rock, Why hast thou forgotten me?" |
11615 | --_Id._"I will say unto God my_ rock_, Why hast thou forgotten me?" |
11615 | --_Id._"If he_ dares_ not say they are, as I know he_ dares_ not, how must I then distinguish?" |
11615 | --_Id._"If_ mea_, which means_ my_, is an adjective in Latin, why may not_ my_ be so called in English? |
11615 | --_Id._"Is it such a fast that I have chosen, that a man should afflict his soul for a day, and bow down his head like a bulrush?" |
11615 | --_Id._"May not four feet be as_ poetic_ as five; or fifteen feet as_ poetic_ as fifty?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Now who would dote upon things_ hurried_ down the stream thus fast?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Now, if it be an evil, to do any thing out of strife; then such things_ as_ are seen so to be done, are they not to be avoided and forsaken?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Shall the intellect alone feel no pleasures in its energy, when we allow_ pleasures_ to the grossest energies of appetite and sense?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Should we render service equally to a friend,_ a_ neighbour, and an enemy?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Suits my complexion--_hey_, gal? |
11615 | --_Id._"Thus the declarative mood[ i.e., the indicative mood] may be used in asking a question: as,''_ What_ man_ is_ frail?''" |
11615 | --_Id._"To reason how can we be said to rise? |
11615 | --_Id._"What can prevent this_ republic_ from soon raising a literary standard?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What connection has motive, wish, or supposition, with the the term_ subjunctive_?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What is Brown''s Rule in relation to this matter?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What is Rule III?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What is emphasis? |
11615 | --_Id._"What kind of article, then, shall we call_ the_?" |
11615 | --_Id._"What nouns are_ of the_ masculine gender? |
11615 | --_Id._"What say you to such as these? |
11615 | --_Id._"What shall we say of_ noctambuloes?_ It is the regular English plural."--_G. |
11615 | --_Id._"What then may AND be called? |
11615 | --_Id._"What was_ Simon_ and Andrew''s employment?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Who can tell us who they are?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Who gave you that book, which you prize so much?" |
11615 | --_Id._"Whose prerogative is it? |
11615 | --_Id._"Why are you_ vexed_, Lady? |
11615 | --_Id._"Why then_ citest_ thou a scripture which is so plain and clear for it?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Did_ they_ learn_ their pieces perfectly?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ I_ meeting a friend the other day, he said to me,''Where are you going?''" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Mr._ Smith,_ you_ say, on page 11th,''_ The_ objective case denotes the object''"--_Id._"Gentlemen, will you always speak as you mean?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Of_ what number is_ pens_? |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Seems?_ madam; nay, it is: I know not_ seems_-- For I have that within which passes show."--_Hamlet_. |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Who_ think ye that I am? |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why are we so often_ frigid and unpersuasive in public discourse?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why does_ our teacher_ detain_ us so long?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why were_ the former days better than these?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Why_ need you be anxious about this event?" |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Yet here, Laertes? |
11615 | --_Id._"_ Your_ fathers, where are they? |
11615 | --_Infant School Gram._, p. v."Do not they say, every true believer has the Spirit of God in them?" |
11615 | --_Ingersoll cor._"Which tense is formed_ from_ the_ present_, or root of the verb?" |
11615 | --_Ingersoll cor._"_ Dost_ thou_ learn_ thy lesson?" |
11615 | --_Jamieson cor._"What is the name of the river on which London stands? |
11615 | --_Jaudon cor._"Does the conjunction_ ever_ join words together? |
11615 | --_Job._"_ What_ have I offended thee?" |
11615 | --_John Flint cor._"_ Of_ what number is_ boy_? |
11615 | --_Josephus cor._"What is quantity, as it respects syllables or words? |
11615 | --_Kames cor._"Or, if he was,_ were_ there no spiritual men then?" |
11615 | --_Kirkham cor._"How_ are_ vocal and written language understood?" |
11615 | --_Kirkham cor._"What are verbs? |
11615 | --_L''Estrange cor._"How comes this to be never heard of, nor in the least questioned, whether the Law was undoubtedly of Moses''s writing or_ not_?" |
11615 | --_Lempriere cor._"Good_ Master_, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?" |
11615 | --_Lempriere''s Dict., n. Chilo._"Good master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?" |
11615 | --_Lennie and Bullions cor._"Who calls the council, states the certain day, Who forms the phalanx, and who points the way?" |
11615 | --_Lennie cor._"When the perfect participle of an active- intransitive verb is annexed to the neuter verb_ to be_, what does the combination form?" |
11615 | --_Lieber cor._"Would it not be_ to make_ the students judges of the professors?" |
11615 | --_Locke cor._"What do you call it? |
11615 | --_Locke cor._"Will not a look of disdain cast upon you throw you into a_ ferment_?" |
11615 | --_Lowth cor._"Which road_ dost_ thou take here?" |
11615 | --_Mack cor._"What sort of thing is it?" |
11615 | --_Mathews cor._"Why should not we their ancient rites restore, And be what Rome or Athens_ was_ before?" |
11615 | --_Merchant cor._"Or what man is there of you,_ who_, if his son ask bread, will give him a stone?" |
11615 | --_Merchant cor._"Shalt thou build me_ a_ house to dwell in?" |
11615 | --_Milton cor._"What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus_ roamst_ the camp alone?" |
11615 | --_Milton cor._"Who finds the partridge in the puttock''s nest, But may imagine how the bird was_ killed?_"--_Shak. |
11615 | --_Milton._"_ Wherein_ have you been galled by the king?" |
11615 | --_New Gram._, p. 337, Why not? |
11615 | --_Nutting cor._"Why did not the Greeks and Romans abound in auxiliary words as much as we_ do_?" |
11615 | --_Peirce cor._"Am I_ to be_ instructed?" |
11615 | --_Peirce cor._"An Interrogative Pronoun is one that is used in asking a question; as,''_ Who_ is he? |
11615 | --_Peirce cor._"Why do you tolerate your own inconsistency, by calling it the present tense?" |
11615 | --_Pierpont cor._"_ Is then_ one chaste, one last embrace_ denied_? |
11615 | --_Priestley cor._"Who is there? |
11615 | --_Rev._, xii, 5.--"Why have ye done this, and saved the_ men- children_ alive?" |
11615 | --_Rowe cor._"Who knows not how the trembling judge beheld The peaceful court with_ arm~ ed_ legions fill''d?" |
11615 | --_Rush cor._"Is not the bare fact,_ that_ God_ is_ the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon?" |
11615 | --_Russell cor._"Is that ornament in good taste?" |
11615 | --_Shak._"Can hearts, not free, be try''d whether they serve Willing or no, who will but what they must?" |
11615 | --_Sheridan cor._"_ Are you not ashamed_ to affirm that the best works of the Spirit of Christ in his saints are as filthy rags?" |
11615 | --_Sir W. Scott, L. L._"_ Seems he not_, Malise, like a ghost?" |
11615 | --_Sketch cor._"_ Was_ it I or he,_ that_ you requested to go?" |
11615 | --_Smart cor._"_ Do_ WILL and GO express but_ one_ action?" |
11615 | --_Smith cor._"Have they ascertained who gave the information?" |
11615 | --_Stuart cor._"If the crew rail at the master of the vessel,_ whom_ will they mind?" |
11615 | --_Swift cor._"Who bade the mud from Dives''wheel_ Bedash_ the rags of Lazarus? |
11615 | --_Tooke''s Annotator cor._"I, nor your plan, nor book condemn; But why your name? |
11615 | --_Volney cor._"What_ has_ become of those ages of abundance and of life?" |
11615 | --_Walker cor._"Wilt thou kill me, as thou_ didst_ the Egyptian yesterday?" |
11615 | --_Webster cor._"Are we to welcome the loathsome harlot, and introduce_ her_ to our children?" |
11615 | --_Webster cor._"_ Of_ what use can these words be, till their meaning is known?" |
11615 | --_Webster''s Dict._"What, then, was the moral worth of these renouned leaders?" |
11615 | --_Webster''s Dict._,"I only mean to suggest a doubt, whether nature has enlisted herself as a Cis or Trans- Atlantic partisan?" |
11615 | --_Who_ runs? |
11615 | --_Wilson cor._"What should we say of such_ a_ one? |
11615 | --he asked,''Did I say_ penetrate_, sir, when I preached, it?'' |
11615 | --or even the possessive; as,"Whose sobs do I hear? |
11615 | --or,"Proper_ seasons for_ retirement should be allotted?" |
11615 | --or,"Seasons_ proper for_ retirement should be alloted?" |
11615 | 10 When an infinitive phrase is made the subject of a verb, do the words remain adjuncts, or are they abstract? |
11615 | 10.--to Rule 10th? |
11615 | 11.--to Rule 11th? |
11615 | 12.--to Rule 12th? |
11615 | 12th of the first chapter? |
11615 | 13.--to Rule 13th? |
11615 | 14.--to Rule 14th? |
11615 | 15.--to Rule 15th? |
11615 | 16.--to Rule 16th? |
11615 | 16th, of the plan of mixing syntax with etymology? |
11615 | 17.--to Rule 17th? |
11615 | 2.--to Rule 2d? |
11615 | 22, at p. 555;) as,"For is there aught in sleep can charm the wise?" |
11615 | 25? |
11615 | 3.--In interrogative sentences, the terms are usually transposed,[359] or both are placed after the verb; as,"Am_ I_ a_ Jew_?" |
11615 | 3.--to Rule 3d? |
11615 | 31st on Rule 4th? |
11615 | 39. Who invented the doctrine, that a participle and its adjuncts may be used as"_ one name_"and in that capacity govern the possessive? |
11615 | 4.--In negative questions, the adverb_ not_ is sometimes placed before the nominative, and sometimes after it: as,"Told_ not I_ thee?" |
11615 | 4.--to Rule 4th? |
11615 | 5.--Generic names, even when construed as masculine or feminine, often virtually include both sexes; as,"Hast thou given_ the horse_ strength? |
11615 | 5.--to Rule 5th? |
11615 | 57. Who says,"the verb agrees with_ the last nominative_?" |
11615 | 6,) that,''Language is established by reason, antiquity, authority, and custom?'' |
11615 | 6.--to Rule 6th? |
11615 | 7.--to Rule 7th? |
11615 | 7th of the first chapter? |
11615 | 8.--to Rule 8th? |
11615 | 9.--to Rule 9th? |
11615 | : Can you tell me the reason of his father''s making that remark?" |
11615 | : What is the reason of our_ teacher''s_ detaining us so long?" |
11615 | A Noun or a Pronoun is put absolute in the nominative, when its case depends on no other word: as,_"He failing, who shall meet success? |
11615 | A cardinal number answers to the question,"_ How many_?" |
11615 | A compiler of grammar first observes these habits, and then makes his rules: but if a person is himself familiar with the habits, why study the rules? |
11615 | A worse_ what_? |
11615 | ANALYSIS.--What is the general sense of this passage? |
11615 | According to Allen''s rule, this question is ambiguous; but the learned author explains it in Latin thus:"Placet igitur eos_ dimitti_? |
11615 | According to Churchill,"To use_ ought_ or_ cause_ in this manner, is a Scotticism:[ as,]''Wo n''t you_ cause_ them_ remove_ the hares?'' |
11615 | According to Johnson and Tooke, what is_ worth_, in such phrases as,"Wo_ worth_ the day?" |
11615 | According to this, must we not suppose verbs to be often transitive, when_ not made so_ by the author''s_ definition_? |
11615 | Adverbs of decree are those which answer to the question,_ How much? |
11615 | Adverbs of degree are those which answer to the question,_ How much? |
11615 | Adverbs of manner are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded. |
11615 | Adverbs of manner are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded. |
11615 | Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | Adverbs of_ degree_ are those which answer to the question,_ How much? |
11615 | Adverbs of_ manner_ are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded. |
11615 | Adverbs of_ place_ are those which answer to the question,_ Where? |
11615 | After making this application of the name_ modes_, was it not improper for the learned author to call the moods also"_ modes_?" |
11615 | After the antecedent_ who_; as,"Who that is a sincere friend to it, can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?" |
11615 | After verbs of_ giving, paying_, and the like, what ellipsis is apt to occur? |
11615 | After what manner should pauses be made? |
11615 | Again, Barnard approves of the question,"What do you think of my_ horse''s running to- day_?" |
11615 | Again, what sense is there in making the"liberty"of publishing one''s"private observations"to depend on the presumed absence of rivals? |
11615 | Again, with what truth can it be said, that nouns have_ no cases_ in English? |
11615 | Again:"_ Who_ betrayed_ her_ companion? |
11615 | All this is regular, with the exception of one foot; but who can make any thing but_ prose_ of the following? |
11615 | Am I not related, in this view, to the very earth itself?--_to_ the distant sun, from whose beams I derive vigour?" |
11615 | An ordinal number answers to the question,"_ Which one_?" |
11615 | An''twas yesterday? |
11615 | An_ interrogative pronoun_ is a pronoun with which a question is asked; as,"_ Who_ touched my clothes?" |
11615 | And again, Are they all wrong? |
11615 | And again, is not a simplification of the verb as necessary and proper in the familiar use of the second person singular, as in that of the third? |
11615 | And also this:"Why are we brought into the world_ less perfect_ in respect to our nature?" |
11615 | And even here an auxiliary is usually preferred in questions and negations; as,"_ Do_ you love?" |
11615 | And even if they were so, and the difference were nothing, would it not be better to adhere, where we can, to the analogy of General Grammar? |
11615 | And how can the_ first person_ be"the_ person_ WHO_ speaks_,"when every word of this phrase is of the_ third_ person? |
11615 | And how can"_ largest_"be wrong, if"_ first_"is right? |
11615 | And how do feelings differ from thoughts? |
11615 | And how does_ the_ commonly limit the sense? |
11615 | And how is it in the Latin phrases,"_ Dulcior melle_, sweeter than honey,"--"_Prà ¦ stantior auro_, better than gold?" |
11615 | And if infinitives and other mere_ adjuncts_ may be the objects which make verbs transitive, how shall a transitive verb be known? |
11615 | And if so, have we not reason to conclude that the adoption of participles in such instances is erroneous and ungrammatical? |
11615 | And if so, what is that rule? |
11615 | And if some would be found less so than others, may there not be an insufficiency in the very nature of them all? |
11615 | And if such they had, what Scripture taught them? |
11615 | And if we depart from the common scheme, where shall we stop? |
11615 | And if we follow not ours, when or how shall the English scholar ever know why we spell as we do? |
11615 | And if_ to_, without government, is not an_ adverb_, what is? |
11615 | And if_"see"_ is here transitive, would not other forms, such as_ are told, have been told_, or_ are aware_, be just as much so, if put in its place? |
11615 | And is it arrogant to say there is much? |
11615 | And is it not plain, that the old verb"THE,"as used by More, is from Theon,_ to thrive_, rather than from Thicgan,_ to take_? |
11615 | And is not this the situation of every transitive participle that is made either the_ subject_ or the_ object_ of a verb? |
11615 | And must| it shine| to light| a world| of war|-fare and| of tears? |
11615 | And since Murray''s phrases are both entirely too long for common use, what better name can be given them than this very simple one,_ the Curves_? |
11615 | And the expression in English should rather have been,"Lovest thou me more than_ do_ these?" |
11615 | And the swift| charger sweep, In full| career, Trampling thy| place of sleep-- Why cam''st| thou here? |
11615 | And what advantage has it, even where it is least objectionable? |
11615 | And what becomes of syllables that end with vowels or liquids and are not accented? |
11615 | And what can be made of rules and examples like the following? |
11615 | And what do his twenty pages amount to? |
11615 | And what else can be meant by"_ the division of thought_,"than our notion of objects, as existing severally, or as being distinguishable into parts? |
11615 | And what is one singular irregular preterit, compared with all the verbs in the language? |
11615 | And what then? |
11615 | And what would this mean? |
11615 | And where shall we find a more blamable one than this? |
11615 | And which is that? |
11615 | And who does not know, that to call the adjuncts of any thing"an_ essential part_ of it,"is a flat absurdity? |
11615 | And who will deny that every degree of improvement in literary taste tends to brighten and embellish the whole intellectual nature? |
11615 | And who will undertake such a task but he that is personally interested? |
11615 | And who, but some sciolist in grammar, would, in all such instances, prefer the passive voice? |
11615 | And why not? |
11615 | And yet are there some prepositions which govern nothing, precede nothing? |
11615 | And yet what truth is there in the passage? |
11615 | And, again,"a worse"_ than_ what? |
11615 | And, if so, what is a"silent letter?" |
11615 | And, indeed, why should we write,"I_ can not_ go, Thou_ canst not_ go, He_ can not_ go?" |
11615 | And, of the quackery which is now so prevalent, what can be a more natural effect, than a very general contempt for the study of grammar? |
11615 | And, why should we_ wish_ to write bad grammar, if we can express our meaning in good grammar?" |
11615 | And, with such an interpretation, what must be the meaning of_ more bookish_ or_ most foolish_? |
11615 | Are Letters Sounds? |
11615 | Are all interjections to be parsed as being put absolute? |
11615 | Are all literary works divided exactly in this way? |
11615 | Are all long syllables equally long, and all short ones equally short? |
11615 | Are all the conjunctive adverbs included in the first four classes? |
11615 | Are authors apt to undervalue their own performances? |
11615 | Are not these expressions much better English than the foregoing quotations? |
11615 | Are not"_ three or more persons_"here compared by"the comparative"_ wiser_? |
11615 | Are proper triphthongs numerous in our language? |
11615 | Are rules of government to be applied to the governing words, or to the governed? |
11615 | Are sentences often elliptical? |
11615 | Are such expressions as,"the_ then_ ministry,""the_ above_ discourse,"good English, or bad-- well authorized, or not? |
11615 | Are such pauses essential to verse? |
11615 | Are the countless examples of this exception truly elliptical? |
11615 | Are the different forms of false construction as numerous as these notes? |
11615 | Are the distinctions of voice and of time as much regarded in participial nouns as in participles? |
11615 | Are the interrogative pronouns declined like the simple relatives? |
11615 | Are the just powers of the letters in any degree variable? |
11615 | Are the kinds of composite verse numerous? |
11615 | Are the methods of science to be accounted mere hinderances to instruction? |
11615 | Are the person, number, and gender of a pronoun always determined by an antecedent? |
11615 | Are the prepositions divided into classes? |
11615 | Are the principles or doctrines which are applied in these different exercises usually the same, or are they different? |
11615 | Are the sounds of a language fewer than its words? |
11615 | Are the words to be divided thus,_ ri- ver, fe- ver_? |
11615 | Are there any exceptions or objections to the old rule,"Active verbs govern the objective case?" |
11615 | Are there any exceptions to this rule? |
11615 | Are there any of our passive verbs that can properly govern the objective case? |
11615 | Are there any verbs that sometimes connect like cases, and sometimes govern the objective? |
11615 | Are there different methods of analysis, which may be useful? |
11615 | Are there exceptions in reference to all the parts of speech, or to how many of the ten? |
11615 | Are there exceptions to all the rules, or to how many? |
11615 | Are these kinds to be kept separate? |
11615 | Are these the Gods they worship? |
11615 | Are they Hebrews? |
11615 | Are they Israelites? |
11615 | Are they friends to learning? |
11615 | Are they ministers of Christ? |
11615 | Are they not loved? |
11615 | Are they the seed of Abraham? |
11615 | Are verbs often connected without agreeing in mood, tense, and form? |
11615 | Are words in apposition always supposed to be in the same case? |
11615 | Are words in apposition always to be parsed separately? |
11615 | Are_ an_ and_ a_ different articles, or the same? |
11615 | Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague? |
11615 | As?_ 21. |
11615 | Author make new words when he pleases? |
11615 | Author make new words when he pleases? |
11615 | Ay, truly; but must we not also, in the latter case, use_ and_, and not_ with_? |
11615 | B. Peirce about the name and place of the interjection? |
11615 | B. Peirce cor._"It is_ the_ choosing_ of_ such letters to compose words,"& c.--_Id._"What is parsing? |
11615 | B. Peirce''s Grammar, with reference to his manner of parsing words after_ than_ or_ as_? |
11615 | B. cor._"Thy nature, Immortality, who_ knows_?" |
11615 | B.--is not the infinitive in Latin_ the same_ as in_ the English?_ Thus, I desire_ to teach Latin_--Ego Cupio_ docere_. |
11615 | Bat what says the Bible? |
11615 | Besides the rules and their examples, what sorts of matters are introduced into these chapters? |
11615 | Better English:"What means this noise_ with which the city rings_?" |
11615 | Better:"What means this restless stir,_ this_ commotion of mind?" |
11615 | Between what other related terms can_ as_ be employed? |
11615 | Between what parts of speech, as terms of the relation, can a preposition be used? |
11615 | Blair cor._"Do we for this the gods and conscience brave, That one may rule and_ all_ the rest_ enslave_?" |
11615 | Blair cor._"The question might be put, What more does he than mean?" |
11615 | Bullions cor._"What striking lesson_ is taught_ by the tenor of this history?" |
11615 | But after all, what does it mean? |
11615 | But are not many teachers too careless here? |
11615 | But are not"TRUTH, NATURE, and REALITY,"worthy to be preferred to any instructions that contradict them? |
11615 | But are there not_ other_ faults in the version? |
11615 | But can a boy learn by such means what it is,_ to speak and write grammatically_? |
11615 | But can they give a_ reason_ for their preference? |
11615 | But can we change this well known name? |
11615 | But did not the wit consist in adroitly excusing himself, by an illusory comparison? |
11615 | But do not its"simplicity and facility"appear greatest to those who know least about it?--i.e., least of its grammar, and least of its history? |
11615 | But does the text specify a_ particular_"deeper well"or"clearer water?" |
11615 | But how can one indivisible word be consistently made two different parts of speech at once? |
11615 | But how can the metre which predominates by two to one, be called, in such a case, an occasional diversification of that which is less frequent? |
11615 | But how does_ an_ or_ a_ commonly limit the sense? |
11615 | But how far is analogy alone a justification? |
11615 | But how shall, or can, this readiness be acquired? |
11615 | But in what a posture does the grammarian place himself, who condemns, as_ bad English_, that phraseology which he constantly and purposely uses? |
11615 | But is it not a_ fact_, that such words as_ cuttest, stopping, rapid, rugged_, are_ trochees_, in verse? |
11615 | But is it not plain that_ heiress''s, abbess''s, peeress''s, countess''s_, and many other words of the same form, are as good English as_ witness''s_? |
11615 | But is it not preferable to the hyphened form, with three Ells, which has authority? |
11615 | But is it true, that,"We all know_ what light is_?" |
11615 | But is the fourth case of these authors_ the same_ as his? |
11615 | But is this all that Webster meant? |
11615 | But it is more dignified, and in general more graceful, to place the preposition before the pronoun; as,"_ To whom_ did he speak?" |
11615 | But let a scornful expression be addressed to a passionate man, will not the words"call internal feelings"into action? |
11615 | But of_ what_ ideas are the words of our language significant? |
11615 | But shall it be allowed, in the present state of things, to confound our conjugations and overturn our grammar? |
11615 | But still the definition would not be true, nor would it answer the question, What is a letter? |
11615 | But the reader may ask,"What have all these things to do with English Grammar?" |
11615 | But the true question is, would it be right to say,"He expressed the pleasure he had in the_ philosopher''s_ hearing_ him_?" |
11615 | But varied how? |
11615 | But what ambiguity of construction, or what diversity of interpretation, proceeding from the same hand, can these admissions be supposed to warrant? |
11615 | But what apology is this, for that authorship which has produced so many grammars without originality? |
11615 | But what do they mean by"_ their substantives_,"or"_ their nouns_?" |
11615 | But what does such a thinker know about correctness? |
11615 | But what etymology? |
11615 | But what has the doubling of_ c_ by_ k_, in our native monosyllables and their derivatives, to do with all these words of foreign origin? |
11615 | But what have these to do with the monstrous absurdity of supposing objective adjuncts to be"parts of the actual nominative?" |
11615 | But what if all these authors do prefer,"_ but him_,"and"_ save him_,"where ten times as many would say,"_ but he_,""_ save he_?" |
11615 | But what is any opinion worth, if further knowledge of facts can confute it? |
11615 | But what is it? |
11615 | But what is the familiar form of expression for the texts cited before? |
11615 | But what property has_ unity_ in common with_ plurality_, on which a definition of_ number_ may be founded? |
11615 | But when or where, since the building of Babel, has this ever happened? |
11615 | But when, or where? |
11615 | But when? |
11615 | But who can hope to prevail on nations to change their practice, and make all their old books useless? |
11615 | But who can not perceive, that without the colon, the semicolon becomes an absurdity? |
11615 | But who shall determine whether the doctrines contained in any given treatise are, or are not, based upon such authority? |
11615 | But who will suppose that_ foolish_ denotes but a slight degree of folly, or_ bookish_ but a slight fondness for books? |
11615 | But why is it, that so much of what is spoken or written, is spoken or written in vain? |
11615 | But why make the classes so numerous as four? |
11615 | But why should any principle of grammar be the less intelligible on account of the extent of its application? |
11615 | But why was this text admired? |
11615 | But"_ Shall_ I go?" |
11615 | But, if_ four_ be taken as only one thing, how can_ three_ multiply this one thing into_ twelve_? |
11615 | But, when this command was uttered to the dark waves of primeval chaos, it must have meant,"_ Do ye let light be there._"What else could it mean? |
11615 | But, without other exceptions, what shall be done with the following texts from Murray himself? |
11615 | But_ n_ too is a letter; and is_ n_ the first principle? |
11615 | By a repetition of the article before two or more adjectives, what other repetition is implied? |
11615 | By observing that it answers to the question,_ When? |
11615 | By what is the possessive case governed? |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"How many persons? |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"Is WILLIAM''S a proper or_ a_ common noun?" |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"Of whom hast thou been afraid, or_ whom hast thou_ feared?" |
11615 | C. Smith cor._"_ Of_ what gender, then, is_ man_, and why?" |
11615 | Can a collective noun, as such, take a plural adjective before it? |
11615 | Can a participle which is governed by a preposition, have a case after it which is governed by neither? |
11615 | Can a preposition ever govern any thing else than a noun or a pronoun? |
11615 | Can a preposition, in English, govern any other case than the objective? |
11615 | Can a pronoun agree with its antecedent in one sense and not in an other? |
11615 | Can a single foot be a line? |
11615 | Can a theory which turns topsyturvy the whole plan of syllabication, fail to affect"the_ natural quantities_ of syllables?" |
11615 | Can a uniform series of good grammars, Latin, Greek, English,& c., be produced by a mere revising of one defective book for each language? |
11615 | Can a verb or participle not transitive take any other case after it than that which precedes it? |
11615 | Can a zeugma of the verb be proved to be right, in spite of these authorities? |
11615 | Can all sentences be divided into clauses? |
11615 | Can an active- transitive verb govern any other case than the objective? |
11615 | Can an adjective ever be substituted for its kindred abstract noun? |
11615 | Can an adjective ever be used without relation to any noun, pronoun, or other subject? |
11615 | Can an adjective ever relate to any thing else than a noun or pronoun? |
11615 | Can an objective before the infinitive become"the subject of the affirmation?" |
11615 | Can any grammarian forget that, in speaking of brute animals, male or female, we commonly use_ which_, and never_ who_? |
11615 | Can any of the definitives which preclude_ an_ or_ a_, be used with the adjective_ one_? |
11615 | Can any thing but the governing of an objective noun or pronoun make an active verb transitive? |
11615 | Can any word have the secondary accent, and not the primary? |
11615 | Can any words agree, or disagree, except in something that belongs to each of them? |
11615 | Can articles ever be used when we mean to speak of a whole species? |
11615 | Can different antecedents connected by_ or_ be accurately represented by differing pronouns connected in the same way? |
11615 | Can he be a competent grammarian, who does not know the meaning of_ between_; or who, knowing it, misapplies so very plain a word? |
11615 | Can he conceive how the number_ five_ can be a_ unit_? |
11615 | Can infinitives, participles, phrases, sentences, and parts of sentences, be really"in the objective case?" |
11615 | Can it be anything else than their_ similarity_ in some common property or modification? |
11615 | Can it be right, to regard as hypermeter the long rhyming syllables of a line? |
11615 | Can it be shown, on good authority, that_ O_ in Latin may be followed by the nominative of the first person or the accusative of the second? |
11615 | Can it be, though, that you are not dead?" |
11615 | Can monosyllables have either? |
11615 | Can not my opponents see in these examples an argument against the distinction which they attempt to draw between_ to_ and_ to_? |
11615 | Can nouns without_ and_ be taken jointly, as if they had it? |
11615 | Can one article relate to more than one noun? |
11615 | Can one noun have more than one article? |
11615 | Can one read with too many emphases? |
11615 | Can our| eyes Reach thy| size? |
11615 | Can praise and success entitle to critical notice works in themselves unworthy of it? |
11615 | Can singular antecedents be so suggested as to require a plural pronoun, when only one of them is uttered? |
11615 | Can such pronouns as stand for things not named, be said to agree with the nouns for which they are substituted? |
11615 | Can the article in English, ever be placed after its noun? |
11615 | Can the explanatory word ever be placed first? |
11615 | Can the insertion or omission of an article greatly affect the import of a sentence? |
11615 | Can the parsing of words be affected by the parser''s notion of what constitutes a simple sentence? |
11615 | Can the parsing of words be varied by any transposition which does not change their import? |
11615 | Can the possessive sign be ever rightly added to a separate adjective? |
11615 | Can the preposition_ to_ govern or precede any other mood than the infinitive? |
11615 | Can the relative position of the article and adjective be a matter of indifference? |
11615 | Can the subject of a finite verb be in any other case than the nominative? |
11615 | Can the syllables of a word be perceived by the ear? |
11615 | Can there be a syntactical relation of words without either agreement or government? |
11615 | Can there be an inelegant use of prepositions which is not positively ungrammatical? |
11615 | Can there ever be an implied repetition of the noun when no article is used? |
11615 | Can this, in general, be literally imitated in English? |
11615 | Can we consistently take for our present standard, a style which does not allow us to use_ you_ in the nominative case, or_ its_ for the possessive? |
11615 | Can we help| loving him-- Loving ex|-ceedingly? |
11615 | Can words connected by_ with_ be properly used as joint nominatives? |
11615 | Can words differing in number be in apposition with each other? |
11615 | Can words having the form of the first participle be nouns, and clearly known to be such, when they have no adjuncts? |
11615 | Can words that agree with the same collective noun, be of different numbers? |
11615 | Can you form a word upon each by means of an_ f_? |
11615 | Can you give examples? |
11615 | Can you mention the principal exceptions to this rule? |
11615 | Can you repeat the alphabet, with_ an_ or_ a_ before the name of each letter? |
11615 | Can you specify some that appear to be faulty? |
11615 | Can"the case absolute,"in English, be any other than the nominative? |
11615 | Canst thou make_ him_ afraid as a grasshopper? |
11615 | Common Version:"Art thou he that_ should come_, or do we look for another?" |
11615 | Could we| soar to| your proud| eyries| fleeing, In our| hearts, would| haunting|_ m= em~ or~ ies_| die?" |
11615 | Cruel| charmer,| can you| go? |
11615 | Dict., w. Human._"How much more grievous would our lives appear, To reach th''eighth hundred, than the eightieth year?" |
11615 | Dict._ Now is it not plain, that the action expressed by"_ read_"is"that_ towards_ which"the affection signified by"_ loves_"is directed? |
11615 | Dict._"Tell me, in sadness, whom is she you love?" |
11615 | Did Adam give names to all the creatures about him, and then allow those names to be immediately forgotten? |
11615 | Did I lose heaven for this?" |
11615 | Did his praisers think so too? |
11615 | Did n''t they do it? |
11615 | Did not Jane West write justly,"She made an attempt to look in at the dear_ dutchess''s_?" |
11615 | Did not both he and his family continually use his original nouns in their social intercourse? |
11615 | Did the writer mean,"Proper seasons should be_ allotted to_ retirement?" |
11615 | Did these authors_ know_ the words, or did they not? |
11615 | Do I not write? |
11615 | Do I write? |
11615 | Do any English authors adopt the Latin doctrine of the accusative( or objective) before the infinitive? |
11615 | Do any imagine these fashionable substitutions to be morally objectionable? |
11615 | Do any of these virtues stand in need of a good word; or are they the worse for a bad one? |
11615 | Do any other verbs, besides these eight, take the infinitive after them without_ to_? |
11615 | Do any reputable writers allow passive verbs to govern the objective case? |
11615 | Do articles always relate to nouns? |
11615 | Do collective nouns generally admit of being made literally plural? |
11615 | Do compounds embracing the possessive case appear to be written with sufficient uniformity? |
11615 | Do figures of rhetoric often occur? |
11615 | Do n''t they do it? |
11615 | Do not adverbs sometimes relate to participial nouns? |
11615 | Do not the principles of etymology affect those of syntax? |
11615 | Do other adverbs come between the article and the adjective? |
11615 | Do the Latin grammarians agree in their enumeration of the concords in Latin? |
11615 | Do the Latin grammars teach the same doctrine as the English, concerning nominatives or antecedents connected disjunctively? |
11615 | Do the simple orders admit any diversity? |
11615 | Do the teachers of this doctrine agree among themselves? |
11615 | Do these ten heads embrace all the uses of the infinitive? |
11615 | Do those who speak of syntax as being divided into two parts, Concord and Government, commonly adhere to such division? |
11615 | Do we ever compare by adverbs those adjectives which can be compared by_ er_ and_ est_? |
11615 | Do we ever find the subjunctive mood put after a relative pronoun? |
11615 | Do we ever lay two equal accents on one word? |
11615 | Do we learn to articulate in learning to speak or read? |
11615 | Do we often put proper nouns in apposition with appellatives? |
11615 | Do we put the sign of possession always and only where the two terms of the possessive relation meet? |
11615 | Do what? |
11615 | Do_ we, our_, and_ us_, become actually singular, as often as a king or a critic applies them to himself? |
11615 | Do_ who, which_, and_ what_, all ask the same question? |
11615 | Does Lowth agree with Murray in the anomaly of supposing_ to_ a preposition that governs nothing? |
11615 | Does Mr. Bevil know your history particularly?" |
11615 | Does Murray acknowledge or furnish any exceptions to this doctrine? |
11615 | Does Murray''s notion, that collective nouns are of different sorts, appear to be consistent or warrantable? |
11615 | Does a collective noun with a singular definitive before it ever admit of a plural verb or pronoun? |
11615 | Does a singular antecedent ever admit of a plural pronoun? |
11615 | Does an ellipsis of the verb or participle change this construction into apposition? |
11615 | Does any verb in English ever govern two objectives that are not coupled? |
11615 | Does apposition require any other agreement than that of case? |
11615 | Does emphasis ever affect accent? |
11615 | Does every adjective"belong to a substantive, expressed or understood,"as Murray avers? |
11615 | Does every possessive sign imply a separate governing noun? |
11615 | Does he mean"_ a worse vocabulary_?" |
11615 | Does he positively determine, that the participle should_ never_ be allowed to govern the possessive case? |
11615 | Does it appear that nouns before participles are less frequently subjected to their government than pronouns? |
11615 | Does not every body know it was current four hundred years ago, or more? |
11615 | Does not the verb_ make_ agree with_ constitution_ and_ laws_, taken conjointly? |
11615 | Does our rule for the verb and disjunct nominatives derive confirmation from the Latin and Greek syntax? |
11615 | Does syllabic quantity always follow the quality of the vowels? |
11615 | Does the adjective frequently relate to what is not uttered with it? |
11615 | Does the adverb"_ frequently_"qualify the verb"_ will depend_"expressed in the sentence? |
11615 | Does the analogy of other languages with ours prove any thing on this point? |
11615 | Does the composite order demand any uniformity? |
11615 | Does the compounding of words necessarily preclude their separate use? |
11615 | Does the mere being of a thing demand the use of articles? |
11615 | Does the possessive case admit of any abstract sense or construction? |
11615 | Does the possessive case before a real participle denote the possessor of something? |
11615 | Does the preposition_ to_ before the infinitive always govern the verb? |
11615 | Does this author appear to have gained"a_ clear idea_ of the nature of a collective noun?" |
11615 | Does this construction admit of any variety in the position of the words? |
11615 | Does this list contain all the words that are ever used in English as prepositions? |
11615 | Does this work contain specimens of different kinds of composite verse? |
11615 | Does_ than_ as well as_ as_ usually take the same case after it that occurs before it? |
11615 | Dost thou love?" |
11615 | Dost thou love?" |
11615 | Doth_ the eagle_ mount up at thy command, and make_ her_ nest on high?" |
11615 | E. Day cor._"_ Who_ is generally used when we would inquire_ about_ some unknown person or persons; as,''_ Who_ is that man?''" |
11615 | Else what_ is_ agreement? |
11615 | Example of error:"What is_ Person_? |
11615 | Example:"For dost thou sit as judging me_ according to_ the law, and_ contrary_ to law command me to be smitten?" |
11615 | Examples:"In the grave,_ who_ shall give thee thanks?" |
11615 | Examples:"Whence hath_ this_ man_ this_ wisdom, and_ these_ mighty works?" |
11615 | Expression? |
11615 | Fall whither? |
11615 | Fisk has it in the following form:"What is the reason of this_ person''s dismissing his servant_ so hastily?" |
11615 | Flint cor._"In the sentence,''This is the pen which John made,''what word_ expresses the object of_ MADE?" |
11615 | For example: Is it not a disgrace to a man of letters, to be unable to tell accurately what a letter is? |
11615 | For example: is it better to say,"Twice one_ is_ two,"or,"Twice one_ are_ two?" |
11615 | For how can they be right, while reason, usage, and the prevailing opinion, are still against them? |
11615 | For instance,_ does_ the_ v_ in_ river_ and the_ v_ in_ fever_ belong to the first or to the second syllable? |
11615 | For instance:"What is the meaning of the word_ number_? |
11615 | For seeing_ time_ and_ person_ be, as it were, the right and left hand of a verb, what can the maiming bring else, but a lameness to the whole body?" |
11615 | For the correcting of false syntax, we have a hundred and fifty- two_ notes_; can these be used also in parsing? |
11615 | For what purpose are_ Italics_ chiefly used? |
11615 | For what sense could be made of parsing, without supposing an objective case to nouns? |
11615 | For why stop at a limited number, when in all subjects, susceptible of intension, the intermediate excesses are in a manner infinite? |
11615 | For, what is requisite to the performance? |
11615 | For,"_ As he attends_,& c.,"means,"As_ he_ attends_ to your studies!_"And what good sense is there in this? |
11615 | Forms adapted to the Common or Familiar Style._"Was it thou[538] that_ built_ that house?" |
11615 | From such an instructor, who can find out what is good English, and what is not? |
11615 | Gildon ah!_ what ill- starr''d rage Divides a friendship long confirm''d by age?" |
11615 | Ha?" |
11615 | Had Adam, Abel, Enoch, Noah, and Abraham, then, no such knowledge? |
11615 | Had I loved? |
11615 | Had he loved? |
11615 | Had he meant,"Would you have them_ to_ let go then?" |
11615 | Had n''t they done it? |
11615 | Had she a| brother? |
11615 | Had she a| sister? |
11615 | Had they not been loved? |
11615 | Had thou loved? |
11615 | Had we not loved? |
11615 | Had you not seen? |
11615 | Hadst thou loved? |
11615 | Has Murray written any thing which goes to show whether_ as follows_ can be right or not, when the preceding noun is plural? |
11615 | Has grammar really been made easy by this confounding of its parts? |
11615 | Has he loved? |
11615 | Has the regular method of comparison any degrees of this kind? |
11615 | Hast thou loved? |
11615 | Hast thou loved? |
11615 | Hast thou so crack''d and_ splitted_ my poor tongue?" |
11615 | Hath he said it? |
11615 | Hath he spoken it? |
11615 | Hath he spoken it? |
11615 | Have I loved? |
11615 | Have any popular authors adopted this doctrine? |
11615 | Have n''t they done it? |
11615 | Have plagiarism and quackery become the only means of success in philology? |
11615 | Have prepositions any grammatical modifications? |
11615 | Have the compound relative pronouns any declension? |
11615 | Have they not been loved? |
11615 | Have we any connective words besides the conjunctions? |
11615 | Have we more than one sort of accent? |
11615 | Have we not loved? |
11615 | Have ye| chosen,| O my| people,| on whose| party| ye shall| stand, Ere the| Doom from|_ its_ worn| sandals| shakes the| dust a|-gainst our| land? |
11615 | Have you not seen? |
11615 | He saith unto him, Which? |
11615 | He saith unto them, How then doth David in Spirit call him Lord?" |
11615 | He saith unto them, How then doth David in_ spirit_ call him Lord?" |
11615 | He that teacheth man knowledge, shall not he know?" |
11615 | He? |
11615 | Hear no| sound of| sabbath| bell?''" |
11615 | Hear ye| not his|_ chariot_| wheels, As the| mighty| thunder| rolls? |
11615 | Here the idea is,"_ What person_ hath first given_ any thing_ to_ the Lord_, so that it ought to be repaid_ him_?" |
11615 | Here_ it_ represents_ the word"Jane"_ and not_ the person Jane._"What mark or sign is put after_ master_ to show that_ he_ is in the possessive case? |
11615 | Here_ what_, means_ in what degree? |
11615 | Herself? |
11615 | Himself? |
11615 | Honour hath no skill in surgery then? |
11615 | How able is that writer who is chargeable with the_ greatest want_ of taste and discernment? |
11615 | How are adjectives regularly compared? |
11615 | How are adjectives regularly compared? |
11615 | How are adverbs to be parsed in such expressions as,"_ Away with him?_"9. |
11615 | How are different vowel sounds produced? |
11615 | How are participles placed? |
11615 | How are passive verbs formed? |
11615 | How are poetic quantities denominated? |
11615 | How are pronouns divided? |
11615 | How are relative and interrogative pronouns placed? |
11615 | How are such questions asked in the familiar style? |
11615 | How are the conjunctions divided? |
11615 | How are the consonants divided? |
11615 | How are the degrees of diminution, or inferiority, expressed? |
11615 | How are the following sentences analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How are the harmonic pauses divided? |
11615 | How are the interjections arranged in the list? |
11615 | How are the leading principles of syntax presented? |
11615 | How are the person and number of a verb ascertained, where no peculiar ending is employed to mark them? |
11615 | How are the prepositions arranged in the list? |
11615 | How are the second and third persons singular distinctively formed? |
11615 | How are the two articles distinguished in grammar? |
11615 | How are these inflections exemplified? |
11615 | How are these learned? |
11615 | How are they proportioned? |
11615 | How are they used in asking questions? |
11615 | How are verbs divided, with respect to their form? |
11615 | How are verbs divided, with respect to their signification? |
11615 | How are words distinguished in regard to_ species_ and_ figure_? |
11615 | How can a noun be, or seem to be, in apposition with a possessive pronoun? |
11615 | How can he be a man of refined literary taste, who can not speak and write his native language grammatically? |
11615 | How can it be proved that_ to_ before the infinitive is a preposition? |
11615 | How can it be said, that_ good_ and_ bad_ are here substantives, since they have a plural meaning and refuse the plural form? |
11615 | How can one avoid the ambiguity which Dr. Priestley notices in the use of the adjective_ no_? |
11615 | How can one determine whether an adjective or an adverb is required? |
11615 | How can one''s notion of_ ellipsis_ affect his mode of parsing, and his distinction of sentences as simple or compound? |
11615 | How can references be otherwise made? |
11615 | How can that be"_ a part_ of the verb,"which is_ a word_ used_ before_ it? |
11615 | How can the terms of relation which pertain to the preposition be ascertained? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a CONJUNCTION? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a NOUN? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a PARTICIPLE? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a PREPOSITION? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a PRONOUN? |
11615 | How can we distinguish a VERB? |
11615 | How can we distinguish an ADJECTIVE? |
11615 | How can we distinguish an ADVERB? |
11615 | How can we distinguish an INTERJECTION? |
11615 | How can we introduce a noun or pronoun before the infinitive, and still make the whole phrase the subject of a finite verb? |
11615 | How can we know to what class, or part of speech, any word belongs? |
11615 | How can_ it_ be quiet, seeing the Lord hath given_ it_ a charge against Askelon, and against the sea- shore? |
11615 | How can_ to_ be a"_ preposition_"in the phrase,"_ He was listened to_,"and not so at all in"_ to be listened to_?" |
11615 | How could the man who saw all this, insist on adding_ st_ for the second person, where not even the_ d_ of the past tense could he articulated? |
11615 | How could"good writers"indite"much"bad English by_ dropping_ from the subjunctive an indicative ending which never belonged to it? |
11615 | How do Dr. Adam and others suppose"the gerund in English"to become a"substantive,"or noun? |
11615 | How do Ingersoll, Kirkham, and Smith, agree with their master Murray, concerning such examples as,"_ Let me go_?" |
11615 | How do Nutting, Kirkham, Nixon, Cooper, and Sanborn, agree with Murray, or with one an other, in pointing out what governs the infinitive? |
11615 | How do Priestley and others pretend to distinguish between the participial and the substantive use of verbals in_ ing_? |
11615 | How do compounds take the sign of possession? |
11615 | How do conjunctions differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do conjunctive adverbs differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do our grammarians now dispose of what remains to us of the old Saxon dative case? |
11615 | How do permanent compounds differ from others? |
11615 | How do prepositions differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do relative pronouns differ from other connectives? |
11615 | How do we compare_ well, badly_ or_ ill, little, much, far_, and_ forth_? |
11615 | How do we mark a quotation within a quotation? |
11615 | How do we sometimes avoid such repetition? |
11615 | How do you compare_ far? |
11615 | How do you compare_ good? |
11615 | How do you decline the nouns,_ friend, man, fox_, and_ fly?_ LESSON VII-- PARSING. |
11615 | How do you decline the pronoun_ I? |
11615 | How do you decline the pronoun_ Myself? |
11615 | How do you decline_ Who? |
11615 | How do you decline_ Whoever? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb BE LOVED, with the nominative_ I? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb BE READING, with the nominative_ I? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb_ be_, with the nominative_ I? |
11615 | How do you form a synopsis of the verb_ see_, with the pronoun_ I? |
11615 | How do you_ know_ long and short Syllables? |
11615 | How does Bolles define articulation? |
11615 | How does Brown review these criticisms, and attempt to settle the question? |
11615 | How does Churchill differ from Lowth respecting the phrase,"_ ever so wisely_,"or"_ never so wisely?_"23. |
11615 | How does Churchill treat the matter? |
11615 | How does Comstock define it? |
11615 | How does Dr. Ash parse_ to_ before the infinitive? |
11615 | How does Hiley treat the English participle? |
11615 | How does John Burn propose to settle this dispute? |
11615 | How does L. Murray connect emphasis with quantity? |
11615 | How does a finite verb agree with its subject, or nominative? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with a collective noun? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with disjunct antecedents? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with its antecedent? |
11615 | How does a pronoun agree with joint antecedents? |
11615 | How does a verb agree with a collective noun? |
11615 | How does a verb agree with disjunctive nominatives? |
11615 | How does a verb agree with joint nominatives? |
11615 | How does articulation differ from pronunciation? |
11615 | How does the English fashion of putting_ you_ for_ thou_, compare with the usage of the French, and of other nations? |
11615 | How does the English participle compare with the Latin gerund? |
11615 | How does the French construction of participles and infinitives compare with the English? |
11615 | How does the author of this work dispose of the example? |
11615 | How does the author of this work generally dispose of such government? |
11615 | How does the infinitive"express an action or state_ indefinitely_,"if it"_ usually relates to some noun or pronoun_?" |
11615 | How does the passage here cited comport with this hint of Pope? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of metaphor? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of metonymy? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of personification? |
11615 | How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of synecdoche? |
11615 | How does this accord with the views of Murray, Lowth, Adam, and Brown?. |
11615 | How is Grammar divided? |
11615 | How is a verb conjugated interrogatively and negatively? |
11615 | How is a verb conjugated negatively? |
11615 | How is an adverb to be parsed, when it seems to be put for a verb? |
11615 | How is grammar to be taught, and by what means are its principles to be made known? |
11615 | How is the distinguishing of the participle from the verbal noun inculcated by Allen, and their difference of meaning by Murray? |
11615 | How is the first or imperfect participle formed? |
11615 | How is the following example analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How is the following example analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How is the following example analyzed by this method? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example parsed? |
11615 | How is the following example to be parsed? |
11615 | How is the following long example parsed in Praxis XII? |
11615 | How is the form of negation exemplified by the verb_ love_ in the first person singular? |
11615 | How is the infinitive used after_ bid_? |
11615 | How is the infinitive used after_ have, help_, and_ find_? |
11615 | How is the like synopsis formed in the third person plural? |
11615 | How is the negative question exemplified in the first person plural? |
11615 | How is the negative question exemplified in the second person plural? |
11615 | How is the passive verb BE LOVED conjugated throughout? |
11615 | How is the plural number of nouns regularly formed? |
11615 | How is the possessive case of nouns formed? |
11615 | How is the regular plural formed when the word gains a syllable? |
11615 | How is the regular plural formed without increase of syllables? |
11615 | How is the second or perfect participle formed? |
11615 | How is the sense of nouns commonly made indefinitely partitive? |
11615 | How is the third or preperfect participle formed? |
11615 | How is the verb BE conjugated? |
11615 | How is the verb READ conjugated in the compound form? |
11615 | How is the verb SEE conjugated throughout? |
11615 | How is the verb conjugated interrogatively? |
11615 | How is the word_ man_ to be parsed in the following example? |
11615 | How is this art to be acquired? |
11615 | How little?_ or to the idea of_ more or less_. |
11615 | How little?_ or to the idea of_ more or less_. |
11615 | How little?_ or, to the idea of_ more or less_. |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How long? |
11615 | How many agreements, or concords, are there in English syntax? |
11615 | How many and what are the compound personal pronouns? |
11615 | How many and what are the consonant sounds in English? |
11615 | How many and what are the degrees of comparison? |
11615 | How many and what are the diphthongs in English? |
11615 | How many and what are the figures of etymology? |
11615 | How many and what are the figures of syntax? |
11615 | How many and what are the governments in English syntax? |
11615 | How many and what are the improper diphthongs? |
11615 | How many and what are the improper triphthongs? |
11615 | How many and what are the parts of speech? |
11615 | How many and what are the principal figures of rhetoric? |
11615 | How many and what are the principles of syntax which belong to the head of simple relation? |
11615 | How many and what are the proper diphthongs? |
11615 | How many and what are the simple personal pronouns? |
11615 | How many and what are the_ principal parts_ of a sentence? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to rule 20th, concerning participles? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for adverbs? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for conjunctions? |
11615 | How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for prepositions? |
11615 | How many and what kinds of pauses are there? |
11615 | How many and what parts of speech are concerned in government? |
11615 | How many and what parts of speech are usually parsed by such rules only? |
11615 | How many and what secondary feet are explained in this code? |
11615 | How many and what tenses has the_ infinitive_ mood?--the_ indicative_?--the_ potential_?--the_ subjunctive_?--the_ imperative_? |
11615 | How many and which of the ten have but one rule apiece? |
11615 | How many and which of these are so variable in sound that they may be either proper or improper diphthongs? |
11615 | How many are there for infinitives, and which are they? |
11615 | How many are there of the general or critical notes? |
11615 | How many cases are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many definitions are here given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech? |
11615 | How many exceptions, or forms of exception, are there to Rule 1st for the comma? |
11615 | How many feet do prosodists recognize? |
11615 | How many genders are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many kinds of figures are there? |
11615 | How many kinds of participles are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many kinds of sentences are there? |
11615 | How many letters are in the alphabet? |
11615 | How many letters are there in English? |
11615 | How many moods are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many numbers are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many of the rules have no such notes under them? |
11615 | How many of the ten parts of speech in English are in general incapable of any agreement? |
11615 | How many of the twenty- four rules of syntax are used both in parsing and in correcting? |
11615 | How many of them are under the rule for_ articles_? |
11615 | How many of them belong to the syntax of_ adjectives_? |
11615 | How many of them expose errors in the use of_ prepositions_? |
11615 | How many of them pertain to the syntax of_ participles_? |
11615 | How many of them refer to the construction of_ nouns_? |
11615 | How many of them regard the use of_ verbs_? |
11615 | How many of them relate to the construction of_ adverbs_? |
11615 | How many of them show the application of_ conjunctions_? |
11615 | How many of them speak of_ interjections_? |
11615 | How many of them treat of_ pronouns_? |
11615 | How many of these seventeen speak of_ cases_, and therefore apply equally to nouns and pronouns? |
11615 | How many persons and numbers belong to verbs? |
11615 | How many persons are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How many pronouns are there? |
11615 | How many redundant verbs are there? |
11615 | How many rules are there for finite verbs, and which are they? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Colon? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Curves? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Dash? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Period? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the Semicolon? |
11615 | How many rules are there for the agreement of pronouns with their antecedents, and which are they? |
11615 | How many rules are there for this mark? |
11615 | How many rules are there for this mark? |
11615 | How many rules for capitals are given in this book? |
11615 | How many rules for spelling are given in this book? |
11615 | How many rules for the Comma are there, and what are their heads? |
11615 | How many rules for the figure of words are given in this book? |
11615 | How many rules of government are there in the best Latin grammars? |
11615 | How many simple irregular verbs are there? |
11615 | How many special rules of syllabication are given in this book? |
11615 | How many such rules are there among the twenty- four? |
11615 | How many syllables are found in the longest? |
11615 | How many tenses are there, and what are they called? |
11615 | How may an interjection generally be known? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of degree be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of manner be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of place be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the adverbs of time be subdivided? |
11615 | How may the vowel sounds be written? |
11615 | How may these sounds be modified in the formation of syllables? |
11615 | How much? |
11615 | How much?_ or_ How_?--or serves to ask it; as,"He spoke fluently." |
11615 | How shall we parse the word_ that_ in the foregoing sentences? |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | How then can the mere addition of this mood make_ any_ verb transitive? |
11615 | How was the infinitive expressed in the Anglo- Saxon of the eleventh century? |
11615 | How, after_ dare_? |
11615 | How, after_ feel_? |
11615 | How, after_ hear_? |
11615 | How, after_ let_? |
11615 | How, after_ make_? |
11615 | How, after_ need_? |
11615 | Hundreds? |
11615 | I allude to those who would prefer the possessive case in a text like the following:"Wherefore is this noise of the_ city being_ in an uproar?"'' |
11615 | I do not see that the copulative_ and_ is here ungrammatical; but if we prefer a disjunctive, ought it not to be_ or_ rather than_ nor_? |
11615 | I fear for life,''_ which words_ here appear to be thrown in_ between the sentences_, to express passion or feeling? |
11615 | I pray thee,_ with whom_ doth he trot withal?" |
11615 | I suppose the author to speak of_ good persons_ and_ bad persons_; and, if he does, is there not an ellipsis in his language? |
11615 | I. Adverbs of_ time_ are those which answer to the question,_ When? |
11615 | If an adverbial word relates directly to a noun or pronoun, does not that fact constitute it an adjective? |
11615 | If any body can boast of being"_ the first person in grammar_,"I pray,_ Who_ is it? |
11615 | If difficult, wherein does the difficulty lie? |
11615 | If easy, why do so few pretend to know their number? |
11615 | If ever one of Father Hall''s nouns shall speak for itself, or answer when"spoken to,"will it not reprove him? |
11615 | If it is said,''What think you of my_ horse running_ to- day?'' |
11615 | If it were_ true_, a few quotations might easily prove it; but when, and by whom, have any such words as_ lovedest, turnedest_, ever been used? |
11615 | If not, what else is it? |
11615 | If participial nouns retain the power of participles, why is it wrong to say,"A superficial reading books is useless?" |
11615 | If reputation has been raised upon the mist of ignorance, who but the builder shall lament its overthrow? |
11615 | If so, what sense has"_ vocabulary_?" |
11615 | If so, whose? |
11615 | If the Doctor designed to ask,"Do you think my horse ran well to- day?" |
11615 | If the antecedent is a collective noun conveying the idea of plurality, must the pronoun always be plural? |
11615 | If the errors of some have long been tolerated, what right of the critic has been lost by nonuser? |
11615 | If the interests of Science have been sacrificed to Mammon, what rebuke can do injustice to the craft? |
11615 | If the nominative is a collective noun conveying the idea of plurality, must the verb always be plural? |
11615 | If the second person singular of this verb be used familiarly, how should it be formed? |
11615 | If the works of grammarians are often ungrammatical, whose fault is this but their own? |
11615 | If there are antecedents connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, is the pronoun always to take them separately? |
11615 | If there are nominatives connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, is the verb always to refer to them separately? |
11615 | If there are two or more antecedents connected by_ and_, must the pronoun always be plural? |
11615 | If there are two or more nominatives connected by_ and_, must the verb always be plural? |
11615 | If this is to be taken for a grammatical definition, what definition shall grammar itself bear? |
11615 | If we take neither of these assumptions, must we not say, they are of different genders? |
11615 | If when a participle becomes an adjective it drops its regimen, should it not also drop it on becoming a noun? |
11615 | If"_ a_ participle refers to_ nouns_ or_ pronouns_,"_ how many_ of these are required by the relation? |
11615 | If"a_ participle_ is called an_ adjective_,"which is it, an adjective, or a participle? |
11615 | If, in the following example,_ gold_ and_ diamond_ are neuter, so is the pronoun_ me_; and, if not neuter, of what gender are they? |
11615 | If_ all_ grammatical fame is little in itself, how can the abatement of what is undeserved of it be much? |
11615 | In Flint''s Murray it stands thus:"An adverb may generally be known by its answering the question, How? |
11615 | In either form of it,_ two_ nominatives are idly imagined between_ as_ and its verb; and, I ask, of what is the first one the subject? |
11615 | In etymological parsing, we use about seventy_ definitions_; can these be used also in the correcting of errors? |
11615 | In extended compositions, what is the order of the parts, upwards from a sentence? |
11615 | In how many and what ways does the relation of prepositions admit of complexity? |
11615 | In how many different ways can the letters of the alphabet be combined? |
11615 | In how many different ways can the nominative case be used? |
11615 | In how many ways are the sexes distinguished in grammar? |
11615 | In how many ways can nouns of the second person be employed? |
11615 | In how many ways is the nominative case put absolute? |
11615 | In law,| what plea| so taint|-ed and| corrupt, But, be|-ing sea|-son''d with| a gra|-cious voice, Obscures| the show| of e|-vil? |
11615 | In making a phrase the subject of a verb, do we produce an exception to Rule 14th? |
11615 | In preparing a manuscript, how do we mark these things for the printer? |
11615 | In respect to collective nouns, how is it generally determined, whether they convey the idea of plurality or not? |
11615 | In scansion, why are the principal feet to be preferred to the secondary? |
11615 | In such expressions as,"I give it up_ for lost_,"--"I take it_ for granted_,"how is the participle to be parsed? |
11615 | In such phrases as,_ at once, from thence, till now_, how is the latter word to be parsed? |
11615 | In such phrases as_ in vain, at first, in particular_, how is the adjective to be parsed? |
11615 | In such sentences as,"I paid_ him_ the_ money_,"--"He asked_ them_ the_ question_,"how are the two objectives to be parsed? |
11615 | In the expression,"_ I, thou, or he, may affirm_,"of what person and number is the verb? |
11615 | In the phrase,"For_ David_ my servant''s sake,"which word is governed by_ sake_, and which is to be parsed by the rule of apposition? |
11615 | In the sentence,"And_ Simon_ he surnamed_ Peter_", how are_ Simon_ and_ Peter_ to be parsed? |
11615 | In the sentence,"I_ know that_ Messias cometh,"how are_ know_ and_ that_ to be parsed? |
11615 | In the sentence,"I_ know why_ she blushed,"how is_ know_ to be parsed? |
11615 | In the sentence,"It is certainly as easy to be a_ scholar_, as a_ gamester_,"what is the case of_ scholar_ and_ gamester_, and why? |
11615 | In the sentence,"It is_ man''s_ to err,"what is supposed to govern_ man''s_? |
11615 | In the sentence,"What_ have_ I to_ do_ with thee?" |
11615 | In the sentence,"_ It_ is useless to complain,"what does_ it_ represent? |
11615 | In the sentence,''William hastens away,''the active intransitive verb_ hastens_ has indeed an_ agent_,''William,''but where is the_ object_? |
11615 | In this perplexity, is not the pronunciation of the words the best guide? |
11615 | In what chapter are the rules of syntax first presented? |
11615 | In what does a knowledge of the letters consist? |
11615 | In what exercise can there be occasion to cite and apply the_ Exceptions_ to the rules of syntax? |
11615 | In what instances is the adjective placed after its noun? |
11615 | In what instances is the first participle equivalent to the infinitive? |
11615 | In what instances may the adjective either precede or follow the noun? |
11615 | In what kinds of examples do we meet with a doubtful case after a participle? |
11615 | In what manner, or in what respect, does an article point out substantives? |
11615 | In what order are the rules of syntax arranged in this work? |
11615 | In what other form can the meaning of the possessive case be expressed? |
11615 | In what place are the rules, exceptions, notes, and observations, in the foregoing system of syntax, enumerated and described? |
11615 | In what praxis are these rules first applied in parsing? |
11615 | In what series of words may all these sounds be heard? |
11615 | In what series of words may each of them be heard two or three times? |
11615 | Interrogatively and negatively; as, Write I not? |
11615 | Interrogatively; as, Write I? |
11615 | Into what classes may adjectives be divided? |
11615 | Into what general classes are nouns divided? |
11615 | Into what general classes are the letters divided? |
11615 | Is a good articulation important? |
11615 | Is dactylic verse very common? |
11615 | Is either of them right in his argument? |
11615 | Is every thing that a preposition governs, necessarily supposed to have cases, and to be in the objective? |
11615 | Is every word accented? |
11615 | Is he the only man who has ever had a right notion of its_ meaning_? |
11615 | Is it agreed among grammarians, that the Latin gerund may govern the genitive of the agent? |
11615 | Is it clear, that they ought to be called adverbs? |
11615 | Is it common to find in grammars, the rules of syntax well adapted to their purpose? |
11615 | Is it compatible with apposition to supply between the words a relative and a verb; as,"At Mr. Smith''s[_ who is_] the bookseller?" |
11615 | Is it demonstrable that verbs often agree with relatives? |
11615 | Is it easy to distinguish an ARTICLE? |
11615 | Is it ever convenient to have one and the same rule applicable to different parts of speech? |
11615 | Is it ever convenient to have rules divided into parts, so as to be double or triple in their form? |
11615 | Is it ever indifferent, which word be called the principal, and which the explanatory term? |
11615 | Is it ever right to put both terms before the verb? |
11615 | Is it ever uniform? |
11615 | Is it not a pity, that"more than one hundred thousand children and youth"should be daily poring over language and logic like this? |
11615 | Is it not plain, that twice two things, of any sort, are four things of that same sort, and only so? |
11615 | Is it not rather true, that we know nothing at all about it, but what it is just as easy to tell as to think? |
11615 | Is it not strange, is it not incredible, that the same hand should have written the two following lines, in the same sentence? |
11615 | Is it not this;--that, like_ English, French_,& c., they are always_ adjectives_; except, perhaps, when they denote_ languages_? |
11615 | Is it not_ I_, even_ I_? |
11615 | Is it often expedient to join in the same rule such principles as must always be applied separately? |
11615 | Is it proper to teach, in general terms, that the noun or pronoun which limits the meaning of a participle should be put in the possessive case? |
11615 | Is it right to introduce it into our paradigms, as the only form of the second person singular, that modern usage acknowledges? |
11615 | Is it right to say with Smith,"Every hundred_ years constitutes_ a century?" |
11615 | Is it right without the_ of_, though contrary to the author''s rule for elegance? |
11615 | Is it some"_ vocabulary_"both"English and parliamentary?" |
11615 | Is it that of one and one, the_ positive_ and the_ comparative_ added numerically? |
11615 | Is it the_ authors_, or their_ figure_, that becomes tedious and intricate? |
11615 | Is it then any disgrace to spell words erroneously? |
11615 | Is it therefore difficult to determine which party is right? |
11615 | Is it they_?" |
11615 | Is it thou? |
11615 | Is it| to fast| an hour, Or ragg''d| to go, Or show A down|-cast look| and sour? |
11615 | Is it| to quit| the dish Of flesh,| yet still To fill The plat|-ter high| with fish? |
11615 | Is language impotent? |
11615 | Is not our language like the Latin, in respect to verbs governing two cases, and passives retaining the latter? |
11615 | Is not the former as good English as the latter? |
11615 | Is not this because there is an_ ellipsis_ in the sentence, and such a one as may be variously conceived and supplied? |
11615 | Is not this better English than to say,"of_ his_ being the only person?" |
11615 | Is that a correct rule which says,"Two negatives, in English, destroy each other, or are equivalent to an affirmative?" |
11615 | Is the Greek or Latin construction of the latter term in a comparison usually such as ours? |
11615 | Is the anapest adapted to single rhyme? |
11615 | Is the article_ an_ or_ a_ always supposed to imply unity? |
11615 | Is the author himself to be disbelieved, that the extravagant praises bestowed upon him may be justified? |
11615 | Is the case after the verb reckoned doubtful, when the subject going before is a sentence, or something not declinable by cases? |
11615 | Is the common rule for interjections, as requiring certain cases after them, sustained by any analogy from the Latin syntax? |
11615 | Is the connecting of verbs elliptically, or by parts, anything peculiar to our language? |
11615 | Is the devil in you? |
11615 | Is the distinction between the participial noun and the participle well preserved by Murray and his amenders? |
11615 | Is the doctrine well sustained by its adopters, or is it consistent with the analogy of general grammar? |
11615 | Is the infinitive ever governed by a preposition in French, Spanish, or Italian? |
11615 | Is the infinitive ever liable to be misplaced? |
11615 | Is the mere relation of words according to the sense an element of much importance in English syntax? |
11615 | Is the number of feet in a line to be generally counted by that of the long syllables? |
11615 | Is the objective, when it occurs before the infinitive in English, usually governed by some verb, participle, or preposition? |
11615 | Is the possessive case always governed by the name of the thing possessed? |
11615 | Is the possessive often governed by what is not expressed? |
11615 | Is the preposition_ to_"understood"after_ bid, dare, feel_, and so forth, where it is"superfluous and improper?" |
11615 | Is the pronoun_ we_ singular when it is used in lieu of_ I_? |
11615 | Is the pronoun_ you_ singular when used in lieu of_ thou_ or_ thee_? |
11615 | Is the syntactical parsing of a noun to be precisely the same as the etymological? |
11615 | Is the voice to be varied for variety''s sake? |
11615 | Is there a construction of like cases, that is not apposition? |
11615 | Is there any argument from analogy for taking_ each other_ and_ one an other_ for compounds? |
11615 | Is there any exception to the 24th rule, concerning interjections? |
11615 | Is there any other method of expressing the degrees of comparison? |
11615 | Is there any question about the true mode of parsing"_ only_"and"_ also_"here? |
11615 | Is there anywhere, in print, viler pedantry than this? |
11615 | Is there ever any needful agreement between unrelated words? |
11615 | Is there not an amplification that is at once novel, disagreeable, unauthorized, and unnecessary? |
11615 | Is there not contradiction in these instructions? |
11615 | Is there not truth, is there not power, in the appeal? |
11615 | Is there| peace where| ye are| borne, on| high? |
11615 | Is this doctrine consistent either with itself or with Wilson''s? |
11615 | Is this frequent? |
11615 | Is this the conduct of the duellist? |
11615 | Is this the true ratio of the merit of these authors, or of the wisdom of the different ages in which they lived? |
11615 | Is this the woman you saw?" |
11615 | Is this their"common mode of expression?" |
11615 | Is"_ O thee_"good English, because"_ O te_"is good Latin? |
11615 | Is_ a_ the first principle? |
11615 | Is_ an_ Unit of one, a Number? |
11615 | Is_ m_ the first principle of this word? |
11615 | Is_ need_ ever an auxiliary? |
11615 | Is_ than_ supposed by Murray to be capable of governing any other objective than_ whom_? |
11615 | Is_ to"in every other case a preposition_,"and not such before a verb or a participle? |
11615 | Is_ to_ a preposition when it is placed_ after_ a verb, and_ not_ a preposition when it is placed_ before_ it? |
11615 | Is_ to_ before the infinitive to be parsed just as any other preposition? |
11615 | It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do? |
11615 | It is indeed so much more common, as to seem the only proper mode of expression: as,"_ Do I say_ these things as a man?" |
11615 | It is true, we occasionally meet with such fulsome phraseology as this; but the question is, how is it to be explained? |
11615 | It might be set down under Critical Note 9th, among examples of_ Words Needless_; for the author''s question is,"Why is the verb so called?" |
11615 | It ought to be,"Is it_ her_ honour or_ his_, that is tarnished?" |
11615 | It?_ 17. |
11615 | Itself?_ 19. |
11615 | Johnson cor._"How_ are_ the gender and number of the relative known?" |
11615 | Keith cor._"Who is so mad, that, on inspecting the heavens,_ he_ is insensible of a God?" |
11615 | Lewis sighs| for the sake Of her charms,| as they say; What excuse| can she make For not com|-ing away? |
11615 | Literally:"What means this noise of the_ city which is so moved_?" |
11615 | Literally:"What[_ means_] the clamour of the_ city resounding_?" |
11615 | Loop up her| tresses, Escaped from the comb,-- Her fair auburn tresses; Whilst wonderment guesses, Where was her| home? |
11615 | Lov''st thou? |
11615 | Love I? |
11615 | Love we not? |
11615 | Loved I? |
11615 | Loved he? |
11615 | Loved thou? |
11615 | Loved we not? |
11615 | Lovedst thou? |
11615 | Loves he? |
11615 | Lovest thou? |
11615 | Low lies the| stately head, Earth- bound| the free: How gave those| haughty dead A place| to thee? |
11615 | M''Cartee._"Shall I tell you_ why?_ Ay, sir, and_ wherefore_; for, they say, every_ why_ hath a_ wherefore._"--_Shak._( 2.) |
11615 | M.?" |
11615 | MIXED EXAMPLES OF ERROR"If to accommodate man and beast, heaven and earth; if this be beyond me,''tis not possible.--What consequence then follows? |
11615 | Many such examples may be cited, but are they not examples of false syntax? |
11615 | May I not_ call_ them what they_ are_?" |
11615 | May a surplus ever make up for a deficiency? |
11615 | May n''t, ca n''t,_ or_ must n''t they do it? |
11615 | May n''t, ca n''t,_ or_ must n''t they have done it? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must I have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must I love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must he have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must he love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must they not be loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must they not have been loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must thou have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must thou love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must we not have loved? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must we not love? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must you not have seen? |
11615 | May, can,_ or_ must you not see? |
11615 | May_ we not_ say? |
11615 | Mayst, canst,_ or_ must thou have loved? |
11615 | Mayst, canst,_ or_ must thou love? |
11615 | Might n''t, could n''t, would n''t,_ or_ should n''t they do it? |
11615 | Might n''t, could n''t, would n''t,_ or_ should n''t they have done it? |
11615 | Might not Quintilian or Varro have obliged many, by recording these? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should I have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should I love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should he have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should he love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should they not be loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should they not have been loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should thou have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should thou love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should we not have loved? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should we not love? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should you not have seen? |
11615 | Might, could, would,_ or_ should you not see? |
11615 | Mightst, couldst, wouldst,_ or_ shouldst thou have loved? |
11615 | Mightst, couldst, wouldst,_ or_ shouldst thou love? |
11615 | Murray cor._"If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what_ has_ become of decency and virtue? |
11615 | Murray cor._"Know ye not that there is[542] a prince, a great man, fallen this day in Israel?" |
11615 | Murray cor._"Know ye not your own selves,_ that_ Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?" |
11615 | Murray cor._"Was it thou, or the wind,_ that_ shut the door?" |
11615 | Murray cor._"Why does_ began_ change its ending; as, I began, Thou_ begannest_ or_ beganst_?" |
11615 | Must a finite verb always agree with its nominative in number and person? |
11615 | Must composites have rhythm? |
11615 | Must every preposition govern some"_ noun or pronoun_?" |
11615 | Nay, docs he not make man the contriver of that"natural language"which he possesses"in common with the brutes?" |
11615 | Neither does_ oh_ or_ ah_: for, if a governing word be suggested, the objective may be proper; as,"Whom did he injure? |
11615 | Now are not,"_ I only spoke three words_,"and,"_ He only bared his arm_,"analogous expressions? |
11615 | Now can any one suppose that words are not here, in some true sense, the instruments of thought, or of the intellectual process thus carried on? |
11615 | Now do not_ my, thy, his, her, our, your, their_, and_ mine, thine, hers, its, ours, yours, theirs_, all equally denote possession? |
11615 | Now the question to find the subject of the verb_ are_, is,"My_ what_ are to come?" |
11615 | Now then to| find a name;-- Where shall we| search for it? |
11615 | Now who can show that this is not the case in general with the numerals of multiplication? |
11615 | Now would not this"useful improvement"give us such a word as_ allejjable_? |
11615 | Now, has the boy been instructed, or only puzzled? |
11615 | Now, if this is not_ government_, what is? |
11615 | Now, if"participles are adjectives,"to which of these five classes do they belong? |
11615 | Now, if_ many_ is here a singular nominative, and the only subject of the verb, what shall we do with_ are_? |
11615 | Now, in parsing an_ article_, why should the learner have to tell all this story about_ adjectives_? |
11615 | Now, is this good English, or is it not? |
11615 | Now, to what extent do these questions apply to the verbs in our language? |
11615 | Now, what was it that_ freezed_ so hard?" |
11615 | O where is now your bloom?" |
11615 | Of how many different constructions is the objective case susceptible? |
11615 | Of interrogating;_ eh? |
11615 | Of the seven rules for cases, how many are applicable to relatives and interrogatives? |
11615 | Of the twenty- four rules in this work, how many are applicable to pronouns? |
11615 | Of what degree is the adverb_ rather_? |
11615 | Of what does Etymology treat? |
11615 | Of what does Etymology treat? |
11615 | Of what does Orthography treat? |
11615 | Of what does Orthography treat? |
11615 | Of what does Prosody treat? |
11615 | Of what does Prosody treat? |
11615 | Of what does Syntax treat? |
11615 | Of what does Syntax treat? |
11615 | Of what does a poetic foot consist? |
11615 | Of what does a verse consist? |
11615 | Of what parts is syntax commonly said to consist? |
11615 | Of what two kinds does the composition of language consist? |
11615 | Of what use are those which can not be violated in practice? |
11615 | On what are the different genders founded, and to what parts of speech do they belong? |
11615 | On what are they founded? |
11615 | On what but the vowel sound does quantity depend? |
11615 | On what is the construction of_ same cases_ founded? |
11615 | On what principle can one justify such an example as this:"_ All work and no play, makes_ Jack a dull boy?" |
11615 | Or an arm? |
11615 | Or because proprietors and publishers may profit by the credit of a book, shall it be thought illiberal to criticise it? |
11615 | Or better:"What then shall we call the article_ the_?" |
11615 | Or both wish''d here, where neither can be found?" |
11615 | Or did Scott write inaccurately, whose guide"Led slowly through the_ pass''s_ jaws?" |
11615 | Or does this adverb qualify the action of"_ reading_?" |
11615 | Or even to adults, when they are spoken of without regard to a distinct personality or identity; as,"_ Which_ of you will go?" |
11615 | Or is it certain that human languages used by perfect wisdom, would all be perfectly competent to their common purpose? |
11615 | Or is it expedient to augment by it that multiplicity of other forms, which must either take this same place or be utterly rejected? |
11615 | Or is it proper for a grammarian to name sundry authorities on both sides, excite doubt in the mind of his reader, and leave the matter_ unsettled_? |
11615 | Or take away the grief of a wound? |
11615 | Or this again? |
11615 | Or this? |
11615 | Or this? |
11615 | Or this? |
11615 | Or thus:"What is an_ assertor_? |
11615 | Or thus:"What is an_ assertor_? |
11615 | Or, as our common grammarians prompt me here to say,"May not the comparative degree increase or lessen_ the comparative_, in signification?" |
11615 | Or, if it be supposed to mean,"above the amount of all other_ degrees_,"what is this amount? |
11615 | Or, if none of them,_ what else_ is meant? |
11615 | Or:"If such maxims and practices prevail, what_ will_ become of decency and virtue?" |
11615 | Or:"Shalt thou build_ a_ house for me to dwell in?" |
11615 | Or:"What need_ have_ you to be anxious about this event?" |
11615 | Or:"What nouns_ are_ frequently_ used one after an other_?" |
11615 | Or:"Why do_ ye_ plead so much for it? |
11615 | Or:"_ Does_''_ will go_''express but_ one_ action?" |
11615 | PRECEPT I.--Avoid a useless tautology, either of expression or of sentiment; as,"When will you return_ again_?" |
11615 | PRONOUNS:"_ What_ am I eased?" |
11615 | Respecting an English verb, what things are to be sought in the first place? |
11615 | Respecting_ an_ or_ a_, how does present usage differ from the usage of ancient writers? |
11615 | S. Journal cor._"Art thou a penitent? |
11615 | Saw ye not? |
11615 | Say rather:"Was this_ because there were_ twelve primary deities among the Gothic nations?" |
11615 | Say, where greatness lies? |
11615 | Say,"_ Why does the parliament neglect_ so important a business?" |
11615 | Say,"_ Why have the committee_ delayed this business?" |
11615 | See ye not? |
11615 | See, in the original, these texts:"There was_ a man_ sent from God,"(_ John_, i, 6,) and,"What is_ man_, that thou art mindful of him?" |
11615 | Sha n''t,_ or_ wo n''t they do it? |
11615 | Shall I have loved? |
11615 | Shall I love? |
11615 | Shall I not lay me by his clay- cold side?" |
11615 | Shall I not lay me by his clay- cold side?" |
11615 | Shall all| the les|-sons time| has taught,| be so| long taught| in vain; And earth| be steeped| in hu|-man tears,| and groan| with hu|-man pain?" |
11615 | Shall he who can not paint, retouch the canvass of Guido? |
11615 | Shall he who can not write for himself, improve upon him who can? |
11615 | Shall hu|-man pas|-sion ev|-er sway| this glo|_-rious world_| of God, And beau|-ty, wis|-dom, hap|-piness,| sleep with| the tram|-pled sod? |
11615 | Shall man, endowed with reason, do, say, or contrive any thing, without design, and without understanding? |
11615 | Shall modest ingenuity be allowed only to imitators and to thieves? |
11615 | Shall now| that ho|-ly fire, In us,| that strong|-ly glow''d, In this| cold air,| expire? |
11615 | Shall peace| ne''er lift| her ban|-ner up,| shall truth| and rea|-son cry, And men| oppress| them down| with worse| than an|-cient tyr|-anny? |
11615 | Shall the better usage give place to the worse? |
11615 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?" |
11615 | Shall we en|-dow him with Title he|-roic, After some| warrior, Poet, or| stoic? |
11615 | Shall we not have loved? |
11615 | Shall we not love? |
11615 | Shall we say that"_ place_,"in this sense, is not a noun of place? |
11615 | Shall we then say, as he does, in the_ present tense_ conjugation of his passive verb,--''The criminal is bound?'' |
11615 | Shall we| not sing| an ode? |
11615 | Shall_ or_ will he love? |
11615 | Shall_ or_ will they not be loved? |
11615 | She? |
11615 | Should not every individual feel the deepest interest in their character and condition?" |
11615 | Should not every individual feel_ a deep_ interest in their character and condition?" |
11615 | Smith and Priestley cor._"Art thou proud yet? |
11615 | So one might say,"Can a man arrive at excellence, who has no desire_ to_?" |
11615 | So the interrogative_ who_ may be the antecedent to the relative_ that_; as,"_ Who that_ has any moral sense, dares tell lies?" |
11615 | Sometimes we see it divided only by a comma, from the preceding question; as,"What dost thou think of this doctrine, Friend Gurth, ha?" |
11615 | Sometimes, however, the sense forbids it to be put in the possessive case; thus, What do you think of my_ horse running_ to- day? |
11615 | Son Louis soupire, Après ses appas; Que veut elle dire, Qu''elle ne vient pas? |
11615 | Strephon, how can you despise Her who without thy pity dies?" |
11615 | Strephon, how_ canst thou_ despise Her who, without thy pity,_ dies_?" |
11615 | T. Smith''s_, 13. Who, but a child taught by language like this, would ever think of_ speaking to a noun_? |
11615 | Ten''s? |
11615 | That he is regenerate? |
11615 | That is, What am I, and whence_ am I_?" |
11615 | That is,"Ode is,_ literally_, the same_ thing that_ song or hymn_ is_?" |
11615 | That is,"Would you have them_ dismissed_ then? |
11615 | That is,"_ What act_, or_ thing_?" |
11615 | That is,"_ Which man_ of you?" |
11615 | That there must be some such relation, is obvious; but what is it? |
11615 | That? |
11615 | The Bible has many examples; as,"Who is_ like to_ thee in Israel?" |
11615 | The Doctor absurdly says,"Not only things, but persons, may be the_ antecedent_ to this pronoun; as,_ Who is it_? |
11615 | The French Bible has it:"Simon, fils de Jona, m''aimes- tu plus que_ ne font_ ceux- ci?" |
11615 | The answer to the question,''How does he read?'' |
11615 | The double question is, Which of these forms ought to be approved and taught for that person and number? |
11615 | The errors here committed might have been avoided thus:"What is_ a verb_? |
11615 | The falling,"_ When_ will you_ gò_?" |
11615 | The following are a few examples:--_ Example I.--Two ancient Stanzas, out of Many_,"This while| we are| abroad, Shall we| not touch| our lyre? |
11615 | The meaning is,"Whose house is that house?" |
11615 | The potential mood, like the indicative, may be used in asking a question; as,"_ Must_ I_ budge_? |
11615 | The preposition_ till_, or_ until_, is sometimes found in use before an expression of_ times numbered_; as,"How oft shall I forgive? |
11615 | The question which he asks, ought to have been,"_ Why did this person dismiss_ his servant so hastily?" |
11615 | The rising,"Do you mean to_ gó_?" |
11615 | The second person is that which denotes the hearer, or the person addressed; as,"_ Robert_, who did this?" |
11615 | The word_ heathen_, too, makes the regular plural_ heathens_, and yet is often used in a plural sense without the_ s_; as,"Why do the_ heathen_ rage?" |
11615 | The_ noun_ that is spoken to, is the second person; as,_ James_, were you present? |
11615 | Then, of the twenty- four rules, how many remain for the other three parts,--nouns, pronouns, and verbs? |
11615 | Therefore,"Dispenser"should here begin with a capital D.]"Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?" |
11615 | Therefore,_ me_ should be_ I_; thus,"Who would not say,''If it be_ I_,''rather than,''If it be_ me_?''"] |
11615 | These verbs are here transitive, but are they so above? |
11615 | This also is plausible; but is the imperfection less, for being sometimes traceable to an ulterior source? |
11615 | This author prefers"_ heardest_;"the other,"_ heardst_,"which I think better warranted:"And_ heardst_ thou why he drew his blade? |
11615 | This is a very peculiar idiom of our language; and if we say,"Have ye not houses_ in which_ to eat and to drink?" |
11615 | This may be supposed to mean,"_ I_, granting this to be true,_ ask_ what is to be inferred from it?" |
11615 | This sentence, before it is parsed,_ should be transposed_; thus,''Whose is that house?'' |
11615 | This usage is now obsolete; and, in stead of it, we say,"_ Which_ is greater?" |
11615 | This would, of course, double the_ l_ in nearly all the derivatives from_ metal, medal_,& c. But what says Custom? |
11615 | Thou? |
11615 | Through_ what?_ Ans. |
11615 | Thus Milton:--"Thou following_ cry''dst_ aloud, Return, fair Eve; Whom_ fly''st_ thou? |
11615 | Thus Webster:"We have some verbs which govern two words in the objective case; as,''Did I request thee, maker, from my clay To mold_ me man_?'' |
11615 | Thus a monosyllable, considered singly, rises from a lower to a higher tone in the question_ Nó? |
11615 | Thus all his personal pronouns of the possessive case, he then made to be inflections of pronouns of_ a different class!_ What are they now? |
11615 | Thus much, in this place, to those who so frequently ask,"Wherein does your book differ from Murray''s?" |
11615 | Thus, Ã � sop''s viper and file are both personified, where it is recorded,"''What ails thee, fool?'' |
11615 | Thus:"How many times or tenses have verbs? |
11615 | Thus_ who_ means_ what person_? |
11615 | Thyself? |
11615 | To explain the syntax of"_ Twice two are four_,"what can be more rational than to say,"The sense is,''Twice two_ units_, or_ things_, are four?''" |
11615 | To the distant sun, from whose beams I derive vigour?" |
11615 | To what adjectives is the regular method of comparison, by_ er_ and_ est_, applicable? |
11615 | To what do adjectives relate? |
11615 | To what do adverbs relate? |
11615 | To what do articles relate? |
11615 | To what does the adjective usually relate, when it stands alone after a finite verb? |
11615 | To what general classes may adverbs be reduced? |
11615 | To what other terms can the infinitive be connected? |
11615 | To what part of speech is the greatest number of rules applied in parsing? |
11615 | To what purpose can he_ transpose_ the words of a sentence, who does not first see what they mean, and how to explain or parse them as they stand? |
11615 | To what style is the inflecting of_ shall, will, may, can, should, would, might_, and_ could_, now restricted? |
11615 | To what then are the_ mortar_, the_ wheat_, and the_ pestle_, to be mentally subjoined? |
11615 | To what then does_ the_ refer, but to the proportionate degree of_ deeper_ and_ clearer_? |
11615 | To what| region| far a|-way, Bend thy| steps to| find a| home, In the| twilight| of thy| day?'' |
11615 | To which of the apposite terms is the rule for apposition to be applied? |
11615 | Turn to his| ancestry, Or to the| church for it? |
11615 | Twice two duads are how many? |
11615 | Under what circumstances can a pronoun agree with either of two antecedents? |
11615 | Under what circumstances is it common to disregard the distinction of sex? |
11615 | Under what four heads are the apparent exceptions to this Rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what names are words classed according to the number of their syllables? |
11615 | Under what seven heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the apparent exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the exceptions, real or apparent, here noticed? |
11615 | Under what three heads are the limits and exceptions to this rule noticed? |
11615 | Under what_ figure_ of syntax did the old grammarians rank the plural construction of a noun of multitude? |
11615 | Unit figure? |
11615 | Upon what does distinctness depend? |
11615 | Vainly,| vainly,| would my| steps pur|-sue: Chains of| care to| lower| earth en|-thrall me, Wherefore| thus my| weary| spirit| woo? |
11615 | Was Murray less praiseworthy, less amiable, or less modest? |
11615 | Was there a| dearer one Yet, than all| other? |
11615 | Was this from a notion, that_ you_ and_ ye_, thus employed, were more analogous to_ thou_ and_ thee_ in the singular number?" |
11615 | Was this, or something else, the desideratum of Beattie? |
11615 | Was this_ owing to there being_ twelve primary_ deities_ among the Gothic nations?" |
11615 | We may say,_ tenderer_ and_ tenderest, pleasanter_ and_ pleasantest, prettier_ and_ prettiest_; but who could endure_ delicater_ and_ delicatest_?" |
11615 | We might ask in turn, when you say''the field ploughs well,''ploughs_ what_? |
11615 | We might here, perhaps, say,"of_ Christ''s speaking_ in me,"but is not the other form better? |
11615 | We often speak of"_ the same words_,"and of"_ different words_;"but wherein does the sameness or the difference of words consist? |
11615 | We ought,_ therefore_, to introduce something explanatory; as,''What do you think_ of the propriety_ of my going to Niagara?" |
11615 | Well you| know how| much you| grieve me: Cruel| charmer,| can you| go? |
11615 | Were they not loved? |
11615 | What actual ellipsis usually occurs with the imperative mood? |
11615 | What adjectives are compared by means of adverbs? |
11615 | What adjectives can not be compared? |
11615 | What adjectives exclude, or supersede, the article? |
11615 | What adjectives precede the article? |
11615 | What agreement is required between words in apposition? |
11615 | What am I? |
11615 | What analogy is there between the things which he compares? |
11615 | What are adverbs of degree? |
11615 | What are adverbs of manner? |
11615 | What are adverbs of place? |
11615 | What are adverbs of time? |
11615 | What are cases, in grammar? |
11615 | What are conjunctive adverbs? |
11615 | What are corresponsive conjunctions? |
11615 | What are genders, in grammar? |
11615 | What are gerundives? |
11615 | What are inflections? |
11615 | What are its participles? |
11615 | What are pauses? |
11615 | What are persons, in grammar? |
11615 | What are the PRINCIPAL PARTS in the conjugation of a verb? |
11615 | What are the chief constructional peculiarities of the relative pronouns? |
11615 | What are the component parts of a sentence? |
11615 | What are the construction and import of the phrases,_ in particular, in general_, and the like? |
11615 | What are the faults opposite to it? |
11615 | What are the inflections and uses of_ can_? |
11615 | What are the inflections and uses of_ may_? |
11615 | What are the inflections and uses of_ shall_ and_ will_? |
11615 | What are the inflections of the verb_ be_, in its simple tenses? |
11615 | What are the inflections of the verb_ do_, in its simple tenses? |
11615 | What are the inflections of the verb_ have_, in its simple tenses? |
11615 | What are the just powers of the letters? |
11615 | What are the least parts of language? |
11615 | What are the names of the letters in English? |
11615 | What are the other parts called? |
11615 | What are the principal feet in English? |
11615 | What are the principal figures of orthography? |
11615 | What are the principal kinds, or orders, of verse? |
11615 | What are the principal parts of the simple verb READ? |
11615 | What are the principal parts of the verb LOVE? |
11615 | What are the principal parts? |
11615 | What are the principal parts? |
11615 | What are the principal points, or marks? |
11615 | What are the several combinations that form dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter, heptameter, and octometer? |
11615 | What are the several measures of anapestic verse? |
11615 | What are the several measures of dactylic verse? |
11615 | What are the several measures of iambic verse? |
11615 | What are the several measures of trochaic verse? |
11615 | What are the several titles, or subjects, of the twenty- four rules of syntax? |
11615 | What are the six Marks of Reference in their usual order? |
11615 | What are the uses of_ must_, which is uninflected? |
11615 | What are the vowel sounds in English? |
11615 | What are the_ Person_ and_ Number_ of a verb? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their heads? |
11615 | What are their names in both numbers, singular and plural? |
11615 | What are their names? |
11615 | What are their titles, or heads? |
11615 | What are these_?" |
11615 | What are thy_ comings- in_? |
11615 | What are tones? |
11615 | What are you a- seeking? |
11615 | What are_ Cases_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Classes_, under the parts of speech? |
11615 | What are_ Genders_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Modifications?_ 5. |
11615 | What are_ Moods_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Numbers_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Persons_, in grammar? |
11615 | What are_ Tenses_, in grammar? |
11615 | What art thou?" |
11615 | What art thou?" |
11615 | What art thou?_"And, by analogy, this seems to be the case with all plurals; as,"_ Who are we? |
11615 | What art thou?_"And, by analogy, this seems to be the case with all plurals; as,"_ Who are we? |
11615 | What article may sometimes be used in lieu of a possessive pronoun? |
11615 | What author declares it improper ever to connect by_ or_ or_ nor_ any nominatives that require different forms of the verb? |
11615 | What authors deny the existence of"the case absolute?" |
11615 | What authors prefer"_ the nearest person_,"and"_ the plural number_?" |
11615 | What authors prefer"the_ nearest nominative_, whether singular or plural?" |
11615 | What authors teach that interjections are put absolute, and have no government? |
11615 | What becomes of the elongating power of e, without accent or emphasis, as in_ jun´cate, pal´ate, prel´ate_? |
11615 | What benefit may be expected from the rules for spelling? |
11615 | What besides a noun or a pronoun may be made the subject of a verb? |
11615 | What can be hoped from an author who is ignorant enough to think"_ Thou walketh_"is good English? |
11615 | What can be hoped from the grammarian who can not discern it? |
11615 | What can be more fantastical than the following etymology, or more absurd than the following directions for parsing? |
11615 | What can be more uncouth than to say,''What do you think of_ me_ going to Niagara?'' |
11615 | What can be transgressed, but a law, a limit, or_ something_ equivalent? |
11615 | What can she more_ than_ tell us we are fools?" |
11615 | What case do prepositions govern? |
11615 | What case does an active- transitive verb or participle govern? |
11615 | What case in Latin and Greek is reckoned_ the subject_ of the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What case is employed as the subject of a finite verb? |
11615 | What case is put after a verb or participle not transitive? |
11615 | What causes the sign_ to_ to be expressed before_ study?_ Its being used in the passive voice after_ be made_." |
11615 | What characters are employed in English? |
11615 | What common property have the_ three cases_, by which we can clearly define_ case_? |
11615 | What comparative view is taken of accent and emphasis? |
11615 | What conjunction is frequently understood? |
11615 | What constitutes a circumflex? |
11615 | What constitutes a monotone, in elocution? |
11615 | What constitutes the rising, and what the falling, circumflex? |
11615 | What construction is produced by the_ repetition_ of a noun or pronoun? |
11615 | What critic will not judge the following phraseology to be faulty? |
11615 | What critical remark is made on the misuse of_ ever_ and_ never_? |
11615 | What defect is observable in the common rules for"the case absolute,"or"the nominative independent?" |
11615 | What did he say, when his fit partner, the fairest and loveliest work of God, was presented to him? |
11615 | What difference does it make, whether we use the possessive case before words in_ ing_, or not? |
11615 | What different sorts of types, or styles of letters, are used in English? |
11615 | What distinction between the participial and the substantive use of verbals in_ ing_ do Crombie and others propose to make? |
11615 | What distinction of form belongs to each of the letters? |
11615 | What distinction, in respect to government, is to be observed between a participle and a participial noun? |
11615 | What do Nixon and Kirkham erroneously teach about cases governed by interjections? |
11615 | What do conjunctions connect? |
11615 | What do our grammarians teach concerning the omission of_ to_ before the infinitive, after_ bid, dare, feel_,& c.? |
11615 | What do we derive from these combinations of sounds and characters? |
11615 | What do we mean by_ matter_? |
11615 | What do you see now? |
11615 | What do you see now? |
11615 | What do you see? |
11615 | What do you see? |
11615 | What does Brown say of this doctrine? |
11615 | What does Cobbett say about_ with_ put for_ and_? |
11615 | What does Dr. Wilson say of the character and_ import_ of the infinitive? |
11615 | What does Richard Johnson infer from the fact that the Latin infinitive is sometimes governed by a preposition? |
11615 | What does elocution require? |
11615 | What does he know of grammar, who can not directly and properly answer such questions as these?--"What are numbers, in grammar? |
11615 | What does he say of the manner in which"the use of_ nor_ after_ not_ has been introduced?" |
11615 | What does it include? |
11615 | What does the combination form?" |
11615 | What does the pronoun"_ they_"represent? |
11615 | What does_ interjection_ mean? |
11615 | What does_ preposition_ mean? |
11615 | What else can the author have meant? |
11615 | What erroneous remark have Priestley, Murray, and others, about two prepositions"in the same construction?" |
11615 | What errors are taught by Greenleaf concerning_ dare_ and_ need_ or_ needs_? |
11615 | What errors do Kirkham, Smith, and others, teach concerning the possessive singular? |
11615 | What errors in the construction and punctuation of interjectional phrases are quoted from Fisk, Smith, and Kirkham? |
11615 | What false doctrine have Lowth, Murray, and others, about the separating of the preposition from its noun? |
11615 | What fault is found with the opinion of Priestley, Murray, Ingersoll, and Smith, that"either of them may be used with nearly equal propriety?" |
11615 | What fault is there in the usual distribution of these rules? |
11615 | What faults appear in the teaching of our grammarians concerning_ do_ used as a"substitute for other verbs?" |
11615 | What faults are there in the rules given by_ Lowth, Murray, Smith_, and others, for the construction of_ like cases_? |
11615 | What figures of rhetoric are liable to affect the agreement of pronouns with their antecedents? |
11615 | What form of the article do the sounds of_ w_ and_ y_ require? |
11615 | What four adverbs affect the position of the article and adjective? |
11615 | What four things distinguish the elegant speaker? |
11615 | What further is added concerning the terms which conjunctions connect? |
11615 | What further is remarked concerning false teaching in relation to participles? |
11615 | What governs the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What grammarian approves of such expressions as,"Two and two_ is_ four?" |
11615 | What grammarian supposes_ whom_ after_ than_ to be"in the objective case_ absolute_?" |
11615 | What grammarians have taught that the preposition_ to_ governs the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What great difficulty does Murray acknowledge concerning"nouns of multitude?" |
11615 | What guide have we for dividing words into syllables? |
11615 | What has discourse to do with sentences? |
11615 | What has stress of voice to do with quantity? |
11615 | What have the_ three persons_ in common, which, in a definition of_ person_, could be made evident to a child? |
11615 | What inconsistency is found in Murray, with reference to his"_ nominative sentences_?" |
11615 | What inferences have our grammarians made from the phrase_ than whom_? |
11615 | What inflection of English nouns regularly changes their gender? |
11615 | What is Antithesis? |
11615 | What is Aphà ¦ resis? |
11615 | What is Apocope? |
11615 | What is Apophasis, or Paralipsis? |
11615 | What is Apostrophe? |
11615 | What is Climax? |
11615 | What is Cobbett''s"_ clear principle_"on this head? |
11615 | What is Dià ¦ resis? |
11615 | What is Dr. Webster''s ninth rule of syntax? |
11615 | What is Ecphonesis? |
11615 | What is Ellipsis, in grammar? |
11615 | What is Enallage? |
11615 | What is English Grammar, in itself? |
11615 | What is Erotesis? |
11615 | What is Grammar? |
11615 | What is Hyperbaton? |
11615 | What is Hyperbole? |
11615 | What is Irony? |
11615 | What is Mimesis? |
11615 | What is Nixon''s notion of the construction of the verb and collective noun? |
11615 | What is Onomatopoeia? |
11615 | What is Paragoge? |
11615 | What is Personification? |
11615 | What is Pleonasm? |
11615 | What is Prosthesis? |
11615 | What is Syllepsis? |
11615 | What is Syncope? |
11615 | What is Synecdoche? |
11615 | What is Synà ¦ resis? |
11615 | What is Tmesis? |
11615 | What is Vision? |
11615 | What is a Bacchy? |
11615 | What is a CONJUNCTION, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is a CÃ ¦ sura? |
11615 | What is a Dactyl? |
11615 | What is a Metaphor? |
11615 | What is a Metonymy? |
11615 | What is a Moloss? |
11615 | What is a NOUN, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is a PARTICIPLE, and how is it generally formed? |
11615 | What is a PREPOSITION, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is a PRONOUN, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is a Pyrrhic? |
11615 | What is a Simile? |
11615 | What is a Spondee? |
11615 | What is a Tribrach? |
11615 | What is a Trochee? |
11615 | What is a VERB, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is a collective noun? |
11615 | What is a common adjective? |
11615 | What is a common noun? |
11615 | What is a compound adjective? |
11615 | What is a compound word? |
11615 | What is a conjunction? |
11615 | What is a consonant? |
11615 | What is a copulative conjunction? |
11615 | What is a defective verb? |
11615 | What is a defective verb? |
11615 | What is a derivative word? |
11615 | What is a diphthong? |
11615 | What is a disjunctive conjunction? |
11615 | What is a figure of etymology? |
11615 | What is a figure of orthography? |
11615 | What is a figure of rhetoric? |
11615 | What is a figure of syntax? |
11615 | What is a letter? |
11615 | What is a mute? |
11615 | What is a neuter verb? |
11615 | What is a noun? |
11615 | What is a numeral adjective? |
11615 | What is a participial adjective? |
11615 | What is a participle? |
11615 | What is a passive verb? |
11615 | What is a perfect definition? |
11615 | What is a personal pronoun? |
11615 | What is a preposition? |
11615 | What is a primitive word? |
11615 | What is a pronominal adjective? |
11615 | What is a pronoun? |
11615 | What is a proper adjective? |
11615 | What is a proper diphthong? |
11615 | What is a proper noun? |
11615 | What is a proper triphthong? |
11615 | What is a redundant verb? |
11615 | What is a redundant verb? |
11615 | What is a regular verb? |
11615 | What is a relative pronoun? |
11615 | What is a rule of grammar? |
11615 | What is a semivowel? |
11615 | What is a simple word? |
11615 | What is a stanza? |
11615 | What is a syllable? |
11615 | What is a triphthong? |
11615 | What is a verb called which wants some of these parts? |
11615 | What is a verb? |
11615 | What is a verbal or participial noun? |
11615 | What is a vowel? |
11615 | What is a word? |
11615 | What is a_ Figure_ in grammar? |
11615 | What is a_ Praxis?_ and what is said of the word? |
11615 | What is a_ Praxis?_ and what is said of the word? |
11615 | What is a_ clause_, or_ member_? |
11615 | What is a_ compound sentence_? |
11615 | What is a_ phrase_? |
11615 | What is a_ sentence_? |
11615 | What is a_ simple_ sentence? |
11615 | What is a_ triphthong_? |
11615 | What is accent? |
11615 | What is affirmed of the difficulties of parsing the infinitive according to the code of Murray? |
11615 | What is an ADJECTIVE, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is an ADVERB, and what is the example given? |
11615 | What is an ARTICLE? |
11615 | What is an Allegory? |
11615 | What is an Amphibrach? |
11615 | What is an Amphimac? |
11615 | What is an Anapest? |
11615 | What is an Antibachy? |
11615 | What is an Archaism? |
11615 | What is an English Grammar? |
11615 | What is an INTERJECTION, and what are the examples given? |
11615 | What is an Iambus? |
11615 | What is an abstract noun? |
11615 | What is an active- intransitive verb? |
11615 | What is an active- transitive verb? |
11615 | What is an adjective? |
11615 | What is an adverb? |
11615 | What is an article? |
11615 | What is an auxiliary, in grammar? |
11615 | What is an elementary sound of human voice, or speech? |
11615 | What is an example, as used in teaching? |
11615 | What is an exercise? |
11615 | What is an improper diphthong? |
11615 | What is an improper triphthong? |
11615 | What is an interjection? |
11615 | What is an interrogative pronoun? |
11615 | What is an irregular verb? |
11615 | What is an irregular verb? |
11615 | What is articulation? |
11615 | What is blank verse? |
11615 | What is cadence? |
11615 | What is called the falling or downward inflection? |
11615 | What is called the rising or upward inflection? |
11615 | What is comparison, in grammar? |
11615 | What is composite verse? |
11615 | What is elocution? |
11615 | What is emphasis? |
11615 | What is it but an idle conjecture? |
11615 | What is it that is called_ Orthoëpy?_ 3. |
11615 | What is it,"to analyze a sentence?" |
11615 | What is it,_ to read_? |
11615 | What is it,_ to speak_? |
11615 | What is it,_ to write_? |
11615 | What is meant by the term,"_ Parts of Speech?_"3. |
11615 | What is meant by_ scanning_ or_ scansion_? |
11615 | What is meant, when we speak of the powers of the letters? |
11615 | What is necessary to every finite verb? |
11615 | What is noted in relation to the unamendable imperfections sometimes found in ancient writings? |
11615 | What is noted of the ambiguous use of_ but_ or_ only_? |
11615 | What is noted of the word_ which_, as applied to persons? |
11615 | What is observed concerning the distinction of_ voice_ in the simple infinitive and the first participle? |
11615 | What is observed concerning the further extension of this rule to nouns and pronouns of the third person? |
11615 | What is observed concerning the place of the verb? |
11615 | What is observed in relation to the exceptions to Rule 23d? |
11615 | What is observed of Murray''s"_ infinitive made absolute_?" |
11615 | What is observed of adjectives preceded by_ the_ and used elliptically? |
11615 | What is observed of collective nouns used partitively? |
11615 | What is observed of nouns of weight, measure, or time, coming immediately together? |
11615 | What is observed of sentences like the following, in which there seems to be no nominative:"There_ are_ from eight to twelve professors?" |
11615 | What is observed of such phrases as,"_ hand to hand_,"--"_face to face_?" |
11615 | What is observed of the agreement of verbs in interrogative sentences? |
11615 | What is observed of the expressions,_ these people, these gentry, these folk_? |
11615 | What is observed of the frequent ellipses of the verb_ to be_, supposed by Allen and others? |
11615 | What is observed of the multiplicity of uses to which the participle in_ ing_ may be turned? |
11615 | What is observed of the nouns used in dates? |
11615 | What is observed of the relation of conjunctive adverbs, and of the misuse of_ when_? |
11615 | What is observed of the term_ not but_, and of the adverbial use of_ but_? |
11615 | What is observed of the word_ worth_? |
11615 | What is observed of the words_ like, near_, and_ nigh_? |
11615 | What is observed of those rules which suppose every adjective to relate to some noun? |
11615 | What is observed of verbs that agree with the nearest nominative, and are understood to the rest? |
11615 | What is observed of_ never_ and_ ever_ as seeming to be adjectives, and being liable to contraction? |
11615 | What is observed of_ this_ and_ that_ as referring to two nouns connected? |
11615 | What is offered in refutation of Peirce''s doctrine? |
11615 | What is our nearest approach to the Latin construction of the accusative before the infinitive? |
11615 | What is pronunciation? |
11615 | What is quantity? |
11615 | What is remarked concerning the place of the pronoun of the first person singular? |
11615 | What is remarked concerning the rhyming syllables? |
11615 | What is remarked concerning the use of_ of, to, on_, and_ upon_? |
11615 | What is remarked of different cases used indiscriminately before the participle or verbal noun? |
11615 | What is remarked of instances like the following:"Prior''s_ Henry and Emma contains_ an other beautiful example?" |
11615 | What is remarked of such examples as this:"The_ Pleasures_ of Memory_ was_ published in 1702?" |
11615 | What is remarked of the difference between the indicative and the subjunctive mood, and of the limits of the latter? |
11615 | What is remarked of the ellipsis or omission of the relative? |
11615 | What is remarked of the faulty omission of the pronoun_ it_ before the verb? |
11615 | What is remarked of the placing of two or more adjectives before one noun? |
11615 | What is remarked of the possessive relation between time and action? |
11615 | What is remarked of the use of adjectives for adverbs? |
11615 | What is remarked of two or more conjunctions coming together? |
11615 | What is remarked of two or more negatives in the same sentence? |
11615 | What is remarked on the place and character of the critical notes and the general rule? |
11615 | What is replied to Dr. Adam''s suggestion,"Adverbs sometimes qualify substantives?" |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in syntactical parsing? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the EIGHTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the ELEVENTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the FIFTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the FIRST PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the FOURTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the NINTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the SECOND PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the SEVENTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the SIXTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the TENTH PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is required of the pupil in the THIRD PRAXIS? |
11615 | What is rhyme? |
11615 | What is said in regard to the placing of adverbs? |
11615 | What is said of Dr. Adam''s"_ To_ taken_ absolutely_?" |
11615 | What is said of Murray''s mode of treating this subject? |
11615 | What is said of adjectives as agreeing or disagreeing with their nouns in number? |
11615 | What is said of certain infinitives supposed to be erroneously put for participles? |
11615 | What is said of ellipsis after_ than_ or_ as_? |
11615 | What is said of needless articles? |
11615 | What is said of nouns used in exclamations, or in mottoes and abbreviated sayings? |
11615 | What is said of rhetorical pauses? |
11615 | What is said of small letters? |
11615 | What is said of the comparison of adverbs by_ more_ and_ most, less_ and_ least_? |
11615 | What is said of the compound personal pronouns? |
11615 | What is said of the correction of those examples in which a needless article or possessive is put before the participle? |
11615 | What is said of the different parts of speech contained in the list of correspondents? |
11615 | What is said of the distinguishing or confounding of different parts of speech, such as verbs, participles, and nouns? |
11615 | What is said of the duration of pauses, and the taking of breath? |
11615 | What is said of the ellipsis of one or the other of the terms? |
11615 | What is said of the fifth method of analysis? |
11615 | What is said of the gender of nouns of multitude? |
11615 | What is said of the notation of them? |
11615 | What is said of the omission of_ s_ from the possessive singular on account of its hissing sound? |
11615 | What is said of the parsing of a preposition? |
11615 | What is said of the participles which some suppose to be put absolute? |
11615 | What is said of the place of the interjection? |
11615 | What is said of the placing of prepositions? |
11615 | What is said of the position of the adjective? |
11615 | What is said of the position of the infinitive? |
11615 | What is said of the prepositions which follow_ averse_ and_ aversion, except_ and_ exception_? |
11615 | What is said of the secondary feet? |
11615 | What is said of the sign_ to_ after_ than_ or_ as_? |
11615 | What is said of the slanting strokes in Roman letters? |
11615 | What is said of the sounds of_ c_ and_ g_? |
11615 | What is said of the sounds of_ j_ and_ x_? |
11615 | What is said of the suppression of the antecedent? |
11615 | What is said of the suppression of the conjunction_ and_? |
11615 | What is said of the suppression of_ to_ and the insertion of_ be_; as,"To make himself_ be_ heard?" |
11615 | What is said of the teaching of Murray and others, that,"The participle with its adjuncts may be considered as a_ substantive phrase_?" |
11615 | What is said of the transitive use of such words as_ unbecoming_? |
11615 | What is said of the transposition of the two terms? |
11615 | What is said of this figure? |
11615 | What is said of those examples in which participles seem to be made the objects of verbs? |
11615 | What is said of those sentences in which an interjection is followed by a preposition or the conjunction_ that_? |
11615 | What is said of_ O_ and the vocative case? |
11615 | What is said of_ an_ or_ a_ before an adjective of number? |
11615 | What is said of_ and_ as supposed to be used to call attention? |
11615 | What is said of_ sc_, or_ s_ before_ c_? |
11615 | What is said of_ see_, as governing the infinitive? |
11615 | What is shown of the later teaching to which Murray''s erroneous and unoriginal remark about"_ O, oh_, and_ ah_,"has given rise? |
11615 | What is spelling? |
11615 | What is stated of the retaining of adverbs with participial nouns? |
11615 | What is stated of the rules of Adam, Lowth, Murray, and Kirkham, concerning collective nouns? |
11615 | What is suggested concerning the character and import of_ than_ and_ as_? |
11615 | What is the Rule for the pointing of_ Participles?_ 10. |
11615 | What is the comparative degree? |
11615 | What is the comparative degree? |
11615 | What is the compound form of conjugating active or neuter verbs? |
11615 | What is the conjugation of a verb? |
11615 | What is the construction of a noun, when it emphatically repeats the idea suggested by a preceding sentence? |
11615 | What is the construction of such expressions as this:"A torch,_ snuff_ and_ all, goes_ out in a moment?" |
11615 | What is the construction of the pronoun in"_ Ah me!_""_ Ah him!_"or any similar exclamation? |
11615 | What is the construction when two nominatives are connected by_ as well as, but_, or_ save_? |
11615 | What is the declension of a noun? |
11615 | What is the declension of a pronoun? |
11615 | What is the difference between_ in_ and_ into_? |
11615 | What is the dispute among grammarians concerning the adoption of_ or_ or_ nor_ after_ not_ or_ no_? |
11615 | What is the effect of putting one article for the other, and how shall we know which to choose? |
11615 | What is the effect of the word_ the_ before comparatives and superlatives? |
11615 | What is the essential character of the_ Notes_ which are placed under the rules of syntax? |
11615 | What is the feminine gender? |
11615 | What is the feminine gender? |
11615 | What is the fifth example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the first example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the first method of analysis, according to this code of syntax? |
11615 | What is the first person? |
11615 | What is the first person? |
11615 | What is the first- future tense? |
11615 | What is the form for the familiar style? |
11615 | What is the form of negation for the solemn style, second person singular? |
11615 | What is the form of question in the solemn style, with this verb in the second person singular? |
11615 | What is the fourth example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the fourth method of analysis? |
11615 | What is the general rule? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Colon? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Comma? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Dash? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Period? |
11615 | What is the general use of the Semicolon? |
11615 | What is the guide to a right emphasis? |
11615 | What is the imperative mood? |
11615 | What is the imperfect participle? |
11615 | What is the imperfect tense? |
11615 | What is the indicative mood? |
11615 | What is the infinitive mood? |
11615 | What is the infinitive, and for what things may it stand? |
11615 | What is the interrogative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ I_? |
11615 | What is the interrogative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ he_? |
11615 | What is the kind, and what the degree, of originality, which are to be commended in works of this sort? |
11615 | What is the masculine gender? |
11615 | What is the masculine gender? |
11615 | What is the name, or title, of this book? |
11615 | What is the negative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ he_? |
11615 | What is the neuter gender? |
11615 | What is the neuter gender? |
11615 | What is the nominative case? |
11615 | What is the nominative case? |
11615 | What is the object of a verb, participle, or preposition? |
11615 | What is the objective case? |
11615 | What is the objective case?" |
11615 | What is the opinion of Nixon, and of Crombie? |
11615 | What is the perfect participle? |
11615 | What is the perfect tense? |
11615 | What is the pluperfect tense? |
11615 | What is the plural number? |
11615 | What is the plural number? |
11615 | What is the position of the article with respect to its noun? |
11615 | What is the positive degree? |
11615 | What is the possessive case? |
11615 | What is the possessive case? |
11615 | What is the potential mood? |
11615 | What is the power, and what the position, of a conjunction that connects sentences or clauses? |
11615 | What is the preperfect participle? |
11615 | What is the present tense? |
11615 | What is the quantity of a syllable? |
11615 | What is the regular construction of participles, as such? |
11615 | What is the result of a uniform mixture? |
11615 | What is the rhythm of verse? |
11615 | What is the rule which speaks of a finite_ Verb Understood?_ 8. |
11615 | What is the second example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the second method of analysis? |
11615 | What is the second person? |
11615 | What is the second person? |
11615 | What is the second- future tense? |
11615 | What is the simplest form of an English conjugation? |
11615 | What is the singular number? |
11615 | What is the singular number? |
11615 | What is the subject of a verb? |
11615 | What is the subjunctive mood? |
11615 | What is the superlative degree? |
11615 | What is the superlative degree? |
11615 | What is the syntax of interjections? |
11615 | What is the syntax of the verb, when one of its nominatives is expressed, and an other or others implied? |
11615 | What is the syntax of the verb, when there are nominatives connected by_ as_? |
11615 | What is the third example of conjugation? |
11615 | What is the third method of analysis? |
11615 | What is the third person? |
11615 | What is the third person? |
11615 | What is the use of doing so? |
11615 | What is the use of prepositions? |
11615 | What is the use of the Acute Accent? |
11615 | What is the use of the Apostrophe? |
11615 | What is the use of the Asterism, or the Three Stars? |
11615 | What is the use of the Brace? |
11615 | What is the use of the Breve, or Stenotone? |
11615 | What is the use of the Caret? |
11615 | What is the use of the Cedilla? |
11615 | What is the use of the Circumflex? |
11615 | What is the use of the Crotchets, or Brackets? |
11615 | What is the use of the Curves, or Marks of Parenthesis? |
11615 | What is the use of the Dià ¦ resis, or Dialysis? |
11615 | What is the use of the Ecphoneme, or Note of Exclamation? |
11615 | What is the use of the Ellipsis, or Suppression? |
11615 | What is the use of the Eroteme, or Note of Interrogation? |
11615 | What is the use of the Grave Accent? |
11615 | What is the use of the Guillemets, or Quotation Points? |
11615 | What is the use of the Hyphen? |
11615 | What is the use of the Index, or Hand? |
11615 | What is the use of the Macron, or Macrotone? |
11615 | What is the use of the Paragraph? |
11615 | What is the use of the Section? |
11615 | What is the usual construction of_ each other_ and_ one an other_? |
11615 | What is the usual position of pronouns, and what exceptions are there? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the article with respect to an adjective and a noun? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the nominative and verb, and when is it varied? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the objective case, and what exceptions are there? |
11615 | What is the usual position of the possessive case, and what exceptions are there? |
11615 | What is the_ Perfect Participle_? |
11615 | What is the_ agreement_ of words? |
11615 | What is the_ arrangement_ of words? |
11615 | What is the_ government_ of words? |
11615 | What is the_ relation_ of words? |
11615 | What is there remarkable in the construction of_ ourself_ and_ yourself_? |
11615 | What is there that_ can not be named or mentioned?_ Others again are restricted to one noun, or to a few; as,_ to transgress a law, or rule_. |
11615 | What is this"vague sense?" |
11615 | What is to be done with"_ Thinks I_ to myself,"and the like? |
11615 | What is told of two prepositions coming together? |
11615 | What is verse, as distinguished from prose? |
11615 | What is"_ being builded_"or"_ being printed_,"but"an_ imperfect passive participle_?" |
11615 | What is_ Parsing?_ and what relation does it bear to grammar? |
11615 | What is_ Parsing?_ and what relation does it bear to grammar? |
11615 | What is_ Punctuation?_ 3. |
11615 | What is_ Utterance?_ 2. |
11615 | What is_ Versification_? |
11615 | What is_ apposition_, and from whom did it receive this name? |
11615 | What is_ as_ when it is made the subject or the object of a verb? |
11615 | What is_ the Imperfect Participle_? |
11615 | What is_ the Present_? |
11615 | What is_ the Preterit_? |
11615 | What is_ to_ here? |
11615 | What kind of a stone? |
11615 | What kind of a way? |
11615 | What kinds of words can take different cases after them? |
11615 | What knowledge does pronunciation require? |
11615 | What large exception to this rule has been recently discovered by Dr. Bullions? |
11615 | What less pardonable misnomer, than for a great critic to call the sign of long quantity a"_ hyphen_"? |
11615 | What letters are called liquids? |
11615 | What letters are reckoned mutes? |
11615 | What letters are reckoned semivowels? |
11615 | What letters are vowels? |
11615 | What made this vast difference, but this: That_ one was_ accustomed to have what_ they_ called or cried for;_ the other_ to go without it?" |
11615 | What marvel then, that all his multifarious grammars of the English language are despised? |
11615 | What marvel, then, that he falls into errors, both of doctrine and of practice? |
11615 | What mean the technical words,_ catalectic, acatalectic_, and_ hypermeter_? |
11615 | What modifications have adjectives? |
11615 | What modifications have adverbs? |
11615 | What modifications have nouns? |
11615 | What modifications have pronouns? |
11615 | What modifications have the articles? |
11615 | What modifications have verbs? |
11615 | What monosyllables, contrary to this rule, end with_ c_ only? |
11615 | What name is given to the sound of a letter? |
11615 | What needless ellipses both of nominatives and of verbs are commonly supposed by our grammarians? |
11615 | What notice is taken of the application of the rule for"_ O, oh_, and_ ah_,"to nouns of the second person? |
11615 | What notice is taken of the application of_ between, betwixt, among, amongst, amid, amidst_? |
11615 | What notion had Dr. Adam of simple and compound sentences? |
11615 | What notions are inculcated by different grammarians about the introductory word_ there_? |
11615 | What notions have been entertained concerning the word_ to_ as used before the infinitive verb? |
11615 | What nouns, then, are masculine? |
11615 | What number is_ pens_? |
11615 | What objections are there to the rule, with its exceptions,"One verb governs an other in the infinitive mood?" |
11615 | What observation is made respecting exceptions to this rule? |
11615 | What odd use is sometimes made of the pronoun_ your_? |
11615 | What order is observed in the placing of these notes, if some rules have many, and others few or none? |
11615 | What orders of verse arise from these? |
11615 | What other common modes of expression are censured by this author under the same head? |
11615 | What other orders are there? |
11615 | What participle is often understood after nouns put absolute? |
11615 | What particular classes are included among common nouns? |
11615 | What particular convenience do we find in having most of our tenses composed of separable words? |
11615 | What parts of speech can be omitted, by ellipsis? |
11615 | What parts of speech have no other syntactical property than that of simple relation? |
11615 | What pauses are denoted by the first four points? |
11615 | What pauses are particularly ungraceful? |
11615 | What pauses are required by the other four? |
11615 | What peculiar meaning does this form convey? |
11615 | What peculiar name have some of these? |
11615 | What peculiarities are noticed in regard to the noun_ side_? |
11615 | What peculiarities has the possessive case in regard to correlatives? |
11615 | What peculiarity has the relative_ what_? |
11615 | What peculiarity is there in the construction of nouns of time, measure, distance, or value? |
11615 | What preposition is often put between nouns that signify the same thing? |
11615 | What principle of universal grammar determines the gender when both sexes are taken together? |
11615 | What principles of spelling must be observed in the comparing of adjectives? |
11615 | What pronoun is sometimes an expletive, and sometimes used with reference to an infinitive following it? |
11615 | What pronoun is sometimes applied to animals so as not to distinguish their sex? |
11615 | What quantity coincides with accent or emphasis? |
11615 | What questionable uses of participles are commonly admitted by grammarians? |
11615 | What questions are raised among grammarians, about the construction of_ as follow_ or_ as follows_, and other similar phrases? |
11615 | What reasons can be adduced to show that the infinitive is not a noun? |
11615 | What regulates accent? |
11615 | What relation of case occurs between nouns connected by_ as_? |
11615 | What relative is applied to a proper noun taken merely as a name? |
11615 | What rule does Dr. Webster give for such examples as the following:"There_ was_ more than a hundred and fifty thousand pounds?" |
11615 | What rule speaks of the separation of_ Words in Apposition?_ 2. |
11615 | What rules of relation are commonly found in grammars? |
11615 | What say Crombie and others about this disputable phraseology? |
11615 | What say Murray, Ingersoll, and Lennie, about interjections and cases? |
11615 | What says Blair about tones? |
11615 | What says Brown of this their teaching? |
11615 | What says Churchill about the notion that certain conjunctions govern the subjunctive mood? |
11615 | What says Comstock of rules for inflections? |
11615 | What says Critical Note 1st of_ the parts of speech_? |
11615 | What says Exception 1st to Rule 2d of_ Restrictive Relatives?_ 20. |
11615 | What says Exception 1st to Rule 4th of_ Two Words with Adjuncts?_ 23. |
11615 | What says Exception 1st to Rule 7th of_ Complex Names?_ 3. |
11615 | What says Exception 2d to Rule 2d of_ Short Terms closely Connected?_ 21. |
11615 | What says Exception 2d to Rule 4th of_ Two Terms Contrasted?_ 24. |
11615 | What says Exception 2d to Rule 7th of_ Close Apposition?_ 4. |
11615 | What says Exception 3d to Rule 2d of_ Elliptical Members United?_ 22. |
11615 | What says Exception 3d to Rule 4th of a mere_ Alternative of Words?_ 25. |
11615 | What says Exception 3d to Rule 7th of_ a Pronoun without a Pause?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Exception 4th to Rule 4th of_ Conjunctions Understood?_ LESSON III.--OF THE COMMA. |
11615 | What says Exception 4th to Rule 7th of_ Names Acquired?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Hiley? |
11615 | What says Lindley Murray about this passive government? |
11615 | What says Murray? |
11615 | What says Note 10th of_ improper omissions_? |
11615 | What says Note 11th of_ literary blunders_? |
11615 | What says Note 12th of_ literary perversions_? |
11615 | What says Note 13th of_ literary awkwardness_? |
11615 | What says Note 14th of_ literary ignorance_? |
11615 | What says Note 15th of_ literary silliness_? |
11615 | What says Note 16th of_ errors incorrigible_? |
11615 | What says Note 2d of_ the doubtful reference_ of words? |
11615 | What says Note 3d of_ definitions_? |
11615 | What says Note 4th of_ comparisons_? |
11615 | What says Note 5th of_ falsities_? |
11615 | What says Note 6th of_ absurdities_? |
11615 | What says Note 7th of_ self- contradiction_? |
11615 | What says Note 8th of_ senseless jumbling_? |
11615 | What says Note 9th of_ words needless_? |
11615 | What says Rippingham about it? |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ Infinitives?_ 18. |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ final e retained?_ 26. |
11615 | What says Rule 10th of_ personifications_? |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ Participles?_ 19. |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ derivatives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 11th of_ final y changed?_ 28. |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ Adverbs?_ 20. |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ I and O_? |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 12th of_ final y unchanged?_ 30. |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of the terminations_ ize_ and_ ise?_ 32. |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of_ Conjunctions?_ 21. |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of_ Pronouns_? |
11615 | What says Rule 13th of_ poetry_? |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ Prepositions?_ 22. |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ compounds?_ 34. |
11615 | What says Rule 14th of_ examples_? |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ Interjections?_ 23. |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ chief words_? |
11615 | What says Rule 15th of_ usage_, as a law of spelling? |
11615 | What says Rule 16th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 16th of_ Words Repeated?_ 24. |
11615 | What says Rule 16th of_ needless capitals_? |
11615 | What says Rule 17th of_ Dependent Quotations?_ LESSON II.--OF THE COMMA. |
11615 | What says Rule 17th of_ Finite Verbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 18th of_ Infinitives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 19th of_ Infinitives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Abrupt Pauses?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Additional Remarks?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Articles_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Complex Members?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Distinct Sentences?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Interjections?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Questions Direct?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ Simple Sentences?_ 9. |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ books_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ compounds_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ consonants_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ final f, l_, or_ s_? |
11615 | What says Rule 1st of_ the Parenthesis?_ 5. |
11615 | What says Rule 20th of_ Participles_? |
11615 | What says Rule 21st of_ Adverbs_? |
11615 | What says Rule 22d of_ Conjunctions_? |
11615 | What says Rule 23d of_ Prepositions_? |
11615 | What says Rule 24th of_ Interjections_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Allied Sentences?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Emphatic Pauses?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Greater Pauses?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Invocations?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Nominatives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Questions United?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Simple Members?_ 10. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ Simple Members?_ 6. |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ first words_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ other finals_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ simples_? |
11615 | What says Rule 2d of_ vowels_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of the_ doubling_ of consonants? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ Apposition_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ More than Two Words?_ 11. |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ names of Deity_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ terminations_? |
11615 | What says Rule 3d of_ the sense_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ Only Two Words?_ 12. |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ Possessives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ ellipses_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ prefixes_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th of_ proper names_? |
11615 | What says Rule 4th_ against the doubling_ of consonants? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ Objectives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ Words in Pairs?_ 13. |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ compounds_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ final ck_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ the hyphen_? |
11615 | What says Rule 5th of_ titles_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of the_ retaining_ of double letters before affixes? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ Same Cases_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ Words put Absolute?_ 14. |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ lines full_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ no hyphen_? |
11615 | What says Rule 6th of_ one capital_? |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of the_ retaining_ of double letters after prefixes? |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of_ Objectives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of_ Words in Apposition?_ 15. |
11615 | What says Rule 7th of_ two capitals_? |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of the_ Nominative Absolute_? |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of_ Adjectives?_ 16. |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of_ compounds_? |
11615 | What says Rule 8th of_ final ll_, and of_ final l single_? |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ Adjectives_? |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ Finite Verbs?_ 17. |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ apposition_? |
11615 | What says Rule 9th of_ final e omitted_? |
11615 | What says Sheridan, of a good articulation? |
11615 | What says the Exception to Rule 1st of a_ Long Simple Sentence?_ 19. |
11615 | What says the Exception to Rule 8th of_ Adjectives Restrictive?_ 7. |
11615 | What says the Exception to Rule 9th of a_ Very Slight Pause?_ 9. |
11615 | What sense would there be in expounding this to mean,"And_ neither_ a true one?" |
11615 | What shall I say to you? |
11615 | What shall be said of the following? |
11615 | What shall we do when_ of_ after the participial noun is objectionable? |
11615 | What should regulate the inflections? |
11615 | What signifies it, to object to his language as"_ unintelligible_"if it conveys his idea better than any other could? |
11615 | What sort of scholarship is that in which_ fictitious examples_ mislead even their inventors? |
11615 | What sounds has the consonant_ g_? |
11615 | What strange error is taught by Cobbett, and by Wright, in regard to the relative and its verb? |
11615 | What strictures are made on Murray, Lennie, and Bullions, with reference to examples in which an infinitive follows the participial noun? |
11615 | What strictures are made on the classification and placing of the word_ only_? |
11615 | What suggestions are made concerning the word_ no_? |
11615 | What suggestions are made in relation to the number of rules or notes, and the completeness of the system? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure anapestic line? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure dactylic line? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure iambic line? |
11615 | What syllables have stress in a pure trochaic line? |
11615 | What ten chapters of the foregoing code of syntax treat of the ten parts of speech in their order? |
11615 | What then becomes of the thousands of"adjectives"embraced in the"& c."quoted above? |
11615 | What then is the middle ground for the true grammarian? |
11615 | What then is the remedy? |
11615 | What then is the_ agreement_ of words? |
11615 | What then is"being built,"but"_ continuing to be built_,"the same, or nearly the same, as"_ building_"taken passively? |
11615 | What then of the following example:"Which of_ those two persons_ has_ most_ distinguished himself?" |
11615 | What then shall be thought of the explanations which our grammarians have given of this degree of comparison? |
11615 | What then? |
11615 | What then? |
11615 | What things are commonly exhibited wholly in capitals? |
11615 | What three modes of construction appear like exceptions to Rule 4th? |
11615 | What two cases of nouns are alike in form, and how are they distinguished? |
11615 | What two great authors differ in regard to the correctness of the phrases,"_ upon the rule''s being observed_,"and"_ of its being neglected_?" |
11615 | What uniformity have stanzas? |
11615 | What variation may occur in the first foot? |
11615 | What variety have they? |
11615 | What variety is there in the letters? |
11615 | What verbs are defective? |
11615 | What verbs are used as auxiliaries? |
11615 | What verbs take the infinitive after them without the preposition_ to_? |
11615 | What verbs take the participle after them, and not the infinitive? |
11615 | What was language at first, and what is it now? |
11615 | What whimsical account of the English infinitive is given by Nixon? |
11615 | What words does this rule claim, which might seem to come under Rule 7th? |
11615 | What words must be supplied in parsing? |
11615 | What words want the comparative? |
11615 | What words want the positive? |
11615 | What would be the natural effect of the following sentence, which I quote from a late well- written religious homily? |
11615 | What, for instance, would they substitute for the following very inaccurate expression from the critical belles- lettres of Dr. Blair? |
11615 | What, in his view, is a good articulation? |
11615 | What, of_ ce, ci_, and_ ch_? |
11615 | What, then, are interjections? |
11615 | What, then, is the common order of literary division, downwards, throughout? |
11615 | What, then, is"THE PRODUCTIVE SYSTEM?" |
11615 | What? |
11615 | What? |
11615 | What_ excess_ of skill, or what_ very high degree_ of acuteness, have the_ brightest_ and_ best_ of these grammarians exhibited? |
11615 | Whatever? |
11615 | Whatsoever?_ LESSON XI.--PARSING. |
11615 | When Dr. Johnson was asked,"What is_ poetry_?" |
11615 | When a noun is implied in an adjective of a different number, which word is regarded in the formation of the verb? |
11615 | When a pronoun represents a phrase or sentence, of what person, number, and gender is it? |
11615 | When a verb has nominatives of different persons or numbers, connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, with which of them does it_ commonly_ agree? |
11615 | When are_ w_ and_ y_ consonants? |
11615 | When do we employ the same relative in successive clauses? |
11615 | When does a common noun not admit an article? |
11615 | When does a_ participle_"admit the degrees of comparison?" |
11615 | When does it agree with the remoter nominative? |
11615 | When is an active verb followed by two words in apposition? |
11615 | When is this figure allowable? |
11615 | When is_ the_ required before adjectives? |
11615 | When joint antecedents are of different persons, with which person does the pronoun agree? |
11615 | When joint antecedents differ in gender, of what gender is the pronoun? |
11615 | When one can condense several different principles into one rule, is it not expedient to do so? |
11615 | When ought_ an_ to be used, and what are the examples? |
11615 | When shall I, like Oscar, travel in the light of my steel?" |
11615 | When should_ a_ be used, and what are the examples? |
11615 | When the Bible was translated, either form appears to have been used before the letter_ h_; as,"Hath not_ my hand_ made all these things?" |
11615 | When the adjective follows its noun, where stands the article? |
11615 | When the confounding of such distinctions is begun, who knows where it will end? |
11615 | When the gender is figurative, how is it indicated? |
11615 | When the nominatives connected are of different persons, of what person is the verb? |
11615 | When the noun is such as may be applied to either sex, how is the gender usually determined? |
11615 | When the speaker changes his nominative, to take a stronger one, what concord has the verb? |
11615 | When the verbs,_ say, answer, reply_, and the like, introduce the parts of a dialogue; as,"''Son of affliction,''_ said Omar_,''who art thou?'' |
11615 | When two declinable words are connected by a conjunction, why are they of the same case? |
11615 | When two or more infinitives occur in the same construction, must_ to_ be used with each? |
11615 | When two or more nominatives connected by_ and_ explain a preceding one, what agreement has the verb? |
11615 | When verbs are connected by_ and, or_, or_ nor_, do they necessarily agree with the same nominative? |
11615 | When will the cause of learning cease to have assailants and underminers among those who profess to serve it? |
11615 | When words commonly used as adverbs assume the construction of nouns, how are they to be parsed? |
11615 | When, and in what case, is a noun or pronoun put absolute in English? |
11615 | When, or how often, should articles be inserted? |
11615 | When? |
11615 | Whence?_ or,_ Whereabout?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | Whence?_ or,_ Whereabout?_ including these which ask. |
11615 | Where and what is this"_ thing_"which is so bad that the leading Senator has"never heard a worse?" |
11615 | Where are the positives which are here supposed to be"_ increased to the highest degree_?" |
11615 | Where is quantity variable, and where fixed, in English? |
11615 | Where is the noun or pronoun, when an adjective follows an infinitive or a participle? |
11615 | Where is the| thatch- roofà © d| village, the| home of A|-cadian| farmers?" |
11615 | Where must the sign of possession be put, when two or more possessives are in apposition? |
11615 | Where the cit|-ron and ol|-ive are fair|-est of fruit, And the voice| of the night|-ingale nev|-er is mute? |
11615 | Where the sense admits of a choice of construction in respect to the participle, is not attention due to the analogy of general grammar? |
11615 | Where the vir|-gins are soft as the ros|-es they twine, And all,| save the spir|-it of man,| is divine? |
11615 | Where then holds the anchor of his praise? |
11615 | Where then is the propriety of their notion of infinitive government? |
11615 | Where usage is utterly unsettled, what guidance should be sought? |
11615 | Where, but among the heroes and the wise?" |
11615 | Where? |
11615 | Where? |
11615 | Wherefore Beza expressed it differently:"Simon_ fili Jonà ¦_, diligis me plus_ quâm hi_?" |
11615 | Wherein are the common rule and definition of apposition faulty? |
11615 | Wherein consists_ the truth_ of grammatical doctrine, and how can one judge of what others teach? |
11615 | Whether of them twain did the will of his father? |
11615 | Which are the copulative conjunctions? |
11615 | Which are the corresponsive conjunctions? |
11615 | Which are the disjunctive conjunctions? |
11615 | Which are the interrogative pronouns? |
11615 | Which are the most apt to be taken plurally, collections of persons, or collections of things? |
11615 | Which are the relative pronouns? |
11615 | Which are these seven? |
11615 | Which exercise brings into use the greater number of grammatical principles, parsing or correcting? |
11615 | Which is the best adapted to strong emphasis? |
11615 | Which is the definite article, and what does it denote? |
11615 | Which is the indefinite article, and what does it denote? |
11615 | Which kind of inflection is said to be most common? |
11615 | Which number does_ the_ limit, the singular or the plural? |
11615 | Which of the letters can form syllables of themselves? |
11615 | Which of the ten parts of speech is left without any rule of syntax? |
11615 | Which of the visors was it, that you wore? |
11615 | Which of the vowel sounds form words? |
11615 | Which of_ these_ are called_ Vowels_?" |
11615 | Which, now, is"more judicious,"such confusion as this, or the arrangement which has been common from time immemorial? |
11615 | Which, now, of all these did Charles the Second mean, when he gave the colony this name, with his charter, in 1663? |
11615 | Which, then, of the two or three modifications or forms, do they mean, when they say,"Number is_ the distinction_"& c.? |
11615 | Which? |
11615 | Whichever? |
11615 | Whichsoever? |
11615 | Whither? |
11615 | Who are they? |
11615 | Who are you? |
11615 | Who art thou? |
11615 | Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?" |
11615 | Who breaks a butterfly upon_ the_ wheel?" |
11615 | Who does not know that such syllables as"_ at, bat_, and_ cur_"are often long in poetry? |
11615 | Who is he that will pretend that the solemn style of the Bible may be used in familiar discourse, without a mouthing affectation? |
11615 | Who shall decide whether the contributions which any individual may make to our grammatical code, are, or are not, consonant with the best usage? |
11615 | Who shall say that_ Daleth, Delta_, and_ Dee_, are not three_ real words_, each equally important in the language to which it properly belongs? |
11615 | Who that knows what it is, to name a letter, can think of naming_ w_ by double_ o_? |
11615 | Who was her| father? |
11615 | Who was her| mother? |
11615 | Who, in common parlance, has ever said,"He_ was loving me_,"or any thing like it? |
11615 | Who, then, are here the neologists, the innovators, the impairers of the language? |
11615 | Whom did he copy when he said,"The phrases,_ more perfect_, and_ most perfect_, are improper?" |
11615 | Whose are"The Principles of English Grammar"which Dr. Bullions has republished with alterations,"on the plan of Murray''s Grammar?" |
11615 | Whose fault is that? |
11615 | Whosoever? |
11615 | Why are both parties wrong in this instance? |
11615 | Why are interjections so called? |
11615 | Why are not these things defined under the head of pronouns? |
11615 | Why are not these things defined under the head of verbs? |
11615 | Why are the anapestic measures few? |
11615 | Why are these feet principal? |
11615 | Why are verbs called by that name? |
11615 | Why are we apt to use a plural pronoun after antecedents of different genders? |
11615 | Why can not an omission of the possessive sign be accounted a true_ ellipsis_? |
11615 | Why can not the omission of an article constitute a proper ellipsis? |
11615 | Why can not two nouns, each having the possessive sign, be put in apposition with each other? |
11615 | Why delayest thou thy coming? |
11615 | Why delayest thou thy coming? |
11615 | Why did Murray think all Webster''s examples under this rule bad English? |
11615 | Why do collective nouns singular, when connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, admit of a plural verb? |
11615 | Why do singular antecedents connected by_ or_ or_ nor_ appear to require a singular pronoun? |
11615 | Why do they deserve particular attention? |
11615 | Why do those teach just as inconsistently, who forbear to call the_ to_ a preposition? |
11615 | Why does it vary? |
11615 | Why does the author discard the two special rules commonly given for the construction of relatives? |
11615 | Why does the author incline to condemn these peculiarities? |
11615 | Why have we no exact enumeration of the measures of this order? |
11615 | Why is Murray''s rule for the possessive case objectionable? |
11615 | Why is it difficult to learn to spell accurately? |
11615 | Why is it more objectionable to change_ pupillaris_ to_ pupilary_, than_ pupillus_ to_ pupil_? |
11615 | Why is it necessary to observe_ the sense_, or_ meaning_, of what we parse? |
11615 | Why is it necessary to use the sign_ to_ before an abstract infinitive, where it shows no relation? |
11615 | Why is it not as proper, to write an order for"a bushel of_ peas_,"as for"a bushel of_ beans_?" |
11615 | Why is it reasonable to limit the government of the possessive to nouns only, or to words taken substantive? |
11615 | Why is it thought improper to put a noun in two cases at once? |
11615 | Why is it wrong to say, with Dr. Ash,"The king and queen appearing in public_ was_ the cause of my going?" |
11615 | Why is it wrong to say,"The first has a lenis,_ and_ the other an asper over_ them_?" |
11615 | Why is just articulation better than mere loudness? |
11615 | Why is the position,"Active verbs govern the objective case,"of no use to the composer? |
11615 | Why is the thirteenth rule of the author''s Institutes and First Lines not retained as a rule in this work? |
11615 | Why is_ an_ or_ a_ not applicable to plurals? |
11615 | Why must a grammarian discriminate between idioms, or peculiarities, and the common mode of expression? |
11615 | Why not suppose them all to be elliptical? |
11615 | Why not? |
11615 | Why or wherein is the common rule,"Prepositions govern the objective case,"defective or insufficient? |
11615 | Why should the different sorts of letters be kept distinct? |
11615 | Why then attempt instruction by a method which both ignorance and knowledge on the part of the pupil, must alike render useless? |
11615 | Why then is the simplest solution imaginable still so frequently rejected for so much complexity and inconsistency? |
11615 | Why were the general rule and the general or critical notes added to the foregoing code of syntax? |
11615 | Why? |
11615 | Why?" |
11615 | Why?" |
11615 | Why?" |
11615 | Why_ must_ its_ agent_"be in the_ objective_ case,"if"_ to improve_ relates to the pronoun_ he_?" |
11615 | Will a boy pretend that he can not understand a rule of English grammar, because he is told that it holds good in all languages? |
11615 | Will any grammarian say,"I know well enough what the thing is, but I can not tell?" |
11615 | Will any one say, that every such construction is_ bad English_? |
11615 | Will any person pretend that the connective here joins different cases?" |
11615 | Will he have loved? |
11615 | Will it be pretended that the French names and the English do not differ? |
11615 | Will it be said that the latter phrases are elliptical, for''ask_ of_ him his opinion?'' |
11615 | Will they not have been loved? |
11615 | Will thou have loved? |
11615 | Will thou love? |
11615 | Will you name the ten parts of speech, with_ an_ or_ a_ before each name? |
11615 | Will you not have seen? |
11615 | Will you not see? |
11615 | Will you try the series again with a_ p_? |
11615 | Wilt thou have loved? |
11615 | Wilt thou love? |
11615 | With how many other parts of speech does W. Allen confound the participle? |
11615 | With what does single- rhymed dactylic end? |
11615 | With what does the relative agree when an other word is introduced by the pronoun_ it_? |
11615 | With what nominatives of the second person, does the imperative verb agree? |
11615 | Without you, what were man? |
11615 | Wo n''t they have done it? |
11615 | Would it not be better to say,"Ode is the same_ as_ song or hymn?" |
11615 | Yet he does not fail to repeat, with some additional inaccuracy, the notion, that,"What do you think of my_ horse''s running_? |
11615 | Your_ Effs_, and_ Tees_, and_ Ars_, and_ Esses_?" |
11615 | [ 269]"Suppose a criminal to be_ enduring_ the operation of binding:--Shall we say, with Mr. Murray,--''The criminal is binding?'' |
11615 | [ 28]"Except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken? |
11615 | [ 331] ANALYSIS.--What is the general structure of this passage? |
11615 | [ 354] To these examples, Webster adds_ two others_, of a_ different sort_, with a comment, thus:"''Ask_ him_ his_ opinion_?'' |
11615 | [ 359]"''Whose house is that?'' |
11615 | [ 430] Should not the Doctor have said,"_ are_ there_ more_,"since"_ more than one_"must needs be plural? |
11615 | [ 550]"If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what_ has become_ of national liberty?" |
11615 | [ 89] What, but the greater care of earlier writers, has made the Greek names better known or more important than the Latin? |
11615 | [ EXAMPLES:]''May_ not we_ here say with Lucretius?'' |
11615 | [?] |
11615 | [?]" |
11615 | ], the Dash[--], the Eroteme, or Note of Interrogation[? |
11615 | ], the Note of Interrogation[? |
11615 | ],_ the Note of_ Interrogation[? |
11615 | _ Ail, irk_, and_ behoove_, are regular verbs and transitive; but they are used only in the third person singular: as,"What_ ails_ you?" |
11615 | _ Being built_ signifies action_ finished_; and how can,_ Is being built_, signify an_ action unfinished?" |
11615 | _ But_ what are goose- eyes in grammar?" |
11615 | _ Example VI.--"A Good Name?" |
11615 | _ Heardst_ thou that shameful word and blow Brought Roderick''s vengeance on his foe?" |
11615 | _ How_ did he speak? |
11615 | _ Hundreds_''? |
11615 | _ I_ know_ thou_ sayst it: says thy_ life_ the same?" |
11615 | _ Is it not Thomas_? |
11615 | _ Prodest_ is a Latin verb, which signifies"_ is profitable to_;"but who will thence infer, that_ profitable to_ is a verb? |
11615 | _ Siccine ais Parmenó?_ Voss. |
11615 | _ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?" |
11615 | _ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?" |
11615 | _ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?" |
11615 | _ Tens_''? |
11615 | _ Units_''figure? |
11615 | _ What_ through? |
11615 | _ What_ unto day? |
11615 | _ What_ unto night? |
11615 | _ Whereto_ serves mercy But to confront the visage of offence?" |
11615 | _ Who are_ in the house? |
11615 | _ Who strike_ the iron? |
11615 | _ Who strikes_ the iron? |
11615 | _ Who was_ in the street? |
11615 | _ Who were_ in the street?" |
11615 | _ Who_ fathers the foundlings? |
11615 | _ Whom_, the wretch Whose lands beyond the Sabines largely stretch?" |
11615 | _ Why is_ the sign_ to_ expressed before_ study_? |
11615 | _ Why_? |
11615 | _ Why_? |
11615 | _ Why_? |
11615 | _ Why_?" |
11615 | _ Ye mountains_, that ye skipped like rams; and_ ye little hills_, like lambs? |
11615 | _ a_ is an article.--why? |
11615 | _ dead- eyes_ are in a ship, they are blocks, with holes in them, but what are goose- eyes in grammar?" |
11615 | _ elles_] Other; one or something_ beside_; as, Who_ else_ is coming?" |
11615 | _ heard ye not_ of lowland war?" |
11615 | _ must_ I_ observe_ you? |
11615 | _ or_ Did I love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did he love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did we not love? |
11615 | _ or_ Did you not see? |
11615 | _ or_ Didst thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ Do I love? |
11615 | _ or_ Do we not love? |
11615 | _ or_ Do you not see? |
11615 | _ or_ Does he love? |
11615 | _ or_ Dost thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ Dost thou love? |
11615 | _ or_ a vine, figs?" |
11615 | _ that is_,''What is the reason of this person,_ in_ dismissing his servant so hastily?'' |
11615 | _ thee_, my boy?" |
11615 | _ thine_, my child?" |
11615 | _ thou Jordan_, that thou wast driven back? |
11615 | _ till_ seven times? |
11615 | _ to leave_[ town] to- day:''''They tried( What?) |
11615 | _ very_ is an adverb.--why?" |
11615 | _ was_ is a verb.--why? |
11615 | _ wast thou_ never to do any thing?" |
11615 | _ whither_? |
11615 | a language"_ The meaning of which_,"he says,"_ all the different animals perfectly understand_?" |
11615 | ah, whither dost thou run? |
11615 | am_ I_ not_ free_? |
11615 | and Priestley cor._"Say, dost thou know Vectidius? |
11615 | and adds,"Between this form of expression and the following,''What do you think of my_ horse running_ to- day?'' |
11615 | and have they not in the other sentence, a relation similar to what is seen here? |
11615 | and how are they always the same? |
11615 | and how could they use them, without other parts of speech to form them into sentences? |
11615 | and how do they differ? |
11615 | and how is it to be known? |
11615 | and how many of these are aspirates? |
11615 | and how many sounds do they represent? |
11615 | and how shall he who knows not what and how many they are, think himself capable of reforming our system of their alphabetic signs? |
11615 | and how uttered when they are not words? |
11615 | and if it is a plural adjective, what shall we do with_ a_ and_ great?_ Taken in either of these ways, the construction is anomalous. |
11615 | and if it is, do they not make"common"what is no better English than the Doctor''s? |
11615 | and if my is an adjective, why not_ Barrett''s_?" |
11615 | and in depriving the poor of a benefactor? |
11615 | and is it not a_ perversion_ of the sentence to interpret it otherwise? |
11615 | and is not_ unlock_ an_ iambus_? |
11615 | and of those who do pretend to this knowledge, why are there so few that agree? |
11615 | and shall he not do it? |
11615 | and shall he not do it? |
11615 | and shall he not make it good?" |
11615 | and shall he not make it good_?" |
11615 | and the prophets, do they live forever?" |
11615 | and the_ prophets_, do they live forever?" |
11615 | and to whom must our appeal be made? |
11615 | and what are their titles, or subjects? |
11615 | and what are their titles, or subjects? |
11615 | and what are their titles, or subjects? |
11615 | and what are their titles? |
11615 | and what by_ mind_? |
11615 | and what else is a burning coal than redhot wood?" |
11615 | and what else is a burning coal than_ red- hot_ wood?" |
11615 | and what epithet, to a letter not sounded? |
11615 | and what is it, that is"indeterminate?" |
11615 | and what knowledge does it imply? |
11615 | and what of the rest? |
11615 | and what the power of God may do for thee?" |
11615 | and what was it about?" |
11615 | and what, consonants? |
11615 | and what, neuter? |
11615 | and what, the chain of connexion between the words_ Swift_ and_ putrefaction_? |
11615 | and what, the chain of connexion"between the words_ away_ and_ is? |
11615 | and when, vowels? |
11615 | and where is the place of understanding? |
11615 | and which can not? |
11615 | and which of them are imperfect mutes? |
11615 | and which of them ought to be censured and rejected as bad English? |
11615 | and who does it belong to?" |
11615 | and who is thy companion?" |
11615 | and who is thy companion?" |
11615 | and why are capitals used? |
11615 | and why have_ Greene, Bullions, Hiley, Hart_, and others, also copied it? |
11615 | and why so? |
11615 | and why? |
11615 | and why? |
11615 | and why? |
11615 | and with whom did it originate? |
11615 | and with_ what_ body do they come?" |
11615 | and would not one such monster be more offensive than all our present exceptions to Rule 9th? |
11615 | and, if this be done, with respect to the infinitive, why not also with respect to the objective case? |
11615 | and_ to whom_ does it belong?" |
11615 | are not_ ye_ my_ work_ in the Lord? |
11615 | are there not two kinds of sentences? |
11615 | as, in the phrase,''He reads_ correctly_,''the answer to the question, How does he read? |
11615 | bad, evil_, or_ ill? |
11615 | but, What do you think of my_ horse''s running_? |
11615 | but,''Does the sentence ask a question?''" |
11615 | can Sporus feel? |
11615 | can Sporus feel? |
11615 | canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection? |
11615 | canst thou not forbear me_ half an hour_? |
11615 | cor._"And will you_ rend_ our ancient love asunder?" |
11615 | cor._"Are we not lazy in our duties, or_ do we not_ make a Christ of them?" |
11615 | cor._"By what code of morals_ is the right or privilege denied me_?" |
11615 | cor._"Can hearts not free, be_ tried_ whether they serve Willing or_ not_, who will but what they must?" |
11615 | cor._"Can our_ solicitude_ alter the course, or unravel the intricacy, of human events?" |
11615 | cor._"Can the fig- tree, my brethren, bear olive berries? |
11615 | cor._"Do not they say,_ that_ every true believer has the Spirit of God in_ him_?" |
11615 | cor._"Does continuity,_ or_ connexion, create sympathy and relation in the parts of the body?" |
11615 | cor._"Has this word, which represents an action, an object after it, on which_ the action_ terminates?" |
11615 | cor._"How many numbers do nouns appear to have? |
11615 | cor._"How many numbers have pronouns? |
11615 | cor._"How many_ Esses_ would_ goodness''_ then end with? |
11615 | cor._"How many_ Esses_ would_ the word_ then end with? |
11615 | cor._"In what other,_ consistently_ with reason and common sense, can you go about to explain it to him?" |
11615 | cor._"May I_ express thee''unblam''d? |
11615 | cor._"To_ whom_? |
11615 | cor._"What is the_ putting- together of_ vowels and consonants called?" |
11615 | cor._"When the judge_ dares_ not act, where is the loser''s remedy?" |
11615 | cor._"Who is here so rude,_ he_ would not be a_ Roman_?" |
11615 | cor._"Young stranger, whither_ wanderst_ thou?" |
11615 | cor._"_ Questions asked by_ a principal verb_ only_--as,_''Teach I?'' |
11615 | cor._"_ Was_ either of these meetings ever acknowledged or recognized?" |
11615 | deeper than hell, what canst thou know?" |
11615 | deeper than hell; what canst thou know?" |
11615 | does every body take their morning draught of this liquor?" |
11615 | either a vine, figs?" |
11615 | for_ whether_ is greater, the gold, or the temple that sanctifieth the gold?" |
11615 | fore? |
11615 | ha? |
11615 | hast thou clothed_ his_ neck with thunder? |
11615 | hath he spoken it, and shall he not make it good?" |
11615 | have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord? |
11615 | have ye not houses to eat and to drink in? |
11615 | have ye not houses to eat and to drink_ in_?" |
11615 | he that formed the eye, shall he not see?" |
11615 | he? |
11615 | he? |
11615 | he? |
11615 | he? |
11615 | hind? |
11615 | how are_ have_ and_ do_ to be parsed? |
11615 | how his thoughts adore That painted coat which Joseph never wore?" |
11615 | how long will it be ere_ thou_ be quiet? |
11615 | how much? |
11615 | how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?" |
11615 | how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?" |
11615 | how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?" |
11615 | i. e._ Who is the person_? |
11615 | if the latter, how are they governed? |
11615 | in filling the orphan''s eyes with tears?" |
11615 | in ill thoughts again? |
11615 | in relation to this matter?" |
11615 | in? |
11615 | instead of--_wilt thou_ walk? |
11615 | is Moscow in flames?" |
11615 | is different_ to_[ say_ from_,] What do you think of my_ horse running_?" |
11615 | is this the consequence of thy generosity?" |
11615 | is thy_ servant_ a_ dog_?" |
11615 | is_ different_ from, What are you seeking? |
11615 | its chief use--declined--to what creatures may be applied--put for the distance,("_ How far do you call_ IT?" |
11615 | late?_ 26. |
11615 | little? |
11615 | low? |
11615 | many?_ 25. |
11615 | me_, how fared it with me then?" |
11615 | means, Do you think I should let him run? |
11615 | means, he_ has_ run, do you think he ran well?" |
11615 | mild and_ gall- less_ dove, Which dost the pure and candid dwellings love, Canst thou in Albion still delight?" |
11615 | much? |
11615 | near? |
11615 | nor in preferring the lessons of conscience to the impulses of passion? |
11615 | of whom do the kings of the earth take taxes and tribute?''" |
11615 | or Where? |
11615 | or both? |
11615 | or both? |
11615 | or came it unto you only?" |
11615 | or canst thou thunder with a voice like him?" |
11615 | or despise ye the church of God, and shame them that have not? |
11615 | or from one who does not know that_ you_ is never a_ nominative_ in the style of the Bible? |
11615 | or from one who tells us, that"_ It walks_"is of the solemn style? |
11615 | or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?" |
11615 | or how is_ to_"joined to the verb,"or made a part of it, in the phrase,"_ to_ ride?" |
11615 | or how knowest_ thou_, O_ man_, whether_ thou_ shalt save_ thy wife_?" |
11615 | or how the word_ five_, the figure 5, or the numeral letter V, is"the designation of a_ unit_?" |
11615 | or is he not rather at fault in his interpretations? |
11615 | or is it the sum of all the quantities which these may indicate? |
11615 | or neither? |
11615 | or neither? |
11615 | or sentences, with points? |
11615 | or that"a_ more reddish_ tinge,"--"a_ more saltish_ taste,"are not correct phrases? |
11615 | or the action of"_ composing_?" |
11615 | or thus,_ riv- er_,_ fev- er_?" |
11615 | or what advantage would a new orthography procure equivalent to the confusion and perplexity of such an alteration?" |
11615 | or what propriety could there be in making the words,_ of_, and_ to_, and_ from_, govern or compose three different cases? |
11615 | or what reason can be assigned for making more than three? |
11615 | or where, on such a principle, can the line of distinction for transitive verbs be drawn? |
11615 | or where? |
11615 | or where? |
11615 | or why an emphasis alone, will not sufficiently distinguish the members of sentences from each other, without pauses, as accent does words? |
11615 | or"_ will depend_"understood after_ more_? |
11615 | or, Am I not writing? |
11615 | or, Am I writing? |
11615 | or, in the order of a declarative sentence,"That house is whose house?" |
11615 | or, that a noun can not be put in the_ first person_, so as to agree with_ I_ or_ we_? |
11615 | or, that a noun of the second person_ could not be spoken of_? |
11615 | or, to change_ tranquillitas_ to_ tranquility_, than_ tranquillus_ to_ tranquil_? |
11615 | or,"Do you think it proper for my horse to run to- day?" |
11615 | or,"_ What one_?" |
11615 | or_ whence_? |
11615 | or_ who are_ my brethren?" |
11615 | our own, or that which is foreign? |
11615 | out? |
11615 | says a bright boy;"pray, what are they? |
11615 | says a bright boy;"pray, what are they? |
11615 | shall I praise you in this? |
11615 | tell, Tell, if ye saw, how came I thus, how here? |
11615 | that a doctrine so pure as the Gospel should be the work of an uncommissioned pretender? |
11615 | that he is regenerate? |
11615 | that is,"so that_ the gift_ ought to be recompensed from Heaven to_ the giver_?" |
11615 | that so perfect a system of morals should be established on blasphemy?" |
11615 | that the proudest and the most ambitious of mankind should be the great master and accomplished pattern of humility? |
11615 | that the verb should be made plural? |
11615 | the boy? |
11615 | the boys?_ LESSON XIX.--VERBS. |
11615 | the child? |
11615 | the children?_ LESSON XX.--VERBS. |
11615 | the man? |
11615 | the men?_ LESSON XVIII.--VERBS. |
11615 | the note of interrogation(?) |
11615 | these pictures? |
11615 | they? |
11615 | they? |
11615 | they? |
11615 | they?_ LESSON XVII.--VERBS. |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | thou? |
11615 | to thee? |
11615 | to thee? |
11615 | up? |
11615 | violated?" |
11615 | we? |
11615 | we? |
11615 | we? |
11615 | we? |
11615 | were you never to do any thing?" |
11615 | what am I, and from whence_ am_ I?" |
11615 | what an one was he?" |
11615 | what answer will he get? |
11615 | what visor? |
11615 | what, feminine? |
11615 | when? |
11615 | when? |
11615 | where art thou? |
11615 | where is thy blush?" |
11615 | where is thy blush?" |
11615 | where is thy blush?" |
11615 | where is thy sting? |
11615 | where is thy sting? |
11615 | where is thy victory?" |
11615 | where is thy victory?" |
11615 | where? |
11615 | where| are the charms That sa|-ges have seen| in thy face? |
11615 | which way shall I fly Infinite wrath, and infinite despair? |
11615 | whith-- erstraysth''--immort-- almind?" |
11615 | whither hast thou fled?" |
11615 | whither hast thou fled?" |
11615 | whither shall I fly?" |
11615 | whither shall i fly? |
11615 | whither strays the immortal mind?'' |
11615 | who fathers the foundlings? |
11615 | who hath warned you to flee from the wrath_ to come_?" |
11615 | whose Son is he? |
11615 | whose_ son_ is he? |
11615 | who| would inhab|-_it_ This bleak| world alone?" |
11615 | why demand you this?" |
11615 | why do frown?" |
11615 | why do frown?" |
11615 | why do ye preach it up?" |
11615 | why do_ ye_ preach it up?" |
11615 | why do_ you_ preach it up?" |
11615 | why was this concealed?" |
11615 | why was this concealed?" |
11615 | will it support him in preparing affliction for the widow''s heart? |
11615 | will justice support him in robbing the community of an able and useful member? |
11615 | would not such a sight annihilate_ thee_?" |
11615 | you? |
11615 | you? |
11615 | you? |
11615 | you? |
11615 | | But why| complain? |
11615 | | Who knows| not Cir_c~ e_, The daugh|-ter of| the sun? |
11615 | | m= y s= oul''s| f~ ar b= et|-t~ er p= art,_ Wh= y w~ ith_| untime|-ly| sor|-rows heaves| thy heart? |
11615 | | whither| are you| going? |
11615 | | whither| do ye| call me? |
11615 | Ã Kempis cor._"Who is she_ that_ comes clothed in a robe of green?" |